Barker’s View for April 25, 2025

Hi, kids!

It’s time once again to turn a jaundiced eye toward the news and newsmakers of the day who, in my cynical opinion, either contributed to our quality of life or detracted from it in some significant way…

It’s been an eventful week…

The Volusia County School Board – who recently announced they are $25.8 million in the hole due to declining enrollment – mysteriously brushed aside the adamant objections (and legal threats) of the City of DeBary and voted 4-1 to spend $8.4 million to purchase property for a new school in that community, because, “It’s about the kids,” and all…

School Board member Donna Brosemer rightfully voted against the measure in keeping with the city’s wish to determine its own future – and to avoid a protracted lawsuit as DeBary fights to protect its comprehensive plan.

Meanwhile, Jeep enthusiasts were allowed to park and drive along a long-closed section of beach behind the Hard Rock this week as part of Jeep Beach 2025 festivities – yet the rest of us rubes are being told it will literally take an act of Congress to return the tradition between Auditorium Boulevard and International Speedway Boulevard?

Why is that? 

Let’s revisit some of the other issues that continue to simmer here on Florida’s fabled “Fun Coast” and beyond:

Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris – “Sentence First, Verdict Afterward!”

“As the camel falls to its knees, more knives are drawn…”

–Old Bedouin Proverb

I don’t know Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris, but I know a precious few like him.

Those who didn’t conform, or refused to kowtow to influential insiders, and quickly found themselves on the outside.  The outcasts who couldn’t be pounded into the round hole of lockstep compliance and were cut adrift, marginalized, and ultimately burned at the stake for their independence.

Watching the life altering personal and political destruction of those who enter politics to serve their constituents rather than toe the line is almost a pastime around these parts…  

So, here on the fetid ash heap of history lies the smoldering political remains of Mayor Mike Norris.

A maverick with poor “people skills” and sharp elbows who dared challenge the ossified status quo, struggled to release his community from the mercenary grip of developers, and tried desperately to hold entrenched bureaucrats inside City Hall accountable.

For the sin of refusing to go along and get along, those malleable marionettes on the dais of power crushed Norris and all he stood for.

Let that be a hard lesson to any elected official here on Florida’s “Fun Coast” who dares to mention a “development moratorium,” or derail the out-of-control freight train of greed-crazed overdevelopment that is destroying our environment, infrastructure capacity, and our collective quality of life.

Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris

Last month, within days of Mayor Norris’ proposal to pause approvals for new residential development in the face of astronomically expensive utility upgrades to meet current needs, the appointed City Council member Charles Gambaro (a developers shill who hasn’t been elected to anything) along with others working in clear concert began the process of publicly castrating Mr. Norris.

Based on a complaint by Gambaro that accused Norris of unilaterally asking for the resignation of Acting City Manager Lauren Johnston and Chief of Staff Jason DeLorenzo – bolstered by allegations from delicate flowers inside City Hall who began blubbering about Norris’ coarse language – the Council commissioned an independent “investigation” by an outside law firm.

On Monday, the Palm Coast City Council received the damning “investigative report” – and before any semblance of due process – the following day, with Mayor Norris absent, Gambaro sensed blood in the water and initially moved to ask Governor Ron DeSantis to reverse the will of Palm Coast voters and remove Norris from office. 

In turn, another unelected appointee, Councilman David Sullivan, tapped the brakes and instead suggested the council forward a complaint to the Florida Commission on Ethics.  

According to a report in FlaglerLive!, during the meeting Mr. Norris’ colleagues “…each spoke in turn with that strange mixture of eloquence and disgust, and with the occasional lapse, almost inevitable in those circumstances, into defensive self-righteousness. They rejected public suggestions – by Norris or by his supporters – that he alone has advocated for residents, or that he alone had raised alarms about development or developers.

They repeatedly described Norris as acting in his own self-interest and against the interests of the city, though as that last segment of their meeting lengthened, it risked turning into a public flogging in absentia.”

Interesting…

Ultimately, the council took a vote of no-confidence, issued a public censure, and agreed to refer Norris to the Commission on Ethics.

For clarification, the Commission on Ethics is charged with investigating and administrating complaints of unlawful compensation, the solicitation or acceptance of “gifts,” financial reporting requirements, and the misuse of public office that would secure a special privilege, benefit, or exemption for the elected/appointed official or others.

To my knowledge, Norris hasn’t been accused of any of those things.

So, I’m not sure why Gambaro and his bloodthirsty cronies want the Ethics Commission to pause efforts to ferret out corruption in Florida government (a full-time job which should have them working in shifts) so they can sort through Palm Coast HR complaints? 

