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Description
Regular Meeting Agenda: https://broward.legistar1.com/broward/meetings/2022/5/1104_A_County_Commission_22-05-24_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.pdf
Budget Workshop Materials:https://www.broward.org/Commission/Meetings/Pages/Calendar.aspx
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C
He
served
as
a
as
a
board
member
vice
president
and
president
of
the
florida
auctioneers
association
director
of
the
national
auctioneers
association
and
was
a
member
of
the
hundred
club
of
broward
county
since
nineteen.
Eighty
eight
in
ninety
five
he
was
presented
with
the
louis
c
del
award
by
his
louis
c
dell
award
by
his
fellow
members
of
the
florida
auctioneer
association
and
the
culmination
of
his
career
came
in
2004
when
he
was
inducted
into
the
national
auctioneer's
hall
of
fame
by
seven
thousand
of
his
colleagues
and
peers.
C
He
was
known
for
his
impeccable
fashion
sense
kind
of
like
marth.
He
was
never
seen
without
his
quintessential
suit
tie
and
hat
his
charismatic
personality
led
him
to
never
meet
a
stranger.
He
always
took
the
opportunity
to
share
the
word
of
the
lord,
with
his
friends
and
family
benny
survived
by
his
aunt
barbara
lyons
platts,
his
sisters
maryland
virginia
woolf
and
mary
frances
whidden,
his
nephew
ben
whidden
and
his
wife
megan
his
sons,
louis
b
fischer
iii
and
his
wife
mitzi
our
vice
mayor,
lamar
fisher
and
his
wife,
suzanne
and
his
grandchildren
louis
fisher.
C
C
A
life
well
lived
and
just
a
fascinating
person
to
learn
about
and
on
behalf
of
the
residents
of
broward
county
and
myself
and
my
family,
god
bless
vice
mayor
and
I'm
going
to
open
to
start
with.
Commissioner
fur.
Thank.
F
You
and
just
to
add
to
that
condolences
to
fisher
family,
and
it's
amazing
how
much
you
learn
about
a
family
during
these
times
and
what
a
legacy,
what
an
incredible
legacy
and-
and
I
just
learned
that
his
great-grandfather
was
the
had
sign
the
articles
of
incorporation
into
pompano.
F
So
this
is
a
it's
an
amazing
family
and
I'm
sure
he
was
incredibly
proud
of
you
as
well,
but
condolences
to
your
entire
family.
In
addition,
I'd
like
to
recognize
the
loss
of
barry
fask,
who
was
known
throughout
the
region
for
his
leadership
on
environment.
F
He
was
chair
and
leading
member
of
the
hollywood
green
team.
He
was
on
the
climate
change
task
force,
chair
of
the
leadership
hollywood
environmental
day,
and
what
I
really
appreciated
about
barry
was
whenever
I
would
see
him,
he
always
had
some
idea.
He
was
always
he
always.
He
was
always
thinking
always
trying
to
make
this
a
better
world
and
he
will
be
missed.
G
Yeah,
I
don't
want
to
repeat
what
the
commissioner
first
said,
but
I
certainly
join
in
the
thoughts
about
very
fast
and
it's
true.
Every
time
he
came
up
to
you,
he
had
an
idea.
He
was
always
looking
to
make
things
better
and
I
just
want
to
extend
my
deepest
condolences
to
you.
Lamar
and
your
family.
D
Mayor,
I
just
want
to
thank
this
board
for
their
unwaven
support
and
it's
quite
overwhelming
all
the
cards,
all
the
emails,
all
the
flowers,
all
the
texting.
That
just
was
overwhelming.
I
just
from
the
bottom
of
my
heart
in
the
fisher
family.
I
just
wanted
to
say
just
thank
you
so
much
for
the
awaiting
support.
H
I
Thank
you,
mr
mayor,
don't
want
to
be
repetitive
or
cause
commissioner
fisher
to
cry,
but
I
was
at
the
funeral
on
friday
and
the.
J
Benny
fisher
was
just
amazing.
Unfortunately,
I've
attended
some
funerals
where
it
was
clear
that
the
minister
head
or
the
rabbi
or
the
priest
had
never
actually
met
the
person
that
he
was
performing
the
services
for,
and
there
were
two
or
three
people
in
the
audience
who
may
have
felt
it
obligatory
to
attend.
J
That
was
not
the
case
with
benny
fisher,
where
the
minister
had
talked
about
how
many
times
the
two
of
them
had
met
and
counseled
each
other
and
the
outpouring
of
love
and
affection
from
the
entire
when
all
of
the
members
of
the
of
the
auctioneers
association
walked
on
stage
and
when
you
could
see
the
just,
it
was
a
full
room.
J
Despite
a
pouring
rainstorm,
you
could
tell
you
know-
and
I
had
met
benny
many
times
before,
but
you
could
tell
the
high
regard
that
the
he
and
the
fisher
family
are
held
in,
and
so,
commissioner,
I
know
it
sounds
hollow.
Normally
we
say
this
after
a
shooting,
but
in
this
case
I
really
mean
it.
When
I
say
my
thoughts
and
prayers
are
with
you.
N
Thank
you,
mayor
ditto.
I
too
don't
want
to
have
the
vice
mayor
shed
another
tear,
but
as
he
knows,
I
was
happy
to
stand
with
him
condolences
to
you
be
strong
he's
in
a
much
better
place,
as
we've
talked
already.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
commissioner.
C
C
For
today
we
will
be
taking
a
time.
Certain
item.
57
is
time
certain
for
11
o'clock
and
the
budget
workshop
will
start
at
12
30,
so
we'll
try
and
work
around
those
two
times.
Today's
music
was
brought
to
you
by
senator
nan.
Rich
children
will
listen
by
barbara
streisand
and
the
house.
I
live
in
by
frank
sinatra
and
thank
you
for
breakfast
from
our
friends
at
downtown
mitch's
bagel
place.
So
thank
you,
senator
rich
for
selecting
the
music
and
providing
the
the
breakfast
this
morning,
all
right,
so
proclamations
and
special
recognitions.
C
So
as
everyone's
aware
I
try
to-
and
I'm
I'm
going
by
the
rules
to
limit
these
to
three
per
meeting,
and
so
some
of
you
have
asked
me-
and
I've
said
we
already
have
three
on
so
I'm
really
stopping
at
three
and
I'm
trying
to
really
abide
by
the
rules
to
make
life
a
little
bit
easier
for
everyone.
As
we
have
these
meetings,
the
first
proclamation
was
set
for
me,
but
they
called
at
five
o'clock
last
night
and
canceled
and
couldn't
be
here
so
one
of
the
ones
that
I
I
did
that
didn't
make.
C
Our
agenda
was
gun
violence
prevention
month
that
wasn't
on
for
today,
because
we
had
already
had
three
but
the
other
one
cancelled.
So
I'm
not
going
to
read
the
whole
proclamation
other
than
to
mention
that
there
is
a
there's.
C
A
food
drive
for
for
mom's
demand
action
and
it's
it
is
going
to
be
the
the
you
can
go
on
their
website,
their
their
it's
gun,
violence,
awareness
day
and
their
where
orange
food
drive
is
at
the
pantry's
website,
the
pantry
of
broward.com,
if
they
want
to
donate
directly
to
that
with
that
I'll
get
into
the
other
proclamations,
there's
two
other
ones.
The
first
one
is
being
presented
by
commissioner
beam
far,
and
it
is
air
awareness
month
and
it's
being
presented
virtually
to
preston
mclean.
F
Thank
you,
mayor
and
I'll.
Just
do
it
from
here
since
we're
doing
it.
Okay,
virtually
this
is
air
awareness
month
and
this
the
recipient,
for
this
is
preston
mclean
from
the
florida
department
of
environmental
protection,
and
I
know
we
have
an
item
later
today
that
is
going
to
be
dealing
with
this.
So
this
is
a
apropos.
F
And
whereas
air
awareness
month
is
an
opportunity
to
celebrate
our
partnerships
with
the
united
states,
environmental
protection
agency
and
the
florida
department
of
environmental
protection
as
we
work
together
toward
clean
air
and
a
sustainable
future.
And
whereas
air
awareness
month
encourages
all
residents
to
take
simple
steps
to
help
protect
our
air
by
using
mass
transit.
Ride.
Sharing
bicycling
walking
using
electric,
hybrid
and
or
fuel
efficient
vehicles.
F
Now
now,
therefore,
be
proclaimed
by
the
board
of
county
commissioners
of
broward
county
florida
that
the
board
hereby
designates
the
month
of
may
2022
as
their
awareness
month
in
broward
county,
and
it
encourages
all
residents
to
take
simple
steps
to
reduce
impacts
on
our
environment.
Be
air
aware
and
prepared.
And
with
that
I
don't
know
if
we
have
preston
mclean
on
the
line,
do
we.
A
O
O
We
are
all
grateful
for
the
excellent
work
that
the
local
programs
do
throughout
the
state
of
florida
and
in
broward
county,
specifically
you're
right
about
the
excellent
air
quality
that
you
all
enjoy
down
there,
and
it
is
a
testament
to
the
efforts
that
you
as
leaders
and
the
citizens
put
into
thinking
about
the
way
that
their
actions,
their
businesses,
their
daily
lives,
impact
the
quality
of
the
environment
around
them
and
we're
proud
to
receive,
as
this
designated
approved
air
program
for
the
state
of
florida,
this
proclamation
and
to
support
you
all
in
the
efforts
that
you
undertake
to
conserve
and
preserve
florida's
environment
and
florida's
excellent
air
for
our
time
and
for
future
generations.
F
Thank
you
thank
you,
mr
mclean,
and,
and
I
just
well
kind
of,
as
an
added
note
mentioned,
that
this
last
saturday,
we
gave
away
a
ton
of
trees,
which
kind
of
helped
help
the
effort.
When
we
did
a
tree
giveaway,
we
always
do
it
on
water
matters
day
and
this
thursday,
at
ann
cole
park
you'll,
have
a
chance
to
see
all
the
different
alternative
fuel
cars
and
everything
if
that
will
be
an
all-day
affair,
starting
at
nine
o'clock.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you,
mayor.
C
Thank
you,
commissioner,
for
our
next
proclamation
is
being
presented
by
commissioner
moskowitz,
and
it
is
national
nurses,
week
barc
and
it's
being
presented
to
jack
feinberg
from
the
broward
addiction
recovery
center,
the
division
director,
anika
hamilton,
the
bark
assistant
division
director,
and,
if
he's
here,
dr
dale
foy,
the
physician
that
works
at
mark
so
jared.
If
you
want
to
go
down
to
the
well
or
commissioner
mouse
woods,.
P
Good
morning
before
I
read
the
proclamation,
I
just
want
to
talk
about
nurses
very
quickly.
P
You
know
in
the
very
beginning
when
hospitals
were
closed
and
then
again
in
delta,
when
we
had
to
close
hospitals
to
visitors,
nurses
didn't
just
have
to
provide
care,
didn't
just
have
to
work
more
hours
than
they
were
used
to
didn't
have
to
deal
with
more
patients
than
they
were
used
to,
but
they
also
had
to
become
friend,
family
member
consoler
and
nurses
were
some
of
the
unsung
heroes
of
the
pandemic,
and
I
grew
a
tremendous
admiration
for
what
they
do
every
single
solitary
day
in
in
their
regular
business,
but
the
fact
that
they
had
to
take
on
the
pandemic
and
be
worried
also
about
their
own
families.
P
I
mean
think
about
where
they
worked,
every
single
solitary
day
being
exposed
and
being
being
having
to
worry
about
their
families,
but
yet
they
went
to
work
every
single
solitary
day
and
did
their
duty
and
did
their
job.
And
so
we
should
be
eternally
grateful
to
people
who
are
nurses
and
we
need
more
people
to
become
nurses.
We
need
more
people
to
go
into
that
field.
Covid
should
not
dissuade
you
from
going
to
be
a
nurse.
It
should
persuade
you
to
go
and
help
people
in
their
time
of
need.
P
P
B
T
F
F
U
Morning,
tuesday,
agenda
memorandum,
the
following
are
submitted
for
your
consideration.
Consent
items
are
1
through
38.
Public
hearing
item
is
39.
Regular
items
are
40
through
61..
I
request
the
following:
withdrawals
and
scrivener
error.
Corrections
and
inclusion
of
additional
information
withdraws.
The
first
substitution
item
number
one
hyphen
e
withdrawal
for
further
stock
review
and
is
expected
to
be
brought
back
at
the
june
7
2022
commission
meeting
item
number
41
withdrawal
for
further
staff
review
and
is
expected
to
be
brought
back
at
the
june
14
2022
commission
meeting
scrivener
errors.
U
Item
number
47,
summary
explanation:
background
last
paragraph
currently
reads:
exhibit
six:
the
memorandum
prepared
by
the
office
of
the
county
attorney
addressing
the
ability
ability
of
third
party
third
parties
to
potentially
acquire
should
read,
exhibit
six
originally
provided
as
additional
information
for
agenda
item
number
43
of
the
may
10
2022
board
meeting.
Is
the
memorandum
prepared
by
the
office
of
the
county
attorney
addressing
the
ability
of
third
parties
to
potentially
acquire
additional
information
item
number
17?
U
U
Item
number
49.
The
points
consideration
of
this
item
will
be
based
on
the
item
as
amended
by
the
exhibit
a
included
within
the
additional
material
distributed
under
the
item.
Item
number
56.
The
board.
Consideration
of
this
item
is
as
modified
by
the
revised
page,
eight
of
exhibit
one
referred
to
the
may
16
2022
memorandum
from
richard
c
tourney
pe
to
greenspawn
martyr,
llp
submit
as
additional
information
item
number
59.
U
The
board's
consideration
of
this
item
is
based
on
the
revised
motion
statement
distributed
as
additional
material
mayor
requests
without
objection,
items
numbers,
48,
49,
50,
51,
54,
55,
56
and
59
be
moved
to
consent.
Please
no
time.
Certain
item
item
number
57
time.
Certain
at
11
o'clock
am
additional
material.
Regular
meeting
item
items
number
a
through
one
j
board.
Appointments
item
number
17
proposed
amendment
submitted
by
commissioner
nan
rich
item.
17
parental
per
item
number
17
parenthetical.
U
Two
proposed
amendments
submitted
by
commissioner
steve
geller
item
number
17
parenthetical
3
proposed
amendment
submitted
by
county
administration
item
number
18
proposed
amendment
submitted
by
commissioner
steve
geller
item
number
18
parenthetical
2
proposed
amendment
submitted
by
county
administration
item
number
22
letters
and
job
scope
from
fla
live
arena
submitted
by
county
administration
item
number
31
replacement,
exhibit
1
submitted
by
broad
municipal
services.
District
item
number
42,
exhibit
1
hyphen
change
order.
U
C
Thank
you,
madam
reading
clerk,
so
I'm
going
to
ask
for
polls
from
consent.
Before
we
start,
I
see
item
7
has
been
pulled
by
the
public.
It
says
chris
zimmerman,
I'm
sure
it's
for
questions
only,
but
it's
pulled
so
I'm
going
to
pull
seven,
even
though,
because
it
doesn't
say-
and
I
see
item
49
has
been
pulled
from
the
public.
Those
are
the
only
two
public
polls
that
I
say
start
with
commission
with
commissioner
moskowitz.
Any
polls,
commissioner
fur.
C
F
K
Thank
you,
commissioner
alston.
Thank
you
mayor.
V
C
Okay,
I'll
accept
a
motion.
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
bogan
second
by
commissioner
alston,
all
in
favor
of
the
consent
agenda
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
the
con
sent
agenda
passes
eight
to
zero.
That,
oh,
I
forgot
to
ask:
did
county
administer
monica,
did
you
have
any
polls?
C
Thank
you.
That
brings
us
to
agenda
item
number
seven
that
was
pulled
by
a
member
of
the
public
chris
zimmerman
he's
listed
as
on
the
phone,
so
at
t
operator,
can
you
open
the
phone
line
for
chris
zimmerman.
A
J
C
M
Thank
you
mayor
since
the
bringing
of
this
forward
by
commissioner
rich.
It's
coming,
there's
two
and
a
half
versions
of
this
there's
senator
rich's.
There's
the
counties
and
steve
geller's
amended
this.
I
I'm
going
to
ask
everyone
to
support
senator
rich's
version.
The
version
that's
here
today
and
I
want
to
tell
you
why
the
county
version
really
goes
over
and
above
beyond.
If
mike
jorgensen
is
right
now
showing
everybody
a
website,
nobody
has
seen
this
website.
Can
you
scroll
down
mike?
This
is
the
first
time
anybody
is
seeing
this
stop
right
there.
M
If
you
see
to
the
right
on
this
website,
anybody
can
find
out
a
condo
or
homeowner
association's
board
of
directors
by
clicking
on
the
go
to
sun
biz
link
and
then,
if
you
scroll
down
a
little
more
there
you
go.
Where
can
I
find
my
docs
there's
another
link
down
there
go
to
official
records.
I
created
this
website
last
week.
It's
a
one,
you
scroll
down
a
little
more
and
people
can
get
the
law.
You
don't
need
to
put
condo
docks.
They're
already
filed
they're
already
recorded
it'd,
be
a
huge
burden.
M
What
the
county
recommendation
is
would
be
a
huge
burden
on
the
condos
to
require
the
structural
documents
is
always
good
and
I
think
that's
what
center
rich
is
doing
is
requiring
the
structural
documents,
but
again
steve
geller's
amendment
is
necessary
because
you
can't
rely
that
they're
going
to
be
accurate.
You
know
you
don't
know
of
a
con,
so
so
again,
this
website,
the
county,
wants
to
take
it
over
it's
fine.
M
M
Thank
you
and
I
I
support
senator
ridge's
version
with
steve
geller's
amendment,
just
I'd
like
to
move
that
forward.
J
Thank
you,
mr
mayor,
as
commissioner
bogan
said,
the
only
thing
that
my
amendment
does
is,
and
I
I
discuss
this
with
the
county
attorney.
I
want
to
ensure
that
if
everybody
understands
the
county
isn't
checking
the
accuracy
of
these
and
there
is
no,
you
can't
sue
the
county.
If
somebody
has
filed
an
inaccurate
document,
the
county
is
not
warranting
that
this
information
is
correct,
and
that
is
all
that
my
amendment
does.
It
should,
I
hope,
be
non-controversial.
F
F
I
think
we
you
wanna,
you
want
like
what
you've
got
there
a
way
to
to
contact
all
of
the
condos
the
board,
if
you're
in
and
ask
them
for
that
information,
because
that's
who
should
have
the
most
up-to-date
information
if
it's,
if
it's
in
our
domain
they're
not
going
to
keep
they're
not
going
to
keep
replenishing
that
they're.
Just
not
it's
not
going
to
happen,
but
but
we
should
be
the
place
where
they
can
find
who
to
call
to
I.
F
I
would
prefer
that
we
just
be
the
the
place
where
people
go
for
that
information
to
contact,
because
I
think
that's
worthwhile
people
want
to
know
that
they
want
to
know
where
to
go,
and
I
would
strip
it
down
just
to
that.
If
it
was,
if
it
was
up
to
me,
I
think
it's
much
easier
to
do.
Then.
We're
not
on
the
hook
for
whether
or
not
it's
accurate
or
anything,
but
at
least
it's
that's
it
that
that
would
be
my
preference.
M
Yeah,
just
so,
you
know:
well
that's
what,
if
you,
if
you
wanted
to
provide
information
to
the
public,
this
website
that
I
created
browardinfo.org
would
provide
it.
If
you
want
to
say
well
who's
the
board
director
is:
where
do
I
go?
There's
a
click
where's
their
condo
documents
boom,
there's
a
click
or
the
home
associated
with
one
website.
You
can
do
that.
I
didn't
know
if
this
board
wanted,
as
senator
rich's.
M
I
believe
she
could
talk
for
herself,
but
I
believe
that
what
she
wants
to
do
is
say:
hey
if
there's
any
structural
issues,
please
let
us
know
and
put
have
a
repository
for
structural
documents
again.
What
steve
geller's
amendment
does
kind
of
makes
it
kind
of
worthless
in
the
sense,
because
you
don't
know
if
it's
up
to
date,
you
don't
know
you're,
not
taking
responsibility,
but
as
long
as
they
don't
have
to
provide
thousands
of
documents.
That
was
my
big
problem
last
time.
M
F
I
think
I'd
like
to
make
an
amendment
to
this
to
to
limit
it
to
simply
the
con
the
contact
information
for
every
board
and
then
that
then
then
it's
everybody's
responsibility
they
go
and
get
that
they
go
to
there
to
get
the
correct
information
and
then
we're.
You
know
we're
simply
a
place
where
they
can
find
that
find
how
to
con
make
that.
M
Mike
jorgensen,
can
you
click
on?
Can
you
scroll
and
click
on
the?
Can
you
go
down
and
just
right
there
on
the
right?
There
click
that
on
go
to
sunbiz
and
then
can
you
click
on
name.
I
I
wish
you'd
put
it
on
the
screen
here.
K
M
And
then,
what's
the
name
of
give
the
name
of
a
condo.
M
King's
point
put
on
king's
point:
there
kings
point:
okay,
there's
kings,
point
corporation
king's
floyd,
llc,
and
so,
if
you
click
on
llc
it'll
tell
you
go
scroll
down.
It'll
tell
you
who
the
registered
agent
is.
It
tells
you
who
the
manager
is.
It
tells
you
the
annual
report
in
there.
It
gives
you
it
gives
you
all
the
information
that
they're
required
by
law
to
give
and-
and
you
don't
have
to
worry
about
people
giving
in
documents
and
people
submitting
things
on
time.
M
F
F
F
Okay
and-
and
I
and
I
appreciate
that-
I
actually
think
that's
pretty
good,
because
if,
if
somebody's
looking
for
that,
they
can
find
it
there.
I
just
think
this
is
we
we
should
strip
this
way
down
and
just
make
it
sure.
So
people
can
just
contact
the
board
as
quickly
as
they
can
and
ask
for
those
documents
and
not
put
us
in
the
position
of
having
to
store
them
I'll,
keep
it
up
to
date.
We
don't
need
to
be
doing
that.
K
G
Yeah-
and
I
don't
have
I-
I
agreed
with
commissioner
bogan's
first
remarks-
that
we
should
just
move
this
one
along
with
the
yeller
amendment.
That
would
be
fine.
The
the
other
thing
I
think
we
need
to
consider-
and
I'm
not
sure
judy.
You
want
to
comment
on
this,
because
one
of
the
things
we
had
in
here
was
this
shift
of
the
enforcement.
G
I
mean
we
need
to.
Everybody
is
not
doing
this
now
everybody's
not
doing
this
now,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
everybody
that
everybody
is
so
all
by
without
you
know
us
being
responsible
for
for
what's
in
the
content
of
the
documents,
but
I
we
talked
about
shifting
this
away
from
municipal
code
enforcement
for
anything
to
instead
creating
a
a
private
cause
of
action.
So
you
want
to
just
comment
on
that.
V
Yes,
I
think
senator
rich
in
in
the
original
version
of
this
item.
I
believe
it's
still
municipal
code
enforcement.
I
think
that
county
administration
and
its
version
had
proposed
creating
a
private
right
of
action
either
one
of
them
would
be
available,
so
it'd
be
very
easy
to
amend
the
item
before
the
board.
The
the
primary
item,
if
that's
the
board's,
will,
as
everybody
knows,
this
is
just
the
set
for
public
hearing
at
this
point,
so
whatever
doesn't
make
it
into
whatever
we're
directed
to
advertise.
G
Okay
and
and
also
I
did
have
an
an
issue
with
another
amendment
that
senator
geller
had
which
I
don't
know
comes
into
play
here,
and
that
is
the
number
of
properties
that
a
person
owns.
V
And
that
I
believe,
is
on
item
17.
so
that
that's
just
going
to
travel
with
the
item
because
it
wasn't
pulled
from
consent
to
go
to
the
public
hearing
and
then
that
debate
can
occur
at
that
time.
Okay,.
P
Thank
you
mayor.
We,
we
discussed
this
at
a
previous
commission
meeting
when
we
were
looking
at
a
a
broader
sort
of
what
we
would
say,
transparency
of
information-
and
I
I
think
commissioner
bogan
did
a
good
job,
educating
us
on.
Why
that's
not
necessary
a
lot
of
that
information.
It
is
already
there
this
website,
by
the
way,
I
think
is
also
tremendously
helpful,
makes
it
just
an
easier
rubric
for
people
to
know
where
to
go.
So
I
think
that's
something.
P
Maybe
this
county
should
should
incorporate,
but
I
do
support
the
general
purpose
of
making
the
structural
documents
or,
let's
say
the
decisions
to
not,
which
is
really
what
we're
talking
about
the
decisions
to
not
make
structural
changes
just
available
and
transparent.
P
All
I
want-
and
I
think
the
senator's
intent
is-
is
that
the
documents
are
available
somewhere
that
show
the
structural
integrity
issues,
because
that
is
not
available
now.
So
I
agree
with
senator
geller's
amendment.
This
has
nothing
to
do
with
liability.
I
think
that's
a
perfect
amendment
needs
to
be
done,
so
I
I
support
senator
rich.
I
support
commissioner
bogan
and
his
comment
with
the
geller
amendment
and
I
support
senator
geller's
amendment.
K
Thank
you.
I
have
vice
mayor
fischer.
D
D
Yeah,
as
we
debated
this,
you
know
before
you
know
when
you
are
buying
or
selling
a
unit
or
a
cooperative,
that
you're
required
to
give
that
buyer
sellers
required
to
get
that
buyer.
Those
documents-
and
I
get
that
my
only
concern
here-
is
that-
and
I
think
it's
great
and
I
think
it's
awesome.
I
love
the
structural
report
to
it.
Two
things
happen:
number
one
officers
of
the
association's
change.
D
One
person
might
move
one
person
who
might
pass
away
who's
going
to
police
it
in
the
sense
of
making
those
immediate
changes
say
the
president
changes
today
at
king's
point.
How
are
we
going
to
know
that
president?
No
longer
there,
the
new
president
is
number
one
number
two.
You
talked
about
code
enforcement,
mr
myers,
but
I'm
just
seeing
how?
D
How
are
we
going
to
be
able
to
really
police
the
issue?
And
how
is
is
the
information
going
to
become
stale
next
week?
There's
got
to
be
some
mechanism
that
we
can.
We
can
do
that,
but
I
don't
think
it's
going
to
be
on
a
priority
on
the
city
side
to
make
sure
that
condo
abc
has
made
sure
their
board
of
directors
are
up
to
date.
I
just
don't
see
that
happening
and
who's
going
to
make
sure
that
that
happens.
That's
all.
Thank
you.
I
love
the
item.
I'm
I'm
overall,
for
it.
V
And
and
just
to
balance,
administrative
burden
for
the
associations
and
the
public's
need
for
this
information.
There
is
going
to
be
some
staleness
because
it
only
requires
an
annual
update.
So,
but
I
guess
the
thinking
is
that
unless
the
board
completely
changes
or
the
officers
completely
change
or
the
management
company,
completely
changes,
there'll
be
sufficient.
Contact
information
still
listed
that
you'll
be
able
to
make
contact.
C
All
right:
well,
I'm
I'm
going
to
go
and
then
I'll
go
into
the
second
round.
This
is
just
a
motion
to
direct
and
then
to
set,
so
it's
going
to
come
back
for
us
for
us
to
all.
Have
our
comments.
My
only
comment
on
this
is
I,
like
the
idea
of
commissioner
bogan's
thing,
because
I
like
the
idea
of
using
what
already
exists
when
this
comes
back
for
us.
C
I'm
only
voting
for
this
if
there's
no
cost
to
the
county,
I
think
that
we're
at
a
point
now,
where
to
start
adding
new
divisions
and
responsibilities
onto
the
county
payroll
to
monitor
all
this.
This
becomes
a
want
and
not
a
need.
At
this
point,
you
already
have
to
produce
all
these
documents.
The
structural
documents
are
very
much
meaningless
to
an
individual
person
buying
a
condo
anyway
they're
not
going
to
know
what
to
do
with
it.
I'm
going
to
support
what
already
exists
in
state
law.
C
I
think
if
commissioner
bogan's
search
engine
engine
gets
us
there
and
it's
something
I'm
not
supporting
if
the
county
has
to
start
spending
dollars
on
this,
because
I
think
we're
going
to
be
very
soon
in
the
next
couple
of
quarters
into
a
position
where
we're
going
to
be
looking
like.
We
were
in
the
cities
a
few
years
ago
at
needs
versus
wants,
and
I'm
only
voting
for
needs
as
we
move
forward.
So
I'm
not
setting
up
an
additional
thing.
C
R
R
I
wanted
to
just
let
the
body
know
that
we
are
happy
to
work
with
whatever
platform
the
commission
directs
us
to
use.
I
think
that
what
commissioner
bogan
put
together
is
very
helpful
and
useful,
and
if
you,
if
it
is
the
will
of
the
board,
but
I'd
like
to
maybe
utilize
that
as
a
platform
and
incorporate
that
into
the
broward.org
structure-
and
we
can
amend
it,
however,
include
whatever
information
you
all
want
us
to
include.
R
Also,
we
can
utilize
our
311
call
center
to
direct
people
through
the
website
to
information
spread.
The
word.
Thank
you.
C
All
right
drew
and
then
I'm
starting
on
the
second
round
on
this
motion
to
set
for
public
hearing
mayor
night.
