BCC Minutes 04/15/1996 J (w/Lee County BCC) WORKSHOP MEETING OF APRIL 15, 1996,
OF THE COLLIER COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COHMISSIONERS
AND
LEE COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COHMISSIONERS
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of County Commissioners in
and for the County of Collier, and also acting as the Board of Zoning
Appeals and as the governing board(s) of such special districts as have
been created according to law and having conducted business herein, met
on this date at 1:39 p.m. in SPECIAL SESSION at the Bonita Springs
Lions Center, 10370 Pennsylvania Avenue, Bonita Springs, Florida, with
the following members present:
COLLIER COUNTY COHMISSION
CHAIRPERSON: John C. Norris
VICE CHAIRPERSON: Timothy L. Hancock
Timothy J. Constantine
Bettye J. Matthews
Pamela S. Hac'Kie
ALSO PRESENT: W. Neil Dorrill, County Manager
David C. Weigel, County Attorney
LEE COUNTY COHMISSION
CHAIRPERSON: DOUGLAS R. ST. CERNY
VICE CHAIRPERSON: ANDREW W. COY
H. RAY JUDAH
JOHN E. MANNING
JOHN E. ALBION
ALSO PRESENT: Donald D. Stilwell, County Administrator
James G. Yaeger, County Attorney
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Call the meeting to order. We've got a
little problem with the sound system, so we have no amplification. So
at least minutes is able to record us.
First of all, I'd like to say welcome to our compatriots from
Collier County, another good opportunity for us to get together and
discuss joint issues here in Bonita Springs, and we've got a good
agenda today, and staff has done a good job of putting together an
agenda that needs to be addressed, so we'll get started with it. The
first item on the agenda today is presentation of a feasibility study
on regional transit service by Jim Fetzer. Jim.
MR. FETZER: Good afternoon. My name is Jim Fetzer. I'm director
of Lee Tran. I'm going to propose some -- do a proposal for Lee Tran
service in Collier County. Can everybody hear me?
THE RECORDER: No. You've got to get to the mike.
MR. FETZER: Is the mike working?
THE RECORDER: That mike. That mike.
MR. FETZER: Can you hear me now?
MR. DORRILL: I think that records only. I don't think that's for
amplification.
MR. FETZER: Okay. For recording?
Before we start, I thought I'd give you a little background on Lee
County transit. Lee Tran currently operates 12 routes with 39 buses
and 9 paratransit vans throughout Lee County. We cover 377 miles of
Lee County road network, and we have $4.6 million annual operating
budget, and we employ about 80 people.
A little bit of background about Lee Tran. We've been operating
for going on 22 years now. We were started in 1974 with FDOT as a
service demonstration project. The first year of operation we provided
199,000 trips, and in 1995 our ridership has reached 1.7 million
passengers, and right now we have 24 new buses on order. We just
received 7 -- 7 new -- excuse me. We just received 7 buses, and we
have 24 more on order.
Some projects of Lee County Tran right now, we were just -- we
were just notified that we have received $8.2 million for a transit
corridor project in Lee County. It's going to enable us to provide
20-minute bus service on U.S. 41 from North Fort Myers to San Carlos
Park. It was the largest transit corridor project ever awarded in the
state, so we're real proud of that.
Intermodal center, we're in the process of a feasibility study.
We have $2.3 million dedicated for the construction and design of the
facility.
Like I said, we're in a bus replacement project right now. We
have 7 new buses and 24 new buses on order. They are minimumly --
minimally funded, 83 percent from the fed -- federal and state sources.
Our supergraphic bus program, I'm sure everybody has seen our
buses, all different colors, all different kind of advertisement. It's
a way of generating revenue for Lee Tran. Our revenues have gone from
25,000 three years ago to 180,000 this last year.
We have a bus shelter and advertising program right now. We just
started last year, and we are getting bus shelters put in at no cost to
the county. The private firm puts them in, advertises on them, and
pays us a monthly advertising revenue, and they're turned over to Lee
County. They're the property of Lee County.
And we have bikes on buses. We were the first property in the
southern -- southeastern United States to have bike racks on our buses.
The program has been very successful. Other properties are following
along with us. Tampa just installed bike racks on their entire fleet.
So we're pretty proud of that.
The benefits of transit I think are obvious. I'll go through
them. Number one, it provides low-cost transportation to senior
citizens, mentally and physically challenged, commuters, or persons
with low income; reduces vehicle congestion and air pollution; and
attracts employers; new federal facilities must be serviced by mass
transit; and provides access to jobs.
The benefits to both Collier and Lee County of Lee County Transit
providing a service is -- the regional concept is going to eliminate
the need for multimillion-dollar dual facilities. We already have a
structure. We already have a bus wash, a fueling system, and the
property to park the vehicles. It eliminates the duplication of
planning, grant and purchasing activities. We already do planning,
purchasing and the whole bit. We -- We've been doing it for 22 years.
It's going to provide access to the new Florida Gulf Coast University
which is coming on line next year. It's going to be important to Lee
County and Charlotte for -- excuse me -- Lee and Collier County and
provide inter-county service to the citizens and visitors of Southwest
Florida.
In your packet you'll see we have requirements of grant-funded
transit agencies. I'm not going to go through that, but if any of you
have any questions regarding that, I'll be happy to answer them. I am
going to cover one because it has such a large impact on our
organization. It's ADA paratransit. Everyone have heard -- Everyone's
heard of the Americans with Disabilities Act. It's basically -- to
transportation, it means that we have to provide paratransit service to
those persons because of physical or mental disability cannot use a
fixed route, three-quarters of a mile either side of the fixed route.
It's -- it's basically -- buses must meet accessibility standards for
disabled people. The fare can be no more than double the fare on fixed
routes and must have comparable days and hours of service.
The big one, where does the money come from? We have several
sources. Some are ongoing, and some are competitive and once -- once
every few years or once whenever you get them apportioned. Of these,
we have federal. We have section 3, section 8, section 9, and section
18. The only one of this -- these four that is a competitive, earmark
type of program is section 3. That -- That would not be a funding
source that Collier or Lee would receive every year. Lee Tran has had
an application in for section 3 money since 1989, and we have not been
successful. It's congressionally earmarked for capital funds.
Section 8, Collier County should be already receiving these funds
through their MPO for planning activities. Lee Tran receives about
45,000 a year through section 8 from the feds.
Section 9 is the big one for Collier and Lee. Lee Tran receives
about 1.1 million a year in capital and about 268,000 in operating. If
Lee or -- excuse me -- If Collier County would start off operations,
there's money sitting there that they could take advantage of, and
Collier County's money under section 9 would be 146,000 in operating
and 414,000 in capital yearly. It's an ongoing apportionment.
Section 18 is another funding source if you're operating in rural
areas. Lee Tran utilizes some of this funding for areas such as Lehigh
or -- or San Carlos Park, some of the areas that are outside the
urbanized boundaries. It will pay for up to 50 percent of the
operating costs in rural areas.
State sources of funding, there's one that's repetitive and
ongoing. It's the transit block grant. Lee Tran receives this money
every year. Collier County is eligible for the first year of service
to receive $200,000 for operating -- operating and/or capital. We
believe that the block grant will grow each year and replace the next
one I want to show you. It ties into this.
If Collier County would decide to start transit service, we would
go after the transit service development funds, and that is also a
state funding source. It's good for three years. We believe that
after the service development funds would go away, the block grant
would grow from 200,000 upwards and make up for the difference of the
service development funds going away.
There's another one which really isn't in the picture for Collier
County unless they started a transit system and -- several years down
the road, but transit corridor is a funding program where the state
will pay 100 percent of the operating and/or capital cost to operate a
transit corridor on state roadways that are considered congested. Lee
Tran, like I said, just received $8.2 million to provide 20-minute bus
service on 41. That may be an area that we could look at down the road
after we start service.
The routing we have proposed for Collier County is on page 15 of
your booklets. There's also a map up here. I think I'm going to point
out on this map because it's much clearer. We proposed three routes
within Collier County. The blue route here is on U.S. 41. It travels
from the government center up 41 to Pine Ridge, intersects with the red
route which is Pine Ridge and Airport-Pulling, up 41, and it will meet
the Lee Tran system in San Carlos Park. This would be hourly service,
and it requires three buses to provide this service.
The next route, the red route, is also hourly service. It starts
at the government center, travels Airport-Pulling to Pine Ridge. It
makes on-time connections with the blue route at Pine Ridge and 41 and
on-time connections at the government center.
And the third route in yellow is the Golden Gate route. It
travels Airport-Pulling, Radio Road, Santa Barbara, and then it does a
rather extensive route through Golden Gate. It also is hourly service.
It requires one bus.
So you have a total of five buses in service, all of them on
hourly service, all making on-time connections. So somebody can travel
out of Golden Gate, transfer to the government center and straight up
41.
I'll move on, I guess. The next one is the operating budget, and
here you'll see we have operating budget, Collier, Lee County, and
total cost. We have a total project cost of 909,000 to provide service
in Collier County of which you'll see personnel, operating, and ADA.
The Americans with Disabilities Act is paratransit services. Basically
what it boils down to is -- the share of service in Collier County is
818,000. The portion of the service traveling into Lee County is
90,000, for a total project of 909,000.
