Barker’s View for May 22, 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…

Hard Lessons Learned.  And Ignored…  

“Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it…”

–George Santayana

Last week I shared a post pointing out the 900-pound gorilla squatting in the waterlogged living rooms of flood victims throughout the region:  The abject refusal of the Volusia County Council to take effective action on development-induced flooding – the most pressing issue of our time – now a destructive reality for thousands who cry out for strong leadership. 

Apparently, my thoughts on the subject ruffled some sensitive feathers… 

It is what it is. 

Rather than mandate that real estate developers incorporate low-impact best practices in future construction as a means of mitigating flood risks for existing residents, earlier this month, the Volusia County Council of Cowards opted for a nonsensical “…flexible and voluntary process for implementing LID and green stormwater infrastructure standards with incentives.”

If you’ve ever sandbagged your home, peeled soggy carpet off the floor, carried your soaked belongings to the curb, lived with the hum of dehumidifiers, or cut three feet of moldy drywall off your home’s studs, you might want to read that last paragraph again… 

Under the county’s skewed plan, if a developer elects to follow what should be mandatory LID industry standards, they will be eligible to choose from a lucrative list of environmentally impactful “incentives” to include higher density, increased building height, reduction in tree replacement requirements, reduced permitting fees, etc.

In my windy essay last week, I called out Councilman Danny “Gaslight” Robins for attempting to sucker his constituents into believing that no data exists to show Low-impact development practices help mitigate flooding. 

Bullshit.

A fact Mr. Robins conveniently ignored (to his political benefactor’s benefit) is that low-impact practices were designed by environmental scientists, hydrologists, and building industry experts to preserve natural drainage processes, reduce stormwater runoff, and help retain more rainfall onsite.

Never mind all that. 

“If there was data that would show mandatory LID practices would solve the county’s flooding concerns, Robins said “there wouldn’t be any question up here.”

“We have to pay attention to the data and the facts, and I think it’s very important,” he said. “We’ve been down this road several times and I’m ready to vote.”

That’s “Gaslighting 101,” and I pointed out that Mr. Robins’ statement was the most preposterously stupid distraction ever issued from the Volusia County Council dais (which puts it high in the running for the most idiotic and politically driven falsehood anywhere…) 

In a nonsensical response posted to the popular social media site Volusia Issues, Councilman Robins attempted to turn the tables using his patented DARVO techniques – reversing roles and attempting to embarrass me with a Gotcha! moment:

“Also Mark Barker, Holly Hill’s police chief during major flood events / natural disasters said “his city doesn’t have a faulty drainage system, either. “(The rain) just overwhelmed the system,” Barker said. Pumps couldn’t even be used in some areas because there was no dry place close enough to send the water, he said.  “Once the rain stopped, our system worked efficiently,”

Barker said.  Just like the National media, common sense, math, logic and science goes right out the window.  Anything goes for ratings.”

Ratings?   

I don’t charge a subscription for these logorrheic screeds – and I have never accepted advertising. 

In my view, given the hyper-political nature of the content, monetizing one man’s jaundiced view on the news and newsmakers of the day would distract from the goal of fostering a larger discussion of the issues we collectively face.  (That, and no one in their right mind would pay for it anyway…)

The rest of it is all true…taken directly from a News-Journal article dated May 31, 2009. 

Sixteen-years ago this week, Central Florida received unprecedented torrential rains – with the Ormond Beach/Holly Hill area of northeast Volusia recording record rainfall of 27.9 inches.

In three-days

The event resulted in nearly $70 million in damage with 1,500 structures damaged, resulting in a presidential disaster declaration.  At the time it was the third costliest disaster in Volusia’s history behind Hurricanes Frances and Charlie. 

By comparison, last October, Hurricane Milton – which resulted in devastating flooding in many parts of Volusia County – recorded rainfall totals of 6 inches across much of the county to as much as 12+ inches in southeastern portions. 

