BCC Minutes 01/27/1999 S (LDC Amendments)January 27, 1999
TRANSCRIPT OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE HEARING
Naples, Florida, January 27, 1999
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 5:05 p.m. in SPECIAL SESSION in Building
"F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the
following members present:
CHAIRWOMAN:
Pamela S. Mac'Kie
Barbara B. Berry
John C. Norris
Timothy J. Constantine
James D. Carter
ALSO PRESENT:
Robert Fernandez, County Administrator
David Weigel, County Attorney
Page 1
COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA
Wednesday, January 27, 1999
5:05 p.m.
NOTICE: ALL PERSONS WISHING TO SPEAK ON ANY AGENDA ITEM MUST REGISTER
PRIOR TO SPEAKING. SPEAKERS MUST REGISTER WITH THE COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR
PRIOR TO THE PRESENTATION OF THE AGENDA ITEM TO BE ADDRESSED.
REQUESTS TO ADDRESS THE BOARD ON SUBJECTS WHICH ARE NOT ON THIS AGENDA
MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING WITH EXPLANATION TO THE COUNTY
ADMINISTRATOR AT LEAST 13 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF THE MEETING AND WILL BE
HEARD UNDER "PUBLIC PETITIONS".
ANY PERSON WHO DECIDES TO APPEAL A DECISION OF THIS BOARD WILL NEED A
RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS PERTAINING THERETO, AND THEREFORE MAY NEED TO
ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE, WHICH RECORD
INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED.
ALL REGISTERED PUBLIC SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO FIVE (5) MINUTES UNLESS
PERMISSION FOR ADDITIONAL TIME IS GRANTED BY THE CHAIRMAN.
ASSISTED LISTENING DEVICES FOR THE HEARING IMPAIRED ARE AVAILABLE IN THE
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NUMBER 91-102, AS AMENDED, THE
COLLIER COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, WHICH INCLUDES THE
COMPREHENSIVE ZONING REGULATIONS FOR THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF
COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, BY PROVIDING FOR: SECTION ONE, RECITALS:
SECTION TWO, FINDINGS OF FACT; SECTION THREE, ADOPTION OF AMENDMENTS
TO THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, MORE SPECIFICALLY AMENDING THE
FOLLOWING: ARTICLE 2, ZONING, DIVISION 2.2. ZONING DISTRICTS, PERMITTED
USES, CONDITIONAL USES, DIMENSIONAL STANDARDS, DIVISION 2.3. OFF-STREET
PARKING AND LOADING; DIVISION 2.6. SUPPLEMENTAL DISTRICT REGULATIONS;
DIVISION 2.7. ZONING ADMINISTRATION AND PROCEDURES; DIVISION 2.8.
ARCHITECTURAL AND SITE DESIGN STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES FOR
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS AND PROJECTS; ARTICLE 3, DIVISION 3.2,
SUBDIVISIONS; DIVISION 3.3. SITE DEVELOPMENT PLANS; DIVISION 3.15.
ADEQUATE PUBLIC FACILITIES; ARTICLE 5, DECISION MAKING AND
ADMINISTRATIVE BODIES, DIVISION 5.2, PLANNING COMMISSION, DIVISION 5.13.
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY BOARD; ARTICLE 6 DIVISION 6.3. DEFINITIONS,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE DEFINITIONS OF ZERO LOT LINE HOUSING,
FRONT YARD, AND DUPLEX; SECTION FOUR, CONFLICT AND SEVERABILITY;
SECTION FIVE, INCLUSION IN THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE; AND SECTION SIX,
EFFECTIVE DATE.
3. REPEAL OF ORDINANCE 91'26, AS AMENDED, WHICH ESTABLISHED THE COLLIER
COUNTY ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY TECHNICAL ADVISORY BOARD.
4. ADJOURN.
January 27, 1999
Item #2
ORDINANCE 99-6 AMENDING ORDINANCE 91-102 THE COLLIER COUNTY LAND
DEVELOPMENT CODE - ADOPTED
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Okay, I'm going to call the meeting to
order for Wednesday, January 27, 1999 for the Land Development Code
hearing, and ask that you stand for the pledge of allegiance.
(Pledge of allegiance was recited in unison.)
