These are the necessary documents a person would need to read by 6pm to make a fully informed decision about whether or not to support an item before the CITT.
Citizen blog concerned with quality of journalism, current events, transparency/access to public information, and community building. Interests include public records, policy analysis, accountability, ethics in politics.
Thursday, October 10, 2019
Monday, October 1, 2018
Open Letter on Incorporation Facts
Neighbors,
We will vote in November on whether to become a city. If Yes wins, our county commissioner will select a committee of residents to develop a founding document, called a charter. This committee will present their charter to the county commission, whose approval results in a second election to approve the charter. Yes in the second election would allow the County to create the city.
Please allow the following considerations to inform your decision. I have detailed many of these facts with documentation on my blog. I invite you to E-mail me or reach me on social media if you have specific questions or want to start a discussion.
I cannot quickly or easily answer whether taxes will go up if we incorporate, though they can go up even if we don’t. Many neighbors would pay marginally more in taxes for increased safety and property values, which could come with a well managed city. If we become a city we must work hard to make it a good city. Miami Dade County has many rather unfortunate cities. Most of them, in fact.
Please allow the following considerations to inform your decision. I have detailed many of these facts with documentation on my blog. I invite you to E-mail me or reach me on social media if you have specific questions or want to start a discussion.
Status Quo (or the situation today)
In our community many people get by most of the time without much issue, but we do ourselves disservice if we accept the situation today as good enough.
- Severe parking shortage in the condominiums
- Flooding of properties and roads during storms
- Extreme rush hour traffic on our most important thruways
- Car break ins and thefts
- Armed robberies
- Local tax money funding services in other areas of the county (donor community)
- Sharing a county district with other areas, decreasing the attention our representatives give us, and the services we get for what we spend
If We Become a City we would
- elect a local city council, hires employees to maintain the city,
- contract or develop locally dedicated police, increasing service substantially, but also greatly increasing the cost
- develop a local planning and zoning code, as well as enforcement mechanisms
- Pay ~5% of our budget to county for 7 years as mitigation
I cannot quickly or easily answer whether taxes will go up if we incorporate, though they can go up even if we don’t. Many neighbors would pay marginally more in taxes for increased safety and property values, which could come with a well managed city. If we become a city we must work hard to make it a good city. Miami Dade County has many rather unfortunate cities. Most of them, in fact.
To be an exception we need to work exceptionally.
With great hopes for our future,
Prem Lee Barbosa
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
NEMAC Timeline Part 3 January 21, 2015
The Mayor's Memorandum included a convenient timeline highlighting a period in which the county stopped considering the question of incorporation.
I don't know if the NEMAC completed their study by April of 2005, but since it doesn't appear in the timeline I assume as much. The Board of County Commissioners established a moratorium on incorporation in November of 2005. A moratorium prohibits an activity. (Like President Obama's 2010 moratorium on offshore drilling.)
In 2012 the BCC changed its mind and lifted the moratorium. Two and a half years later Commissioner Heyman reintroduced the NEMAC officially. However according the the Mayor's Memorandum the NEMAC reconvened February 2013, almost two years before.
To this date I have not discovered under whose authority they met, nor who called any of these meeting, but I have inquired with county staff.
I also await the minutes for these NEMAC meetings. Hopefully those can address some of these concerns.
On to the Resolution!
Over 6 years |
I don't know if the NEMAC completed their study by April of 2005, but since it doesn't appear in the timeline I assume as much. The Board of County Commissioners established a moratorium on incorporation in November of 2005. A moratorium prohibits an activity. (Like President Obama's 2010 moratorium on offshore drilling.)
In 2012 the BCC changed its mind and lifted the moratorium. Two and a half years later Commissioner Heyman reintroduced the NEMAC officially. However according the the Mayor's Memorandum the NEMAC reconvened February 2013, almost two years before.
To this date I have not discovered under whose authority they met, nor who called any of these meeting, but I have inquired with county staff.
I also await the minutes for these NEMAC meetings. Hopefully those can address some of these concerns.
On to the Resolution!
