Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Why Be On the Up and Up, When Getting Way Down and Really Dirty Works Better? Annexation. Or Not.


Yesterday turns out to have been a most interesting day.  At first, it was only disgusting and infuriating, and we couldn't appreciate how really interesting it was.

The County Commission meeting was scheduled to start at 9:30 AM.  I was advised that they really never start on time.  But I got there at 9:00 anyway.

Sure enough, there's way more milling around than respect for people's time, and the meeting did not start until around 10:00.  Boy, do they love their presentations down at the County Commission.  They take lots, and lots, of time with them.  Eventually, they get to the actual business of the meeting.

They allowed speakers for the first issue, which was the County's TRIM.  Everyone gets two minutes to speak, which doesn't sound like much, until you find out how many people want two minutes each.  My day job started at about 2:15 PM yesterday, and I had to prepare for it, so I left at 12:45.  The County Commission had heard the last of the TRIM speakers, but it hadn't yet deliberated about the matter.  So I have no idea what the maximum TRIM was said to be.  It might not be accurate anyway, since it can be lowered after the maximum was set.

At some point (I didn't ask when), the County Commission was ready for item 5B on the Agenda: the BP annexation application.  We were able to go forward with it, because our application was complete, it was no longer contested (since CNM withdrew by a Council vote of 4-1, with Carol Keys dissenting), and we had a sponsor.  Our own regional County Commissioner, Sally Heyman, was pleased and eager to advocate for our annexation.  Not only that, but we heard through some version of the grapevine that there were six more County Commissioners who were disposed in our favor.

What I'm about to describe is based on what other people who remained at the meeting told me, as well as what I learned in talking to Sally Heyman today.  I asked Sally if what she told me was to be off the record, and she said absolutely not.  I said I supposed she did not want her name used, and she told me to use it freely.

David Coviello made our opening presentation, explaining what this was about (as if County Commissioners didn't already well know).  I'm told by at least three people, including Sally Heyman, that his presentation was excellent and impressive.  David was given 8-9 minutes to make our case.

At that point, the Chair of the County Commission, Jean Monestime, suddenly realized there were dignitaries, or something, in the audience, and he decided it would be better to interrupt the BP issue, and introduce the dignitaries.  One observer found this digression to be very disturbing, and he felt the Chair seemed almost to want to throw the presentation off course.  After Chairman Monestime finished playing with his guests, he allowed the meeting to return to the issue at hand.  Several other presentations from representatives of BP (including Heidi Siegel, who I'm told did a wonderful job advocating for us) followed, and the feeling was that the issues had been adequately spelled out.

On the "other side" was a collection of people.  Our own Steve Bernard told the County Commission he had collected 23 (twenty-three, not 2300, and not 230) signatures which he said were from BP residents who did not favor annexation.  CNM Councilperson Carol Keys presented several assertions that both Sally Heyman and CNM's own attorney(!) had to repudiate, because they were false.  Chuck Ross told her the same thing, and she just stared at him.  Also in the room, taking up a large portion of the room, more than any other presence in the room, was an army of people wearing identical red tee shirts.  The shirts said something like "Vote NO Biscayne Park Annexation" on the front, and something like "Concerned Citizens of North Miami" on the back.  The fact is, none of us knew who these people were.  They didn't speak, but the person who spoke for them was the developer or owner of one of the apartment complexes in the annexation area.  He didn't want his taxes to go up.  After the meeting, those people were seen being given "vouchers" and treated to a bus ride to who knows where.  Back under whatever rock they came from, no doubt.

At the end of all of this (who knew it was just a charade?), Sally Heyman made "the motion:" she moved to approve our annexation application.  Amazingly, there was no second. Going once, going twice, motion dies for lack of a second.  And Jean Monestime quickly ditched any further consideration or questioning.

We didn't know this was all a joke.  Sally Heyman didn't know it was a joke.  But Jean Monestime and the rest of the County Commission knew it was a joke.  I called Sally to ask what the joke was about.  I figured she must know by now.  She did.

Sally was apologetic for what happened, and she was appreciative of all the time and dedication we expended for this annexation effort.  She said everyone did a great job.  Yeah, but why did no one even second your motion?   We heard six others besides you were in favor.  Where were they?  Well, Sally explained, County Commission elections are coming up.  Not for her, though, since she has apparently termed out.  But the people running aren't termed out.  They want to get re-elected.  They need to advertise themselves.  They need...money.  The lobbyist for the developer was there, and he had greased plenty of palms.  Sally confided in me (but she allowed me to tell you this) that they gave money to her in the past, too.  But she says her vote (for us) is not for sale.  That kind of ethic is evidently not universal.