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Okay, who's going to start us through this
process?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: I'll bet Mr. Nino is.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: And what's the desire of the board? Do we
want to take questions or do you want to go through each item, maybe
just hear from the staff on the items that we asked them to bring
back to us from the first hearing?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: That's what --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: We certainly don't need to do the drill
again, we've already --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I don't think so.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Just the changes.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Yeah, we've been there.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Can you do that for us, Ron?
MR. NINO: Yes, I certainly can.
At your first meeting -- following your first meeting, there
were several adjustments that had to be made to the proposed
amendments. The first one, which didn't appear and doesn't appear in
your -- did not appear in your December 2nd public hearing was to
page 18 of your agenda package. Amendments to the RMF-6 district, we
had inadvertently omitted a requirement that had been in the RMF-6
district provisions for some time, that if eliminated would create a
serious problem with respect to nonconforming lots.
We -- the underlying provisions on page 18 have been in the code
for a number of years, and this amendment would return that provision
to the code, which says that for existing legal loss of record, the
number -- the amount of floor area required for each dwelling unit
would be 6,500 square feet. And by dividing the lot into 6,500, if
the fraction was greater than 1.501, then you were allowed to go to
two dwelling units per acre.
That provision has long-standing in the code, and we found that
there were a number of properties, particularly in the Golden Gate
City area, that were zoned multiple family and that people had bought
them, having been assured by our department that the rounding up
provision to determine density would apply to their property.
So to eliminate that problem, we put that provision back into
the RMF-6 district provisions.
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January 27, 1999
Are there any --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Any "uh", anyone?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Apparently no "uh".
MR. NINO: The second area where a change was reflected, which
is not -- was not in the December 2nd package is on page 23, which is
the variance exceptions for an airport area. We were advised by
legal counsel that we needed some additional verbiage in there. I'd
like to hand that out.
And you'll note that that underscoring, instead of what was in
the December 2nd package, would now read subject to subsection
333.031(C), Florida Statutes, and subject to each interlocal
agreement entered into by the county pursuant to subsection
3330(B)(1) Florida Statutes. We were directed to add that by our
legal counsel.
MS. STUDENT: Mr. Palmer.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Nino?
MR. NINO: Yes.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: My agenda packet appears to be numbered
incorrectly. I'm having a difficult time following along with the
page numbers you're giving. Do we have another agenda packet with
us? Do you have another -- is that an agenda packet there? MR. NINO: In the hallway.
Then you will recall that as a result of -- I wish to get this
into the record. You will recall that at the December 2nd meeting --
this is on page 26 now of the agenda package -- there was a
discussion as to the length of time that one could park a boat or
recreational vehicle in one's driveway, and there was concern that
one would park a boat for six hours and an hour later come back
again.
We added the language within a time period of seven days to
that. So within any seven days, six hours out of every seven days is
the maximum period of time that you could place a recreational
vehicle in front of your house for purposes of cleaning, loading,
unloading, et cetera.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: That's great. I've got a couple of
situations where that will help immensely. Thank you, Mr. Nino.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, I have a question about it. If you
come home at 6:00 on Sunday night in a recreational vehicle and
you've got to unload it, what's going to happen if you don't get it -
- what do you do that night? Where -- how's that -- there's a six-
hour time frame.
MR. NINO: You've got a six-hour time frame. You need to get it
unloaded and you need to move it to the back of your property where
it's supposed to be, or --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: But what if you're taking it to a storage
place and you can't get in there until Monday morning?
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January 27, 1999
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: And you don't want to break all your
irrigation lines by driving it to the backyard.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: But those things happen.
MR. NINO: Michelle Arnold, Director of Code Enforcement, is
here to address those kinds of issues.
MS. ARNOLD: For the record, Michelle Arnold, Code Enforcement
Director.
If you have a situation as Commissioner Berry explained, the
six-hour time frame is being introduced for enforcement purposes. We
would -- it's a lot easier for us to witness a six-hour than a 24-
hour period. So in that situation, if you moved it the following
day, I don't believe there would be a problem.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Okay, because chances are code
enforcement's not going to be outside -- MS. ARNOLD: No.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- your house.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I kind of hope not. If you've got all that
extra time, I've got some signs out on the East Trail I'd like you to
be looking into.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, but unfortunately, the old code
was abused by --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Yes, absolutely.
Okay, Ron, what else?
