Saturday, March 26, 2011

The Quest For The Perfect Pizza in Miami-Dade. By Geniusofdespair


I am always looking for that New York style pizza in Florida. I have given up on Mario the Baker and have been going to Anthony's Coal Fired Pizza which is good but it is not New York pizza.

This hole in the wall place, Tony's Pizza, at 19329 Route 441 (State Road 7) fits the bill, I give it a thumbs up. They are just South of Ives Dairy Road. The pizza at Tony's is crispy, the crust tastes good and they put the right ratio of sauce to cheese (I hate white pizza). Anyway, give Tony's a try for good New York style pizza. Don't get turned off by the plastic utensils or the slightly caving in drop ceiling toward the back. Sit up front. The tall guy is the owner, maybe his name is Tony, forgot to ask.

Nuclear disaster could never happen in Miami, but if it did... By gimleteye

I am upset with FPL's "charm offensive" on its record at Turkey Point with nuclear power and plans for two new reactors to cost in excess of $20 billion. Here is a very sobering message, I hope all ratepayers take to heart. What to do? Write your US senators and President Obama. Tell them: there is no role for nuclear power at sea level on hurricane-vulnerable coastlines.

Survivor's Message for Japan: 'Run Away as Quickly as Possible'
Mar 22, 2011 – 1:23 PM

Natalia Manzurova, one of the few survivors among those directly involved in
the long cleanup of Chernobyl, was a 35-year-old engineer at a nuclear plant
in Ozersk, Russia, in April 1986 when she and 13 other scientists were told
to report to the wrecked, burning plant in the northern Ukraine.

It was just four days after the world's biggest nuclear disaster spewed
enormous amounts of radiation into the atmosphere and forced the evacuation
of 100,000 people.

Manzurova and her colleagues were among the roughly 800,000 "cleaners" or
"liquidators" in charge of the removal and burial of all the contamination
in what's still called the dead zone.

Courtesy of Natalia Manzurova
Natalia Manzurova, shown here in 1988 in the "dead zone" of the Pripyat, is
one of the relatively few survivors among those directly involved in the
cleanup of Chernobyl.
She spent 4 1/2 years helping clean the abandoned town of Pripyat, which was
less than two miles from the Chernobyl reactors. The plant workers lived
there before they were abruptly evacuated.

Manzurova, now 59 and an advocate for radiation victims worldwide, has the
"Chernobyl necklace" -- a scar on her throat from the removal of her thyroid
-- and myriad health problems. But unlike the rest of her team members, who
she said have all died from the results of radiation poisoning, and many
other liquidators, she's alive.

AOL News spoke with Manzurova about the nuclear disaster in Japan with the
help of a translator on the telephone Monday from Vermont. Manzurova, who
still lives in Ozersk, was beginning a one-week informational tour.

AOL News: What was your first reaction when you heard about Fukushima?
Manzurova: It felt like déjà vu. I felt so worried for the people of Japan
and the children especially. I know the experience that awaits them.

But experts say Fukushima is not as bad as Chernobyl.
Every nuclear accident is different, and the impact cannot be truly measured
for years. The government does not always tell the truth. Many will never
return to their homes. Their lives will be divided into two parts: before
and after Fukushima. They'll worry about their health and their children's
health. The government will probably say there was not that much radiation
and that it didn't harm them. And the government will probably not
compensate them for all that they've lost. What they lost can't be
calculated.

What message do you have for Japan?
Run away as quickly as possible. Don't wait. Save yourself and don't rely on
the government because the government lies. They don't want you to know the
truth because the nuclear industry is so powerful.

Courtesy of Natalia Manzurova
Natalia Manzurova, now 59, has suffered a variety of ailments since she
worked at Chernobyl, but she says she is the only member of her team still
alive.
When you were called to go to Chernobyl, did you know how bad it was there?
I had no idea and never knew the true scope until much later. It was all
covered in secrecy. I went there as a professional because I was told to --
but if I was asked to liquidate such an accident today, I'd never agree. The
sacrifices the Fukushima workers are making are too high because the nuclear
industry was developed in such a way that the executives don't hold
themselves accountable to the human beings who have to clean up a disaster.
It's like nuclear slavery.

What was your first impression of Chernobyl?
It was like a war zone where a neutron bomb had gone off. I always felt I
was in the middle of a war where the enemy was invisible. All the houses and
buildings were intact with all the furniture, but there wasn't a single
person left. Just deep silence everywhere. Sometimes I felt I was the only
person alive on a strange planet. There are really no words to describe it.

What did your work as a liquidator entail?
First, we measured radiation levels and got vegetation samples to see how
high the contamination was. Then bulldozers dug holes in the ground and we
buried everything -- houses, animals, everything. There were some wild
animals that were still alive, and we had to kill them and put them in the
holes.

Were any pets left in the houses?
The people had only a few hours to leave, and they weren't allowed to take
their dogs or cats with them. The radiation stays in animals' fur and they
can't be cleaned, so they had to be abandoned. That's why people were crying
when they left. All the animals left behind in the houses were like
dried-out mummies. But we found one dog that was still alive.

Where did you find the dog and how did he survive?
We moved into a former kindergarten to use as a laboratory and we found her
lying in one of the children's cots there. Her legs were all burned from the
radiation and she was half blind. Her eyes were all clouded from the
radiation. She was slowly dying.

Were you able to rescue her?
No. Right after we moved in, she disappeared. And this is the amazing part.
A month later we found her in the children's ward of the (abandoned)
hospital. She was dead. She was lying in a child's bed, the same size bed we
found her in the kindergarten. Later we found out that she loved children
very much and was always around them.

How did working in the dead zone begin to affect your health?
I started to feel as if I had the flu. I would get a high temperature and
start to shiver. What happens during first contact with radiation is that
your good flora is depleted and the bad flora starts to flourish. I suddenly
wanted to sleep all the time and eat a lot. It was the organism getting all
the energy out.

How much radiation were you subjected to?
We were never told. We wore dosimeters which measured radiation and we
submitted them to the bosses, but they never gave us the results.

But didn't you realize the danger and want to leave?
Yes, I knew the danger. All sorts of things happened. One colleague stepped
into a rainwater pool and the soles of his feet burned off inside his boots.
But I felt it was my duty to stay. I was like a firefighter. Imagine if your
house was burning and the firemen came and then left because they thought it
was too dangerous.

When did you discover the thyroid tumor?
They found it during a routine medical inspection after I had worked there
several years. It turned out to be benign. I don't know when it started to
develop. I had an operation to remove half the thyroid gland. The tumor grew
back, and last year I had the other half removed. I live on (thyroid)
hormones now.

Sponsored
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Why did you go back to Chernobyl after getting a thyroid tumor?
Right around the time of my operation, the government passed a law saying
the liquidators had to work for exactly 4 1/2 years to get our pension and
retire. If you left even one day early, you would not get any benefits.

Really? That seems beyond cruel.
It's why the nuclear industry is dangerous. They want to deny the dangers.
They kept changing the law about what benefits we'd get because if they
admitted how much we were affected, it would look bad for the industry. Now
we hardly get any benefits.

Did your health worsen after you finally finished work at Chernobyl?
I was basically disabled at 43. I was having fits similar to epileptic fits.
My blood pressure was sky high. It was hard to work for more than six months
a year. The doctors didn't know what to do with me. They wanted to put me in
a psychiatric ward and call me crazy. Finally they admitted it was because
of the radiation.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Running for County Commission District 7: The GOOD Julio Robaina. By Geniusofdespair

Former State Representative/Former South Miami Mayor Julio Robaina is registered to run for the District 7 County Commission seat. Don't confuse him with Julio Robaina from Hialeah who is running for Miami Dade County Mayor. Also running for District 7 is Xavier Suarez - former City of Miami Mayor. I heard a rumor that Armando Gutierrez's wife Maritza is thinking of throwing her hat in the ring. Let's hope not.

