Barker’s View for October 23, 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:

Cowardice and Avarice Reign in the Lost City of Deltona

With the grotesque Commissioner “Farting” Chris Nabicht now ensconced on the dais, this week the compromised majority of the Deltona City Commission ignored the will of residents, spinelessly reversed course, and abruptly pulled out of a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Senate Bill 180.   

After Deltona earned widespread admiration for being among the first municipalities in the state to push back on the preemptions of SB-180 – a wide-ranging tool that completely undermines local growth management regulations and allows real estate developer’s carte blanche to build what, when, and where they wanton Monday, the “new” majority on Deltona’s dais tucked tail in fear of state sponsored “retribution” and voted for vassalage over independent governance and self-determination.  

To her immense credit, rather than kowtow to the petty intimidation of Volusia County’s legislative delegation, Commissioner Dori Howington courageously stood firm in her commitment to represent the rights of her constituents, fighting tooth-and-nail to stay the course and continue the city’s noble legal challenge to the state’s greed-crazed attack on Home Rule authority. 

In a bold act of leadership, Commissioner Howington spoke truth in the face of her “colleague’s” handwringing – standing up to the meanspirited Volusia legislative delegation, who have punished the city for its participation in the lawsuit by childishly refusing to present those giant cartoon checks for projects to deny elected officials a campaign photo op – fighting to protect her residents from malignant overdevelopment.

For her forthright stand against the pernicious influence of special interests, Ms. Howington was browbeaten from the dais by that insolvent sad sack, Mayor Santiago Avila Jr., and the strategically appointed (and forever flatulent gasbag) Commissioner Nabicht…

Kudos to Commissioners Maria Avila-Vasquez and Stephen Colwell for having the courage of their convictions and joining Ms. Howington in voting to stay in the fight.

It is no secret that the gross maladministration of the Lost City of Deltona has been a growing embarrassment for residents (and greater Central Florida) for years – a flaming shit-show of epic proportion – marked by an abysmal lack of leadership, slimy personal agendas, and a parade of ill-equipped elected marionettes whose personal irresponsibility, and ethical ambiguity, would preclude them from holding office in any third-world banana republic in the world.

But not here.

In Deltona – just like in the rest of Florida – manipulative external forces cultivate those they can control, while whoever is responsible for enforcing public integrity laws here in the Biggest Whorehouse in the World continues to turn a blind eye…  

Tragic.

In my view, if – as the majority of the Deltona City Commission now suggest – our state government is engaging in a strongarm campaign, using threats of retribution against any political subdivision that disagrees with handing the future of their communities over to the wants of mercenary developers, then the solution to that disturbing thuggery begins by changing our bought-and-paid-for state representatives at the ballot box.

Rarely in modern times has the pernicious effects of special interest money and influence become so blatant and divisive at the local level.

As the Lost City of Deltona hits an appalling new low, here’s hoping the longsuffering residents of this irreparably damaged community can encourage candidates who have their best interests at heart – servant-leaders committed to something beyond the for-profit whims of their political overseers – then vote their conscience.

The “Culture of Deceit” Continues in Volusia County

“If a well governed city were to confine its governmental functions merely to the task of assuring survival, if it were to do nothing but provide “basic services” for an animal survival, it would be a city without parks, swimming pools, zoo, baseball diamonds, football gridirons and playgrounds for children. Such a city would be a dreary city indeed. As man cannot live by bread alone, a city cannot endure on cement, asphalt and pipes alone. A city must have a municipal spirit beyond its physical properties, it must be alive with an esprit de corps, its personality must be such that visitors both business and tourist are attracted to the city, pleased by it and wish to return to it.”

–Justice Michael A. Musmanno, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, Conrad v. Pittsburgh

What do you call someone who reneges on a promise?

Unreliable?  A liar?  An untrustworthy turncoat?  A four-flushing welsher?   

All of the above?

For the second time this month, in a nasty display of bait-and-switch deception, on Tuesday the Volusia County Council once again put not-for-profit cultural organizations across our region through the emotional grinder, voting to deny previously budgeted funding after another round of pompous political grandstanding.

In June 2023, the Volusia County Council listened to two-hours of public input then voted 6-0 (with Councilman David “No Show” Santiago typically absent) to continue the Volusia Cultural Council and the Community Cultural Grant program which has provided assistance to area arts, cultural, and heritage organizations through a competitive process for the past 36-years.

After approving the allocation of cultural arts grant funding during budget negotiations earlier this year, on October 7, Councilman Danny “Gaslight” Robins callously pulled the rug out from under 33 long-established local arts organizations at the eleventh-hour.

It seems Mr. Robins took offense to the fact the Shoestring Theater, a Lake Helen playhouse that has served Volusia County for 75-years, allowed a privately funded “Volusia Pride Pageant,” while the iconic 103-year-old Athens Theater in DeLand permitted an outside group to rent the venue to screen an adult only production of the “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” which included a “drag show” before the movie.

In turn, after Robins clutched his pearls, and a ham-handed process of confusing motions and counterproposals – the council voted 6-0 (you guessed it, Santiago was absent…) to return the traditional $611,758 allocation back to the general fund.

Oddly, Chairman Jeff Brower mumbled something about the money going to a non-existent “road” program…   

As a result, those cultural organizations who dutifully completed grant applications, attended workshops, provided requested financial data, and jumped through the myriad hoops required to have their funding request ranked and vetted by the Cultural Council, were publicly humiliated for no other reason than it suited Councilman Robins’ shameless self-promotion.

After fervent public pushback – including lobbying by 19 former Volusia County Council members, emails, social media posts, a petition containing 2,300 signatures, and impassioned pleas from the podium – this week, the off-the-agenda discussion continued with a longwinded push by Councilman Don Dempsey to wheedle a way to use Volusia ECHO funds for the cultural grant program by manipulating the millage (?).

In what must have been a pique of guilt, Mr. Dempsey mewled, “I’m not opposed to the ECHO portion of our tax dollar being used to maybe help them out, because that seems like that was the will of the voters with ECHO.  But I would never want to take anything out of the general fund for the arts, because I don’t think that’s a government purpose, but as long as that goes in place, I think it’s fair that maybe these people should have a shot of putting in for some of that money.”

You remember Councilman Dempsey? 

He’s the one who hates investing public funds in arts and cultural pursuits that draw thousands of visitors to our area annually, yet he has proposed shoehorning a multi-million-dollar publicly funded motorcross track to accommodate his family hobby using a mishmash of Volusia Forever and ECHO programmatic funding…    

(Maybe Mr. Dempsey should sit this one out?)

This time around, the council’s self-aggrandizing kabuki focused on pretentiously preaching how “fiscally conservative” our elected dullards are (after unanimously approving the cultural grants program in the 2025-26 budget?)

After taking a few cheap shots at arts organizations who spoke of hiring grant writers, cutting children’s programs, and restructuring budgets after the promised funds were abruptly denied, a motion to approve funding for the current list of grant recipients failed 4-3, with Councilmen Matt Reinhart, Jake Johansson and “No Show” Santiago voting to fund the program, at least for this year.

Given the promise made in 2023, it was a gross betrayal of those organizations who acted in good faith.

In my view, this protracted pageant of pomposity was a sickening display of the abject cruelty self-serving politicians are capable of – to include their suggested manipulation of established voter approved and tax supported programs like ECHO – when it serves their posturing, regardless of the corrosive effects on the public trust.   

These chiselers went back on their word – repeatedly – and Volusia County voters should not forget that.

Richard Francis “Dick” Kane – Requiescat in Pace

Several years ago, I ambled into a riverfront bar in Wilber by the Sea, perched on a barstool, and ordered a cold beer.  As luck would have it, sitting next to me was the great Dick Kane and his lovely wife Marylin. 

At the time, Dick was well into his 80’s and we rekindled our acquaintance, having previously met during a Sons of the Beach fundraiser. 

Paul Zimmerman and Dick Kane

In remarkable fashion, Dick plumbed the depths of his incredible knowledge of local politics spanning decades as we spoke of the absurdities, blessings, and importance of a lifelong calling to public service. 

Having spent the bulk of my life serving the citizens of Holly Hill, I was amazed that Dick knew as much about the unique history and political timeline of that small community as he did about Daytona Beach and Volusia County – recalling names, dates, the context, and backstory on some of the most famous (and infamous) periods of Halifax area history. 

It was like learning at the foot of a master storyteller with an encyclopedic recollection. 

According to a reflection on Mr. Kane’s amazing life and times published in The Daytona Beach News-Journal last week:

“Born on Long Island, New York, Kane served four years in the U.S. Navy, then earned a law degree from Duke University in 1963. He was admitted to the Florida Bar later that year.

He became the first Daytona Beach city attorney, and in 1965, as a member of the Daytona Regional Chamber of Commerce, he helped move Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University to Daytona Beach.

At age 34, in 1969, Kane was elected to the first of three terms as Daytona Beach mayor.”

During his long legal and often tumultuous political career, Mr. Kane held various posts, to include service as municipal judge for the City of Port Orange, decades as the city attorney of Hallandale Beach, Florida, past president of Sons of the Beach, and a longtime member of the Volusia County Republican Executive Committee. 