MR. NINO: I need to get into the record that division --
section 2-8, the architectural section, had quite a number of changes
made to it; however, none of those changes are content driven.
Style, form, punctuation, grammar basically are what drove all of
those changes, and --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: And we've all had the chance to look
through and see those, so I don't think there's any need to go
through and tell us the semicolons, unless somebody cares.
MR. NINO: The next section, for which there were a number of
changes have to do with the amendment abolishing the EAB and EPTAB
and creating an EAC. And I have an additional provision for that.
Essentially the revisions to this ordinance have to do with
making sure that this ordinance is consistent with other ordinances
that deal with how members are appointed, their terms of office, what
happens in the event of a vacancy, and issues of that nature.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: And likewise, I mean, I've looked at all
these, and none of them are substantive. They're all important, but
none of them affect the actual makeup or working of the committee.
And just for the Board's information, I've forwarded this to as
many environmental groups as I could find to ask them for comments,
and I generally got support and indications of -- you know, positive
indications on the new committee with a lot of the proof will be in
the pudding kind of comments. We want to see how it's operated and
we want to see if it really is going to be on par with Development
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January 27, 1999
Services Advisory Committee. But thought you'd want to know that
it's been disseminated that way.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Would this be a good time to talk about
Ms. Filson's problem that --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I think they fixed them, though. That's
what this is.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Okay, so we're all done, Ms. Filson?
Okay.
MS. STUDENT: Madam Chairwoman?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: That would be -- Commissioner Norris, that
would be 274 and 275, the corrections that I had that -- get this
into sync.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, I've been out in the afternoon, so
apparently they got fixed in the afternoon.
MS. FILSON: They did.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Okay, we're okay.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: So we're all right. Ms. Filson is happy.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So we're all happy.
Ms. Student?
MS. STUDENT: Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. For the record,
Marjorie Student, assistant county attorney.
I also need to mention that just before the EAC provisions, as
was requested by the commission, we've also added a definition of
aggrieved or adversely affected party in the 5-2-11 dealing with
appeals from the Planning Commission. So that was Board directed,
and I didn't want to let that go by without -- that that was added
for your direction.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Good.
What else do we have, Mr. Nino?
MR. NINO: We don't have any other areas where changes were made
from the December 2nd review.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So any comments in general by any of the
board members?
COMMISSIONER BERRY: No comments.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Do we have public speakers?
MS. STUDENT: Yes, Madam Chairwoman. Ray Pelletier.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Ray?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Any more? Is that the only one?
MS. STUDENT: That's the only one.
MR. PELLETIER: Hello, commissioners. My name, for the record,
is Ray Pelletier.
I have three things I would like to update you on regarding the
Land Development Code and, more specifically, the Landscape Code.
The first is a legislation which is the first two pages of your
packet. This was a compromise agreement between the landscape
architects and the landscape designers, and you have a copy of that,
of a Florida law.
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January 27, 1999
The legislation passed through several committees and went
through the House and Senate and passed unanimously.
The third page is an article regarding the same, where I'd like
to point out for the record the final paragraph. It says, "Members
of the legislative committees that reviewed this bill felt that the
practice of landscape design did not pose a threat to the health,
safety and welfare to the public and therefore should not become a
regulated profession. The industry is to be responsible for its own
self-regulation, should it so choose."
The fourth page is the actual requirements for the landscape
designer certification. And I'd like to point out that this
certification not only exceeds Florida standards, but also exceeds
the standards that were'in the original bill that the Board supported
in that it has a four-hour exam that's given twice a year.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Are those standards adopted now, or in
place?
MR. PELLETIER: Yes. And the first certification with the exam
will be held -- I think it says in February. February, '99.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Great.
MR. PELLETIER: And the next page is -- there's been some
argument that, you know, we're a self-serving organization, which of
course most organizations are. But we are -- we have taken on board
members that are outside of our actual profession, and the
qualifications actually exceed that of a landscape designer.
There's -- the board that reviews our work consists of five
different people: One is professor of landscape design, the second
person is a professor of horticulture, the third person is a national
certified landscape designer, the fourth person is a Florida
certified landscape contractor. And that person on this review board
is also a landscape architect. And then number five, we always have
a landscape architect.
I wanted to make a note that the current president of our
association is a landscape architect; 10 CU's per year required to
maintain certification, and that's in line with other professionals.
