Barker’s View for December 18, 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:

Mayor’s Self-Serving Soiree Leads to Major Controversy in Deltona

The Lost City of Deltona is once again embroiled in controversy after the age-old question of “Where’d the money go, Santiago?” arose following the “Mayor’s First Annual Winter Ball” held at the city owned The Center earlier this month.   

Unlike the normal political contretemps that plague progress in Deltona, this one could have serious repercussions for those involved…

According to advertisements that were posted to social media, local businesses, and websites affiliated with the municipal government and event organizers, the formal black-tie event was “presented by the Volusia County Hispanic Association in partnership with Mayor Santiago Avila Jr.” 

In addition, the gala was promoted on the City of Deltona’s calendar, to include a city sponsored link to an Eventbrite page where tickets to the “Mayor’s Winter Ball” could be purchased. 

According to a promotional article in the West Volusia Beacon, admittance to the soiree was listed at “$108.55 general admission, with an elegant dinner and evening program, with live music, dancing and entertainment; $161.90 VIP admission, with early access, a networking reception, champagne toast, premium dinner seating and photo opportunities.”

In addition, several “Platinum, Gold, and Silver” sponsors – identified by Mayor Avila as “community partners” (to include several city contractors…) – were conspicuously promoted as having contributed to the gala.   

According to Mayor Avila’s campaign website, “A majority of the proceeds from this year’s Mayor’s Winter Ball will go toward the renovation and expansion of the Harris Saxon location in Deltona — a cornerstone project dedicated to empowering youth and families in our city.

The Boys & Girls Clubs of Volusia/Flagler Counties vision is to:

“Provide a world-class Club Experience that assures success is within reach of every young person who enters our doors — with all members on track to graduate from high school with a plan for the future, demonstrating good character and citizenship, and living a healthy lifestyle.”

As often happens in the shadowy world of Mayor Santiago Avila, Jr.’s skeevy politics, personal finance, and method of governance, that’s when things took an ugly turn… 

Last week, former Deltona City Commissioner and civic activist David Sosa revealed that before collecting an undetermined amount of cash from attendees and “sponsors” ostensibly to support the Boys & Girls Clubs of Volusia/Flagler County, neither Mayor Avila nor the Volusia County Hispanic Association bothered to notify the Boys & Girls Clubs of Volusia/Flagler Counties that they would be the beneficiary of a “majority” of the proceeds.

You read that right.

After being widely billed as a fundraiser for the Boys & Girls Clubs, on the late afternoon of December 5 (one day before the event) Mayor Avila, Deltona City Manager Doc Dougherty, and the Volusia County Hispanic Association received a terse email from Dr. Camesha Whittaker-Samuel, Chief Executive Officer of the BGCVFC, questioning why neither her leadership team or Board of Directors had been previously consulted about the charitable designation, clarifying that the organization has no plans to renovate or expand the Harris Saxon facility.

In turn, Dr. Whittaker-Samuels asked that the event organizers explain how BGCVFC came to be listed as the beneficiary, to include a “formal, immediate meeting” with event organizers and relevant “city partners” to “discuss the plans, clarify intentions, and ensure proper alignment,” and an assurance that the BGCVFC name will not be used in the future “without prior consultation and written approval.”

Whoa.

Now that the “fundraiser” has been exposed as a potential fraudulent use of the name and imprimatur of the Boys & Girls Clubs, many angry Deltona residents are demanding answers as to how this shameless self-promotion by Mayor Avila became quasi-officially associated with the highly respected youth organization?

Things got worse on Saturday when The Daytona Beach News-Journal started asking questions… 

That’s when Mayor Aliva (per usual) attempted to paint himself as the victim – claiming the criticism was a “political stunt by some of my political opponents” – and that he was merely attempting to save Deltona taxpayers money on the renovation of the Harris Saxon Park.   

After initially claiming the Mayor’s Winter Ball was a “remarkable success” – when pressed, Avila now claims “…the cost to put on the event — including food and decor — leaves little in the way of proceeds, far less than the half-million he estimates the building renovation might need, so what was raised will instead go directly to the Boys & Girls Clubs, he said.”