In the News-Journal’s summation of Mayor Kane’s life of service, former President of Sons of the Beach, and longtime friend of the Kanes, Paul Zimmerman, spoke of Dick’s dedication to preserving public access to our most precious natural amenity:

“…Kane’s legal acumen served the Sons of the Beach well, advising the group as it engaged in lawsuits against Volusia County seeking to overturn decisions that removed beach driving in certain designated areas.

“One of the reasons he was so stringent about his belief that driving should be sanctified, it’s written in our County Charter,” Zimmerman said. “He felt as though driving on the beach was a tremendous economic engine for Daytona Beach, and he was always looking at ways to improve Daytona Beach.”

Mayor Dick Kane passed away last week. He was 90 years old.

A wonderful life of service to others.  

Well done, Mayor Kane.  We’re glad you passed our way…  

City of Bunnell – Crossing the Goal Line Pays Dividends…

“To mark the completion of his seventh year with the city, last Monday commissioners gave him a 10 percent raise, or $14,600, increasing his salary from $143,395 to $158,000, not including a $2,400 a year car allowance and his health and retirement benefits.

It would have been a 12.5 percent raise had Commissioner Pete Young’s motion carried. Commissioner John Rogers pushed it back to 10. “I did the best I could to cut it back,” Rogers said.

The 10 percent includes a 2.5 percent inflation raise that all employees got. Employees also got up to 3 percent in merit raises. But no one got anything more than 5.5 percent.

Jackson’s salary is now nearly double the $82,000 salary he started with in August 2019. “My work speaks for itself,” Jackson said.”

–As excerpted from FlaglerLive.com, “It’s a Great Day for Bunnell Manager Alvin Jackson, Who Gets $14,500 Raise Despite Checkered Record,” Friday, October 17, 2025

When I read the Bunnell City Commission gifted City Manager Alvin Jackson a $14,600 salary increase following their almost supernatural evaluation of his performance, I immediately thought of that old adage “Persistence pays off.”

Make no mistake, when it came to ramrodding some of the most impactful (and controversial) development agreements and rezonings in the history of this once quaint community – a herculean behind-the-scenes effort that overcame almost universal public opposition and blindsided outraged residents – Mr. Jackson simply ignored civic resistance and made it happen.

Now, Alvin Jackson gets his due.  Because that’s how it works.

In my view, Mr. Jackson’s lucrative payday comes after his ‘damn the torpedoes’ push to resuscitate the 6,100-home monstrosity perversely named the Reserve at Haw Creek just weeks after the commission quashed the project to the applause (and relief) of worried residents.

Using a viciously underhanded tactic known as public policy by ambush, Bunnell Mayor Cathrine Robinson waited until the end of a June meeting to revive the development that will ultimately blanket over 2,800 acres between SR-100 and SR-11.

After strategically waiting for interested residents to leave the chamber that evening – Mayor Robinson sprang her off-the-agenda surprise – moving to reconsider the previous denial of the rezoning application and move forward with the development agreement. 

It was widely seen as wrong, duplicitous, and horribly deceitful – something orchestrated well in advance…

The mayor’s deceptive action stunned Bunnell residents who are rightfully concerned that the “city within a city” development will fundamentally change the character of their community.  Now, many believe that while Mayor Robinson was the face of the project, City Manager Jackson was its architect.

After greenlighting the Haw Creek development, the City Commission moved to rezone some 1,260 acres to light and heavy industrial use despite public opposition.   

According to a report in FlaglerLive.com, the approvals represented “…one of the largest such single-rezoning in the state, while never disclosing to what uses the land would be put. The development and the rezoning drew near-unanimous and intense public opposition. It made little difference to Jackson and the bare majority of the commission that pushed both through.”

Most recently, Mr. Jackson kept a mysterious project known only by the cryptogram “Another Great Day,” hidden from public review as the Bunnell City Commission took action to “execute documents” on the October 13 consent agenda. 

Using an “economic development” public record exemption to keep the project a secret, the citizens of Bunnell could be getting anything from an ice cream parlor to a hazardous waste incinerator…

None of that matters. 

Now is the time for those in “public service” who are willing to go along and get along to feather their nests – and the needs and demands of those they took an oath to serve are of no concern.

When historians reflect on this period of explosive growth in what remains of the Sunshine State – a greed-crazed era that traded our environment and quality of life for more pavement, development-induced flooding, loss of natural ecosystems, and growing threats to the quality and quantity of our finite water supply – they will note that loyalty paid dividends for those willing to sell their soul for a developer’s sense of “progress.”

Quote of the Week

“For most of the 13 years the City Island Recreation Center has been shuttered, city managers have repeatedly suggested that the World War II-era building be torn down.

The once-beautiful heart of pine floors have been buckling, and in recent years the wood frame structure has been saddled with water damage, mold, cracked walls, broken windows and holes in the roof, floor and walls.

Now, for the first time, a majority of city commissioners have agreed it’s time for the beat-up riverfront structure to come down.

At their next meeting on Nov. 5, city commissioners will vote on a proposal to tear down the 8,000-square-foot building perched on Orange Avenue just east of Beach Street.”

–Investigative Journalist Eileen Zaffiro-Kean writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Daytona Beach World War II building appears doomed to the wrecking ball,” Thursday, October 23, 2025

She was a tough old bird.  Good bones. 

It took decades, but the forces of “progress” finally got their way.  Our culture and history be damned.  Waterfront lots don’t grow on trees – and who needs trees anyway?

Sad.

Under this pernicious scheme, “progress” and “economic development” often require the sacrifice of public properties which link our present to our past – and the idea of preserving and enriching our unique cultural heritage by incorporating the past into the modern landscape is dismissed as “too expensive” by arrogant politicians and short-sighted administrators who naturally know what’s best for the rest of us.

So, they simply breach their fiduciary duty and fail to act or use due care – strategic negligence committed in plain sight – that allows publicly owned assets to fall into dangerous disrepair.  

And no one who should seems to care.  

The ruse usually begins with scary stories about physical threats to the building – a nasty “mold” problem, rodent infestation, or compromised structural elements round out the tale – all while officials purposely withhold funding for maintenance of the facility then allow time and the elements to do the rest.

When the public asset has deteriorated to the point it is no longer salvageable – outrageously inflated estimates for repairs are published – and the complicit elected officials tut-tut in faux astonishment about “priorities” and a “lack of funding” – with razing and replacing the building as the only prudent solution.

Now, the fate of the City Island Recreation Center is sealed after decades of strategic neglect.

I am always taken by the fact that our ‘powers that be’ have no qualms about gifting tens-of-millions in public funds to all the right last names – with various city and county officials rolling over and pissing on themselves like incontinent lapdogs whenever our “Rich & Powerful” demand tax incentives and corporate welfare packages to underwrite their for-profit ventures – yet an expenditure to save arts organizations or preserve a threatened piece of our local history is never a “wise investment.”

“Not a core responsibility of government…”

My ass.

This staggering level of incompetence, deliberate waste, and resource mismanagement at all levels of government is not limited to one historic building in Daytona Beach.  In my view, it represents a continuing, almost institutionalized, lack of substantive oversight by our elected officials that allows this calculated course of conduct to continue.

We deserve better.

“Tu vis ta culture ou tu tues ta culture, il n’y a pas de milieu.” “You live your culture, or you kill your culture, there is no in between.”

— Les Rôdailleurs, La Prière

And Another Thing!

Last week, Volusia United Educators held a rally outside the School Board meeting in DeLand to bring attention to the district’s insulting offer of a 1.5% cost-of-living increase for educators.

The teacher’s union had asked for 4%. 

According to reports, negotiations between VUE and Volusia County Schools stopped in September when the district declared an impasse after five bargaining sessions…

In a disturbing article by Jarleene Almenas writing in the Ormond Beach Observer last week, “As a union steward for Volusia United Educators, Mainland High School teacher Susan Holbrook asked her colleagues: If you could say one thing to the School Board and the superintendent, what would you say?

Their responses? One teacher sells plasma to pay her bills. Another said she wished she could sell plasma to buy her groceries, but can’t due to the cancer treatments. Then there was a statement by a teacher who lives with three roommates to make rent, and another by a teacher who has to work five jobs to make ends meet.”

Unfortunately, it appears those grim realities – along with physical assaults, threats, statistical manipulation by district administrators, and dystopian classroom conditions – are the terrible cost of teaching our children in Volusia County Schools in 2025.

The district claims that under their current offer, all instructional staff will receive a minimum 2.5% increase this year, with most instructional staff seeing a 3+% raise.  In my view, given the trifling offer, the teacher’s union is right to stand firm in opposition to an insulting 1.5% cost-of-living increase.  

According to VUE, Florida ranks an embarrassing 50th in the nation for teacher salaries – with Volusia County Schools base pay for instructional staff falling below what surrounding counties in Central Florida offer by $5,000 to $6,000.

Superintendent Balgobin

In a statement to the board, VUE President Elizabeth Albert said, “Your employees are working harder than ever, yet they are struggling to make ends meet.  Wages are low. Respect feels conditional and the people that make VCS an A-rated district are reaching their breaking point.”