Now we have 13 candidates running for mayor (with maybe Roosevelt Bradley joining the pack). Former Miami Dade County Commissioner Jose Pepe Cancio (appointed to fill vacancy of Miriam Alonso) has joined in as well as Darrin McGillis and Farid A. Khavari (these last two also ran for Governor).

Coral Gables Election Sewer Pit. By Geniusofdespair

We have not been following the Coral Gables election but Discourse.Net has been and they have uncovered a Julio Robaina connection in PAC campaign contributions. Pretty slimy stuff going on in the City Beautiful - namely the police union paid for an attack ad.

History, repeating itself in Miami Dade politics through Hialeah? by gimleteye


What do Hialeah voters really know about their elected officials and what interests they represent? The question bears repeating, in context of G.O.D.’s photo of former Seijas chief of staffer Terry Murphy huddled with former Hialeah mayor and candidate for US Congress, Raul Martinez. Both formers are plotting their way back to power since none of the currents have the brass knuckle instincts of Natacha Seijas who obsessively ruled Miami-Dade County, pulling levers for campaign contributors through county agencies and a compliant county manager, George Burgess.

Seijas was turned out by Hialeah and Miami Lakes voters disgusted with the economy. But those voters understand only a little ... (please click 'read more')
... how the economy ties back to a political system that virtually guaranteed county government would serve the purposes of speculation first and foremost: speculation related to infrastructure like roadways, sewer, and water on which development and construction depends. Seijas was turned out because voters sought accountability for unwanted tax increases, but those voters understand very little of the scope of hidden deficits – on the order of $7 billion at least—that accumulated throughout the time that Seijas was the populist minister of pothole politics in Hialeah.

That the story of how the $7 billion accumulated never made it into the newspapers verges on the criminal. In so far as the mismanagement of the county budget and priorities is concerned, long-timers like Javier Souto might properly say; “What is the big deal? We always do things, this way.” And so, it is no wonder that there is—on the county commission dais at this particular time, a sense of the surreal. How much, the unreformable majority is wondering, do we really change the roles we are accustomed to play?

They know that the same wave of populist anger licks their heels, but it can only reach them if the billionaire financier, Norman Braham, invests to recall them the way he did Alvarez and Seijas. (Ordinary voters don't have that muscle.) Meanwhile, managing their roles through the Depression requires adjustment to the play-by-numbers structure of governance, through which lobbyists representing campaign cash bundlers guarantee that scripts and agenda items on the county commission calendar are orchestrated neat as a freshly starched, pressed guayabera.

Terry Murphy was turned out of power, along with Seijas who he served as chief of staff. There would be little surprise if he latched onto the next county commissioner from Hialeah. Murphy is the institutional memory for a political order made vastly wealthy through the biggest bubble in Florida real estate history. He can take credit for much of the staging of the Kabuki drama that presents itself as representative democracy in Miami-Dade. Murphy was Larry Hawkins' mastermind, too, before Hawkins faced sexual misconduct charges as commissioner in the South Dade district and subsequently defeated by then newcomer, Katy Sorenson. His principal achievement was to consign the wrecked Homestead Air Force Base to a group of board members of the Latin Builders Association reconstituted as that private corporation, HABDI. In doing so, Murphy paved the way for county government to misdirect tens of millions in taxpayer money, deforming the purpose of county agencies, and diverting at last in 2000 the political fortunes of a presidential candidate—Al Gore—persuaded by local lobbyists (Chris Korge, Mitchell Berger) to keep his hands off the Homestead Air Force Base while Ralph Nader siphoned off enough votes to throw the presidency to George W. Bush. Not conspiracy theory. Fact.

Do Hialeah voters, contemplating their role in pushing George Bush forward have any idea what their former mayor, Raul Martinez, also represents? Do voters have an inkling that Karl Rove, who brought Bush to national politics, is behind Rubio and the mechanics of the Tea Party? County commissioners, I suspect, know perfectly well the financial wherewithal of those who supported the likes of Seijas, Alex Penelas (county mayor – and Democrat-- at the time who managed to be in Spain on important private business during the 2000 recount halted in Miami Dade) and Rubio. Along such lines, one can also interpret the meaning of the recent political fundraiser hosted by US Century Bank insiders like Ramon Rasco for US Senator Bill Nelson; a Democratic paying respect to Republicans who manage county politics like a syndicate or limited liability corporation. Rasco was the lead organizer of the Homestead Air Force Base fiasco, HABDI.

That the local piggy bank, US Century, a Republican stronghold would not even be open for business but for the largesse of US taxpayers (through TARP money anchoring its balance sheet, supported by Democrats) does not occur to Hialeah voters. Raul Martinez would be their man, and Terry Murphy would be back as major domo, consigliere, or calderon as the case may be.

Do You Remember the 8 and 1/2 Square Mile Taxpayer Buyout? By Geniusofdespair


The 8 1/2 square mile area is rearing it's ugly head once again in Miami Dade County. As if we didn't spend enough dough (tens of Millions if my memory serves me) on a compromise buyout in this area. Very troubling. The compromise left some property ownership there now they want to form a neighborhood called Las Palmas. Talk about a camels nose under the tent! There was an October 2010 PAB meeting about this subject.

This application is being heard by the Miami Dade County PAB on Monday at 10 a.m. in the Commission Chambers. It is being put forward by staff. Duress? Why would staff put this out there on their own?

People who own land in the area want to increase its usage and are hitting hard on a compliant County Commissioner Lynda Bell (Katy Sorenson's less than environmental minded replacement) who held a town hall meeting a few weeks ago for them to put the screws on DERM. Here is what is being heard:

LAND USE ELEMENT
Modify the text of Open Land Subarea 4 (East Everglades Residential Areas)
in the Land Use Element of the Comprehensive Development Master Plan (CDMP),
to allow agriculture production including nurseries and tree farms and
limited raising of livestock.


Some background:

News story on the buyout which cost taxpayers multi-millions:
------
35 Homes Targeted In 8 1/2 Square Mile Deal
June 16, 2000|By NEIL SANTANIELLO Staff Writer


Members of a western Miami-Dade community won't be forced to sell their homes to water managers after all.

After agreeing 18 months ago to buy out the entire 8 Square Mile Area, a regional water board voted Thursday on a compromise that preserves most residents' property rights while delivering more water to the east side of Everglades National Park.

"Is this perfect? No," said South Florida Water Management District board Chairman Michael Collins. "Does this give us the ability to move forward? I believe in my heart of hearts it does."

Voting 8-1, with member Vera Carter from Orlando dissenting, the water board agreed to ask the Army Corps of Engineers to acquire about one-quarter of the 6,000-plus acre community.

The area to be bought, 1,613 acres on the community's western edge, contains 35 homes, as well as wetlands where water tables could rise to improve water flows to the national park.
-------
More from the application:

Description of Open Land Subarea 4 and Existing Land Uses

Open Land Subarea 4 (East Everglades Residential Areas) is generally west of
the Kendall Tamiami Executive Airport, and bounded on the north, west and
southwest by Everglades National Park, on the east by the L-31N Canal, and
on the south by SW 168 Street. The boundaries of the Subarea are depicted,
along with other information, on the map entitled, “Application No. 5”,
located at the end of this report. The Subarea is approximately 5,635 acres
in size, or 8.8 square miles (thus the common name for this area, “the 8 and
1⁄2 Square Mile”).

1 Existing land uses in Subarea 4 include various types of agriculture,
undeveloped land, residential use, and transportation, communication, and
utility uses. Agriculture types include tropical fruit crops, tree farms,
and vegetable crops such as okra. Some agricultural activities are
year-round uses and are not consistent with the adopted CDMP and do not have
required County permits. Animals observed in the area include horses,
goats, fowl, and some hogs; the maintenance and raising of animals for
commercial purposes is not permitted in the Subarea. The Subarea also
includes residential structures, and some structures that support
agricultural uses. According to Department of Environmental Resources
Management staff, some of these structures, or building densities, have not
been permitted by the County.

Approximately 41% of Subarea 4 is owned by government agencies; including
the SFWMD, the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Everglades National
Park, and a 306 acre parcel of land that belongs to the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA). This FAA-owned property is a radar and antenna site
that supports aviation activities throughout South Florida.

