Friday, October 2, 2015

I Rest My Case, or You Can't Make This Stuff Up; Or Can You?


Letter written in response to Biscayne Times article.  Not sent to them, as they are not likely to publish it.


I'm still not sure what was Erik Bojnansky's point with his article about Biscayne Park and a collection of unconnected issues ("$24K Question," BT 10/2015).  I guess the title and the column inches suggest he wanted mostly to address the log cabin renovation, and the dais that is to be created there.  

Bojnansky cited BP resident Steve Bernard more than he cited anyone else.  He quoted three Commissioners, which I imagine is supposed to mean he spoke to them.  He did not speak to me, and I don't know if he spoke to the other Commissioner, either. But he did speak to Bernard.  Bernard was a Commissioner here some years back.  He no longer attends meetings, and he is not seen at information-gathering and opinion-expounding sessions, but that doesn't seem to prevent him from forming opinions.  And it seems not to prevent Bojnansky from relying heavily on him.

Bernard told Bojnansky, seemingly as a complaint, that the Village is not run by its residents any more.  Now, it is run by a professional manager.  What Bernard seems to have forgotten to mention to Bojnansky is that the change occurred on advice from a Charter Review Committee of Village residents, and that it was Bernard himself who chaired that Committee.  Bernard has never told anyone why he thought professional management was such a good idea, but then he spent the remainder of his time, both on and off the Commission, bucking the managers and lamenting, as he does here, that residents don't run the Village any more..

I was also unclear what to make of the juxtaposition of BP's having gotten a very large grant from the State, for construction of a new administrative building and renovation of the historic log cabin, and Bojnansky's quote of Commissioner Barbara Watts. who thought continued use of plastic folding card tables, covered in blue nylon drape attached with velcro, was good enough for us.  I wonder if we would have gotten that grant from the State if they had known our level of devotion and sophistication, or at least Commissioner Watts'.

Then, there's the matter of that "movable" dais.  Bojnansky quotes BP resident Barbara Kuhl as having thought it would be an advantage to have a dais that could be moved "out of the room."  I hope that's not really what she told Bojnansky.  No one has imagined such a thing.  The dais, unless it's those plastic folding card tables Commissioner Watts likes, will be a very heavy and well-made piece of furniture that isn't going anywhere.  At most, it could be moved toward a wall, but there's no way anyone could move it out of the room.  And there's no place to store it anyway.  This, of course, is assuming anyone would ever have a need to move it, which, according to imaginings of uses other than for Village meetings, would be almost unheard of.

Christina McKenzie, who originally said she didn't want a fixed dais, will be relieved to know that there will be no yoga classes in the log cabin.  They'll take place in the recreation building, as they always have.  And she doesn't want us to "get stuck on tradition?"  That was the whole point of the renovation.  In any case, we're then told she changed her mind.  The message here is what?  Where is Bojnansky going with this?

As for Bojnansky's glancing swipes about outsourcing sanitation, and annexation, we can talk about those alleged "some 300" people who didn't favor outsourcing.  I'll explain to Bojnansky about the petition that was the basis for this conclusion, but maybe his stomach can't take it.

If, as Bojnansky says, "some residents...fear that annexation will actually cost the Village money," does that mean that other residents don't think so?  How many on each side?   Did Bojnansky research the financials at all, or is he just passing along the views of "some" people?

I knew in advance about Bojnansky's article.  I followed from a distance, since he never contacted me.  I was expecting something that was at least questionable, as are so many BT articles.  Bojnansky did not, in that sense, disappoint.  Unless I was looking for something honest, remotely adequate, and balanced.  But the BT doesn't seem to work that way, especially when it comes to BP matters.

Fred Jonas
Commissioner,
Biscayne Park

8 comments:

  1. Erik contacted me but chose not to quote me. He wanted to know my opinions on the dais and also about the outsourcing of sanitation, the annexation and if I think the "commissioners don't listen to the people".

    I only gave him my thoughts about the dais and told him I wanted a well made dais that can serve the community for the next 2 or 3 decades, if it can double as a table for other community gatherings then it will be great and that I think making it movable just increases the cost without providing benefits.

    But those kind thoughts were not what he was looking for.