In a horribly lop-sided insult to their dedicated instructional staff, last December, the Volusia County School Board – with little opportunity for newly elected representatives to review the lucrative terms of the agreement – fast-tracked an obscene four-year contract with Superintendent Carmen Balgobin on a 4-1 vote – increasing her base salary by 8.7% bringing her annual haul to $280,000 before perquisites.  

In addition, Balgobin’s contract includes life insurance, a medical stipend of $500 a month, district-owned cellular phone and computer, 20 calendar days of vacation, 12 days of sick leave per year, six “personal leave days, and a take-home car owned and maintained by Volusia County taxpayers.

A virtual cornucopia of salary and bennies has been lavished on Balgobin while questions of altering enrollment records and manipulating testing to increase school scores, ongoing communication issues, nondisclosure agreements to silence administrators, program cuts, and allegations of gross mismanagement in the Ivory Tower of Power continue to swirl…  

After that slap in the face to Volusia County educators, you begin to see why the district’s measly 1.5% cost-of-living offer is a sick joke…

According to the Observer’s report, to her credit, during last week’s School Board meeting, the resolute District 4 member Donna Brosemer – who cast the lone “No” vote to deny Balgobin’s horribly disproportionate contract – explained:

“District leadership knows what I thought of 1.5 (percent) from the beginning,” she said, adding that the board had been celebrating Homes Bring Hope — a nonprofit that recently helped six VCS employees become homeowners — while “completely ignoring the fact that there’s no number of plaques and certificates or photo ops or challenge coins that we can give to any teacher that helps them pay their bills.”

“What I heard tonight was horrifying,” Brosemer said. “So I hope that we all take this to heart and do more than just be dignified in ignoring it.”

That’s what leadership looks like, folks…

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

______________________________________________________

Note to the Barker’s View Tribe:

Barker’s View will be on hiatus – a short ‘pause for the cause’ – until November 13, 2025. 

During the break, please feel free to enjoy some past asides from the copious BV achieves at the bottom of this page.  In my view, it’s fun to take a look in the rearview mirror with the clarity of hindsight and analyze what’s changed, and what remains the same, here on Florida’s “Fun Coast.”  

All the Best, 

MDB

Barker’s View for October 16, 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:

Another Unfortunate ‘Misunderstanding’ in Ormond Beach

I served in municipal government for over three-decades.  During a long and necessarily tumultuous career, I learned that in politics the fumble doesn’t matter, it’s the recovery that counts…   

In my experience, disagreements surrounding essential services, budget allowances, and operational focus are inevitable.  Not everyone in the community is going to agree on how funds are allocated or concur with policy decisions that affect their lives and livelihoods.  That’s why elected officials need to be open to citizen input, welcome the competition of ideas, and grow some hard bark.   

Because contentious debate comes with the territory – and honest mistakes are inevitable in a bureaucracy with a lot of moving parts.     

Then there are the flagrant foul-ups.  Governmental gaffes that are purely self-inflicted – and worthy of widespread criticism.   

Purely unforced blunders – like the mystery of the Ormond Beach City Commission’s strategic foot-dragging in selecting an employee benefits provider – something many residents now suspect may involve undue lobbying and internal influence that has postponed (undermined?) the selection process (is there another reason?)

Add to that the withering backbiting and confusion on the dais that dominated recent budget negotiations – coupled with the incessant squabbles, political torpedoes, and petty power plays that continue to hamper progress on pressing issues – and you see why many are convinced Ormond Beach City Hall has descended into a factious and dysfunctional dumpster fire.

Deputy Mayor Lori Tolland

In my view, none of that explains why five reasonably intelligent elected officials (and their ample “staff”) once again snatched defeat from the jaws of victory when they missed a golden opportunity to do the right thing.   

Last week, Ormond Beach mom Anni Suadi appeared before the Ormond Beach City Commission to ask that her son, Lance Avery, 25, a resident living with Down syndrome, be returned to his two hour a day/two day a week volunteer role at the Nova Community Center, a position he enthusiastically held from October 2023 to November 2024, under a job training program sponsored by the Florida Division of Vocational Rehabilitation. 

For reasons still not clear, Lance was terminated from his role in November 2024 when the “temporary” program ended. 

According to a report by Brenno Carillo writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “To this day, he does not understand why his dream job got taken from him and has an emotional breakdown whenever at Nova Rec or even gets near it,” Suadi told the City Commission.

Suadi told The News-Journal last year that former Ormond Beach Mayor Bill Partington, who now serves as the district’s state representative, helped Avery secure his job at the center to serve “as an example” for other special needs young adults to do the same as part of a future pilot program idea.

More than 10 people spoke in support of Avery, calling on the board to rehire the former Seabreeze High School student to his previous post at the center.

Jennifer Bright, a candidate for City Commission, said the program gave special needs residents “an opportunity to learn job skills so they can build self-confidence and be more productive members of society.”

According to the city’s flummoxed Leisure Services and Parks and Recreation Director Robert Carolin, all the City of Ormond Beach did was provide space for the training course, stating that the vocational program “…possibly could have been construed as (was) an opportunity for employment within the city of Ormond Beach, but traditionally that’s not the case, and it hasn’t been.”

Seriously? 

After Lance served in a volunteer role for the City of Ormond Beach for over a year performing functions normally assigned to paid employees – sweeping floors, moving nets, shredding papers, preparing rooms for programs and special events, cleaning windows, and putting away gym equipment – Director Carlin disingenuously questions how he could have interpreted that his contributions might translate to a job opportunity with Parks & Rec? 

Bullshit.

By any measure, Lance had the right to believe he was proving himself and working towards a goal.

According to the News-Journal, “…Suadi said Avery kept volunteering at Rec Center until November, when she was told by city officials her son required some supervision.

“He can work independently, without supervision,” Saudi said.

When Partington left as mayor, the idea for the program did not continue, which prompted Suadi to ask the commission to vote to adopt it.

“It is not the primary role of government to directly employ individuals with special needs,” Deputy Mayor Lori Tolland said, indicating the board would not hold a vote. “It’s hard on our hearts, there is no doubt about it … but it’s not the role of government to provide jobs and training for individuals.”

Excuse me?  What in the discriminatory hell is Lori Tolland blathering about?

In my experience, smart government organizations at every level routinely recruit qualified individuals with disabilities to ensure essential services and equal opportunities for everyone, regardless of personal challenges.   

That’s the law.  It’s also the right thing to do…

During the public meeting, individuals who spoke to the City Commission on Lance’s behalf touted his value to the rec center, and our community.  In a report by Jarleene Almenas in the Ormond Beach Observer, Lance’s job training coach Chris Bond touted his potential:

“Lance is a very capable young man,” Bond said. “He thrives on a strong routine in any place that can offer him that strong routine. He is a very hard worker. He is very capable and I know that we’re going to find success, whether in the future with the city, if that’s something that is in the cards, or elsewhere in the competitive job market. Lance makes his own success.”

What a terrible shame for the tone-deaf City of Ormond Beach.

When they had the chance to demonstrate a firm commitment to their constituents with special needs – going beyond faux sympathy and a few leisure programs – rather than invest in gainful opportunities for disabled residents who aspire to public service, they cruelly claim helping people isn’t a “role of government.”    

(Where have I heard that before?)

I find it difficult to believe that a city government currently employing two redundant Assistant City Managers – each commanding $173,000 annually, plus perquisites – cannot find 4-hours of entry-level compensation to retain an inspirational and demonstrably loyal asset? 

State Rep. Bill Partington

I’ll just bet if State Rep. Bill Partington wanted to, he could look under the couch cushions in Tallahassee and find a modicum of funding to support occupational training for Ormond Beach’s special needs population to help them succeed personally and professionally.

In his “State of the City” address on Tuesday, Mayor Jason Leslie themed his speech “It all starts here!” 

That is, unless you happen to be disabled… 

Then, you can find your start elsewhere.  Because while your plight is “hard on the hearts” of our callous elected officials – it’s not their “role” to provide a hand up to “individuals” like you…

In my view, qualified individuals living with special needs like Lance Avery who have proven their worth through volunteerism, job training, solid personal and professional references, and demonstrated proficiency, should have the right to expect a chance for gainful and personally rewarding employment through the competitive process, just like everyone else.   

Anything less is morally wrong, systemically exclusionary, and patently discriminatory. 

Deputy Mayor Tolland should know that – and understand she has now an opportunity to recover with grace and do the right thing to the benefit of all Ormond Beach residents.  

Bold Leadership Brings Hope for Volusia County Arts & Culture Funding   

The unfortunate fallout from Volusia County Councilman Danny “Gaslight” Robins’ political showboating – a self-promoting eleventh-hour parlor trick that cut all previously appropriated grant funding for 33 nonprofit organizations and impacted numerous art shows, festivals, community theaters, educational opportunities, and musical productions – continued this week with an inspiring community effort and extraordinary leadership from an impressive alliance of former County Council members.

More on that important development later. 

Shockingly, all public funding for arts and cultural programs in Volusia County was eliminated and returned to the general fund last week after Councilman Robins discovered that – in an effort to become self-sustaining – the iconic Athens Theater in DeLand, and the tiny Shoestring Theater in Lake Helen, rented their venues to third-party producers who held an adult only “drag show” ahead of a screening of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” and a Volusia Pride event, respectively.   