Nurses, I believe, have 10 hours of certification, or 30 hours once
every three years.
So we've taken the necessary steps to bring not only
qualifications, but very high qualifications to our profession, and
would hope that on the final page you would recognize this
certification process and allow us back into the Land Development
Code.
If you have any questions, I'd be happy to answer them for you.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Questions for Mr. Pelletier?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Madam Chair, what action does that take on
our part if they go through this process, they're tested and they are
certified for us to then incorporate them into the code? Is this
apropos at this time, or does it have to go to the next cycle?
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January 27, 1999
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Ron, why don't you -- or maybe the cycle
question is appropriate for the attorney, but tell us a bit about
where we were.
MR. NINO: Of course, if you find what Mr. Pelletier says is
correct, then whether or not that discipline ought to be considered
on a co-equal basis to a registered landscape architect is one that
you need to make. And if you would decide that is the case, then we
would prepare an amendment either in the next cycle or, if it's
possible, to do it in this cycle.
I see Ms. Student nodding her head.
MS. STUDENT: On that question -- this is fraught with legal
problems. And by the time that we would have to get that up to
Tallahassee in 10 days, I don't know that would be sufficient time.
And I think you might want a report from Mr. Weigel or myself on
this, because it has a history to it. And we have not evaluated it
under this new provision, because it was not a part of this cycle.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: If that's the case, I don't mind.
But maybe you can tell me what legal problems it's fraught with,
because it seems amazingly simple to me.
MS. STUDENT: Well, again, we haven't looked at this new
language, Commissioner. However, in the past it was a matter of what
the legislative intent was. And I think this Board, or at least
certain members of the Board, had heard testimony about that
legislative intent.
And we have to be careful, because if we go too far on either
way, we could be subject to lawsuits by one or the other groups. And
that's what we need to be -- in other words, if it's opened up to
landscape designers, and that's beyond the legislative intent, we
could be subject to suit from the landscape architects.
And I mean, we're being asked to render -- I'm being handed out
now some documentation from the House of Representatives. And I
think it's more appropriate from our office's perspective -- and Mr.
Weigel may wish to weigh in here -- but to give us some time to
evaluate this.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And if we need to, we need to. But I
just -- I mean, everybody is pretty familiar with this. We've dealt
with it for a long time, and it seems to me the issues are fairly
simple. This isn't a new letter.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: May 11.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: This --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I asked the question before.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, if we're trying to meet a
certain level, if the intent is to meet a certain level and their
certification process is exceeding that, I don't understand what it
is we're still vague about. I don't know what intent there otherwise
could possibly be other than trying to prohibit people from
practicing a particular business.
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January 27, 1999
MR. PELLETIER: The letter I just handed out, just for the
record, is from the Florida House of Representatives, and it is from
the Vice Chair of Business and Professional Regulation and Consumer
Affairs.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Ray, can I just read an excerpt here at the
last paragraph?
MR. PELLETIER: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: There is some concern -- this is
Representative Brown, who we should talk about who that is -- but
there is some concern that landscape architects may go to County
Commissioners to ask for ordinances that would usurp the ability of
landscape designers to perform the work, as specified in this
legislation. In other words, what we've already done by excluding
landscape designers this representative is concerned may happen in
other counties. If this happens, she would like to know about it.
So, I mean, that just -- is she the proponent of the
legislation? I mean, would her --
MR. PELLETIER: She was merely the vice chair of that. She did
not sponsor the bill. That was sponsored by a Senator and
Representative Fuller in the House of Representatives, and Senator
Lee.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: But she was not the member of the House who
MR. PELLETIER: Well, she is a Representative, so she is the
House of Representatives person that's on that committee.
It's kind of a new experience for me to actually go up in
Tallahassee. And I did testify before the Department of Business and
Professional Regulations. And this had to pass from several
different committees, and it passed each one unanimously. It was a
compromised agreement between landscape architects and landscape
designers, so they sat at the table in the Representative's office
and hammered this out.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Ray and I have met on this. And I'll tell
you, here's my sort of simple way of looking at it, is that the
legislature has said that landscape designers can draw up planting
plans. I don't think anybody can argue about that.