Since when did the “Mean man talk ugly to me” indiscretion become a matter for the Florida Commission on Ethics?

Whatever.

To lend an air of legitimacy to this ridiculous Kangaroo Kourt, Vice Mayor Theresa Pontieri (clearly thinking strategically) cautioned that the call to remove Norris should probably wait until the attorney who conducted the “investigation” (which appears to consist of little more than a series of written memos from hypersensitive senior bureaucrats) can formally present his findings in a public forum.  

“My hesitancy with doing it now, prior to the investigator coming forth and presenting the findings is he’s also supposed to present recommendations of how we move forward,” Pontieri said.

But, like any good mob beatdown, it appears they couldn’t wait to put the boots to Norris and appease their fawning overseers snickering from the sidelines…   

According to a report in the Ormond Beach Observer, “When a resident also mentioned that the discussion shouldn’t be had until Norris was present, (Councilman Ty) Miller said Norris chose not to attend the meeting.

“His job is to be here, and he chose not to. That says all that needs to be said. He could be here, rebutting this, talking about it. He’s not.”

I guess it’s no fun when the piñata refuses to participate, eh?

Maybe Mayor Norris is a curmudgeonly asshole who needs a lesson in office diplomacy, personal deportment, and an admonition to demonstrate courtesy when dealing with staff; or perhaps he comes from a place where treating well-compensated senior bureaucrats with kid gloves wasn’t a prized trait.

Or maybe he lacks basic social skills and needs a Dale Carnegie course (I have some of those same qualities myself…) 

Regardless, I’m not sure the clumsy fuming of an overzealous newly elected mayor pushing the limits of his role while seeking fundamental change in a historically dysfunctional government is grounds to disenfranchise the majority of Palm Coast voters. 

In my view, the disturbing fact this butchery began within days of Norris calling for a building moratorium – a controversial move which drew vehement resistance from nervous developers and their shills inside City Hall – is a weird “coincidence” ripe for independent investigation.

When pompous politicians become judge, jury, and executioner – publicly decapitating their political foes and destroying anyone who stands against the very lucrative status quo – We, The Little People get a frightening glimpse at the lengths our malleable elected officials will go to remove impediments for their political benefactors.   

Unfortunately, Palm Coast residents are now forced to endure this latest theater of the absurd while progress on the pressing issues of overdevelopment, overwhelmed infrastructure, and the crushing debt that has resulted takes a backseat to this crude attack on our foundational democratic principles and the basic concept of fairness.

First Step Shelter – Who Protects Volusia County Taxpayers?

Earlier this month, the governing board of the First Step Shelter voted 4-2 to ignore expanding lawsuits and disregard still unanswered allegations of fraud, fiduciary malfeasance, discrimination, harassment, and retaliation to provide a protective Teflon coating for beleaguered Executive Director Victoria Fahlberg. 

For many watchers, the timing seemed odd – and cast further doubt on who the board exists to protect – amid mounting questions regarding the form, function, and leadership of the enigmatic program.

Earlier this month, The Daytona Beach News-Journal gained access to the personnel files of whistleblowers – former employees who have, in my view, been the subject of a well-choreographed campaign to besmirch their character and reputation as an example of what happens when one speaks ill of the Queen.

According to reports, the files contained “notes” from Director Fahlberg that painted one whistleblower as disrespectful, insubordinate, and “hostile,” another as a pilferer who was criminally charged with stealing food from the shelter. It appeared the life altering criminal complaint was a cruel strongarm tactic used by Fahlberg to get the lawsuit dropped. 

Although the whistleblower was later acquitted following a jury trial, the damage was done, compounded by the smears and marginalization brought by board members during public discussion of the allegations.  

In my view, you don’t need an advanced degree in personnel management to understand how terribly mishandled this ugly internal tumult has become, allowing a series of bush league mistakes, gaslighting, and inexplicable personal attacks by bullying board members to result in expensive litigation against both First Step and the City of Daytona Beach. 

Rather than say enough-is-enough, instead the First Step board used the clearly conflicted Daytona Beach city attorney Ben Gross to negotiate a shield for Director Fahlberg which, among other protections, ensures a lump sum severance payment equal to 20 weeks of salary if she is terminated “without cause,” and indemnification against “…any tort, professional liability claim or demand or other legal action, whether groundless or otherwise,” arising from the performance of her duties, and the ability to request independent legal representation at the shelter’s expense.

To their credit, Daytona Beach Mayor Derrick Henry and Ormond Beach Mayor Jason Leslie voted against the horribly ill-timed agreement. 