Open Land Subarea 4 is generally a low-lying area with elevations between
5.5 and 8.5 feet above mean sea level (msl) and contains prairie wetlands.
According to Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) records,
approximately the eastern half (diagonal line from the northeast to the
southwest) of Subarea 4 is in FEMA flood zone X (moderate to low flood risk
area, usually the area between the limits of the 100-year and 500-year
floods) and the western portion of the Subarea is the higher risk flood zone
AH (Areas with a 1% annual chance of shallow flooding, usually in the form
of a pond, with an average depth ranging from 1 to 3 feet).2
Numerous properties within Subarea 4 have jurisdictional wetlands and must
have a Class IV Wetlands Permit from the Miami-Dade County Department of
Environmental Protection (DERM) for development activity; this permit
addresses allowed land uses, and any proposed grading or filling. The Class
IV permit also requires onsite retention of stormwater because “cut and fill
criteria” are applicable to this hydrologic basin.

Some Charter Reform on the Horizon, Like Repeal the Strong Mayor? By Geniusofdespair

Here is another reason why we need paid reporters. They have to sit through Javier Souto talking - and an 8 hour meeting of commissioners mostly pontificating for the TV cameras with some substance thrown in. In other words, they turn a 2 or 3 hour meeting into 8 hours by adding nonsense. Apparently I missed some stuff in yesterday's report because I left early, I couldn't stomach it. They seemed so intent on a straw vote, I thought that was where they were going. Well the tides turned somehow and I was wrong. They did approve some charter amendments to be placed on the ballot according to the Miami Herald:


On May 24, Miami-Dade voters will consider charter amendments that:

1. Set 12-year term limits for county commissioners and ban outside employment in exchange for boosting commissioner salaries to $92,097 a year.

2. Make voter ballot initiatives easier by eliminating a requirement that signatures be notarized.

3. Allow the Charter Review Task Force to bring proposals approved by two thirds of the panel directly to voters.

4. Eliminate the strong-mayor form of government created in 2007.

5. Ban elected officials from lobbying at County Hall for two years after leaving office

6. Put the Inspector General’s Office in the county charter, in a bid to help insulate it from commission meddling.


We definitely want 2, 3 and 6 and should vote for them.

We don't want 1 - it should be 8 years. We don't want 4 - never do we want 4. The Commissioners are making a power grab. Number 5 doesn't go far enough. It should be 5 years but I would probably vote for it. Maybe not.

According to the Herald:

Braman criticized the commission’s proposed 12-year term limits as meaningless because it would do little to alter the current makeup of the commission. Under the commission proposal, the limits would begin with the 2012 election.

“To think these people would stay in office until 2024 is just incredible,’’ said Braman, who was not present at the meeting.

And, how about we recall Joe Martinez, who "...initially argued Thursday that the recall vote last week was a campaign to replace Alvarez and Seijas — not a call for wholesale changes."



Thursday, March 24, 2011

Vanessa Brito and Raul Martinez. By Geniusofdespair


Vanessa Brito - Miami Voice - said she would not rule out an at large County Commission seat. Vanessa forget about it. We won't get that change in the charter. When I left - see post below - Jordan was backpeddaling on term limits saying elections are term limits. What we need Vanessa is another targeted recall. They haven't got the message.

On another front -- Sounds like Raul is running for Natacha's seat. He said he does not like sitting on the sideline and he lives in the district. He was standing with Terry Murphy - Natacha's former chief of staff -- very bad sign (see photo above). Something is up. When I started my video Terry ran away. Maybe Raul is also considering the mayor slot.

Headed To The County Commission Meeting. By Geniusofdespair

(Photo Vanessa Brito with Victor Diaz - Chairman of Former Charter Review Task Force)

Postscript: 5pm. They came up with one insulting to citizens charter change -- a 12 year term limit and a salary increase. What a bunch of turkeys. They already did the $90,000 in 2008 tied to no ouside employment and we rejected it. Hey Commissioners don't insult us: 8 years is already too much of you folks. Joe Martinez - we are fed up.
-----------
I will do on the spot reporting from the County Commission meeting. It will be interesting to see them weasel out of Charter Change. They are proposing a straw vote? What do they take us for a pack of fools.

10:15-- just getting started, everyone is fashionably late. They are talking about fire at airport now. Sixty flights were cancelled -- 1/3 of flights. Plenty will be late. Mechanical failure they say. Also they have a bomb scare (unattened bag and had to evacuate part of the terminal). Souto is now talking... I will have plenty of time to write as he blathers on. Seijas' former chief of staff Terry Murphy is in the audience. Souto is talking about Libya and Cuba now. Martinez has asked him to get to the point--which appears to be he wants more security at airport.

10:35 Jordan wants to change $75,000 to State formula. Resolution 110629.
Martinez asked but no one wanted to appoint a mayor/commissioner. Talking about election on May 3rd. Now they probably all will pontificate (lots of cameras in the room). Qualifying period is point of contention. Qualifying period immediate?? That way all candidates would have to resign to run. Hard on Sosa, Gimenez and Robaina. Gimenez wants item 1 to be last item (110637) on agenda. He wants true charter reform on the ballot, then set date. Sosa does not want to reduce the number of commissioners in the charter. Wants to do changes right. Grandstanding now for 'little people'. Wants election buGt not charter questions on it. Now - they are all grandstanding on how much the did reform. Blah, blah. He wants charter changes on general election ballot, not on this special election ballot.

10:59 - Now a surprised Martinez asked if all these resolutions could go on a straw ballot. The attorney said yes. Martinez acted surprised. Gimme a break. We all knew that little Joe. Your candor was so fake it was laughable. Now Heyman is complaining about charter change being rushed. Wants straw vote. We are going to get F--ked. Remembered we already had a long drawn out Charter Review Committee and these assholes voted them down. Now all of a sudden they have to rethink them. Monestime can't support quick charter change vote. Martinez suggested (no surprise) to Monestime, maybe you can support a straw vote. You know where this is going folks.

11:12 - Why is Raul Martinez here? Moss is talking against downsizing the county commission -- will hurt blacks and whites. Pepe le pew Diaz complaining how he wants to hear from people. Change done with haste is no good. I must listen to the people. Again doesn't want charter change on the ballot because there hasn't been a public hearing and he needs to hear from the people. What bullshit. If I hear the word haste - rush etc. I am going to scream. This is so f--ked. I am ready to leave. Martinez wants a straw ballot looking for vote on it I presume. Souto will be speaking again. I won't be able to sit through him.

11:32 - it is going to be a straw ballot with THEIR charter changes. By the time the vote comes, people will be on to other things. We won't get any petition reforms. I am going - adios. So much for democracy.

For the Agenda hit read more:

AGENDA -- 21 Items
Item 1 - 110637 Resolution Bruno A. Barreiro, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO QUALIFIED ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE CANDIDATES TO FILL THE VACANCY CREATED BY THE RECALL OF MAYOR CARLOS ALVAREZ AND COUNTY COMMISSIONER NATACHA SEIJAS, AND IF NECESSARY A SPECIAL RUN-OFF ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2011

Item 2- 110669 Resolution Bruno A. Barreiro, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE, COMMENCING WITH THE COUNTY MAYOR AND COMMISSION ELECTIONS SCHEDULED FOR 2012, THAT NO PERSON WHO HAS SERVED EIGHT (8) YEARS AS AN ELECTED MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICER IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY SHALL BE ELIGIBLE TO QUALIFY AS A CANDIDATE FOR, NOR MAY BE ELECTED AS, MAYOR OR COUNTY COMMISSIONER

Item 3 - 110644 Resolution Audrey M. Edmonson, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT, EFFECTIVE WITH THE COUNTY COMMISSIONER ELECTIONS IN 2012, NO PERSON ELECTED FOR MORE THAN THREE CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS AS A COUNTY COMMISSIONER SHALL BE ELIGIBLE TO QUALIFY FOR, NOR SHALL BE ELECTED AS, A COUNTY COMMISSIONER FOR THE NEXT SUCCEEDING TERM WITH TERMS OF OFFICE COMMENCING BEFORE 2012 EXCLUDED FROM THE TERM LIMIT CALCULATION

