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Venice Florida! dot com

Herald-Trib's article on Hizzoner and the airport: High on fumes, short on facts
Past entries in Mayor's blog, past city council videos refute H-T's allegation of a secret airport plan; airport business group, Venice Neighborhoods Coalition, and the Venice Taxpayers League all accuse Herald-Trib of a bum rush
-- John Patten, 04/30/008
--
jpatten@veniceflorida.com

Got a comment? Make it here.

WTF? H-T ODs on LSD?
There is soooooo much wrong in the Herald-Trib's article of April 29 on the airport and possible Sunshine Law violations that trying to describe this complicated mess almost defies description.

One thing is clear: this appears to have the city manager's handprints all over it. While nobody on council is willing to publicly confirm, this is quite likely the straw that breaks the camel's back. Black is currently in Las Vegas, but he's likely to face a lynching upon his return.

I don't know how long Black can now survive as city manager, but my best guess is somewhere in single digit weeks.

At Tuesday's transportation workshop, citizens from across the political spectrum denounced the article. Chuck Schmieler, of Venice Airport Business Association, joined in with Herb Levine of the Venice Taxpayers League to denounce the article as fiction -- while it is not uncommon for loud protests to take place over any given political story, those are two seemingly dynamically opposed groups. The fact that the two men agreed loudly is highly significant and incredibly surreal.

What the Herald-Trib published What Venice Florida! dot com has verified
"When Mayor Ed Martin traveled to Washington, D.C., last month to talk with federal officials about Venice's airport, he carried a surprise in his briefcase: a plan that called for discouraging jets from landing in the city." Three not true statements in the opening paragraph.

First: The "plan" was hardly a secret or a surprise -- citizens and council knew that both Mike Rafferty, an opponent of growth at the airport, and the Venice Airport Business Association, a newly formed group to promote growth at the airport, had been communicating and developing suggestions and ideas to resolve conflicts. The two groups each developed separate preliminary conceptual maps of the airport, which were then submitted to the city March 4 and 5 in the hopes that some of their ideas might be incorporated into later. This was discussed at city council meetings. They were received by city hall a week before Mayor Ed Martin's trip to Washington to talk with the FAA.

Martin discussed some of this on his blog (here and here, e.g.).

Second: The "plan" (actually two different plans) does suggest rolling back to a B-II (B-2) airport, but proponents state that would curtail little to no current functionality. It would definitely not discourage jets from landing at the airport -- nobody was suggesting that.

Third: As Chuck Schmieler pointed out, these are not plans as such, rather they are conceptual drawings, although everyone keeps referring to them as plans. While this seems like a splitting of hairs here, Schmieler thought it was important to note, so I'm mentioning it.

"Not only had Martin's companions on the trip, City Manager Marty Black and airport administrator Fred Watts, not seen the plan, few others in Venice had, either -- even though it determines whether the city gets more than $4 million in federal grants for airport improvements." Few others had seen it because it wasn't quite ready for formal prime time unveiling and because they were received by the city on March 4 and 5.

That said, there was no attempt to hide the docs' existence and there was every attempt to disseminate the knowledge of their existence. That the Herald-Trib never saw them is attributable to the fact that they never asked for them until late April, and copies were provided based on their request.

According to John Simmonds' statements in the videos below, the docs were available on the table in council's shared office space prior to Martin's Washington trip of March 12-14. As for this doc being responsible for getting federal grants, no, not even close. It was a work in progress, the result of a collective brainstorm session, not anything close to a finished product.

The only thing close to insidious secrecy happened when the Herald-Trib finally got around to asking to see the docs in late April. There was some hemming and hawing that lasted about an hour, as Mayor Martin wasn't quite sure initially if the docs were actual public records when first asked by the Herald-Trib. Hizzoner called the H-T back within an hour and stated that the H-T was free to have the copies -- that was admittedly a big mistake on the part of the Mayor, but one that he cleaned up himself and apologized for.

"Martin and a small group of supporters who shared his strong opposition to growth at the airport developed the plan in private." Big, big, big fiction. First off, there were two different plans developed by two different groups of citizens that were each turned over to the city at nearly identical points in time. The Herald-Trib seems to have merged the two groups and the city into one big group with one big plan. By all accounts of those involved, Mayor Martin was not involved in the development of the documents other than public, on-the-record discussions held in council meetings. He received a copy and promised the citizens he would sound it off on the FAA in Washington to see if they liked any of the ideas. I believe that is called responding to one's constituency, but what the hell do I know?
"He characterizes it as a grass-roots effort to 'work around some problems' -- mainly the potential inclusion of several upscale houses and a city golf course in a federally mandated safety zone.

"'It is a citizen plan,' said Martin, who won office last year after campaigning on a slow-growth and limited airport development platform."