I’m glad Danny reminded me of that special time and place so many years ago…

To this day, I consider the historic floods of 2009 as one of the highlights of my career in law enforcement and emergency management.  A time that speaks of the incredible dedication of a group of smalltown first responders facing a life-threatening emergency and the resilience of a tightknit community. 

I made a lot of mistakes over a lengthy career, but in Spring 2009, the people I had the honor of serving with were superb – conducting high-water rescues, transporting victims to safety, then expertly transitioning from emergency response to disaster recovery and relief operations.

During the sleepless days that followed, we learned many valuable lessons – like the importance of social media as a public communications platform.  In fact, our agency was recognized as being among the first in the nation to employ the then relatively new social networking site Twitter as an emergency information exchange. 

It was also the first time the City of Holly Hill hosted both a Red Cross operated shelter and a regional FEMA Disaster Recovery Center, providing support for families and businesses affected by flooding. 

I had an enormous sense of pride watching our staff expertly manage logistics and security for the Disaster Recovery Center, with officers and volunteers working seamlessly with state and federal emergency management officials, while good-naturedly ignoring the interruptions of VIP visits as every politician from Tallahassee to Washington came to get some floodwater on the spit shines and their picture taken doing it… 

Hundreds of flood victims who had lost so much were ushered inside the DRC at the city’s gymnasium where they were given a bottle of water, a word of encouragement, and a seat in the comfortably air-conditioned building while waiting their turn to meet with federal emergency officials and Small Business Administration representatives. 

Upon leaving the center, each person was issued a decontamination kit with mops, bleach, disinfectants, and other useful items to help with rehabilitating their homes.  I recall one displaced victim telling me that receiving the kit helped alleviate a feeling of hopelessness now that he had the tools to do something constructive to help his family and neighbors.

Small things that matter.

In the aftermath, the efforts of our officers, volunteers, and staff earned numerous awards and accolades from FEMA, the Florida Department of Emergency Management, and, most inspiring, from those residents and businesses affected by the disaster. 

In the aftermath, a senior FEMA site administrator announced it was the most professionally managed DRC operation he had experienced in a lengthy career in federal emergency management – something that had nothing to do with my efforts – and everything to do with the dedication of those committed professionals I had the honor of serving with. 

Remarkable people.

In my view, comparing nearly 30-inches of relentless rain in a coastal community where drainage is directly influenced by changing tidal conditions is apples/oranges to the now chronic development-induced flooding residents regularly experience across the width and breadth of Volusia County…

Once dry pastureland in West Volusia now inundated with standing water – small lakes and retention areas overflowing into surrounding residential areas historically free from flooding, impassible streets and roadways that must have been built on dry ground, existing homes once high-and-dry now threatened each time it rains – as developers continue to upend the topography and hydrology of the land.

So, what have waterlogged Volusia County residents received in return from those we elect and appoint to represent their constituents and allocate our hard-earned tax dollars?   

Years of time wasting “LID Workshops on Green Infrastructure,” useless dog-and-pony shows, and endless PowerPoints delivered verbatim by the likes of Clay Ervin, director of Growth and Resource Mismanagement, which produced nothing more than hot air.    

More, more, more expensive “studies” by outside (and out of state?) firms – coupled with millions in federal flood and infrastructure assistance siphoned off by the bureaucracy for “planning and administration.”  

Sham “programs” we were told would protect and promote tree canopies to assist natural processes and improve air quality that were quickly ignored, replaced by slash-and-burn land clearing practices that denude the land to make way for fill-and-build construction.

Over a decade of worthless jabbering about “Smart Growth” – something now recognized as strategic procrastination by various iterations of the Volusia County Council – shameless shills who kick the can down the dusty political trail, flouting the warnings of residents, while basic maintenance of stormwater utilities was ignored.  