You'll see below contingency reserve. That basically is
we -- we cost -- our cost right now is forty-three sixty-three per
hour to provide bus service. Operating more buses is going to spread
some of our cost out over more buses, lowering the cost per hour. We
already pay liability. We pay a sewer bill. We pay insurance and
such. Those expenses will be spread over more buses, so it will lower
our expense per hour to $40.32. We're asking that the contingency
fund contain the difference between those two costs per hour and be
there just in case.
The revenues to make up the $909,000 operating cost, federal --
excuse me -- federal -- Collier County is going to receive 146,000.
State funding, if we're successful in getting service development,
you're going to get 314,000. Collier County's local share is going to
be 283,000. Fares and advertisement, we anticipate $134,000. And Lee
County's share would be thirty-one four fifty-four.
Start-up requirements, we require six buses. It takes five for
just doing the routes, and we anticipate the need for one spare.
Similar to the bus that's parked outside, we would order the
same style vehicles. They cost 230,000 each. The total cost is 1.3
million of which the federal portion is going to be 1.1. Collier
County is going to pay about 17 percent of the cost of the bus -- the
buses. And, again, we would need the funding for those buses when
they're delivered. It's going to take a year and a half to two years
to get those vehicles in. We would require the local share at that
time.
We require three paratransit vans to provide ADA paratransit
service within the corridor of the fixed route in Collier County. The
total cost is 120,000. The local share would be $20,000. And, again,
we would need the $20,400 at time of delivery of the vans.
We need seven radios. Lee County already has an adequate radio
system that would operate in Collier County, but we do have to put it
on a different channel. So we need seven radios for the system. Six
will go on the buses. One will go on our base station so our
dispatchers can monitor Collier County's operation.
And also we propose to have two bus shelters at transfer
locations, one at the government center and one at Pine Ridge and U.S.
41 so people can get out of the weather.
Again, on all these projects, the local share is less than 20
percent on each one.
Start-up timing, if we're going to go ahead with this project,
there's certain key dates we need to stick to or adhere to. Funding
can be provided by July 1997, provided the following is accomplished.
We need to execute an intergovernmental agreement between Lee County
and Collier County prior to 6-1 of '96. We need to -- Lee Tran would
need to submit an amended TDP which is a transit development plan to
the Florida Department of Transportation no later than July 1 of this
year. And we would have to apply for the grant for service development
funds prior to 6-1-96 to the Florida Department of Transportation.
Start-up requirements, again, this is just an overview
of what we just discussed, the buses, the radios, and so forth.
Service description, a little more detailed. Where do
we come up with our figures? Our cost per hour is established. Our
forty-three sixty-three is our federal -- it's our audited cost per
hour of providing service. We propose that it's going to take 11 bus
drivers, 2 operations supervisors for Collier County, an additional
transit coordinator in our office to assist us with the additional
grant activity. You would have 22,568 hours of operation for the
buses for a year, revenue miles of 331,000, and we anticipate
ridership to be 233,000 in the first year, and that -- that figure is
based on how many miles the buses go and point -- .7 passengers per
mile, meaning you're going to have one passenger get on every mile and
three-tenths. And an annual fare box revenue intake of 98,000.
The next three pages of the packet are just basically a route
schedule that we've come up with. I'm open to any questions now if
anybody has any or --
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Questions by either commission?
Commissioner Hancock.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I've just got a couple of questions if I
may. Based on your current operation, do you have any idea what
percent of your ridership actually own cars? MR. FETZER: No, we do not.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. Again, because a lot of times in
mass transit, the idea is that it reduces traffic or traffic
congestion. So I was curious if you had any local numbers on that.
MR. FETZER: We -- We have a good idea that most of our passengers
do have cars, especially our commuters in the morning, but we don't
have an exact figure.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. You mentioned the trend of section 9
funds continues to drop. Then you mentioned that the state
transportation block grant trend is going up, or do you expect it to
go up?
MR. FETZER: Expect it to go up. We would apply for service
development funds for about $141,000, and you would get a $200,000
block grant. Now, as the service development funds went away after
three years, we anticipate as you get operational history, you
get ridership, miles and such, the block grant should grow. Lee
Tran's receiving -- and, Chris, you can correct me -- about 800,000 a
year in block grant, and your block grant should grow enough to do --
to replace your -- your service development going away. In service
development you have to operate for three years under service
development, and then the local county has to take that service over
and operate it at least one more year.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. And I would be remiss in not at
least recognizing Mr. Stilwell and Mr. Dotrill and your respective
staffs for the work you've put in on this and putting this together. I
think what you've done is very commendable, and I wanted to thank both
of you and your staffs.
The last last question I have -- and -- and this is really for
Neil. Because of the ADA application of these buses, would this in any
way reduce the funds necessary for our community transportation system
in Collier?
MR. DORRILL: We -- We did talk specifically about that,
and I had asked Jim to be prepared to discuss that today. I -- I
don't think that it will specifically eliminate the need for the
transportation for the disadvantaged program. What they do find in
Lee -- in Lee County under Lee Tran, though, is that many of those
people who would otherwise be eligible for the community transportation
for disadvantaged program find Lee Tran to be a more efficient and more
convenient service; thus, the ADA requirement that anybody who lives
within three-quarters of a mile of a regularly scheduled route must be
picked up and delivered to that bus stop. And -- And, Jim, you can
elaborate on that, but I think their experience has been that their
service has exceeded the prior service. While it still exists in a
format similar to ours, they're finding more and more of those people
come from Lee Tran because of convenience.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: And the cost; right? Isn't it
significantly less expensive?
MR. FETZER: Yeah. Our cost per paratransit trip is -- it's
around $12 a trip, and on a fixed route, it's about $2 a trip. So
we're just receiving accessible buses now, buses that are capable
of transporting wheelchairs and such, and we're seeing some of our
people come off of ADA and TD and come over to the fixed route. You
have to encourage it a little bit, and some of the TD or the -- the
ADA population -- some of them will come over on their own, but once
we're fully accessible, we -- we anticipate shipping a lot of our
clients over to our fixed-route system. We're feeding our -- our
paratransit vans into our fixed route system.
When our corridor starts next year, we're going to have service
from North Fort Myers all the way to San Carlos Park which is the
majority of the county. We anticipate having two feeders or three
feeders of paratransit vans into the bus system so we can take -- if
they're going from North Fort Myers, there's no sense of taking a
paratransit van all the way to South Fort Myers, transfer them over to
the bus, and then -- and then let a van in the south county do the
rest of the trip.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Further questions?
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Norris.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: I just want to make sure I
understand it right. I think from the discussion we've had here this
afternoon that it looks like that if we do the project from Collier's
perspective, at least we'd be committing to a four-year project. MR. FETZER: Exactly. Yes.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: And I -- I would also assume that if we
decided to terminate it before that, that we would have to return the
grant money that we had received. Is that -- That's the way they
usually work; isn't that correct?
MR. FETZER: In service development -- John -- I think you're
under contract for four years to do the service but John -- Ron
Lasseter with FDOT might be able to help out.
MR. LASSETER: Actually, what we would do is set project
milestones for each year, and there would be decision points at the
end of the first year. It would be a joint agreement whether to
continue or to terminate the project. So we would be looking for a
three-year project, but there would be annual milestones that will be
reviewed by the parties involved.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: Okay. So we could expect, then, something
like this $283,000 as our initial year and probably something similar
to that for two years -- MR. FETZER: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: -- but then the fourth year would be more
like $600,000 --
MR. FETZER: No. It shouldn't -- We don't think it will be. It
should stay fairly consistent because after the -- three years after
the service development funds go away, we believe that the block grant
will go up enough to make up the difference of the service development
dropping away.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: Okay. Also on page 16 of our packet --
MR. FETZER: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: -- which is the service description, I see
22,000 hours of operation and 331,000 revenue miles which would equate
to approximately a 15-mile-an-hour average. Is that about -- Is that
about right?
MR. FETZER: Yeah. I think -- Chris, what's our average --
MR. LEFFERT: Chris Leffert. It's been around 18 miles.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: So about 18 miles an hour would be average?
MR. LEFFERT: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: All right. Thank you.
MR. FETZER: To give a little bit of background, Lee Tran -- when
they were started 22 years ago, Lee County had a population of about --
just over -- a little over 100,000, and I think our first year of
ridership, like I said, was 199,000. We've grown substantially in Lee
County. We're up to 370,000 now, and our trips have grown quite a bit
too but to give you a little bit of background.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Albion.
COHMISSIONER ALBION: These guys are down here talking about a
bullet train. I don't see that in the near future but I think
-- I think it's important that -- that our colleagues of Collier
County hear specifically from this side that we're very, very pleased
with the job that Jim Fetzer and the staff has done for Lee County.