In an effort to make up for the $611,758 denied by the Volusia County Council and maintain critical funding for area arts programs, Grace Boynton, development director at the 103-year-old Athens Theater, has launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise $700,000 to support “…the theatres, museums, galleries, and cultural spaces that give our community its soul…”

Please find the Volusia Arts Lifeline here: https://gofund.me/6f4178b21

In an unprecedented show of bold leadership and solidarity with community cultural organizations, this week nineteen former Volusia County Council members – from both sides of the aisle and all political persuasions – stood strong and signed an open letter to Chairman Brower and current council members calling their action “a shock to the system,” and reminding them of the estimated $50 million in annual economic impact artistic programming brings to our region.

As previously stated, I believe that arts programs should be self-sufficient to the extent possible – supported by fundraisers, philanthropy, volunteerism, and productions that help offset costs. 

However, given the sheer number of visitors festivals like the DeLand Fall Festival of the Arts, the Pioneer Settlement for the Creative Arts, Daytona Beach Arts Fest, and the IMAGES festival bring to Volusia County each year – promoting tourism, stimulating the local economy, and highlighting area communities – you begin to understand that the paltry budget allocated to arts funding for the past 36 years has resulted in a handsome return on investment countywide.

Not anymore.

In an article that appeared in the West Volusia Beacon this week, reporter Robin Mimna exposed some disturbing facts about how our elected representatives cloister themselves and refuse to explain their petty machinations to either the working press or their constituents.   

According to the report, only County Chair Jeff Brower and Councilman Matt Reinhart responded to the reporter’s request for comment:

“I do not believe government should be in charge of defining or funding art,” Brower wrote. “Government should not take our residents’ income with the threat of seizing their homes and property to use it for charitable donations.”

Brower said he wants the grant funding redirected to sidewalk construction, which he described as a “core government responsibility.”

Reinhart, who supported the grants, told The Beacon he made a motion to approve all the applicants but it died without a second. Because he was on the losing side, he said, he cannot bring the matter back; only one of the four opposing council members can.”

According to the report, Robins did not respond to The Beacon’s request for additional comment following the meeting, and the remainder – Jake Johansson, Don Dempsey, Troy Kent, and David “No Show” Santiago – couldn’t be bothered…

Cowards.

While Chairman Brower’s rationale sounds noble, when you consider this council has done essentially nothing when it comes to funding desperately needed transportation infrastructure, while blatantly misusing ECHO and Forever dollars to bankroll Councilman Don Dempsey’s multi-million-dollar publicly funded motorcross facility, his “core government responsibility” argument rings hollow.

Why didn’t Mr. Brower and his “colleagues” allocate the funds to sidewalks during the normal budget process?

Instead, they waited for Volusia County nonprofits to complete applications, jump through hoops, have their requests vetted and ranked by the now unnecessary Cultural Council, only to have the rug publicly pulled out from under them so Councilman Robins could preen and peacock with his pompous puritan act…

The Volusia Arts Lifeline request for donations reads, in part, “For generations, the arts have shaped Volusia County into a place where imagination is nurtured, where children discover their voices, and where neighbors come together to feel inspired, connected, and part of something beautiful.

Now, those same organizations are fighting to keep their doors open, their lights on, and their programs alive.”

Please join me in supporting the arts in Volusia County this fall – attend a festival, take in a live performance, or enjoy a concert – your patronage fuels creativity in our community and enhances the quality of life for everyone.  

Quote of the Week

“In 1989 the County Council established the Cultural Council as the official arts agency and tasked them with establishing a program for review of annual funding requests. This action followed a recommendation from Leadership Daytona together with an economic study which showed significant economic impact to Volusia County by cultural and arts programming.

For more than three decades, the economic rate of return for cultural and arts programming has been extraordinary. Every dollar invested in the arts produces two dollars in return.  A recent study by United Arts of Central Florida demonstrated that local arts programming had a nearly $50 million annual impact. Culture and the arts support nearly 1000 local jobs, and hosted events which attracted over 800,000 people.

A recent exhibit at the Museum of Arts and Sciences attracted over 30,000 people from around the state. Images Art Festival annually draws a crowd of over 50,000. Atlantic Center for the Arts has earned a national reputation.  While the economic gain is tangible, the benefits to our quality-of-life is even more significant.

Volusia voters have long demonstrated their support for funding culture, arts, and history.  In both 2000 and 2020, voters overwhelmingly supported taxing themselves through the ECHO program, but these funds are restricted to capital improvements.  Annual programmatic funding is essential to the vitality of these museums and venues.   

The recent action of the county council to reject the annual award of community cultural grants was a shock to the system…”

–As excerpted from correspondence signed by nineteen former Volusia County Council members and chairs to Chairman Jeff Brower and Councilmen Johansson, Robins, Reinhart, Kent, Santiago, and Dempsey, asking they reconsider their recent action and approve the recommended cultural and arts funding for 2025-2026.

“Bravo!” Many thanks for your courage and thoughtful leadership when we need it most:

Pat Northey

Clay Henderson

Deanie Lowe

Ed Kelley

Frank Bruno

Joyce Cusack

Judy Conte

Pat Patterson

Deb Denys

Roy Schleicher

Joe Janynes

Jim Ward

Doug Daniels

Carl Persis

Billie Wheeler

Barbara Girtman

Phil Giorno

Ben Johnson

Josh Wagner

And Another Thing!

“Over the years, the county has seen debate over where and how to spend (ECHO) money and the process itself.

(Clay) Henderson said he’d like to see changes to the direct expenditure program, which enables the county to spend Volusia ECHO money for its own purposes.

“It’s a concern to many that the county can just say, ‘Well, (we) want to appropriate some of this money for our own projects,” Henderson said.

Some have criticized the County Council for setting aside $3.5 million from Volusia ECHO funds toward a motocross facility. The Volusia County Council hasn’t voted yet on whether to build the facility, but the Council approved buying land for the site with part of those funds. The idea is being spearheaded by District 1 Councilman Don Dempsey.”

–Reporter Sheldon Gardner, writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “ECHO at 25: Volusia grant program has spent $117 million so far, has it been worth it?” Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Kudos to former Volusia County Council Chair Clay Henderson for saying the quiet part out loud.

In a timely report on the health of Volusia County’s ECHO program, voter-approved revenue earmarked for ecological, cultural, historical, and what has traditionally been passive outdoor recreation; this week The Daytona Beach News-Journal gave the good, the bad, and the ugly of the program over the past quarter-century.

Although Volusia ECHO was sold to voters as a means of partnering with nonprofits and municipal governments who compete for funding with innovative quality-of-life projects – a process that normally requires a vetted plan demonstrating countywide interest, matching funds, and clear performance requirements – what we got was a cheap backdoor slush fund. 

Inexcusably, two years ago, the Volusia County Council approved a “Direct County Expenditure” bundled as a “5-year plan,” which placed costs for the repair and replacement of existing infrastructure on the back of the Volusia ECHO grant program.

According to a March 2023 report in the Ormond Beach Observer, “Over the next five years, Volusia County plans to fund 43 projects at 32 facilities — a request totaling over $15 million — through its voter-approved Volusia ECHO program.”

In addition, since the program’s inception in 2007, “…the council approved 22 projects to be funded by direct county expenditure, at $16.1 million.”

At the time, the county’s facilitator, Community Services Director Brad Burbaugh, hid behind an obscure 2020 resolution passed by the Volusia County Council that both authorized the referendum to renew the ECHO program while permitting the council to route programmatic funds for “direct county expenditure for County government projects or by grants-in-aid awards.”

In my view, wrapping the ballot initiative in some bureaucratese then misappropriating what was billed as competitive grant funds to supplant recurring repair and replacement expenditures is not an accepted use of ECHO grant dollars – it’s bait-and-switch sneak thievery.

In my view, when 72% of Volusia County voters opted to extend the ECHO and Forever programs for 20-years, they had no idea that funds earmarked for new and innovative amenities would ultimately be used for “ecological, cultural, and historic” features like repairing long neglected beach ramps, walkovers, and docks, refinishing ceilings, renovating public restrooms and parking lots at county facilities, and building a multi-million-dollar motocross facility…

Unlike Volusia County, most responsible government entities without a tax supported piggybank at their disposal are required to budget for infrastructure repair and replacement obligations each year in an honest and transparent way.

They don’t exacerbate a growing “trust issue” by stretching a voter-approved program’s intent to shoehorn anything and everything – including the pet projects of sitting politicians – into a slimy slush fund where our tax dollars are regularly looted to cover the ongoing mismanagement of preventive maintenance, repair, and replacement of existing public assets. 

That’s all for me.  Have a safe and fun Biketoberfest 2025, y’all!

Barker’s View for October 9, 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:

This one’s a doozy, y’all. Settle in…

The Case of the Slippery Sidewalks – A Mystery at Mosaic

Last month, The Daytona Beach News-Journal’s investigative journalist Eileen Zaffiro-Kean broke the story of how 40 residents of ICI Homes’ Mosaic community have suffered slip-and-fall incidents on neighborhood sidewalks – some resulting in serious injuries. 

The culprit is standing water due to inadequate drainage that results in a slippery coating of mold, algae, and mud forming across the surface. 