East and North to Highland Oaks Neighborhood Walk Around August 14, 2018
As I planned, on my walk today I traveled East into the single family residential neighborhood. I didn't walk yesterday due to the rainy weather. Likely in the future I won't skip my walk on account of rain.
While I took many photos I didn't necessarily do a lot of noticing because I did not have familiarity with much of what I came across. I live pretty close to where I usually work, but I tend to take the same route every day.
I availed myself to the chance of seeing places I hadn't before. For the most part I let the incorporation signs guide me!
So expect to see a bunch of those, and some random other thoughts. Press on an image
Look at these dipping swales! I wonder how much higher the road is than the first floor of the condominiums on the north side of 191st Street. Also notice how much the driveway drips fro the street to the parking lot.
This part of the neighborhood has terrible car problems. Not only do we drive 30 mph down a high density residential street, with virtually no pedestrian crossing ability, but condos have given up lawn space, an sometimes cars resort to parking in the county swale.
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I also noticed this second tower above the building 1701. It has the same style of the other tower at the building center. |
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My block ends at a T. On Thursday's walk I went right so today I turned left. |
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The first YES sign on the walk. More of both to come. |
This street corner has amazing shade from these two trees in the swale. Compare it to the shade-free places around it. I love tree cover! (Though make sure they're properly maintained.)
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Organic bananas anyone? |
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Look at these hanging pods! |
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This tree took my breath away. What an attention hog! |
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I always wondered about this odd driveway situated just off Ives Dairy Road. It connects to at least five properties. One of them with the NO sign in the previous image. |
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I didn't want to stand in the middle of the road to take this image, but there's debris from a crash right in the middle. Ives Dairy and NE 24th is a traffic nightmare. |
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After stopping in at Highland Oaks Middle to say hello to some staff, I went right on my way home. Look how traffic gets stuck at 10:35 am on a Tuesday. |
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After crossing the street on my walk signal I took this picture to show how traffic from over 30 seconds ago still hadn't moved. |
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Though on private properties, this is one of the only views I have seen of any of the lakes surrounded by private single family residences. I wish the lakes were a bit more accessible to the comm. |
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Aside from the all-access guard gates, I don't know any other entrances to this part of the neighborhood, but one could easily traverse this fence. |
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Another one of these bodies of water which take up a significant portion of the surface area around here. |
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Yes sign on the left |
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The truck in the middle actually covers up a third YES sign. Bad timing on my part. |
Saturday, August 11, 2018
Neighborhood Walk Around August 8,9, 2018
I decided to start walking daily to get fresh sunlight while awaiting my work year to start. As a typical millennial I couldn't help taking pictures of anything that caught my attention. Given my recent strong of posts regarding incorporation I couldn't help fixating on thoughts of what the county doesn't do well that a city might accomplish more efficiently and effectively. I invite you to spy some untypical views of my community, and my thoughts of them. On these two walks (Thursday and Friday) I went south so Skylake Plaza, and back.
On Monday I will instead walk east towards the single family neighborhood.
Thursday
I found this pump station between 191st and Miami Gardens Drive, well south of 19720 NE 18 Avenue. This circumstance immediately raises the question of why the county wants some pumps and not others. |
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Many of these NO signs went up several years ago. The Yes campaign only recently got their act together and have a much prettier design. I will feature such an image when I find one. |
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The most recent development in my immediate area. |
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It looks as though we lost a gas station and gained another bank. I find gas in this area too expensive and did not frequent that station. |
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More NO signs in front of a condominium. I wonder if the boards of these respective places approved these signs. |
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I presume they installed that pipe on the east side of 14th Avenue. |
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When I first moved to the area people did not park on the swale to the west side of 14th Avenue. I only found two cars this time, but likely many more after 6pm. |
Trash along the west side of 14th Ave., a small sampling.
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Lack of available parking in the condominium lots also lead to many cars left in the swale on the north side of the bridge on 14th Avenue. |
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Another pump station. Also not included in the county's demands for incorporation. |
Friday
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Open utility box. |
I took no more photos Friday as I saw all the same things. Thank you for sharing my walk!
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