And they took a service that, quite frankly, is not an easy task, and
the $8.2 million grant is just the latest improvement that we've made
to our system. We're very pleased with it. The ridership is very
pleased with it. And most important is that those buses are, from
what I've heard, pretty well full -- very full during the rush-hour
times which obviously is where the greatest congestion times are. And
I can't answer as far as how Collier County has been going the last
couple of years with this, but in Lee County I know that we've had a
number of different agencies, including the sheriff's department, that
are -- also that's even gone on television asking people in the middle
of the season that if you can be able to use the flex -- your own time
flexibility to make your trips on key roadways outside of the rush
hours, to please do so. So this is one way that we're able to combat
it, and the number of increases that -- that are listed in here
recognize how many people are being transported, recognize the fact
that being such fast-growing counties as we have, that the need as far
as getting especially employees to and from has become that much more
critical, and I think that's a lot of what we've been seeing. It's --
The other element that I think was very important that I
-- I really commend our staff for have been the supergraphic buses
because, quite frankly, those buses before -- no disrespect -- were
basically, like most bus systems, a bit of an eyesore. So, as a
result, it's at least a little bit more appealing to go in this
direction. It does generate some revenue besides, and it has made it
a little bit more fashionable, if you will, to take the bus, as well
as the fact that with all these new, neat contraptions they have like
the fact that the bus comes down like a pony or something or an
elephant to pick up its rider is absolutely wonderful. The elephant
is not a republican plug, by the way, but '-
So I just think that's important there for -- that I would also
add -- I think it's a terrific opportunity. If Collier County feels
that its residents have the need for public transportation, this can be
a great partnership between these two counties. To start up and to
make sure you have the right person at the helm is critical from what
I've seen in Lee County over the last -- since I've been here in 1984,
and it literally brings you up plateaus, and we have full confidence in
our staff to be able to -- to pull it off if that's what Collier County
would like to see, and I think that it's important that you hear that.
So thank you.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Hac'Kie.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I just have a great deal of interest in
pursuing this further and have a couple of questions. One, I had some
fear about this long-term commitment and -- and that we hope this grant
will balance that grant. I need to get more comfortable with that and
I also -- I -- I had come today thinking that to support this, I had to
support a four-year commitment, and I'm also interested to hear that
there's a possibility of one year at a time bite at this apple because,
frankly, what I see in Collier County is a lot of interest in this but
just a great deal of fear about what's it going to look like, what's it
going to look like in our community, what effect will it have on our
community, and I'm interested in taking a smaller bite at the apple,
and if we could do that with a year or maybe even two, that's something
I'd like to talk about further.
MR. FETZER: That's -- That's a good comment. You know,
the system would only be as good as we make it and only look as good
as we make it, and, you know, we would be responsible to do the right
thing.
As far as the federal funding and the fears, yes, we've
seen a lot of changes in our federal funding. This year we saw a
major drop in our federal funding, over -- over half. There's talk
that it's going to go back up slightly this year, and it does vary
from year to year with administration. The state's been more
consistent in their -- their revenues bringing us -- actually been
quite helpful to Lee Tran, but there's no guarantees on the federal
funding. As you can see, we're only receiving -- Lee Tran is only
receiving 268,000 in operating out of a $4.6 million budget from the
feds.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The other thing just from a practical
perspective that I was wondering -- I don't know if this is a Jeff
Perry question or somebody -- or maybe you. I just don't -- I don't
know what your expertise is.
MR. FETZER: Okay.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: What does this look like on the road as far
as interfering with the flow of traffic if -- if -- with the stops and
starts and the 20-mile-an-hour or 18 or 15 or whatever it is? How does
that -- because we're talking about U.S. 41.
MR. FETZER: Right. And -- And we just -- we just got a
corridor project for 20-minute service on 41. We've been operating on
41 for 21, 22 years, and, yes, you're going to have some traffic, but
the bus is only through there every hour. You're going to have some
delays to be expected. You don't want to get the bus out of traffic
because once you get the bus out of traffic, you can't get back in so
you just stop. Our newer buses -- they're out -- we have one out in
the parking lot. You'll see the back end has much -- or has many
lights across the back that flash. So when it comes to a stop, people
stop. It really doesn't create any traffic jams. It really doesn't.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: And -- And my last one is just so
I understand. The -- The Collier County commitment, if it's possible
to do this on a one- or a two-year program, would involve -- our
capital expenditure, anyway, wouldn't come until after. We would
spend $270,000 the first year and about that the next year. And it
would be possible, it sounds like from what you were saying about the
two-year schedule, to do this for a year and almost two before we
spent the money to buy buses.
MR. FETZER: We could utilize some of our old buses in
Collier County. I don't know if that's a decision I can make, but we
are getting 24 new buses in next year, and they're -- they're supposed
to be delivered prior to March of 1997 so we can start our project.
So we're going to have an excess of older buses to run.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You might want to say that again.
You're going to have an excess of --
MR. FETZER: We're going to have an excess of buses that
we can use in Collier County. You know, I -- I don't want to sound
down-hearted, but I can see where you want to do a one- or two-year
commitment. You're not going to get the true picture of the effects
unless you run it longer than that because it takes a while to get the
steamship rolling. We could do a one- or two-year thing, but -- but
you really won't get your riders and the people accustomed to it right
away.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Frankly, I -- I'm -- you would
probably find me willing to take the risk on the four-year program,
but I think that the community will be more comfortable if we go a
little more slowly than that which is why I'm -- I'm looking at
something maybe with one or two years and -- and I think -- My reality
check is that we have to do this, guys, and it's a question of when we
have to do it and if we do it by ourselves from scratch and start up
on our own or if we piggyback on something that's already had a lot of
the headaches, that we could, you know, learn from their mistakes
instead of making them on our own so --
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Constantine.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, first, I want to echo
Commissioner Hancock's sentiments, thanking our two county managers
and the appropriate staffs for trying to work together. In the last
couple of years, we've managed to work together fairly well on a
number of items. And I think you're right; if Collier County wants to
go ahead with the transportation system, it makes the most sense to
piggyback that and to do that together.
I have a number of concerns as to whether or not Collier
County wants to do that. Moneywise is one thing. We are in perhaps
our most burdensome budget year since I've been on the board, since
any of the five have been on the board. We're facing an unusual
picture and a difficult picture this year. So adding more expenses to
that in the next couple of years right off the bat creates some
concern.
Transportation is a money loser everywhere. It is here.
It is all over the country. And even though federal and state
programs pick up a big chunk of that, those are still tax dollars, and
it's still a money loser. So I -- I have a -- kind of a philosophical
concern that when we say,"Well, only a portion of that is local," it's
still all tax dollars in one way or another.
The other is the route logic or the logic of how effective in can
be in Collier County is a little different. You have a downtown Fort
Myers, a center where several hundred or several thousand people come
every day to go to work. You have different centers populated, work or
shopping or whatever, population centers where people travel, and we
have -- we're much more limited in that. We don't have -- Other than
the government center itself maybe, we don't have a place where several
hundred people convene every day or thousands of people convene every
day and so that's -- I think to have logical stops is more awkward in
Collier County. And, frankly, as I look at the route structure, the
Golden Gate route structure is wonderful, but much of it doesn't get
into residential areas. So you're going to have to find a way to get
to that main road anyway.
But also we have a private vendor who is starting a bus
service right now that virtually mirrors a big chunk of these routes,
and it doesn't make a whole lot of sense for us to be spending tax
dollars if there's going to be a bus service privately run and won't
cost the taxpayer a penny to run almost the same route. Obviously
that wouldn't connect and go up to Lee or the university, but I'm not
real excited about the idea of duplicating an existing service that
doesn't cost the taxpayer anything.
And I do worry a little when we say it's a test case.
That's obviously how we want to do it, but a four-year commitment with
a purchase of a million or a million three, whatever the number was,
in buses is a pretty expensive task, and when you hire on eight
personnel, I think you take some responsibility for those people and
have some level of expectation for those people. And so I think if
you buy six buses and hire eight people and start this, it's going to
be awfully hard to back off. So when we use the phrase "test case," I
think once it's started it's going to be extremely hard to turn around
and say, "Well, we've decided to back out of it," a year from now or
four years from now or any time frame.
There are some others. And, one, you answered the question on
road congestion of the buses stopping. The major routes that are shown
on the proposed schedule for us obviously are the most traveled, the
most congested roads we have but -- Pine Ridge, it's six lanes, but it
is very, very congested, and I do have a -- what I think is a
legitimate concern. If you stop traffic in one lane on that, you
do impact and lower the level of service on that road considerably.
Much of 41 where this is, is only four lanes. Some of it is six
lanes, but it's the same thing. You've got heavy, heavy traffic, and
I don't know if I can -- Maybe you can help me with this one, but I
don't know if I'm completely comfortable with the idea that stopping
off one of those lanes every few hundred yards or every mile, or
whatever, isn't going to have an impact. I just -- It's pretty darn
crowded in season now. If you cut off one of those lanes -- MR. FETZER: Believe me, in Fort Myers we -- we
appreciate those concerns. We have the same problem. You're talking
-- Again, you're talking one bus an hour. So the traffic bite has
more affect on the traffic than the bus.
And as far as -- I'd like to address the private operator. I'm
not sure what -- What fares does he plan on charging or any of that?
Do you know?
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah. Actually, I'll pass it on to
you. I have a whole little packet from him here.
MR. FETZER: It depends on what you're going for. Are you going
for a service that's for the commuter or the daily shopper, or is it,
you know, more -- I'm sure that the fares are going to be rather high
on the private end so -- they would have to be to make up for the
service, and it depends on what Collier County is after. If Collier
County would like service to the university or to persons that
shouldn't be driving anymore or can't drive, mass transit would be the
way to go.
Your concerns about the traffic, to give you an idea '-
I'm sure everybody in this room has been on Fort Myers Beach, a
two-lane road. We operate a trolley service down there and -- yeah,
we do stop traffic down there, but we're viewed as a very positive
addition down there. They see that there's 70 or 80 people on that
bus, and that's 70 or 80 cars off the road.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: As long as you've got recirc on the air
conditioner.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: We're not going to resolve all this today,
Jim.
