PNJ: Senate eyes BP money for rural areas hit my Hurricane Michael
Posted by Admin on Mar 19, 2019 in News | 0 commentsPNJ: Senate eyes BP money for rural areas hit my Hurricane Michael
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PNJ: Senate eyes BP money for rural areas hit my Hurricane Michael
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The videos circulating on social media are shocking: Groups of men pummel people to the ground; women brawl on the street, ripping the weaves from each other’s heads; a man punches a woman in the face and knocks her out; people drink openly in vehicles and, despite closing Ocean Drive — or maybe because of it — traffic is a nightmare.
Welcome to Miami Beach Spring Break 2019, where — despite a public outreach campaign and the expenditure of $700,000 in overtime to put a cop on every corner — the chaos is such that some people in South Beach feel trapped in their homes. Many feel police have lost control.
Where is Mayor Dan Gelber amidst all this? Well, he’s having a fundraiser at the Miami Beach Golf Club on Alton Road Tuesday night.
Gelber, who is so far unopposed, probably scheduled this in advance. But it was poor planning. And perhaps it should be cancelled.
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After all, if the situation is such that you have to call an emergency city commission meeting for Tuesday morning because your police department is losing control of the streets, then maybe you shouldn’t be asking folks to fund the extension of your job Tuesday evening.
At least one Miami Beach voter posted that “hosting a fundraising event in the middle of the current traffic and crime crisis is an incredibly clueless and callous act.”
Also, Gelber has already raised $71,960 in just one month, according the the last and only filed campaign finance report ending Feb. 28. With no real challenge, he could have easily postponed this powwow.
In a desperate attempt to get votes in North Gables, commission candidate Jorge Fors is stirring up annexation fears.
Fors — who is running for the seat vacated by Commissioner Frank Quesada — walked North Gables streets last week, passing out petitions to stop the annexation of Little Gables, an unincorporated Miami-Dade enclave just south of 8th Street.
Only problem is, the process is pretty far along already, having been approved by the existing commission. Police Chief Ed Hudak told them that it would be better from a public safety standpoint. Gables Police and Fire Rescue already have to go into Little Gables all the time. It would be better f they can patrol it proactively and get the tax dollars for the services provided.
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The annexation application — one of two, the other being the High Pines area just south of Sunset — is at the county level now, having passed the planning and zoning committee in December. Basically, it’s headed to a vote the full county commission and then a vote of the people in Little Gables.
But those kind of details don’t matter in a campaign. What matters is emotion. Some people in North Gables are unhappy about bringing Little Gables into the fold. Some are angry that they never got a chance to vote to let them in.
And Fors is taking advantage of that. He is the least known candidate in a four-way race against former Commissioner Ralph Cabrera, onetime interim city manager Carmen Olazabal and downtown property owner Jackson “Rip” Holmes. He needed something to set him apart — other than the Homestead exemption fraud. Annexation was low hanging fruit. Early in the campaign, Fors sent a mailer out about annexation. Then he hit the streets with the petitions. Last Thursday, annexation was even turned into a campaign issue at the Coco Plum Woman’s Club candidate forum.
But can he really do anything if elected? He would only be one of five votes. And should he even try?
Read related: Coral Gables candidate Jorge Fors had illegal Homestead exemption
“When there are very limited issues to talk about — crime is not an issue, the state of our city is not an issue — certain candidates feel the need to drum up issues that don’t exist,” said Commissioner Vince Lago. “The police chief stood up and said that annexation is in the best interest of the city to patrol the area because it provides a more natural border and closes our geo fence.”
Little Gables has a penchant for drugs and prostitution, mostly from the trailer park and the Wishes Motel on 8th Street that rents by the hour.
Lago and City Manager Peter Iglesias — who got rid of two trailer parks in his previous life at the city of Miami — believe that they can incentivize property owners to redevelop and bring their properties up to Gables code. Lago says he even wants to see a city park for North Gables residents.
There have been at least five public community meetings about annexation since 2016, including one hosted by Miami-Dade Commissioner Rebeca Sosa. How much you wanna bet that Jorgie Come Lately didn’t go to one? He did not return several calls and texts to his cell phone.
Perhaps what Fors has shown is just how uneducated he is about the issues.
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