Barker’s View for August 21, 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:

Daytona “International” Airport – The Triumphant Return of JetBlue…

In 2018, just three years after Volusia County economic development types ponied up some $2.3 million in public incentives to lure JetBlue to Daytona “International” Airport – the low-cost carrier gave area residents the slip – moving on to more lucrative markets while consolidating “underperforming” routes.

In their patented “throw more money at it” strategy to coax discount airlines to Daytona Beach, our “movers & shakers” went so far as to develop a “travel bank” among local companies – to include Brown & Brown, the former Consolidated-Tomoka Land Company, International Speedway Corporation, and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University – which collectively promised to spend a quarter-million dollars with JetBlue if they agreed to grace us with one flight per day to New York’s JFK.

Add to that some $25,000 in free upgrades to the airlines gate location at DIA (paid for with public funds) and it was a pretty good deal – for JetBlue anyway…

Considering the lavish financial “incentives” offered, the departure of JetBlue was a demoralizing blow to a down-at-the-heels resort area that was repeatedly duped by hospitality statisticians who told us were drawing more visitors annually than we actually were.

Remember?  I do.  

In May, the Daytona Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau sheepishly explained a more than 50% drop in the annual visitor count in 2024 (4.5 million down from 10.1 million in 2023) after a fresh marketing and research firm began tallying the actual number of people who intentionally spent time here, as opposed to “pass-through” travelers.

Yeah.  I know…   

Last week, everyone who is anyone was busy firing up the Halifax Area All-Star Goodtime Band for another refrain of “Happy Days are Here Again, Again!” as JetBlue announced its triumphant return to Daytona “International” Airport!

This time around, routes include daily service to Boston and New York City.

So, did Volusia County economic development officials learn anything from our incredibly expensive jilting by JetBlue seven years ago? 

Hardly…

According to an article by business editor Clayton Park writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal last week:  

“When JetBlue Airways resumes daily flights here on Dec. 4 after a nearly seven-year absence, it will do so with a little economic incentive help from its friends at Daytona Beach International Airport.

“We have our standard airport marketing package that we do for every airline when they start service here,” said Joanne Magley, director of air service, marketing and customer experience at the Volusia County-run airport also known as DAB. “They’ll receive $200,000 in marketing support per route, and a waiver of certain airport fees (for the first two years of service),” she said.”

So, how much is the total “incentive package” worth beyond the $400,000 in “marketing support”

Who knows?

According to the News-Journal, “Magley did not say how much the incentives will be worth in total, but indicated it will be far less than the $2.3 million in incentives that JetBlue received its first time around here…” 

Shhhhhhhh.  Just a ‘standard package.’  That’s all ye know, and all ye need to know… 

Great.

Is this a “Huge Win-Win” for DAB or another expensive disappointment in the making as past experience would suggest?   

Time will tell… 

Rewarding the Unjustifiable: More Questions at Volusia County Schools

“It truly takes a village, and this work is fully realized through the engagement of our students, parents, all staff, community partners, volunteers, mentors, School Board, and stakeholders. Through collaborative partnerships and servant leadership, we’ve achieved remarkable progress with our first ‘A’ rating in 16 years. This recognition reinforces my commitment to the collective work we do to transform public education for every student we serve.”

Dr. Balgobin’s leadership is marked by her commitment to collaboration and knowledge sharing. She regularly shares scalable frameworks for instructional improvement, strategic alignment, and sustainable district transformation with other districts. Under her guidance, initiatives such as “Synergy Walks” and clear instructional “look-fors” have strengthened instructional capacity and fostered a culture of shared accountability across more than 70 schools.”

–Volusia County School Superintendent Carmen Balgobin, as conjured by those magicians at Volusia County Schools Community Information Services, “Dr. Carmen Balgobin Named Finalist for NASS 2025 Superintendent of the Year,” Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Want to have a little fun? 

Let’s play a game.