So that's what happened to our application.  It was bought away from us by someone who didn't want his profit margin encroached upon.  Ain't that just the way?


11 comments:

  1. I was only able to be there until noon, so I also got to experience the very casual and unprofessional atmosphere as well as the numerous lengthy presentations/proclamations... but not the annexation part. Infuriating is a generous word for it. The level of corruption in the county government is amazing, though I suppose not entirely surprising (Miami does have that kind of reputation). And without any legal repercussions, it will only continue, leaving the little guys like Biscayne Park in the dust.

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  3. Just to be clear I told Carol after the meeting that she made false statement or mis-statements can't remember my exact words, she didn't deny it.
    Still reading your post.

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  4. Fred,
    I am speechless. Yesterday I was in such shock, actually so numb I couldn't get out of my chair. All I could do was sit there trying to figure out what just happened, not even the courtesy of a second, WTF!

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    1. Fred, I'm going to assume those funds were campaign donations.

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    2. WTF? Now you know.

      The meeting was a joke and a deliberate waste of our devotion, our concern, our time, and our money. That's our "County Commission." It would be bad enough, if the Commission listened and failed to give us serious consideration. But to jerk us around and waste our time and effort is disgraceful. The only one who's honorable is the only one I get to vote for, except I don't, because she's not running.

      Fred

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    3. Yes, Chuck, the euphemism is "campaign contributions." That's the term Sally used. Clearly, the recipients knew how to interpret the help, you know, getting elected.

      Fred

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  5. There were numerous lies (false statements) that were dispelled by Sally Heyman yesterday. Here's a good example.... rents increasing for the annexed apartment residents, a total scare tactic. Didn't one of our very own Biscayne Park Commissioners use this lie as her argument against annexation? Did she just "assume" that rents would increase, and not actually research the facts. I find this commissioner's tactics very negligent and disturbing.

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  6. One of our neighbors who was at the meeting told me she approached one of the redshirts, to ask what their message was. He told her they were there, because they wanted to "save the parks." Some other people at the County Commission had on green tee shirts, and they were advocating for more funding to save the County's parks. They were there for the TRIM discussion. It seems the redshirt wasn't really paying much attention, and he assumed he must probably be there for the same reason. Obviously, when someone offered him five bucks, or whatever the voucher was worth, to wear a red tee shirt and sit around the air conditioned County Commission chamber all day, and get a free bus ride, too, they didn't discuss with him what he was supposed to symbolize. I suppose that since all he was supposed to do was be a dumb mascot, it didn't really matter. Just hang out for the day, wear the shirt, get your pay, and don't ask any questions. I'm thinking maybe they were even allowed to keep the shirts. What a payday!

    Fred

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  7. Terrible. Maybe this could be forwarded to the Herald?

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  8. I have some real concerns about this post. It's a very rare thing to get insights like the ones I got from Sally Heyman. She was very, very angry about what happened, to us and to her. We were all betrayed, and we were deliberately set up.

    I was very clear with her that I do a blog for the neighborhood, and she very clearly told me to tell this story like it was. I asked her outright if what she was telling me was "off the record." She said absolutely not. I also asked her explicitly if she would like me to keep her name out of it. She said to feel free to use it.

    I like Sally a lot. We all do. She's been very supportive to this neighborhood, and she's been great to us. Even about annexation, she just didn't try to manipulate it our way. She offered very nice concessions in CNM's advantage, if they would concede the annexation area to us. She was fair and good to everyone about this.

    Even at the end of our conversation yesterday, when we commiserated about the loss to BP without annexation, and how that would prevent us from doing what a municipality must do for itself, like fix its streets, she said there was some sort of fund available, and that when she gets back in town after August 1, she would work on it for us.

    I don't know why Sally cares as much about us as she does. She cares more about BP than do some of the people who live here. And I don't want any trouble for her. I published this post, because the experience was bizarre (to those of us uninitiated in the shenanigans of dirty politics), and I thought we were entitled to know the real story (there was obviously a real story, when the rest of the County Commission colluded to deprive Sally/us of a second), and Sally told me I could.

    Forwarded to the Herald? I don't know. To what end? No one in the rest of the County would care, and it just exposes Sally more. I'm just feeling protective of her. We lost out very badly, and we're entitled to know why. And as an aside, the fact that some of our own residents don't understand how badly we needed to succeed here is very sad.

    Fred

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