MR. FETZER: Okay.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: We have two more comments, Commissioner
Hancock, then Commissioner Manning, and then we've got to move on.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. That -- That's one thing I
-- I was actually going to try and do is, whether we decide to move
ahead or not, in no way is it an indictment of Lee Tran. You know,
you've got a program that works well in Lee County. I think you have
every reason to be proud of how it operates in Lee County, and not
every community in the United States has mass transit, and there's a
reason for that. Each community has to decide for itself whether or
not it's in its best interest, and it sometimes comes down to dollars,
and sometimes it comes down to character of the community.
Our county manager expressed an interest, and Lee County
has responded very, very well, and we are very grateful for it. I
think if there is an opportunity out there to step in to mass transit,
this is probably the best one available. And whether we choose to do
that or not, in no way is it a reflection on what we have received or
the information or the work that Mr. Stilwell has put forth because I
think all of that deserves an A-plus, and I appreciate the effort.
So we have a decision to make as a board, and I didn't want to let
this go without saying that what you have presented us I am very
grateful for, and thank you for the information, and I'm sure we're
going to be making a decision in the near future and just wanted to
thank you all for your cooperation and help. MR. FETZER: Thank you, sir.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Manning and then we'll move
on.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: I have just a couple of quick points. Do
you have a mass transit element in the camp plan? So you eventually
will have to develop a mass transit system?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's very weak.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It's a pretty weak element.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: That's -- That's, again, your decision.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: We hedged that one in the past pretty well,
John.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: The only thing I wanted to say was if you
look at this from the perspective of the business side, to give you a
flavor of -- of what it would -- what would the effect be on Collier
County as a demonstration project, you won't find any cheaper way to
go. I think you understand that. And if I were to go back in the
history books and look up what the start-up costs were when we were in
your situation from a population stand -- point of view and what we
have spent and subsidized, you're right. It's not -- it's not even a
break-even situation. If it was a break-even situation, we would be
very happy campers on this side of the board. But you will see an
increasing population in Collier County having to rely on mass transit
in some form, and so I would suggest that you think long and hard about
it because even if you -- if you took the boundaries and reduce those
boundaries down a little bit or -- or made them conform to what would
give you a flavor without the extensive map that's been before you
today, I think that would be something that you should take a look at.
But, you know, we're willing to work with you, and I know that it's
your decision, but it could -- could develop into a very good
partnership down the road. So let us know by next week, will you?
MR. FETZER: Can I have one more comment, and Ran Lasseter would
like to stand up and clarify some information on service development.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Make -- We've got to move on, Jim --
MR. FETZER: Oh, okay.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: -- so make it quick. Go ahead.
MR. FETZER: I compared densities in certain census tracts within
Lee County and within Collier County, and I wanted to show you some
similarities. There's some of our better bus routes, and then there's
some census tracts that would be served by Collier County bus routes,
and I'll pass this around and show you some of the similarities.
COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: While that -- While they're transitioning,
I just wanted to ask Mr. Dotrill if he would get the numbers to all of
us about the survey results. And we're talking about what does our
community want. In that annual survey every year, they have said we
want the mass transit. So if you could make that available.
MR. DORRILL: We -- We can. And, Mr. Chairman, if I could digress
for just a half a second, if not today, at least from our
commissioners' perspective, we need to make a decision, I would
think, within 30 days because at this point we have -- have suspended
any further work unless you authorize us to go forward.
COHMISSIONER MANNING: June 1 is the cut-off date.
MR. DORRILL: That's my understanding.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we can be more solid, Mr. Dorrill,
in just asking to place us on the first available agenda for
discussion. I don't think there's a lot of information to -- yet
received that we haven't got. So I think it's -- it's right for
discussion as soon as possible.
MR. DORRILL: A final -- A final thought I have, Mr. Chairman, is
I -- I can tell you, from a staff perspective, in 16 years I have never
been more impressed with the Lee County department and for no other
reason than the entire administration of Lee Tran is here today sitting
in two chairs in addition to Mr. --
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: We like that.
MR. DORRILL: That's right. I -- I'd like for these two folks
just to stand up and tell you who they are because I'm -- I'm telling
you, these people really -- really do run a fine department. I just
couldn't help but be any more impressed with them over the last three
months.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Come on. Don't be shy.
MR. LEFFERT: Chris Leffert, and I do the grants coordination.
MS. HONTAZ: Susan Hontaz. I'm a senior fiscal officer.
MR. DORRILL: Thank you. I appreciate the opportunity just to
recognize you. You did a fine job.
MR. LASSETER: Mr. Chairman, just a quick comment. I'm Ron
Lasseter from DOT. On the service development, just to clarify
something, it is a three-year maximum program that we can provide
funding. At the beginning of the project, we would set milestones for
each of the three years. If we meet the milestones the first year,
we're just asking for commitment to go into the second year. And the
same thing the second year. If we met the terms, then we go to the
third year. If at the first year we do not meet the milestone, then
it would be a joint decision to terminate the project or to continue
anyway. So I just wanted to clarify that.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Thank you very much. I had a request to
combine item two and item five from Chip Herriam from South Florida
Water Management District. We'll begin with these two items. I just
want to -- While they're leaving, just one reminder. We do have to be
out of the hall by four o'clock. So that's why I'm trying to push this
meeting.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Not a problem.
MR. HERRIAM: Okay. I'm Chip Herriam with South Florida Water
Management District, and today I want to talk about a couple of things.
One of the issues I want to bring up is the -- issue number five on
your agenda today, the channelization of water to the south. What I'd
like to do is give you a little perspective of what we did this summer,
what happened this summer, and where we are to date with the
recommendations that have somewhat grown their own entity out there.
First off, we're all very well aware that we had a real wet summer
this past summer, around 65 inches of rainfall between June and
November. With that said, during the latter part of the summer,
going into the fall, a leadership group from the Bonita Chamber came
and met with the district in West Palm Beach to discuss some of their
concerns and issues. Some of the concerns they raised were how we
were going to deal with this today and in the future when further
storms move into this region. One of the discussions we had was that
we would work with the local community or local leadership group to
look at some ideas and establish a charrette, if you will, or a
planning workshop to try and get our arms around what happened and
what the issues were. After we committed to that, we also committed
to two workshop sessions. One was in November, and the other was in
January. Well, before we got to November, Hurricane Opal provided us
with an extra 7 inches of rainfall and a federal disaster. What we
then did was took advantage of a consultant that was on the ground
doing some reconnaissance for Lee County, expanded that scope and had
them take a much more detailed look. Not only did we ask them to do
that for a limited amount of money, but we also asked for all the
modeling and everything to be done in six weeks. All that was
completed, and a series of recommendations came forward. That's what
they are. They're recommendations at this point.
The recommendations include one of the items we just recently
completed which was snagging and cleaning the Imperial River. We also
included right-sizing, for some of the changes in development that have
occurred, a few culverts out there. Others identified some
constrictions, bridge openings that were not near wide enough. A good
example was the 1-75 opening was 300 feet. The next opening, 1,000
feet to the west, then it's 43 feet. Three hundred doesn't pass water
through 43 very well. The next opening to the west is 93 feet.
one of the recommendations was to take the first 43-foot opening, make
it wider. Again, it's a recommendation. Some of those kind of fall
into common sense, how you -- how you do these things.
Then comes our charge of how we balance this. We have to balance
the adverse impacts on -- from the flood events, the adverse impacts it
could cause -- be caused on the environment and other downstream
landowners. So that's pretty much where we are at this point.
We filed an application with FEHA using the information
that was gathered during the storm event. The application lists all
the recommendations that were -- that would fit within a window that
we thought could successfully be accepted by the State Division of
Emergency Management and by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
With that said, one of the ideas came up from what was
possibly historical. If you took the development out that's out there
today, when rainfall sat in the center portion -- the south -- central
portion of North Naples and southern Lee County, water most likely
traversed south, in a southerly to southwesterly direction very
slowly. The Cocohatchee, the Imperial, Halfway Creek, all those
smaller tributaries were pretty much areas where when the water staged
up, it leaked out to the west. Some of it still moved its way,
depending on where the storms were and the storage was, even further
to the east.
What happens today is, as the water tries to move its
way back into the historical direction, it comes across several
embankments, developments and other items that are kind of in its way,
and it tries to makes its way out to the Imperial River. What doesn't
make its way out to the Imperial River will back up and then come back
into the Cocohatchee.
So what we then did was we took a look at some of the history and
some of the engineering we had from the basin. We took care of the new
models we had, and we started looking at where do we go from here. The
first simple steps were some of the initial recommendations which are
the ones I discussed, snagging and cleaning, culvert replacement,
looking at some other regulatory issues where we have some water that
needs to be altered somewhat by new permits coming in. Those we did
call in the developers that are currently under application or were
just finished application, ready to go for permit, and we asked them to
-- to alter their permit product some so that we could get more water
moving in a different direction. To date they've all been very
responsive.
What we were looking at in the recommendations were -- and this is
the scope we gave the consultant, was -- do nothing was one extreme,
and then come up with the most engineered solution you can come up
again with in six weeks, and that was the other extreme. Where it's
actually going to fall out in all those is -- is going to come with
time, planning, and engineering to make sure, water being dynamic, that
we don't just push it -- stop it one place and push it on somewhere
else. So that's what the next step is, and that's the step we're
walking into now, is, as we implement A, B, and C, what happens
elsewhere. And from that point on, I'd just like to open it up for
questions. I know you have some concerns.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Questions by Commissioners?