On the honor system, take all the time you need to decipher the meaning and definition of the following jabberwocky without throwing your hands-up in utter exasperation and turning to Google, Grammarly, or ChatGPT:

  1. “Scalable framework for instructional improvement”
  2. “Strategic alignment”
  3. “Sustainable district transformation”
  4. “Synergy walk”
  5. “Clear instructional “Look Fors”

Now, put your right hand on a 2025 printing of Funk & Wagnall’s Encyclopedia of Inane Corporate-Speak and repeat after me:

“I affirm that I will not give or receive any unauthorized help on this just-for-fun exam, and that all hair I pull out in frustration will be my own.”

You may begin…  

Not as easy as it looks, eh? 

Don’t feel bad.   No one else understands it, either.

That’s because the only people who speak that nonsensical pseudo babble are eggheads and assholes – people who surround themselves with sycophantic minions who nod enthusiastically and act like they understand that gobbledygook – lest they expose themselves as being just as clueless as the rest of us.

Superintendent Balgobin

It is the preferred vernacular of Dr. Carmen Balgobin, a cloistered senior official doubling-down on a still unproven accomplishment with her nomination for National Superintendent of the Year…   

You read that right.

This week, US News and World Report ranked Volusia’s Spruce Creek High School as 130th in Florida with a graduation rate of 99% – yet only 44% of students were proficient in math and just 55% demonstrated reading proficiency… 

What are we graduating? 

Well-rounded young adults with the life and academic skills to succeed?  Or victims of a pernicious system designed to give economic development shills (and senior administrators) something to crow about?

I hate to be the proverbial turd in the celebratory punchbowl, but did the district really earn an “A” grade, or is it the contrived result of manipulating enrollment data by transferring lower performing students so they didn’t count against their assigned school’s graduation rate?

It’s a valid question.

This week, District 4 School Board Member Donna Brosemer continued to educate her constituents (and challenge the stagnant status quo) with a barnburner op/ed published in the Ormond Beach Observer. 

(Please find Ms. Brosemer’s editorial here: https://tinyurl.com/4j74v4tz )

In her cogent piece, Ms. Brosemer explained the board’s obligation to provide budgetary oversight in a place that has historically been less than forthcoming…

For instance, when discussing what passes for preliminary budget hearings, Ms. Brosemer wrote, “The process was equally sanitized this time too. There were numerous declarations of the evils of social media, and indignant demands that only “experts” should be trusted.”

In turn, Ms. Brosemer dropped another shocking allegation regarding the possible artificial manipulation of grades and graduation rates…

“My experts, as I have said many times, are my teachers and school administrators. They are on the ground, doing the heavy lifting, figuring out what works and what doesn’t.

They are the ones required to move kids around to produce the desired graduation rates. Or administering the same tests multiple times and eliminating the hard questions so the test grade is higher. Or who describe their ESE classes with 3 grade levels, multiple special needs, and 30 students, all in the same class, with just one para to help them.

Does the current budget reflect the needs of those experts? It’s hard to tell, because they are never candidly discussed. We’re too busy making everything pretty.”

That’s disturbing.  

So, what is the truth behind the “A grade” graduation rates and school scores for which Dr. Balgobin is receiving this national recognition? 

Is that the reason for the forced organizational silence at Volusia County Schools?

If not, why was it necessary for Superintendent Balgobin to demand over 100 public employees sign a chilling Nondisclosure Agreement limiting their ability to discuss matters specifically covered by Florida’s Public Records Law at the risk of having their careers destroyed?

Why would it be necessary to prevent administrators from speaking about where and how public funds are spent, i.e., “Information regarding the District’s financial operations, including budgets, funding sources, and allocation of resources”?

What about “Strategic planning documents and information,” or “Non-public communications between and among District personnel, the Department of Education, parents, students, and community stakeholders” is so top-secret staffers need to be officially gagged?  

When will those of us who pay the bills get answers to these important questions from Dr. Balgobin or our elected representatives on the School Board? 

In my view, haughty awards and individual recognition for senior administrators is admirable – so long as the basis for them is verifiable – not the result of restricting information to control the narrative regarding how these remarkable graduation rates were obtained…

Anything less is unconscionable – and further erodes the public’s trust.

As Ms. Brosemer so aptly said, “So many questions no one asks. So few answers no one wants. Does the board’s apathy mirror that of the public, or vice versa?”