Item 4 - 110645 Resolution Audrey M. Edmonson, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT COMMISSIONERS NO LONGER RECEIVE THE $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY ESTABLISHED IN 1957, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD THE SALARY PROVIDED BY STATE STATUTORY FORMULA, ADJUSTED ANNUALLY BY THE COUNTY’S POPULATION (CURRENTLY APPROXIMATELY $92,097), USED BY OTHER FLORIDA COUNTIES, INCLUDING BROWARD COUNTY

110656 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT THE COUNTY SHALL HAVE NO MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE ADMINISTRATIVE DEPARTMENTS NOT INCLUDING DEPARTMENTS AUTHORIZED BY THE CHARTER

110657 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT: EACH COUNTY COMMISSIONER SHALL DEVOTE FULL-TIME SERVICE TO THE OFFICE OF COUNTY COMMISSIONER AND HOLD NO OTHER EMPLOYMENT; NO LONGER RECEIVE THEIR CURRENT $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD THE STATE STATUTORY FORMULA, ADJUSTED ANNUALLY BASED ON THE COUNTY’S POPULATION (CURRENTLY APPROXIMATELY $92,097); SHALL SERVE NO MORE THAN TWO CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS IN OFFICE; AND SHALL BE PROHIBITED FROM LOBBYING THE BOARD FOR 5 YEARS AFTER LEAVING OFFICE

110660 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A SPECIAL ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011 FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE FOR THE CREATION OF A 9-MEMBER CHARTER REVIEW TASK FORCE, APPOINTED BY THE PRESIDENTS OF LOCAL COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES AND THE CHIEF JUDGES OF THE LOCAL, FEDERAL AND STATE TRIAL COURTS, WHO SHALL MEET ON PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION YEARS TO PROPOSE REVISIONS TO THE CHARTER AND HAVE THOSE REVISIONS APPROVED BY A 2/3 MAJORITY SUBMITTED DIRECTLY TO THE ELECTORATE ON THE SAME BALLOT AS THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

110666 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO REQUIRE THE BOARD TO CREATE BY ORDINANCE A TASK FORCE TO STUDY AND PROPOSE A CHARTER AMENDMENT TO ABOLISH THE CURRENT THIRTEEN COMMISSION DISTRICTS AND CREATE A NEW TWO-TIERED ELECTORAL SYSTEM COMPRISED OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF AT-LARGE AND SINGLE MEMBER COMMISSIONER DISTRICTS NECESSARY TO PROVIDE MEANINGFUL COUNTYWIDE AND LOCAL PERSPECTIVE WITH SUCH PROPOSAL TO BE PLACED ON THE NEXT COUNTYWIDE ELECTION BALLOT AFTER APPROVAL BY A FEDERAL COURT

110667 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER THE HOME RULE CHARTER SHALL BE AMENDED TO: SPECIFY THE EXCLUSIVE PROCESS, FORM, CONTENT, AND METHOD FOR CERTIFICATION OF CITIZEN INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM, RECALL, AND CHARTER AMENDMENT PETITIONS, REPEAL ALL PROVISIONS IN CURRENT ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS THAT REGULATE CITIZEN INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM, RECALL, AND CHARTER AMENDMENT PETITIONS, AND PROVIDE THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS SHALL NOT ADOPT ANY RESOLUTION OR ORDINANCE THAT REGULATES SUCH PETITIONS

110668 Resolution Carlos A. Gimenez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT THE COUNTY SHALL NOT ENTER INTO CONTRACTS FOR LOBBYING SERVICES WHICH DO NOT ALSO PROHIBIT THE LOBBYISTS FROM LOBBYING THE COUNTY ON BEHALF OF OTHER ENTITIES DURING THE TERM OF THE CONTRACT

110630 Resolution Sally A. Heyman, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT: EACH COUNTY COMMISSIONER SHALL DEVOTE FULL-TIME SERVICE TO THE OFFICE OF COUNTY COMMISSIONER AND HOLD NO OTHER EMPLOYMENT; NO LONGER RECEIVE THEIR CURRENT $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY ESTABLISHED IN 1957, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD THE SALARY PROVIDED BY STATE STATUTORY FORMULA, ADJUSTED ANNUALLY BASED ON THE COUNTY’S POPULATION (CURRENTLY APPROXIMATELY $92,097), AND USED BY OTHER FLORIDA COUNTIES, INCLUDING BROWARD COUNTY; AND SHALL SERVE NO MORE THAN THREE CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS IN OFFICE

110658 Resolution Sally A. Heyman, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO REQUIRE EACH COUNTY COMMISSIONER TO DEVOTE PRIMARY SERVICE TO THE OFFICE OF COUNTY COMMISSIONER AND WORK IN NO OTHER EMPLOYMENT FOR MORE THAN 20 HOURS WEEKLY; NO LONGER RECEIVE THEIR CURRENT $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY ESTABLISHED IN 1957, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD THE SALARY PROVIDED BY STATE STATUTORY FORMULA, ADJUSTED ANNUALLY BASED ON THE COUNTY’S POPULATION (CURRENTLY APPROXIMATELY $92,097), AND USED BY OTHER FLORIDA COUNTIES, INCLUDING BROWARD COUNTY; AND SHALL SERVE NO MORE THAN THREE CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS IN OFFICE, EXCLUDING ALL TERMS SERVED PRIOR TO 2012

110662 Resolution Sally A. Heyman, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT ELECTED COUNTY CHARTER OFFICERS SHALL BE PROHIBITED FROM LOBBYING THE COUNTY FOR COMPENSATION FOR A PERIOD OF TWO (2) YEARS AFTER LEAVING OFFICE

110663 Resolution Sally A. Heyman, Prime Sponsor
ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI- DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE: FOR THE CREATION EVERY FIVE YEARS OF A CHARTER REVIEW TASK FORCE TO PROPOSE CHARTER REVISIONS; TO PROHIBIT AN ELECTED COUNTY CHARTER OFFICER FROM SERVING AS A MEMBER OF THE TASK FORCE; TO SUBMIT THOSE REVISIONS APPROVED BY A TWO-THIRDS MAJORITY OF THE TASK FORCE DIRECTLY TO THE ELECTORATE; AND TO SUBMIT THOSE REVISIONS APPROVED BY A MAJORITY OF THE TASK FORCE DIRECTLY TO THE COUNTY COMMISSION FOR ITS CONSIDERATION AT ITS NEXT REGULARLY SCHEDULED MEETING

110664 Resolution Sally A. Heyman, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT PETITIONS FOR CHARTER AMENDMENT, INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL MAY CONTAIN SPACES FOR MORE THAN ONE VOTER’S SIGNATURE PER PAGE AND PETITION FORMS MAY NOT BE DISAPPROVED FOR PROVIDING FOR MULTIPLE SIGNATURES PER PAGE

110629 Resolution Barbara J. Jordan, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT: EACH COUNTY COMMISSIONER SHALL NO LONGER RECEIVE THEIR CURRENT $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY ESTABLISHED IN 1957, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD AN ANNUAL SALARY OF $75,000; AND SHALL SERVE NO MORE THAN THREE CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS IN OFFICE

110647 Resolution Joe A. Martinez, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], 2011, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO CREATE THE OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL WHO SHALL BE INDEPENDENT AND SHALL, AT A MINIMUM, BE EMPOWERED TO PERFORM INVESTIGATIONS, AUDITS, REVIEWS AND OVERSIGHT OF COUNTY CONTRACTS, PROGRAMS, PROJECTS, ABUSE, WASTE AND MISMANAGEMENT AS WELL AS COUNTY FUNDED CONTRACTS, PROGRAMS AND PROJECTS AND PROVIDE INSPECTOR GENERAL SERVICES TO OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES WITH SUCH OFFICE’S APPOINTMENT, TERM, POWERS, DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES TO BE FURTHER ESTABLISHED BY ORDINANCE