A dirty and dangerous condition that has persisted for years.

For reasons that are yet to be determined, construction performance bonds on the sidewalks – which would have ensured the infrastructure met applicable codes – were reduced or released apparently with little (if any) inspections. 

As a result, the taxpayers of Daytona Beach are on the hook for at least $1 million in repair and replacement costs to correct the problem for Mosaic residents.

Now, the internal intrigue at City Hall is becoming a Nancy Drew Mystery… 

When last we left River Heights, it was reported that assistant city manager for infrastructure Andy Holmes was claiming “Former Daytona Beach City Manager Jim Chisholm, who served from 2004 until 2021, decided unilaterally whether a bond would be reduced or released, Holmes said. Chisholm also decided whether a newly constructed street or sidewalk would be accepted, he said.

Chisholm oversaw Mosaic sidewalk construction from 2017 until 2021, and there are no city inspection records of that work during that period, Holmes said.”

After the diligent investigative efforts of Daytona Beach Commissioner Stacy Cantu, things took an even stranger turn

At the October 1 commission meeting, Commissioner Cantu revealed internal documents that shed light on who reduced performance bonds covering Mosaic sidewalks, and when.  

Although it was initially made to appear that former City Manager Jim “The Chisler” Chisholm individually released the bonds without adequate inspection, the records Ms. Cantu produced prove that wasn’t the case:

“Chisholm oversaw Mosaic sidewalk construction from 2017 until 2021, and there are no city inspection records of that work during that period, Holmes said at the July meeting.

But one document Cantu obtained shows there was staff oversight, and Chisholm only slightly reduced two performance bonds on newly built sidewalks in the first phase of the neighborhood.

The 2019 document shows Chisholm reduced one bond from $342,736 to $322,844. The other bond was reduced from $320,860 to $304,427. That means the contractor was still on the hook at that point to build the sidewalks correctly.

The Oct. 9, 2019, memo from Holmes to Chisholm requested the city manager reduce the bonds, and noted that “substantial work has been completed and accepted by the city” in the phase one area of the neighborhood.

The memo also notes that “the city engineer has verified that the work in question has been complete, and the amounts of bond reduction correspond to the value of the completed work.” Holmes was the city’s public works director when he wrote the memo six years ago.”

Whoa. 

In response to a public records request, Ms. Cantu obtained documents indicating that current City Manager Deric Feacher significantly reduced the same two bonds, one “from $304,427 to $6,089 in July of 2022,” the other “from $322,844 to $6,457 in July 2022 as well.”

According to the News-Journal, correspondence from Mr. Feacher to ICI Homes at the time claims the sidewalks had been completed to a degree that warranted the performance bond reductions but apparently makes no reference to city inspectors approving the final construction or bond reductions.  

It is not clear whether Mr. Feacher relied on the recommendation of City Engineer Jim Nelson or others, but the report indicates Nelson was copied on the letter to ICI Homes.  

Perhaps more disturbing, the News-Journal is reporting that other communications between ICI Homes and Daytona Beach officials suggest that the issue of sidewalks holding water may not be limited to the Mosaic community…

Look, I’ve never been a fan of “The Chisler,” but if he (or Mr. Feacher) acted upon the best advice of city engineers and inspectors when reducing the performance bonds, then someone has some explaining to do at City Hall.   

As Ms. Cantu was quoted, “I’m not Chisholm’s protector, but what’s right is right,” she said. “You don’t blame someone.”

She’s right.  But it shouldn’t end there.

Now, the residents of Mosaic – and the taxpayers of Daytona Beach – deserve a full investigation into the who, what, when, where, why, and how these substandard sidewalks were approved without adequate inspection to restore the public’s trust in the process. 

Given the pace and scope of development over the past decade, the citizens of Daytona Beach and beyond deserve assurance that conscientious professionals are ensuring safety, compliance, and construction quality – a process city managers should be able to trust when making decisions about specific projects.

In my view, the City of Daytona Beach has done the right thing in working with ICI Homes and others to make the residents of Mosaic safe and whole – and the credit goes to Commissioner Stacy Cantu for her efforts to expose the good, the bad, and the ugly, tackle difficult problems, and demand solutions for her constituents.

Volusia County Schools – Defending the “Cult of Silence”

One thing outsiders quickly understand about the administration of Volusia County School’s is that no expense will be spared when the District defends its dubious operational policies from external scrutiny. 

In fact, controlling the narrative and silencing contrary opinions has become the overriding focus of Superintendent Carmen Balgobin and her “cabinet” of obsequious drones – a well-crafted and intensely protected storyline that has mesmerized the majority of our so-called “elected oversight” on the Volusia County School Board. 

Last year, School Board member Donna Brosemer defeated an entrenched insider – the malleable Carl Persis – who spent as much time staring at his shoes and apologizing for the District’s latest scandal or blunder as he did rubber stamping the administration’s policies… 

To her credit, Ms. Brosemer made it immediately clear who she works for – and it isn’t Superintendent Balgobin. 

That independence hasn’t set well with Volusia’s stagnant ‘Old Guard,’ lead-assed insiders who prefer a “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” approach when propping up a flimsy façade of competence (while cementing a culture of mediocrity) that is turning Volusia County students into victims and running off quality educators who are sick of the hypocrisy. 

For instance, earlier this year, Ms. Brosemer was shocked to learn that over one-hundred non-instructional staff had been directed to sign a non-disclosure agreement by the Balgobin administration – an overbroad gag order that included information specifically covered by Florida’s open records law – something many saw as a means of bureaucratically silencing those who accept public funds to serve in the public interest.

To her credit, Ms. Brosemer had the courage to seek answers – and spent her own money to fight for her constituents – going in her own pocket to obtain independent counsel while being charged by the administration she was elected to oversee to fulfill her public records requests.

Read that again.    

Last week, during a School Board workshop, we learned that the District hired Aaron Wolfe, an attorney with Doran, Foxman, Sims, Wolfe & Yoon of Daytona Beach, to defend Volusia County Schools Attorney Gilbert Evans’ opinion that the Balgobin NDA is somehow both legal and constitutional in a tax funded entity subject to Florida’s open records law.

In turn, at personal expense, Ms. Brosemer engaged Irine Korte, of Apfelbaum Martinez Law in Port St. Lucie, who determined the document was most likely “void, illegal and unenforceable under Florida law.”

In a purely obstructionist move, the District failed to make Ms. Korte’s determinations available until the agenda item was called at the workshop.  Then a short 15-minute recess allowed board members time to skim Korte’s well-formed dissenting opinion…

Bullshit.

Of course, Mr. Wolfe attended the meeting and explained in monotonous detail all the reasons why Dr. Balgobin was right and Ms. Brosemer was wrong – claiming that the NDA itself explains that “confidential information” does not include information that is “required to be disclosed by law, regulation or court order” – even though the extremely broad language governs public records, such as “the district’s financial operations, including budgets, funding sources and allocation of resources.”

In attorney Korte’s opinion, “Strategic planning documents and information − this is a very broad statement and likely could not be construed to fall under any statute which permits confidentiality.  Therefore, protection of this information likely violates the Florida Constitution and applicable Florida law.”

With little discussion, other board members essentially told Ms. Brosemer to mind her own business (?) – explaining their groupthink has concluded the controversial (and potentially unconstitutional) nondisclosure agreements are the sole authority of the politically unaccountable Superintendent Balgobin.

“I think there’s lanes,” said School Board member (and admitted liar) Jessie “Whackadoodle” Thompson. “… There are things that come before us, policy being a major one, but that kind of stuff (NDAs) falls under organization. That’s why we pick the superintendent.”

In my experience, whenever an elected watchdog gets too close to the truth, the instinctive organizational defense is to isolate the inquirer, accuse them of crossing the line, then berate them for meddling in the affairs of sacrosanct administrators.   

In the aftermath of the District’s expensive dog-and-pony show, this week Ms. Brosemer spoke of the acquiescence of our elected “representatives,” and the frightening effects of internal censorship and information manipulation on our right to know:

“The board has surrendered its ability to challenge, question, or research any action by the district, and the district makes it as difficult as possible to get answers or information in any form.

How will we know whether information provided by any staff member in any form is all there is to know, and not just what the district wants us to know?”

Disturbing.

In my view, NDA’s are clearly a public policy decision for our elected representatives – not the manipulative whims of a self-aggrandizing superintendent with a superiority complex…  

Kudos to Donna Brosemer for standing firm for the rights of Volusia County taxpayers – and shining a very bright light on how things have been done in Balgobin’s “Ivory Tower of Power” in DeLand for far too long.  

Please find Ms. Brosemer’s thoughts on the NDA’s – and the School Board’s gross inaction – here: https://tinyurl.com/2c7tcc8p

Volusia County Council of Cowards – The Day the Arts Died on Florida’s “Fun Coast”

After approving the allocation of cultural arts grant funding earlier this year, on Tuesday, the Volusia County Council staged one of its overacted melodramas as Councilman Danny “Gaslight” Robins effectively killed the arts in Volusia County by callously pulling the rug out from under thirty-two local nonprofit organizations at the eleventh-hour.