Quote of the Week

“All over the state, local governments are pushing ahead on common-sense changes to their growth plans, wetlands protection, and impact fees. They’re doing so despite warnings from big, bad opponents that what they have in mind will violate a new pro-developer state law that limits city and county governments’ authority on new land-use or development regulations.

It’s happening in big counties like Orange and small cities like Edgewater. And everywhere it’s happening, it’s bad news for Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Legislature, because it shows that local governments are tired of being pushed around by developers and their toadies and are ready to push back.

“This is one of those tipping points,” Manatee County Commission Chairman George Kruse told me.

As my colleague Mitch Perry reported last week, the law they’re challenging has “become the most controversial new measure” of the 2025 legislative session.

People are now realizing what this law really demonstrates: Tallahassee is tightly controlled by campaign donors who don’t care about what’s best for Florida’s people, only what boosts their private profits, Kruse said. That’s why they wanted to handcuff the local officials who might object.

The bill was passed on the pretext of providing emergency help for hurricane victims. But it contained a poison pill benefiting no one but big developers.

“It’s important to realize that this was described as an emergency bill that goes far beyond an emergency to actually attack the basis of democracy,” said Kim Dinkins, planning and policy director for the smart growth group 1000 Friends of Florida. “It allows a popular vote to be overturned.”

With so many people lining up to resist, I’m thinking we should change our state song from “Old Folks at Home” (yawn!) to the far more appropriate “Fight the Power” by the Isley Brothers.”

–Reporter Craig Pittman, writing in the Florida Phoenix, as excerpted from his op/ed, “Florida cities and counties line up to defy new pro-developer state law,” Thursday, August 14, 2025

Courage takes many forms.  

Mostly it means having the moral strength to simply do the right thing…

On Monday evening, in a bold move, the majority of the Underwater City Commission voted 3-2 to keep development moratoriums in place to protect waterlogged residents from recurrent development-induced flooding by defying the pernicious tenets of SB-180. 

Edgewater Mayor Diezel DePew and Councilmembers Eric Rainbird and Charlotte Gillis voted to keep the protections in place, while Councilmembers Mike Thomas and Debbie Dolbow were opposed.

According to a report by Brenno Carillo writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “City Council members who supported keeping the city’s moratoriums echoed the vast majority of Edgewater residents’ opposition to the new state law. Rainbird and Gillis made emphatic and emotional statements about protecting residents, even if it means challenges could be on the way for the city.

Several Edgewater residents and some from surrounding cities spoke in near unison against the new state law and urged council members to keep the moratoriums.”

In Deltona, the City Commission voted 4-3 to join a growing coalition of cities and counties seeking a legal challenge to the overreach of SB 180.

Commissioners Maritza Avila-Vasquez, Stephen Cowell, Dori Howington, and Nick Lulli stood firm for their constituents – while Mayor Santiago Avila Jr, Vice Mayor Davison Heriot, and Commissioner Emma Santiago evidenced their cowardice in the face of this legislative attack on the right of Florida’s charter governments to self-determination.

Later, Santiago said she was merely following the spineless lead of the Florida League of Cities which, she claims, counseled her to “Spend time developing relationships with your legislators and stay out of the political fray.”

In other words, “play nice, keep your mouth shut, and do as you’re told…”

Which sums up why the Florida League of Cities has become a nonentity in the fight against repeat legislative bullying – cowering in the corner and kissing the rings of Florida lawmakers’ intent on destroying the ability of cities and counties to determine how, when, and where they grow.

For his part, Vice Mayor Heriot (and “others”?) has been unctuously pleading with Volusia legislators behind the scenes, asking pretty-please for “amendments” to SB 180; changes that are never coming.  This week he explained his vote as not wanting to kick his oppressors “in the face” with a lawsuit, just when his “discussions” are becoming “productive.”

Sure they are. 

Keep kowtowing, Mr. Heriot.  That always works…      

I get it.  It’s rarely easy for mealy-mouth politicians controlled by influential special interests to stand up and do the right thing – especially when it comes to challenging legislative aggression, intimidation, and political pressure from on high.  

In my view, these cold and timid elected officials should take a lesson from those brave souls throughout American history who taught that it is a moral obligation of citizenship to righteously oppose patently unfair laws.   

