Friday, October 6, 2017

Correction


For many years, the Village has had a requirement that parking should be provided "on the property," not just in the swale.  Some homeowners never followed this requirement, and for whatever reasons, the Village did not enforce it.  In 2015, the Code Review Committee presented to the Commission a new proposed Code, and it strengthened and clarified requirements for parking.  The requirement for parking "on the property" was retained in the 2015 proposal.

At that point, there were over 60 properties that were out of compliance, and they always had been.  The Commission adjusted and ratified the CRC's proposal, but there were still some issues that were in some dispute, among Village residents and among Commissioners.  So there were ongoing efforts to further adjust the Code.  For the moment, the 2015 Code was the Code of record.

At that point, Village homeowners who were out of compliance, and always had been, did one of two things.  One was to adhere to the new Code, and that adherence took the form of designing and constructing proper parking where it should be, and where it should always have been.  About half of the 60+ property owners took that route.  The other half decided to do nothing, either because they didn't want to (they never wanted to), or because they wanted to wait for the final adjustment.

One thing that is important to realize here is that if homeowners whose properties are out of compliance felt more confident about what the Code was, and that it would not change, more of them would presumably have made the changes necessary.  So most Village residents, even among those whose properties were out of compliance and had always been so, actually want to do the "right thing."  Half already did, and more would have, if the last Commission had not hung them up by still considering possible changes.

From 2015, there has been a driveway and swale Code, and it required, as has always been required, parking "on the property."  Toward the end of 2016, there was another proposal, but it didn't pass.  So the controlling Code was and still is the 2015 Code.

When I quoted in the immediately preceding blog post that there were 12 properties out of compliance, I was wrong.  The correct number is 31 such properties.  It's still true that Will Tudor's property, and his sister-in-law's property, are among those out of compliance, but they are two of 31, not two of 12.

There's a "big picture" here.  Tracy Truppman's posture is that she doesn't want to ask her neighbors to spend money to improve their properties.  She doesn't argue that adherence to the old and new Code isn't an improvement.  She just doesn't want to be the "heavy" who makes this imposition on her neighbors.  That's the little picture.  The big picture is that what the old Code required, and the new Code reiterated, represents an improvement in the neighborhood.  Some people are asked to make a sacrifice for the good of the whole Village.

It's true that this kind of improvement costs money, and people don't like to spend money.  I myself was sensitive to that during my tenure on the Commission, and I advocated allowing people in less generous fiscal circumstances to have more time to make the changes.  In reality, the deadline for the change was September of 2015.  I have spoken to Village residents whose properties are not in compliance, but who recognize the value of complying, and who simply couldn't afford to comply by September, 2015.  Their intentions are good, and I lobbied to give them more time.  But I never took the position Tracy takes, which is to construct a Code that allows the weakest homeowners to control the look and functioning of the whole neighborhood, and thus to sacrifice the neighborhood and its appearance and its functioning and its good intentions for the lack of ambition of a few of its residents.  That's not how you protect and improve a neighborhood.  It's not how you try to enhance things like property values.  Frankly, it's a gross failure of leadership.  (Tracy told us previously that she doesn't think the Commission should, as she put it, "legislate from the bench."  Now, she shows us that she doesn't think the interests of the whole Village should be imposed on a very small minority of Village homeowners.  Those two things represent almost everything the Commission has to do.  So it's unclear why Tracy worked to get a job she doesn't want to do.)

And it wouldn't make any difference if Tracy is a failed leader, except that she controls the thinking and the behavior of three other Commissioners.  It is those three other Commissioners who make Tracy's failure a failure of the whole government of the Village, and thus of the Village itself.  It's now about one year down, and one to go, for two of the pets Tracy keeps on a short leash.  And it's three more years of Tracy and her other pet.


5 comments:

  1. Fred, thanks for posting this topic on your blog. After reading your original post about the commission meeting, I emailed the village multiple times to press for a link to the video faster than normal. I posted that link on Nextdoor, watched it in dismay (if not shock) myself, and I include it here for anyone who hasn't viewed it yet.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcjDHXjEM0c&feature=youtu.be

    First, I'll paraphrase what you said to Milt: "We got exactly what we (should have) expected, and quite frankly, deserve."

    Stepping away from the one particularly ugly detail (Will Tudor basically being exempt, in Tracy's plan, from installing a driveway himself), the bigger problem is that the mayor is trying to legislate myopically, considering only how this ordinance will effect the tip of our collective noses without an understanding or appreciation that the decisions they make regarding land use have far-reaching implications and live on for generations. I lost count of how many times the mayor says things like, "This will impose an undue burden on specific property owners" instead of, "This is how it will impact BP as a community now and into the future." She is proposing decisions for specific property owners (those holding us back, if we're being honest), including one specific commissioner. (At what point those two may have decided that was a good thing, pre- or post-election, we can't be certain.)

