As I no longer hold office, I can only offer
my opinions as to the ongoing issues relating to the Palmetto Bay Village
Center (PBVC). I have always fought to preserve those 22 acres, not see them developed. Twice I asked the council to join me in participating in the purchase through the County Environmentally Endangered Lands Program (EELs).
THE SHORT BITE:
The Vice mayor had the opportunity to repeal the 2016 ordinance relating to the PBVC. Former interim Village Attorney John Herin, Esq. was hired at village expense to advise the council on how to repeal this 2016 ordinance. The repeal ordinance was prepared and passed 3-2 on first reading which was held way back on April 3, 2017. This was a special council meeting that was called (requested by the vice mayor) for Independence Day weekend, 2017, (yes, a Saturday, July 1, 2017) – Soon after - and inexplicably, the second reading was deferred by a 5-0 vote. (CLICK HERE to view the ordinance folder
The Vice Mayor had the votes to “undo” the 2016 ordinance, beginning on December 5, 2018, if this is really what he desired however the ordinance was never brought forward for enactment. In a complete 180, the Staff operating under Mayor Cunningham and Vice Mayor is now recommending approval of the 480.
Failure to follow through has led to the PBVC seeking the present zoning on the 2016 & 2018 ordinances. It did not have to come to this had the repeal ordinance been properly and fully pursued.
Promises not kept?
Also see PRIOR RELATED POST relating to the library parking: June 1, 2020
Correcting the record. The parking easement lasts for as long as a library, community room and Park operate as provided for in Resolution 2008-20. This was approved by the (then) Village Council on February 25th, 2008. Why would they lie, is it intentional or do they honestly don’t know the facts?
Parking is locked in for as long as this library and the park operate.
THE FULL STORY PROVIDING A BRIEF
INTRO & BACKGROUND/CONTEXT
Their
fingers are pointing at others in deflection, but this is just another clear
example where the buck stops at Mayor Cunningham and Vice Mayor John DuBois.
The Vice Mayor spent village tax dollars to obtain a written legal opinion from
John Herin, Esq, former interim village attorney as far back as March 2017. The
result was a 14 page treatise stating that the 2016
ordinance can be undone and providing the road map on how to do it. The vice mayor felt strong enough that
significant village funds were spent to obtain this legal opinion as an effort
to undo the 2016 ordinance. Yet it moved forward and passed on first reading
and then it stopped after a single deferral. This ordinance would have rescinded,
undoing the 2016 ordinance.
The
2016 ordinance:
Then
Mayor Shelley Stanczyk had sponsored an ordinance in July of 2014 that would
have permitted the immediate development of 40 units in the 22 acres as well as
a fire station. A little noticed fact was the July 2014 ordinance would have
placed these 22 acres into the VMU, which would have vested the PBVC with 10
units per acre for a potential total build out of 220 units on those 22 acres. See: May 5, 2016,
The facts regarding council action of Mon, 5/2/16. Protecting endangered land, managing vest rights inherited from Miami-Dade County.
The
2016 ordinance was passed not to create more units, but merely to transfer the
developmental rights (known as TDRs) from the 22 acres to the back area of the Palmetto
Bay Village Center (PBVC). This area was created as what is known as the
Village Mixed Use, or VMU district. No one (except apparently Mayor Stanczyk) has ever wanted to see those 22 acres developed. Saving
the 22 acres through transferring the developmental rights (TDR) is one way, but obviously not the way that the Vice Mayor felt appropriate. In fact, at one time the ordinance was
proceeding through the 2016-18 village council – the ordinance passed 3-2 on
first reading held April 3, 2017. A special council meeting was called
(requested by the vice mayor) for Independence Day weekend, 2017, (yes, a
Saturday, July 1, 2017) – where, inexplicably, the second reading was deferred
by a 5-0 vote. (CLICK HERE to view the ordinance
folder
More
importantly – the Vice Mayor had the votes to “undo” the 2016 ordinance,
beginning on December 5, 2018, if this is really what he desired however Du Bois did not change back the 2016
ordinance. In a complete 180, the Staff operating under Mayor
Cunningham and Vice Mayor DuBois is now recommending approval of the 480.