Last year, Mayor Henry expressed concern about the deteriorating situation at First Step, saying “There are things at the shelter that rise to a deep level of concern.  The situation we’re in is because of leadership.”

He’s right.

Before the vote, Mayor Leslie suggested tabling Fahlberg’s contract until October when budgets are set, claiming the measure could jeopardize the City of Ormond Beach’s continuing support – which amounts to $85,000 annually – and that of other concerned municipalities.

“I can’t stress this enough: I think we’re on thin ice.  We could be in jeopardy of losing tens of thousands of dollars,” Leslie said.

The valid concerns of Henry and Leslie come on the heels of funding reductions by the Volusia County Council, who, in January, agreed to a decreasing contribution plan in which First Step will receive $400,000 this year, $300,000 next year, and then $200,000 for the last three years of the agreement.

At the time, Chairman Jeff Brower said, “I don’t think we should just ignore the whistleblowers.  There’s whistleblower laws for a reason, and I think there’s serious issues that are brought forward, and I think they need to be dealt with.”

In my view, it is time for the Daytona Beach City Commission – who has fiscal (and political) liability for the debacle at First Step – to listen to the concerns of Mayor Henry and take action to bring new and innovative blood to the governing board and salvage the remaining support of stakeholders and donors before the next embarrassing (and expensive) gaff…

Animal Activist and Hometown Hero Debbie Darino

Kudos to the intrepid Debbie Darino for her tireless efforts to end animal abuse and hold those who commit these heinous acts accountable to the fullest extent of the law. 

Thanks to her excellent work, in 2018 the state legislature passed “Ponce’s Law,” which provides harsher penalties for those convicted of animal cruelty and gives judges the authority to order the abusers have no further contact with animals. In addition, Debbie led efforts to establish an animal abuse registry in Volusia County and is currently working on new laws that would form a statewide database.

Locally, Ms. Darino serves as founder and president of the Ponce Animal Foundation, a non-profit animal advocacy which helps pet owners cover veterinary costs, and aids with pets of domestic violence victims and those affected by natural disasters. 

Recently, Ms. Darino was rightfully honored for her work by Gov. Ron DeSantis and First Lady Casey DeSantis during the 2025 Florida Heros recognition event in Tallahassee.   

Congratulations to Debbie Darino for assisting pets in need, and for her bold efforts to hold accountable and enhance penalties for those monsters who abuse innocent animals.   

For information on how you can help, please visit https://theponceanimalfoundation.org/

Quote of the Week

“Avelo Airlines is scrapping its twice-weekly nonstop flights at Daytona Beach International Airport to two destinations, including one route just launched at the beginning of this month.

The self-described ultra low-cost carrier will end its Thursday and Sunday service to and from Concord, North Carolina, after its last incoming and outgoing flights on Thursday, April 24.

Also slated for cancelation is Avelo’s Friday and Monday service to Hartford, Connecticut. The last incoming and outgoing flights at Daytona Beach airport will be on Monday, April 28.

“It’s always disappointing when an airline decides to change or discontinue some of its routes… but in this case we are not actually losing service to (those) specific markets,” said Joanne Magley, the director of air service, marketing and customer experience at the Volusia County-run Daytona Beach airport.

Magley noted that Breeze Airways, another ultra low-cost carrier, offers twice-weekly nonstop flights to Hartford, while Avelo still offers twice-weekly nonstop flights to nearby New Haven, Connecticut, which is a half-hour drive away.”

–Business Editor Clayton Park, The Daytona Beach News-Journal, as excerpted from his report, “Avelo cuts flights to these cities from Daytona International. Here’s why,” Monday, April 21, 2025

(By Tuesday, Avelo threw us a bone and announced they will be returning twice-weekly “seasonal” service to Wilmington, Delaware on May 22…)  

Two years ago, leery Volusia County taxpayers watched as the majority of the Volusia County Council once again ignored the lessons of history, threw caution to the wind, and entered another unequal “partnership,” this time with the then unknown “ultra-low-cost air carrier,” Avelo Airlines.

To their credit, Councilmen Danny Robins and Don Dempsey voted against making another bad bet, while At-Large Councilman Jake Johansson had something better to do that day and was absent from the meeting altogether…  

It was another example of how elected officials can be sold a pig in a poke – asked to appropriate our hard-earned tax dollars to support some enigmatic private entity, one cloaked in secrecy until the corporate welfare demand is approved.

Then, some “economic development” shill theatrically sweeps back the velvet curtain for the ‘Grand Reveal’ – in this case, a small airline who initially agreed to serve one “premiere destination:”

New Haven… 

In exchange, Volusia County officials agreed to shove $1 million into a brown paper bag with Avelo’s name on it as a “minimum revenue guarantee” – an asinine taxpayer funded bailout should the carrier fail to meet quarterly estimates – and waived landing, terminal, and ground-handling fees for the first two years, something we were told is a standard spiff for all new airlines willing to try their luck at DAB.