    Tracy's lack of vision, and her inability to even understand what "vision" means and how that would actually help her accomplish more, is staggering. At a recent strategy session she held, I tried to explain that any successful organization has a vision from which decisions and choices emanate, and her engineer's brain couldn't even fathom that concept. I made the mistake of also using the word "brand," and green pea soup spewed from her throat and heads spun on shoulders throughout the room.

    If Biscayne Park were like unincorporated Miami-Dade or the countless other South Florida communities with no real potential to be special or better (and, speaking as an ugly capitalist, worth more money), or if Biscayne Park were past the point of no return like our neighbor, North Miami (where I lived for 14 years, so I'm allowed to say it's a corrupt shithole, kinda like I can say my Mom's a bitch but you can't), I could shrug off Tracy and her impotent minions more easily. But the sad truth is that Biscayne Park "could," "should," but won't with Tracy & Co. at the helm. It just ain't in her.

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    1. Mac,

      It's a "funny" thing how Tracy went from declaring that it's not the job of the Commission to "legislate from the bench" to deciding it's her personal job to ram through any legislation she wants to, on the strength, of course, of owning three puppets. She's "myopic?" She's about self-interest, in this case presumably influenced by some promise she probably made to Will when they were running as a slate. Neither Tracy nor her stooges care one bit for the Village as a whole. I would probably have been inclined to give Harvey more credit, but it now seems he's just not about anything. He has the perspective and the history of involvement to know better. There's just no there there, once he's in a Commission seat.

      I think Tracy's vision was completely satisfied the day she won the election. The icing on the cake for her was pressing the eject button on Sharon, whatever that was about. (I have a theory, and I'm saving it for a future blog post, if I think a speculation is called for.) Her vision, like Trump's, has nothing to do with the Village. It has to do with what Tracy was always about: telling other people how wrong they are, and what the true answer/approach is.

      It's funny you should mention unincorporated County. When in the past we've felt hopeful, ambitious, superior, or whatever we've felt, we've turned up our noses at "inferior" communities, like Hialeah, North Miami, and "Peachtree." Tracy and the bobbleheads are working to get us to match those communities.

      We really have such potential, but not enough sustained pride and ambition. Not only have I been unable over a span of years to get Dan Keys to have P&P give us a median plan, I couldn't even get the Commission of which I was a member to "task" P&P to give us a plan. I'm sure Dan would have refused anyway, but it was still remarkable that I haven't been able to get anyone to show some interest and forward thinking for the Village.

      Fred

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  2. Has Tracy actually used the phrase "legislate from the bench" in reference to the BP commission? If so, someone please elucidate her on the meaning, which applies to judges who are tasked with interpreting law. Elected commissioners have the DIRECT responsibility to do exactly that: legislate, make laws and ordinance and code. Otherwise, what's their function?

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    1. I should have been making that up, shouldn't I? As I recall, it was during the Meet the Candidates event last year. You can ask Milt Hunter to see the recording of it.

      And yes, of course, Tracy has no idea what she's talking about, for both of the reasons you cite: it's about a judicial banc, and that's exactly what legislative bodies, like municipal councils/commissions are for. Tracy herself could be called guilty of a lie by omission (your comment below), but she speaks before she thinks, and maybe she didn't even understand the job for which she applied. She certainly knows nothing about municipal management, and she applied for that job, too. There seems to have been a spate last year of inexperienced people who know nothing about the jobs they're trying to get somehow being elected (by...I'd rather not think about it).

      Fred

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  3. LIE BY OMISSION
    Lying by omission occurs when an important fact is left out in order to foster a misconception. Lying by omission includes the failure to correct pre-existing misconceptions. For example, when the seller of a car declares it has been serviced regularly but does not tell that a fault was reported at the last service, the seller lies by omission. An omission is when a person tells most of the truth, but leaves out a few key facts that therefore completely change the story. (Wikipedia)

    In the case of Commissioner Will Tudor not disclosing that his property is noncompliant to the current driveway code ... and further that he would be excused from having to install a driveway under the proposal put forth by Mayor Tracy last week and rubberstamped by Will, Jenny and Harvey. The misconception that it fosters is that he's making decisions for the good of Biscayne Park rather than for his own personal benefit.

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