V
Excuse
me,
and
I
just
wanted
to
correct
one
thing:
I
was
also
conflating
a
little
bit
17
and
18
and
staff's
proposal
when
he
was,
I
think,
kind
enough
to
bring
it
to
our
attention
and
monica
didn't
want
to
mention
it.
Since
I
made
a
mistake
on
it,
there
is
no
private
right
of
action
and
staff's
proposal
on
18
that's
on
17,
but
if
anyone
decided
to
go
that
route,
it's
a
very
easy
amendment
that
we
could
bring
back
for
the
next
one
got
it.
C
All
right,
second
round
now
I
have
senator
geller
commissioner
rich
bogan
b,
commissioner
fahr
moskowitz.
J
If
that
occurs,
and
you
know
it's
not
clear
that
that
will
occur,
but
if
that
does
occur,
then
whatever
we
spend
our
time
now
discussing
will
be
meaningless
because
it
will
probably
be
preempted
by
state
law.
So,
at
the
conclusion
of
my
other
brief
remarks,
I
would
suggest
that
we,
just
you
know,
pass
this
as
it
is
until
the
public
hearing
when
we
can
have
this
debate
after
we
know
what
the
state's
going
to
do.
I
agree
with
senator
rich
though
I
I
believe
it
was
said
by
someone
else.
J
The
one
other
critical
thing,
I
think
is
important
are
the
inspections
and
reports.
People
have
said
you
can
get
those
from
the
documents
you
can't.
The
condo
is
under
no
obligation
to
provide
those
to
sometimes
even
to
their
own
members,
but
certainly
if
you're
just
looking
at
buying,
they
don't
have
to
give
them
to
you
and
finally,
as
I
believe
you
all
know,
I
chaired
a
study
commission
on
this
in
these
chambers,
where
we
had
over,
I
think,
was
28
hours
of
testimony,
and
the
recommendation
was
that
the
cities
do
that.
J
Not
the
county
keep
these
reports,
because
the
cities
who
are
doing
the
code,
inspection
and
all
of
that
they're,
the
ones
that
have
the
better
access
to
know
who
the
condo
officers
are,
and
all
of
that,
so
we
had
recommended
unanimously
that
the
cities
do
this.
I
agree
with
senator
rich.
This
is
it's
necessary
to
get
these
structural
reports,
but
a
it
probably
should
be
from
the
city,
but
I
recommend
we
just
pass
on
this.
The
way
it
is
right
now
until
we
see
what
the
legislature
is
going
to
do.
K
G
Senator
rich
yeah-
and
I
I
actually
I
totally
agree
with
that-
I
really
do
not
want
us
to
pass
something.
Ultimately,
that
does
not
have
this
structural
information
in
it
as
a
requirement
so,
but
I
would
just
make
a
motion
to
move
this
item
to
set
for
public
hearing.
C
Okay,
so
there's
a
motion
to
move
this
item
and
there's
been
a
second
with
with
the
comments
that
were
made.
Well,
let
we
could
keep
debating
or
we
could
just
vote
and
bring
it
back
for
the
public
hearing
and
talk
about
it
when
we
have
the
public
hearing
with
that,
as
is
let's
vote
on
the
item.
All
in
favor
of
setting.
K
N
And
I
was,
I
purposely
have
not
talked
because
I
was
ready
for
june
14th.
Okay,
so
I
just
want
to
confirm
commissioner
rich.
This
is
with
the
geller
amendment.
Correct
just
want
to
clarify
your
emotion.
C
Right
this
will
come
back
for
a
public
hearing,
I'm
assuming
we'll
have
all
the
backup
we'll
have
a
financial
report.
What
this
is
going
to
cost
to
do
there'll
be
a
financial
impact
statement,
because
there
there's
going
to
be
costs
to
monitor
all
this,
and
we
can
all
vote
on
it
on
whatever
the
date
is.
Commissioner,
first
just.
F
Real
quick
and
I'm
fine
with
that.
The
only
thing
I
would
like
to
see
is
that,
instead
of
us
doing
the
storage
of
all
those
documents
that
there
be
a
link
to
that,
okay
and
that's
a
much
easier
way,
then
we
don't
have
to
be
doing
the
storage
right,
because
I
that's
the
part
that
I
was
concerned
with
well.
Q
M
M
C
F
That
was
me,
commissioner,
quick.
This
was
just
a
retroactive
approval
to
on
the
u.s
environmental
protection
agency,
monitoring
the
county's
particular
matter
in
the
air.
It
is
air
awareness
month.
F
The
reason
I
pull
this
is
because
I
asked
I
was
at
first
of
all,
I
was
asked
by
some
county
palm
beach
county
commissioners
to
consider
resolutions
with
regard
to
what's
happening
up
there
with
the
sugarcane
burning
and
all
the
air
particulate.
That's
up
there
and
affecting
lots
of
communities
up
there
and
they're
not
happy
about
it,
and
I
said
I
don't
really
know
what's
going
on
in
broward.
I
said
I
don't
know
if
we're
affected
or
not.
I
asked
our
division
for
the
results
turns
out.
F
C
And
with
that,
will
you
move
the
item
motion
to
approve?
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner.
Far
on
19,
I
have
a
second
by
senator
geller,
all
in
favor
of
agenda
item
19
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes
nine
to
zero.
That
brings
us
to
our
public
hearing
item
item
number
39,
madame
reading
clerk.
U
The
public
hearing
on
item
number
39
is
now
open.
Our
only
public
hearing
item
is
item
number
39,
which
is
a
motion
to
enact
ordinance
amending
the
schedule
of
capital
improvements
table
of
the
capital
improvements
element
of
the
county,
comprehensive
plan.
No
member
of
the
public
has
signed
up
to
speak
on
this
item.
C
I
have
a
motion
by
senator
gellar,
a
second
by
commissioner
alston
on
item
39.
Any
comment
by
the
commission
seeing
none
all
in
favor
of
item
number
39,
please
signify
by
saying
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
item
number
39
passes
unanimously.
That
brings
us
up
to
item
number
49,
which
was
pulled
by
the
public
by
chris
nelson
chris
nelson
step
forward.
You'll
be
given
three
minutes
to
opine.
Congratulations
on
your
wedding
chris!
I
wish
you
a
lifetime
of
happiness.
E
All
right
good
morning,
commissioners,
and
the
reason
I
pulled
this
item
is
I
had
some
concerns
because
we
had
a
mail-in
ballot
sent
to
our
house
last
year
that
we
did
not
order,
and
I
showed
how
easy
it
was
to
take
this
mail-in
ballot,
fill
it
out
for
somebody
else
and
bring
it
down
to
the
dropbox
and
drop
it
in
and
nobody
would
have
known
about
it.
E
I'm
very
concerned
about
this
because
I
don't
know
if
you
know,
but
there
was
a
movie
that
has
come
out
recently
called
2000
mules
by
dinesh
d'souza,
and
it
shows
video
evidence,
and
I
and
I
want
to
tell
you-
I'm
not
into
election
conspiracy
theories-
I'm
not.
This
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
2020
election,
but
showing
video
evidence
of
people
bringing
multiple
ballots
to
multiple
dropboxes
and
dropping
them
in
dropping
them
in
dropping
them
in
and
potentially
committing
voter
fraud.
E
Now,
in
some
of
these
districts,
some
of
these
voting
precincts
in
broward
county.
They,
a
a
study,
was
done
showing
cell
phone
data
of
people,
because
you
know
all
of
our
cell
phones
are
tracked.
So
a
a
company
called
true
to
vote
showed
all
the
cell
phone
data
around
the
voting
precincts
in
the
2020
election,
bringing
the
and
and
irregularities
of
people
driving
to
ballot
boxes,
driving
to
ballot
boxes
going
here
then,
going
back
to
the
ballot
box
back
to
the
ballot
box.
E
E
If
you
would
consider
adding
video
on
every
single
drop
box
and
extra
security
on
every
single
drop
box,
just
to
make
sure
that
there
isn't
any
ballot
stuff
and
stuffing
going
on
or
any
shenanigans
going
on.
I
think
this
is
an
issue
that
would
be
very
important
not
just
to
republicans
but
to
republicans
and
democrats
alike.
So
I
come
here
today
to
ask
you
to
consider
adding
extra
surveillance
to
the
drop
boxes
in
the
next
elections.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank.
C
You
chris
this
item,
though
this
item
really
doesn't
have
it's
not
really.
I
mean
it's
related
to
voting,
but
this
is
just
to
clean
up
the
precinct
and
make
some
of
these
precincts
and
and
make
them
more
compact,
make
them
easier
for
the
supervisor
of
elections
office
to
manage
this.
C
The
representative
from
the
supervisor's
office
is
here
if
we
need
any
questions,
but
this
is
just
a
way
to
make
these
more
compact
and
make
these
easier
for
the
supervisor
to
work
with,
with
the
early
voting
and
with
the
vote
by
mail
there's
less
of
a
need
for
so
many
precincts,
I
think,
was
his
thing.
So
comments
from
the
commission
seeing
none
I'll
accept
a
motion
on
item
number
49.
I
have
a
motion
by
senator
geller
second
by
vice
mayor
fischer,
all
in
favor
item
49
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
C
C
Oh,
no!
No!
Let's
go
to
that's
going
to
take
too
long.
Let's
do
item
number
43,
so
I
can
that
that's
an
airport
thing
that
would
have
been
on
consent,
but
we
have
to
pull
it
because
it's
the
airport
agenda
item
number
43
is
a
motion
to
approve
a
first
amendment
to
the
lease
between
broward
county
and
the
carolina
group
and
permit
the
director
of
aviation
to
provide
notice
to
the
permit.
C
Is
there
any
comments?
I
have
a
motion
by
senator
gellars,
our
second
second
by
senator
rich,
all
in
favor
on
item
number
43.
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes.
Nine
to
zero
item
number
44
motion
to
award
comment
competitively
solicited:
open-end
contract,
shi
international
corp
contract
number
tec,
212-457-6g1.
C
Item
number
44
is
open
to
the
commission
for
comments
like
motion
by
senator
geller.
I
have
a
second
by
commissioner
fur,
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes
nine
to
zero
agenda
item
number
45
motion
to
approve
agreement,
lease
between
broward
county
and
federal,
express
at
the
airport
comments
by
the
commission.
C
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
alston,
second
by
senator
gellar,
all
in
favor
on
45
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes
unanimously
agenda.
Item
number
46
is
a
motion
to
waive
section
39.3
at
fort
lauderdale
and
hollywood
for
the
county
administration
group,
a
motion
to
approve
an
agreement
between
broward
county
and
national
jets
on
item
number
46..
C
C
So
that's
awesome
in
aviation
motion
to
approve
change
order.
Number
seven
to
the
agreement
between
broward,
county
and
west
construction
item
number
42
is
open
to
the
commission
for
comments.
So
I
have
a
motion
by
commissioner
allison.
Is
there
a
second
secondary
second
by
commissioner
far
and
commissioner
and
senator
geller
did
a
tie
item
42
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes
unanimously
agenda
item
number
41
41.
We
didn't.
We
kick
that
to
another.
N
N
V
V
I
frankly
didn't
understand
it
in
the
context
of
this
item,
because
I
don't
think
that
there
are
there's
outlier
voting
right,
but
we
are
going
to
make
sure
we
understand
the
status
of
it
today
or
tomorrow.
We'll
circle
back
with
you,
and
I
know
this
has
come
up
periodically
and
we'll
see
what
options
purchasing
is
proposing
on
that
all.
N
C
C
J
Geller
miss
mayor.
This
is
the
item
that
I
had
pulled
at
the
last
meeting.
When
I
wasn't
here.
I
just
want
to
say
that
the
cities,
the
residents
in
that
area
and
the
cities
of
southwest
ranchers
and
and
davey
both
have
problems
with
this,
but
it
has
now
been
resolved.
I'd
like
to
thank
everybody
for
working
with
us
and
move
approval.
C
C
I
see
the
sheriffs
here.
Welcome
sheriff
tony
I'm
going
to
turn
this
over
to
monica
our
county
administrator
and
she
can
begin
the
process
monica
you're
recognized.
Thank
you,
mr.
R
Mayor
item
before
you
is
a
culmination
mark
that
we
had
with
the
sheriff
since
the
last
meeting,
where
he
presented
a
proposal
for
11.1
million
and
then
wanted
to
pro
rate
the
amount
for
the
current
fiscal
year
for
some
salary
adjustments
to
those
in
the
call
center
for
communications.
R
This
item
actually
represents
the
four
million
dollars
that
we
believe
it
would
actually
cost
to
do
that
for
the
remaining
portion
of
the
fiscal
year.
However,
I
wanted
to
make
it
clear
that,
since
this
is
something
that
we
monitor
each
and
every
year,
it
would
be
something
that
we
will
true
up
at
the
end
of
the
contractual
period.
So
if
it
does,
if
it's
left,
then
less
money
would
be
obviously
used
for
that
purpose.
R
And
if
it's
more,
then
we
will
true
that
up
as
long
as
that
is
within
the
parameters
that
the
commission
has
requested
and
authorized.
Additionally,
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
guys
got
to
see
the
additional
material
that
was
provided
as
a
follow-up
to
some
of
those
briefings
we
have
with
each
of
you
and
also
to
recognize
dr
blue,
smaller,
with
fiction
associates
who
also
participated
with
me
in
our
briefings
in
the
audience
there
with
you
today.
R
C
C
Where
is
he
oh
so
come
up
to
the
front?
So
this
way,
if
anybody
has
any
questions
he's
here,
I
also
have
nine
speakers,
so
I'm
going
to
they
get
two
minutes
each.
There
is
one
person
here
in
person
that
signed
up
to
speak
and
that
is
where's.
My
in-person
speaker
is
on
item
number
57
ruddy
turnstone
is
ruddy
turnstone.
Here.
C
C
T
T
T
T
Okay:
okay,
it
is
critical.
The
board
county
commissioners
takes
action
to
provide
justice
and
peace
with
his
family.
Some
of
the
fear
who
are
present
here
today,
please
drop
some
passive
referendum,
stating
that
as
a
great
public
importance
at
bso
release
the
video
footage
of
his
murder
regarding.
T
To
keep
the
public
safer,
and
so
since
april
of
2020
at
the
start
of
the
lockdowns
in
the
jails
in
response
to
kovid,
we
at
chip
have
been
speaking
to
and
advocating
for
people
that
are
or
were
incarcerated
in
broward
county
jail.
T
We've
also
spoken
to
people
that
if
they
were
having
an
alternative
line
to
9-1-1,
they
could
have
avoided
incarceration
altogether,
because
people
are
incarcerated
wrongly
all
the
time
we
connected
with
nearly
500
individuals
in
broward
jail.
Since
we
started
the
hotline
and
have
come
to
find
that
there
is
rampant
misconduct
in
the
jail.
The
number
one
issue
that
is
reported
to
us
is
medical
neglect,
ranging
from
mild
to
life-threatening,
such
as
in
the
case
of
kevin
defer.
We
can
provide
documentation
and
countless
hours
of
recording
of
these
statements.
C
And
wrongdoing.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Miss
turnstone.
I
appreciate
your
speaking.
That
brings
us
to
our
public
speakers
that
are
here
on
item
number
57.
item
number
57
is
the
transfer
budgetary
request
for
the
e911
operators.
Our
first
speaker
is
mikko
atkinson
and
then
on
deck
is
valerie
sands,
so
is
mikko
atkinson
here.
C
Z
Thank
you
county
commission.
My
name
is
nicole
morse,
I'm
also
a
volunteer
with
the
community
hotline
for
incarcerated
people,
and
I
wanted
to
elaborate
on
why
item
57
and
redirecting
funds
away
from
broward
sheriff's
office
and
towards
alternatives
to
9-1-1
are
so
crucial,
especially
in
preventing
tragedies
like
the
horrific
death
of
kevin
desire
at
the
hands
of
broward
sheriff's
office.
Z
Z
Often
what
happens
is
when
I
call
bso
from
the
outside,
and
I
let
them
know
that
this
is
a
concern.
The
next
time
I
speak
with
someone
I
hear
that
they
have
indeed
finally
received
medical
attention.
What
this
says
to
me
is
that
bso
is
not
capable
of
monitoring
itself
and
is
not
capable
of
investigating
its
own
conditions.
Z
Bso
is
not
able
to
operate
a
constitutionally
safe
facility
without
external
monitoring.
That's
what
we
see
in
the
case
of
kevin
decire,
and
that's
why
we
need
to
move
resources
away
from
bso
and
toward
community-based
alternatives
that
can
actually
keep
our
community
safe,
and
we
also
need
neutral,
objective
third
parties
investigating
bso.
They
cannot
do
it
themselves.
Thank
you.
Thank.
C
AA
You
thank
you,
commissioners,
for
allowing
me
to
speak
today.
My
name
is
mainly
hoshing.
I
am
a
local
activist
in
broward
county
after
surviving
the
parkland
shooting
my
junior
year.
I
was
on
the
second
floor
of
the
freshman
building,
also
standing
here
as
a
community
organizer
for
chainless
change.
I'm
asking
the
commission
to
think
outside
the
box
in
order
to
find
an
alternative
solution
to
this
issue.
I'm
confident
that
community-based
models
will
allow
for
those
trained
in
specialized
care
to
be
the
sole
person
responding
to
non-life-threatening
calls.
AA
AA
My
classmates
called
9-1-1
with
the
late
with
delayed
response.
We
did
not
feel
safe
as
a
mass
shooting
survivor,
knowing
that
in
the
buffalo
shooting
that
left
10
people
dead,
a
9-1-1
dispatcher
hung
up
on
one
of
the
supermarket
workers.
While
she
was
whispering
for
help.
I
know
how
it
feels
to
be
in
her
position
and
I
could
not
imagine
how
that
must
have
felt
if
history
repeats
itself
and
the
unexpected
always
happens.
How
incapable
must
man
be
to
learn
from
experience,
said
george
bernard
shaw.
We
must
not
allow
to
fix.
AA
C
AB
AB
Thank
you
mayor,
commissioners,
there's
an
old
legal
maxim
that
states
justice
delayed,
is
justice
denied
and
I
think
of
no
better
situation
where
this
maximum
applies
than
the
situation
regarding
kevin
de
siere's
murder
almost
15
months
ago.
During
that
time,
the
broward
sheriff's
office
basically
dragged
their
feet
using
every
method
from
disingenuous
interpretation
of
section
119
of
the
florida
statute
to
obstruct
and
impede
any
evidence
from
coming
out
or
reports
from
being
publicly
seen
until
almost
the
week
before
this
commission
meeting,
which
I
don't
think
is
a
coincidence.
AB
Actions
like
that
erode
public
trust,
which
is
especially
just,
is
especially
necessary
when
bso
is
a
billion
dollar
taxpayer-funded
entity
and
people
see
those
things
and
see
that
they
are
self-investigated
and
it
erodes
public
trust
even
further
when
bso
investigates
its
own
misconduct
and
use
of
force.
People
see
those
things
as
a
cover-up.
Current
bso
employees
are
tasked
with
making
the
final
determination
about
the
actions
of
their
own
team
members.
For
obvious
reasons.
AB
C
AC
AC
Besides
shiny
cars
and
new
buildings,
the
average
tenure
of
bso's
dispatch
staff
from
2019
through
2021
was
just
202
days,
and
so
what
our
county
essentially
is
investing
investing
in
is
for
people
to
just
be
on
the
wheel
in
a
high
rate
of
turnover
from
2019
to
2021
the
abandoned
call
rate
increased
26
percent,
which
shows
that
bso
is
ill-equipped
to
deal
with
crises
in
our
county.
Furthermore,
the
staff
who
are
trained
to
answer
calls
have
no
training
to
address
critical
needs
and
people
who
receive
people
who
need
to
receive
specialized
care.
AC
Bso's
failure
to
respond
properly
to
911
puts
all
of
broward
county
residents
in
jeopardy
and
their
continued
failure
to
manage
resources,
as
well
as
their
staff,
is
a
clear
indication
that
they
are
following
a
failing
leader.
Alternatives
will
never
be
given
equal
treatment
as
long
as
9-1-1
dispatch
is
housed
in
bso
and
bso
is
incentivized
to
route
calls
to
bso
staff.
AC
AD
AD
AD
AE
Good
morning
commissioning
community,
I'm
here.
As
a
concerned,
citizen
advocate
and
a
social
worker,
having
witnessed
the
last
commission
meeting
regarding
bso's
continued
mismanagement
of
their
911
dispatch
lines.
I
am
deeply
concerned
first,
I'm
concerned
about
the
hostile
working
environment
our
911
dispatchers
are
swimming
in,
while
bso
may
get
away
with
blaming
some
of
these
challenges
on
the
prior
managing
entity.
They
surely
cannot
blame
them
for
perpetuating
a
toxic
working
environment.
AE
We
all
witnessed
sheriff
tony's
behavior
at
the
last
commission
meeting
as
someone
who
endured
years
of
sensitive
and
difficult
fieldwork
as
a
social
worker
while
having
to
endure
a
hostile
working
environment.
I
now
fully
understand
why
20
percent
of
these
dispatch
positions
remain
empty
and
why
bso
only
retains
the
average
dispatcher
for
202
days.
If
tony
spoke
to
this
commission
and
this
legislative
body
in
the
way
that
he
did
here,
how
does
he
speak
to
his
staff?
AE
Even
just
a
few
months
in
a
hostile
working
environment
can
have
dangerous
effects,
some
of
which
I
am
personally
still
recovering
from
individuals
who
handle
the
most
sensitive
crises
in
our
communities
should
be
nurtured,
valued
and
supported
not
harmed.
Second,
I
am
concerned
as
an
advocate
and
social
worker
beyond
the
issues
with
the
violent
and
hostile
working
environment,
failing
infrastructure
and
budget
mismanagement,
bso
clearly
does
not
have
the
capacity
or
sensitivity
to
deal
with
the
crises
that
come
through
the
dispatch
lines.
AE
We
continue
to
criminalize
people
in
situations
that
could
be
better
fielded
by
social
workers,
mental
health
professionals
and
community-based
programs.
Lastly,
I'm
concerned
because,
as
commissioner
bogan
stated,
this
seems
to
be
a
lot
more
about
money
than
protecting
our
people.
While
it
was
stated,
911
failed
before
bso
took
it
over.
It
is
clear
that
they
are
incapable
of
improving
the
issues
they
claim
to
have
inherited.
They
are
under
constant
community
scrutiny
with
legitimate
reason.
911
management
is
just
one
of
bso's
99
problems.
AE
C
H
C
C
Signed
up
on
item
number
40.
well
we'll
get
to
that
one!
Okay.
So
it's
closed
as
to
moses.
So
there's
no
other
speakers
that
have
signed
up
mr
desire,
we'll
get
to
you.
If,
when
we
talk
about
agenda
item
number
40.
we're
going
to-
I
don't
think,
there's
public
speakers
on
that.
But
if
there's
we'll
get
to
that
one
because
there's
that
is
not
on
57.,
so
no
one
else
has
signed
up
to
speak
on
item
number
57..
C
Have
they
yeah?
We
have
bruce
mohler.
That's,
but
that's
not
a
speaker!
That's
someone
for
our
questions!
All
right!
I'm
going
to
open
this!
I'm
closing
this
to
the
public.
I'm
going
to
open
this
to
the
commission
and
I
will
start
a
queue
and
we
can
go
from
there.
I
see
geller
first
and
I'll
start
with
senator
geller.
So
I
have
s
I
have
just
for
the
public.
C
I
have
sheriff
tony's
in
the
first
row
and
we
have
bruce
mohler
from
fitch
and
associates,
he's
the
consultant
that
was
retained
by
the
county
many
years
ago
with
the
county
and
the
cities
and
the
group
together
that
was
looking
at
all
these.
This
is
not
someone
that
came
in
new
just
for
this
issue.
This
is
somebody
that's
been
on
our
quasi-stat.
You
know
team
for
a
number
of
years,
senator
geller.
You
have
the
floor,
sir.
Thank.
J
You,
sir
brief
statement
and
questions
to
mr
mueller.
I
believe
right.
Okay,
thank
you.
I'm
supportive
of
giving
these
funds
on
a
temporary
stop
gap
measure,
because
we
have
to
do
something
right
now
and
this
money
will
give
the
sheriff.
I
guess
an
opportunity
to
prove
that
they
can
improve
this.
We
have
not
known
until
all
of
these
news
stories.
Nobody
had
told
us
if
this
was
an
issue,
and
if
this
was,
I
would
have
thought
that
somebody
at
bso
or
someplace
else
would
have
told
us.
This
was
a
problem.
J
J
Give
me
another
two
days,
but
you
know
I
am
the
general,
but
not
universal
expert.
So
you
are
the
expert
in
this
area.
Can
you,
as
part
of
when
we
get
your
report?
Will
you
be
giving
us?
J
AF
Thank
you
senator
just
for
the
record,
bruce
mohler
senior
consultant
with
fiction
associates,
you're
correct.
Our
firm
was
retained
by
the
county
about
2015-2016.
We've
delivered
a
series
of
reports
that
have
looked
at
the
regional
dispatch
center,
just
as
I
shared
with
some
of
you
individually.
AF
I
also
come
from
broward
county
and
was
actually
here
both
as
the
county
fire
chief
when
I
was
under
the
county
as
a
city
fire
chief
as
a
city
manager,
so
my
background's
pretty
at
least
with
regard
to
this
system.
I
would
like
to
think
somewhat
comprehensive,
still
a
general
expert,
if
that's
the
case,
senator
the
firm's
very
data
driven.
So
what
we're
doing
is
we
are
using
data
to
form
the
foundation
of
our
analysis.
We
have
already
received
much
of
that
data.
If
not
the
the
overwhelming
majority
of
it.
AF
To
answer
calls
and
to
sign
those
calls
to
resources
out
in
the
field,
we
will
do
that
also
on
the
911
telephone
system
itself,
and
then
the
radio
system
and
looking
at
all
three
of
those,
the
county
made
significant
investments
in
the
past
few
years
in
that
system,
so
we
were
contacted
last
year
actually
might
have
been
yeah
about
mid
last
year
about
a
year
ago
to
actually
come
back
and
reevaluate
the
system.
AF
From
that
point,
our
next
phase,
then,
is
to
actually
do
modeling
of
the
resources
necessary.
So
to
your
question,
we
will
not
make
policy
decisions.
Are
our
forte
is
to
sit.
There
is
to
give
you
very
objective
data,
both
quantitative
and
qualitative
data,
on
how
the
system's
performing,
including,
as
we
have
already
been
in
all
the
centers
spoken
with
a
number
of
the
dispatch
personnel.
We
may
do
more
in
that
area.
AF
We
will
look
particularly
at
the
issues
of
abandoned
calls,
which
has
come
up
and
put
that
in
context,
not
obviously,
and
with
all
due
respect
to
the
press,
that
we
will
give
you
a
very
thoughtful
analysis
on
that,
something
we
hadn't
anticipated
earlier
and
from
that
we
will
come
back
to
the
commission
after
sitting
with
the
various
stakeholders
I
mentioned
and
lay
out
for
you
how
the
system
is
performing.
What
are
the
pinch
points?
What
are
the
issues
that
are
strong?
AF
J
J
What
is
the
best
way
of
handling
dispatch?
Because
I'm
not
the
expert
you
are.
I
am
hoping
when
you
give
us
this
information,
that
you
will
have
some
alternatives
for
us
possibly
recommendations,
or
at
least
if
you
give
us
the
alternatives
myself
and
the
other
eight
commissioners
on
this
dais
are
used
to
making
hard
decisions,
but
we
can
only
make
those
decisions
based
on
facts
and
recommendations
that
we
have
in
front
of
us.
Will
your
report
say-
and
you
have
these
four
options
you
can
have
the
sheriff
can
do
everything
transfer
everything
to
bso?
J
J
I
am
hoping
that
you
will
give
us
options,
objective,
facts
and
some,
you
know
at
least
pluses
and
minuses
of
how
this
should
be
handled,
taking
into
account
that
perhaps,
with
this
additional
money
we're
giving
bso,
we
will
see
a
sudden
improvement
and
if
that's
the
case
great,
we
can
leave
it.
You
know
everything
the
way
it
is,
but
I'm
hoping
you'll
be
able
to
give
us
something
which
will
include
the
new
money
that
we're
giving
to
presumably
bso
today.
Is
that
what
you
will
be
able
to
do.
AF
AF
We
will
then
make
recommendations
based
off
that
those
will
be
placed
in
the
context.
So
each
recommendation
there
may
be
some
policy
options.
Sometimes
there
may
not
be
a
policy
option
with
it,
but
we
will
still
lay
those
out
and,
as
we
walk
through
those,
I
think
it
will
get
everything
and
even
a
little
more
what
the
board
needs
in
order
to
look
at
those
issues
and
make
a
policy
determination.
J
I
understand
that
sir,
so
hopefully
my
next
to
last
question
so
just
to
be
clear,
though
you
understand
what
I
want.
Yes,
I
want
some
recommendations,
or
at
least
options
from
you
with
facts
to
back
them
up,
and
you
believe
that
I
will
have
when
you're
done,
something
like
what
you're
describing
absolutely
okay
and
then
my
last
question
is
members.
I
have
passed
out
to
you
earlier
today,
some
additional
information-
and
I
believe
I've
discussed
this
with
you.
J
If
you
look
at
the
hollywood
police
department,
their
main
number-
and
this
is
passed
out,
their
main
number
is
954-764-4357.