More talk of a half-cent sales tax increase to address “stormwater and flooding” coming out of a “subcommittee” of that political insulation committee known as the Volusia Knights of the Roundtable – co-chaired by Mayor Nancy Miller of Daytona Beach Shores and At-Large Councilman (and wannabe state senator) Jake “The Snake” Johannson…

While basic Low-Impact Development “standards” are made voluntary by ordinance, with lucrative “incentives” offered to developers who agree to follow industry best practices…

Don’t take my word for it.

Ask residents who have been forced to self-engineer flood mitigation efforts in their own yards who found municipal and county “maintained” drainage systems with caved-in pipes, culverts full of dirt, trash, and vegetation, clogged storm drains, and blocked canals, all demonstrating a grossly negligent lack of maintenance, repair, and replacement.

That didn’t happen overnight.

So, where are our ever-increasing stormwater fees being spent?  Where does the money go? 

Cui bono?

What about impact fees, growth “paying for itself,” and concurrency requirements?

And why in God’s name would we vote to increase the sales tax to allow the same incompetent dullards who got us into this mess to fritter away more of our money?  

I’m damn glad Councilman Robins reminded me of what current Volusia County officials have conveniently forgotten: The hard lessons learned during heavy rain events, hurricanes, and now afternoon thunderstorms, as they tap dance around the growing threat for the lucrative benefit of their friends and political donors in the real estate development community…    

Cowards.

Good Times are Here Again!  Again… 

“Daytona Beach is finally getting a Trader Joe’s store, ending a long wait that began when the upscale California grocery chain raised hopes by opening a huge regional distribution center here in 2015.

It’s no coincidence that land is also being cleared for two Trader Joe’s competitors across the street: Sprouts Farmers Market and Fresh Market, along with a Tesla electric-car dealership.

All are part of a real estate development boom that — for better or worse — is bringing thousands of new homes and apartments as well as new retail centers, hotels, condos, healthcare facilities and aircraft-assembly plants to Volusia County.

It begs the question: Is this Daytona’s moment?”

–Business Editor Clayton Park, writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Is this Daytona’s moment? Trader Joe’s, Tesla among ‘puzzle pieces’ changing area’s image,” Wednesday, May 21, 2025 (Find the rest here: https://tinyurl.com/pu7m6fwm

Fire up the Halifax Area Goodtime Brass Band! 

Happy days are here again!

The skies above are clear again!

So, let’s sing a song of cheer again!

Happy days are here again!

All together shout it now!

There’s no one who can doubt it now!

So, let’s tell the world about it now, Happy Days are Here Again!

Is this our moment? 

I sure hope so…

Unfortunately, small local businesses and service workers who form the backbone of our economy aren’t enjoying the “transformational success” that we were promised a glass-and-steel insurance office or a tony shopping center would produce – somehow missing the cascade of wealth we were promised the next panacea project would deliver…

And they damn sure weren’t the recipients of millions in public funds, infrastructure, revenue guarantees, and tax breaks that those corporate welfare recipients who are patting themselves on the back received – now laughably hailed as “visionaries” – who were gifted our money to eliminate their risk by their compromised shills in city and county government.     

Don’t take my word for it. 

Ask struggling beachside merchants, the half dozen mom-and-pop eateries that close each month, or strapped Main Street entrepreneurs if they are feeling the “moment”?

In my view, trading campaign contributions for a prime spot in the suckling order at the public tit does not make one a “visionary.” 

In an artificial economy where government picks winners and losers with obscene and patently unfair incentives, “success” doesn’t lift all boats – it is a privilege afforded the elite few…

If a car dealership and a few grocery stores are truly harbingers of the “Great Renaissance” we’ve been promised over these many years – decades marked by blight, dilapidation, greed, and political obstruction – then the true heroes of that rebirth are the unsung taxpayers who funded the myriad “game-changers” with their hard-earned tax dollars and swallowed hard as massive overdevelopment was forcibly shoved down their throats.    

You’re welcome.  

Yeah.  Happy days are here again.  Again…  

Quote of the Week!