In its first three months of operation, Avelo used $226,000 in county guarantees to cover revenue shortfalls…  

What?  Nobody at Volusia County government offered to cover the monthly nut for your small business that employs residents and forms the backbone of our local economy? 

Hard cheese, rube.  Just pay your taxes and keep your piehole shut…  

For reasons known only to our elected dullards, the majority of our self-described “small government/fiscal conservatives” on the Volusia County Council convinced themselves that – despite our painful experience with JetBlue, Silver Airways, Sunwing, etc. – repeatedly risking public funds to cover the operating and start-up costs of an unproven airline with just 24-months experience in a highly competitive industry was fiscally responsible.

That’s why this unwelcome reduction in routes shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone…

By any metric, it is patently unfair when government insinuates itself into the marketplace – picking winners and losers (or, in the case of enticing airlines to DAB, repeatedly pissing away good money after bad), voting in the blind, ensuring ludicrous minimum revenue guarantees, building private infrastructure, gifting tax breaks, purchasing property for commercial enterprises, and lavishing public funds on private for-profit entities.   

In my view, this latest predictable failure should be engraved on the walls of the Volusia County Council chambers in DeLand as a lasting reminder of the risks inherent to corporate welfare schemes and those lopsided “public/private partnerships” grifts, which ultimately leave taxpayers holding the empty bag…  

And Another Thing!

“The Tampa Bay Times and Miami Herald reported that the DeSantis administration — without seeking permission from legislators — directed $10 million in money from a Medicaid legal settlement to the Hope Florida Foundation. Then that Foundation gave $10 million to political committees controlled by (Florida Attorney General James) Uthmeier and the Florida Chamber of Commerce that were fighting the marijuana amendment DeSantis vowed to defeat last year.

Let’s be clear: Under no circumstance would it be appropriate for public money to be spent on political campaigns. But now GOP legislators are saying it may have been more than simply inappropriate; it may have been illegal.

State Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola, said the money-moving “looks like criminal fraud by some of those involved.” And House Speaker Daniel Perez said the transaction “looks as if it could be illegal.”

Roger Stone, the often hyperbolic ally of Donald Trump, went so far as to predict that both DeSantises and A.G. Uthmeier “are going to prison.”

–Editorialist Scott Maxwell, writing in the Orlando Sentinel, “DeSantis Hope Florida scandal looks like real trouble,” Tuesday, April 15, 2025

The “smell test” is defined as an informal method of determining whether something is authentic, credible, morally acceptable, or ethical using a commonsense evaluation based upon the appearance of impropriety, reputation and past practice, or suspected conflicts of interests. 

Sound familiar?  

Once elected to high office and fawned over by senior staff, wealthy insiders, and backslapping hangers-on who laugh at their jokes – the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker quickly become convinced of their own infallibility – and enamored by the fact people are forced to listen as they drone on from the dais of power during what passes for the policymaking process.

In time, these malleable egotists become confident they are the smartest person in any room.

As a result, I have a theory that in the absence of oversight and accountability, politicians at all levels of government will eventually succumb to these mistaken feelings of superiority – a sense the rules no longer apply – and conveniently forget the purpose and origin of the money they have a fiduciary responsibility for safeguarding.      

That’s when dreadful things happen… 

Last week, the Hope Florida Doesn’t Follow the Money controversy continued to rage as the Florida’s republican controlled House continues down the labyrinth of money trails in an attempt to determine how $10 million in public funds originating from a Medicaid overbilling settlement ended up with a political group that helped Gov. Ron DeSantis fight a recreational marijuana amendment last year.

If I understand it (and I’m not sure I do) after government healthcare contractor Centene entered a $67 million settlement with the state of Florida – funds which, by law, are required to be deposited in the state’s general fund – $10 million was mysteriously sent to Hope Florida, a non-profit created and controlled by First Lady Casey DeSantis. 

Subsequently, it appears Hope Florida transferred millions of dollars to two political groups – who then funneled the money to a political committee overseen by James Uthmeier, then DeSantis’ Chief of Staff – which supported the Governor’s efforts to crush Amendment 3, the citizen lead ballot initiative that would have authorized the legalization of marijuana in Florida.