110655 Resolution Joe A. Martinez, Prime Sponsor
Barbara J. Jordan, Co-Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, ______________, FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO RETURN CERTAIN POWERS AND RESPONSIBILITIES TO THE COUNTY COMMISSION AND THE COUNTY MANAGER, WHICH WERE PREVIOUSLY TRANSFERRED TO THE MAYOR

110641 Resolution Rebeca Sosa, Prime Sponsor
RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT: EACH COUNTY COMMISSIONER SHALL DEVOTE FULL-TIME SERVICE TO THE OFFICE OF COUNTY COMMISSIONER AND HOLD NO OTHER EMPLOYMENT; NO LONGER RECEIVE THEIR CURRENT $6,000 ANNUAL SALARY ESTABLISHED IN 1957, BUT RECEIVE INSTEAD THE SALARY PROVIDED BY STATE STATUTORY FORMULA, ADJUSTED ANNUALLY BASED ON THE COUNTY’S POPULATION (CURRENTLY APPROXIMATELY $92,097); AND SHALL SERVE NO MORE THAN TWO CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERMS IN OFFICE EXCLUDING TERMS OF SERVICE PRIOR TO 2012

110670 Resolution Sen. Javier D. Souto, Prime Sponsor

RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY A STRAW BALLOT TO ASCERTAIN VOTER SUPPORT FOR THE INCORPORATION OF ALL UNINCORPORATED AREAS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY INTO SMALLER COMPACT CITIES


110672 Resolution Joe A. Martinez, Prime Sponsor

RESOLUTION CALLING A COUNTYWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN CONJUNCTION WITH A PRIMARY ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, [ ], FOR THE PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE ELECTORS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY THE QUESTION OF WHETHER TO AMEND THE HOME RULE CHARTER TO PROVIDE THAT PETITIONS FOR CHARTER AMENDMENT, INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL SHALL NO LONGER REQUIRE A SWORN AFFIDAVIT OF A CIRCULATOR AND SHALL INSTEAD ONLY REQUIRE THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF A CIRCULATOR

Florida Power and Light Nuclear at Turkey Point: where promises turn to salt ... by gimleteye

The nuclear disaster in Japan is unfolding according to events inside the crippled reactors that could never be imagined by people who live within its poisoned radius. In a similar accident at Turkey Point, more than a million people could find themselves in the same state of bewildered disbelief from places of refuge far, far from their homes and possessions. Consider the formation of hundreds of thousands of pounds of salt within the damaged reactors as salt water boils off. Here in South Florida, FPL -- the operator of two aging nuclear reactors with plans for two more moving forward supported by the county commission-- insists that nothing similar could happen and that its reactors are operating at the highest levels of safety. Wrong, on both counts.

FPL Turkey Point has a history of safety problems at the edge of Biscayne National Park. Its current design, to cool the superheated water from the reactors, depend on a "radiator" of cooling canals immediately adjacent to the plant. FPL also built a perimeter canal whose promised purpose was to prevent salt water intrusion. Indisputably, the perimeter canal has failed, sending an underground flood of salt water toward population centers in South Dade.

This salt water front threatens farming and drinking water wells. Rock mining is particularly vulnerable because the contamination of crushed rock by salt renders it unusable for construction. FPL not only denies the nuclear power plants are causing this problem, it has failed to abide by terms of prior agreements and commitments with the state of Florida, represented in this instance by the South Florida Water Management District.

Salt and broken promises at Turkey Point: not only do these reactors continue to run, they have recently been "uprated" to create more power... and speed the intrusion of salt water inland through the Biscayne Aquifer. As far as the two new reactors are concerned, plans for emergency backup power include the use of water directly from Biscayne Bay. In the case of an accident at Turkey Point requiring salt water to cool the plants-- if a hurricane causes power outages to stop the flow of fresh water-- Biscayne Bay and communities surrounding its waters could be at direct risk. FPL asks neighbors to stay cool, calm and collected, but based on its current operations, the company has already violated the public trust.

Cute Take-off on the Coppertone Ad. By Geniusofdespair


Mimomag.com sent this out as a email blast.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Watch out for a new PAC. By Geniusofdespair

One Miami is a new Political Action Committee. It sounds so friendly and inclusive. It is actually a SEIU Pac funded and registered out of New York. It has $6,975. I wonder what they are going to lobby for, more bad candidates? If they were smart they would be lobbying for their continued existence. We progressive citizens -- once their friends -- are turning off to unions in droves because of their steadfast support of bad candidates: Like Natacha Seijas.

Marco Rubio can't wash Miami Dade out of his hair ... by gimleteye

When recently US Senator Marco Rubio went on the radio, announcing his plan to lead the Senate in a shut down of the federal government, Rush Limbaugh immediately chirped, "Wish the damn guy... would run for president." Limbaugh gets his talking points from the GOP operations center in Karl Rove's office. And here's what the Florida Independent had to say about that, last weekend: "Many of Rubio’s other campaign donors have connections to the Koch brothers. Some are more closely affiliated with the Kochs than others, but all those with ties are plugged into the national network of business leaders and anti-tax and anti-regulation advocates that Charles and David Koch have endeavored to build through conferences and think tanks." The Billionaire Fanjul Sugar Barons also show as Rubio's key funders. And, as reported, Rubio took a vacation after the election to Israel, with Miami billionaire activist Norman Braman.

By Kyle Daly | 03.14.11 | 10:59 am
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Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., has made no secret of his pro-business agenda since taking office in January. It comes as little surprise, then, that his 2010 campaign was backed largely by industries he now supports.
Data obtained by the Center for Responsive Politics from the Federal Elections Commission shows that Rubio was the largest recipient of Koch Industries campaign money for U.S. Senate races in 2010. He also received more money than anyone running for national office outside of Kansas, where Koch Industries is headquartered. Florida is home to a major Georgia-Pacific paper mill (Georgia-Pacific is a subsidiary of Koch Industries) that has been at the center of a major battle between Koch industries and environmental regulators.
Many of Rubio’s other campaign donors have connections to the Koch brothers. Some are more closely affiliated with the Kochs than others, but all those with ties are plugged into the national network of business leaders and anti-tax and anti-regulation advocates that Charles and David Koch have endeavored to build through conferences and think tanks.
The largest single contributor to Rubio’s campaign by far was the economic libertarian organization Club for Growth, whose members gave $346,450. Club for Growth has had ties to the Kochs since its founding in 1999. One of the group’s directors, Howard Rich, is also a director of the Cato Institute, a think tank that Charles Koch provided the initial funding for and on whose board of directors David Koch now sits.
Elliott Management, the Senate Conservatives Fund, Flo-Sun, Inc. and Koch Industries itself round out the list of the top five contributors to Rubio’s campaign. Elliott Management is a hedge fund management company run by Paul Singer, an investment banker who chairs the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank underwritten in part by the Koch Family Foundation and its affiliates. Singer has helped MC controversial Manhattan Institute events that Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Antonin Scalia have attended in recent years.
The Senate Conservatives Fund is a campaign fund started by Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., who has attended Koch-sponsored events and was given the Washington Award by David Koch in 2009 for “defending the American dream.” Koch Industries is one of the top contributors to the Senate Conservatives Fund PAC.
Flo-Sun, meanwhile, is a sugar and real estate conglomerate owned by the Fanjul family of South Florida. Flo-Sun, which owns Domino Sugar, has been active in fighting the EPA over water pollution regulations in the Everglades. The Fanjuls are family friends of the Kochs; David Koch and his wife Julia traveled to the Dominican Republic in 2009 for the wedding of Christina Fanjul.
Rubio’s connections with the vast Koch Industries web did not end with his election. The senator’s chief of staff, Cesar Conda, was once an aide to Dick Cheney and is said to be one of the architects of the Bush tax cuts. He is the former executive director of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, a libertarian think tank funded in part by Koch-run groups such as the Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation.
Kyle Daly reports for The American Independent.

