Friday, May 09, 2008

The Underbelly of the Urban Development Boundary Vote. by Geniusofdespair

Here is another translation of an article from El Nuevo Herald about the UDB line vote. I like this Shoer Roth guy, he really gets to the heart of the issues, exposing the crap.

TRUTHS IN DISGUISE by Daniel Shoer Roth

Moments before the Miami-Dade Commission traded our environmental health for more stores outside the urban boundary of the County, two opposing groups of restless residents exposed their respective sides of the coin at this reunion.

The first group mentioned the rich biodiversity of the Everglades National Park, its designation by the United Nations as patrimony of the world, water shortage due to climate change, the excessive urban sprawl…

The second group mentioned the need to build a high school on the western part of the county with fewer students per class, and a $7 million new highway to alleviate West Kendall’s traffic congestion…

Anybody might believe that the controversy about the expansion of the UDB is about a school or a highway. But that is not true.

This is how these urban projects are twisted in ways that astonish us when they get the OK from the authorities:

The promoters persuade neighborhood groups by promising them public works that are the sole responsibility of county government, so that in turn they put pressure on their commissioners so that they have the perfect excuse to grant a final blessing to more urban sprawl.

This is the technique of disguise that in the Greater Miami, although it escapes the eye of the majority, is notoriously popular.

In this occasion it is a Lowe’s Home, a mega hardware store to be built at 8th Street and SW 137 Avenue, that knew how to seduce the parents concerned about their children’s education with a new school that, according to them, would offer excellent academic results.

In fact, an anonymous e-mail was circulated among parents living in the county’s southwest area promising that the future school “would compete academically with Belen…” and urged them to “convince one more commissioner to vote yes on the Lowe’s project”.

The second approval last Thursday corresponds to a 600,000 square feet commercial and office center, on the corner of SW 167 Avenue and Kendall Drive. Traffic is so terrible in this latitude that who would not have been hooked by the offer of a new highway?

“This is the level of corruption that the situation has reached”, said Patricia Wade, an environmentalist and agriculturist from the Redland. “It is no longer the petition [to move the limit], but what they [the developers] can provide to the people in order to get their support, which is not necessarily what they are requesting on their petition”.

But, watch out, once the limit is expanded for one project, there is no guarantee that developers will fulfill their promises.

At least that is what experience has shown us. In 2005, when a milestone was reached with the first time approval of the expansion of the UDB in Hialeah, one of the enticements was a treatment plant of water from the Floridan aquifer, which gave the impression that the developer was going to pay for. The City of Hialeah attempted to negotiate with the state, but last year Tallahassee rejected the $3 million requested in the budget. Who will carry the burden? Miami-Dade County.

County Commissioners are so myopic that they have come to believe that no one is paying attention to what they do, but they have on them a national magnifying glass.

On Monday, in a report that calls South Florida “Paradise Paved”, Time Magazine wrote that the Miami-Dade Commission “has for a long time been considered the builders’ most avid accomplice”.

The prestigious magazine mentions with first and last names Jose "Pepe" Diaz, ‘who is under federal investigation for allegedly receiving gifts from developers whose plans he'd voted for. (He denies any wrongdoing.)”

Another, according to Time, is Natacha Seijas, ‘who at one commission meeting voiced her dislike of manatees … and faced a recall vote in 2006 (which she defeated) due to public complaints that she also was too cozy with developers”.

Other Commissioners in favor of “the school and the highway” were Joe Martinez, Audrey Edmonson, Rebeca Sosa, Dorrin Rolle, Bruno Barreiro, Barbara Jordan and Javier Souto.

How lucky they were that their names did not appeared in Time!

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

TERM LIMITS FOR COMMISSIONERS

Anonymous said...

Shoer should be translated and put in the Herald too. He is such a good columnist! And to think some of it is lost in translation and it is still good.

Anonymous said...

Please tell us, the citizentry,
what can we do to get TERM LIMITS
on Dade County's Commissioners?
Do we go to the Governor, the
United States President, Time Magazine, Sixty Minutes, Sun Sentinel? Please, Who?
(Oh, I forgot, it's the Home-Rule Charter, and who controls that,--- The DADE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS)

Geniusofdespair said...

Read my column of Sunday, December 10, 2006 on Term Limits, maybe we can revive 8 is enough!!!

Contact Ed Ludovici and beg him to start again!

Ludovici & Ludovici
Headquarters Address:
17415 South Dixie Highway (Southbound US1)
Palmetto Bay, Fl 33157-5491
USA
Website: www.ludovici-law.com
Phone: (305) 235-2161

Anonymous said...

The majority of electors, (voting citizens) want BCC term limits. When you have a document such as the Home Rule Charter which says two different things, therein lies the problem.

HOME RULE CHARTER PREAMBLE
We, the people of this County, in order to secure for ourselves the benefits and responsibilities of home rule, to create a metropolitan government to serve our present and future needs, and to endow our municipalities with the rights of self determination in their local affairs, do under God adopt this home rule Charter.

CITIZENS' BILL OF RIGHTS

(A). This government has been created to protect the governed, not the governing.

OKAY, THAT SOUNDS GOOD, BUT THEN WE GET THIS:

(1) The electors of Dade County, Florida, are granted power to adopt, revise, and amend from time to time a home rule charter of government for Dade County, Florida, under which the Board of County Commissioners of Dade County shall be the governing body.

SOMEBODY LIED.

Anonymous said...

Something happened...to warp this.

Anonymous said...

Term limiting is stupid.

Has anyone been watching what a mess Tallahassee has become? Much of that is thanks to term limits.

The biggest cheerleader for the Lowes project was "Pepe" Diaz and he's only in his second term. He's done plenty of damage in his short tenure there. Jordan and Edmonson are first-term commissioners. They voted to move the line every time.

Sorenson and Moss have consistently voted to hold the line and they've been in office since the mid nineties.

What the hell does term limits have to do with anything?

You need a decent salary with no outside employment. Not for the dinks in the office now, but so you can get a decent pool of contenders.

You need to restore public campaign financing so that better pool of candidates have a chance against a well-financed incumbent.

Make elections competitive, then you'll see change. If those elected can scoff at the electorate, you will just get people in office who will do as much damage as they can in 8 years or less and get out.

Geniusofdespair said...

you said:

You need to restore public campaign financing so that better pool of candidates have a chance against a well-financed incumbent.
I say:
We had it. They killed it by legislating impossible standards to meet. We can't get it back without them and you know they won't go back. We voters are cornered. Give us a way to get it back.

Anonymous said...

Daniel is doing an important job in educating Spanish speaking residents about the environment. Too bad he could not reach the environmentally ignorant Lowes supporters. Keep it up Daniel, little by little you are making a difference.