“In light of the recent talk of putting a sales tax increase for Volusia County on the ballot (again), I looked at the operating budget from the year of most recent Volusia sales tax vote (2018-2019) and the current Volusia County operating budget year (2024-2025).

2018-2019: $768,755,651

2024-2025: $1,322,153,507

A 72% increase.

Volusia County government doesn’t have a “not enough taxes” problem. It has a “too much spending” problem.”

–Joe Hannoush, Ormond Beach, writing in the Ormond Breach Observer, “Letters to the Editor,” Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Amen. Preach it, Joe…

And Another Thing!

“We see the Space Coast, up through Daytona and St. Augustine as an area that’s not been fully developed,” said Jim Harvey, the president of Brookfield Kolter. Harvey is also president of The Kolter Group, a position he has held since 2007.”

–President Jim Harvey, Brookfield Kolter Land Partners/Kolter Group, as quoted by business editor Clayton Park in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Who are the developers of New Smyrna Beach’s Deering Park Innovation Center?” Monday, May 19, 2025  

Insatiable (adjective)

  1. An appetite or desire impossible to satisfy. 
  2. Often used interchangeably with “greed” or “avarice.”

Sound familiar?

Everyone knew the burgeoning monstrosity that is Deering Park would inexorably change the once quaint community of New Smyrna Beach and the now habitually flooded City of Edgewater. 

However, smart people are beginning to realize the pervasive effects of this massive development won’t stop there.

Unfortunately, that certainty hasn’t stopped various elected officials from sacrificing their political souls on the altar of “progress” – even if it fundamentally alters critical environmental processes unique to Florida and destroys our quality of life forever.

In an excellent article by business editor Clayton Park writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal this week, we learned that the Deering Park Innovation Center – a sprawling 1,618-acre “planned unit development” that includes hundreds of homesites and commercial/industrial uses – was the brainchild of those officials’ residents elected and appointed to represent their interests:

“City officials came up with the idea for the project after conducting a pair of “leadership summits” in 2021 and 2022 to brainstorm ways to grow its local economy and create higher-paying jobs. The mostly undeveloped land south of State Road 44, west of Interstate 95, was identified as one of the areas best suited for commercial growth that could include an industrial park.”

(I was wondering how long it would take for New Smyrna officials to trot out the “high-paying jobs” trope…)

According to the report, in addition, a 6,300-acre section in the City of Edgewater will be developed as the first phase of the mixed-use project called Deering Park

Astonishingly, plans call for the ultimate development of 24,000-acres – including some 23,000 residential units over decades of construction – blanketing the earth from Edgewater to the Brevard County line.

It’s enormous – and it is coming – regardless of the fears expressed by existing residents who clearly see the devastating effects of Deering Park and other regionally impactful developments on their lives and communities.

It seems our ‘powers that be’ are strategically blind to the threat of development-induced flooding, reduced water quality and quantity resulting in the looming specter of “toilet-to-tap” (that’s right, drinking our own recycled human waste), the impacts on wildlife and the environment, and the continuing lack of adequate transportation and utilities infrastructure countywide.

Hard lessons forgotten…

Now, insatiable development consortiums only see dollars and cents – untapped greenspace that hasn’t been fully developed and paved over as Volusia County and beyond reaches critical mass – while they attempt to calm our fears with talk of “conservation areas” and “wetland parks,” concessions that downplay the environmental insults that await the land.   

From the “Space Coast,” to the already claustrophobic “Fun Coast,” and north to St. Augustine and beyond – we are no longer considered communities with the moral entitlement to growth management and self-determination – a basic right increasingly stripped by those shameless real estate shills in the Florida Legislature.

No longer considered special places, “beach communities” and rural boundaries with unique civic characteristics, where people live, raise families, and pursue their dreams and livelihoods.

Now, avaricious developers see us as just another unexploited money pit…

Vote like your quality of life depends upon it.