The Marlins might have a job for the X-Mayor. By Youbetcha'


Who should get the job, Mayor Carlito because he was THE Mayor or George Burgess since he was the de facto Mayor? George has the most operations experience by default.

Guess we will have to wait and see!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

County Waived Competitive Bid for Politically Connected Innovida - Now in Bankruptcy. Guest Blog by Youbetcha'

A recent article in the Miami Herald noted that businessman Claudio Osorio filed for bankruptcy. Gimleteye also reported on his own adventure with the political mover and shaker.

However, there is a Miami-Dade County connection (as always) to this bankruptcy. Claudio and his company were recipients of a 6/3/2010 bid wavier which offered up the POINCIANA INDUSTRIAL CENTER project to them. Ironically, they were given the bid in spite of the fact that one of their partners in the bid had criminal actions pending. InnoVida was allowed to replace the partner, instead of the county tossing the bid process and rebidding the RFP.

The best aspect of the whole county legislative recommendation was staff’s observation:

“InnoVida’s proposal meets the requirement for creating jobs, provides for a viable business and real estate plan and is presented by a firm with good experience and financial ability.”

Need I mention that this legislative item was sponsored by Commissioner Rolle and was seconded by Commissioner Jordan. It passed by a vote of 9-0. (Commissioners Diaz, Sosa and Seijas and Chairman Moss were absent). Our new county manager, Alina Tejeda-Hudak, was the county staff person assigned to this item.

InnoVida was deemed a solid company with a viable business plan in June 2010 by the County, but by March 19, 2011, it is bankrupt and according to the Miami Herald, ”Their Chapter 11 filing in Miami’s federal bankruptcy court capped a series of lawsuits that accuse the Osorios of duping investors to put tens of millions of dollars into Claudio Osorio’s once-fledgling business venture, InnoVida, to pay for the couple’s lifestyle.”

How much money did the county taxpayers contribute to their lifestyle? Don’t you think we have a right to know?

US Century Bank, Zero Leadership, Credibility, and Zero Rating ... by gimleteye

On the same day that Sergio Pino announced his resignation from the board of the bank he founded, US Century Bank had more bad news: the ratings agency, Fitch, withdrew its rating. In a public statement to South Florida Business Journal, Pino said his withdrawal had nothing to do with the severely deteriorating condition of the bank.

Pino, along with other bank directors, have been major Republican campaign contributors and lobbyists for suburban sprawl in Florida wetlands and farmland. They have strongly supported and pushed for the expansion of the Urban Development Boundary in Miami-Dade to include lands purchased as speculative investments for future platted subdivisions and sprawl. The bank they founded has been the recipient of the largest infusion of federal taxpayer moneys, through TARP, among all Florida banks.

Also on March 15, Business Wire reported on the mounting troubles at US Century, "Although the company remains above minimum regulatory capital standards to be considered 'well-capitalized', Fitch believes that, given the bank's CRE and construction portfolios, the embedded losses will deplete capital further. In Fitch's opinion, USCB will likely need to raise additional capital. It is also extremely likely that the bank's regulator will place capital requirements on the bank through a regulatory agreement." Business Wire notes that the new Fitch rating, by definition, considers US Century Bank to have exceptionally high levels of credit risk.

Fitch noted, also, a lack of information provided by the company. Eyeonmiami has written extensively about the role of US Century Bank and its founders, including Sergio Pino, in fomenting the housing and construction bubble in Miami-Dade and, by extension of its political influence, in the state of Florida. For example, US Century investors and shareholders are prominent owners of land outside the Miami Dade Urban Development Boundary, bought in some cases at the height of the real estate bubble. Last week South Florida Business Journal reported that Pino’s 77 Acres LLC lost a $22.6 million foreclosure judgment over a site in Hialeah Gardens. BankUnited is suing Pino for $34 million on a Doral project, Century Grand. In 2009, Pino reportedly was seeking to create a visa program to allow temporary residency visas to foreigners if they invested in his project. Wachovia Bank, in Dec. 2009, hit Pino with a $65.5 million foreclosure lawsuit for Century Grand. In addition, Pino was battling recovery by Mercantil Commercialbank of a $4.4 million loan for an office building in Coral Gables.

Another bank rating agency, Bauer Financial based in Coral Gables, has noted that among the bank's problems-- leading to a recent rating of "zero"-- are the extraordinarily high level of loans to insiders, as expressed as a percentage of total loans; nearly ten times higher than similarly sized banks. It is possible that US Century's disclosure of the exact nature of those insider transactions would prove an embarrassing connection to politically connected individuals in Miami Dade County. Like the 2008 disclosure that US Senator Marco Rubio, with little worth at the time, in 2005 at the height of the real estate bubble obtained a $135,000 equity loan from US Century to the purchase of a $550,000 home in West Dade. Rubio failed to disclose it until three years later. So much slipped through the cracks.

In the last quarter of 2010, US Century Bank lost $44.7 million. In 2008, the bank received the top minority business award from the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce that was the victim of a $2 million theft by its financial auditors in 2004. Absent federal rescue, US Century would not have survived. Some banks are too big to fail, some banks should be allowed to sink of their own weight. In that category, would be Ocean Bank-- another favorite bank with sprawl developers-- that in July 2010 extended a $39.1 million loan to Pino for another condominium project in Coral Gables. The due date on that loan, according to South Florida Business Journal, is April 30. There is no similar expiration date on the enormous political pressure brought to bear on county governments and the state legislature by lobbyists using the economic crisis to eviscerate environmental regulations, hoping that a free pass to build more sprawl in wetlands and the Everglades will refloat their speculative investments. A yacht owned in whole or part by Pino sank two weeks ago in a Coral Gables canal.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Remember Who Gave To Natacha Seijas' PAC. By Geniusofdespair

This is who was working against us folks, giving to Natacha Seijas' PAC in the last cycle. Remember them, because whomever you vote for in the Mayor's race shouldn't have these people on their campaign report:

Committee : Abre Los Brazos

(2/19/2011 - 3/10/2011)
These are the people/corporations/unions that support BAD POLITICIANS AND KEEP THEM IN OFFICE, remember them:

1 2/19/2011 ASBESTOS WORKERS LOCAL 60
13000 NW 47 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33054 Committee PAC Check $1,000.00

2 2/19/2011 THOMAS K MURPHY
414 SEVILLA AVE
CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 Individual ATTORNEY Check $500.00

3 2/19/2011 EMF & ASSOCIATES
9100 SOUTH DADELAND BLVD
SUITE-900
MIAMI, FL 33156 Business CONSULTANTS Check $500.00

4 2/19/2011 PLUMBERS LOCAL UNION #519
14105 NW 58 COURT
MIAMI LAKES, FL 33014 Business PAC Check $1,000.00

5 2/19/2011 THE GRAHAM COMPANIES
6843 MAIN ST
MIAMI LAKES, FL 33014 Business PROPERTYMANAGERS Check $1,000.00

6 2/19/2011 CAROL G WYLLIE
8541 GLENCAIRN LANE
MIAMI LAKES , FL 33016 Individual PROPERTYMANAGER Check $500.00

7 2/19/2011 LUIS O MARTINEZ
8531 GLENCAIRN LANE
MIAMI LAKES, FL 33016 Individual PROPERTYMANAGER Check $500.00

8 2/19/2011 STUART WYLLIE
8541
GLENCAIRN LANE
MIAMI LAKES, FL 33016 Individual PROPERTYMANAGER Check $500.00

9 2/20/2011 RAUL GONZALEZ
1955 NW 110 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33172 Individual PAVING/ASPHALT Check $2,000.00

10 2/20/2011 COMMUNITEL,INC.
6955 NW 77 AVE #204
MIAMI, FL 33166 Business COMMUNICATIONS Check $3,000.00

11 2/20/2011 MERIDIAM INTERNATIONAL GROUP
PO BOX 331990
MIAMI, FL 33133 Business GOVERNMENTCONSULTANS Check $2,000.00

12 2/20/2011 DADE COUNTY PBA
10680 NW 25ST
MIAMI, FL 33172 Committee PAC Check $10,000.00