OK, this part is true.
"But Martin and the group may have created other problems, including possible violations of state open government laws." And back into fiction again. A group of private citizens came up with a bunch of ideas, formulated them into a document and handed that document over to city hall. Some or all of those ideas would, in turn, be vetted and possibly folded into formal government plans pending public review and further general public input -- that was the idea, anyway, as Martin discussed it in council meetings and on his blog.

Meanwhile, Jim Marble, one of the contributors to the doc, was appointed to the Airport Advisory Board on February 22. Even if Martin had met with Marble after the board appointment, it would not have been a Sunshine Law violation: they are not on the same board.

Marble, Chuck Schmieler of VABA, and Mayor Martin all deny that Martin attended any of their meetings or knew of what they were doing other than what the group shared with the city through public documents and speaking at city council. The process was a bit jerky, but never closed from the public, yet the Herald-Trib made clear allegations of illegal wrongdoings. I'd be curious to hear from the Herald-Trib's lawyers as to what possible law was broken here and how.

"Martin, who spent years as a federal education bureaucrat in Washington, is undaunted. He sent a letter Monday urging favorable FAA consideration of the plan and asking an agency manager in Orlando to meet with some of the 'team leaders' who helped develop it." True. This was discussed openly at the March 25th city council meeting and council voted to approve of the mayor's actions. By this time, the docs presented by the groups had been public records for well over a month, available for free reading at city hall or for ten cents a page to anyone who wanted to take a copy home.

Note the tone: 'bureaucrat' is an insult word in journalism, usually reserved for op-ed pieces, not straight news. I know: I've used the word quite frequently as a deliberate insult.

One funny thing here is that when Black and then- Mayor Fred Hammett went to Washington a year or two ago to try to get HUD money for a marina (don't laugh -- it really happened), nobody had ever discussed that in open council. It came as a total surprise to all when Paul Quinlan reported that little item in the Herald-Trib, but there was no mention of Sunshine Law violations from the paper at that time. In fact, despite the seemingly inappropriate attempt at using HUD money for a luxury buildout, the Herald-Trib barely raised an eyebrow after that. Ditto on Black and Hammett's attempt to get the National Guard to move in to the airport.

"Although the mayor calls it a private citizens' group, it is doing the work of a public body and should operate in the open, said Adria Harper, director of First Amendment Foundation, a Tallahassee advocacy group.

"'Decisions are going to be made, but we don't know when they are going to be made and how,' she said. 'Citizens are left twiddling their thumbs while this happens.'

"Florida's Sunshine Law requires that meetings where public policy is being made be open to the public. Two or more elected officials cannot even discuss public business in private. Violations carry criminal penalties; at a minimum any decisions made would be null and void, Harper said."

Adria Harper gave a somewhat different analysis of the situation to Venice Florida! dot com once further elements of this story were explained.

According to Harper, such a violation would have to be sorted out in a court and it would be unlikely that this mess would ever get to one.

Assuming it did make it into court (if I understand Harper's convoluted email correctly), it would all hinge on whether Schmieler, Rafferty, etc. were considered a private group of citizens or a government board by proxy.

This, in turn, would likely hinge on whether they had sole input into the final plan. Which they didn't, don't, and won't.

"A few council members expressed concern about the private group running afoul of open meeting laws, but the issue has not been discussed at a meeting." Not discussed at a meeting? Oh really? How do you account for the three video clips below? Claymation from Venice Florida! dot com's crack animation team?

IT'S EVIDENCE OVERKILL TIME:
Three ten-minute videos from the March 25th city council meeting -- one month before the Herald-Tribune labeled this as a secret process

Part 1:
Martin explains the process; Tacy buys and spouts city manager's as-yet unspoken version of what happened in Washington; Simmonds notes that the docs had been on the table in council's shared office space
{audio goes a bit out of synch with video midway through this first clip)
 

 
Part 2:
Simmonds continues to fight for city manager's version of events; Martin defends his position; Black jumps in and finally speaks for himself in his attempt to skewer the mayor.
 

 
Part 3:
Mayor Martin again defends his position; Tacy and Simmonds get some digs in; Lang and Zavodnyik give support; Black starts to show a bit of temper; and you can guess the rest as it all goes around in circles after that.

...and on and on and on ad nauseam. Council finally votes to support a motion for the mayor to take the ideas to Orlando, bounce the ideas off of the FAA there, then bring back what floats and get ready to parade it before the public for input.

Did I mention that this was a public meeting?

TECH NOTE: There's a missing 5-second hiccup in part 3 from where the 1GB VOB files on the DVD are split -- it's seamless when you watch it as a DVD, but the conversion to web video files creates a dropout between the DVD file parts. 

 

John Patten is the head of Web Operations for Creative Pages, and has worked in broadcasting for over 12 years. He can also be incredibly rude at times.

 


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