Per usual, District 5 Councilman David “No Show” Santiago had something better to do… 

Why would the Volusia County Council appropriate arts funding, allow their Cultural Council to waste time and effort vetting, ranking, and approving detailed applications submitted by nonprofits, then ignore the recommendations of their appointees – and the fervent pleas of residents involved in Volusia’s struggling arts scene – by terminating funding across the board? 

The answer is preposterous, even by the Volusia County Council’s subjective standards…

It appears the tiny Shoestring Theater, a Lake Helen playhouse that has served Volusia County for 75-years – allowed a privately funded “Volusia Pride Pageant” – while the iconic 103-year-old Athens Theater in DeLand permitted an outside group to rent the venue to screen an adult only production of the “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” which included a “drag show” before the movie.

What stunned many is that two-years ago, the Volusia County Council discussed the issue and voted 6-0 to preserve funding for the Community Cultural Grant program, which provides a vital shot-in-the-arm for countywide nonprofits who produce art festivals, museums, theaters, stage concerts, curate historical collections, promote public art, and hold associated educational programs for “Fun Coast” residents and visitors. 

For the record, “No Show” Santiago was absent from that meeting as well…  

On Tuesday, after staring down like catatonic gargoyles from the dais as residents spoke passionately about how the arts enhance their quality of life – from a program called “Guitars4Vets” at the Hub on Canal in New Smyrna Beach (which the speaker said is saving lives among struggling military veterans), to healing music for cancer patients, the Halifax Historical Society, and MOAS – it took three ham-handed motions and a final 6-0 vote to return the $611,758 allocation back to the general fund.

Only Councilman Matt Reinhart championed public support for the cultural arts, but his pleas were equally ignored. 

Hell, even Councilman Jake Johansson tried his patented “elder statesman” routine, suggesting that funding for the Athens and Shoestring theaters be culled for later discussion, which would allow the other organizations to receive funds.  

So, where will the $611,758 be spent?   

According to a report by Jarleene Almenas writing in the Ormond Beach Observer, “I think we need to take this $611 (thousand) and move it to the $5 million that we have for roads, sidewalks, for support — because we have very limited funds to maintain our roads,” Brower said. “For me, that’s more of a core responsibility.”

That’s a great political soundbite for Chairman Jeff Brower, but why didn’t they do that when budget allocations were being discussed, rather than publicly humiliating organizations who took the time to submit grant applications to accommodate Councilman Robins’ political grandstanding?

Whatever. 

Councilman Danny Robins

At the end of the day, Councilman “Gaslight” Robins got his way – along with a chance to preen and peacock with one of his patented political parlor tricks while dashing the hopes of Volusia’s struggling arts community.

This isn’t institutional wokeness, it is two long-established nonprofit organizations who tried to live up to their obligation for self-sustainability by renting space to third-party entities, then got publicly flogged because the productions didn’t appeal to Mr. Robins.   

Look, I believe cultural arts should be self-sustaining – and gaps in limited public funding not covered by Volusia’s voter approved ECHO program should be met by philanthropic patrons – and the proceeds of fundraisers and successful productions that fill seats in theaters and concert halls. 

That said, I’ve watched that shitshow in DeLand long enough to have seen millions in taxpayer dollars pissed away to fund everything from the pet projects of individual elected officials to myriad corporate welfare schemes for their political benefactors.

Like a publicly funded motorcross facility deemed essential by Councilman Don Dempsey to marketing budgets for start-up airlines, infrastructure, tax breaks for massive corporations, and spiffs for all the right last names who fund their political campaigns and expect a return on investment.

Yet, Councilman Robins now has a “moral obligation” to be the gatekeeper and allow only his version of a “healthy family-oriented arts and culture learning and education experience” for the rest of us?

Sure he does.

Hypocritical assholes…

In my view, as evidenced by his staunch resistance to addressing widespread development-induced flooding across the width and breadth of Volusia County – Danny “Gaslight” Robins doesn’t give two-shits about the health of your family or mine. 

What he cares about is getting reelected to political office so he can continue slavishly serving the wants of his wealthy benefactors in the real estate development industry. 

Sadly, if he has to crush your kids’ choral group, cut your mothers Plein Air class, pull funding for veterans’ museums, summer art camps, IMAGES: A Festival of the Arts, school field trips, the Ormond Memorial Art Museum, Pioneer Settlement Jamboree, DeLand’s Fall Festival of the Arts, etcetera – then so be it. 

All that matters is that he can play the role of the “posturing puritan” when it is politically convenient. 

Equally sad, the others present didn’t have the moral or political courage to think for themselves…  

Now that’s obscene.

Quote of the Week

“The jobs alone,” Volusia County Councilman Matt Reinhart said, “just providing those jobs and boosting the economy is, I mean, I can’t put words to it, that’s exciting.”

Amazon Fulfillment Center DAB2 is a 630,000-square-foot robotics facility that can hold up to 30 million items and is offering a starting salary of $19 per hour. Once fully operational, DAB2 will have the capability to ship more than 800,000 packages in a single day. As of this writing, the facility was running at 65% of capacity. Andrew Jaworski, the general manager of DAB2, expects the fulfillment center to be fully operational before the year is out.

Working at Amazon means receiving a comprehensive benefits package from day one, a 401(k) with 50% Amazon match, paid leave and free mental health resources. Some DAB2 warehouse employees can work in shorts and a T-shirt and all have access to a multi-faith room (AKA prayer room).

This is Amazon’s second facility in Daytona Beach, joining a “last mile” delivery station on Mason Avenue.

Daytona Beach City Manager Deric C. Feacher agreed Amazon’s interest in Daytona is creating business leads for the city. “There are other entities that are looking at us, not only from the Amazon type market, but from hospitality and accommodations that I think will be significant,” Mr. Feacher said.

Mayor Henry concurred, “It just sends a ripple effect. Hopefully, others will come and see us as a viable space.”

He pointed to a “great school system” and “great colleges and universities” that make Daytona, “a good resource for employers.”

–Journalist Charles Guarria, writing in Volusia Hometown News, “Amazon opens robotic fulfillment center at Daytona,” Thursday, October 2, 2025

I hate to be the proverbial turd in the punchbowl, but… 

While our local politicos are rolling over and urinating all over themselves like overexcited puppies – touting the “grand slam” that is the new Daytona Beach Amazon Robotics Fulfillment Center – I’m still hung-up on the word “Robotics.”

Just me?

After gifting some $4 million in corporate welfare incentives in the form of tax breaks for the largest e-commerce behemoth in the known universe (rather than demand concessions for allowing a 24/7/365 fulfillment center at the incredibly lucrative nexus of I-4 and I-95, adjacent to Daytona “International” Airport), last week the gargantuan Amazon logistics operation opened to great fanfare.

With the promise of 1,000 jobs paying at least $19 an hour, during the recent ribbon-cutting ceremony, Daytona Beach Mayor Derrick Henry gushed, “Let me be clear: these aren’t just jobs. They are careers,” he said. “This means our neighbors and young people entering the workforce will not only have stable employment but also a future where they can build skills, raise a family and prosper.”

Maybe the flummoxed Councilman Matt Reinhart and the overexuberant Mayor Henry know something the burgeoning Generative AI industry doesn’t?   

In June, Forbes reported that Amazon eliminated 1,000 jobs from its workforce due to advances in Artificial Intelligence and robotics technology, something job market analyst Eli Amdur suggests might be a “harbinger of things to come at Amazon,” and potentially a “phenomenon we will see far and wide, not just at Amazon.”

According to Amdur, “It’s inescapable for a few reasons. First, according to data from layoffs.fyi, which monitors tech worker layoffs, already this year 141 companies have laid off 62,832 employees. In 2024, it was 152,922 employees from 551 companies and in 2023, it was 264,220 employees from 1,193 companies.

Layoffs, we see, are inevitable – especially in tech. At the onset of new technologies or the introduction of new products, hiring takes place with kid-in-a-candy-store concern for consequences. A year later, things look quite different – and that kid is now an obese diabetic.”

Interesting…

In my view, the word “Robotics” means just that – intelligent machines performing heavy lifting and repetitive tasks with the speed, reliability, and efficiency that human workers cannot match – resulting in fewer people doing jobs that have been technologically automated.

“Come on, Barker – you bloviating windbag!  This is a renaissance, dammit!  The future is bright, and you’re not.  For your information, Bubba, Amazon gave a whopping $20,000 grand to promote Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics at Volusia County Schools to help local kids aspire to schlepping boxes around a warehouse floor, you cantankerous crank…”

Look, don’t take my cynical word for it, in a memo to employees earlier this year, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said it first:

“As we roll out more Generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done. We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today, and more people doing other types of jobs. It’s hard to know exactly where this nets out over time, but in the next few years, we expect that this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.”

In my view, it’s nice for our elected and appointed officials to beat their chests and throw around exciting words like “synergy,” “bright future,” “shared vision,” and “grand slam” – so long as they understand the true “ripple effect” that the potential loss of hundreds of jobs/careers could have on our local economy as automation increases – then have the vision to plan for it. 

Ignoring the hard truth while fanning the frenetic excitement of the “next big thing” is what we’ve come to expect from those toxic optimists who continue to throw our money at the promise of “high paying jobs.” All while refusing to seek concessions and much needed infrastructure in exchange for the impacts, job insecurity, traffic, and civic nuisances inherent to largescale industrial warehouse operations.  