J
Which
is
the
county
city
of
pembroke
pines
for
not
for
emergencies.911
for
non-emergency
style,
954?
Four,
four:
three:
five:
seven,
which
is
the
county
city
of
sunrise,
main
number
for
police
department,.
J
Of
davey
just
show
city
of
davie's
clothes
actually
go
to
the
city
of
davey.
So
question
that
I
have
here
is:
I
understand
we
have
a
uniform,
county-wide
dispatch
and
we're
supposed
to
do
that,
and
I
think
our
charter
says
that,
but
a
lot
of
these
phone
calls
that
are
clearly
not
going
to
involve
a
dispatch.
If
somebody
calls
and
says
you
know,
I
what
I
want
information
on,
how
to
get
a
job,
how
to
apply
for
a
job
with
city
of
hollywood
police.
I
need
to
drop
by
and
pick
up
a
police
report.
J
J
AF
J
I
assume
I
need
data,
but
that
in
the
majority
of
these
non-emergency
calls,
I
assume
they
never
involve
a
dispatch
and
then
the
majority
of
them-
and
I
would
like
you
to
try
and
obtain
that
data
that
they
are
just
being
transferred
back
to
the
city
anyhow,
which
is
placing
an
additional
and
unnecessary
burden
on
the
911
operators.
Can
you
address
that?
Please
certainly.
AF
So
we
will
have
data,
we
will
answer
the
question
here.
Here's
the
challenge.
In
the
past
two
decades,
little
more
than
that,
there's
been
a
significant
shift
in
community
expectations
regarding
9-1-1,
we
have
individuals
that
call
9-1-1
for
non-emergency
events
that
still
require
law,
fire
or
ems
response.
We
have
individuals
that
call
non-emergency
numbers
and
they
require
there
is
a
significant
percentage.
I
don't
have
that
data.
Now.
AF
I
was
on
the
phone
with
our
statistician
two
days
ago,
over
the
weekend
talking
about
where
he's
at
in
that
process
we'll
be
delivering
that
when
I
mentioned
the
cad
data
and
the
telephone
data
we'll
be
able
to
answer
that
question
there
there's
a
sizeable
percentage
that
do
end
up
in
a
dispatch.
The
best
practice
is
to
offload
calls
that
do
not
belong
in
the
center
in
there.
The
challenge
is
that
triage
process.
How
do
we
really
understand?
We
will
evaluate
the
data
senator.
AF
J
AF
J
AF
I'll
attempt
to
be
more
direct,
please
I
I'll
I'll
agree
with
the
first
point.
9-1-1
majority
of
9-1-1
calls
necessary
on
the
non-emergency,
I'm
not
yet
ready
to
accept
the
position
that
the
overwhelming
majority
do
not
require
a
law
enforcement,
fire
or
ems
response.
On
that
point,
I'm
going
to
wait
for
the
data
okay,
when
one
of
the
stakeholder
groups
will
meet
with
is
the
police
chiefs,
as
we
did
in
our
prior
engagements
multiple
times.
I've
spoken
to
the
president
of
that
association.
J
Recommendation
that
would
be
fine
if
we're
only
offloading
half
of
it.
If
they're,
if
the
numbers
say,
if
you
need
a
police
officer
dial
this
number
for
all
other
things
style,
you
know
the
local
city,
I'm
fine
with
that.
I
just
seems
to
me
like
we
cannot
offload
a
lot
of
this.
That's
going
to
the
911
operators.
That
should
never
be
there
to
begin
with,
and
that
concludes
my
questioning.
Sir.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
K
Thank
you,
commissioner.
AG
You
know
this
is
an
interesting
bruce
come
back
up.
This
is
an
interesting
discussion
about
law
enforcement
versus
non-law
enforcement
versus
fire
rescue,
so
there's
different
systems
where,
in
in
our
current
system,
if
it's
on
a
true
emergency
call,
whether
it's
law
enforcement
or
fire
rescue,
you
don't
really
have
it
differentiated
when
the
call
comes
in
but
other,
I
guess.
Other
municipalities
and
other
regional
governments
do
make
that
distinction
between
law
enforcement
fire
rescue
at
what
point
and
the
9-1-1
call.
How
is
that
differentiated.
AF
You're
correct
commissioner,
so
when
somebody
dials
9-1-1,
that
is
the
universal
number
for
emergency,
you
know
emergency
response
of
public
safety
personnel,
so
there's
no
way
you
have
to
in
that
very
first
phone
call,
wherever
the
call
lands
in
the
in
the
dispatch
center
where
that
call
gets
directed.
First,
you
have
to
make
a
determination
on
whether
it's
going
to
require
a
law
enforcement,
fire
or
ems
response
in
some
communities.
C
Excuse
me
there's
something
on
the
chair:
there,
that's
being
picked
up
on
the
tv.
Let's
be
I
don't.
I
don't
know
what
our
rules
are
with
something
like
that.
I
don't
want
to
have
something
with
phone
numbers
and
the
whole
thing
there,
because
I
I
don't
want
to
start
like
that.
I
don't
mean
it
to
be
disrespectful,
but
we
just
don't
put
things
on
the
chairs
that
work
for
anything
like
that.
I
don't
even
know
what
it
said,
but
I
just
saw
a
phone
number
there.
Thank
you.
AF
Okay,
thank
you
so,
commissioner,
so
when
that
call
first
comes
in,
the
911
operator
has
to
make
that
determination.
Broward
county
operates.
What
is
a
best
practice.
It's
a
regional
dispatch
center
that
call
never
gets
transferred
it
either.
AF
AF
Other
communities,
all
communities
have
to
go
through
that
in
other
jurisdictions
outside
of
broward
county.
Sometimes
that
call
has
to
be
transferred
because
the
911
center
that
receives
the
call
only
handles
law
enforcement,
ninety
percent
approximately
nationwide.
Ninety
percent
of
calls
that
come
in
are
law
enforcement
related
in
the.
If
the
calls
are
for
fire
ems,
they
have
to
be
transferred
and
that
transfer
builds
in
a
delay
in
getting
emergency
care,
and
so
it's
that
one.
AF
That
was
one
of
the
reasons
that
was
cited
in
2012
2013
in
the
creation
of
this
center.
It's
something
actually
that
I've
been
researching
right
now
with
the
university
of
south
florida.
The
delay,
the
time
that
delay
causes.
AG
That's
that's
an
interesting
follow-up,
so
I
mean
in
your
preliminary
analysis.
If
there
is
a
transfer
to
another,
I
guess
call
intake
person
or
a
dispatched
person.
If
it
is
fire
rescue
and
you
mentioned,
90
is
law
enforcement.
I
mean
that
surprised
me.
I
would
think
that
you
know
you
might
have
a
much
higher
percentage.
That
would
be.
That
would
be
fire
rescue,
not
fire,
but
but
rescue,
and
so
but
that's
your
analysis.
90
is
law
enforcement.
AF
Not
not
in
this,
because
we
are
still
looking
at
the
data
here.
I
will
tell
you
that
across
the
nation
about
90
percent
of
the
911
calls
come
in.
Results
are
for
law
enforcement.
That's
what
the
caller
believes.
They
need
of
the
remaining
percentage
for
fire
and
the
fire
does
ems
as
well
as
they
do
here
in
in
south
florida
and
in
broward
county
about
80
70
to
80
percent
of
those
calls
for
fire.
Rescue
are
ems
related
to
your
point
and
then
the
remaining
percentage
is
just
fire
related
calls
right.
AG
So
we
have
kind
of
a
just
a
a
request
here
for
some
kind
of
like
bridge
funding.
You
know,
because
there
is,
I
think
everybody
here
agrees.
We
need
to
have
some
adjustment
in
salaries
of
our
call
intake,
911
personnel.
How
much
is
is
the
question
I
mean.
The
ask
right
now
is
an
amount
that
exceeds
the
the
highest
amount
that
we
have
for
for
cult
intake
at
various
levels
in
the
the
agencies
that
we
have.
AG
You
know
done
a
comparative
analysis,
but
I
mean
maybe
we'll
meet
somewheres
in
the
middle,
but
then
it
begs
the
question
of
what
are
the
the
working
conditions
or
the
other
factors
that
would
lead
to
greater
interest
in
being
a
911
salary
is
is
essential,
but
what
what
about
the
the
workforce
issues?
I
mean,
what
you've
had
some
analysis
from
a
study
back
in.
I
guess
it
was
2016.
AG
what
type
of
of
recommendations
were
you
making
with
regard
to
like
morale
and
the
amount
of
persons
that
would
be
assigned
to
each
shift
how
you
would
deal
with
persons
who
are
like
you
know,
last
minute,
absentees
and
things
like
that.
I
know
I
know
you
have
to
eventually
get
to
move
in
managers
and
the
rest
of
it,
but
I
mean
you
must
have
some
process
that
on
short
notice,
you
have
persons
that
are
on
call
that
can
just
come
in.
AG
How
is
that
handled
to
kind
of
minimize
the
disruption
and
forcing
persons
to
have
like?
I
don't
know
you
know
all
of
this
overtime
I
mean
you
know,
find
you
know
that
it
increases
their
salary,
but
at
the
same
time
the
burnout
is
amazing
and
that's
what
we
want
to
avoid.
So
how
can
we
better,
you
know,
adjust
the
the
movement
of
persons
on
call
to
get
into
these
centers.
AF
So
I'll
play
off.
What
I
said
to
senator
gellar
is
that
that
is
an
area
that
we
will
address,
we're
still
analyzing
that
data.
But
let
me
make
some
general
comments
across
the
nation:
we've
seen
challenges
in
staffing,
911
centers
attrition
rates,
the
vacancy
you
know
the
turnover
every
year
was
high
before
covet
and
covid
aggravated
that
condition
on
a
national
basis.
We
in
our
prior
report
that
you
made
reference
to,
commissioner,
we
did
some
qualitative
analysis
talking
to
groups
of
employees.
AF
We
were
in
the
centers
directly
observing
and
then
we
did
surveys
we're
going
to
repeat
that
process
in
this
engagement
as
well
refresh
that
we
look
at
those
issues
of
training
and
supervision
and
job
satisfaction,
just
general
areas
of
that
that
qualitative
is
a
little
more
challenging.
Sometimes
if,
if
there
are
major
themes
in
that
it's
a
little
more
challenging,
but
we'll
do
that
I'll
say
that
the
three
centers
that
you've
got
now.
One
of
the
recommendations
we
have
made
prior
is
a
recommendation
to
have
two
centers.
AF
It
makes
oversight,
supervision
and
a
purpose-built
facility
would
probably
help
with
that
as
well.
You're
right
money
generally
does
not
motivate
a
workforce
in
the
long
term
as
a
single
issue,
there
is
no
silver
bullet
here.
It
is
that
it
is
management,
the
training
of
those
managers
and
there's
been
discussions
with
the
sheriff's
office.
Already
on
that
issue
that
they've,
you
know
been
leaned
into
that
some
elements
we're
going
to
evaluate
that
we'll
report
it
and
we'll
see,
if
there's
other
recommendations
that
that
blend
with
that,
I'm
not.
AG
Sure
the
vast
majority
of
the
employees
in
the
system
I
mean,
I
think,
you're,
looking
at
a
much
higher
percentage
that
are
like
they're
on
call
intake
operator
one
and
then
there's
a
large
number
that
are
operator
three
and
then
then
you
get
into
your
your
re.
Your
excuse
me
your
duty
officers
and
your
site
managers
and
the
rest
of
it.
That's
a
much
much
smaller
number,
but
you
know
with
regard
to
that
largest
position,
that
you
have
some
250
persons
that
are
just
a
regional
operator
classification.
Three.
AG
AF
That's
probably
a
question,
frankly,
better
asked
of
the
sheriff's
office
and
either
ms
mize
or
thomas
that
are
here
that
run
those
centers.
I've
had
one
of
my
staff
and
one
of
the
people
that
I
work
with
have
gone
through
that
I'm
not
intimately
familiar
with
the
specifics
on
moving
up,
but
like
a
lot
of
positions
in
any
organization,
but
in
government
as
well.
People
come
in
and
their
first
level
of
training
gets
them
in
the
door
on
the
telephones
and
then,
as
they
progress
they
get
trained.
AF
AG
The
specifics
I
I'll
yield
to-
I
don't
know
if
it's
seniority
or
you
know
some
other
measure
of
of
competence
that
that
takes
you
from
you
know
one
position
to
another
one,
whether
you
have
to
be
in
the
first
position
for
a
minimum
of
two
years
or
three
years,
and
then
my
last
question
is
with
regard
to
persons
that
initially
come
into
employment.
Here,
perhaps
I
mean
I
don't
know
if
they're
on
probation
or
they're
a
trainee
or
something
like
that,
I
mean.
AG
AG
Answered
with
regard
to
like
housing
or
health
care,
and
things
like
that,
rather
than
you
know,
go
go
talk
about.
You
know.
I
have
somebody's
got
a
heart
attack
over
here
or
you
know,
somebody's
pounding
on
the
door
and
I
need
I
need
a
police
officer
here
right
now,
so
you
told
me
it's
a
smaller
percentage
that
is
non-emergency
calls
and
you're
going
to
give
get
us
the
data
on
that.
AG
AF
No,
I
agree
with
you.
We
will
we'll
look
at
that.
We
don't
generally
separate
non-emergency
lines
from
emergency
lines.
There's
an
inefficiency
in
that
there's,
actually
an
inefficiency.
We
can
demonstrate
that
what
there
is,
though,
is
there's
other
lines.
For
example,
three
one
one
other
lines
that
maybe
can
be
strengthened
and
then
calls
can
more
quickly
and
seamlessly
be
transferred
to
those
when
appropriate,
which
kind
of.
F
Thank
you
mayor
and
bruce.
I
really
appreciate
you
being
here
and
and
having
a
chance
to
talk
with
you,
because
I
think
to
commissioner
bogan's
point
a
couple
weeks
ago.
We
needed
like
an
independent
person
who
was
who
could
look
at
this,
and
it
was
looked
at
many
many
systems
so
that
we
have
kind
of
a
clear-eyed
view
of
where
we're
going,
and
you
know
we.
Obviously
you
wrote
us
a
very
good
kind
of
blueprint
in
2016.
F
and
I
guess
I
just
kind
of
want
to
leave.
It
have
an
open-ended
question,
given
what
you
wrote
in
2016,
given
where
we
are
now.
F
AF
So
I'm
not
at
the
point
to
get
specific
on.
Okay,
let
me
make
a
couple
general
comments.
If
I
can,
though,
the
recommendations
that
we
made
in
2016
were
largely
embraced
by
both
bso
and
county
staff,
we
had
lots
of
discussions,
as
I
said,
with
municipalities,
key
stakeholders,
fire
chiefs
and
police
chiefs,
and
the
overwhelming
majority
of
those
were
implemented.
AF
There
have
been
challenges
in
providing
public
safety
services.
911
has
been
impacted
by
that
as
well.
We
recognize
that
we
also
recognize
the
county
made
significant
investments
in
technology
significant
and
how
that
impacted,
because
we're
very
data
driven,
sometimes
there
can
be
an
adverse
impact
we
haven't
seen
anything
yet,
but
but
there's
some
things
that
we
want
to
dig
into
to
look
at
the
data
and
see
an
example,
an
example
would
be
how
long
it
takes
to
process
a
call
okay,
so
that.
F
AF
F
Yeah,
I
think
that
is
yeah,
essential
yeah,
because
that
is
something
that
I
think
all
of
us
were
proud
of
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
we're
not
there
and
I-
and
I
think
all
of
us
need
to
understand
what
happened
and
what
is
that?
A
staffing
issue?
Is
it
a
technological
issue,
what
it
and
and
hopefully,
you're
going
to
be
able
to?
Oh.
AF
F
And
what
we
need
is
that
what
you're
going
to
be
bringing
this,
but
we
need
quick.
We
need
to
assume
yes
for
this
next
year's
budget.
Are
you
going
to
be
able
to
bring
that
to
us
for
this
year's
budget.
AF
We're
going
to
be
close,
so
one
of
the
things
that
we
do,
I
said
we're
very
data,
we're
also
very
interactive
with
with
our
client.
Okay,
our
client
is
the
county
commission,
that's
who's
engaged
us,
but
we
recognize
the
sheriff's
office
is
responsible
for
running
the
911
center.
We
engage
them
highly
on
the
municipalities,
the
data
that
we're
going
to
base
this
on
the
raw
data.
AF
How
the
system's
performing
today,
which
really
is
the
toughest
part,
we'll
have
that
in
about
two
to
three
weeks,
I'm
hoping
we'll
have
that
and
begin
briefings
with
staff
in
the
various
groups
I
talked
about
and
then
once
there's
an
understanding
and
agreement.
Kind
of
this
is
how
the
system's
performing
now.
We
will
then
look
at
what
are
the
specific
recommendations
and
challenges
and
opportunities
to
make
it
better
and
to
model
that
and
then
to
share
that
with
everybody.
AF
So
the
preliminary
data
will
have,
let's
just
say
a
month
from
now,
but
the
modeling
on
what's
necessary,
the
resources
needed
I've
shared
with
some
of
you.
We
will
go
hour
by
hour
in
radio
positions
hour
by
hour
in
people
answering
phones
and
tell
you
exactly
the
numbers
that
are
needed
for
a
given
level
of
performance
that
full
work.
The
final
may
not
be
done
until
october
november,
but
we'll
have
some
preliminary
information
that
we'll
be
sharing
with
staff.
AF
I
think
staff
will
be
able
to
kind
of
lean
into
that
and
give
some
guidance
to
the
board.
You
know,
prior
to
the
adoption
of
the
budget.
AF
A
AF
You
know
every
good
plan
and
I've
managed
large
systems
and
have
been
there.
It
is
in
the
best
interest
of
the
county
and
its
residents
to
have
that
redundancy
on
critical
public
safety
infrastructure,
and
so
we
recommend
two
operational
centers,
not
not
a
backup,
because.
F
F
Child
care
come
came
up
a
lot
surprisingly
that
the
that
it
was
not
you
know
by
and
large,
a
lot
of
people
that
are
dispatched
are
women,
and
this
is
a
big
issue
and
it's
something
I
think
when
you're
looking
at
qualitative
issues.
This
is
something
that
probably
needs
to
be
looked
at
the
other.
F
The
other
thing
that
came
up
a
lot
was
they
were
concerned
with
their
training
and
ra
in
radio,
and
I
don't
quite
get
that
because
I
don't
know,
I
don't
understand
the
distinctions
in
the
different
types
of
of
training,
but
but
it
came
up
again
and
again
and
again
that
they
weren't
feeling
confident
in
their
ability
on
radio
training.
Can
you
explain
that?
Well,
generally,
as
opposed
to
the
other
training,
they
get
sure
initially,.
AF
So
so
dispatch
operations
generally
and
again,
I
think
bso.
Can
you
know
their
staff
can
answer
more
detail
than
I
can
granular?
AF
So
again,
on
the
granular
level,
bso
staff
can
speak
more
succinctly
on
the
training,
okay
and
whether
people
feel
comfortable.
We
are
going
to
go
through
that
from
the
qualitative
piece-
okay
and
talk
to
staff
as
they've
been
very
candid
with
us
and
we'll
continue
to
engage
them
on
that.
F
Okay
and
I'm
sure
sheriff
I'm
sure
you
had
a
chance
to
see
these
already.
Okay,
because
it
did.
You
know
I
think
that
was
that
was
an
important
aspect
of
it,
but
last,
thank
you.
I
think
that's
all
I
needed
from,
but
again
thank
you
for
giving
us
the
bigger
picture
on
things.
I
think
it's
essential
for
us
to
be
able
to
make
good
decisions
to
the
issue
itself.
I
want
to
get
to
the
motion
to
authorize
and
direct
county
administrator
to
provide
in
additional
funding.
F
F
All
of
us,
I
think,
across
the
board,
are
happy
to
to
redirect
that
money
toward
that,
but
I
don't
see
it
needing
to
be
in
addition,
it
because
it
just
stands
to
reason
that
if
it
hasn't
been
used
yet
if
there's
80
positions
that
haven't
been
used
yet
some
of
that
money
is
still
there
and
and
to.
I
think,
I'd
like
to
hear
from
our
county
administrator
on
this.
But
every
year
we
true
up
things.
F
Every
year,
there's
20
to
20
to
30
to
40
million
that
gets
rolled
over
and
redirected,
and
things-
and
I
am
all
of
us-
want
to
see
the
parity
and
the
salaries
and
then
we
go.
Then
I'm
happy
to
go
to
the
next
year's
budget,
but
this
year
we
have
a
budget
we
need,
we
should
we
should
and
can
live
within
that
budget.
F
F
So
could
I
can
we
speak
to
the
good
I'm.
C
R
Thank
you
mayor.
Thank
you,
commissioner,
clarifying
question
and
you're
exactly
right.
That
was
the
intent
of
this
motion
statement.
I
think
what
you
see
in
front
of
you
is:
it
says,
to
provide
up
to
4
million
in
additional
funding
that
we
would
do
through
that
true
up
and
third
supplemental
budget
process.
R
So
should
they
somehow
run
through
all
of
their
budget
allocation,
then
this
would
authorize
us
to
increase
it
to
accommodate
for
the
salary
adjustments
that
you
guys
are
discussing
and
would
be
authorizing
here,
but
we
don't
anticipate
that
to
necessarily
happen.
It
would
be
in
fact
trued
up
because
they
do
have
urine
surplus
frequently
that
that
can
be
used
for
this
very
purpose.
F
A
major
distinction
and
the
interpretation-
and
I
think
hopefully,
we're
all
understanding
that.
Okay
with
that,
I'm
happy
to
make
that
motion
to
approve.
C
Okay,
so
I
have
a
motion.
Can
I
have
a
second
just.
X
C
G
You,
mr
mayor,
okay,
well,
I'm
glad
that
that
was
clarified,
and
I
certainly
support
that
motion
and
the
ability
to
go
up
to
the
four
million
if
there
is
not
funding
available.
So
I
I
just
want
to
say,
I
think
it
is
just
so
incredibly
important.
I
know
that
money
is
not
the
only
issue,
certainly,
but
to
me
right
now
we
have
to
be
in
line
with
our
neighboring
counties.
We
need
to
be
in
in
line
with
the
business
community
for
similar
type
positions.
This
is
this.
G
Is
such
a
difficult
position
and
bruce
mentioned-
or
I
think
maybe
being
mentioned
about
this
is
a
lot
of
women.
I
think
I
remember
the
figure
84
of
the
people
that
take
the
calls
are:
are
women
and
a
lot
of
them
on
the
younger
end
of
the
spectrum
where
they
have
children?
If
you
remember
when
the
group
was
here
last
time,
the
one
applause
line
was
when
someone
mentioned
about
that,
we
need
child
care
centers
at
the
peace
apps.
So
there's
more
than
just
money,
but
right
now
I
I.
G
I
believe
that
we
have
to
do
the
what's
expedient
and
what's
what's
necessary
right
for
the
moment,
and
that
is
to
move
ahead
with
this
additional
salary
and
to
make
sure
that
in
next
year's
budget,
we
enable
these
positions
to
rise
to
the
level
of,
as
was
mentioned
in
something
that
the
sheriff
put
out
about
comparable
with
with
with
palm
beach
county
and
dade
county.
So
I
certainly
support
this.
Thank
you.
S
Who
represents
commissioner
moskowitz?
Whatever
your
name?
I
had
all
those
titles,
the
master
of
disasters.
P
We
haven't
heard
from
the
sheriff's
office
at
all
today,
under
this
whole
thing,
so
I
didn't
know
if
they
wanted
to
to
talk
on
the
item
at
all.
If
they
don't
that's.
Okay,.
AH
AI
Morning,
commissioners,
colonel
james
reyes,
executive,
director
department,
administration
assistant,
county
administrator,
madam
county
administrator
on
the
phone,
so
first
and
foremost,
the
point
of
clarification
when
we
mention
true
up
is
first
and
foremost
as
it
relates
to
the
communications
budget.
Are
we
talking
about?
AI
If
there
are
any
dollars
left
in
the
communications
budget
at
the
end
of
our
fiscal
year,
those
dollars
would
be
applied
toward
the
four
million
dollars
that
we're
discussing
today,
or
are
we
talking
about
tapping
into
the
sheriff's
general
dollar
general
fund
dollar
rollover
dollars
in
order
to
make
up
those
four
million
dollars
because
they're
two
very
different,
distinct
things?
One
was
discussed
the
previous
meeting.
The
latter
was
not
in
any
way
shape
or
form,
and
now
we're
we
might
be
hearing
that.
C
Today,
I
think
we
were
talking
about
the
first
one
I
think
monica
said
this
was
done
under
contractual
services.
This
is
different
and
the
public
may
there
were
some
some
blurring
of
that
when
the
public
spoke
to
these
dollars
in
this
budget,
for
this
contractual
service
doesn't
get
blended
with
the
sheriff's
budget
in
any
way,
this
is
a
separate
contractual
service.
C
The
sheriff's
office
acts
as
a
vendor.
So
I
think
I
mean
that's
the
way
I
understood
it
is
there
were
dollars
budgeted
for
these
positions
under
the
contractual
service,
and
the
point
is
if
there's
dollars
remaining
in
there.
Yes,
there
was
overtime,
there
was
whatever,
then
those
are
going
to
be
looked
at
first
before
we
need
to
get
to
the
4.7
million
dollars
someone's
got
to
sit
down
with
the
budgetary
staff
to
see
where
we
are
on
that
contract.
P
R
K
R
Yes,
thank
you.
So
first
you
would
go
to
the
contractual
services
dollars,
but
our
intent
would
be
in
fact,
since
bso
as
a
whole
does
have
surplus
dollars
each
and
every
year
it
would
still
be
general
fund
dollars.
So
the
funds
are
still
the
same.
It
is
just
a
general
fund,
but
from
the
bso
allocation
that
would
be
utilized
to
make
up
the
difference.
That
was,
in
fact
the
intent
and
that's
what
the
motion
statement
said.
P
R
During
the
last
discussion,
we
did
in
fact
talk
about.
The
board,
did
talk
about
truly
up
and
a
number
of
commissioners
made
that
request
and
made
those
comments.
So
that
was
exactly
the
intent
that
I
got
from
the
conversation.
It
was
not
any
kind
of
intention
to
change
what
the
motion
to
direct
was.
That
was,
in
fact,
our
understanding
of
it
from
the
conversation
about
filling
up.
P
V
Yes,
and
and
commissioner
on
this,
I
would
yield
on
the
budget
issues
to
to
the
county
administrator
or
to
norm,
but
these
are
two
different
pots
of
funds,
and
one
of
them
is
purely
contractual.
P
So
since,
since
it
was
my
motion
right,
I
I
know
for
we
talked
about
like
it
is-
the
mayor
talked
about
chewing
up
within
the
communications
budget,
but
there
was
there
was
to
maybe
separate
conversations,
maybe
in
separate
comments,
but
as
a
action
of
the
board
of
the
vote.
I
don't
believe
there
was
any
discussion
of
general
fund
dollars
as
part
of
the
item,
so
if
that
wasn't
clear,
that's
okay,
but
but
as
we're
going
to
now
take
official
vote
on
that,
I
think
doing
it
within
the
communications
budget.
That
staff
wants
to
do
that.
P
C
So
what
I
understood
this
to
be-
and
maybe
this
makes
it
clear
they
true
up
within
the
communications
budget-
if
there's
not
enough
dollars
there,
then
the
dollars
can
come
from
general
funding.
I
want
the
dollar
should
be
there,
but
the
true
up
doesn't
come
from
bso
funding.
Bso
has
been
funded
for
police
officers
and
for
what
they
need
in
the
beginning
of
the
year.
C
We're
going
to
true
this
up
in
the
communications
budget
under
the
contractual
service
and
then,
if
it
doesn't
work
out,
if
there's
not
enough
dollars
there,
then
we
would
come
up
with
general
fund
dollars
after
that,
but
we
need
to
at
least
true
up
the
contractual
part
of
the
understanding.
That's
my
understanding.
Is
there
anybody
who's
different
than
that?
C
AI
Mayor,
if
I
mean
so
several
points
to
the
model
that
you're
saying
we're
not
going
to
and
the
reason
why
it's
so
important
for
us
to
clarify
that,
in
fact
is
the
model
that's
been
in
place,
so
the
model
that
you're
saying
we're
not
proposing
today,
that's
been
in
place
in
the
past,
so
it
presents
a
couple
of
challenges.
Once
today,
I'm
facing
you
today
telling
me
we're
at
pace
to
use
a
hundred
percent
of.
C
That
of
that
of
that
budget,
I
could
only
tell
you
100.
Then
the
money
will
be
there
from
another
fund,
but
how
I
think
what
this
board
is
trying
to
understand,
and
I'm
just
trying
to
make
it
as
simple
as
possible.
Budgeting
is
so
complicated
because
the
numbers
are
so
all
over
if
we
budgeted
for
400
people-
and
you
only
have
300
people
those
dollars,
I
know
there's
some
overtime
and
some
other
those
dollars
have
to
still
be
in
communications.
C
P
This
is
really
simple:
they
have.
They
have
80
positions
open
that
there's
money
for
there
right.
If
they
take
that
money
to
go
give
raises
to
the
others,
then
there's
now
no
money
to
hire
those
80
people-
okay,
so
so
they're
going
to
show
us
all
of
that
right.