13 2/20/2011 STRATEGIC EDGE INC
235 CATALONIA AVE
CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 Business CONSULTINGFIRM Check $1,000.00

14 2/20/2011 BARRETO GROUP,INC
235 CATALONIA AVE
CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 Business REALESTATE Check $1,000.00

15 2/20/2011 VULCAN MATERIALS COMP.
PO BOX 385014
BIRMINGHAM, AL 35238 Business FLROCK-PAC Check $1,500.00

16 2/21/2011 6201 OF MIAMI LLC (Jorge Munilla)
6201 SW 70 ST 2ND FLOOR
MIAMI, FL 33143 Business ENGINEERS Check $5,000.00

17 2/21/2011 MILIAN SWAIN & ASSOCIATES
2025 SW 32 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33145 Business ENGINEERS Check $500.00

18 2/22/2011 KENNTH M GOMULKA
642 CARRINGTON LANE
WESTON, FL 33326 Individual FACILITY MAINTENANCE Check $1,000.00

19 2/22/2011 SHOMA DEVELOPMENT
3470 NW 82 AVE #988
DORAL, FL 33122 Business DEVELOPERS Check $1,000.00

20 2/22/2011 GOMEZ BARKER ASSOCIATES
2350 CORAL WAY #301
CORALGABLES, FL 33145 Business GOVERNMENT RELATIONS Check $1,000.00

21 2/23/2011 MRC MFG
28117 GROESBECK HWY
ROSEVILLE, MI 48066 Business MANUFACTURING COMPANY Check $5,000.00

22 2/23/2011 J.S. OF SOUTH FLORIDA ,LLC
11400 W FLAGLER ST #202
MIAMI, FL 33174 Business MARKETING Check $250.00

23 2/23/2011 J.S. PARTNERSHIP LTD
11400 WEST FLAGLER ST # 202
MIAMI, FL 33174 Business GENERAL CONTRACTORS Check $250.00

24 2/24/2011 LUIS P RABELL
5720 SW 82 ST
MIAMI, FL 33143 Individual Check $50.00

25 2/24/2011 RICHARD M GOMEZ
6095 SW 25 ST
MIAMI , FL 33155 Individual ATTORNEY Check $200.00

26 2/24/2011 MILO HOLDINGS II LLC
2100 SW 4 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33029 Business PROPERTY MANAGERS Check $250.00

27 2/24/2011 JUAN JR C MAYOL
1400 CORAL WAY
CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 Individual ATTORNEY Check $500.00

28 2/24/2011 JOSEPH G GOLDSTEIN
510 NW 84 AVE #116
PLANTATION, FL 33324 Individual ATTORNEY Check $500.00

29 2/24/2011 FL EAST COAST INDUSTRIES
4601 TOUCHTON ROAD EAST
BUILDING 300 SUITE 3200
JACKSONVILLE, FL 32246 Business CONSTRUCTION Check $2,000.00

30 2/24/2011 TOWNE CONSTRUCTION
3315 NW 167 ST
MIAMI GARDENS , FL 33056 Business CONSTRUCTION Check $500.00

31 2/24/2011 PRIME MANAGEMENT GROUP
4651 SHERIDAN ST # 480
HOLLYWOOD, FL 33021 Business MANAGEMENTCOMPANY Check $150.00

32 2/24/2011 THOMAS M DAVID,P.A.
381 N KROME AVE #200
HOMESTEAD, FL 33030 Business CONSULTANT Check $100.00

33 2/24/2011 BUILDERS ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH
15225 NW 77 AVE 1 ST FLOOR
MIAMI LAKES , FL 33014 Committee PAC Check $500.00

34 3/1/2011 ALAN S BECKER
13494 STIRLING ROAD
SOUTHWEST RANCHES, FL 33330 Individual ATTORNEY Check $1,000.00

35 3/1/2011 G-T CONSTRUCTION GROUP
2520 SW 22 ST #2-169
MIAMI, FL 33145 Business CONSTRUCTION Check $4,000.00

36 3/1/2011 JORGE LUIS LOPEZ LAW FIRM LLC
131 MADEIRA AVE PH
CORAL GABLES , FL 33134 Business LAWFIRM/ATT Check $5,000.00

37 3/1/2011 AKERMAN SENTERFITT
255 S ORANGE AVE 13 FLOOR
ORLANDO, FL 32802 Business ATTORNEYS Check $1,000.00

38 3/1/2011 NEISEN KASDIN
255 S.ORANGE AVE
13TH FLOOR
ORLANDO , FL 32802 Individual ATTORNEY Check $500.00

39 3/1/2011 ARIEL MILLAN
7300 N KENDALL DR #400
MIAMI , FL 33156 Individual ENGINEER Check $500.00

40 3/1/2011 ADONEL CONCRETE
2101 NW 110 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33172 Business CONCRETE PUMPING Check $200.00

41 3/1/2011 CIR SEIU
520- 8 TH AVE #1200
NEW YORK, NY 10018 Committee INTERNS &RESIDENTS Check $500.00

42 3/1/2011 ROYAL AIRPORT CONCESSIONS
3650 NW SOUTH RIVER DRIVE
MIAMI , FL 33142 Business RENT A CAR Check $1,000.00

43 3/1/2011 MARIO FERRO
8165 nw 155 st
HIALEAH, FL 33016 Individual BUILDERS Check $2,000.00

44 3/1/2011 MARIO FERRO
8165 NW 155 ST
HIALEAH, F 33016 Individual BUILDER Check $500.00

45 3/1/2011 MARIO JR FERRO
8165 nw 155 st
HIALEAH, FL 33016 Individual CONSTRUCTION Check $500.00

46 3/1/2011 MARIO JR FERRO
8165 nw 155 st
HIALEAH , FL 33016 Individual CONSTRUCTION Check $2,000.00

47 3/1/2011 STANLEY S HILLS
5001 SW 65 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33155 Individual FIREMAN Check $500.00

(48 to 55 is the same person: SERGIO PINO)

48 3/1/2011 CENTURY PARTNERS GROUP
2301 NW 87 AVE 6 FLOOR
DORAL, FL 33172 Business BUILDERS Check $250.00

49 3/1/2011 CENTURY HOMEBUILDERS OF SOUTH
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
DORAL , FL 33172 Business HOMEBUILDERS Check $250.00

50 3/1/2011 CENTURY GARDENS VILLAGE LLLP
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
MIAMI, FL 33172 Business PROPERTYMANAGERS Check $250.00

51 3/1/2011 CENTURY GARDENS LLP
2301 NW 87 AVE 6 TH FLOOR
MIAMI, FL 33172 Business PROPERTYMANAGERS Check $250.00

52 3/1/2011 77 ACRES LLC
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
DORAL, FL 33172 Business PROPERTYMANAGER Check $250.00

53 3/1/2011 PRIVATE LENDING GROUP LLC
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
DORAL, FL 33172 Business INVESTMEN/LENDING Check $250.00

54 3/1/2011 GROUP 5 ,LLC
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
DORAL, FL 33172 Business DEVELOPERS Check $250.00

55 3/1/2011 HIALEAH HOLDINGS,LLC
2301 NW 87 AVE 6TH FLOOR
DORAL, FL 33172 Business PROPERTYMANAGER Check $250.00

56 3/5/2011 ATLANTIC CIVIL INC
9350 SOUTH DIXIE HIGHWAY
SUITE-1250
MIAMI, FL 33156 Business CIVILENGINEERS Check $500.00

57 3/5/2011 SDI QUARRY,INC
9350 SOUTH DIXIE HIGHWAY
SUITE 1250
MIAMI, FL 33156 Business ROCKPIT Check $500.00

58 3/5/2011 ALICE PENA
14390 SW 199 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33196 Individual Check $100.00

59 3/5/2011 R L EPLING
28801 SW 157 AVE
HOMESTEAD, FL 33033 Individual Check $100.00