My question is, which sections of our code describe planting
plans and which sections of our code describe something more than
that? Because I'm ready to allow landscape designers to work and
design -- draw up planting plans.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I thought that the difference between was
the fact that Ray can do them for my house -- is that not right?
MR. PELLETIER: No, there's no --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I thought it was strictly for commercial
buildings.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Well, the way we defined it right now.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Right now.
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January 27, 1999
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: But the present take in Collier County is
what she --
MR. PELLETIER: We were allowed under state law to submit
planting plans for commercial buildings. There's no exclusions as far
as the scope of work.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Then what can't you do now?
MR. PELLETIER: You cannot do urban planning, which means we
can't go and design a town between here and Everglades City.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: What in this county are you prohibited from
doing, though, Ray, by ordinance?
MR. PELLETIER: Submitting a landscape plan; which, I'd like to
add, was called a planting plan up until a few years back.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So where you were going, Barbara, was
correct. You all just aren't communicating. In this county we
prohibited Ray from doing what he could otherwise do. We said we did
that because we wanted higher standards. Now they've come up with a
certification program, looks like higher standards.
So I see Ms. Student wants to talk to us.
MS. STUDENT: Well -- no, go ahead, David.
MR. WEIGEL: What I'll say is that it's not impossible for an
item that hasn't been advertised for the second hearing to come up
and be discussed by the Board.
But the ability for the county attorney or any attorney to
defend the process where we have no staff representation here to
address this issue prior to now, and a potential issue concerning the
notice of this -- of the inclusion at this moment I think renders it
a little bit difficult for us to say that you go forward without some
risk if you were to include it right now.
If it should be included tonight and the directive given and it
be transmitted as part of the LDC amendments to Tallahassee, so be
it, we'll defend it to the best of our ability. But there is a
technical issue in regard to bringing up a previously unadvertised --
and an issue that has not had any presentation at the prior hearing
at the second hearing here.
Now, I know as recently as five, six weeks ago the staff was
given direction by the Board in the course of normal Board meetings,
bring something back on the LDC and they would do so. And it came
into the process in a regular way. But it makes it, I think, from
the standpoint of potential defensibility an issue this evening.
MS. STUDENT: The other thing I need to add: The Planning
Commission, who is charged under state law as our Land Development
Regulation Commission, specifically requested that it be brought back
at the next amendment cycle.
And to answer your other question about the semantics, I think
our code talks in terms of landscape plan, and that may be different.
But there's no staff here to address it, that a planting plan -- I
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January 27, 1999
think a landscape plan is broader and requires some additional
expertise that may differ from a planting plan. But again --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: What I've got to say --
MS. STUDENT: -- I can't testify as to that because I'm an
attorney, I'm not a landscape architect.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Well, what I've got to say about this, you
know, Ray, I think that we probably can't do it this cycle. And you
know I've already told you that.
But I want Mr. Fernandez to hear that Ray tried to interject
this into the cycle at many appropriate times, it appears to me, in
plenty of time for this to be in this cycle. This is a May letter
from the House of Representatives. And the legislation passed when,
Ray?
MR. PELLETIER: It was passed in October.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: You know, this could have made it in this
cycle.
MR. PELLETIER: I think that's a typo in the letter, I'll be
honest with you. I have the actual letter with her original
signature on it here. And she couldn't have wrote this in May,
because the legislation didn't get passed in October.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So it's possible, however, for it to have
been in this cycle. And so I don't want us to use this we don't have
the people here to respond to him as an excuse to not hear it when he
asked for it to be --
MR. NINO: Well, may I speak to that issue, however? A lot of
people ask the staff to do things in terms of amending the Land
Development Code, and we don't -- we can't respond to all of those.
But we do have a provision for a person or a professional to file an
application to amend the Land Development Code --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: The fee for that --
MR. NINO: -- for which there is a fee.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: What's the fee?
MR. NINO: $1,4007 $1,400.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: $1,400.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Has Mr. Pelletier paid his fee?
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: No, that's the point.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, the other option is that a
commissioner can introduce that. And I will introduce the item, if
need be. Because this is one we've wrestled with for years. It's
foolish. It's other businesses, it's not safety oriented. It's not
-- it's not anything except other businesses trying to cut out
certain businesses and hoard their industry. And we ought not do
that.