So,
of
course,
so
we're,
I
think,
we're
talking
in
in
circles.
AI
Except
for
the
fact
that,
from
an
operational
perspective-
and
I'm
not
at
this
point
in
my
career,
the
operational
person
keep
this
in
mind
and
for
all
of
you,
it's
the
only
area
in
our
budget
where
we're
working
backwards
so
that
our
leadership
and
the
men
and
women
behind
me
don't
know
that
they're
fully
funded
on
the
first
day
of
the
fiscal
year.
We
don't
do
that
anywhere
else
in
bso.
So
why
do
we
do.
C
AI
C
P
P
What
I,
what
I
heard
from
the
explanation
of
the
item
is
well
first
we're
going
to
ask
them
to
transfer
money
from
outside
of
communications
into
this
before
any
new
county
dollars,
and
I
don't
believe
that
was
the
intent
of
the
board's
discussion
or
direction
from
the
last
meeting.
So
I
just
want
to
make
sure
we
have
that
right.
C
AJ
Foster
budget
director
at
the
risk
of
complicating
this
issue
a
little
further.
The
reason
we're
going
to
deal
with
this
in
the
third
supplemental
is
because
state
law
requires
that
we
can't
change
the
amount
in
a
fund
without
going
back
to
advertising
and
that's
what
we
do
in
third
supplemental.
So
I
think
the
motion
just
says
such
amounts
as
needed
will
be
included
in
the
county's
third
settlement
budget,
and
I
think
the
commission
has
given
us
direction
of
what
to
do
right,
but
we
have
to
do
it
in
the
third
supplement
because
of
an
advertising.
J
J
If
we
can't
put
that
money
in
until
the
third
supplemental,
which
will
be
when
that's
usually
in
september,
okay,
so
what
assurances
do
they
have
or
do
they
have
them
that
they
can
get
the
money
that
they
can
spend
that
money
between
now
and
september?
I
think
this
is
what
commissioner
moskowit
was.
AJ
J
If
bso
in
their
communications
budget
they
allege?
I
haven't
seen
that
that
all
of
the
money
that
has
gone
for
all
of
these
vacancies
intuitively,
we
all
think
that
they
should
have
that
money
still
there
or
that
we
do
know,
there's
some
overtime
if
they
don't
have
the
money
and
we
can't
give
it
to
them
until
september.
AJ
Revenue,
as
the
commission
probably
remembers
every
month,
we
actually
we
give
them
the
cash
for
the
next
month
in
advance.
We
will
work
with
them
to
make
sure
that's
not
an
issue.
Okay,
I'm
saying
you
pre-fund
them
each
month
and
we
will
work
with
them
to
make
sure
that
I'm
satisfied.
C
Okay,
so
my
comments
are-
and
this
is
I
know
I
spent
some
time
with
bruce
on
the
phone
and
and
it's
really
a
follow-up
to
what
senator
geller
said,
and
I
don't
want
to
be
repetitive,
but
I'm
just
hoping
that
in
your
report,
because
when
sometimes
when
the
public
comes
up
and
and
they
make
certain
comments,
it
gets
accepted,
as
fact
and
then
the
press
would
run
with
it
and
it's
there.
I
want
to
see
in
the
report
the
data
and
I
also
want
I
know
you
mentioned.
C
AF
C
Because
there
was
an
issue,
I
think
mei
ling
from
stoneman
douglas
mentioned
it
about,
and
that's
just
a
one
example,
but
a
hundred
people
call
9-1-1
for
the
same
incident.
There's
different
protocols
after
they
get
the
incident
dispatched
and
whatnot.
You
could
get
drops
on
those
calls
and
it
may
feel
like
you're
not
being
responded
to
on
9-1-1,
but
the
incident's
already
been
properly
dispatched
and
to
the
public.
That's
calling
in
it's
the
biggest
mistake
they've
ever
seen
in
in
in
life,
but
really
it's
being
handled
according
to
best
practices.
C
The
way
that
it's
done
so
I
think
I
think
that's
an
important
thing.
This
abandoned
call
number
and
I
think
these
numbers
are
going
to
be
through
the
roof
for
what
they
show,
but
the
data
may
show
a
little
bit
different
on
what
it
actually
means.
A
one
ring
to
911
generally
isn't
really
an
abandoned
call.
C
It
can
be,
but
in
most
cases
it's
someone's
not
hanging
up
on
9-1-1
after
one
ring
unless
there's
some
kind
of
mistake
or
some
sort.
So
I
want
to
see
that
in
there
I
want
to
see
something
else.
Senator
geller
made
the
the
idea
of
this
whole
non-emergency
line
issue
and
where
these
calls
can
get
routed
is
somebody
mentioned
from
the
deus.
You
know
someone
called
9-1-1
when
they
lost
their
keys
and
it
led
to
a
different
type
of
outcome
and
yeah
there.
C
The
calling
of
9-1-1
there's
all
kinds
of
different
programs
that
are
going
to
come
out
with
different
mental
health
crisis
hotlines
and
whatnot,
but
we
need
to
do
a
better
job.
All
of
us
together
we're
on
the
same
team,
I'm
on
the
same
team
as
the
sheriff
here
911
county.
We
need
to
do
a
better
job
as
be.
I
want.
C
I
think
I
think
that
that's
extremely
important
and
then
you
know
obviously
you're
going
to
come
back
to
us
with
the
exit
interviews,
work
conditions
status
based
on
the
new
technology
that
this
commission
made
a
significant
investment
in,
and
you
know
those
those
are
my
comments,
because
I
think
that
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
are
doing
everything
we
can
for
the
general
public
to
feel
safe
when
they
dial
9-1-1-
and
I
know
sometimes
there's
outliers
and
isolated
incidents
on
a
specific
call
that
happens
with
every
agency
and-
and
my
last
final
thing
is
whoever
you
work
with
at
the
sheriff's
office.
C
I
don't
care
who
it
is
at
that
what
level-
and
I
know,
they're,
very
professional-
the
people
that
you
work
with
give
me
some
kind
of
outline
of
how
the
top
ten
and
most
of
these
agencies
pinellas
county,
hillsborough
county,
perform
this
function.
How
do
they
do
this?
Do
they
do
this
with
the
sheriff
running
the
whole
thing,
with
the
county
running
the
whole
thing
kind
of
like
what
we
spoke
about
business
sheriff
is
saying
one
thing,
and
then
you
know
when
we
speak
you're
saying
no.
No,
it's
not
being
run
like
that.
C
C
We're
now
down
with
round
one
I've
already
counted,
there's
going
to
be
well
more
than
five
votes
to
approve
this
motion,
yet
we
will
start
on
round
two
who's
in
the
queue
for
round
two
ryan
and
then
well,
you
didn't
you
didn't
get
in
the
queue
first,
so
I'm
gonna
let
bogan
go
first
in
round
two,
then
commissioner
ryan.
M
I
think
the
most
important
thing
is
that
we
are
competitive,
price-wise
and
give
the
salaries
necessary
to
keep
these
people.
I
think
we
need
to
just
focus
on.
Why
are
we
here?
We
need.
We
need
to
keep
good
workers,
we
need
to
keep
these
workers,
we
need
to
pay
them
well,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
they
have
the
funds
to
do
that
and
whatever
way,
that
is,
we
need
to
get
it
done.
We
need
to
get
it
done
today.
AG
So,
mr
floss,
there
was
a
a
question
about
how
can
we
fund
these
increases
in
the
short
term
and
carry
this
budget
through
for
the
next
four
months
to
september
30th,
and
there
may
be
some
disagreement
between
your
position
and
bso's
position
that
was
explained
by
colonel
reyes
about
how
right
now
bso
is
contractually
like
on
on
a
step
forward
that
they're
going
to
go
through
the
entire
budget.
AG
I
guess,
even
though
they
have
all
these
open
positions,
it's
because
they're
building
up
so
much
overtime,
and
that
I
mean
one
offsets
the
other.
I
don't
know
if
that's
exactly
true
or
not
if
in
fact
the
the
money
runs
out
the
contractual
money
I
mean
we
can't
wait
until
september
to
provide
the
adjustments
and
salary
for
these
911
intake
callers.
I
mean
we
need
to
do
something
now
and
then.
AG
At
the
same
time
I
mean
we
need
to
begin
these
efforts
to
recruit
new
persons
at
this,
this
higher
salary
level
to
make
it
competitive
and
then
we're
going
to
talk
about
bringing
in
you
know
additional
benefits,
whether
it's
child
care
or
child
care,
and
everything
else
that's
necessary.
But
I
mean
how
much
money
in
your
estimation
do
we
need
between
now
and
september
30th?
How
much
would
we
have
available
in
the
contractual
budget
and
how
much
money?
If
any,
do
we
need
to
get
out
of
bso's?
AG
You
know
larger
budget
that
may
be
carry
over
money
for
the
following
year.
AJ
Well,
I
think,
my
understanding
of
that
they
can
come
up
and
correct
or
not,
I
think,
in
the
current
year
budget.
My
understanding
is
halfway
through
the
year
they
they
had
spent
about
half
of
the
budget.
So
I
think
the
the
discussion
that
was
talked
about
earlier
about
the
the
vacancy
amounts.
I
think
they've
essentially
been
needed
to
be
used
in
order
to
cover
overtime
for
those
shifts
all
right.
AJ
Through
the
year
they
spent
about
half-
I
think
there
have
been
occasions
in
prior
years
and
we
will
work
with
them
on
the
cash
flow,
if
necessary,
where
they've
had
to
come
back
to
you
late
in
the
year,
because
they
were
in
fact
running
over
on
the
dispatch
budget,
and
we
took
care
of
it
in
the
third
supplemental.
So
we
will
work
on
the
cash
flow
needs
authority.
AJ
AG
AJ
AI
Can
tell
you
we're
not
doing
it,
commissioner.
Our
focus
was
on
the
increase,
was
on
retention.
First,
to
answer
your
question
before
we
start
putting
right
bodies
in
the
seats.
Obviously,
our
focus
was
retention.
First
for
the
men
and
women
that
are
behind
me
here
and
then
moving
forward
is
increasing
our
recruiting
efforts,
which
we
did
ask
when
we
were
discussed
in
terms
of
the
upcoming
year.
What
that
cost
would
be
like.
I
think
the
number
was
around
300.
AI
there
you
go.
The
sheriff
has
spoken
and
314
thousand
dollars,
of
which
I
wanna.
Obviously,
while
we
proacted
the
cost
of
the
salaries
to
make
sure
that
the
people
we
have
stay,
we
have
not
funded
for
any
recruiting
efforts
that
would
take
place
prior
to
the
the
next
fiscal
year
right.
AG
We
show
good
faith
that
we
want
to
make
adjustments
and
we're
going
to
come
up
with
a
number
now
that'll
carry
us
through
to
september
30th
and
not
continue
to
have
this
great
attrition,
and
then,
with
that
I
mean,
I
think,
workforce
conditions
are
just
as
important
as
salary,
so
we're
gonna
need
to
come
up
with
a
more
dynamic
plan
to
to
right.
This
ship
got.
D
Yeah,
I
just
want
to
kind
of
bring
it
into
a
landing
sheriff.
If
I
can
so.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that-
and
I
want
to
ask
mr
myers
the
motion
to
authorize
and
direct
the
dollars
of
the
four
million
thirty
three
thousand
one.
Fifty
six
is
the
true
true
up
within
the
con
contractual
agreement
with
911,
which
is
specifically
says
used
by
bso
solely
for
increasing
salaries
and
salary
ranges
as
applicable
and
recruitment
efforts.
D
I
want
to
make
sure
that
this
motion,
if
it
needs
to
be
amended
or
not,
that
it
goes
what
I
think
on
this
board
wants
to
do,
is
they
have
a
congressional
agreement
with
the
911
budget
and
if
there's
shortfalls
there,
that
up
to
four
million
dollars
can
be
infused
into
that
particular
budget.
So
they
can
hire
these
people,
they
can
increase
the
salaries
and
they
get
to
where
they
need
to
be.
V
Vice
mayor,
I
I
don't
understand
if
there
are
no
funds
available
for
this,
I
don't
understand
where
the
money
comes
from,
to
pay
for
it.
If
you're,
not,
if
you're
not
taking
the
money
from
the
general
bso
budget,
you're
taking
it
within
the
communications
contract,
there
may
be
cash
management
things
that
norm
can
do
to
make
sure
that
they're
funded
until
today.
V
I
thought
my
understanding-
and
I
thought
we
had
talked
to
staff
about
this-
was
that
there
was
money
within
the
communications
contract
that
was
available
basically
to
pay
for
this,
and
that
was
our
understanding
of
the
up
to
four
million
dollar
amount.
I
I
think
we
may
need
a
a
supplemental
budget
to
effectuate
this.
If
we're
putting.
D
V
D
We
can't
afford
to
wait
anymore,
mr
myers.
We
need
to
the
whole
purpose
of
our
action
was
to
merely
react
to
the
situation
now,
so
we
need
to
make
whatever
we
can
do
right
now,
so
they
can
have
the
funding
whether
they
have
leftover
funds
right
now
and
if
they
need
more,
we
can
infuse
up
to
four
million.
That's
how
we
need
to
get
there.
So
we
we
need
to
get
there
today
and.
D
R
Mr
mayor,
I
was
just
gonna
chime
in,
and
I
think
norman
can
can
clarify
this,
but
I
do
not
think
that
there's
going
to
be
any
kind
of
problem,
the
sheriff
with
you
guys
authorizing
this
motion.
The
sheriff
will
be
able
to
increase
the
salaries
and
do
the
salary
ranges.
As
stated
in
that
motion
statement,
and
we
are
clear
that
the
commission
does
not
want
to
use
the
bso
surplus
to
true
that
up.
We
first
go
to
the
communications
budget
for
this
very
thing
and
then
it
would
come
from
commission
reserve.
V
Vice
mayor,
that's
that's
correct
and
miss
harry
just
spoke
to
mr
foster.
There
was
there
is
a
practice
of
doing
this.
The
money
can
come
if
it's
not
available
internally.
In
that
communications
budget,
it
can
come
from
commission
reserves
and
it
would
have
to
be
trued
up
at
the
end
in
the
third
supplemental
budget.
So
the
answer.
C
C
AH
C
So
the
next
item
is
the
delegation
request
from
mark
mitchell,
so
I
just
want
to
be
very
clear
on
this.
This
is
how
a
delegation
request
works
under
our
rules
when
you
fill
up
the
pa
sign
in
for
the
paper.
You
get
three
minutes
to
speak
on
that.
There's
no
public
comment
comment
on
a
delegation
request.
I
was
very
open
during
the
other
one
to
allow
some
public
to
kind
of
blend
over.
C
C
C
My
anticipation
is,
if
we
can
get
through
this
in
seven
minutes,
spend
another
few
minutes
see
if
we
can
finish
the
rest
of
the
agenda
and
then
break
give
the
stenographer
for
a
few
minutes
and
then
go
right
into
our
workshop.
AC
Since
time's
extremely
limited,
I'm
going
to
move
on
or
move
really
quickly,
this
boils
down
to
bso
having
a
violent
culture.
It's
no
surprises.
It's
nothing.
New.
The
consent,
decree
carruthers
consent
decree
has
indicated
that
the
documents
that
you're
going
to
receive
also
support
the
fact
that
bso's
culture
is
violent,
especially
as
it
pertains
to
people
who
are
inside
of
jail,
kevin
decear.
Who
was
a
gentleman
from
our
community.
AC
He
was
having
a
severe
mental
health
episode
and
the
officers
while
he
was
in
handcuffs,
kicked
him,
beat
him
tased
him
and
ultimately
left
him
brain
dead,
and
he
had
cardiac
experience.
Cardiac
arrest,
bso's
facilities,
as
well
as
their
officers
and
the
institution
as
a
whole,
are
not
equipped
to
house
or
care
for
people
with
specialized
needs
and
oftentimes.
When
people
with
specialized
needs
have
crises,
the
outcome
is
violence.
AC
The
officers
have
claimed
and
as
well
as
the
leadership
of
broward
sheriff's
office,
that
it
was
within
their
policies
to
be
able
to
use
the
use
of
force
that
resulted
in
kevin
being
murdered,
while
in
the
care
of
bso
his
family.
For
the
past
year
has
asked
for
transparency,
as
well
as
the
officers
who
killed
kevin
to
be
held
accountable,
and
I
want
to
be
clear
that
what
happened
to
kevin
is
not
an
anomaly.
It's
not
unique.
AC
It's
been
happening
for
years
and
the
other
issue,
with
not
only
them
not
being
equipped
to
address
mental
health
crises
or
not
being
able
to
really
contain
that
violent
culture
is
the
reality
that
when
there
are
incidents
like
what
happened
to
kevin
bso
investigates
themselves.
If
you
look
at
the
closeout
memo
that
was
released
by
the
state
attorney's
office,
you
will
see
that
the
same
people
who
wrote
the
reports
also
was
responsible
for
fact-finding.
AC
AK
K
AK
As
you
see
behind
me,
kevin
was
a
loving
father,
brother
son,
cousin
and
friend
to
all
that
who
knew
him
to
know
kevin
is
to
love
him.
This
thursday,
my
oldest
niece,
kevin's
oldest
daughter,
will
be
going
to
her
eighth
grade
prom
and
won't
be
able
to
share
that
memory.
With
her
father,
her
sister
asked
us
after
kevin
pass
who's.
Gonna
walk
me
down
the
aisle
my
mother
had
to
deal
with
an
unbearable
pain
that
no
parent
wishes
to
bury
their
child
members.
We,
our
families,
begging
and
pleading
you
this
pain
that
our
family
feels.
AK
Bso
is
not
equipped
to
handle
mental
health,
mental
health
issues,
and
they
also
continue
to
do
their
own
investigations,
which
leads
with
the
same
results.
They
didn't
find
any
no
wrong
doings.
Tell
me:
how
can
somebody
who
goes
in
your
custody
in
perfect,
perfect
health
conditions
walk
out
lifeless
when
you
get
an
altercation
with
six
officers
and
still
find
no
wrongdoing?
AL
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
jeremy
mclemon,
I'm
the
attorney
representing
the
kevin
dazier
family.
We're
asking
the
commission
to
take
a
stand
with
us
and
state
that
broward
sheriff's
office
needs
to
turn
over
the
video
of
kevin
dazier's
death
release
the
video
and
save
lives.
Kevin
did
not
have
to
die.
He
had
a
right
to
live
and
sold
as
the
next
person
in
his
shoes.
AL
The
surveillance
video
showed
that
howard-
and
this
is
this-
is
taken
exactly
word
for
word
from
the
internal
affairs
report.
The
surveillance
video
showed
that
howard,
which
is
a
correction
officer
in
the
jail
placed
his
hands
under
zazir's
chin
and
his
neck
area.
That
statement
is
followed
by
the
next.
The
medical
records
in
the
medical
examiner's
office
autopsy
report
show
that
they
were.
There
was
no
evidence
that
dazir
was
choked
or
strangled
by
the
placement
of
howard's
hands
followed
by
this.
AL
As
the
struggle
continued,
it
was
clear
that
at
a
point
in
time,
dazir
became
clearly
unconscious.
Nothing
in
the
medical
records
or
the
amy's
autopsy
report
can
definitively
state
what
caused
dazeer
to
lose
consciousness.
That
is
the
answer
that
the
family
is
left
with.
After
16
months
of
an
investigation
by
broward
sheriff's
office,
release
the
video
and
save
lives,
release
the
video
and
allow
us
the
community
to
find
answers
to
what
bso
was
not
able
to
do.
AL
I
understand
that
and
we
all
understand
that
the
commission
does
not
have
the
authority
and
the
power
to
tell
or
demand
bso
to
release
the
video,
but
you
all
have
the
influence
the
influence
to
influence
bso
sheriff
tony
to
release
the
video.
In
this
case,
broward
sheriff's
office
cannot
rule
with
an
iron
fist,
do
as
they
please
and
then
come
to
the
commission
and
ask
for
funds,
a
budget
increase
and
more
money,
a
taxpayer
money.
AL
V
M
30
seconds,
okay,
sir,
did
you
follow
civil's
suit.
AA
X
AL
A
video
request,
video,
I'm
sorry,
public
records,
requested.
AL
C
So
so
my
hands
are
tied
on
this
thing
I
mean
I'm.
I
got
to
follow
the
rules
on
this
or
they're
not
going
to
have
rules
for
any
of
these
meetings.
So
we've
heard
you
you
can
speak
with
the
the
sheriff's
office,
we'll
speak
to
the
appropriate
personnel
here,
they'll
comply
with
what
they
need
to
comply
with
by
law.
I
thank
you
all
for
being
here.
AC
Happy
to
be
accepted,
but
the
question
is
about
a
resolution
to
move
the
shares
to
state
that
it's
important
for
our
community
for
the
sheriff's
office
to
be
transparent
and
to
hold
officers
accountable,
there's
language
for
such
resolution.
Inside
of
those
folders
that
were
distributed
to
you
all.
Thank
you,
drew.
V
Yeah,
the
mayor,
it
is
the
rule,
as
you
noted,
that
the
board
doesn't
take
action
on
delegation
requests
and
speakers
of
delegation
requests
are
limited
to
a
primary
speaker
who
gets
three
minutes
and
then
two
additional
speakers
who
get
up
to
two
minutes
each
that
was
afforded
today.
What
I
would
suggest
is,
if
there's
something
that
you'd
like
to
raise
for
us
to
analyze
legally.
V
I
would
be
happy
to
take
a
look
at
this
if
you
want
to
send
it
to
me,
but
at
this
point
the
board
can't
take
action
on
the
delegation
request.
Mr.
H
N
Me,
the
same
30
seconds
sure
also
what
I
think
and
of
course
I
know
many
folks
standing
out
here,
but
I
think
also
what
may
be
helpful
is
to
understand
kind
of
public
records.
So
clearly
I
know
that
I
don't
think
the
county
commission
is
the
custodian
right
so
kind
of
bso
so
kind
of
what
that
means.
Limitations
et
cetera.
So
I
think
that
would
be
helpful
as
they're
seeking
some
information.
V
Yes,
sir,
these
are,
these
are
not
our
records,
I
think
that's
clear
bso
has
custody
of
them.
There
is
a
way
to
obtain
them
that
I
think
this
resolution
would
be
in
support
of
is
what
I
think
you're
asking,
but
it's
something
that
I
think
we
should
legally
analyze
and
and
again
your
rules
are
not
provided
for
taking
any
action
on
a
delegation
request.
F
AC
We've
been
reaching
out
to
members
of
the
commission
for
quite
some
time,
especially
nan,
rich,
because
she
champions
mental
health
concerns
and
the
family
hasn't
gotten
a
response
for
at
least
15
months
and
and
now
we're
just
asking
for
some
intervention,
and
it's
not
just
kevin.
There
are
hundreds
of
people
who
have
been
beaten
and
horned
by
broward
sheriff's
office
and
we're
asking
for
some
level
of
oversight
so
that
our
community
members
don't
continue
to
die
and
be
brutalized
while
in
vegas
custody.
Thank
you.
C
C
I've
spoken
to
you
many
times
on
the
phone,
and
I
will
continue
to
speak
to
you.
I
I
just
try
to
follow
the
rules
or
else
these
meetings
will
I'm
pretty
much
a
stickler
for
that.
So
I
gave
you
extra
time.
I
thank
you
and
we
will
all
follow
up
with
it
and
follow
up
through
the
attorney.
Okay.
Thank
you.
C
C
Item
number
47,
which
is
the
item
that
keeps
coming
back
to
us
on
the
right-of-way
issue,
with
the
with
the
with
the
us,
letting
other
people
use
our
right-of-way.
I.
V
Okay,
thank
you
so
this
item
it
had
come
back.
It
had
been
before
the
board
earlier.
At
that
point.
As
you
know,
I
was
asked
a
question
about
where
what
would
be
available
as
public
records?
What
wouldn't
but
maybe
available
through
subpoena
we've,
responded
to
that.
V
There
are
some
additional
things
that
have
been
added
to
the
item,
including
excuse
me,
some
information
about
fdot
and
its
limited
use
of
these
types
of
camera
systems,
and
also
some
information
from
I
think
the
city
of
coral
springs,
which
shows
some
very
effective
law
enforcement
uses.
We
also
have
the
proposed
amendment
from
senator
geller,
who
I
I
know
publicly
had
been
wrestling
with
the
law
enforcement
side
of
it
and
the
privacy
issue
side.
Senator
geller's
proposed
amendment
would
and
I'll
defer,
senator
I'll.
Let
you
speak
to
it,
but
all
right.
C
For
the
record,
we
have
future
chief
mccann
from
coral
springs
who's
here
in
the
audience.
He'll
be
chief
next
month
so
he's
here,
because
he
was
the
one
who
brought
this
to
us.
I
have
geller
and
then
I'm
gonna
go
to
ryan.
Thank
you.
J
AG
So
at
our
last
meeting
we
incorporated
some
amendments
that
I
I
think
provided
some
breaks
on
the
latitude
that
private
vendors
would
have
to
to
sell
the
data
to
release
the
data
to
to
the
public
and
it
provided
some
protections.
I
understand
where
senator
geller
is,
and
notably
the
state
department
of
transportation
does
not
allow
these
cameras
on
any
of
their
traffic
control
devices.
AG
So
I
mean
we
are
taking
a
step
forward
that
otherwise
we
have
not
done,
and
so,
if
you
want
to
take
the
more
cautious
position
that
that
senator
geller
has,
I
understand
that
position.
The
the
downside
is
that
now
law
enforcement
will
not
have
that
data
to
actually
identify
persons.
That
may
be,
you
know
in
a
vehicle,
or
perhaps
you
know,
fleeing
the
scene,
you
know
and
and
some
other
kind
of
surveillance
that
would
be.
You
know
that
would
be
very
helpful
in
apprehending
subjects
in
criminal
investigation.
AG
So
I
mean
that's
the
that's
the
offset
on
it
and,
in
my
view,
I
believe
we
have
adequate
protections,
but
the
senator's
position
is
a
little
more
on
the
conservative
side
and
it
may
be
maybe
more
in
tune
with
protection
of
civil
liberties.
J
County
attorney
follow
up
on
what
commissioner
ryan
was
just
saying.
I
know
that
we
have
placed
limits
as
to
what
the
private
vendors
can
do,
but
in
our
discussions
my
understanding
is
if
the
county
is
in
possession
of
these
or
even
an
agent
of
the
county.
Are
they
not
in
some
cases,
subject
to
public
records
requests,
even
if
they
can't
be
sold?
Isn't
the
information
if
it's
being
held
by
local
police,
for
example,
isn't
that,
subject
to
public
records,
requests.
V
But
the
bottom
line
is
there's
either
going
to
be
a
police
agency
or
or
somebody
that's
an
agent
of
that
police
agency
using
it
virtually
all
of
the
data
and
the
images
are
going
to
be
public
records
requests
the
data
that's
produced
by
the
license
plate
reader
system.
That
would
be
confidential,
but
that
could
be
released
through
subpoena.
But.
J
You're
correct,
okay
and
mr
mayor:
that's
the
reason
that
I
have
my
amendment
limiting
it
to
the
license
plate
readers.
I
just
think
it's
a
step
too
far
against
civil
liberties
to
to
permit
the
images,
but
I
am
sensitive
to
what
law
enforcement
said
that
they
wanted
the
license
plate
reader
so
that
they
can
track
cars.
Moving
things
of
that
nature,
I
I
don't
know
what
the
right
answer
is.
I'm
trying
to
split
the
baby
here,
and
I
I
think
that
that
my
amendment
does
that
as
best
it
can
be
done.
C
So
my
comments,
and
then
I
guess
we
I
would
vote
to
support
it
as
it's
originally
made
because,
like
commissioner
ryan
had
mentioned
it
at
a
previous
meeting,
I
think
once
you
step
outside
nowadays,
you
kind
of
give
up
a
little
bit
of
your
right
to
privacy.
They
could
put
these
cameras
all
over
the
place
and
they
are
all
over
the
place.
Private
businesses
have
these
everywhere
that
you
look
if
there's
a
if
there's
a
lawsuit,
someone
subpoenaing
all
the
neighborhood
businesses
that
have
these
cameras.
C
All
this
is
is
a
way
to
facilitate
so
that
you
don't
have
to
have
six
poles
in
a
right-of-way.
It's
if
the
pole
is
already
there
most
of
the
stuff
that
they
can
get,
they
can
get
from
different
areas,
but
this
may
be
a
better
way
for
them
to
do
it.
I'm
going
to
vote
to
support
it,
I
mean,
if
the
only
way
it's
going
to
pass
is
with
senator
geller's
amendment,
then
I
would
think
that's
a
first
start,
but
I'm
going
to
vote
to
support
it
as
it's
originally
put
in
there.
C
C
They
get
they
get
a
lot
of
this,
but
this
helps
other
areas
and-
and
I
think
that
it's
it's
something
that
law
enforcement
would
be
a
big
help
in
crime.
Solving
I
get
what
commit
I
actually
agree
with.
Commissioner
geller
is
saying,
but
I
would
kind
of
tend
on
the
other
side
I'll
deal
with
the
jilted
paramore
subpoenas.
You
know
we
had
from
law,
school
and
and
and
they'll
have
to
go
from.
AG
D
I
just
I
agree-
I
mean
this
law
enforcement
folks
came
to
us
way
back
about
this
and
we
need
to
trust
them
and
what
they
need
to
to
solve
crimes
and
to
solve
issues
throughout
our
community.