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Yes, Mr. Chairman.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Yes. Commissioner Judah.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Chip, you've probably seen that article in
Naples Daily News. I've received a lot of comments from constituents
regarding the difference with the Big Cypress Basin revenue that's used
solely in Collier County versus the tax dollars that Lee County sends
to South Florida Water Management District. Let me preface, first of
all, by saying, I, for one, am very appreciative of what the district
has done for Lee County in particular and the region in general with
regards to helping manage water supplies and protecting us from a lot
of flooding problems, but I still think, though, it's worthwhile to
comment today publicly regarding some of the figures that were
presented in the Naples Daily News editorial. For instance, Lee County
being taxed 80 million since 1990, receiving 8.7 million in benefits
versus Collier's Big Cypress Basin investing 7.3 million in Collier
County.
MR. MERRIAM: I'm going to answer it kind of two ways if I could,
Commissioner. One is I'm going to start some of the process, and Mike
Slayton, our deputy executive director is here, and he was the past
administrator for the Big Cypress Basin, and he can pick up some of the
other pieces for me.
When we were in discussion with the reporter on that article -- we
have a problem because we are a regional entity that covers 16
counties. When you pay taxes in to us, we do not measure the benefit
on a percent contributed by county to -- in a basis back. The projects
that we are in charge of at this point include, as you're well aware,
the Kissimmee River, Lake Okeechobee, Caloosahatchee, St. Lucie, the
Everglades, Florida Bay, on and on and on. That's the -- That's the
big picture.
Also, when we do water supply plans and when we implement
projects, there may be a set that we have that we can account for that
was directly -- On the lower west coast, I think the number in there
was maybe $900,000. That did not account for all the east coast
personnel that was also involved in the modeling, working on that
project as well as the lower east coast water supply plan, on the upper
chains water supply plan. We don't have the -- We have not accounted
that way. It's the district, 16 counties. We account for the region
as a whole.
Now, to separate and just by a template over on one county is
somewhat misleading, and if Mike can help there some, I would
appreciate that.
MR. SLAYTON: Good afternoon. That same differential --
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Could you state your name for the record?
MR. SLAYTON: Mike Slayton, deputy executive director of South
Florida Water Management.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Thank you.
MR. SLAYTON: That same taxing issue applies directly with Dade,
Broward, and Palm Beach County where the district receives
approximately one-third or two-thirds of its -- of its ad valorem
revenue from. Our -- Our taxes are used throughout the system, and
those are applied wherever the needs are in the system, from the head
waters in the Kissimmee down through the lake. There are differences
in values paid and values received. Our view on the -- on that issue
is the water is moving down throughout the system, and whether the
taxes are taken from within Lee County and applied elsewhere in the
basin, the water flows down through the system for the county's
benefit as well and the same issue down in, you know, Dade and Broward
counties.
COMHISSIONER JUDAH: Mike, I think it's all well and good that Lee
County along with many of the other counties contribute on a regional
basis to helping restore the Everglades and the Kissimmee Basin, but I
think there's a nattower scope of thought that perhaps more monies that
are generated in Lee County for these regional efforts perhaps could be
redirected back for local needs within Lee County, much of what's being
done with the Big Cypress Basin. I guess that leads off into a
discussion as to whether or not it's fruitful to consider expansion of
the Big Cypress Basin boundaries, where that plays in with the effects
of the South Florida Water Management District's efforts to take a
regional approach to managing water supplies.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: You want to address Commissioner Judah's
comment?
MR. MERRIAM: Mr. Hammond wanted to address it, I think, because
he was coming back.
MR. HAMMOND: I particularly want to address that one.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Bill, would you state your name for the
record?
MR. HAMMOND: Yeah. Bill Hammond. I'm a member of the governing
board of South Florida Water Management District. There's a political
answer to that too, Ray, and I think as a governing board member, I've
witnessed -- and I think perhaps in some ways, the Big Cypress Basin
has gotten more support from the district at large than -- than Lee
County may have. If you look at its political influence over the
years, three of our past chairpersons have come from major interests
from the Big Cypress Basin area, and -- and it's just like me and Lee
County. I'm under Commissioner St. Cerny's district, but I don't get
the same service as some other people in other districts in Lee County
get if I look at a dollar paid for a dollar value in return.
What I am impressed with right now is that there are some big
things in the wind in my view as we look at Southwest Florida. We're
seeing some proposals that return us back to kind of Neander --
Neanderthal drainage plans of -- you know, of what happened on the east
coast that are not solutions that we're paying hundreds of millions of
dollars now to try and rectify. And what Chip has proposed is a range
of spectrum of possible solutions that look at not just drainage but
water supply, surface water management, and restoration of systems that
are out there right now, in many cases that have been overdrained.
Some of the issues in the basin affect drainage to the north where we
have a reduced flow in -- in -- in the Estero River system and some of
the tributary streams at the north end of that -- that large complex
watershed system, and so there -- there's an obvious no quick-fix
answer situation to this problem. It's complex. We don't have our
homework fully done on trying to solve this problem.
In regard to emphasis, the regional service center here
in Fort Myers that serves Southwest Florida is the showpiece and the
leading regional service center for South Florida Water Management
District. No other region of South Florida has the service center
capacity that Chip has set up here in Southwest Florida. We are
seeing the district provide more services. We expect more staff
members that are permanent professionals to be staffed over here next
year serving the Southwest Florida region. So in addition to the
Caloosahatchee studies that are going on that have been long term in
coming, a lot of attention now is being focused over to the west coast
of Florida in the South Florida Water Management District, and part of
this has been the wake-up call to -- that -- that's come from the
quarry study information. The Caloosahatchee River receives more
water coming out of Lake Okeechobee, then basically flows either
directly through the Everglades system, through the agricultural area,
or out at the St. Lucie area. We have some evidence that's showing
that -- that the Big Cypress Basin may be one of the major contributors
to the nutrient loading of -- of Florida Bay which could have big
implications for the future of restoration and maintenance of that Big
Cypress Basin canal system if -- if it has to be class three water
standards and if those waters are going to be suitable for ASR at some
time in the future without having to have major cleanups
associated with them.
So there's a lot of complex things we're looking at here in
Southwest Florida, and, you know, Valetie Boyd is our chairperson.
She's been the chairperson of the Big Cypress Basin Board, and when
Valetie speaks, things have been happening. I think the basin has
enjoyed that influence, the same with Jim Garner and Stanley Holes'
influence. But I think right now I think the whole basin -- when I
say "the whole basin," I'm thinking of everything from Okeechobee down
the Caloosahatchee system through the Big Cypress and all of Collier
County is part of that Everglades system, and the people in the Big
Cypress Basin are not paying the tenth of a mill Everglades
restoration millage. They were exempted from that. But the rest of
South Florida is. And Lee County is paying it because we're a major
connection to the -- to that system, as is Collier County.
So it's not a simple answer, and it's not a
dollar-for-dollar correlation. What I'd suggest to you, if you look
at it, the ratio of what's happening is increasing rapidly in the last
three years of what's being sent to Southwest Florida from those --
you know, that -- that five million voters over on the east coast.
I'd rather have them helping us share their money, bringing that money
this way than us trying to deal with all of our problems with our one
million people over on this side of the state. And I think with the
federal aid and so on starting to move into the Everglades
restoration, we're going to see more of the ad valorem taxes that have
had to be spent on Everglades restoration moving back to serve basic
water needs over here in Southwest Florida. So that -- that's --
that's where I'm coming from, Ray.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Bill -- and there's no question the
regional approach pays big dividends, and I -- I really have been very
thankful of the district's partnership with the CREW programs and
helping acquire the environmentally sensitive lands to assist us with
functional aspects of water storage during rainfall events and the
aquifer recharge and filtration of the runoff before it hits our
receiving water bodies like Estero Bay and certainly your efforts with
our surface water management plan and all the consulting work that was
done, the payment -- the funding for the consulting work that was
needed to establish those programs, but I still get hit, you know, by
individuals that get flooded in their own back yard saying that, you
know, we don't have the infrastructure in place to -- to deal with the
combination of -- of flooding events such as Collier County because of
the Big Cypress Basin's funding source to maintain those canals.
MR. MERRIAM: I -- I think -- If I could, Commissioner,
it's not apples and apples, and I think that the canal system in
Collier County was created for a purpose at a period of time which was
much different. Part of the earlier conversations and discussions
that we had in 1990, in that early period there was along the lines of
how do we take advantage of flowways in Lee County, how do we take
care of what -- the assets Lee County has instead of the traditional
ditch, dike, and dig type mentality. When we looked at that, that was
the plan which came out of the surface water master plan, and that's
the direction, you know, we all as a team and partners were -- were
moving towards, and at that time we were your committed partner to do
that. What's wrong is to -- is to believe that canals and ditches or
smaller ditches, improvements, that kind of infrastructure is really
going to make it that much better. It's -- you know, you -- there's a
fine line, and we tend to human nature-wise build up or exceed the
level of service we established. And you look at Cape Coral and all
the canals they have, they -- they flood when it rains in the summer.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Chip --
MR. MERRIAM: You look at the massive canals on the east
coast, it floods when it rains --
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: I'm not disputing what you're
saying. In fact, I agree that -- that the -- the contemporary
approach -- the modern-day approach is a much superior approach than
-- than years past with all the ditching and diking and
channelization. The preservation of natural flowways, the proper
disbursal of surface water runoff is the way to proceed, and I'm glad
we're taking that approach. But with regards to the primary canals
and ditches that already exist, not any new canals and ditches but
what already exists, we're not set up in Lee County to properly
maintain those ditches and canals, and I guess the presumption of the
folks in Lee County is we ought to be getting more funding from the
district to maintain what we do have.