    ReplyDelete
  2. As a community, it would be more advantageous to promote Biscayne Park in a positive light. It's difficult to understand why residents and past commissioners want to tarnish the reputation of Biscayne Park, and what do they have to gain? Is this all ego, and sour grapes? We finally have a commission that has been successful at getting funds for new facilities, enforcing code to support property values, and focused on the long term issues that were ignored by previous commissions. I was also contacted, and shared my positive views regarding a dais which could be less costly and movable. We discussed why Biscayne Park was a great place to buy a home and raise a family, however that obviously isn't important to this writer.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Fred,
    I believe that this is at least the second time you have asserted that a dais was somehow a component of the State's $1M funding grant. Can you please provide for your readers some factual backing for your claims?

    Why I ask is that if indeed this was a mandate, then there should have been no need for the various discussions on the subject. At all. We would have already been committed without any other options.

    Milt

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Milt,

      My apologies. I hope I didn't wrongly leave the impression that the dais was part of what the State funded. It is our complement to the renovated log cabin. In my opinion, it should be a fitting complement. Watts' favorite word for the (renovated?) log cabin is "magical." Her next favorite words for it are "warm" and "humble." I'm with her on magical and warm. I think the proposed dais will do that, and it's what we should do for this building. It's our contribution to our own project. I'm fine with the project's winding up "humble," too, but plastic folding card tables with velcro-attached nylon skirting is a little more humble than fits, in my opinion.

      Fred

      Delete
    2. By the way, Milt, the State did not fund us based on a proposed cost of the project. It was just a number. The project cost considerably more than the $1.05M the State granted us. That would be true even if we didn't build a dais at all. As you may recall, we had to borrow money to complete various parts of the overall project. This was controversial with some, as they didn't want us to borrow anything, or perhaps finish the project. But the Commission decided the project should be finished, now, and we agreed to borrow the money to do it. We borrowed up to $350K, of which the $22K dais expense is a part.

      So no, the dais was in no way "a component of the State's $1M funding grant," and frankly, I doubt I ever said it was. You're saying it was "the second time," "at least," that I "asserted" such a thing. Can you point me to the other example or two?

      Fred

      Delete
  4. It seems I answered my own question. A few posts back, I pointed out that BT writers have an unusual knack for getting stories wrong, and they do it by getting their facts wrong. I wondered how they keep getting this to happen. I wondered, for example, whether they handicap themselves, by not interviewing enough people, or by misquoting those they do interview. No, it seems Bojnansky interviewed a reasonable range of people. He didn't interview everyone he should have, but he had enough of a sampling. And apart (I hope) from Barbara Kuhl, I don't think it's likely he misquoted anyone. What he did, though, was begin his examination already having formed his conclusion. He wrote a story that took him to where he already was, and where he started. If he interviewed people who told him something that was not in keeping with his premise, he simply ignored them. He wasn't trying to learn about the topic. He was trying to support a conclusion he formed from the outset. Or maybe he formed it before the outset. We still don't know who put him up to this project, or what agenda they had and pressed on him. I don't suppose he would tell us. The BT no longer writes routinely about BP. It seems they only come here if there's a special situation. Someone has to tell them there is, and what that special situation is. (And what the desired conclusion is?)

    Fred

    ReplyDelete
  5. PS: I alerted BT publisher Jim Mullin to this post, and to the other recent one about the BT. He wrote back to me to offer to print this one in the BT letters to the editor next month, and he said he would print comments to this post, too. If you comment, and you would like, or wouldn't mind, your comment being printed in the BT, let me know. I'll tell Jim which comments he can print, and which ones he can't.

    Fred

    ReplyDelete
  6. JUST SAY NO!

    Despite the fact that Bojnansky gave a lot of air time to both Bernard and Watts mostly irrelevant and inaccurate statements and that he didn’t speak to Fred or apparently Bob Anderson, and that he did speak to both Rox (Misquoted her by the way) and David at length but printed few of their comments and spoke to Jorge and Brad but printed none of their comments, I’m glad that Bojnansky finished the article with the following quote from Christy:

    ”Christina McKenzie has since modified her opinion”. “I was initially against the dais because I understood it would interfere with being able to use the space for other functions,” she explains to the BT“. However, after hearing more details about the design and possibilities at the last town meetings, I’m in favor of it, since it will essentially be a table that can be easily repurposed for other events. Seems like a win/win now.”

    This speaks volumes, a resident finds out more of the facts and then changes her mind. It tells you about the propaganda by certain individuals being distributed that creates manufactured controversies in the Village to the detriment of us all.

    The behavior by certain individuals is destructive not constructive and they don't bring anything to the table.

    Let’s just say no, no to the lies, exaggerations and misstatements. You want higher property values? You want to see improvements in the Village?

    When confronted by the negative behavior of certain individuals, please for the betterment of the Village just say no!

    ReplyDelete