So
I
agree.
I
think
we
need
to
support
it
as
it
stands.
This
is
what
they
came.
This
is
what
they
agreed
to,
so
we
want
to
be
able
to
help
them
any
way.
We
can.
C
C
Springs
is
the
one
that
asks
where
chief
assistant,
chief,
whatever
he
is
right
now,
as.
M
As
a
resident
of
coral
springs,
you
know
I
I
was
told
if
I
vote
for
this,
I
get
out
of
about
any
of
my
tickets,
any
of
the
speeding
tickets.
So
one
free
one.
Thank
I'm
voting.
Okay,
okay,.
C
C
Seeing
no
one
geller's
amendment
fails
now
we
have
the
original
item
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye,
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
it
passes
unanimously.
Thank
you
for
being
here.
Everyone
in
the
city
of
coral
springs.
What
does
that
leave
us
left?
I
think
one
or
two
more.
That
means
58
58
is
one
that
we
three.
C
Okay,
so
52
is
an
airport
issue
that
I
thought
we
did,
but
we
didn't
do,
but
it's
an
open-end
lease
contract
to
the
lowest
responsible
bidder.
This
would
have
been
on
consent,
but
for
the
fact
that
it's
an
airport
issue,
I'm
opening
52
to
the
public.
Seeing
no
one
there's.
I
have
a
motion
motion
but
motion
by
gallery.
Second,
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
I
opposed
please
show
the
52
passes
unanimously.
C
53
a
motion
award
an
opening
contract
to
sole
source
vendor
johnson
controls
for
building
automation
systems
at
fll
quotation
number,
bld212
3530q1.
No,
no
member
of
the
public
has
signed
up
to
speak
on
this
part.
C
C
This
is
the
motion
that
we
talked
about
last
time,
but
we
lost
a
quorum
at
senators.
Rich's
had
brought
this
a
resolution
of
the
board
of
county
commissioners
of
broward
county
urging
governor
desantis,
the
florida
department
of
education
and
the
state
board
of
education
to
reinstate
the
administration
of
the
youth
risk
behavior
system.
That
brings
us.
We
have
public
on
that
michael
raynor
you're
here
on
58.
I
don't
think
anybody
else
from
the
public
has
signed
up
to
speak
on
it.
AM
Good
afternoon,
mayor
commissioners,
you
know
last
time
when
I
spoke
on
this,
I
was
a
little
bit
passionate
talking
about
my
own
journey
as
a
gay
man
living
with
hiv
aids
and
how
important
something
like
this
is
to
have
in
our
schools
to
make
sure
that
these
surveys
are
being
done
so
that
we
could
properly
address
the
challenges
that
youth
are
facing.
AM
You
know
my
concern
with
this
is
the
state
is
pulling
out
of
their
participation
out
of
this,
which
really
is
frightening.
You
know
right
now.
The
current
survey
actually
allows
the
state
to
add
and
delete
various
questions
so
as
to
why
the
state's
deviating
and
coming
up
with
their
own
survey
completely
separate
from
the
one
that
the
cdc
is
doing
and
that's
recognized
nationally
and
participated
nationally.
AM
C
AM
Just
give
me
a
second
so
already
the
state
can
add
and
delete
questions
on
the
survey
I
mean
quite
frankly,
we
understand
why
the
state
is
doing
this
between
the
department
of
education
and
the
health
department,
and
it's
clearly
to
go
with
the
anti-gay
agenda
coming
down
from
the
state,
as
well
as
other
issues,
and
it's
really
appalling,
I
mean
look.
AM
We
have
a
case
of
monkey
pox
going
on
right
now
that
you
know
we're
hearing
from
the
cdc
that
right
now,
there's
a
high
incidence
among
the
of
those
that
are
being
impacted
are
gay
men
and
some
with
hiv.
You
know
worldwide,
that's
where
we're
seeing
some
of
those
numbers,
but
you
won't
hear
that
in
florida
you
know,
because
those
are
not
priority
populations
that
are
ever
addressed
from
the
state,
especially
from
the
surgeon
general's
office.
AM
We
went
for
years
of
the
censoring
of
lgbt
people
in
the
department
of
health
for
years
where,
when
estate
surgeon,
general
john
armstrong
was
there,
you
know
john
stemberger
had
his
person
in
there,
as
as
the
chief
of
staff
in
communications,
to
make
sure
that
things
were
completely
censored
that
we
couldn't
say
gay
in
health.
AM
AM
C
G
I
I
would
like
to
move
approval
of
this.
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
a
lot
of
things
unless
it
becomes.
You
know
an
issue
again.
It
was
four
to
one.
If
we
had
a
full
quorum,
I
believe
it
would
have
passed
it's
incredibly
important
to
our
children.
It's
about
so
many
issues.
So
many
issues
and
it's
it's
an
anonymous
study.
It's
been
done
since
1991.
We
have
all
kinds
of
people
who
have
sent
us
letters.
G
People
involved
with
the
mental
health
community
with
suicide
prevention
resources
are
are
allocated
in
states
across
the
nation
based
on
this
study,
and
we
need
to
be
a
part
of
the
national
database
of
what's
going
on
in
the
50
united
states,
and
this
would
take
us
out
of
that
and
it's
just
incredibly
important
that
we
try
and
join.
C
Motion
by
senator
rich
seconded
by
commissioner
geller
and
commissioner
fur
commissioner
allison
had
your
hands
raised.
You
want
to
comment.
N
Yes,
thank
you
mir
and
I
too
wasn't
going
to
go
into
it
because
I
think
everyone
who
knows
me
sitting
up
here
and
those
who
may
be
watching
know
that
I
have
a
partisan
bone
in
my
body.
I
actually
support
the
intent
of
this,
as
I've
talked
to
several
individuals
on
this.
But
if
you
recall
the
question
I
asked
to
county
staff
and
others
it
was
very
simply
have
we
had
a
conversation
with
many
of
these
agency
heads
and
senior
staff,
and
I
think
the
answer
I
received
the
last
meeting
was
no
so
I'll.
N
Ask
the
question
again
from
county
administration
and
or
if
someone
from
a
commissioned
staff
has
had
conversation
with
the
department
of
education
with
department
of
juvenile
justice
with
dcf
on
this
item.
Because
for
me
I
don't
believe
in
throwing
punches
in
this
regard.
I
don't
like
the
language
in
it
and
I
think
that's
what
I
communicated
at
the
prior
meeting
so
I'll.
Ask
that
question
factual
question
again
just
to
understand.
Thank
you.
Y
K
AG
AG
This
study
here
in
the
state
of
florida
that
we
talk
about
what
the
benefits
of
the
study
have
been
in
the
in
the
past,
and
I
thought
we
had
some
data
that
we
could
put
together
without
any
great
expense,
and
we
could
provide
that
to
the
department
of
education
and
perhaps
that
data
might
persuade
them
to
to
reinstate
the
the
survey
you
know.
Maybe
maybe
not,
but
I
think
it's
it's
it's
worth
that
the
effort.
AG
That's
my
that's
my
feel
on
it,
but
I
don't
know
whether
commissioner
rich
supports
that
position
or
not.
H
K
G
Rich,
this
is
not
our
responsibility.
We
passed
resolutions
here.
I've
been
on
the
board
since
16.
I
think
commissioner
bogan
others
have
been
on
longer.
We
did
one
for
bright
futures
a
couple
of
years
ago.
We've
done,
we've
done
so
many
of
them.
This
is
a
very
simple
thing.
This
has
become
a
political
issue
in
tallahassee
and
I
don't
want
to
be
a
part
of
the
politics.
I
want
to
be
a
part
of
doing
what's
right
for
children,
we
know
what
this
study
does.
We
know
the
data
it
provides.
C
Other
members,
it's
already
been
moved
and,
as
dr
sharif
said,
I
can
count
to
five.
So
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
this
pass
is
eight
to
one.
That
brings
us
with
agenda
item
number
59
and
then
that's
our
last
agenda
that
was
pulled
by
senator
geller.
You
said,
and
commissioner.
F
F
This
was
the
publix
and
I
think
what
this
was
asking
was,
whether
or
not
we
should
have
the
county
attorney
weigh
in
on
this
and
help
determine
whether
or
not
this
is
a
mobile
home
park,
because,
right
now,
I-
and
maybe
you
can
maybe
drew
drew.
Maybe
you
can
help
on
this
or
renee
in
that
they
there's
different
rules
and
they
have
to
they
have
to
abide
by
it,
based
on
the
way
that
they
are
licensed.
V
F
F
F
V
F
Right
so
I
think
the
init,
the
initial
thing
that
and-
and
I
had
a
chance
to
talk
to
the
some
of
the
representatives
from
there
and
I
think
originally
I
gave
them
rene
what
you
had
given
us
that
had
talked
about.
You
have
to
give
them
six
months,
all
those
kind
of
things.
But
I
don't
think
that
the
first
thing
you
gave
me
included
the
parameters
if
it
was
a
mobile
home
park.
Am
I
correct
there.
F
I
think
what
we
need
to
be
doing
is
giving
the
second
part
of
this
and
say:
look,
we
think
you're
a
mobile
home
park,
and
you
need
to
respond
accordingly
and
then
see
what
they
do.
I
think
that's
the
because
we
actually
gave
them
from
our
county
attorney's
office,
here's
what
you're
supposed
to
be
doing
and
they
kind
of
responded,
and
I
think
we
need
to
do
the
same
thing
given
now
what
what
we're
looking
at
as
what
should
be
if
it's
a
mobile
home,
that's
my
that
would
be
my
recommendation.
F
Okay,
because
I
think
you
know,
let's
see
what
let's
see
if
they
respond
to
that.
First,
that
you
know
so
so
that's
that's
where,
where
I'm
seeing
it.
V
H
A
K
J
Thank
you,
mr
mayor.
I
had
some
concerns
about
this
and
because
this
is
a
particularly
egregious
situation,
my
concern
is
not
about
what
we're
doing
today,
but
I
want
us
to
be
having
a
clear
policy,
because
I
don't
want
us.
J
I
would
have
absolutely
no
problem
if
we
were
funding
legal
aid
to
do
this,
and
I
have
no
problem
doing
this
as
a
one-off
in
this
one
occasion,
but
I
want
us
to
be
clear
that
we
are
not
now
establishing
the
county
commission
as
the
place
that
any
time
you
have
either
a
mobile
home
park
or
any
other
legal
dispute
with
the
landlord
that
the
county
commission
is
going
to
intervene.
My
understanding
is
in
this
particular
case.
J
What
we're
doing
is
we're.
We
are
not
representing
individuals,
we
are
determining
whether
or
not
in
our
opinion,
this
actually
is
a
mobile
home
park,
and
I
doubt
we're
going
to
have
another
similarly
situated
case
and
again
the
cause
we
heard
at
the
I
wasn't
after
last
week,
but
two
meetings
before
that
we
heard
how
egregious
this
situation
is,
and
so
I
want
to
be
clear.
I'm
not.
J
I
have
no
problems
with
their
with
supporting
commissioner
furs
motion
now,
but
I
want
that
to
come
with
the
appropriate
warning
that
this
should
not
mean
that
everybody
that
has
a
problem
in
the
future
can
come
to
the
county
commission
and
ask
us
to
intervene
instead
of
legal
aid.
And,
having
said
that,
I
I'm
certainly
prepared
to
support
this
motion.
After
having
made
that
statement
got.
G
Thank
you.
We've
had
a
number
of
of
these
people
who
reside
in
the
mobile
home
park,
and
I
say
that
because
of
the
structure
of
their
homes,
this
is
a
this
is
not
a
camping
vehicle.
G
G
You
know
that
that
some
that
the
trinity
broadcasting
company
you
know
says
that
they
are,
you
know
an
rv
park,
but
I
I
just
want
to
say
we
as
a
result
of
some
of
the
complaints-
and
you
know
the
the
the
really
very
sad
situations
that
where
people
have
come
to
us,
the
county
actually
had
staff
go
out
to
put
from
family
success
centers
and
from
the
human
service
division
to
attend
a
few
of
these
meetings
that
trinity
broadcasting
had
with
with
their
tenants,
and
we
did
it
so
that
we
could
help
maybe
provide
assistance
in
relocating
people.
G
Actually,
trinity,
we
were
told
we
removed
the
staff
from
several
of
these
meetings
and
it's
you
know
just
was
very
distressing,
so
I
I
feel
very
strongly
that
you
know
we
need
to
take
the
action
here
of
investigating
the
trinity
broadcasting
company
in
in
terms
of
its
misrepresentation
of
what
kind
of
a
a
residency
it
is
and
and
depriving
tenants
of
their
legal
protections
in
this
action.
G
So
I'm
very
supportive
of
us
moving
forward
and
having
our
county
attorney's
office,
investigate
and
then
come
back
with
anything
that
we
may
need
to
do
as
a
county
commission.
M
I
I'm
in
total
support
of
if
commissioner
fur,
your
motion
is
to
have
this
investigated
by
our
legal
staff
total
support,
and
I
would
even
go
further,
I'm
not
asking
to
mend
your
motion,
but
I
will
support
even
taking
action
at
a
further
date.
You
have
a
large
community
of
people
here
that
have
been
hurt
and
we
need
to
help
in
any
way
we
can
so
I'm
in
total
support.
C
AN
AN
C
AN
AC
L
AN
My
experience
at
lakeside
park
estates
run
by
trinity
broadcasting
networks
of
florida
doing
business
as
lakeside
park
estates
has
been
a
harrowing
one.
I
was
terrorized
by
two
psychotic
criminals
that
worked
for
them.
The
manager
and
her
husband,
nancy
and
jason
ellis
they've
been
removed.
They
were
fired
due
to
a
hud
complaint
and
which
was
an
effort
by
parkland
realty
to
cover
this
up,
because
I
only
have
a
limited
time
to
speak
to
you.
I
would
point
out
that
trinity
is
currently
involved
in
unlawful
evictions,
harassment
of
tenants
and
directly
related
to
number
59.
AN
They
are
going
around
and
demolishing
the
mobile
home
pads
and
the
mobile
home
sites
to
try
and
pull
another
fast
one
and
make
it
look
like
an
rv
park.
Okay.
So
if
you're,
if
we're
going
to
do
something,
you
got
to
get
on
it
now,
because
there-
and
in
my
experience
they
have
no
problem,
fabricating
evidence
lying
to
cover
up
whatever
they
do.
And
yes,
people
get
hurt
and
here's
my
neighbors
we're.
AN
AN
AN
AO
AO
AO
101
102
and
103.
elderly
abuse
anyone
over
65
coerced
out
of
their
property.
All
the
canadians
were
offered
two
hundred
dollars
for
their
trailer,
no
receipt,
ten
dollar
fine.
If
they
didn't
get
their
trailer
out
of
there
and
they
were
told
this
most
of
them-
have
to
leave
april
15th.
Not
all
they
were
told
this
29
days
before
they
had
to
leave
that
created
a
chaos
of
thievery
that
came
when
people
came
to
get
things
that
were
being
sold.
AO
So
then
we
had
a
security
problem.
I
was
told
it
was
going
to
be
corrected
by
rene
the
office
manager
that
we
would
have
security,
24
7.
That
didn't
happen.
Thank
you,
but
getting
back
to
it.
I
was
singled
out
because
I
brought
up
in
a
meeting
that
it
was
a
mobile
home
park
and
I
was
going
to
be
thrown
out
of
the
meeting
and
they
have
been
trying
to
evict
me
since
then
they
haven't
done
it
through
the
court
yet,
but
now
I'm
on
my
15-day
notice
and
they
want
to
take
my
property.
AO
F
AP
My
name
is
fernando
acuna.
I
am
the
son
of
those
two
sitting
right
there.
Those
are
my
parents,
I'm
speaking
for
them,
because
they
don't
speak
english
very
well
so
about
two
months
ago,
as
you
guys
are
aware,
trinity
decided
to
not
be
involved
in
the
mobile
home
rv
park,
business
anymore
and
and
they've
handled
it
in
probably
the
worst
way
possible.
AP
They've
manipulated
the
canadians.
Like
she
just
mentioned.
They
gave
them
200
for
houses
worth
up
to
50
000
60,
70,
80,
100
000,
and
they
are
planning
to
sell
those
houses
to
turn
a
profit
and
not
they
are
not
being
held
accountable
for
that
they're,
manipulating
the
permanent
residence
by
increasing
the
rents
and
making
the
living
conditions
unbearable.
AP
There
are
tractors,
excavation
vehicles,
all
sorts
of
construction
vehicles
that
make
very
very
loud
noises
when
people
are
sick,
people
have
cancer.
There
are
elderly,
there
are
people
like
myself
with
families,
kids,
it's
unsafe.
Okay,
under
the
florida
mobile
home
act,
there
is
an
obligation
to
good
faith
and
fair
dealings,
which
I
feel
they
have
not
upheld
at
all,
and
there
is
also
the
obligation
to
not
public
publicize,
false
or
misleading
information,
which
I
feel
they
have
committed,
because
my
family
recently
purchased
that
mobile
home
less
than
a
year
ago.
AP
AP
If
there
was
a
possibility
that
this
situation
was
ever
going
to
occur,
and
we
were
told
no
okay,
they
knew
that
this
was
going
to
happen
a
year
ago.
There's
no
way,
no
one
can
convince
me.
Otherwise,
these
types
of
dealings
they're
not
telling
us
anything,
they
are
not
informing
us
of
anything.
We
don't
know
if
this
is
going
to
sell.
We
don't
know
if
this
is
going
to
be
turned
into
some
type
of
apartment
complex,
but
whatever
is
going
to
happen.
Is
millions
of.
I
AP
Right
now
we
have
tried
to
reach
out
to
attorneys.
We
have
tried
to
reach
out
to
legal
aid,
and
we
have
been
told
on
multiple
occasions
that
there
is
nothing
that
can
be
done
for
us.
You
guys
literally,
have
just
talked
about
how
they're
trying
to
claim
that
they
are
an
rv
park
and,
and
it
is
clearly
not
an
rv
park,
it
is
very
obviously
a
mobile
home
park,
and
that
is
where
I
feel
like
they
have
misled.
People
people
invested
50,
20,
30
000,
not
to
leave
in
a
year.
AP
Okay,
if
you're
gonna
make
yourself
an
rv
park,
it's
gotta
look
like
an
rv
park.
None
of
those
rvs
look
like
rvs.
They
all
look
like
mobile
homes.
My
dad
did
not
invest
fifty
thousand
dollars
a
year
ago
to
get
kicked
out
in
a
year.
He
was
literally
talking
about
my
little
brother's
graduation,
my
little
brother's
10.
AP
AP
AQ
AQ
AQ
AQ
It
was
a
disaster
and
since
then,
instead
of
having
a
a
resident
of
55
plus
we're
in
the
middle
of
a
demolition
and
a
construction
zone
where
heavily
equipment
is
coming
down
and
completely
ramsacking
loading
up
in
a
dumpster,
throwing
it
into
a
dump
truck
10
feet
away
from
an
83
year
old
lady
who
is
scared
to
death
of
all
the
stuff
going
on
no
protection
of
a
protective
fence
or
barriers,
or
anything
like
that
and
they're
trying
to
get
rid
of
every
mobile
home.
So
we
get
the
ratio
down.
AG
I
do
and
it's
not
actually
directly
to
the
speaker,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
I
think
what
they're
asking
for
is
that
the
county
attorney's
office
issue
an
opinion
on
whether
substance
over
form.
This
is
a
mobile
home
park,
not
an
rv
park
and
the
rules
are
considerably
different
as
a
result
and
the
equities
much
much
more
equities
that
you'll
have
with
the
unit
owners
mobile
home
owners
if
it's
a
mobile
home
park.
So
I
believe
we
just
should
go
ahead
and
have
the
county
attorney
issue
an
opinion.
AQ
I
can
address
that
right
now,
all
right,
we,
the
united
residents
of
lakeside
park
estates,
gathered
together
on
two
different
occasions
in
front
of
the
ceo
of
the
naca,
mr
bruce
marks,
whose
organization
has
helped
over
85
communities
like
ours,
come
against
the
big
corporations
that
were
abusing
the
elderly
that
were
taking
away
their
property.
They
were
taking
away
their
values
and
their
rights
to
live
in
that
property.
AQ
V
It
takes
a
little
while
to
analyze
things
senator,
but
I
want
to
talk
about
what
this
item
would
do.
If
it
passes
it
would
authorize
us
to
investigate
which
we've
already
been
doing
and
we're
listening
to
more
today,
but
basically
continue
to
investigate
this
issue
and
then,
as
amended
only
on
behalf
of
the
county.
If
we
believe
that
regulations
have
been
violated
in
the
county
as
standing
in
its
name
to
sue,
we
could
file
suit
before
representing
any
individuals,
and
it's
very
heartening
to
hear
that
they
have
counsel,
because
this
is
a
fact
intensive.
V
You
know
very
specific
claims.
We
couldn't
represent
individuals
under
the
proposed
item.
We'd
have
to
come
back
to
the
board,
but
we
could
certainly
coordinate
with
outside
counsel.
You
know
we'd
have
to
worry
about
privilege
issues,
but
we
could
coordinate
with
their
counsel
and
therefore
we
could
cover
the
violations
both
on
the
regulatory
side
which
we'd
be
investigating
and
trying
to
get
enforcement
and
coordination
that
may
lead
to
injunctions
and
other
civil
relief.
AQ
M
Important,
no,
no,
no
mayor
would
this
board
be
open
to
adding
to
his
motion
to
not
only
let
him
investigate,
but
if
he
finds
something
he
can
take
action
quickly,
based
on
him
being,
the
attorney
would.
C
V
So,
just
to
clarify
the
item
as
amended,
it
was
amended
yesterday
and
it's
reflected
in
the
monday
night.
Memo
gives
us
the
authority
without
coming
back
to
the
board,
to
sue
on
the
county's
behalf.
Only
on
the
county's
behalf.
We
don't
represent
individuals,
but
the
issues
that
we
may
uncover,
as
we
investigated,
may
be
helpful
to
the
private
prosecution
of
those
claims
as
well
got.
C
C
G
S
V
Know
we
could,
if
we
had
the
facts,
that
we
thought
we
could
stay
to
claim.
We
could
sue
tomorrow,
but
we
obviously
will
continue
to
investigate
it,
and
you
can
see
him
as
hard
and
nathaniel
also
back
there
getting
further
contact
information.
C
AR
You
I'm
going
to
be
brief.
There
are
two
situations
in
different
situations
of
the
tenants
of
the
park,
the
ones
that
have
been
here
for
many
many
years.
Many
of
them
are
old
people,
elderly
people
and
are
on
social
security
and
probably
had
nowhere
to
go,
and
the
time
frame
was
very,
very
short
and
the
other
ones
are
the
ones
that
met
investment
in
the
park,
even
though
they
knew
the
park
is
going
to
be
sold
or
change
of
use.
AR
Even
we
had
a
case,
they
received
the
application
and
approve
it
the
day
before
they
send
the
notice
that
it's
going
to
be
terminated.
So
that's
completely
unfair
and
I
believe
it's
illegal
up
to
now.
When
we
have
this
hearing,
you
can
google
or
you
can
go
to
the
facebook
page
and
the
website
of
lakeside
park
and
they're
still
announcing
the
beautiness
of
the
place
with
amenities
we
don't
have
like
tennis
courts
like
pool
tables.
AR
C
P
Yes,
real
quick.
I
just
want
to
thank
commissioner
for
bringing
this
item
to
the
board.
I
I
appreciate
it
and
then,
while
the
county
attorney
is
doing
his
investment.
P
Rich
bring
this
I'm
sorry.
AJ
P
All
the
commissioners
that
were
involved
in
bringing
this
item
forward.
Okay,
if
I
have
left
you
out,
I
meant
no
offense
all
right.
Thank
you,
but
but
real
quick.
While
this
item
is
going
to
pass
while
the
county
attorney
is
investigating,
I
want
to
make
sure
the
county
attorney
takes
the
resolution
and
sends
a
letter
which
he
can
get
out
the
next
day,
letting
them
know
that
we
are
investigating
and
that
we
may
take
action
based
on
what
we
find.
Is
that
any
objection
to
that.
C
All
right,
I
have
a
motion
in
a
second
I
forget
who
made
it
now,
but
I'm
assuming
it
was
properly
made
fur
and
and
senator
rich
drew
restated
the
motion
to
explain
it
to
us,
and
and
now
we
understand
and
then
we're
going
to
add
a
letter
all
in
favor
signify
by
saying
aye
aye
opposed.
Please
show
that
that
passes
nine
to
zero
unanimously.
C
C
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
C
AJ
R
C
All
right,
so,
let's
start
the
workshop
but
drew
told
me.
Let
me
ask
you
a
question
right
now,
because
if
we
lose,
we
won't
be
able
to
go
back.
All
we
have
left
on.
The
other
meeting
is
commissioner's
comments
which
we
could
wave,
but
I
think
we
have
to
just
adjourn
the
other
meeting.
Can
we
adjourn
the
other
one
now.
C
R
Yes,
thank
you.
Thank
you
all.
So
I'll
just
kick
this
off
and
want
to
start
with
that.
First
slide.
I
hope
you
guys
have
that
up
in
the
chambers
we
distributed
some
materials
for
this
workshop
and-
and
I
just
want
to
walk
you
through
the
first
like
two
pages,
and
we
can
stop
there
and
discuss,
excuse.
M
Me,
I'm
sorry,
excuse
me,
I'm
sorry
can
can
the
can
the
it
department
put
on
the
screen
here
that
what
you're
putting
on
that
board,
I
can't
read
that
instead,
there
you
go.
Thank
you.
R
Actually,
I
was
going
to
start
with
the
the
the
first
one,
which
was
the
kind
of
the
calendar.
AJ
R
Thank
you.
Thank
you
all
right,
so
I
just
wanted
to
walk
through
really
quickly
with
the
board.
Just
so
you
guys
can
understand
where
we
are
in
the
budget
process
right
now.
You
recall
during
the
commissioner
retreat.
We
talked
about
this
that
may
second
date
before
submissions
of
the
accounting,
suspicion,
priorities
and,
and
so
that's
what
we
are
right
now.
We've
got
a
couple
of
things
left
in
that
budget
process.
We've
got
a
today
after
today,
we've
got
the
june
7th
budget
workshop,
which
would
be
bso
and
broward
county
property.
R
Appraiser
then
on
the
16th
is
when
you
will
see
my
general
fund
discussion
priorities
in
the
budget
workshop,
where
I'll
be
proposing
and
sharing
with
you,
the
things
that
were
in
that
I
anticipate
to
come
into
the
recommended
budget.
That
july
16th
date
is
something
we
do
every
year
where
we
distribute
that
county
ministry.
R
A
R
These
are
all
this
is
the
culmination
of
all
of
the
requests
that
we
received
from
the
commissioners
for
budget
priorities,
and
what
we
tried
to
do
here
is
give
a
brief
description
and
whether
or
not
it
would
be
recurring
or
non-recurring
for
those
requests,
and
what
I
anticipated
to
do
in
this
scenario
was
just
kind
of
briefly
kind
of
hit
on
them.
W
R
One
and
then
ask
for
some
guidance
from
the
commissioners
and
I'm
assuming
that
you
guys
will
want
to
chime
in
on
the
those
items
that
you
each
have
submitted,
starting
with
the
bso
discussion
that
we
just
had
just
moments
ago
in
the
regular
commission
meeting.
R
R
For
that
eleven
point,
almost
five
million
dollars
the
next
one
was
an
amount
for
150,
000,
non-requiring
funds
for
legal
aid,
and
currently
that
is
in
the
current
fiscal
year
at
125
000..
It
was
a
one-time
supplement
last
year.
R
The
next
item
was
the
living
wage
discussion
and,
if
you
recall
the
last
time,
we
had
a
conversation
with
the
march
1st
workshop
and
we
presented
a
range
of
options
of
what
you
have
costed
out
here
was
the
highest
of
those
options.
It
was
optionally
due
on
that
material
part
of
the
materials
we
distributed
for
this
budget
workshop
included
kind
of
like
a
a
report.
R
If
you
will
a
cover
memorandum
of
five
pages
and
then
a
report
that
our
staff
put
together,
that
try
to
synthesize
and
put
that
issue
into
context,
as
you
guys
have
requested
us
to
do.
R
The
next
issue
was
one
of
proposing
a
500
million
dollar
general
obligation,
bonds,
affordable
housing
that
would
cost
those
on
the
on
the
right
hand,
side
to
see
that,
and
that
would
be.
We
would
propose
that
to
come
from
a
military
increase,
if
that
was
something
that
was
posed
to
the
voters.
R
R
Pardon
me
the
next
one
was
something
related
to
the
northern
homeless
assistance
center
and
we
devising
clarification.
I'm
not
as
eager
to
do
this.
R
The
next
one
is
a
paint
program
for
home
improvements
for
low-income
residents,
and
I
just
give
you
some
additional
information
there,
which
we're
looking
forward
to
this
conversation
for
the
next
item
is
for
cultural
grants
and
we
have
increased
in
the
fiscal
22
budget,
a
one-time
grant
funding
increase
of
200
000.
So
there's
a
request
here
to
include
that
200
again
and
then
also
increase
200
000
on
a
recline.
X
R
Then
there's
a
film
and
sentence
discussion
which
I'm
sure
the
commissioner
who's
recommending.
