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!

One thought on “Barker’s View for October 2, 2025

  1. We will never buy an ICI home again.Keep replacing windows in Chelsea Place home and get lots of water in my backyard that was never told the woods take the over flow from the lakes and streets.Need sod .Called HOA will find out Monday .Complaint to the management company Sept 19..Will sue.

    Like

Leave a comment