As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. so eloquently said in his Letter from Birmingham Jail, “One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.”

In my view, it is time the flood-prone and claustrophobic residents of Volusia County let our aloof, dictatorial, and wholly compromised legislative delegation know there is some shit we won’t eat…

And Another Thing!

“Holding our elected officials to a higher standard.

Today I picked up my lunch at an establishment that I frequent often.  As I was leaving, Ormond Beach Zone 3 Commissioner Kristen Deaton walked in.

I was walking towards the door to leave and Commissioner Deaton yelled “They should call it Protect Jason Leslie” (referring to Protect Volusia and Ormond Mayor Jason Leslie). Is this the type of behavior “WE” the residents of Ormond Beach should have to endure from our elected officials out in public?

Do residents of Ormond Beach now need to be concerned about being confronted in public or fear retaliation from their elected officials?

Elected Officials should be held to a higher standard as are police/fire employees.  Out of respect for the business owner I did not turn around and reply to her. I continued walking and left the establishment.

Protect Volusia has been assisting residents for over two years. We stand by them and we put out information that we feel the public needs to be aware of. We fight for the residents and always will.

This behavior was unprofessional and I expect more from an elected official.”

–Ormond Beach Activist Robin Magleora, co-founder of Protect Volusia, writing on Ormond Beach Citizens: Protect Ormond Beach Facebook page, Friday, August 15, 2025

Last week in this space, I discussed the pox of pettiness that has descended on local governance. 

From the contentious selection of the 2026 Volusia County Charter Commission, to the on-going shitshow of nastiness and infighting that is the Ormond Beach City Commission, the Lost City of Deltona, Palm Coast, etc. – it seems vindictiveness and spite rule the day – and the ‘people’s business’ takes a backseat to paltry one-upmanship…  

In my view, civic activist Robin Magleora’s self-described encounter with Ormond Beach City Commissioner Kristin Deaton last week exemplifies the “Us v. Them” divisions that continue to separate “We, The Little People” from our “political elite” – that self-anointed clique of arrogant elected dullards who have become convinced of their own infallibility by their political puppeteers.

Commissioner Deaton

It also exposed the Ormond “in-crowd’s” utter distain for Mayor Jason Leslie, a political outsider with the courage to speak his mind.  

In response to Mayor Leslie’s commitment to exercising his right to speak and keep his constituents informed on issues of community concern, earlier this year, Commissioner Deaton proposed a cockamamie ordinance to ensure the mayor – and any other elected official who dares to demonstrate independent thought – will be pounded into the round hole of conformity with the force of law…

According to a social media post by Protect Volusia’s Elena Kraft, it appears Ormond Beach City Attorney Randy Hayes has rightfully decided to put Deaton’s cheap attempt at oppressive censorship in the round file of bad ideas.   

In response to a recent inquiry by Ms. Kraft, Hayes explained “I have not addressed the matter further as other matters have taken priority. At this point, I do not intend to take further action without further direction by the commission.”

I find it interesting that Ms. Deaton’s nasty swipe at Protect Volusia comes during the brewing controversy over the oddly postponed selection of Ormond Beach’s city employee benefits provider after Brown & Brown’s bid for services came in some $50,000 less than their competitor, Foundation Risk Partners.  

Although Commissioners Travis Sergeant (who works for FRP) and Lori Tolland (whose son works for FRP) abstained from the vote in keeping with Florida’ ethics laws – I found it weird both were allowed to actively lobby their voting colleagues during the discussion…

During the back-and-forth that ensued, Mayor Leslie had the good sense to suggest the obvious – selecting the lowest cost option as identified by the city’s selection committee (Brown & Brown was ranked 100 while FRP scored 78). 

“I think it’s just suicide for me to say, ‘Yeah, I’m going to spend more money for a broker that’s going to provide almost similar services to what we currently are going to have, or going to get,” Leslie said.

Mayor Jason Leslie

Ignoring staff’s objective scoring and the clear difference in cost, Commissioner Deaton arrogantly suggested that Mayor Leslie couldn’t possibly understand the underlying nuances of the selection because “You haven’t lived here, and haven’t worked with all of these people in this room, and that’s what makes it hard,” – openly insinuating that the selection should be weighted more toward insider relationships – rather than an impartial analysis of the services and costs contained in the proposals.  