This
can
fill
you
in
a
little
bit
more,
but
in
essence,
we
currently
have
500
thousand
dollars
in
the
existing
recurring
funding
for
the
film
and
sentence
that
the
board
had
given
us
directions
to
including
the
budget,
and
then,
if
we're
just
getting
that
started
to
include
that
up
to
a
million
dollars.
We
wouldn't
need
any
additional
funds
for
that,
because
we
have
two
years
of
that
funding
that
we
will
have
on
the
books.
R
So
in
this
current
in
the
next
budget
year,
we
wouldn't
need
any
additional
funds
to
make
that
a
one
billion
dollar
starting
balance.
For
that
film
and
senate
program,
then
we
have
a
couple
of
commissioners
also
ask
us
what
it
would
cost
to
have
a
millage
reduction
of
one
percent.
So
that
is
the
body
of
the
request
that
you
have
before
you
for
operating
for
general
fund
and
norm.
I
know
it's
standing
there
and
can
also
walk
through
some
of
that.
N
Sure
all
right
yeah,
thank
you
mayor.
Thank
you,
madam
administrator,
and
hope
all
as
well
and
hope
you
are
feeling
better.
So
my
first
question
to
you
is-
and
I
think
you
alluded
to
it
on
the
last
request-
were
there
any
overlaps
in
any
of
the
commissioner
requests
on
the
general
fund?
I
know
you
alluded
to
it
on
one
item.
I
did
not
hear
that
on
on
any
other
item.
N
Yeah
through
the
mayor,
thank
you
mayor.
So,
yes,
madam
administrator,
I
think
at
least
for
me
that
will
be
helpful
just
to
know
if
there
are
multiple
commissioner
requests
for
each
of
these
items
and
then,
of
course,
I'm
sure
each
commissioner,
I
think
I
can
identify
I'll
pick
on
affordable
housing
and
film
incentives.
I
think
I
may
know
who
those
two
are,
but
just
knowing
kind
of
what
those
requests
are.
Just
you
know
better
understanding.
But
yes,
that
will
be
helpful
if
there
are
multiple
commissioners
on
each
of
these
requests.
R
Okay
through
the
mayor
I'll
just
chime
in
I'm
sorry
a
little
bit
difficult
to
do
it
remotely
and
not
see
your
faces,
but
so
the
first
one
is
the
the
bso
regional
communication
issue
had
a
couple
of
commissioners:
the
legal
aid
for
immigration,
also
the
homeless,
morgan
homeless,
assistance
center
and
remember
the
trade
reduction.
AJ
R
C
So
I
just
want
to
ask
one
question,
because
this
is
something
that
came
to
me
a
couple
days
ago
and
they
brought
it
to
me
as
collectively
a
member
of
the
board
they
weren't,
bringing
it
to
me
to
bring
it
to
me.
They
want.
They
asked
if
I
would
bring
this
up
when
we
had
this
kind
of
meeting,
so
I'm
going
to
bring
it
up
right
now.
C
C
C
So
I
think
that
somebody,
they
came
up
with
the
idea
of
putting
one-time
funds
in
our
budget,
and
maybe
the
city
of
fort
lauderdale
is
going
to
have
to
put
one-time
funds
in
their
budget
and
maybe
some
of
the
cities
along
the
corridor
to
really
go
a
little
bit
deeper
because
you're
all
hearing
the
same
thing
because
we're
all
getting
invited
to
the
same
meetings.
Well,
you
don't
have
to
go
as
deep.
You
don't
have
to
go
as
long.
You
don't
need
this.
C
You
don't
need
that
and
everyone's
working
on
back
of
the
envelope
type
of
strategies,
but
really
an
engineer
is
going
to
need
to
say
this
is
this
is
how
it's
going
to
you
know.
This
can
either
be
done
or
it
can't
be
done
like
we're
saying
you
need
to
board,
it
needs
to
be
three
miles
in
in
length
and
I'm
estimating
some
someone
else
is
saying.
C
So
the
thought
was
if
we,
if
we
had
a
placeholder
as
a
commission
and
said,
listen
mayor
fort
lauderdale,
we're
giving
you
six
months,
eight
months
whatever
it
is,
to
prove
out
your
model
and
and
to
prove
out
your
model
they're
going
to
need
to
take
boring
samples,
the
whole
thing
so
fort
lauderdale
you,
you
come
up
with
a
million
dollars.
Let's
have
a
million
dollars
in
here
or
whatever.
M
Mayor,
I
think
that
takes
a
separate
workshop.
You
know
something
separate
meeting.
C
I
Can
I
go
ahead
mark?
Are
you
done
yes,.
M
So
the
I
want
to
just
ask
a
couple,
quick
questions.
So
are
we
allocating
42
and
a
half
mil
42
million
dollars
for
affordable
housing?
C
C
J
F
R
So
what
you
have
here
of
the
11
and
a
half
million
is
just
the
salary
information
and
the
retention
issues
that
you
guys
already
voted
on.
This
is
an
annualized
number
for
what
you
guys
just
voted
on
to
allow
him
to
do
so.
I
just
wanted
you
guys
to
see
that
it
would
be
already
in
the
budget
that
this
is
something
based
on
your
action.
These
are
salary
dollars
for
those
individuals
in
the
call
taking
a
dispatch
function
for
communications.
This
is
only
realizing
that
it
does
not
touch
on
the
psap
issue.
R
M
I'm
going
to
finish
real
quickly
number
one
there's
I
have
two
comments.
One
is
I
I
don't
understand
the
millage
rate
reduction
is
that
a
proposed
reducing
the
millage
rate.
M
AJ
Were
two
commissioners
who
asked
for,
but
they
were
thinking
about
a
reduction
of.
M
One
percent,
okay
and-
and
the
only
other
thing
I
was
going
to
say-
was
with
respect
to
what
I've
been
working
on
on
my
pilot
program
that
the
majority
of
the
commission
asked
me
to
go
and
go
to
the
hospital
districts
that
right
now
we're
talking
about
money
that's
for
next
year.
All
this
is
about
money
for
next
year.
My
pilot
program
that
I'm
coming
back.
My
next
meeting
has
already
been
money
for
this
year.
It's
already
been
allocated
by
the
by
the
county
administration.
M
So
I
just
want
to
let
you
know
that
it
has
nothing
to
do
with
next
year
and
that
bertha
when
she
was
here,
she.
M
C
M
Well,
I
mean
there's,
I
have
a
lot
of
issues
with
things
on
here,
but
this
is
just
looks
like
kind
of
it,
you
know,
looks
like
kind
of
a
guesstimate
or
what's
been
talked
about,
and-
and
you
know
I
I
don't-
I'm
not
I'm
not
going
to
go
point
by
point
down
here.
M
I
if
we
I
love,
reducing
a
millage
rate,
but
is
that
going
to
make
it
so
we
have
to
take
money
from
somewhere
else
and
if
we
have
to
take
somebody
from
somewhere
else,
is
it
coming
from
your
film
budget
or
is
it
coming
from
your
affordable?
Housing
is
coming
from
you
I
mean.
Where
is
it
coming
from?
I'm
I'm
not
being
specific,
senator
rich,
I'm
trying
to
say
is:
where
is
it?
Where
is
it
coming
from?
You
know
so
before
we
talk
about
reducing
anything
which
I
love,
the
idea
of
reducing?
M
Where
is
it
coming
from
before?
I
think
we
can
answer
that
question.
You
know,
as
far
as
you
know,
I'm
the
homeless
hack.
I
mean
I'm
a
big
believer
in
what
we
need
to
be
doing
with
with
the
homeless.
I
I
would
like
to
know,
I
think
we
need
somebody
that
has
that
can
answer
this
question
about
on
the
affordable
housing
money
with
the
prices
of
housing,
keep
going
up
and
up
and
up
and
up.
How
does
that
affect
this
number?
Is
it
more
effective,
less
effective?
M
AJ
M
Okay
and
who
proposed
that
okay,
so
I
with
with
while
I
believe
well,
I
believe,
affordable
housing
is
important.
So
I'm
going
to
say
it's
important,
I
could
never
agree
to
incur
more
debt
on
the
county.
I
would
not
want
to
incur
more
debt
in
the
county.
I
think
we
set
aside
millions
of
dollars
for
it,
but
to
incur
a
half
a
billion
dollars
in
debt.
I
I
just
couldn't
go
along
with
that,
so
otherwise
the
living
wage.
M
C
R
AJ
R
We
have
not
yet
received
that
you
are
going
to
be
meeting
with
sorry
go
ahead
norm.
I
can't
hear
you
you.
R
So
I'll
go
ahead
and
continue
so
you're
going
to
be
meeting
with
the
property
appraiser
and
he's
going
to
be
releasing
the
new
numbers
here
shortly.
The
last
page
of
your
presentation.
There
is
the
slide
that
we
showed
to
you
during
the
budget
discussion
that
we
had
with
you
during
the
commission
retreat
and
that's
when
we
thought
that
we
would
have
about
possibly
about
a
7.3
percent
projection
for
additional
resources,
less
of
one
percent
for
the
value
adjustment
board.
R
So
we
think
that
those
estimates
will
be
a
little
bit
more
positive
than
what
we
thought
originally
back
in
march,
but
we
don't
have
those
numbers
yet
and
they're
still
tweaking
those.
So
while
we
have
some
increase,
we
don't
know
what
that
total
amount
is,
and
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
guys
understand
and
and
concepts
because
as
we
talk
about
what
you've
got
in
front
of,
you
is
there's
obviously
many
pieces
to
putting
this
budget
together.
We've
got
the
commission
priorities
that
you
have
in
front
of
you
right
now.
R
Out
of
the
general
fund,
you're
going
to
have
other
things
competing
for
the
same
pot
of
general
fund
money,
including
an
eight
percent
increase
that
bso
has
requested
a
16
increase
that
the
supervisor
of
elections
has
requested
we're
thinking
a
smaller
amount
percentage
increase
from
the
property
appraiser
that
will
get
his
budget
also
at
the
end
of
this
week,
and
then
that
doesn't
we
haven't
even
touched,
the
county
agency
supplemental
requests
for
doing
the
work
of
the
county
throughout
the
organization
through
the
community.
R
I'm
sorry,
so
we've
got
a
finite
amount
of
resources
to
juggle
all
of
these
requests.
We
don't
know
that
number
yet
from
the
property
appraiser.
But
what
I
wanted
to
get
a
sense
today-
and
this
is
what
we've
done
in
the
past-
is
to
make
sure
we
have
an
idea,
at
least
on
the
general
sense
of
the
priorities
of
the
commission,
so
that
when
we
go
back
and
get
the
real
numbers
from
the
property
appraiser's
office,
we
can
attempt
to
put
together
a
budget
for
you
all
to
react
to.
K
J
I
don't
necessarily
want
to
your
mark
that
exclusively
for
immigration.
If
we
can
find
additional
money
for
legal
aid
because
they
have
the
immigration
they
have
all
of
the
issues
dealing
with
evictions
and
you
know
other
issues,
so
we
can
get
more
money
for
legal
aid.
I
always
think
that's
a
good
thing
living
wage-
I
I
don't
want
to
do
that,
but
I
think
we
have
to.
J
There
is
a
difference
between
wanting
to
and
having
to,
although
I
am
meeting
shortly
with
seiu
and
I
think
they're
asking
for
a
number
like
you
know,
23
times
that
that's
a
slight
exaggeration,
but
you
know
I'll
hear
what
they
have
to
say.
I
think
that
we
have
to
do
that
living
wage,
affordable
housing.
My
understanding
and
I'm
sure
senator
rich-
will
address
this
when
it
comes
to
her.
But
my
understanding
is
each
affordable.
Housing
unit
now
needs
a
subsidy
of
somewhere
around
a
hundred,
and
twenty
thousand
is
that
correct
norm?
AJ
50
000.
they've
done
an
amazing
job
with
the
the
last
set
of
proposals,
because
we
we
were
expecting
it
to
go
up,
but
it's
it's
managed
to
hold
it
around
that
50
000
for.
C
C
I
X
G
G
B
G
J
Thank
you
chris,
as
I
was
saying,
I
commissioned
bogan
is
gone,
but
I
I
tend
to
agree
with
him
the
and
that
again
the
50
000
a
unit
at
50
500
million
dollars
that
should
be
about
10
000
units,
roughly
ballpark
at
if
you
assume
it's
50
000,
which
is
what
you
said
I
am
in
order
to
do
that
we
will
be
increasing
everybody's
millage
at
one
at
0.1424.
J
Mills
and
a
lot
of
people
right
now
are
having
issues
making
their
mortgage
payments,
and
I
am
having
great
concern
about
increasing
millage
on
everybody,
to
including
low-income
people,
to
try
and
give
taxpayer
assisted,
affordable
housing
to
a
relatively
small
number
of
people.
We've
got
to
do
something
about
affordable
housing.
We
are
already
giving
far
more
than
any
other
county
in
the
state
of
florida.
G
J
J
J
If
we
treated
our
trust
funds,
the
way
the
state
treats
their
trust
funds
we'd
be
in
either
state
jail
or
federal
prison.
Having
said
that,
I
think
that
doing
what
we're
doing
is
as
much
as
we
can
do
unaffordable
housing.
I
am
not
in
favor
of
an
additional
30
million
dollars
that
we
would
have
to
pay
year
in
year
out
based
on
bonds
regardless
of
our
economy.
J
J
No,
we
just
want
you
to
spend
more,
but
we
don't
want
you
to
raise
taxes.
I've
advised
them
that
when
they
send
me
a
written
proposal,
saying
we're
all
in
favor
of
raising
property
taxes
I'll
consider
their
proposal
and
tell
them
they
should
be
quiet
and
instead
of
telling
us
to
spend
more
without
raising
more
the.
J
So
I
do
have
a
concern
about
that.
I
continue
to
think
that
the
only
way
we're
ever
going
to
get
out
of
this
problem
is
through
building
more
and
relying
on
the
law
of
supply
and
demand,
while
not
ignoring
what
we've
been
doing,
which
I
think
is,
as
I
said
more
than
any
other
county
in
the
state
out
of
general
revenue
dollars,
I
don't
have
any
concern
about
the
homeless.
The
pain
program
looks
fine,
the
cultural
grant.
That's
me.
Last
year
we
did
a
one-time,
200
000.
J
This
is
would
be
increasing
that
to
buy
another
200
000..
You
can
tell
a
lot
about
the
soul
of
a
county
by
what
we're
doing
and
candidly
an
additional
200
000
is
the
kind
of
money
that
we
can
find
behind
count
couch
cushions,
and
I
mean
that'll-
go
to
a
hundred
or
200
different
cultural
grants
that
are
all
desperate.
We
need
that
money.
The
film
incentives
is
listed.
That's
not
actually
an
increase,
because
it's
500
000
that
we
already
have.
It
was
500
000,
and
this
is
this
year's
500
000..
J
So
it's
just
the
same
as
last
year.
Taking
us
up
to
a
million.
The
understanding
I
have
with
the
county
administrator
is
we're
capping
it
at
least
for
now
at
a
million
and
the
if
they're.
If
next
year
we
spend
700
000
of
the
million
we'll
come
back
and
ask
for
700
to
keep
that
at
a
million.
If
you're
not
aware
the
average
salary
in
the
film
industry,
statewide
is
99
000,
meaning
in
south
florida's
higher.
J
What
is
going
on
right
now
in
fort
lauderdale,
you
know,
broward
has
been
developing
reputation
as
the
most
film-friendly
county
in
the
state.
What
they're
building
in
fort
lauderdale
is
directly
related
to
that.
That's
going
to
create
so
many
jobs
here
we
will
have
the
largest,
I
don't
know
what
disney
or
universal
have,
but
we
will
have
the
largest
sound
stage
area
in
the
state,
with
the
possible
exception
of
disney
and
universal
here,
and
the
county
is
paying
nothing
for
that.
The
last
thing
I
wanted
to
discuss
is
the
millage
rate
reduction.
J
So
if
you're
not
prepared
to
raise
taxes,
then
don't
say
that
for
temporary
reasons,
you're
going
to
cut
them,
because
that
will
end
up
being
a
permanent
cut
which
this
county
can't
afford
norm
prepares
the
chart.
For
me,
every
year,
at
my
request,
which
shows
how
the
county
has
been
treated
since
the
great
recession
and
as
all
of
you
except
the
new
ones,
have
seen
we
have
never
recovered.
We
have
never
gone
back
to
our
level
of
spending
prior
to
the
great
recession.
J
When
you
add
in
population
growth
and
inflation,
which
you
have
to
do,
we've
never
recovered
from
that.
Some
agencies,
like
bso,
have
been
treated
less
badly
than
every
other
agency,
which
is
why
their
percentage
of
our
of
our
county
budget
has
grown
every
year.
They're
now
well,
over
half
of
our
county
budget
and
the
group
that
has
fared
the
worst
is
the
county
agencies
we've
taken
care
of
our
county
constitutional
officers
better.
J
I
am
very
concerned.
I
think
this
year
will
be
a
good
year
for
us,
but
I
don't
believe
that
the
following
year
will
be:
most.
Economists
are
predicting,
if
not
a
recession,
at
least
a
severe
slowdown,
you're
not
familiar
with
the
way
save
our
homes
works.
You
can
have
a
home
appraised
at
400.
000
then
goes
up
to
450,
then
500.
J
Then
it
goes
back
to
300
for
one
year.
They
don't
go
back
to
the
500,
they
start
over
at
300.,
so
a
one-year
brief
recession
for
two
years,
like
we
have
in
the
great
recession
where,
just
briefly,
you
had
a
real
downturn,
we've
never
recovered
the
property.
Taxes
have
never
caught
up
from
from
the
great
recession.
J
J
We
cannot
afford
to
put
all
of
that
money
into
operating
or
to
into
recurring,
because
if
we
put
all
that
money
into
recurring,
when
the
recession
comes,
we're
not
going
to
have
enough
money
to
pay
for,
we
need
to
be
in
good
times
like
what
was
at
the
end
or
whatever,
building
up
our
reserves,
and
if
we
have
extra
money,
that's
where
I
want
to
put
it
putting
him
through
the
reserves.
I
can't
tell
you
when
we're
going
to
have
a
recession.
I
hope
it's
never,
but
I
know
it's
going
to
be.
J
We
can't
change
that
you're
going
to
have
good
times
and
you're
going
to
have
bad
times
and
we
have
to
save
for
the
bad
times.
So
I
don't
know
whether
it's
going
to
happen.
I
I've
met
with
the
sheriff
we've
heard
about
all
these
people
asking
for
money
sheriff
has
asking
for
eight
percent.
I
think
the
supervisor's
asking
for
13,
I
told
the
sheriff
when
they
were
starting
to
go
through
the
budget
he
said
sheriff.
J
You
don't
need
to
tell
me
that
I
agree
that
everything
that
you're
asking
for
is
probably
going
to
be
justifiable
to
get
you
up
to
the
eight
percent
problem.
Is
the
county
has
a
credit
card
and
we
can't,
unlike
the
federal
government,
we
don't
have
deficit
if
we're
not
increasing
our
millage,
and
I
sense
no
desire
of
this
deus
to
do
so
for
not
increasing
our
millage.
This
is
how
much
money
we
have.
We
want
to
build
our
reserves,
and
you
know
your
you
may
be.
Every
dollar
you're
asking
for
may
be
deserved.
J
Every
dollar
the
supervisor
is
asked
for
may
be
reserved
if
we're
not
raising
millage,
we
have
a
limited
amount
of
money
to
spend,
and
the
last
thing
I'm
saying
is,
I
was
elected
to
the
legislature
in
1988
when
dinosaurs
were
roaming,
the
earth
and
bob
martinez
was
governor,
and
a
few
of
you
here
have
heard
of
him
and
you're
all
politicians,
except
for
senator
rich
who's.
The
other
person
that
has
the
years
and
years
of
experience
and
the
fact
is
during
this
time
everybody
always
wants
the
same
thing.
J
They
want
more
services
and
lower
taxes,
and
we
can't
do
that.
I
well,
I
believe
you
can,
but
only
if
you
believe
in
the
services
fairy
that
waves,
his
or
her
magic
wand.
I
don't
know
a
fairy-
is
a
gender-specific
term
if
it's
only
women,
but
if
the
gender
ferry
can
waive
their
magic
wand
and
provide
the
services
without
paying
for
them
that's
great,
but
I
have
yet
to
find
the
services
very.
So
we
need
to
understand
this
and
I'm
not
voting
for
any
millage
reduction.
J
C
It's
impossible
to
afford
to
live
here
as
a
normal
and
and
this
isn't
even
for
what
everyone
always
talks
about
with
affordable
housing.
Like
you
know,
I
know
there
was
something
that
came
out
yesterday
with
the
hometown
heroes
program.
I'm
talking
about
everybody
has
a
problem
right
now
with
their
housing
costs.
C
So
I
I
think
that
it's
worth
having
some
discussions
about
whether
the
actions
that
we
have
been
taking
are
actually
working.
I
for
one,
don't
believe
that
they
are,
and
I
haven't
believed
that
they
are
for
the
last
few
years.
I
believe
we
have
a
crisis,
but
I
believe
similar
to
what
senator
geller
says-
and
I've
said
this
when
most
people
have
asked
me,
because
I
know
he
brought
up
that
one,
the
apple
or
the
carrot
and
the
stick,
and
he
had
a
whole
thing
where
he
was
going
to
beat
people
up.
C
We
have
a
severe
supply,
demand
imbalance
and
if
we
built
a
thousand
houses
last
year
for
50
million
dollars
in
that
affordable
housing,
stipend
we've,
we've
plugged
one
little
spot
on
the
titanic,
but
there's
a
huge
hall
somewhere
else
and
that
fifty
thousand
fifty
million
dollars
was
not
a
good
use
of
those
dollars.
I'm
sorry,
that's
what
I
believe
and
no
one's
gonna
really
convince
me.
Otherwise.
C
I
think
you're
gonna
see
for
this
upcoming
tax
year
they're
going
to
raise
the
tax
rate
for
the
schools.
We
saw
that
that's
going
to
cut
that's
going
to
be
voted
on
they're,
going
to
raise
the
the
tax
rate.
You
know
they
have
this
other
thing
here
for
this
1.424
mills,
another
race.
Here
what
you've
done
there
when
you
raise
these
rates
and
when
you
raise
what
people
are
paying
and
then
you
look
at
what
it
costs
for
housing
versus
what
the
incomes
are?
C
So
you
know
I
would
support
some
dollars
to
go
to
the
affordable
housing
fund
to
do
some
gap
financing,
but
I'm
much
more
interested
in
coming
up
with
long
lines
like
there
are
certain
spots
where
we
have
to
not
approve
land
use
plans
because
they're
not
bringing
us
enough
density
that
we're
we're
wasting
some
of
this
land
that
could
be
used
and-
and
I
get
it,
I
served
in
parkland
of
all
places.
No
one
wants
anything
built
near
them
for
anything,
but
all
everybody
talks
about
is
the
affordable
housing
crisis.
C
So
that's
why
I'd
ask
for
that,
because
I
think
next
year
we
are
the
people
that
pay.
Our
bills
are
going
to
be
in
crisis
mode
too,
and
I
think
that
our
our
tax
rates
are
going
to
be
up
a
lot.
C
Our
property
taxes
are
going
to
be
up
a
lot
and
the
ones
who
really
get
beaten
up
by
that
are
the
affordable,
housing
people,
the
people
that
are
in
rentals,
I'm
in
a
homestead
and
protected
property.
I'm
not
getting
hurt
that
bad
if
that,
if
my
tax
rate
goes
up,
but
if
you're
in
a
rental
you're
paying
for
that
and
and
no
one's
going
to
convince
me,
otherwise,
those
dollars
are
being
passed
on.
I
read
every
transaction
that
takes
place
in
broward
county.
C
I
read
them
all
in
the
daily
business
review,
I'm
looking
at
multi-family
they're
selling
for
double
and
triple.
When
that
happens,
those
rents
are
going
up.
I
don't
care
how
many
tenant
bill
of
rights
we
have.
I
don't
care
how
many
resolutions
we
pass.
This
is
supply
and
demand
in
my
in
my
opinion,
so
I'm
well.
I'm
one
vote.
I'm
not
voting
for
a
millage
rate
to
do
an
affordable
housing
tax
I'll
I'll
speak
to
the
broward
workshop.
I
have
every
member
come
in
here:
I've
spoken
to
them.
C
They
many
of
them
know
that
even
the
school
board
tax,
they
called
me,
and
they
said.
Of
course
we
want
to
pay
teachers
more
and,
of
course,
those
six.
Eight
ten
thousand
people
are
going
to
get
a
few
extra
dollars
in
their
paycheck,
but
we're
going
to
be
exacerbating
the
affordable
housing
next
year
and
it's
the
one
thing
that
people
call
me
on
over
and
over
again.
C
So
I
will
not
I'm
not
going
to
support
the
bond,
so
I
don't
know
you
know
whether
I'm
supposed
to
say
that
or
not,
but
I'm
not
going
to
vote
for
it,
the
millage
rate
reduction.
I
think
we
should
do
something
to
give
taxpayers
a
break
with.
That
said,
it's
more,
I
kind
of
agree
with
senator
geller
as
long
as
we're
not
taking
those
dollars
and
sticking
them
in
recurring
and-
and
I
knew
when
people
came
to
me
now.
C
C
We
had
this
in
the
past
with
different
buildings
that
we
built
that
we
wanted
to
do
it
and
we
we
brought
on
recurring
things
and
when
the
last
housing
downturn
came,
we
couldn't
afford
to
pay
for
them
and
and
and
that's
considered
a
city
that
was,
you
know
very
much
in
the
green
and
it
became
very
expensive.
I
think
we're
at
that
point
now,
so
I'm
not
really
in
favor
of
spending
50
million
dollars
a
year
for
someone
to
come
and
say
to
me:
we've
added
a
thousand
affordable
housing
units.
C
I
I
don't
like
the
word
absorption
when
a
developer
says
I
can't
do
the
pricing
because
of
absorption
and
I
gotta
release
it
very
slow.
We
should
be
demanding
in
some
of
these
areas
when
they're
coming
that
they
have
to
have
more
density,
and
if
we're
not
going
to
do
that,
then
let's
stop
the
charade
of
we're
all
about
the
affordable
housing,
because
we're
really
not
now.
I
know
I'm
going
to
get
yelled
at
in
a
few
speakers
and
I'm
ready
for
that,
but
it's
just
something
I
believe
in.
F
D
While
we're
on
affordable
housing
ralph,
what
is
it
517?
000
is
the
medium
sales
price
of
a
home?
Was
it
540
now?
Did
it
go
550?
So
so
it
went
up
two
weeks
to
550,
okay
and
obviously,
I've
been
a
huge
proponent
of
affordable
housing.
I
have
cheered
it
and
wanted
to
be
a
part
of
the
solution,
but
it
is
so
difficult
and
don't
want
to
be
repetitive.
D
But
you
know
land
is
not
cheap
in
broward
county
and
until
we
give
some
type
of
incentives
to
developers
they're
going
to
build
market
rate
they're
going
to
build
fee,
simple
and
they're
going
to
maximize
it,
the
best
they
can-
and
I
don't
care
what
you
say-
you're
going
to
give
them.
It
is
the
almighty
dollar
and
that's
america,
and
that,
but
so
you
can't,
you
know,
put
a
a
round
peg
in
a
square
hole
and
that's
what
we've
been
trying
to
do.
So
I
think
we've
made
some
strides.
D
I
think,
with
senator
geller's
move
with
some
zoning
opportunities
a
couple
years
ago
that
we
brought
forth.
I
think
that
is
helping
to
some
extent.
I
feel
still
thinking
he's
tweaking.
I
know
the
dda
and
I
know
that
the
workshop
have
approached
me
and
they're
working
on
some
tweaking
of
that
senator
and
I
think
they've.
D
Seeing
it
so
you'll
see
that
and
you'll
see
some
cost,
maybe
ten
thousand
a
unit
whatever
they're
going
to
come
up
with
to
build
into
that
fund.
I
know
ralph,
hopefully,
you've
been
involved
in
that
conversation
as
well.
So
I
think
there's
some
other
items
that
we
can
come
forward.
I
I
am
not
in
favor
of
raising
the
village
in
a
new
way,
shape
or
form
for
anything.
D
I
am
okay
with
a
reduction,
but
as
senator
geller
says
you
know,
we've
been
these
cycles
before
and
we're
gonna
have
another
one
and
I
am
in
the
real
estate
industry.
So
I've
seen
many
many
of
them.
I've
worked
at
the
rct
rtc
days
and
the
fdic
days
and
the
snl
days
and
the
savings
and
loans
were
just
going
bust
and
we
were
selling
three
and
400
properties
a
night
throughout
this
country
at
auction.
D
I
don't
think
we're
going
to
get
there,
but
I
think
there's
going
to
be
a
market
correction
in
in
the
future,
because
again
it's
just
the
cycle.
It's
just
the
nature
of
the
beast
that
we
are
in,
so
we
have
to
be
prepared
for
that.
D
So
going
back
to
the
reduction
in
the
millage,
I
agree
mayor
with
you
and
if
there's
any
way,
we
can
do
that,
but
at
the
same
time,
what
senator
geller's
saying
too
is
once
we
go
down,
then
it's
hard
to
get
back
up
again,
so
I
would
would
not
want
to
to
forego
any
any
programs
that
we
are
doing
now
for
that
millage
reduction.
