Saturday, May 16, 2009
EyeonMiami Needs your help! By Geniusofdespair
Print this Florida Hometown Democracy petition. Get your friends, relatives and neighbors to sign it. Get it in ASAP. It is down to the wire:
"By now, most adults understand that Florida’s entire economy has been wrecked by over development, and it can’t be fixed by more of the same that got us into this mess.
The Chamber lackeys will say and do just about anything to defeat Hometown Democracy. They figure that if their lie gets told enough times people will be absolutely confused and begin to think it’s the truth. Just like the Swift-boating campaign of 2004, watch for a tidal wave of misinformation about Hometown Democracy that is just starting and will bombard us as we approach the 2010 election. Most Americans now recognize and despise such nasty and certainly unethical tactics. But now you’ve been warned what to watch for."
Carlson, a Florida native and resident of New Smyrna Beach, spent 26 years in the U.S. Army, retiring as a sergeant-major.
Also:
Hometown Democracy: People want right to say no
By Maggy Hurchalla, guest columnist ---STUART NEWS
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
It's easy to tell who the bad guys are in the Hometown Democracy debate. They lie so viciously and creatively that they make normal dirty politics seem friendly. They are committing huge piles of money to say and do whatever is necessary to stop Florida Hometown Democracy from getting on the ballot. They clearly believe that people will vote for it and it will slow growth.
And then there are the innocents — the frustrated, angry public that have watched the best planning laws in the country turn into bureaucratic pablum. They want the right to just say "no."
What's puzzling are the good guys caught in between. Tom Pelham, one of Florida's better state planning directors in the past, is fighting Hometown Democracy while warning the Legislature that growth management in Florida has failed. 1000 Friends of Florida is reluctantly and ever so politely not a friend of Hometown Democracy. The American Planning Association state chapter is afraid of it.
When your thoughtful friends question a decision, it's time to stop and think. I have thought long and hard over all the arguments against it. I think my hopeful friends in the middle are wrong.
Opponents go on and on about how difficult it will be to vote on each and every comprehensive plan amendment. They miss the point that local governments are handing out amendments like chewing gum. The problem is that we have too many amendments.
Everyone agrees that our local plan is our constitution. We should treat it like one. We should be conservative in making changes. We should let the people vote on those changes.
It's very clear from the opposition that there will be far fewer amendments proposed if the public gets the right to say "no."
As long as there are 8,000 plan amendments around the state every year, there will be chaos. We're watching it happen. Comp plan amendments should be rare. They should happen every two years at the general election. They should be something the public can understand. Our politicians have proved rather dramatically that they are not smarter than we are on planning issues.
Doubters of Hometown Democracy propose a list of bold legislative changes that would restore the public's role in planning without giving them the "draconian" power to say "no".
I think any of us who have watched the Legislature in recent years can say with complete confidence that there is not a snowball's chance in hell that any of those reforms will pass, unless Hometown Democracy makes it onto the ballot for next November.
Go to: www.floridahometowndemocracy.com or call the toll-free number for petitions: 866-779-5513. Download a petition and mail it in ASAP. E-mail your friends. Beg your neighbors. Time is running out.
And when we get it on the ballot, we will see whether the Legislature can meet the challenge to make growth management work for people instead of developers. If they can't, then we know for sure that we need Hometown Democracy.
Opponents keep saying that letting the people vote will turn over important planning decisions to the side that has the most money for advertising. I find that viewpoint incredibly offensive in terms of its attitude toward voters and democracy in general.
But if we get on the ballot, the November election will produce an unbiased answer to the accusation that voters can always be bought.
The campaign is clearly going to be David versus Goliath. The opponents of Florida Hometown Democracy have already shown that they will be the big bad mean Goliath with most of the money on their side.
So if the people of Florida vote overwhelmingly for the Hometown Democracy amendment, they will have proved that democracy and honesty can win over big money.
That's a happy thought."
Hurchalla, a former Martin County commissioner who lives in Port Salerno, co-authored Martin County's comprehensive plan and has been a longtime statewide advocate for conservation and land preservation.
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6 comments:
It would have been better if you had set this petition up so that all of us could resend it to our own lists with only some wise words explaing why they should sign it
send them this link mensa.
http://eyeonmiami.blogspot.com/2009/05/eyeonmiami-needs-your-help-by.html
Here is a tip: hit on the title and then the whole article is open. All you have to do is copy the link.
Did you try that link?
I sent out 25 requests to use it and find it does not connect.
the link works. all you have to do is left click the form and when it opens right click on the full page form, hit copy, then paste to a word document.
when is the deadline?
The dealine is now. We have been messing around for too long get it done.
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