MR. HAMMOND: Commissioner, you know, the district
doesn't take care of those -- those local -- local -- just as D --
FDOT doesn't take care of your local roads. Lee County surface water
management plan and Lee County comprehensive plan have to take care of
-- of those secondary and tertiary drainage systems. As we found out
in the flooding systems here, we have serious problems with
maintenance and operation of -- of -- of those things with all the
budget cuts that have been going on at the county level as well as the
water management district level, and so we have to prioritize and work
better together than we have up to now, and that's why the district is
looking at trying to put additional planners and engineers over here
to work with your staff to make sure that those things are coordinated
and planned. As Archie Grant can tell you from the work he did, there
needs to be updated studies accomplished on subcontracts to look at
how planning and building in the last four or five years has affected
that surface water management plan which has been, you know, changed
drastically by what's happened. So, you know, a considered effort in
the next few years is going to bring that plan up to date, but it's
going to take a cooperative effort of local governments working with
the regional government to make that happen.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Do you have one last comment?
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: One last one. Bill, while you're
still there, if I could, because this 951 concept has come up and --
and I have serious support investigating that concept and had some
wonderful opportunities from the standpoint of improving
transportation corridors is that -- 951 to Treeline, transportation
corridor improvements, the ability to use it as a planning tool
determining what areas should be, you know, less density versus the
urban core areas and certainly from the water management standpoint,
but what I don't want to get caught in is the inappropriate design
deficiencies of -- of years past with back-pumping, interceptor
swales. Can you perhaps speak on the possibility of pursuing that
joint Collier/Lee project --
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Before we do that, can I get back
to the prior conversation?
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Sure. Can you hold that thought?
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Bill, you -- you said there was a
political solution to this, and you never gave the answer. What is
it?
MR. HAMMOND: Well, I think it's the will to go ahead
and focus politically and cooperatively.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Okay. Let me ask you this
question. Would there be anybody, including my colleagues in Collier
County, that would have any problem if there was legislation provided
that gets a portion of Lee County -- obviously at least the south
portion of Lee County and the boundaries, of which haven't been
decided yet, into the basin?
MR. HAMMOND: I -- I --
COMMISSIONER MANNING: You know, if -- if you have the
political will to do something, okay, then that would be a cooperative
effort that would not take anything away from Collier County, okay,
but would assist us in Lee County to a great extent from a financial
perspective.
Okay. Now, I can tell you -- and I didn't want to
announce this -- that there is legislation that one state
representative and I have discussed for the last two months, and he is
doing the research now to have possible legislation trailed onto other
water policy bills that at least requests interest by portions of Lee
County into the basin, and I'm just putting it on the line now.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm not prepared to make a
commitment right now, but I'm willing to explore it --
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Okay. That's all we're doing.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- to see if there's
feasibility.
COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: My comment about that is the fear
-- if it happened the way you just described it without Collier
County losing anything -- but I fear that the tax value of the
property that we're talking about adding in --
COHMISSIONER MANNING: That's the thing that we want to
avoid, and I didn't want to announce that. You know, I wanted to try
to -- Now, wait a minute. I wanted to try to deal with you folks on a
one-on-one basis and let you know what's going on in that regard. It
hasn't even been filed yet as trailers on those water policy bills.
The thing that I asked to have happen is that Collier County's
interest remain the same as they are now and no deviation whatsoever,
and so that might be the problem that we're having getting the thing
constructed. But if you want a political solution to this thing,
Bill, at least that's a start, maybe an unpopular one in some areas of
the region, but we need the help here in Lee County and especially in
Commissioner Judah's district.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: If I may, Doug.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Yes, Commissioner Hancock.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: This has been a wonderful
lovefest between us and South Florida today. That's about to end.
COHMISSIONER MANNING: Because -- Tim, let me just --
Mr. Chairman, if I may -- CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Well --
COHMISSIONER MANNING: I didn't get an answer. Go
ahead.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: The reason I say that is -- let's
face it. While we're restoring the Everglades, Ray's got people waist
deep in water.
COHMISSIONER MANNING: Thank you.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: And the fact that you are -- are
grouped into an entire section that is funded out of one main office
and you're not getting your due when people's homes are being
destroyed, I don't know if I'd be as polite as you were today, Ray.
Now, the Big Cypress Basin Board cash cow isn't the
answer, and as you just saw, there's not going to be a lot of support
for us wanting taxes that we currently can maintain in the Big Cypress
Basin Board going elsewhere. So your solution of not affecting an
existing operation but adding onto it I think is a logical step, and
that's something that I think we would all be willing to work with you
about, but I'm just surprised at how calm and polite you guys are
because I don't know that I would feel the same way, and I commend you
for your patience.
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: I believe in long, enduring
partnerships.
COHMISSIONER COY: We're -- We're a great group of guys.
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: Well, you can't discount the 12
million that -- that the district has helped bring to the land
acquisition on the CREW program and their phenomenal help with
assisting with the surface water management master plan, but clearly
this is an alternative we ought to be exploring to be sure we get our
fair share. But I know, Bill, that you've got to take that regional
approach.
MR. HAMMOND: Well, I -- I also think it's very
important that the people who would be the taxpayers within this basin
would be the ones that decide that, and that's the critical piece,
that the voters that are going to be taxed be the ones that decide
that and be well informed about what liabilities are there as well as
what potential assets might be derived from such an arrangement
because I think there's something on the liability side that hasn't
been looked at very carefully at this point.
And, John, I personally have an open mind at this point.
I'm not convinced that it be the best interest of the people of Bonita
Springs, but I have a very open mind about that.
COHMISSIONER MANNING: I've heard that about you, Bill.
MR. HAMMOND: Yes. I want to see the facts first, John,
before I jump on the political bandwagon.
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: One last point though. If ever
such a proposal were to come to light, I'm just wondering from a
hydrological standpoint, do you just include those lands south of the
Caloosahatchee River, or do you incorporate all of Lee County?
MR. HAMMOND: You know, there are other things -- I just
-- We have a high probability of things that might happen, even the
purchase of the Okaloacoochee slough system and 12-mile slough between
now and next summer. Those are major areas in Hendry County that
affect drainage in Lee County and particularly in Collier County and
both through the Lake Trafford system and south of the Big Cypress
Swamp. You know, we're connected beyond these three county lines in
ways that if you start looking at this hydrology, it carries you
through Southwest Florida, and you are tied to the Everglades whether
you like to be tied to it or not, politically and hydrologically and
economically. Collier County derives a great deal of benefit from
being part of the Everglades system.
COHMISSIONER MANNING: By the way, it didn't flood in
Cape Coral last year.
COHMISSIONER COY: Yeah. I was going to -- I was going
to say that it did not.
MR. HAMMOND: But we have spent more money from the
South Florida Water Management District working with Cape Coral water
supply problems and surface water management probably than any other
part of the Southwest Florida area, and they've gone from being our
worst case scenario to now being a model for water supply. They're
the only really community that has a pretty secure future in water
supply because of the work that's been done over the last six or seven
years.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Can we get back to the 951
issue? Because we're going to have to keep rolling on along here.
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Bill, real quick, if you wouldn't mind commenting on
that because at the last metropolitan planning organization meeting I
-- I did bring that issue up to get FDOT involved and more players
involved, and Dave Loveland with the Lee County DOT indicated that
he'll be incorporating the suggestion of use -- utilizing that
corridor for water management purposes in the consultant study.
Perhaps if you could maybe shed some light on that.
MR. HAMMOND: My -- My big concerns are, you know, again
open minded, that I have not seen many impoundment systems that work
well based on lots of experience in South Florida. So we'd have to
look at the engineering and the biological impacts of that -- that
system on a tremendous capital investment. That issue will not be
just a local issue. It will be a national issue because it infects --
it affects major policy questions on federal laws, and it affects
probably the gem of Southwest Florida's ecotourism market, the
National Audubon Society's Corkscrew Sanctuary system.
The other piece is -- is where do you put that, and the
tendency is to look for the cheapest route we can find right now, and
that's a mistake. If we were going to build that road bed, even if we
had to buy some old subdivisions or current subdivisions to put it
where it makes the most sense to put. We're going to do this once if
we do it. Once in history is the lesson we learned over on the east
coast. So the placement of that system will be a critical decision,
and it will also enter into the economics of feasibility for that --
for that system. So a lot more homework needs to be done than
anything I've seen floating around at this time.
MR. SLAYTON: There's other -- There's other routing
mechanisms that are involved in that further to the east in the
Corkscrew canal system and then further down into -- into south where
those systems interact with the City of Naples and Collier County's
main well field as far as routing water potentially down in those
areas for increased recharge and water supply.
MR. HAMMOND: As far as the road bed and the dike
combination possibilities, you know, we just haven't done enough
homework to make any kind of sensible judgment about that at this
point, in my view.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Thank you. We'll move on. Did
you have a comment?