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

6 thoughts on “Barker’s View for May 22, 2025

  1. If Robbins doesn’t lay off the gaslighting, you may have to bring back A&A (the second A in particular) to accurately cover him. I’ve personally been on the wrong end of his DARVO, and frankly have some level of concern for his family and friends. I’m not sure he would know the truth if it bit him on the A…

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  2. Without providing context of the fact that a perennial “libertarian” (whatever that means) office-seeker appears to think our county has a “too much spending problem,” one wonders how libraries, roads, traffic signals, municipal services in unincorporated areas, etc. should be provided anyway. There’s a reason budgets grow: 1. Population increases (surprise!) 2. Demands for services and infrastructure increase (see elsewhere in the screed: flood control) 3. Costs of providing services increase. Let’s all (including the “amen” writer) try to be a tiny bit more reality based; it may lead to be being taken a little bit more seriously instead of being predictably and perennially contrarian. Just a thought.

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  3. Mark was laughing when Clayton Park put you in his story.We speak to each other since the building of One Daytona and me calling it a waste our money and Clayton loved the idea.Business is horrible on Speedway.Restaurants empty and Bahama Breeze closed up a few days before the big event of Rock.Came to Ormond from West Palm.You name it they build it and the traffic caught up with Palm Beach County just like it will in Volusia with all this horrible building.I am 77 so I will never see the final disaster after Avalon is built.Yes small stores going up at Tanger and yes they destroyed Williamson from Granada to Mason and yes you have the worst traffic ever at LPGA and Williamson as cars get off I 95 to go to Bucees.Nothing is changing .Start with Beach Street ,Speedway and A1A.Have a great week.

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  4. We blame local officials, and sure, there is plenty of blame to go around. But we need to realize our governor and faceless and gutless state reps (Leek, Wright, Tramont, Partington, et al) write laws for the governor to sign off on that plays to his policy of “The free state of Florida is open for business!” They pass laws all the time that take control from communities and cities to control their own fate. All land is owned by somebody, and will eventually be developed unless we buy it and put it in preservation. The state makes it impossible to say “no,” dictates restrictions on cities who want zone it properly, and restricts the ability to charge enough impact fees to pay for the needed improvements. It then has to be shouldered in cost by those who already live here. And the price of those improvements keep rising thanks to Washington policy makers, no matter who is in charge! Our local leaders take a lot of heat because they are here amongst us. Our state reps love to hide and blame the locals for what they themselves do to us!

    Man, my backside is sore!!!

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  5.  “…flexible and voluntary process for implementing LID and green stormwater infrastructure standards with incentives.”

    Now this has some teeth ya’ll ’cause we all know developers are salivating over these incentives as they contemplate the billions they’ll reap once they get that zoning variance and turn dirt cheap dirt into half million dollar homes on zero lot lines.

    Good on ya, Mark for calling BS on this ineptitude.

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  6. I am totally frustrated with our County Council. Having been flooded 3 times starting with Ian, and no help in sight, the best answer is for me is to move out of the home that I raised my children in and have been in for 27 yrs. Since Westpoint Homes were built and issues at the land fill which cause flooding our way and speaking at the County Council to no avail, I have no choice. Danny Robins is my rep. We cannot get him out of there fast enough. When I talked to him about flooding on my unpaved road his reply was that his property got flooded also. The Corbin Park stormwater project in New Smyrna Beach was a collaboration agreement between NSB and the county to update the stormwater mitigation and infrastructure projects which are very much needed as well. The city of NSB received a $6 Million grant from Volusia County’s 386 funding. The Tomoka Village has been attending CountyCouncil meetings for over five years and all of the Council does is talk about a study that was done at least five years ago and they never even implemented one suggestion! Why can’t the Army Corp of Engineers be brought in to see how to fix the problem? Oh, they are too busy building a motor-cross which is a special interest project for Don Dempsey who has family involved in the sport. Jeff and Troy Kent are the only two that bring good thoughtful advice to the table. The rest are cronies that work hard for any action to be taken to address out flooding issues.

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