So,
but
I
do
not
want
to
raise
taxes,
I
would
be
in
favor
of
keeping
it
as
it
is.
Today
I
was
the
proponent
for
the
homeless,
the
northern
hack.
D
The
reason
is,
I
believe
we
need
to
provide
some
sort
of
a
housing
component
like
we've
done
in
the
central
hacc,
and
so
thank
you.
If
you
would
support
that,
I
would
appreciate
that,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
regional
communications
we've
talked
about
legal
leg
is
fine.
Cultural
grants
are
great.
D
When
I
was
mayor
of
pompano
that
helped
the
city
tremendously
that
we
were
not
having
to
raise
millage
rates,
we
were
actually
to
depend
on
those
reserves
to
make
budget
balanced
budget
at
the
end
of
the
day
during
those
bad
times,
and
we
were
one
of
the
few
cities
that
were
able
to
do
that,
and
thanks
to
the
foresight
of
the
commission
and
the
city
manager
and,
of
course,
the
mayor,
that's
good.
D
I
think
that
senator
gill
is
on
target
for
there.
So
anytime,
you
can
build
a
reserve.
Let's
do
it,
because
again
that
day
is
going
to
come.
Thank
you
mayor.
K
G
Okay,
well
I'd
just
like
to
comment
to
to
you
kim
and
kim,
and
to
monica.
There
was
a
reason
why
I
felt
that
the
bond
the
affordable
bond
should
be
at
a
workshop
and
not
at
a
at
a
workshop
like
this
with
dr
murray
here
and
with
the
facts
about
what
is
going
on
with
affordable
housing
in
broward.
First
of
all,
I
I've
done
this
before
when
a
colleague
of
mine
a
couple
of
years
ago,
said
that
affordable
housing
is
it's
well,
that's
your
project.
G
Let's,
let's
just
make
this
clear.
This
is
not
my
project.
This
is
the
project
or
should
be
the
project
of
nine
commissioners.
It
should
be
the
project
of
everybody
up
here
and
all
the
people
who
work
for
broward
county,
because
many
of
them
are
the
ones
we're
talking
about
who
don't
and
can't
afford
housing.
G
So
I
I
just
you
know
would
like
to
you
know
once
and
for
all
kind
of
get
that
straight.
This
is
the
greatest
need
in
all
the
broward
county,
and
actually
commissioner
moskowitz
is
just
here,
but
the
commissioner
eudean
and
I
are
the
ones
that
have
had
the
least
amount
of
affordable
housing
in
our
districts.
I
know
for
sure
I
have
because
of
where
I
live,
and
but
but
again
it's
not
about
my
district.
It's
not
about
his
district,
it's
about
all
of
our
districts,
it's
about
broward
county!
G
So
I'm
hoping
that
you
know.
I
know
a
lot
of
people
have
said
they
would
not
consider
this
this
this
bond,
it's
a
bond.
Remember
that
and
we're
trying
to
accommodate
the
bond.
Now
we've
asked
dr
murray,
who
is
the
associate
director
of
the
fiu
metropolitan
center.
They
are
the
ones
that
did
our
2018,
affordable
housing
study
they.
G
He
has
just
come
back
with
the
updated
2022
and
he
presented
the
the
facts
and
figures
that
he
has
right
now,
he's
not
totally
finished,
but
he
presented
quite
a
bit
and
mr
fur
was
there
and
heard
it
and
in
his
words
he
said,
the
state
of
affordable
housing
in
broward
county
is
catastrophic.
He
didn't
even
say
just
crisis.
He
said
it's
catastrophic
and
it
is
and
just
to
let
you
know
just
a
few
of
the
some
of
the
critical
findings
include.
G
Only
eight
percent
of
broward
county
residents
can
afford
the
the
current
median
sale
price,
which
that
day,
commissioner
fisher
was
540.
000
of
a
single
family
home
gaps
gaps
exist
in
affordability
for
for
homes,
at
that
price,
between
two
and
three
hundred
thousand
dollars,
rents
have
increased
over
thirty
percent
and
are
still
going
up
in
2018.
There
are
147
hundred
and
thirteen
cost
burden
renters
in
in
in
broward
county
those
spending
over
thirty
percent
of
their
income
on
housing.
G
Now
there
are
two
hundred
and
fifty
four
thousand
and
most
the
most
dramatic
growth
in
in
those
increased
rental.
Households
happens
to
be
not
in
the
30,
but
in
the
those
who
spend
50
and
above
on
housing,
there's
only
a
1.4
vacancy
rate.
The
average
two-bedroom
apartment
has
gone
up
from
1902.18
in
2018
to
between
25
and
3
2,
500
and
3
000.
G
Now-
and
these
are
just
a
few
of
the
of
the
critical
findings-
and
I
will
tell
you
I
I
took-
I
told
the
group
at
the
prosperity,
affordability,
housing
summit,
some
of
the
good
things
that
broward
has
done
and
we
did-
we've
spent
35
million
dollars
for
gap
financing
which
has
been
placed
in
the
2018
voter,
approved,
affordable
housing
trust
fund.
Unlike
the
sadowski,
it's
a
lock
box.
G
Everything
that
went
in
there
has
been
spent
specifically
on
affordable
housing
and
will
continue
to
be
by
the
the
vote
of
the
of
the
the
people
of
broward
county.
I
mentioned
about
the
47
million
dollars.
We've
made
also
some
land
and
zoning
changes
that
have
been
helpful,
but
it's
it's
not
the
the
solution
and
we're
grateful
for
the
federal
funding
this
year
of
47
million
dollars,
but
we
can't
rely
as
we've
seen
on
the
state
of
florida
or
the
federal
government,
because
those
those
were
one-time
monies.
Someone
mentioned
the
hometown
heroes,
here's
an
example.
G
So
last
year
they
cut
50
percent
out
of
the
sadowski
monies
that
go
to
housing
for
other
purposes,
and
then
they
split
the
money
between
the
ship
program,
which
is
the
housing
and
the
sale,
which
is
the
apartments
and
the
hometown
heroes
budget.
100
million
dollars
should
have
come
the
money
for
that
should
have
come
out
of
the
ship
program
because
that's
for
homes
and
that's
what
the
hometown.
G
Heroes
is
okay,
but
instead
they
took
100
100
million
dollars
out
of
200
million
dollars
out
of
the
sale
program,
which
leaves
probably
around
100
million
for
the
entire
state
of
florida
for
a
multi-family
unit.
So,
as
I
just
said
we
have
to,
we
can't
rely
on
them.
We
have
to
rely-
and
this
is
dr
murray's
feelings
too.
I
mean
this
is
what
he
brings
forward.
G
You
have
to
rely
on
yourselves
on
your
local
community,
and
the
answer,
as
far
as
he
is
concerned
is
unlike
what
you're
saying,
commissioner
eugene
is
you
have
to
keep
building
you
have
to
keep
building
and
you
must
have
a
dedicated
source
of
revenue
for
building.
Someone
asked
about
the
the
the
the
funding
for
the
affordable
housing
trust
fund.
That's
a
nice
amount.
We've
put
five
to
ten
million
dollars
in
we've
promised
to
put
in
50
of
the
cra
money.
G
Fine,
but
it's
it's
a
very
small
amount
of
money
when
you're
looking
at
the
problem,
so
I
I
was
checking
around
the
country
to
see
what
people
had
done
that
worked
and
I
researched
a
number
of
measures
that
were
passed
in
in
various
counties
and
the
one
that
stood
out
to
me.
The
most
was
the
general
obligation
bond
that
was
passed
in
the
amount
of
580
million
dollars
in
alameda
county
california.
G
G
Palm
beach
county
is
now
looking
at
and
looks
like
they
may
pass
a
200
million
dollar
bond.
I
don't
really
think
that's
enough,
but
hey
you
know
whatever
whatever
you
can
get,
if
they're
their
commissioners
are
willing
to
to
look
at
that,
and
500
million
is,
is
not
the
end-all,
be-all
figure.
We
could
talk
about
it,
but
I
would
like
people
to
be
open-minded
and
to
think
about
all
these.
These
issues
right
now
that
are
causing
us,
and
I
have
to
say
someone
mentioned
about
the
business
community.
G
You
might
be
very
surprised
about
the
business
community.
Actually,
one
of
the
the
co-chairs
of
this
event
was
a
a
business
person
and
people.
People
realize
that
this
is
impacting
the
economic
development.
The
ability
to
bring
corporations
bring
bring
companies
here.
There
is
no
housing
for
them,
so
there
it
may
be
very
interesting.
Some
said
you
know
some
of
these
things
bring
so
many
jobs.
Well,
they
better
bring
some
housing
along
with
it,
because
people
aren't
going
to
have
a
place
to
live
so
it
is.
G
I
said
I
I
I'm
hoping
that
that
dr
murray
will
be
able
to
be
with
us
on
the
14th
to
do
a
presentation
about
this
and
give
everyone
the
the
overall
view
of
the
updated
study,
and
you
know
just
to
discuss
what
the
options
are.
But,
as
I
said
from
what
what
I
have
learned
and
certainly
what
I've
learned
from
him
and
that
that
we
have
got
to
have
a
dedicated
source
of
revenue
or
we
will
not
be
able
to
do
anything
about
this.
G
And
you
know
people
will
people
are
beginning
to
leave
broward
county.
We
know
that
because
they
can't
live
here.
It
is
according
to
to
dr
murray.
Also,
it
is
the
you
know,
one
of
the
most
unaffordable
places
to
live
in
the
united
states
of
america
and
we
shouldn't
be
proud.
You
know
I
mean
that
we
need
to.
We
need
to
do
something
about
it
to
help
the
people
who
live
here
and,
as
I
said,
if
you
just
look
at
our
own
people,
because
I
talked
to
to
kim
to
monica
about
this,
we
have.
G
We
have
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
people
right
here
employed
by
us
who
who
are
having
problems
living
so
and
and
finding
affordable
housing.
So
it
is,
it
is,
as
he
says,
dr
murray
says
it's
catastrophic,
and
it
deserves
a
lot
more
attention
than
just
you
know.
G
Thank
you
and
I'll
just
mention
the
other
things
I
totally
am
in
favor
of
the
homeless
northern
hack.
Another
affordable
housing
issue
is
transitional
housing
for
people
coming
out
of
you
know,
out
of
homeless
situations
coming
out
of
jails.
G
People
coming
out
of
that
have
had
mental
health
issues
that
need
to
have
a
supportive,
permanent,
supportive
housing.
So
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
issues
here,
and
so
I
certainly
support
that,
and
you
know,
as
far
as
the
millage
reduction
we
have
too
many
needs
for
the
people
in
this
community
to
think
about
reducing
knowledge.
C
C
So
maybe
I
could
could
you
could
you
just
expand
upon
senator
rich
made
some
numbers
of
rental
units?
How
much
of
a
deficiency
we're
in
she?
I
think
she
said
254,
000
rental
units
deficiency
versus
how
many
we're
adding
are
caught
cost
burden.
Okay,
so
we're
254,
000
cost
burden
rental
units.
What
does
that
mean.
AS
That
means
that
the
the
individual
individuals
or
families
that
are
occupying
them
are
spending
more
than
30
percent
of
their
income
on
housing
and
that's
an
elevated
number
from
about
150
000.
When
dr
murray
did
this
in
2018..
So.
C
C
So
we've
gone
from
we're
still
I
mean
the
1700
has
really
not
even
made
a
ripple
in
this
pond
we're
over
a
hundred
thousand
rent
burden.
People
now,
I'm
assuming
that
this
rent
burden
calculation
is
what
somebody
makes
or
family
makes
versus
what
they
pay
for
rent.
That's
correct,
okay,
so
the
what
they
pay
for
rent
number
for
a
second
when
all
when
everyone's
expenses
go
up
and
when
these
landlords
raise
these
prices,
let's
just
take
a
hundred
dollars
for
lack
of
anything
else
on
any
kind
of
unit.
C
AS
You
know
I
don't
I
don't
know
the
exact
number
on
that,
but
but
a
number
yes,
sir.
Let
me
let
me
provide
just
a
quick
perspective
and
I
say
this
all
the
time:
affordable
housing
is
a
real
estate
deal
with
the
subsidy
and
it
doesn't
matter
if
you're
putting
50
000
a
unit
into
a
gap
financing
deal
or
if
you're
doing
a
land
use
incentive
program.
It
all
reverts
back
to
a
pro
forma
that
fills
a
gap.
100.
AS
The
flip
side
of
that
is
wages.
Wages
in
this
country
haven't
gone
up,
adjusted
for
inflation
since
the
mid
70s
everything
else
that
we
count
on
to
live
in
absolutely
has.
I
think
you
all
know
that
right.
So
so
the
final
question
I
get
sometimes
is
this
is
overwhelming.
I
can't
deal
with
it.
What
if
we
do
nothing
and
here's
my
answer?
We
become
california
right
service
people,
don't
go
there.
AS
Middle
level,
professionals
leave,
managers,
leave
and
ultimately,
businesses
move
out
and
we're
now
the
most
expensive
metro
area
to
live
in
the
united
states
more
expensive
than
new
york
city
more
expensive
than
san
francisco,
which
is
like
staggering.
I've
had
two
senior
employees
that
have
left
in
the
last
month.
One's
rent
went
up
six
hundred
dollars,
one
went
up
nine
hundred
dollars,
they
left
left
the
county,
they
left
the
area,
they
got
cheaper
housing,
they
got
a
bigger
salary.
AS
So
that's
that's
what
we're
faced
with
and
it
is
absolutely
intimidating,
but
we
have
to
start
which
we've
done,
and
I
give
the
board
a
ton
of
credit.
There's
not
a
county
commission
in
the
state
that
I've
observed
that
have
come
to
the
table
with
general
fund
dollars,
but
for
miami-dade,
which
is
their
doc
stamps
that
has
done
as
much
as
as
you
guys
and
and
ladies
have,
but
you
have
to
start.
AS
The
the
other
thing
to
understand
is
that
we're
dealing
with
the
legacy
bucket,
but
we
don't
talk
about
all
of
this
new
development
that
happens
and
dr
murray
has
done.
He
studied
that
far.
So
I
went
back
and
looked
at
all
of
the
new
units
that
were
constructed
in
2021
and
all
of
the
retail
and
office
square
footage
that
was
constructed
in
2021
that
development
generated
the
need
for
600
additional,
affordable
units.
AS
The
formula
is
easy
for
every
hundred
new
units
of
market
rate
you're,
generating
a
need
for
seven
affordable
units
for
every
hundred
thousand
square
feet
of
office
and
retail
another
seven
affordable
units,
the
the
legislature
has
has
it-
has
put
in
place
legislation
that
doesn't
allow
us
to
treat
those
kinds
of
requirements
as
impact
fees
like
they
do
water,
sewer,
drainage
and
roads
in
many
in
many
states,
colorado
and
california,
affordable
housing
and
their
impact
fee
ordinance
is
defined
as
infrastructure.
AS
If
we
had
that
one
simple
definition,
it
would
go
into
a
developer's
pro
farma
and
we
would
have
to
have
an
economic
environment
here
that
could
absorb
that
hit.
We
do,
but
it
would
great
the
mitigation
for
those
600
units,
so
we're
not
constantly
throwing
units
in
the
bucket
and
you're
exactly
right
mayor.
The
final
perspective
is
we
don't
have
an
ounce
of
dirt
right
and
without
dirt,
land
values
go
up.
AS
We
don't
have
density,
so
we
go
to
the
urban
areas.
What
does
that
generate
higher
land
cost
and
parking
structures
instead
of
doing
surface
parking
for
seven
thousand,
a
space
you're
in
a
parking
structure
for
twenty
five
to
thirty
thousand
space?
I
I
harken
back
again
it's
a
real
estate
deal
with
the
subsidy
and
the
final
point
I'll
make,
which
is,
is
again
to
the
board's
favor
this
last
round
of
funding
that
we
did
the
47
million.
AS
I
was
told
by
people
in
the
industry
that
the
gap
is
gonna,
come
in
at
seventy
five
to
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
unit
just
be
ready
for
it.
We
came
into
forty
seven
thousand
and
the
reason
that
happened
is
because
we
got
it
on
the
street
competition
happened.
You
know
we
created
an
environment
that
we
were
very
nimble.
AS
We
had
the
hfa
bond
fund
ready
to
to
absorb
all
of
that
funding,
and
we
got
it
done
so
as
we
sit
here
today,
I've
got
12
projects
in
the
pipeline
and
the
funding
in
the
gap
and
the
funding
and
the
bonds
to
do
it.
So,
commissioner,
and
all
of
y'all
it
is,
is
overwhelmingly
aggravating
and
intimidating,
but
we
we've
started.
C
If
this
is
the
area
that
you
want
to
try
and
attack
so
miami-dade,
they
have
this
big
bucket
that
they've
been
doing
for
a
while.
They
also
have
a
much
quicker
approval
process
on
a
lot
of
these
buildings
in
their
core
area.
To
get
these
buildings
up.
So,
whereas
we
can,
we
can
subsidize
with
gap
financing,
and
we
can
do
that.
You
can
also
subsidize
a
developer,
it's
all
modeled
in
financials
and
if
you
give
them
a
quicker
time
to
get
this
done
and
you
make
a
project
get
approved
in
six
months.
C
C
They
could
also
raise
their
wages
if
the
business
community,
just
like
we're
going
to
be
asked
to
raise
our
wages
over
these
next
few
meetings
with
the
living
wage
and
when
we
raise
our
wages.
All
of
those
rate
raised
wages
becomes
the
comment.
I
agree
with
senator
rich
100.
This
isn't
her
issue.
This
is
our
issue,
and
this
is
our
community's
issue.
C
Well,
it's
good
for
affordable
housing,
so
the
business
community
is
going
to
need
to
raise
wages
or
this
problem
is
not
going
to
get
fixed
the
we
cannot
keep
piling
on
these
additional
costs
to
marginal
homeowners.
What
about
the
people
that
are
paying
all
these
bills
that
are
right
on
the
bubble
that
are
working
whatever?
It
is
to
pay
this
stuff
that
don't
qualify
for
any
of
this
they're,
the
ones
that
are
now
being
pushed
into
this
affordable
housing
bucket,
because
we're
raising
all
these
fees
and
we're
raising
all
these
costs
on
them.
C
So
I
think
in
a
lot
of
the
stuff,
we're
doing
we're,
pushing
this
back
and
adding
more
people
to
a
problem-
that's
already
there.
But
what
do
I
know,
but
that's
I
mean
just
what
I
see
from
and
I
think
it's
only
going
to
get
worse
and
worse.
I
think
next
year
is
going
to
be
a
bigger
problem.
I
think
fuel
prices
are
going
to
really
really
lead
to
this.
We
don't
have
the
afford.
We
don't
have
the
transportation
in
our
community,
so
those
prices,
you
know
completely
rent
burden
people.
C
G
Could
you
let
him
just
come
and
respond
to
you
on
how
fast
we
got
those
nine
projects
out,
because
you
know
he
was
talking
about
how
long
it
takes
and
how
jay
does
it
so
much
faster
and
ralph
did
an
amazing
job
and
it
just
within
a
very
short
period
of
time.
It's
amazing
that
we
got
all
that
those
okay.
AS
Mary,
I
mean
you're
out
on
target,
we've
got
31
municipalities,
some
are
extremely
slow,
others
are
better,
but
in
our
request
for
applications
we
create
bonus,
point
incentives
that
they
can
close
in
a
year.
Okay,
so
like
the
the
projects
that
you
just
approved,
almost
all
of
them
took
advantage
that
bonus
point
and
we're
already
having
bond
calls
on
most
of
those
deals.
So
it
can't
it
can
go
faster
than
that.
The
general
rule
of
thumb.
C
AS
C
You
mean
to
tell
me:
I
start,
I
find
a
piece
of
land
and
I'm
ready
to
turn
dirt
in
10
months.
AS
AS
A
C
C
AS
Cornerstone
does
a
good
deal
they're,
usually
under
construction,
they're
they're
a
year
to
18
months,
pinnacle's,
the
same
all
the
big
ones,
htg
pinnacle
cornerstone,
evergreen,
they're,
all
almost
packaged
the
same
way.
So
you
can.
AS
Again,
my
observation
is
it's
about
a
year
to
get
fully
permitted
and
that's
not
just
at
the
city.
There
are
other
permits,
state
and
county
permits.
You
close
on
your
bond
deal.
You
have
to
have
the
permits
in
hand,
then
you
have
18
months
to
construct
it
two
and
a
half
years.
Okay,
not
much
different
from
market
rate
stuff,
really.
C
Well,
I
think
the
market
rate
stuff,
I'm
not
saying
that
it's
any
different.
I
think
it's
slow
on
both
ends,
I
think
the
market
rate
and
the
affordable
house
and
the
affordable
cap
financing
deals
are
both
incredibly
slow
and
they're
way
too
slow.
If
we
want
to
solve
this
problem-
and
just
in
my
opinion,
from
what
I've
seen
but
I've
taken
too
long,
commissioner
farp.
F
Okay,
I'll
just
go
down
the
list,
real,
quick
on
the
regional
communications.
This
looks
like
it's
annualized,
so
that's
gonna,
that's
already
gonna
be
a
cost.
I
guess
what
I'm
hoping
is
bso
will
find
other
places
where
they
cut.
I
doubt
it
will,
but
I
think
that's
what
they
should
do:
the
legal
aid
for
immigration.
I
was
actually
at
this
community
id
thing
the
other
day
and
at
hollywood
they
had
to
cut
the
line.
F
There
were
so
many
people
and
they
were
and
they
were
going
and
they
had
it
working
like
a
clock
100.
You
know,
I
think
they
can
do
100
people
a
day,
there's
an
enormous
amount
of
people
that
are
taking
advantage
of
this
every
time
they
do
it.
So
they
need
this
to
keep
going,
and
these
are
people
that
are
that
are
willing
to
work.
You
know
and
look
at
looking
for
jobs
and
everything
else,
so
I
think
we
should
keep
this
up
the
living
wage.
You
know
I
I
this
is.
F
F
F
F
F
So
it's
like
you
know
we
are
going
to
have
to
do
something
pretty
dramatic,
but
but
we've
got
to
be
strategic
about
it.
We
can't
just
go
throwing
money
at
it
and
and
and
figure
out.
The
long-term
plan
is
if
we
are
doing
something
like
that,
where
can
the
cra
money
be
be
paying
for
that
as
it
comes
in,
it
starts
to
come
in
or
something
like
that.
F
That's
what
I'm
talking
about
the
northern
heck.
My
only
question
on
this
and
lamar.
I
guess
you
brought
this
in
is
when
I,
when
I
think
of
housing
first
model.
F
How
does
how
is
this
different
from
what
we're
already
doing,
and
maybe
kim
you
can
help
me
as
well-
what's
different
from
this
than
our
housing
first,
where
we're
already
doing
transitional
because
we're
because
the
idea
is
not
we're
trying
to
go
away
from
shelters
and
then-
and
you
know,
the
shelter
is
somewhat
the
transition
or
or
in
our
model
the
shelters
are
transitioned.
Then
they
go
to
the
housing
first.
So
what
so
this?
But
this
seems
like
it's
adding
another
layer
of
transitional.
Y
F
R
And
commissioner,
I
might
be
able
to
also
add
some
perspective.
Am
I
okay
thank
you
and
I'm
sorry
to
interrupt
it's
hard
to
kind
of
get
into
you.
But
to
add
on
to
what
kim
was
talking
about
that
proposal?
R
Well,
it
was
described
as
homeless.
Northern
hack,
a
couple
of
commissioners
have
had
requested
this.
We
have
been
in
discussions
with
bb
hr
to
dis
at
the
northern
hack
for
a
council
that
we
could
convey
to
them,
and
we
have
had
conversations
about
doing
the
improvements
to
the
property
for
that
project,
so
that
three
million
dollars
would
be,
and
my
understanding
of
that
would
be
that
it
would
be
whatever
up
to
that
amount,
but
whatever
it
would
cost
us
to
get
that
property
conveyed
to
them
and
prepared
for
that
development
project.
F
But
again,
this
is
one
of
those
things
where,
if
you
build
smaller
units,
it
goes
a
whole
lot
further,
but
our
but
our,
but
our
our
zoning
laws
and
our
land
use
laws
are
not
reflecting
that
if
you
start
to
see
what's
happening
throughout
the
country,
you're
seeing
smaller
units
you're
seeing
a
lot
changes
in
density
in
single-family,
neighborhoods.
D
F
F
So
on
the
paint
program
I
know
I
know,
we've
been
doing
this
a
while
and
I'm
not
sure
why
we've
been
doing
I
mean
it's
been
going
on
for
a
long
time
and
well.
We
still
have
the
hazardous
waste
part.
So
why
is
it?
Why
is
that
not?
When
did
that?
Leave
the
hazardous
waste
part.
Y
F
Here's
what
and
the
the
program
works
great
working
hollywood
great
with
with
the
all
the
stuff
that's
going
on
with
solid
waste
and
the
way
that
the
assessments
might
come
with
this.
F
F
Maybe
we
don't
have
to
do
it
this
time,
but
it,
but
it
will
definitely
can
come
into
play
if
not
next
year,
the
year
after
on
all
of
those
cultural
grants,
I'm
happy
with
that
film
incentives,
especially
with
what's
going
on
with
fort
lauderdale
and
the
stuff
that'd,
be
great
military
reduction.
I
just
don't
see
it.
I
I
I
appreciate
the
conversation
on
it
mayor
because
I
think
you're
bringing
up
some
stuff
for
us
to
think
about,
but
given
the
needs
of
this
community
and
and
some
of
what
we're
seeing.
R
F
I
just
I
think,
we're
gonna,
I
think
we're
gonna
need
to
at
least
keep
it
where
it
is.
But
I
appreciate
the
the
conversation
on
and
that's.
P
Have
we
gotten
the
estimates
yet
from
the
property
appraiser
and
I
may
have
missed
it?
Have
we
gotten
the
estimates
from
the
property
appraiser
and
the
additional.
P
X
AJ
Yes,
I
don't
know
if
you're
here,
for
we
showed
this
chart
earlier,
which
was
from
the
retreat
at
the
time
of
the
retreat.
We
thought
it
might
be
a
seven
and
a
half
percent.
So
how.
AJ
It's
about
10
million
dollars
per
percent,
so
70
80
million
okay,
so,
but
so
just
but
we're
going
to
get
an
update.
So
we're
waiting
for
that
number
because
that's
the
number
one.
P
P
AB
J
Include
all
of
the
agencies
right.
P
Workshops
I'm
getting
well
that
will
be
in
there
I'm
getting
to
that
the
point
in
the
second
center,
which
is
when
we're
done
so.
Obviously,
that's
gonna
be
very
helpful
to
find
out
what
the
new,
what
the
new
revenue
coming
in,
so
that
that
would
be
number
one.
You
know
as
far
as
affordable
housing
and
you
know,
while
it
is
our
issue,
it's
not
of
our
making
right,
I
mean
it's
just
it's
just
the
cards
that
we've
been
dealt
and
everybody
is
dealing
with
it.
I
do
think
it.
P
It
does
need
some
response,
though
right.
Maybe
it's
not
a
500
million
dollar
response.
Maybe
it's
not
a
250
million
dollar
response,
but
it
does
deserve
some
sort
of
response.
You
know
it's
not
really
government's
function
to
tr
to
do
that.
But
what
happens
is
when
it
isn't
getting
done.
It
does
fall
on
us.
I
think
to
try
to
do
something,
and
so
I
I
do
think
we
should-
and
I
look
forward
to
the
workshop-
continue
to
look
at
ideas
of
what
we
what
we
need
to
be
doing
in
affordable
housing.
P
I
support
the
homeless
northern
hack.
Additionally,
in
addition
to
the
dollars
I'd
like
to
see
the
county
be
flexible
with
the
property,
I
think
they've
been
talking
to
us
for
a
while
now
on.
You
know
the
fact
that
they
want
to
go,
build
these
units
and
that
we
own
a
piece
of
the
area
they
own
a
piece
of
the
area
they
may
want
to
land.
Swap
it
I
mean
I'd
like
to
see
us
be
flexible.
P
There's
probably
there's
probably
a
couple
examples
out
there
in
which
it's
not
necessarily
dollars
from
us,
but
just
requires
us
being
slightly
more
flexible
and-
and
I
think
we
can
get
some
of
these
things
done
faster.
So
I'd
like
to
see
that
on
the
paint
program,
listen,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
2.4
million
dollars,
but
but
what
what
I'm
trying
to
do?
And
not?
P
Maybe
we
can
work
with
corporations
to
donate
some
of
the
paint,
but
I'm
I'm
trying
to
get
paint
and
paint
brushes
available
to
folks
that
want
to
make
their
neighborhood
look
nicer,
but
can't
afford
to
do
so,
and
I
represent
a
district
that
is
53
rental
market.
Most
of
people
can't
afford
to
own
a
home
there.
It's
got
the
highest
unemployment
rate,
it
has
the
lowest
median
income
rate,
and
so
you
know
I'm
looking
at
that
as
something
that
is
totally
directed
at
our
low-income
residents.
So.
W
P
Maybe
that
number's
not
2.4,
because
we
can't
afford
it,
maybe
it's
lower,
but
I
don't
want
to
see
it
go
to
zero.
I
want
to
see
us.
We
used
to
have
a
more
active
paint
program
and
it's
just
it's
gone.