COMMISSIONER ALBION: Yeah. I was just going to say,
because I'm hearing one of the explanations, and I understand the
regional standpoint, et cetera, and I know that water management
district between the stagnant zone and the Imperial River really --
you know, you've come to the charge here, but I'm hearing now about
951, and I guess the question that's probably out there in most
people's minds is going to be, now, how long is it going to take until
we can start really saying, okay, here's the menu of possible
solutions, this is a reasonable time frame so that we can start
fighting for the dollars that it's going to take, whether it has to do
with FEMA, whether it has to do with the state water management
district, or whether it's done locally. But we have a picture and a
responsibility to paint that picture for our public, and I think
that's the answer to the people who are waste deep in water so -- and
let me also just clarify too that, you know, where Cape Coral may not
have had the flooding problems, let's all remember that east and north
have also in Lee County had flooding problems. So we better become a
lot more expert, for lack of a better term, at how to start handling
these water conditions in the near future or else we are going to be
overwhelmed by them. So that's where I'm particularly concerned. So
I hear the explanations. I'm really looking for time frames so -- and
I really think that that's the obligation that our public is waiting
for.
MR. SLAYTON: The time frame right now that involves the
Bonita Springs area and North Naples is probably a year, 18 months as
far as the planning process goes, and we are looking to extend that
study into the southern Lee County area. Where it -- Where it doesn't
come to grips with is the far northwestern intersection of that area
where it handles the old coastal creeks and tributaries out into
Estero Bay. So we would look for some Lee County planning assistance
and coordination in that effort.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, I need to
apologize. I'm going to have to excuse myself. I've got another
commitment I need to go to.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Well, we need to move on because
we're kind of losing our Collier County commissioners here because
it's not their issue.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Is that why Charlotte's not here
today?
(Commissioner Constantine exited the meeting room.)
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: I -- I think the expansion of
the Big Cypress Basin or the potential for it is very much our issue
also and -- and --
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: But we're getting bogged down
into all Lee County issues here, and I appreciate your -- your
patience with us.
We'll move on to the next item on the agenda which is
road maintenance responsibility/agreement. Lee County -- There we go.
Scott Gilbertson from the Department of Transportation.
MR. GILBERTSON: Thank you for pointing out I'm Scott
Gilbertson, not George Crawford. He didn't get any younger. I'm here
to talk about items three and four real briefly. We have been working
with the Collier staff on the maintenance split in responsibilities,
if you will, for the county lines along the county line border for the
roads we don't have yet.
As you may recall, back in 1989 we had sort of a master
interlocal agreement that deal with road issues. And then subsequent
to that master one, we had two supplements that dealt with Bonita
Beach Road. Specifically one has been adopted to deal with the
planning and design of it, and one is in progress right now to pay for
the construction of it. So we propose to follow up with a subsequent
or a third amendment to deal with the maintenance responsibilities for
not only Bonita Beach Road but also Vanderbilt Lake Drive and Woods
Edge Parkway.
We had proposed on a lane-mile basis to split Bonita
Beach Road going to Lee County and then the other two of Vanderbilt
Drive and Woods Edge Parkway to be Collier County, and that gives a
lane-miles basis of a little bit over 2 miles to Lee County and a tad
under 7 1/2 miles to Collier County which is a little bit of a
discrepancy, but Bonita Beach Road has a couple of bridges and some
other more unique expensive maintenance features there to deal with.
If that's sort of agreeable to both boards, we can pursue it at the
staff level to give a draft agreement and bring it forward at a later
date for the board's consideration.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Questions by either board?
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Commissioner Norris.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: This is strictly addressing
maintenance and not capital improvements; is that correct? MR. GILBERTSON: Correct.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Comments or questions?
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: All for clarification.
MR. GILBERTSON: The other item is a schedule update for
Bonita Beach phase two widening construction. Right now, like I said
just before, the funding agreement is currently being circulated. I
think it's ready to go to the Collier board for their adoption and
followed up by Lee County board for finalization of it. Assuming that
gets done by the end of this month, we would advertise it for bids the
1st of MAy, have a bid opening around the 1st of June, and then start
construction around the first part of July and finish that up in
November of '97. Keeps us impacting just one heavy tourist season
every year, traffic season, and we think it's a realistic schedule.
One little snag is because of the delays on the
temporary construction easements we had expire in December of this
year, we're going back and contacting those property owners for an
extension for those temporary easements. Assuming we get them, we're
in fine shape. If not, we'll have to do some scheduling manipulation
with the contract to work around those difficulties.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Could we ask to hold down the
conversations a little bit in the room? Without a PA system, we're
having a hard time hearing Scott. Go ahead, Scott. Commissioner
Hancock has a question.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. I was under the
understanding that -- and you just more or less confirmed it -- that
the bids were not being sent out until all of the financial agreements
are signed. I think we're -- both counties are good for it, and the
bids have been held up for some time on this. I don't see any reason
to withhold putting it out for bid on these agreements. We know the
agreements are going to be signed at some point in some form. It's a
question of which form, and we're just holding up the project and I
think unduly.
So I would be of the inclination that unless one
attorney's office or the other has a dramatic problem with that,
there's no danger in bidding the project at this point. It takes time
for the bids to be received. In the meantime, the rest of the work
can be hammered out. So why hold that up and -- and let's go ahead
and move ahead.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: We're going to do it, aren't we?
MR. YAEGER: As long as you don't award it. You're not
in the position to award. You can go out -- You can send it out.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. I -- I see --
MR. YAEGER: You can't award it unless you've got the
money.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I see no reason to wait. Let's
go ahead and send the bids out, and then if there's a problem, then we
don't award the bid, but I don't anticipate that happening.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Do you have a problem with that,
Scott?
MR. GILBERTSON: No. We're ready to go. With that
direction, we'll do it. One other related item, Dennis Church is here
with the beautification committee. He wanted to address you real
briefly about beautification possibilities for the project.
MR. CHURCH: My name is Dennis Church. I'm chairman of
the Bonita Chamber of Commerce Beautification Committee, and I'm here
to talk for a second on the Bonita Beach Road project. I understand
from Lee DOT that the project is not expected to include the funds for
the beautification portion of the beach road. I just want to say
that, you know, I think and a lot of people in the community think
that the beautification aspect of our roadways is a part of our
infrastructure. It's part of our visual infrastructure. It's
important to people of Southwest Florida because that's one of the
reasons they come here is because of the aesthetic quality of our
area. Bonita Beach Road has in the past by Lee County -- the parks
that they built, they've done a real good job of landscaping it,
continuing maintenance, and we really appreciate that work. This last
phase it appears that if there's not enough funds, that they're going
to cut out the landscaped portion of that part of the project, and it
will just be grass medians.
Collier County in the past has a real good record for
streetscape projects, supporting that, and they're continuing to do
that. It's in their EAR to support streetscape guidelines. And since
this is a joint Collier/Lee County project, I wanted to address both
of you here and ask that when the time comes and you get all the bids
in and the dollars are stacked up, that you support the landscape
portion of that project. It's a small portion of a $9 million
project, but it's the one that's most visible to all of our residents
and all of our people that come here to visit our area. I'm just
asking you to consider that, you know, the asphalt improves the
traffic, but without the landscaping that we've done so far, it's
going to have a very different visual quality and -- you know, this
has the support of a lot of people in our community. Floyd Lucky, a
local businessman, has significant funds invested to actually pay for
part of the landscaping. He's put about $10,000 in escrow to help
fund that. There's a lot of organizations that would like to support
this, and I just wanted to take a minute here of your time and ask you
to consider that when the bids come in that you can help make sure
that the funds are there for that portion of the project.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Thank you. Commissioner Albion.
COHMISSIONER ALBION: Yeah. Who is going to operate and
maintain that -- those aesthetic upgrades?
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: That would be item number three,
John.
COHMISSIONER ALBION: So --
MR. CHURCH: Yeah. I think it would be Lee DOT as they
do on Bonita Beach Road right now.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I -- I think it's something we
can work on, and I don't know if Lee County has done this before but
in Collier we have Naples-scape, and they do the public/private
partnership aspect, so they do things such as Mr. Church has mentioned
where they get businesses along the corridor to contribute to the
installation. And then one of our maintenance -- we have enough
record of median maintenance to know what -- lane-mile what the cost
is. That would be an up-front that we would look at and maybe
incorporate into our responsibility and agreement on who pays what and
how much. I'm -- I'm just saying that number three that item could
include if we're looking at these roadways, if we're going to have a
landscaped median, it would be wise to include it in that.
So I don't think what we're to do in number three would
be the vehicle for it, but you obviously need to see the numbers.
And, Mr. Church, if there's one thing we can help, it's maybe getting
Naples-scape and some folks to talk with the Lee County transportation
people and get some models of how this has been done elsewhere and how
we've done it in Collier and other communities to -- to finalize the
cost.
MR. CHURCH: Okay. I'll contact George and work with
your staffs to help push that along.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we can answer that for
you that way.
COHMISSIONER ALBION: I was going to say, because, you
know, countywide we've been wrestling with that particular issue, that
specific issue because of the operation and maintenance cost, and we
have scaled back on that basis, and it is very important to us that we
maintain what we call a core level of service. So, therefore, what
we're willing to offer to people on Daniels Road is the same as up in
North Fort Myers the same as in Bonita Springs. I will be honest with
you. At least from the early indications of what I'm hearing on this
aspect of it, we may have to get a little bit creative to figure out
how it's going to work without putting ourselves into a bind.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: We have formed various MSTUs to
not only do the capital work but the maintenance on them also, and it
may well be that the businesses and homes along the corridor would
want to do that.