Bullshit.

When it comes to the rules governing municipal appropriations and the allocation of public funds for apples-to-apples goods and services, ignoring a 50% difference in bid price is hard to explain.

Unfortunately, the Ormond Beach City Commission’s selection of a benefits provider is now forever tainted by the lobbying of members who are by law prohibited from voting, resulting in the highly suspicious move of tabling the decision until September 3. 

In my view, these ham-handed shenanigans open the door for Ormond Beach taxpayers – and the company who loses the bid – to speculate if the delay is to allow time for backroom maneuverings.     

That is an insult to the integrity of both of these venerated local insurance intermediaries – and an incredibly irresponsible process for an elected body. 

Sadly, with one snide remark, Commissioner Deaton exposed her distain for civic activists and organizations working hard for the betterment of their community – an embarrassing and confrontational comment that served no purpose – other than to prove Deaton’s lofty opinion of herself has cauterized the human emotion of shame from her outsized ego.

In my view, the remainder of the now compromised Ormond Beach City Commission should publicly condemn Commissioner Deaton’s conduct toward Ms. Magleora (and denounce her open animosity toward Mayor Leslie) as counter to the concept of ethical behavior and good governance.  

In the increasingly upside-down world of Ormond Beach politics, one thing is certain; this abhorrent arrogance of power will continue as long as voters permit it…

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

9 thoughts on “Barker’s View for August 21, 2025

  1. ”Publicly condemn”?!?! Seriously? As if a public official doesn’t have the right of free speech! And if the mayor doesn’t need anyone’s permission to speak his mind, the commissioner certainly doesn’t either. If enough voters don’t like what she (or he) says, they – not the commission – can take care of it in the next election.l by voting for someone else.

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  2. to all, open your trim notice. Ormond beach is raising our yearly property tax by hundreds. Call.them or e mail them, especially city manager who put this tax increase in front of elected leaders. Lori Tolland, Joyce Shanahan, Travis Sargent, harold briley, Kristin deaton, Jason leslie- mayor.

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    1. Marc we .must t be neighbors in Ormond Beach. Jet Blue flying into Daytona from December to February 11.Black out dates dec 11 to January 4th.Did use them and were convenient but the black out dates destroy why they fly here.Horseshit.Neptune access to high bridge road proposed for horses on the beach.19 parking spots taken by one trailer.Got my beach pass but Ormond will let dog shit,horse shit and urine.Horses per a vet said they crap 12 times a day.The beaches and oceans will be a sewer with loads of residents from Ormond to Ormond by the Sea..Enough is enough now the beach and ocean are sewers .Will never go to the beach if this occurs.Troy Kent loves it.Will vote you out.Taxes expected to go up.Years ago spoke to Partington and said overbuilt and he said underbuilt.Drive down Williamson and Clyde Morris and see all the rentals that will turn to shit in time.

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  3. And you wonder why Travis and Kristen had me removed from the Planning board. Investigate who replaced me and the dots will connect.

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  4. Sorry forgot that Latitude Margaritaville will bus people to the beach that horses go on their beaches.They will take their horses in the ocean and everything polluted.

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  5. Peter, horses? are you serious? Well then I want my pet dinosaur to be allowed. Can not understand this area at all. Driving on beach, no driving on beach. Dogs or no dogs. Cats? My elephant.

    The county hired a company to patrol for parking violations along beach county parking. This company has many errors. Travis Sargent, Ormond elected official, voted for our 10% increase in taxes, received 3 erroneous tickets while he parked. And yet he voted to hire same company to implement paid larking at Romano.

    I agree with paying for parking at Romano Park if you are not a Volusian, but to hire same company with bad track record for billing?

    Traffic gets really bad here, especially Williamson.

    Glad you are back Peter, good research Barker on your article.

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    1. Hi Marc .Am back .Fox 35 just ran a story about the garbage beach stores on A1A selling vulgar clothes.Daytona is going to hell .Saw on tv how Lake Mary rebuilt their downtown to high class customers not like Ormond that is consignment shops and used furniture and horrible food.Have a great day.

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