And Another Thing!

“To earn an A, Florida schools had to score a 64%.

But when the school grades came out this summer, Atlantic scored a 633 out of 1,000 possible points. That was two points shy of an A, as 635 rounds up to 64%.

“We were right there,” (Atlantic High School Principal) Watson said.

So district officials reviewed the data and found an aberration.

Volusia’s appeal letter to the Department of Education states that students assigned to the district’s Hospital Homebound service were erroneously attributed to Atlantic High.

Where the high school and the program once shared the same address, the district centralized all of its exceptional student education offices, including Hospital Homebound.

“Although these corrections are now reflected in the updated (Master School Identification) file, the change was made after school grades were calculated and reported,” states a letter from Superintendent Carmen Balgobin to the FDOE. “However, Hospital Homebound and Atlantic High School were never physically collocated at any point during the 2024-25 school year.”

–Reporter Mark Harper, writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Volusia’s Atlantic High School earns 1st ‘A’ from Florida Department of Education,” Friday, September 24, 2025

Make it make sense…

Look, I’m no academic (the only thing that kept me out of college was high school…) but since when does 64% equate to an “A” grade? 

I’m asking.

Because student performance assessment in Florida classrooms is based on a standard grading scale – where 90-100% is considered an “A” grade (Excellent) – and 64% is considered a “D” (Below Average). 

That’s typically what people consider when they see achievement measured by a traditional grading system.  

Unfortunately, in the wild and wacky world of Florida academic administration – it appears senior officials with the Department of Education and the various taxpayer funded districts simply interpret “legislative mandates and educational policies” – then develop favorable (and easily massaged) metrics for measuring school performance as a means of influencing public perception.

Why are those responsible for administering the education of our children constantly lowering the bar?

In my view, it is because most people prefer to purchase homes and relocate businesses in areas that have high performing schools to educate their children. 

In March, the Florida Citizens Alliance pressed Governor Ron DeSantis and the state legislature to “implement sweeping reforms,” of Florida’s public school grading system.  According to the FCA:

“If the Florida DOE scored their schools the same way they graded students with the traditional grading scale used throughout the U.S., where scores below 60 percent are considered failing, 52 percent of Florida’s public schools would receive a failing grade.”

According to Keith Flaugh, co-founder of Florida Citizens Alliance, “Florida schools are actually in a major crisis academically, despite PR efforts by the Florida Department of Education to persuade taxpayers into believing the state has the very best schools in the nation. With 82 percent of schools effectively earning a ‘D’ grade or lower, and the state ranking near the bottom of the recent Nations Report Card (NAEP) and 43rd in SAT scores nationwide, it’s abundantly clear that urgent action is needed.”

While Volusia County School Superintendent Carmen Balgobin continues to manipulate scores by moving low performing students and programs around like chess pieces until positive results are obtained – flogging the “Everyone got an A!” ruse – then marginalizing anyone who questions the practice and wrapping herself in self-nominated awards to build credibility.

I question who Dr. Balgobin is serving? 

Is she furthering the mercenary interests of the real estate industry and our “economic development” shills fabricating a disguise to lure more warehouse jobs? 

Because she damn sure doesn’t have the interests of struggling Volusia County students who are unwitting victims of a school grading system that has been labeled a “politically manipulated scam” by those in the know.

What a tragic shame…

That’s all for me.  Enjoy Port Orange Family Days, y’all!

Barker’s View for October 2, 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:

The Revitalization of the Iconic Main Street Arch – A Catalyst for Change?

When I was a kid, a trip to the Boardwalk with family and friends was the quintessence of growing up in the Halifax area.  We would play Skee Ball, swim by the pier, have epic “goofy golf” tournaments on the roof, eat footlong corndogs slathered in mustard, and watch the saltwater taffy being pulled at Zeno’s Sweet Shop. 

Remember strolling with your best girl along the promenade amidst a cacophony of sights, sounds, and smells?

Fond memories of riding the Sky Lift and Ferris wheel, then walking along with the ding-ding-ding of the pinball machines singing out, the aroma of hot pizza, and the crash of the bumper cars (remember the pop of sparks flying off the electrified ceiling as the carts whizzed around the greasy metal floor?)

There was a unique feel and a great salty smell to the air back then, a thrilling sense of something fun.  The scream of seagulls, sandpipers scurrying from an incoming tide, the healing qualities of clean saltwater, the satisfying warmth of hot sun on your shoulders; negative ions creating an invigorating energy at the water’s edge.

If you grew up here, you know.

There was a time when a day at the beach was an experience that we all shared.  Our greatest natural amenity and a draw that brought millions of visitors to our area when The World’s Most Famous Beach was recognized everywhere in the known universe.

Then everything changed. 

Now, thanks to greed, a lack of civic vision, stubborn squabbles, and the effects of time and tide, there’s not much left of Daytona’s legendary Boardwalk but our memories…   

Unfortunately, for decades, what passes for political leadership in Volusia County has suffered from a debilitating form of what psychiatrists call the “Pollyanna Syndrome” – a tendency for people in power to focus exclusively on the positive while ignoring unpleasant issues.

A collective monotropism pathologically fixating on the rosy, hopeful, and enthusiastic.

Rather than face reality (and do something about it), our “powers that be” euphemistically sit cross-legged in the floor, holding hands, and humming Kumbaya, refusing to acknowledge the serious concerns the rest of us keep pointing at. 

That strategic distraction reduces their civic anxiety and makes perennial problems seem softer and less intractable.  In doing so, politicians develop an unconscious bias toward toxic optimism – an unnatural positivity that sooths their fragile egos through constant self-reinforcement. 

Don’t take my word for it, just watch the next ostentatious “State of the County” address…

With repetition, the syndrome blunts their ability to recognize corrosive problems or implement creative solutions – something best exemplified by the ill-fated “blue-ribbon” Beachside Redevelopment Committee – or the disregarded wisdom of the 2013 study of Volusia County’s tourism marketing strategies.

Trust me.  Messengers who come bearing unwelcome news tend to have short life spans in most government organizations.  In fact, freethinkers are shunned like Dalits, and if ones views do not comport with the “everything is beautiful, in its own way” groupthink, you’d better keep those contrary opinions to yourself…

I think that’s why when longsuffering denizens of the “Fun Coast” see tangible evidence of positive change in our blighted core tourist area, we quickly take notice – a feeling of real enthusiasm – a bright spark that can stimulate entrepreneurial investment, restore a sense of place, enhance social cohesion and draw visitors, while enriching our civic identity and organically shaping the “brand.”

Over the past year, work has been underway to restore the iconic Main Street Arch – the beautiful coquina span, originally built as a WPA project in 1936, that bridges the boardwalk across the long closed beach approach – an impressive part of ‘Old Daytona’ and a key renovation many see as a precursor to what may await with a revitalized Main Street.

In addition, new access stairs have been added in the area, and we’re told another project will extend the traditional Boardwalk from Breakers Oceanfront Park to Harvey Avenue. 

There has also been some on-again-off-again prattle by the Volusia County Council about eventually coming to their senses and restoring the beachside’s life’s blood by opening the strand to beach driving from International Speedway Boulevard to Auditorium Boulevard.

That’s cause for real optimism.

Tomorrow morning, city leaders will join with members of the public at the base of the arch to celebrate the grand reopening of the Main Street Arch, beginning at 9:00am – something many hope will represent new beginnings – a much-needed period of rebirth and revitalization for Main Street, our Boardwalk, and beyond.

Giving Waterlogged Residents a Voice in Port Orange

In the past two elections, Volusia County Council Chair Jeff Brower defied the odds (and the money) to rout the hand-select opponents of our “Rich and Powerful” overseers.    

In fact, he bested candidates who were handsomely bankrolled by development interests and members of Volusia’s stagnant ‘Old Guard’ – even as Brower’s compromised “colleagues” on the dais of power did everything physically possible to marginalize, impede, and humiliate him.

In my view, there is a reason for Jeff Brower’s unlikely political success: He listens.

Chairman Jeff Brower

In addition, he’s not afraid to get his hands dirty when seeking answers, such as personally tracing floodwater from recent development to the flooded homes of neighboring residents, and demanding environmental accountability, despite withering push-back from those compromised developer-backed shills sitting next to him.  

Last week, Chairman Brower hosted a standing room only forum in Port Orange – treating his constituents like a concerned neighbor rather than a scheming politician – and gave those waterlogged residents a space to come together and be heard.  

According to a report by reporter Brenno Carillo writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal:

“Nearly 200 residents attended a town hall meeting at the city library to express concerns about the recurrent flooding issues across Volusia County while calling on representatives to take action.

Volusia County Chair Jeff Brower organized the event, which took place in a standing-room-only auditorium where Brower, county Public Works Director Ben Bartlett and Development Engineering Director Tadd Kasbeer answered residents’ questions.

After some introductory remarks, Brower began by addressing pre-submitted questions from residents, many of whom were from Port Orange and share the common experience of seeing their neighborhoods flood after heavy rain events.”