The
inexplicable in-action runs in stark contrast to what we heard from them in both
the 2016 or 2018 elections.
Perhaps it is really the
current Mayor and Vice Mayor who have turned their backs on Palmetto Bay!
There once was plenty of time for Mayor Cunningham/Vice Mayor DuBois administration
to follow the March 2017 repeal manual provided by John Herin, Esq. There have
been 78 meetings with the new council (and we all know there is nothing that
prevents this current mayor and council from calling yet another special
council meeting) – and yet this council never discussed it or let out a peep
during any of them. Yes, though it made for great campaign fodder, the Mayor
Cunningham/Vice Mayor DuBois administration never got around to doing anything
to ‘fix’ this 480.
Results - there was no action to keep promises to 'undo' the "485"!
So
here we are – the Mayor Cunningham/Vice Mayor administration is
recommended 480! Village paid traffic and zoning experts provide evidence in
support of the Palmetto Bay Village Center. Instead of having done their jobs,
the backs of these two were turned. Fingers pointing. I am waiting for their voices
to blast through their proxy psudeo concerned group in their best ventriloquism
act through email. And not only are they taking the 22 acres that I fought for
and he argued against, but they are buying up the 18 acres we all agree are
undevelopable (and not useable for park).
Does this show laziness on his part
or is this an admission that I have been right all along?
Why do I opine that the Vice Mayor never wanted the 22 acres? From his own
comment in an e-mail wherein he specifically stating that it would be very
unlikely to ever be any foot traffic through what he describes as a “mosquito
infested park”. The Vice Mayor characterizes the entire “40 acre village park” as
follows:
a. The 22 acres is discussed above, the other area is 18
acres of wetlands that will never be developed for anything
nor will there likely be foot traffic through there as a mosquito infested
park.
b. The 22 acres in question has had poor maintenance over the
years and will require a tremendous amount of taxpayer money to bring it up the
standards of a Palmetto Bay park property and then maintain it. IMHO, the
current developer should be fined for neglect or be forced to bring it up to
reasonable standards (at a bare minimum, trim back all 3000 foot frontage on
Old Cutler road away from the bike trail). Is it $20K/year or $200K/year of
village taxpayer money that will support it. Look at Thalatta Park, we were sold
at $40K/year to maintain it, the village spent under two million dollars over the
first 8 years for maintenance and to make needed improvements to it.
There
you have it – 78 meetings where it was the Vice Mayor who firmly turned his
back on Palmetto Bay. One has to wonder if the Zoning hearing of 6/2 was really
unable to go forward or if the Mayor Cunningham/Vice Mayor DuBois
administration finally woke up once they started receiving complaints and needed
time to regroup and revise (or reverse) the staff recommendations of their handpicked
interim staffers.
The
wagons are circled and their campers are gearing up for their volley of blame,
smear and innuendo, but the facts remain. Its more than the numbers – 480 is
the unit number. 78 is for the number of meetings where they could of, but
failed to act, 40 (or 38) is the number for acres of land that the Vice Mayor
has never wanted to take, but is there for the transfer.
Gamesmanship.
Thankfully even in politics, the facts and truth sometimes rise to the top. They
could delay it, but the realities of the Mayor Cunningham/Vice Mayor DuBois
administration should now be obvious to those keeping a close eye on this
village and the internal politics of shame.
In
other words, either a sincere apology is due or someone has some serious
explaining to do! The ball has been in their court. Action is long overdue. As
I stated, an explanation is in order as to why village money was spend on
legal opinion and assistance in reversing the 2016 ordinance, yet it was never
completed, despite having the legal assistance as well as the votes to do
so. Their (lack of action) speaks so
much louder than their words –or the shallow arguments of their puppet masters
who continue to deny that they sat silent when Mayor Stanczyk sponsored the
process to actually develop those 22 acres in 2014.