COMMISSIONER ALBION: And that's great. I just want to
make sure the issue is on the table up front. I don't want you
leaving thinking that this is going to be something that we normally
do in our -- our budget because, if anything, we have scaled back off
of it. So if there -- some of these other possibilities are going to
have to be pursued, I think, for us to be able to reach the conclusion
that I think everyone would like to see.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Thank you. Commissioner Judah.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Yeah. The whole reason at the
outset with the design of the widening of Bonita Beach Road that we
incorporated medians was with the idea in mind that we were going to
landscape, that it wasn't just going to be, you know, a suicide lane
like we have on some of the other roads in the county. And with that
in mind, there was certainly interest as demonstrated by a number of
folks in the private sector, such as Floyd Lucky who was just
mentioned, who really wants to make a commitment in contributing
material and -- and making sure that we have an aesthetically pleasing
corridor to the beach. We certainly want to join in partnership with
Collier County. And I'm curious; do y'all vol -- have a set of
voluntary or involuntary MSTUs to make sure you get sufficient funds
for the maintenance of --
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: It requires 50 percent of the
property owners along the corridor, and if we get -- get 50 percent,
those who don't want, that's too bad.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Typically we generally move ahead
at two-thirds or more. I mean, you -- you either have support or you
don't. If it's right at 50 percent, you probably --
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: It gets a little hairy but --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: But, yeah, it's a taxing district
that is not voluntary. Once it's established, all -- all the
properties participate.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: I mean, I'm just amazed, and I'm
pleased to see that you have the business community within Collier
County willing to, you know, get involved with a taxing district such
as that nature to pay for the maintenance of the roadside landscaping.
We -- In Bonita Springs particularly the business community has gotten
really involved in helping out with -- with the landscaping we see
along Bonita Beach Road, and we certainly would like to extend it all
the way to the beach.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Ray, let's you and I get together
and -- and talk about that and work with Mr. Church. I think --
Because our districts abut in that area --
COMHISSIONER JUDAH: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think that with a little effort
we can bring those businesses together.
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: Tremendous.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Good idea. Thank you, Tim.
Further comments or questions?
Thank you, Scott.
We'll go on to the last item on the agenda which is item
number six, regional water authority. Commissioner Judah.
COHHISSIONER JUDAH: Mr. Chairman, I'll be quick. This
was a request of, I believe, the Bonita Springs Chamber of Commerce.
We have Archie Grant here, a professional engineer of Johnson
Engineering and also -- I don't know if Bob Hardy is here or not of
natural -- there he is -- with -- he is a natural resource engineer.
And before I ask those two gentlemen to step forward, real quickly,
the regional water supply authority was originally set up that
incorporated the municipalities and Lee County to come up with a way
in which to provide for bulk supply of raw water. We have since
changed that mission to basically be a planning and coordinating
agency with the private utilities to manage our water supplies,
protect our well fields, facilitate permitting, and help with overall
again management of our surface water. So with that, if Archie or Bob
could step forward and perhaps give a briefing on where we are now,
and if there's any questions.
MR. GRANT: Thank you. Archie Grant. Very brief -- I
know that's the most important when you're last on the agenda. Ray,
you covered most of it, and we have some handouts. In 1990 Lee County
regional water supply authority began operations. Its mission at that
time was to develop a regional water master plan. That's been done.
Among its other missions, well field protection program. That's been
accomplished. The majority of the funding came from, I believe, the
water management district.
Master plan development, it was a two-year effort. It
produced a document that was the first countywide comprehensive water
supply plan that prepared the planning for the year 2030. Among the
benefits of the plan, it shows the benefits of the economy of scale.
It allows for interconnects between utilities, plan those on emergency
basis, and I think some of those are already under way, and they would
have probably been accomplished between the utilities, but this
somewhat expedited that.
Other projects, they have an ASR project right now in
Lee County, Corkscrew well field. This is a potential as far as
pulling the water, putting it down, bringing it back. I wish I could
say that we could put enough down to relieve the flooding problem, but
you're talking about different quantities, but that's something that
we certainly ought to look at. Of course, we have the resource out of
place, too much water in the summer, not enough in the winter. So we
ought to try to capitalize on that.
Again, I said I'd be brief. Bob has copies of pretty
much an outline of the work that's been accomplished to date. He also
has a copy of the new mission statement which Mr. Hotstetler will
certainly furnish you. If there's no questions, that covers it.
Thank you.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Questions?
MR. GRANT: We'll have these up front.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Great. Thank you. The last
item on the agenda is commissioner items. Anything from any
commissioners to be brought to the board?
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: I have one.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: The two boards? Yes,
Commissioner Judah.
COHMISSIONER JUDAH: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. You all
are aware, of course, there's a tax equity issue and another long and
hard struggle with the legislature. Evidently the -- the most recent
compromise is Willy Logan, the chairman of finance and taxation
committee with the House is already floating an amendment -- a
constitutional amendment to allow each individual county to impl -- a
local option tax equity. I don't know where that's going to go, but I
-- I understand Collier's looking at basically an interim
governmental service fee. Perhaps maybe you -- you could help
enlighten, I know, me and maybe help with our board better understand
how we might consider what you all evidently are proposing to adopt
and -- and perhaps maybe explain how that, indeed, shows a way in
which we can ensure that we're no longer subsidizing new development
but that's not necessarily construed as another impact fee.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Neil probably.
MR. DORRILL: We -- We're pursuing two things in
addition to what we're calling the first-year service fee. We would
charge that as a condition of the issuance of the certificate of
occupancy for both residential, commercial, and industrial property,
and the assumption that we are working on is that we would charge it
on a per-square-foot basis because, otherwise, you're going to be
accused of the subterfuge if you try and assign a value associated
with construction permit value or anything resembling what might
arguably be assessed value and a subterfuge for a partial-year
assessment where we don't have the authority to do that. The only
place where we've ever seen that this has been done in Florida at the
county level is Palm Beach County, and we do have a copy of their
ordinance. There was a management study that applied the reasonable
nexus test that is required as part of that that we have also obtained
from Palm Beach County. I want to say -- I think we told our board it
was done in the early '90s. It was proposed when the public hearing
was defeated as a result of very strong lobby on the part of the
building and development community there, but we are pursuing that.
The board has authorized and adopted that as part of our fiscal policy
that would go into effect on October 1.
I might add we're also pursuing charging utility
franchise fees on regulating utilities as a non-charter county because
we found in seeing the desire on the part of Santa Rosa and Escambia
County to do the same thing for both electricity and telephone, and
it's our intention to also put that into effect on October 1 as part
of the county manager's tentative budget that will be submitted here
in about two months.
COMHISSIONER JUDAH: Let me compliment you on your very
proactive position you're taking. Can we have perhaps copies of the
documents you're referring to with regards to the interim governmental
service fee, I guess? Is that what you call it? MR. DORRILL: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Consider it in the mail, Ray.
COMHISSIONER JUDAH: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Are you going to bring this up in
a commission meeting down the road?
COMMISSIONER JUDAH: And you're going to -- you're going
to -- you're going to support them.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Anything else we've got before
us today?
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: I've got one item.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Yes, Commissioner Matthews.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: It's come to my attention -- and
hopefully Commissioner Norris can help me with it -- but I believe the
last week of the -- of the legislature is going to be vacant now, and
it's normally Collier County's position on that this -- this time, and
Commissioner Constantine who has left won't know until the end of this
week if he can attend to that or not, and I would just see if we could
get a commitment from one of you to pick that up.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: I'll be up there anyway. I will
not be utilizing the apartment, but I will be up there.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: But someone -- someone will be
there?
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Right. Putting the thumb in the
dike so we don't get killed.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: Yeah, because that last week is
a mess '-
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's the one that counts.
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: -- and there's an awful lot of
stuff going on.
COMMISSIONER COY: When is that last week?
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: It finishes May 4.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Well, so they think. They don't
know.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: One piece we're a little
concerned about --
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: The city issue.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: -- is the city issue where the
City of Naples has asked our legislative delegation to pursue bills
that would limit the county's ability of eminent domain regarding
beach access and beach parking within the boundaries of any
incorporated area within Collier County.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Or any county.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Or any county. So if -- if the
bill passes for Collier, guess what? You know, start looking for
other counties to ask for it. Now, granted, the City of Naples is
pretty much built out, and it's not like the county is sitting there
with baited breath to go spend $10 million an acre, you know, to
purchase beach areas. But, again, it would be an issue in which a
small municipality governs the greater good of the county.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: If that bill hasn't been filed,
then it's too late.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It has been.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: No, it hasn't.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's not been?
COMMISSIONER MATTHEWS: We were told that it has been
filed.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We were told it had been.
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Well, the eminent domain
legislation issue is dead up there. I was up there -- when was that?
Last week.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Last week? Okay. The report I
had before that -- I got a report that it was dead. Then I heard it
was back alive again. So, again, we'll verify that, but if it does
breed life --
COMMISSIONER MANNING: Let me know, please, soon.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: If it does breed life, I think it
has greater application in Collier County.
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: Take a bag of wooden stakes and a
hammer with you.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Anything else to come before us
today?
CHAIRPERSON NORRIS: We're adjourned.
CHAIRPERSON ST. CERNY: Seeing nothing, we're adjourned.
There being no further business for the Good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by Order of the Chair at 3:11 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS
CONTROL
JOHN C. NORRIS, CHAIRPERSON
ATTEST:
DWIGHT E. BROCK, CLERK
These minutes approved by the Board on
as presented or as corrected
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT
REPORTING BY: Christine E. Whitfield, RPR