Some of the flood prone residents who packed the meeting are tired of hearing the same excuses from Volusia County’s highly paid bureaucratic “brain trust” – frustrated by the same “Nuttin’ we can do about it” excuses for their foot-dragging inaction on development-induced flooding.

Repeat victims, exasperated by the technical eyewash, ‘better late than never’ canal clearing and drainage remediation after years of neglect, the patronizing ridicule that meets those who speak out, while shunting the blame (and accountability) to “King tides,” “100-year atmospheric anomalies,” and now the overreaching preemptions of Senate Bill 180.  

During the meeting, longtime civic activist Greg Gimbert, the moderator of the influential social media platform Volusia Issues, galvanized the crowd when he placed blame where it rightfully belongs.   

“So far, all I’m hearing is: ‘we can’t do nothing about it.  The old rules don’t work, the water doesn’t follow the science, the ponds aren’t good enough. And then we hear we can’t change the rules because Senate Bill 180.” 

Perhaps most important, Mr. Gimbert said what many in the room were thinking, “Maybe the next time we have a meeting, we can start talking about actual solutions that aren’t part of the normal operating business parameters.  You can build all you want: high-density, low-density, whatever. Just don’t change the grade of the land. Build on stilts. Don’t raise.”

In addition, Chairman Brower gave those assembled a quick lesson in determining who has their best interests at heart come election time, urging residents to do their homework and ascertain which special interests are financing various candidates for public office.

“A lot of us vote for people because of their party affiliation, and we have to stop.  And if you see the people that are making a good living off of development, that probably tells you that their inclination is that — and I’m not saying for nefarious reasons — but their inclination is that we need to keep developing,” Brower said.

He’s right.

Unfortunately, for several Volusia County Council members who blankly stare down catatonically from the dais – campaign contributions and special interests speak louder than hundreds of citizens gathering to demand substantive answers to recurrent flooding – another disaster in the making that has now ranked the “Fun Coast” as the most flood-prone region in Florida (in the top ten nationwide…)

In my view, the strategic procrastination of the majority of the Volusia County Council to further the profit motives of their political benefactors is unconscionable – something I hope Volusia County voters remember at the ballot box next year.  

Kudos to Chairman Brower, the concerned citizens of Port Orange, and tireless civic activists like Greg Gimbert, for their inclusive and solution-oriented approach to the most pressing issue of our time.  

Quote of the Week

“FHBA (Flagler Home Builders Association) Executive Officer Annamaria Long, representing the group who filed the lawsuit, declined to comment on the city’s response.

On Sept. 24, an email was sent out to FHBA members from Long asking members to pay their impact fees separately from other city fees and write “under protest” on the memo section of a check payment. The email said this was on the recommendation of the FHBA’s attorney.

“Doing so will make it easier to recover funds when the suit is over and we prevail,” the email said.

The Observer is a member of the FHBA and received the email directly from the FHBA email blast.

Long wrote that the FHBA has already put in over $50,000 into the fight on behalf of its members. She wrote the case should be filed “early next week,” the week of Sept. 29.”

–Reporter Sierra Williams, writing in the Palm Coast Observer, “Palm Coast is ‘prepared to defend’ impact fee increases from developers’ lawsuit,” Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In an effort to keep pace with massive overdevelopment in the tumultuous City of Palm Coast, in March, Mayor Mike Norris suggested a moratorium on new construction.  

“The infrastructure is not in place to support residential growth at this time,” Norris said.

That commonsense statement marked the beginning of the end for Mayor Norris’ civic effectiveness and resulted in a cheap coup d’état, which included investigations, allegations, insinuation, censures, alienation, and marginalization, as the all-powerful real estate development community demanded Norris’ political head on a pike after he had the temerity to utter the “M” word.

To let everyone at City Hall know who is in charge, the militant Flagler Home Builders Association organized a chilling show of force.  FlaglerLive.com described the scene:   

“Mobilized like an army by the Flagler County Home Builders Association, the dump truck and trailers and semi cabs and pick-ups lined City Place and spilled onto Lake Avenue by City Hall this morning, their crews clustered in groups against the morning chill, a large “SAVE OUR CITY” banner stretched across the flank of a truck, with a red circle-backlash symbol painted over the head of Mayor Mike Norris.”

At the time, I naïvely wrote in this space, “Who, in good conscience, could demand more, more, more knowing that current demands far exceed the capacity, funding, and capabilities of the city’s utilities infrastructure?  How is that ethical, responsible, necessary, or sustainable?”

In June, the Palm Coast City Council courageously voted to significantly increase impact fees to help cover the rising cost of growth on transportation, fire protection, and parks and recreation, citing “extraordinary circumstances” that would permit the city to increase fees beyond 50% of the current rate as demanded by state statue, and lessen the massive financial burden on existing residents.  

According to the Palm Coast Observer, “Though the impact fees vary for type of development, for a single-family home, the impact fees increased by $5,881 across all three fees: impact, fire and transportation.”

In turn, the Flagler Home Builders Association claimed the studies Palm Coast relied upon to establish the extraordinary conditions necessary for the required increase were “full of holes,” comparing the analysis to “Swiss cheese,” and cried the Poor Mouth Blues over increased construction costs.

Now, the FHBA has filed suit against the City of Palm Coast, claiming the increases in impact fees were too steep and enacted too quickly – an action the City of Palm Coast has vowed to vigorously defend against with outside counsel. 

In my view, this “under protest” circus stunt is the latest thumb in the eye to claustrophobic Palm Coast residents from development interests who refuse to compensate for the massive impacts of growth on public infrastructure and the quality of life of existing residents.  

It is hard to overemphasize the enormous power developers have in local and state politics in Florida – or the depths to which these special interests will go to further their greed-crazed goals – even if it means exsanguinating their host…  

And Another Thing!

“Our children and grandchildren will live with the consequences of tonight’s decision for decades,” Lila Pontius said.”

“The proposal before you to rezone for a massive industrial park places heavy industry up against our neighborhoods, our wells, our schools, our churches and our businesses. This is not just a rezoning request, it’s a decision that will change the very character and livability of our community forever.” She added, “What troubles me most is we don’t know what this project will mean for our water, air health or our property values.”

–Bunnell resident Lila Pontius, speaking before the Bunnell City Commission last week, as quoted by FlaglerLive.com, “Snubbing Near-Unanimous Public Opposition, Bunnell Commission Approves Rezoning 1,259 Acres to Industrial,” Thursday, September 25, 2025

The benefit and curse of keeping this blog site is organizing a series of running threads in my head each week; an exercise that keeps my mind limber staying abreast of current events.  The bane is trying to explain the recurring theme of bureaucratic arrogance and political egotism – always born of a sense of organizational infallibility – with a pithy phrase I haven’t expressed before.

Sometimes those mental gymnastics tax what’s left of my Gin-addled brain – other times, these screeds seem to write themselves…

In my view, it is that haughty (and dangerous) sense of self-important overconfidence that is driving the Bunnell City Commission – a group of unsophisticated yokels who have become blinded by a developer’s shinny baubles – and are quickly selling out their helpless constituents for the promise every shortsighted small-town politician prays for:  To become a big city politician…  

Last Monday, on a 4-1 vote, with Vice Mayor John Rogers standing alone against forces the others cannot comprehend – the majority approved the rezoning of 1,259 acres south of town from agricultural to industrial – to include 639 acres of heavy industrial

The move came on the heels of the controversial resurrection and approval of a 6,100 home megadevelopment absurdly known as Reserve at Haw Creek.  A “city within a city” that will change the very character of the community forever.  

Ignoring concerns about increased congestion, density, schools, flooding, utilities infrastructure, environmental impacts, increased operational costs, public safety, and the wholesale destruction of rural areas, the Commission revived the once dead project before greenlighting the largest planned unit development since ITT’s Palm Coast.

Among the many other known adverse impacts, the Reserve at Haw Creek is expected to increase traffic from the current 8,817 daily trips to an obscene 81,943 trips per day on area roadways at build out…

Now, anxious residents of Bunnell are worried about what comes next as their elected officials adopt a growth-at-all-costs strategy, giving their undivided attention to real estate developers and their highly paid land use attorneys, while wholly ignoring their constituents (read: voters) as they tread even deeper into unknown territory with heavy industrial zoning.   

According to a report in FlaglerLive.com last week, “There are still no revelations about what the site will be used for, though Rogers has suspicions – and fears – that he made clear at the meeting when he said that a mortgage holder on the property is Lake Environmental Resources, a Lake County company that specializes in construction and demolition debris.

The owner of Lake Environmental Resources is Richard Bazinet of North Bay Road in Mount Dora, according to the Florida Division of Corporations.

On May 13, Lafferty, one of the landowners, incorporated a company called Chat-A-Who-Che LLC. On May 23, Chat-A-Who-Che signed a $2.85 million mortgage with Bazinet on the acreage in question.”

Wow.  That explains a lot.

I assume the landowner’s LLC is aptly named after the City of Chattahoochee – a community in the panhandle that since 1876 has been home to the Florida State Hospital for the Insane… 

Because, in my view, the idea of arrogantly ignoring the fervent pleas of their neighbors and existing business interests to accommodate a trash transfer facility is nuts.   

Yeah. 

Sometimes these things write themselves…

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