It's
gone
away,
and
I've
heard
that
from
from
multiple
folks
in
my
neighborhood,
who
used
to
have
access
through
the
county,
to
the
paint
and
to
and
to
brushes
and
now
that
they
don't
have
that
access
anymore.
P
So
you
know
the
millage
rate
reduction
and
senator
geller
was
there
when
this
happened
right.
The
republicans
cut
all
those
taxes.
Year
after
year
after
year,
the
housing
market
collapsed
and
they
had
to
raise
fees
out
the
wazoo
right
to
get
all
that
money
back
and
that's
right
and
but
and
then
they
try
to
say.
P
I
mean
anyone
who
tells
you
that
you
know
our
republican
colleagues
are
fiscally
conservative
have
not
been
paying
attention
to
what's
been
going
on
in
tallahassee
the
last
couple
years,
they're
spending,
every
single
dollar
they're
getting
and
then
they're
raiding
trust
funds
to
spend
even
more
money,
and
so
look
I
would
love
to
be
aggressive.
I
would
love
that's
right,
right
and
right.
P
Look.
I
would
love
to
be
aggressive.
I
would
love
to
stop
sending
tallahassee
sadowski
money.
I
would
love
us
to
take
a
vote
that
we're
no
longer
going
to
send
that
money
to
tallahassee
and
let's
fight
it
out
with
them
over
it,
because
I
think
we
need
to
highlight
the
fact
that
we're
we're
literally
being
robbed
it
it
is
it
is.
P
It
is
a
robbery
of
dollars
that
come
out
of
this
county
to
go
into
a
trust
fund
that
are
then
supposed
to
come
back
to
this
county
to
help
the
most
needy
of
our
residents,
and
yet
that
money
is
going
to
whatever
the
speaker
and
the
senate
president
and
the
governor
decide
for
it
to
go
to
it's
not
going
to
housing
somewhere
else.
It's
just
going
to
other
stuff.
It
could
be
going
to
a
university
building,
it
could
go
into
a
fountain,
it
could
go
to
a
road
project
in
union
county.
P
We
have
no
idea
where,
where
that
money
goes
and-
and
the
funny
thing
about
it
is-
is
that
there
is
actually
bipartisan
agreement
that
we
should
stop
raiding
the
trust
fund
up
there.
But
for
some
reason
we
continue
to
raid
the
trust
fund,
and
so
you
know
look
I
don't
know
what
our
options
are
on
that
drew.
I
know
we've
discussed
it
privately
because
we've
had
this
conversation,
but
I
mean
at
some
point
in
time
the
county
has
to
figure
out
what
our
option
is
just
to
continue
to
send
this
money.
P
I
know
they'll
punish
us
other
ways.
They
have
the
power
we've
seen
what
happens
when
counties
take
stands
and
what
tallahassee
does,
but
it
we're
now
having
to
talk
about
floating
a
bond
because
money
we're
sending
them
for
this
exact
purpose
is
going
to
other
things.
It's
just
it.
It's
just
totally
ridiculous.
P
You
know
these
other
projects,
you
know,
look
look
good
at.
I
don't
necessarily
have
any
issues,
but
obviously,
if
we
shrink
this
sort
of
stuff
right,
I
do
think
we
we.
We
should
probably
try
to
prioritize
things
for
out
for
our
residents
that
are
in
the
lowest
income
brackets
right.
So
you
know
if,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
don't
spend
67
million
dollars.
I
I
don't
want
to
see
things
that
are
for
the
homeless
or
for
low-income
residents.
I
don't
want
to
see
those
things
cut.
P
What
I'd
like
to
see
are
you
know
parking
improvements
or
park
beautification
or
you
know
new
buildings,
things
of
that
nature,
and
I
don't
know
whose
project
is
which,
by
the
way,
I'm
just
if
we're
going
to
spend
less
money
at
least
we
should
at
least
help
those
who
need
it.
The
most
and
some
of
the
nicer
stuff
might
just
have
to
wait.
Quite
quite
frankly,
so
you
know
I
look
forward
to
having
that
discussion.
P
The
last
thing
on
that
is
one
of
the
things
I
think
we
should
do,
and
I
I
did
this
in
my
agency,
is
you
know.
Every
year
we
talk
about
spending
new
money,
but
we
don't
go
back
previously
to
figure
out.
How
did
we
do
with
the
money
we
spent?
Where
can
we
make?
Where
can
we
save
money
in
our
agencies?
P
Right,
I
mean
there
are
corporations
now
that
are
hiring
companies
and
what
you're
f
and
they
come
in.
They
do
a
full
audit
and-
and
I
read
it
the
other
day
that,
like
one
of
the
major
oil
firms
saved
250
000
a
year
because
they
still
had
light
bulbs
that
were
not
led
right
and
it
sounds
so
that
sounds
so
ridiculous,
but
I
I
do
feel
like
we
have
a
multi-billion
dollar
budget.
P
P
The
way
they
do
it
is
you
don't
pay
them
they
they
keep
a
percentage
of
the
savings
that
they
find
for
you,
I
think,
is
how
how
it
works
in
the
private
industry,
but
I'd
like
to
see
if
we
could
find
savings
in
general
to
see
you
know
how
we
can
do
things
more
efficiently.
It's
not
getting
rid
of
people,
that's
not
what
I'm
talking
about,
but
I
I'm
willing
to
bet.
P
If
we
really
looked
and
someone
came
in
and
said
hey,
you
know
you
could
save
money
by
doing
this
or
you
could
save
money
by
doing
this,
that
that
we
would
come
up.
We'd
come
up
with
real
money.
Think
about
if
we
found
one
percent
of
our
budget,
it's
real
money.
So
you
know.
I
would
like
to
I'd
like
to
see
that
as
part
of
the
budget
discussion
trying
to
figure
out
is
how
we
can
we
can.
H
C
Following
on
something
that
jared
said
that
I've
always
been
a
little
bit
interested
in
there's,
there's
like
some
county
pro
like
somebody
came
to
me
one
time
and
said:
there's
a
there's,
a
county
small
little
warehouse
where
they
keep
files,
it's
right
by
where
they
do
some
of
the
political
meetings
right
by
like
that,
tar
that
that
area
down
downtown
fort
lauderdale,
where
developer
owns
most
of
the
block,
there's
a
little
piece
right
in
the
middle,
where
it's
a
county
facility
that
has
some
files.
C
C
C
So
the
developer
says
I
own
all
the
land
around
all
that
I'll
build
you
the
way
I'll
keep
the
warehouse
right
there,
I'll
rebuild
it.
Let
me
build
units,
it
could
be
affordable,
they
could
be
micro
units,
they
could
be
whatever
you
want
and
I'll
build
something
right
where
that
warehouse
is
you'll.
Fee
simple
on
the
warehouse
would
be
a
brand
new
warehouse
but
I'm
being
held
up
by
the
county,
because
that's
right
in
the
middle
of
my
parcel-
and
I
want
to
build
you
know-
let
me
build
there,
so
we
can
give.
C
We
can
give
gap
financing
to
somebody.
We
can
give
them
50
million
dollars-
or
we
could
say
to
this
guy-
build
us
a
new
warehouse
and
build
us
2,
000
micro
units
right
there
that
that
that
you're
going
to
put
on
the
market
and
have
some
availability
for
people
who
live.
So
how
do
we
go
about
doing
that?.
C
AS
I'm
not
going
to
bother
you
hardly
well,
you
know,
there's
a
there's
established
process
for
declaring
county
property
surplus.
They
need
to
go
through
that.
I
don't
know
exactly
how
what
the
use
is,
what
the
long
term
is.
I
know
the
property
pretty
well,
because
I
drive
by
there
every
day
all
the
way
to
work.
It's
a
little
narrow,
skinny
warehouse.
I
actually
don't
know.
What's
in
there,
he
owns
the
rest
of
the
block
it
its
future
should
be
limited.
But
again
I
don't
know
what
the
use
is
or
what
the
alternatives
are.
C
C
So
it's
good!
So,
okay!
So
I'm
not
really
like
a
government
type
person.
I'm
I'm
the
mayor,
but
I
don't
understand,
but
I
get
it.
You
got
to
go
through
a
surplus
property
deal.
You
got
to
go
through
years
and
years
to
figure
out
the
guy
will
build
a
warehouse.
If
you
need
x
number
of
file
units
he'll
build
it
there.
Why
don't
we
engage?
You
know
the
people
that
own
the
assemblage
around
it.
It
seems
to
make
a
lot
of
sense.
Tell
him.
P
A
P
Perhaps
what
what
should
happen
is
because
I'm
sure
this
is
not
the
only
area
and
it
wasn't
the
only
thing
with
the
with
the
home,
with
the
broward
partner
for
the
homeless
either.
If
perhaps
the
a
list
of
these
sort
of
decisions
right
can
be
brought
to
the
board,
because
perhaps
maybe
there
are
processes
that
staff
has
to
file
follow,
because
there
are
processes
that
have
to
follow,
but
perhaps
the
board.
P
If
the
board
wants
to
do
something
faster
and
be
more
flexible,
perhaps
we
can
give
staff
that
that
direction
if
we're
aware
that
these
are
these
are
these
are
things
that
are
out
there?
I,
I
don't
know
I'm
still
relatively
new
here,
but
you
know
if,
if
there
are
opportunities
like
that,
rather
than
spending
money
or
budgeting
to
fix
things,
perhaps
we
can
make
process
pro
progress
just
by
being
more
flexible.
P
D
Bear
you
know,
I
I'm
ralph,
I'm
sure,
there's
processes
where
you
know
if
they
haven't,
somebody
can
come
in
and
do
an
unsolicited
proposal
on
on
a
surplus
property
and
then
yeah.
You
know
you
put
it
out
for
a
bit
for
30
days,
nobody's
going
to
match
it
because
he's
going
to
build
a
gazillion
things,
I
mean
you
can
narrow
the
process
down.
Just
can't
just
say
hey.
This
will
clear
this
surplus
and
sell
it
to
the
highest
bidder.
You
can
put
restrictions
on
it
on
what
you
want
to
do
with
it.
C
S
R
And
mr
mayor
and
and
vice
mayor
started
to
interrupt,
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
I
chime
in
and
let
you
know
that,
certainly
if
there's
ever
something
like
a
one-off,
like
that
situation,
we
clearly
would
be
open
to
having
a
conversation
and
if
there's
something
that
we
would
need
to
bring
to
the
board,
we
certainly
would
do
that.
R
But
the
example
that
you
just
made-
I
am
not
aware
of
personally,
but
we're
certainly
willing
to
talk
with
any
individual
and
and-
and
we
have
people
come
to
us
all
over
the
county.
Just
like
bphi
did
on
county
parcels
and
if
it
works,
we
will
make
that
happen.
So
we're
not
close
to
those
opportunities
and
situations
we
just
you
know
it
was
their
brought
to
our
attention.
We
certainly
will
to
do
that.
J
Mr
america,
since
we
were
talking
about
that
transit
oriented
development
which
again
we
passed
an
ordinance
on
and
that
if
pompano
beach
has
adopted
it,
I've
spoken
with
hollywood,
lauderdale,
lakes
and
plantation.
I
know
that
at
least
all
three
of
them
are
going
to
be
adopting
it.
Remember
it
just
became
more
relatively
recently
and
they
have
to
adopt
an
ordinance,
but
it's
what
we're
looking
for.
That
will
create
many
thousands
of
units,
but
only
on
the
transit
corridors
and
the
activity.
J
Centers,
so
it'll
be
do
what
we
need
build
a
lot
more
units,
which
is
the
only
way
we
can
reduce
this,
because
we're
never
going
to
be
able
to
fix
the
law
of
supply
and
demand
or
alter
it,
but
we're
also
protecting
the
neighborhoods,
because
it's
only
on
the
transit
corridors,
it's
actually
happening.
It's
just
taking
a
while
for
the
cities
to
work
on
it
and
less
than
a
week
ago
I
met
with
the
you
know,
pompano's
initial
request.
J
We
had
seven
or
eight
planners
there
from
the
cities
and
and
the
the
county
agencies
and
we've
reached
agreement
on
of
the
one
of
the
big
concerns.
Was
they
had?
Some
people
were
complaining
about
the
10
rule
and
I
said
I'm
not
willing
to
eliminate
that
because
otherwise,
los
olas
will
be
entirely
developed
just
for
residential,
but
if
you're
going
to
build
on
land
that
is
currently
commercial,
because
that's
the
idea
behind
this
put
residential
housing
in
the
shopping
centers
make
it
put
it
on
top
of
ground
floor
commercial.
J
But
the
land
is
worth
more
if
they
can
just
replace
the
commercial
and
eliminate
that
and
just
have
residential.
So
I'm
not
willing
to
do
that.
People
are
moving
to
downtowns
so
that
they
can
go
to
the
bars,
the
restaurants,
the
shopping,
and
if
we
let
them,
they
would
just
eliminate
the
bars
the
restaurant,
the
shoppings.
But
I
agree
that
we
can
amend
that
to
say
if
you're
building
a
20-story
building
as
long
as
your
ground
floor
is
commercial.
J
Well,
that's
not
going
to
be
10,
but
that's
okay.
As
long
as
you've
got
the
ground
floor,
commercial
so
and
there
were
some
other
concerns
that
the
cities
had.
I
think
we
have
fixed
all
of
those,
and
I
think
that
when
we
come
back
from
summer
break
at
one
of
the
first
meetings,
you'll
see
some
amendments
to
the
ordinance,
a
one
of
which
pompano
asked
that
they
in
order
to
be
eligible
for
the
county
incentives,
because
remember,
we've
incentivized
them
now.
J
If
they
make
it
a
permitted
use,
not
a
conditional
use
or
special
exception,
pompano
said
well,
we
don't
want
to
do
that
in
all
of
our
commercial,
because
we
don't
want
to
have
to
put
that
in
the
resident
in
the
warehouse
areas
and
the
industrial
we
said,
fine,
the
spokes
county
attorney
said
we
didn't
need
to
amend
the
ordinance,
we're
just
amending
our
interpretation
of
it.
So
it's
actually
occurring
it's
just
taking
a
little
while
so
so
I'm
chuckling,
because
I
just
got
a
text
from
monica,
so
we
can
move
on
to
the
next
slide.
J
Now.
I
think
everyone
thought
we
were
almost
done.
I'm
sorry,
but
it
was
good
that
we
got
to
have
that
discussion.
So
we
can
move
on
to
the
next
slide
now
monica
do
you
want
to
run
through
these,
or
do
you
want
me?
Yes,
and
I
said
mayor
to
clarify,
I
did
say
I
can
move
us
on
to
the
next
one.
If
you
are
ready.
J
So
I
just
wanted
to
walk
us
through
the
final
slide.
Really,
this
is
is
just
the
capital
submissions
that
were
submitted
by
the
board
members,
and
I
just
wanted
to
get
a
sense
of
where
you
all
might
be
on.
J
Some
of
these
you'll
see
that
the
top
two
requests
are
related
to
and
called,
and
the
hollywood
north
beach
park
improvements,
including
some
parking
improvements
and
restaurant
pavilion
and
then
there's
the
everett
race
holiday
park,
new
campsite
exploration
that
you
guys
may
have
heard
about
there's
some
land
that
was
offered
up
by
fish
and
wildlife
to
pass
in
the
south
florida
water
management
district
to
explore.
J
It
would
be
something
that
would
take
a
little
bit
of
time,
but
I
think
that's
that
was
a
placeholder
there
and
then,
of
course,
the
westbrook
cultural
center,
which
is
the
old
young
and
art
facility
out
here
out
west.
So
the
other
items
at
the
bottom
of
that
slide
norm
can
talk
to
you
guys
about
that
a
little
bit,
but
they
were
just
things
that
were
mentioned
by
commissioners
and
there
appears
to
be.
J
You
know
some
some
funding
that
was
not
listed
here,
but
is
included
in
some
of
our
rcip
and
other
areas
that
we
recently
heard
that
the
cs,
f,
c.
F
s:
f,
army
corps
study
was
in
worda,
so
we
were
looking
for
for
that
to
move
forward
and
we
didn't
want
to
put
a
25
million
dollar
number
there,
but
I
know
that
it's
important
to
the
board
and
we
are
watching
that
and
we
think
that
we
might
be
covered
there
at
the
congressional
level
norm.
J
J
That
will
be
very
quick
on
this.
One
surprisingly
remember
when
I
said
earlier
that
if
we
have
spare
money
that
I
did
not
want
all
of
it
going
into
recurring
because
when
times
are
bad,
we
don't
have.
I
said
at
the
time
that
it
should
all
be
going
into
reserves.
I
should
have
said
into
reserves
and
one-time
non-recurring
revenue.
I'm
fine
with
this.
J
I'm
just
I'm
cautioning
us
because
I've
seen
it
when
you
put
all
of
your
money
into
recurring
when
times
are
good
yeah,
don't
have
enough
money
when
times
are
bad,
but
if
you
put
it
one
into
one
time
capital,
then
you
just
don't
build
those
when
times
are
bad,
so
I
perfectly
fully
supportive
of
building.
When
we
have
money,
that's
when
we
should
be
building
our
no
commissioner
on
this
one.
We
just
put
the
current
estimate
that
cmd
construction
management
has.
J
We
may
only
be
funding
the
design
this
year
and
then,
when
they've
had
the
design
done,
and
I
think
to
your
point
about
recurring.
I
think
the
the
analysis
is
happening
about
what
the
cost
of
their
programs
that
go
into
that
building
might
cost
ongoing.
So
all
of
that
will
come
before
you
in
future.
Thank
you.
J
I
put
a
lot
of
these
on
here.
So
let
me
let
me
go
down
the
list.
Real,
quick,
they're,
a
little
hollywood-centric
here,
the
the
the
end
cold
one
is
the
the
main
feature
of
that
entire
park
was
an
aquarium
that
was
in
the
middle
part
that
aquarium
broke
and
it
costs
that's.
J
What
it
costs
to
fix
the
aquarium,
but
it's
the
main
feature
of
the
entire
park
or
when
you
go
into
the
exhibition
room
and
they
haven't
been
able
to
fix
it,
for
I
don't
know
how
many
years
so
it's
kind
of
like
and
they
have
just
boatloads
of
kids
coming
in
there
all
the
time
and
it's
the
one
place
where
all
the
all
those
where
the
kids
learn
about
the
environment
of
the
area.
So
that's
what
that
is
hollywood
north
beach
park.
This
is
probably
one
of
the
most
used
parks.
J
It's
it's
slammed
almost
every
day,
every
night.
What
the
park
division
wants
to
do
is
change
it
to
make
it
a
little
bit
more
efficient,
etc.
I
imagine
the
parking
almost
would
pay
for
itself.
I
I
don't
know
if
that's
true
or
not
for
sure,
but
it's
it's
it's
that
busy.
There's
a
restaurant
pavilion
there
and
I
don't
know
if
you
can
use.
I
don't
know
if
you
can
use
t
money
for
some
of
this
kind
of
stuff,
but
it's
all
tourists.
J
So
it's
you
know:
you're
you're,
it's
a
place
where
it's
just
jammed
with
with
people
the
everglades
holiday
park
for
the
florida,
wildlife,
fwc
fish
and
wildlife
yeah,
whatever
they
have
extra
land,
just
north
of
our
holiday
park,
which
they're
willing
to
give
to
us
to
use
for
primitive
camping.
J
I
mean
it
means
hardly
any
development
at
all,
just
making
a
place
where
you
can
put
a
tent.
That's
why
that's
such
a
small
amount,
waste
generation
study
we're
already
paying
we're
already
doing.
We
already
put
money
inside.
I
don't
know
if
there
what,
if
there's
going
to
need
to
be
more
costs,
but
just
in
case
I
thought
maybe
kevin
will
tell
us
what
that
would
be
the
biosolids.
J
I
do
think
we
are
going
to
need
to
do
a
study
on
how
to
go
from
where
right
now
we're
at
grade
b,
and
that
means
all
of
our
bio
solids
is
going
to
monarch
hill
or
mo
or
a
lot
of
it.
Would
you
want
to
we?
We
need
to
make
it
go
to
to
a
double
a
plus,
where
you
can
actually
put
it
in
different
places
up.
J
You
know
in
arcadia
or
october
other
places
right
now,
because
of
the
bacteria
level,
it
can
only
go
certain
places,
so
this
is
something
we
need
to
study
we're
way
behind
on
this,
and
I
think
the
water
and
wastewater
division
would
like
to
see
some
kind
of
study
going
this
and
and
how
do
we?
J
How
do
we
improve
this?
So
that's
kind
of
what
that
is,
so
that
would
be
like
just
a
first-year
brains,
brainstorming
on
it.
So
I
think
all
these
are
you
know
I
I
recognize
these
are.
These
are
expensive,
but
I
I
would
like
to
hear
from
dan
west
at
some
point
is
what
the
payback
is
on
the
with
the
parks
we've
been
talking
to
dan
west.
Since
the
day
I
arrived
about
parking
at
hollywood,
north
beach,
no
okay,
yeah
dan,
has
got
his
eyes
on
that
revenue.
Okay,
good,
I
assure
you.
J
Well
it's
I
mean
it's
I
I
imagine
it
would
probably
pay
for
it
pretty
much.
We
hope
we're
trying
to
talk
them
into
getting
the
revenue
to
pay
for
the
restaurant
as
well.
So
there's
some
issues:
yeah
yeah,
it's
it's
a
timing
issue
on
the
restaurant
yeah.
I
saw
that
and
commissioners,
we
are
still
in
the
process
of
going
through
all
of
our
budget
discussions
with
our
internal
agencies,
which
includes
some
of
these
capital
projects,
particularly
with
parks.
J
So,
as
I
mentioned,
we're
still
going
through
our
budget
process
internally,
so
we
will
have
some
more
information
as
we
get
through
that
process
and
and
before
I
come
back
to
you
on
june
16th
with
our
general
fund
county
administration,
recommendations,
okay
and
lastly,
I'll
just
say
for
for
people
that
don't
have
a
lot
of
money,
the
the
beach
and
our
parks
are
often
their
vacation
places
where
they
have
a
chance
to
go
and
we
have
to
make
this
place
livable.
We
have
to
keep
it
livable,
and
you
know
this.
J
This
becomes
an
investment
toward
that
and
I
think
I
think
our
citizens
deserve
that
so
I'll
leave
it
there
senator
rich
yeah
norm.
I
I
sort
of
asked
before
but
for
everybody's
holiday
park
I
mean.
Is
it
are
these
all
the
requests
or
first
capital,
because
it
was
supposed
to
be
money
for
everglades
holiday
park?
I
believe
for
the
new
building
to
replace
the
dilapidated
old
main
building
there.
I
think
these
are
the
requests
we
thought
we
got
from
your
offices
directly.
J
There
are
other
requests
from
from
parks
and
other
agencies
that
we're
looking
at
okay.
Thank
you,
but
we
thought
we
captured.
So
if
we
missed
any,
please
let
us
know
yeah,
I
I
it
may
be
already
there,
I'm
not
sure.
That's
why
I'm
okay!
Thank
you
finish
henry.
It's
in
the
parks
request
yeah,
so
we're
aware
of
it.
J
Senator
geller
two
quick
additional
items
since
there
was
some
discussion
on
the
west
broward
cultural
center
for
those
of
us
from
the
west,
primarily
senator
rich-
and
I
you
know,
there's
a
plethora
of
cultural
facilities
in
the
east
and
virtually
none,
no
county
cultural
facilities
in
the
west.
And
so
again
that
happens
to
be
in
my
district,
very,
very
close
to
senator
rich's
district,
and
you
know
we
have
made
a
commitment
that
we
are
keeping
that,
despite
all
the
people
that
wanted
to
buy
it
for
warehouses
or
for
other
space.
J
We
have
made
that
commitment
that
we're
going
to
keep
that
for
cultural,
I'm
wide
open
as
to
how
what
types
of
cultural,
but
we
have
made
that
commitment
that
will
be
cultural,
similar
in
many
respects
to
the
facility
and
sunrise
the
just
throwing
the
bike.
Art
surf.
Thank
you.
You
know
with
you
know,
space
for
meetings,
you
know,
maybe
a
couple
board
rooms,
you
know
a
multi-purpose
center
and
then
they
still
have
half
of
the
building
left.
J
So,
whatever
I'm
looking
forward
to
working
with
the
county
administration
towards
seeing
final
plant
juices
for
that
and
miss
apparel,
just
I
didn't
specifically
since
I
saw
all
of
these
parks,
they
didn't
specifically
bring
up
my
ass
for
money
at
markham
park,
which
is
in
senator
rich's
district
on
the
the
shooting
range.
I'm
sorry
is
that
whose
district
is
in
it
to
my
district?
Again,
I
don't
have
anything
north.
I
don't
have
anything
north
of
595.
J
Now
it
is
north
of
five
right
because
I
have
595
so
probably
isn't
mine,
but
it
could
be
in
his
any
rape.
As
you
will
recall,
miss
apparel.
I
had
spoken
with
you
about
some
money.
J
Therefore
improving
the
the
target
range
there,
but
again
we're
talking,
I
think,
less
than
a
hundred
thousand
dollars,
so
it
I
don't
think
that's
the
kind
of
thing
that
I
had
to
put
in
a
special
request
for
it's
a
tiny
amount
of
money,
and
I
assume
that
it
will
be
in
mr
west's
budget,
but
just
in
case
it's
not.
I
want
to
remind
you
that
we
have
already
discussed.
You
know
that
the
the
target
range
at
markham
park,
I'm
hoping
that
dan
will
have
that
in
his
budget.
J
I
remember
senator
keller
and
I
will
make
sure
that
I
take
an
extra
look
at
mr
west's
budget
recommendations
to
me
and
I
will
let
you
know
what
I
find.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
so,
following
on
to
what
commissioner
first
said,
I
see
like
there's
like
placeholders
on
the
bottom,
that
don't
that
really
don't
even
have
numbers
on
it
that
were
just
like
the
waste
study
and
and
different
kind
of
things
in
there.
I.
J
I
think
that
this
would
probably
be
the
spot
where
we
could
put
something
in,
and
there
doesn't
even
need
to
be
a
number
in
it
because
we
may
not
even
do
it,
but
if
there
is
the
possibility
where
we
would
need
to
step
up
and
do
some
boring
tests
or
different
things
with
some
of
the
municipalities
to
finally
finalize
one
way
or
another,
this
this
new
river
crossing,
you
were
talking
about
a
boring
test.
Are
you
referring
to
our
ability
to
sit
through
budget
hearings.
J
I
think,
mr
mayor,
the
intent
was
either
other
funding
sources
will
take
care
of
them.
For
example,
the
army
corps
of
engineers
were
hoping
or
the
surtax.
One
was
just
a
general
discussion
on
the
test.
It
may
well
be
that
either
certex
or
transit
funds
could
be
used
for
those,
maybe,
but
I
just
don't,
want
it
to
get
lost
in
the
shuffle.
We
don't
need
to
put
a
number
or
anything
there,
but
it's
probably
something
that
we
should
have
on.
I
think
we're
going
to
forget
about
that.
J
One
yeah
yeah,
I
put
the
surtax
on
there
because
I
wanted.
I
know
that
that
may
be
the
thing
that
gets.
It
gets
it
over
the
hump
for
the
airport
to
kind
of,
and
the
airlines
to
kind
of
decide
to
go
together
on
this.
It
may
be
that
leverage
that
kind
of
pulls
it
all
together.
So
I
and
I
don't
know
what
the
cost
is,
but
but
I
and
I
don't
know
if
it's
us-
I
know
the
oversight
committee
actually
has
to
sanction
that.
J
First,
I
think
the
airport
and
transit
have
been
working
a
lot
with
with
fdot
on
this
okay.
So
I
think
you're
going
to
be
seeing
something
fairly
soon:
okay,
okay,
next
slide.
I
think
that,
is
it
that's
it
that
is
it
mayor.
The
last
slide
was
just
to
go
over
again
what
we
shared
with
you
at
the
march
11th
board
retreat.
J
We
don't
have
the
updated
projections
as
of
yet
from
the
property
appraiser,
so
we
just
wanted
to
kind
of
lay
out
the
foundation
for
this
conversation,
and
we
appreciate
honestly
the
the
great
feedback
we
got
today.
I
think
that
gives
us
some
further
direction
on
some
of
these
commission
priorities
and
how
to
put
it
in
context
as
we
go
through
the
rest
of
these
pieces.
J
So
that's
going
to
be
something
that
I'm
spending
a
lot
of
time
with
each
of
the
departments
on
and
then
we've
got
all
the
constitutional
requests,
as
well
as
as
well
as
what
you've
got
in
front
of
you
today
with
the
commission
priorities
for
those
individual
requests.
So
it's
a
delicate
balancing
act
and-
and
as
commissioner
moskowitz
mentioned
earlier
with
you
know
today's
70
or
8
million
dollars.
J
You
know
this
list
in
front
of
us
today
was
67.9
and
that
didn't
include
you
know
some
of
those
other
requests.
So
so
that's
going
to
be
something
that
we
will
bring
forward
a
recommended
budget
to
you
and
you
will
have
two
other
opportunities
to
meet
with
some
constitutionals
on
june
7th
and
and
then
our
follow-up
conversation
on
june
16th
before
the
summer
recess.
So
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
your
time
and
I'm
sure
I'll
be
hearing
from
you
guys
individually
and
I'm
happy
to
entertain
some
conversations
as
follow-up.