60 3/5/2011 ALBERTO J ARAZOZA
9700 SW 93 AVE
MIAMI, FL 33176 Individual FARM PRODUCTS Check $250.00

61 3/5/2011 ALGER FARMS ,INC
950 NW 8 ST
HOMESTEAD , FL 33090 Business FARM Check $250.00

62 3/5/2011 WILLIAM H LOSNER
20251 SW 272 ST
HOMESTEAD, FL 33031 Individual BANKER Check $1,000.00

Total Contributions $68,650.00

I remember you Jimmy! By Geniusofdespair

In an OpEd piece in the Miami Herald Sunday former County Commissioner Jimmy Morales asks if people remember him? I do, he was one of our better County Commissioners and he ran for Mayor against Carlos Alvarez, garnering 322,032 votes to Alvarez's 396,798. I voted for him. His look back over the Alvarez tenure is pretty good, he brings up the Marlin's Stadium (He was against it and Alvarez was for it) and about Burgess, he said:

Nonetheless, seven years ago, when I suggested the next mayor should hire a new county manager, this newspaper and particularly then-columnist Jim Defede blasted the idea as all-but-unhinged. No one at the paper or elsewhere even bothered to ask why I felt such a change was necessary. God forbid that a county mayor would want to name his administrative team! Political expediency trumped good policy and headlines trumped the truth.

Has it been seven years already? It turns out, Jimmy was right about a lot of things but we all remember in the end it came down to, "he just wasn't Cuban enough."

Miami Dade County Insanity, on the 18 Mile Stretch to the Florida Keys ... by gimleteye

The Florida Keys and Miami-Dade County are linked by one of the most controversial stretches of highways in the United States; the strip of US 1 called the 18 Mile Stretch. Why controversial? Because for decades the mainly two lane US 1 acted as a bottleneck for growth and for hurricane evacuation; a point of conflict within state land use planning and emergency management that kept the construction and development lobby at a high boil during an era of intense real estate pressure on fragile natural resources in the Keys. The battle whether or not to widen the 18 Mile Stretch finally concluded in 2009; the environmentalists lost and were sued to pay court costs of the government.

The widening of the stretch is nearly finished but the indignities are not. Now there is THE FENCE. The cyclone fence. The fence is an abomination. First of all, the fact of the fence, at all. One of the glories of driving down to the Keys was to be able to see free and clear to the public lands to the east and west; this is the only stretch of the Everglades that is visible anywhere along US 1 that once ran the length of the eastern Everglades in its entirety.

The land is barely above sea level, so the question that arises first of all why a cyclone fence at all? The answer, one suspects, is that some lobbyist in Tallahassee representing "The Cyclone Fence Cartel" inserted FDOT contract language requiring a cyclone fence to "protect the public". That is the first level of indignity, where no fence had been needed or wanted, before. Here is the second level: on the section of fence on US 1 in Monroe County's portion of the 18 Mile Stretch, the cyclone fence looks about six feet high. I'll say it twice so you keep this in your memory. On the Keys side of the 18 Mile Stretch the fence is about 6 feet high. It is stupid and unnecesary, but generally speaking "stupid" goes right well with decision makers in the Florida Keys. Here is a photo of what the Monroe County side of the fence looks like.



But stupid doesn't begin to describe the Miami-Dade section of the fence, twelve feet high AND TOPPED WITH BARBED WIRE. WTF? Why six feet in the Keys but twelve feet in Miami Dade plus barbed wire? Is this because fence vendors in Miami Dade are better organized than in the Keys? Because business in platted subdivisions sucks, they found a way to sell more fence by building a twelve foot fence and added a frosting of barbed wire to top it off?

It is an incredulous feeling, first distracted by the puke aquamarine concrete barrier that looks the color of a Miami Subs sign, then driving along the stretch that makes you feel like you are being funneled into an adult correctional facility. That's "progress", by Jove. Here's a photo to prove it:



Wasn't there someone, anyone, anywhere in government aware of the insult to intelligence they were authorizing, with the fence topped with barbed wire? Apparently, if there was, no one had the guts to stop it. That's pretty much the case in the dismantling of government everywhere these days: no one has the guts to stop the Republican nuts. Isn't this David Rivera's Congressional district? Or Ileana Ros Lehtinen? Doesn't one of them have the guts to tell them to tear down the freaking fence? For a hundred years we didn't need a fence on the 18 Mile Stretch and now we do? Because there is some danger lurking that the fence will stop? Maybe Democrats and trial lawyers. Or perhaps it is the teachers' fault. Anyhow if I am a visitor to the Florida Keys I'm thinking: what the hell is going on here?

I bet the fence is a business deal, a quid pro quo with a campaign contributor/fence mfg, and the barbed wire represents the expression of latent hatred of Miami Dade County politicians for the Everglades. Like Pepe Diaz, the county commissioner who owns part of a trailer park/future gambling destination bordering Everglades National Park wetlands in Key Largo. They hate government agencies who protect the Everglades and water quality and so they need the barbed wire to remind all the drivers on US 1. I expect they believe drivers need to be protected from alligators crawling up the cyclone fence. I suspect they believe all the do-good'ers who stopped the widening of the 18 Mile Stretch need to be fenced out from putting IED's in the roadway. I suspect the latent hatred springs from the not-so-latent desire to pave over every last scrap of land in South Florida whenever it becomes profitable.

But why, six feet tall in Monroe and twelve feet tall with barbed wire in Miami-Dade? The answer for that? Idiocy, pure and simple. Tear down the fence!

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Note to Starbucks: Learn To Serve Tea Drinkers. By Geniusofdespair

When someone comes in and asks for a breakfast tea, it Is NOT Earl Grey.

You have a tea with the name 'AWAKE'. That should give you a clue. How could you get this order wrong? At breakfast you want to wake up. Use your heads to try to serve tea drinkers correctly. Earl Grey is like serving a coffee drinker hazelnut. Both are a taste -- not a pure coffee or pure tea. Earl Grey is like drinking a perfume laced tea and I have been served it dozens of time when not paying attention, after asking for 'breakfast tea.'

I am going to start naming stores that don't give tea drinkers good service: The Starbucks on Rt. 110 in
Melville New York. Thanks for nothing, I am cranky enough when I wake up - I don't need you guys to escalate it. Readers, do you have a pet peeve?

Note to Readers: Julio Robaina is NOT the right man to be Mayor. By Geniusofdespair

As the candidates kick their campaigns into high gear -- people of Miami Dade County -- do not consider Hialeah Julio (Robaina) to replace Carlos Alvarez, PLEASE. He would just be more of the same. I heard that Julio Robaina's pension after serving 15 years as councilman/mayor will be $150,000 every year. That is pretty generous. Let him collect it and fade away-- we need an above board, ethical candidate, which he is not.

As for County Commissioner, my neighbors in District 13, Miami Lakes and Hialeah, please standby and wait to see who Miami Voice endorses.

Keep an open mind.

My Claudio Osorio Moment ... by gimleteye

I am entranced by the freak show of politicians, sports stars and entertainment personalities regularly snagged by con artists posing as "international business tycoons". I suppose this has gone on from time immemorial, whenever and wherever influence peddling was held to be a treasured and socially accepted norm. The Herald is filled with stories about the latest, Claudio and Amarilis Osorio, who I had never heard of until the story broke of investors bilked and presidents caught in photos. There are many moments of recognition within the Herald story, like Chris Korge-- a top Democrat bundler and lobbyist-- bringing in Rodney Barreto-- a top Republican bundler and lobbyist-- and both were fleeced of millions. Those millions were scooped from various legitimate enterprises, including a business well documented on EOM: the use of Miami International Airport as a tool for political patronage and private gain. Then I thought again.

I have my very own Claudio Osorio moment. It was at an Alex Sink fundraiser at Osorio's Miami Beach home in 2009. Don't let me tell you how I feel about giving over hard earned contributions to Alex Sink. I had never heard of Osorio but had a very brief moment before the festivities started. We exchanged pleasantries and when he answered my question politely, he said he was in the business of "international remittances". In retrospect, it was an honest answer!