In November 2024, despite DeSantis’ campaign to defeat it, Amendment 3 gained 55.9% of the vote, but fell short of the 60% required for passage…

With apologies to Henry Clay, in a move that now shines and stinks like rotten mackerel in the moonlight, earlier this year, Gov. DeSantis appointed Mr. Uthmeier as Florida’s Attorney General…

According to Florida’s House leadership, if proven true, the use of public funds for political purposes represents a “criminal fraud.”  For his part, Gov. DeSantis has trashed the investigation as a “total flop” and “baseless smears,” labeled fellow republicans leading the inquiry as “liberal leftists,” (?) although mounting evidence tends to contradict those assertions…   

Last week, Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola, who is leading the Hope Florida investigation said he believes Attorney General Uthmeier – now the state’s chief law enforcement officer – committed “money laundering” while serving as Gov. DeSantis’ Chief of Staff. 

Ugly.

In my view, this burgeoning scandal is a shocking example of what happens when our elected representatives and senior bureaucrats get “innovative” when using public funds to underwrite personal agendas. 

That’s when things can cross the line from ‘creative financing’ to misuse of public funds…

Speaking of things that smell funny, earlier this month Volusia County taxpayers got a whiff of the shit when our imaginative Community Services Director Dr. Quackenbush Burbaugh took a huge career gamble and quibbled the intent of tax dollars earmarked for environmental conservation and ecological, cultural, historical, and passive outdoor recreation amenities to grossly overpay for 356-acres of cow pasture off State Road 44.

Why?

To obsequiously facilitate the pet project of Councilman Don Dempsey, who wants Volusia County to build a commercial motocross facility to further his hobby…

Ignoring the fact the track will be built inside Florida’s dwindling wildlife corridor – or that the vast majority of taxpayers will never experience the thrill of hitting the whoop-de-doos they purchased at breakneck speed – Mr. Dempsey has made it clear he wants us to fund it, and the quick to please Dr. Burbaugh found a parcel of land with enough identified wetlands to incumber tax supported Volusia Forever funds earmarked for the purchase of conservation lands.

The remainder of this weird hybrid financing scheme originates from Volusia ECHO funds, which have historically been used for eco-friendly outdoor activities, cultural pursuits, and recreational opportunities available to the widest demographic of residents.   

Earlier this week, a concerned Volusia County resident reached out to me and vented, “From Day 1 this has been the sleaziest attempt to deceive the public on the intended use of Volusia Forever and ECHO funds.”  

I couldn’t have said it better myself.

In the view of many, nothing about this concocted flim-flam passes the smell test… 

Given the enthusiastic interest of motorcyclists to locate a motocross track in Volusia County, no one doubts it would be a welcome and commercially viable enterprise. 

However, in my view, a commercial motocross facility should be pursued in a free and fair marketplace – where entrepreneurial investors take educated risks based upon an anticipated return on investment – rather than a slimy bureaucratic scheme where our tax dollars are used to underwrite the for-profit motives of a private entity – and further the hobby project of an elected official who forgot who he was elected to serve…

That’s all for me.  Have a great weekend, y’all!

3 thoughts on “Barker’s View for April 25, 2025

  1. Avelo has a problem that they are being boycotted for flying illegals to El Salvadore.The problem with the airport and air lines is their destinations.When I first moved here I had a direct flight into NYC no an out of the way airport like Harford or white Plains.Let us have direct flights to big cities with a bigger population.Had to sell a home in Brooklyn and it was easier to drive.

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  2. Thanks for highlighting the duplicitous shenanigans associated with the just approved motocross track. Rules and regulations guiding the use of Volusia Forever and ECHO funds were corkscrewed all out of proportion in order to accommodate the wishes of the County Council. One possible outcome from this is a move by supporters of this sleazy deal to expand ATV use to other County properties. They’ve been trying for years to shoe horn these noisy vehicles into Tiger Bay State Forest. What’s to stop them from going after Doris Leeper Spruce Creek Preserve, Lake Beresford Park or Gemini Springs? There is plenty of vacant land along SR 44 or Tomoka Farms Road where some entrepreneur with a healthy check book balance could have ponied up the funds for a track. No one did because this thing is guaranteed to loose money. Especially when and if some 10 year old is seriously injured and law suits are filed.

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    1. County Council and staff are not thru with Volusia Forever Per the May 6th agenda:

      Item LFILE NUMBER 12523Requesting approval of Volusia Forever recommended process and property evaluation criteria changes.

      The TITLES are MISLEADING and per the agenda detail,

      Eligibility Review of Properties by the Volusia Forever Advisory CommitteeNew language allows landowners or their designees, when present at the Advisory Committee meeting, to waive the written notification requirement, enabling immediate progression to the sorting process for eligible properties. Furthermore, properties deemed eligible under a fee simple application are exempt from a second eligibility review.

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