Thursday, May 31, 2018
I Owe Tracy Truppman an Apology. And So Does Mac Kennedy.
It's a weak excuse, I know: Mac and I are "not the only ones." Maybe we're the most vocal, or maybe not. I can name other people who say the same thing. But I really do know. It's no excuse.
Mac and I have incessantly accused Tracy of having no vision for the Village. We've cited what we thought were examples of Tracy's lack of vision. Tracy won't do this, or she won't do that. She won't move the Village forward. And Mac and I, and some others of us, concluded that this is proof that Tracy has no vision. She refused to have the standard visioning conclave. See, more proof.
I started complaining about what I thought was Tracy's lack of vision for the Village even before she got elected. Even when we were running, I pointed out Tracy's refusal to specify any one thing she wanted for the Village. She did say she was offering finally to "listen to residents," but that turned out not to be true. And after she won, and commandeered complete personal domination over the Village, she wouldn't advance any agenda at all. The only partial exception was her claim that policing needed to be improved. But since that was already under way, it wasn't a real initiative. So I thought, and Mac thought, and some others of us thought, Tracy had no vision.
But Mac and I were wrong. Tracy does have a vision. Her vision isn't to move the Village forward. It is, if you can forgive the split infinitive, to not move the Village forward. Tracy's vision is to hold the Village where it is. Nothing is to be demanded of Village residents and property-owners, except that they shouldn't roll through stop signs, and nothing is to be done to improve, or change in any way, the Village. If it has faults, or limitations, or failings, they should remain that way.
I'm saying this as if it was purely negative, but I suspect Tracy doesn't think of it that way. I suspect Tracy thinks the Village is in some sense quaint, and that it is a laid back and homey oasis amid change, progress, and gentrification. And I think Tracy would say she's protecting Village residents and property-owners who are satisfied with their situations, and the Village as it is, and don't want anything demanded of them. Or they're not financially disposed to make or even capable of making improvements, or even doing normal maintenance. Tracy's Biscayne Park is a haven for the unambitious, and the less endowed.
When Mac and I talk with each other about Village properties, we have visions that are different from each other. My view of the Village is that it is changing, as I accept and expect that it would, and that some of those changes include contemporary looks, and two-story houses. I like it like that. To me, it's part of the Village's eclectic theme. Mac doesn't agree with me. He likes a more old style or old time Village look. He thinks properties should be kept up well, as I do, too, and he and I agree that landscaping should be improved, but Mac would otherwise not want the Village and its properties to look more modern.
Tracy goes further than that. She's satisfied if nothing at all changes. She does not support stronger Codes, or more Code compliance. If the Village looks like what someone else would call run down or poorly kept, Tracy has no problem with that. But that's not the absence of vision. That is Tracy's vision.
Every month, every property in the Village receives a copy of The Egret, a publication of the Miami Shores Chamber of Commerce. Our most recent former Mayor, David Coviello, and the Mayor before him, Roxy Ross, produced without fail a Biscayne Park column, which the Mayor in Biscayne Park is always invited (and desired) to do. Tracy refuses to produce a column. I've reminded her about it. And again, I made the mistake of thinking Tracy was failing to do part of her job as the main spokesperson for Biscayne Park, because she refused to produce the BP column. But my mistake was thinking the Mayor in Biscayne Park should provide connection to our neighboring municipalities. Based on my theory, any Mayor who didn't do that was failing to do part of his or her job. But connecting with neighboring municipalities is not Tracy's wish. She's much more isolationist. She doesn't care about Miami Shores, or El Portal, or North Bay Village. She has no use for them. Where I think her refusal to produce a column for The Egret is a failure, I suspect Tracy would call it a success.
So I now think I was wrong about Tracy and what I interpreted as lack of vision. I think Mac was wrong, too. I think Brad Piper was wrong. I think any of us who saw stagnation, and thought it represented apathy or disinterest, was wrong. It's just laissez-faire. Stagnation and unaddressed decay are not evidence of Tracy's lack of agenda for the Village. They are her agenda. And she's been unwavering about executing that agenda. So I apologize for having misunderstood.
Fred,
ReplyDeleteIf you are correct then her agenda is moving the Village backwards.
I found this on the web, this seems to fit your post.
Chuck
Victor Kiam and Moving Forward. This is true because if you're afraid to fail you won't make any progress and there is only progress or regress, there's no standing still. You're either moving forward or you're moving backward. You always want to keep forward momentum, even if that involves falling on your face.
Chuck,
DeleteWhat Victor Kiam said, and you quoted, is correct about Tracy and her vision for the Village for another reason. It could theoretically be possible neither to move forward nor backward. There's a way of staying in place. For a place like a municipality, that would involve simply establishing a standard-- and it could be the standard of a given day-- and not permitting that standard to change. Nothing should advance it, but anything that leads it to deteriorate would not be tolerated, either. Since everything deteriorates, the requirement would be for continual maintenance. A municipality would effect that through codes. If Tracy will not advocate for improvement, and she will not advocate for strong code compliance, then her agenda, her goal, her ambition, her vision for the neighborhood is gradual decay, deterioration, and decline.
It wasn't so long ago that Bryan Cooper was a Commissioner here, and his approach was similar. He wanted nothing that would improve the neighborhood, he wanted nothing that imposed adequate maintenance, he wanted taxes too low for even the appearance of maintaining us, and he was able to articulate the root of this vision by saying he thought the Village should be absorbed by Miami Shores. He wanted the Village to fail, so it could not exist independently, and it would have to be taken over. Most likely, it would have been taken back over by the county, or maybe by North Miami, and it was only Bryan's unsupported fantasy that Miami Shores would be interested in a faster sinking ship.
So maybe Tracy is aiming for the same thing. Maybe she's trying to usher us to failure, so we can be deincorporated. She never said so, but then she never says anything. That was the problem when she was running. There used to be discussions about various community topics on Nextdoor, but she was always careful to avoid exposing her opinion, or what she wanted. She was conspicuous for withholding that. Maybe this is why. Maybe she didn't want to show her hand this way. Well, it's increasingly clear now.
Fred
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteMac,
DeleteYou're raising a different issue. You're essentially asking the question WHY Tracy wants what she wants, which is for no one to be asked to do anything, and for decay to go unchallenged.
If we were talking about Will Tudor, we would know explicitly that Will doesn't want a stronger driveway/swale Ordinance, or enforcement of the one we have, because he doesn't want anyone to make him put a driveway on his property. Maybe what you've identified about Tracy is the same thing. Maybe Tracy doesn't want anyone to demand quality presentation and condition of properties in BP, because she doesn't want anyone to make HER improve what you described. We can't know whether Tracy's personal property management is the result of her not knowing any better, or not caring, or being fearful or even paranoid. But we know what you know, which is what everyone can see.
And that's not inconsistent with the idea that Tracy has a real vision for the Park. Her vision is that people should be allowed to live as they like, and never mind anyone else. It seems odd to me to say that people choose to live in certain communities, but they owe nothing to the community, or their neighbors there. But I see that some people really do feel that way. It is perhaps most likely that Tracy Truppman is one of them.
Fred