If there is some safety issue here or some level of expertise
issue here, great. But it appears that's all been answered. And so
if the question is whether it's been introduced to the process
properly or not, consider this introducing it from this point
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January 27, 1999
forward. If we can't handle it, great, now, that's fine. But if
we're going to handle it in the next one, don't wait for that $1,400
check, just consider that came from Commissioner Constantine.
MR. MULHERE: I understand. For the record, Bob Mulhere,
Planning Services Director.
And obviously, whenever the Board directs to adopt a -- an
amendment to the Land Development Code, we always do, as well as any
direction from the Planning Commission, because they are equally
authorized. And the Board, of course, has the final say.
The Planning Commission and the Development Services Advisory
Committee, who is another body, who may also introduce a Land
Development Code amendment with no fee, the Planning Commission and
the Land Development Code -- excuse me, the Development Services
Advisory Committee looked at this issue in this cycle and both
recommended that it not be included, and that information was
presented at the first Board hearing.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Then why was -- what was their rationale
for that?
MR. MULHERE: Because they felt as though the appropriation was
that the restriction requiring a landscape plan be submitted by a
registered landscape architect was appropriate. That was their
feeling.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So it wasn't --
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Was there a certificate process at that
time? Was all of this presented when they had to go through a
certification and they had to do this exam and everything?
MR. MULHERE: I'll defer to Ron on that.
MR. NINO: No, it wasn't. It wasn't available to us at that
time.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Why?
Ray, was it available to you at that time?
MR. PELLETIER: The only thing that they didn't get was the
final redo that included the four-hour exam.
But I'd like to state for the record that I sent documentations,
and I have a letter here that I sent Barbara Berry a copy of, because
I wasn't getting anywhere with anybody. I was getting no response,
with the exception of an invitation to go to an advisory board
meeting that I went to and Mike Ford went to. And oddly enough, the
board canceled that meeting. And the only people that were there
were me, the county landscape architect and two other architects.
And then I -- so I don't know what happened, what caused that to
be canceled or what. But I think, you know, somebody's got to ask
the question what happened there.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: You and I spoke and you asked me before the
last land development -- or our first hearing -- MR. PELLETIER: Right.
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January 27, 1999
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- if I would ask the question. You
remember that discussion?
MR. PELLETIER: Yeah, and I --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: And I did that. In fact, I --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Yes, you did.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- asked Ron about this particular item.
MR. PELLETIER: So what I did was I filed the same routine that
I wanted to do last time. I don't know who gave the presentation
before the advisory board. I didn't know about it, and I'm the only
person that would have known about it, if we're going to represent
our side in the issue.
They had the documentation well in advance, and I followed the
outline on the front of the packet where it says they need
documentation in request. If you want to go before the board, the
Planning Commission, you have to have it two weeks ahead of time.
They had it in October.
And it's just interesting to point out that the Planning
Commission voted to approve the ability of property owners and
nurserymen to do it. So it went before the Planning Commission with
less qualifications than it has now and it still passed.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Let me ask Mr. Mulhere a question.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Commissioner Norris?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Mulhere, was Ms. Student correct about
there being a distinction between a planting plan and a landscape
plan?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: What is that distinction?
MR. MULHERE: Well, planting plans strictly deals with the
planting and the planting materials, other things like irrigation and
landscape plans, more comprehensive. It deals with the interaction
between the engineering plan and the landscape plan.
This -- we discussed this at the last Land Development Code
Amendment hearing. My only concern is as I stand up here as a
planning director, I have no objection to reviewing this amendment.
And if there is in fact a certification process that qualifies these
individuals, I have no objection to amending the LDC to reflect that.
What concerns me is I want to get it on the record that there
was no effort not to do that through this process. There is a
process. We simply do not accept a request to amend the Land
Development Code from any individual. There is a process to go
through. We brought it through that process.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: But Bob, we told -- when we cut them out of
this, we told them, we gave them marching orders, go away, come back,
you know, with a broomstick and then we'll consider it. And they
came back with a broomstick and we -- you know, and --
MR. MULHERE: I hear, but this is the first that I've seen that
information, that certification process.
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January 27, 1999
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Well, there's a communication problem in
getting it to you, because I've seen it and I've seen efforts of it
getting there.
MR. NINO: That's the first I've ever seen of it.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: The first you've ever seen of the test?
Because --
MR. MULHERE: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: -- that's the only new piece of
information.
MR. MULHERE: Yes, the test. But I think that's a critical part
of the equation.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: See, what we need to know is what is the
subject matter that they're being tested on. Will that qualify them
to submit a landscape plan versus a planting plan? We need to know
that.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: If you look at our code and turn to the
section that describes the landscape plan -- because I did this -- I
find it hard to find elements -- and tell me the section.
MR. MULHERE: For the landscape plan, it's 2.4. I don't think
it's in your packet.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: It's not?
MR. MULHERE: Because that section wasn't advertised. But the
section that requires a registered landscape architect in in the site
development plan section as 3.3, that was advertised.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So 3.3 is in here. Is there something in
3.3 that they should not be allowed to do?
MR. MULHERE: No.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: There are enough questions here, doesn't
it seem prudent that we wait until the next cycle and give our staff
a chance to make an analysis and present us with all the facts,
rather than --
MR. MULHERE: The only suggestion I would make is that there
were an awful lot of landscape architects who were concerned who
spoke at the last hearing. I have no objection to taking a look at
that and bringing that back as an amendment as directed by the Board.
I just don't know whether it's something that can be accomplished at
this meeting. That's the only question that I have. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: That's what I'm saying.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Any other questions for Ray or for staff on
that?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, you know, I'm very new at this, but
I can understand Mr. Pelletier's frustration. I'm equally as
frustrated with process. I don't know how it fell through the
cracks, but I hope that we would back up and objectively look at how
we do this so that in the future we don't have to sit here for 30
minutes and find out that something has fallen through the cracks
because this or that.
Page 13
January 27, 1999
So I -- direction to staff would be to look at the process, look
at what we have to do so that this doesn't happen in the future.
I understand counsel's advice to us, that there's too many
things that we have to do legally so that in the end, Mr. Pelletier,
so that you are protected and this doesn't become short-term.
And I personally apologize to you for the fact that it's been
such a delay.
MR. PELLETIER: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Thank you. No other public speakers.
Any other questions for staff? Then the procedure is a motion.
You could describe for us, I hope.
MR. CAUTERO: Vince Cautero for the record. I think it's
section 3.13, if I'm not mistaken. The issue that Mr. Pelletier just
spoke about, I would like to clear that up first before we move on.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Well, I think what we --
MR. NINO: 3.3.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: -- as I understand the consensus of the
Board is that we're going to see this in the next cycle. MR. CAUTERO: That is clearly understood.
And I would just like to state, commissioners, for the record,
we don't believe it fell through the cracks, Commissioner Carter. We
don't. Perhaps you misunderstood, and you have my personal apology
for that, but we just don't think it fell through the cracks.
There is a process and we just don't think the process was
followed the way it should be followed. And if someone's going to
take the blame for that, it will lie with me, but we don't believe it
fell through the cracks.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I want to be clear that this is not -- and
I think Commissioner Constantine's already taken care of it -- that
this is not an issue that requires a $1,400 fee be paid and -- this
is a board direction that from the time when we changed the code to
prohibit landscape designers from taking -- performing certain
options under our code, the instruction was if they went away and
made their industry regulated, that we wanted to look at it again.
MR. CAUTERO: That's correct. And we do not -- we did not take
that as your direction. And if that was your direction, then I
apologize for the --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: That's what I intended at the time, but it
-- and I appreciate your clarifying it, because that makes it a lot
clearer.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Yeah, but once again, I think what Mr.
Cautero is saying is there's a process. If an individual is going to
bring that forward, that's one thing. If it goes through the proper
committees and the Planning Commission, that's another. But the
proper process is not to chat perhaps with one or two commissioners
and expect it to be done.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: No, I'm clear on that. But --
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January 27, 1999
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, but at the same time, if the
process isn't working efficiently, I hope that a small business owner
feels comfortable coming and chatting with a couple of commissioners
and expecting to get some sort of result.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: I didn't mean to indicate that that would
not be appropriate. But the point is that if that particular
commissioner who got talked to didn't follow up and bring it to the
Development Services Division, then it's not going through the
process correctly.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And apparently for the next several
months, it will.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: It will.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: That's the good part.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, I think it's really important,
because all of you -- Mr. Carter wasn't here, but all of you will
remember when this item was brought up before, we had a room full of
people sitting here who addressed this issue, who were very
passionate.
As Ray and some of his people were here and very passionate,
there was another side here that was extremely passionate as well.
Don't forget that. You don't have that in the room tonight.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Oh, no kidding.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: So it's very easy to assume a certain
position, but don't forget, you had the other side --
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, but my recollection was the other
side was worried about qualifications. And that's what -- virtually
everybody got up and talked about whether or not they were qualified.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I'd like to hear -- personally, that's the
reason I'd like to hear from them now. Does this satisfy their
concerns? We don't know that, because we -- it wasn't advertised,
they didn't know that it was going to be brought up tonight. I don't
know that, I'm not a landscape architect or designer or planner, or
whatever you want to call me. So I don't know what the other side of
the issue is. And I think in all fairness, you've got to hear both
sides.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, and I made the point earlier,
there's some qualifications requirement now and a four-hour test, but
what is that? Does it --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, I'm sympathetic with Mr. Pelletier.
He and I have had numerous conversations about this, and I certainly
understand his frustration.
But as a professional, as you know, Commissioner Mac'Kie,
regulation, professional regulation, you know, if somebody decides to
go out -- you know, would you assume that a paralegal could go do
your job and sign off on some things? I mean, all due respect to the
jobs they do, you know, but this is just the same -- it's the same
kind of thing --
Page 15
January 27, 1999
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: CPA versus accountant.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- all professions have these. My husband
goes through the same thing in his profession.
So it's just things that you have to be aware of. You have to
hear both sides.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So we'll have this discussion --
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Six months from now we're going to have a
great analysis --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: That's right. And we'll know better then
what direction we should go.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So if there aren't any other issues to come
before the commission for this particular cycle, do we have a motion,
or is a motion what's called for at this point, Mr. Nino?
MR. NINO: There's an ordinance, which you have in your package,
which would be to adopt --
MR. WEIGEL: All the way at the back.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: 91.102, as amended?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: I move that we adopt that ordinance.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I'm sorry, I gave the wrong number.
MR. NINO: 91-102, as amended.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: That's -- okay.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: That's the number I meant to move that we
adopt.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Is there a second?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Second.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Motion and second.
All in favor, please say aye.
Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Passes unanimously.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: That's all?
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Does that take care of the repeal of 91-26
and repeal of -- yeah. Does that take care of the repeal of 91-267
In the very back of our book there's another blue page that has to do
with repeal of ordinance 91-26.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Which had to do with EPTAB, and --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Right, and create -- we just created the
EAC and the -- but I think we also need to --
MR. WEIGEL: Yeah, it absolutely does. That's historical.
That's the direction to the Board that came from that November 6th
meeting to go and do this here.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: So we have already repealed.
MR. WEIGEL: You have done so by your approval this evening.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I think -- is there anything else, Mr.
Lorenz?
Item #3
Page 16
January 27, 1999
O~DIN]tNCE 99-7 REPEALING OF ORDINANCE 91-26, AS AMENDED, WHICH
ESTABLISHED THE COLLIER COU~VfY ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY TECHNICAL
/tOVISORY BOARD - ADOPTED
MR. LORENZ: I want to make sure and understand that the EPTAB
ordinance that currently exists is a separate standalone ordinance.
This item here, the Board needs to adopt this ordinance to repeal
BPTAB's ordinance. Simply adopting the Land Development Code
~ndments will not repeal EPTAB's ordinance.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: And for the record, you are?
MR. LORENZ: Excuse me, for the record, Bill Lorenz, natural
.~/resources director.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: I thought we -- that's what I was concerned
with.
MR. WEIGEL: Okay, I see --
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Do we need a motion to repeal that
ordinance?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: I'll make a motion ~-
MR. WEIGEL: You do.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: -- to repeal the ordinance
MR. WEIGEL: May as well.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: -- from what I'm hearing from
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Second.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: -o Mr. Lorenz.
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: Motion and second.
All in favor, please say aye?
Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRWOMAN MAC'KIE: That passes unanimously.
And we're adjourned.
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 5:47 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
Page 17
ATT,EST ( 'u J£
· '~:..These .m~tes approved by the Board on
as presented r as corrected
January 27, 1999
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BE~LF OF GREGORY COURT REPORTING
SERVICE, INC., BY CHERIE' R. LEONE, NOTARY PUBLIC
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