According to Mayor Avila, “We’ll just figure out what needs to get renovated and expanded, and we’ll add it to next year’s budget under park renovations, which is what I was trying to avoid because I was trying to save taxpayers some money.”

Bullshit. 

To clarify the entanglement for confused constituents, on Sunday morning, Commissioner Dori Howington reported on social media that in September the Deltona City Commission appropriated funds in the 2025-26 budget for Harris-Saxon Park improvements.

According to Ms. Howington, “The money is already there. The budget was already approved. There should be no increase to next year’s budget for Harris Saxon Park renovations because the $2 million was already budgeted in the current fiscal year.”

Wow.  Guess Mayor Avila once again proved the old adage “lies beget lies…”

According to the News-Journal’s report, Mayor Avila and the Volusia County Hispanic Association (which has been associated with Deltona Commissioner Emma Santiago) apparently reached out to Dr. Whittaker-Samuel and “clarified the situation,” agreeing to meet after the holidays for “futher (sp) discussion and alignment on next steps.”

“Avila characterized his conversation with Whittaker-Samuel as her asking whether he was using some of the funds to help with his campaign, to which he responded: “Absolutely not. I don’t think that’s legal.”

Good question.  Considering Mayor Avila advertised the event on his campaign website.   

(I know that because it says, “Political Advertisement Paid for and Approved by Deltona, FL Mayor Santiago Avila, Jr.” at the bottom of the webpage www.avilafordeltona.com)

In my view, Deltona residents and event sponsors have a right to know exactly how much money Mayor Avila and the Volusia County Hispanic Association took in by fraudulently claiming an association with the Boys & Girls Clubs of Volusia/Flagler Counties – where that money is now – and the names of everyone who benefitted from the scheme… 

Then, Mayor Santiago Avila, Jr. – and anyone else who participated – should be held personally accountable for their despicable actions.

Quote of the Week

“Politicians undermine our democratic values by putting a veil over government action. Those are not the actions of well-meaning public servants who want good government supported by good people. Jefferson said that “Whenever you do a thing, act as if all the world were watching.” Citizens respond with virtue when government is open and transparent.”

–Attorney Lonnie Groot, Daytona Beach Shores, as excerpted from his editorial in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Keep the clouds away from Florida’s Sunshine Law,” Tuesday, December 9, 2025

In his insightful piece regarding the growing threat to Florida’s venerated open records law, Mr. Groot quoted Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis – “Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the most efficient policeman.”

As usually happens when ordinary people are elected to positions of power – in many local governments across our region, the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker that you and I elevated to high office have now been taken into the ‘system’ – convinced that entrenched bureaucrats are the only legitimate Oracles of Truth – civic clairvoyants gifted with divine guidance on the serious issues of the day (many of which their ineptitude helped create…)

Unfortunately, We, The Little People who pay the bills and are expected to keep our pieholes shut have been painted as the babbling masses – agitators, troublemakers, and loopy gadflies who couldn’t possibly understand the realities and legalities – meddlers who lack the depth and intellect to comprehend the legislative and political nuances that make the cogs and wheels of city/county management work.

Don’t take my word for it. 

Watch any public meetings of the Volusia County Council, the Lost City of Deltona, Orange City, or several other misguided communities that have completely lost touch with those they serve and see for yourself how haughty elected and appointed officials treat citizens who approach their local government with questions and suggestions.

Better yet, spend three-minutes at a public podium yourself sometime.

Ask why anyone in their right mind would consider augmenting our drinking water with recycled sewage, provide insight on your child’s education, seek answers why your home floods each time it rains, or demand an explanation of the process by which out-of-state businesses are gifted public funds to underwrite overhead or guarantee revenue while yours is subject to the artificial ebb and flow of a now uneven playing field?    

Then watch while your catatonic elected representatives stare back at you like inert blobs as you wait for them to merely acknowledge your presence…

Disturbingly, that lack of effective communication is equally prevalent for those on the outside seeking information or public records, only to be frustrated with onerous charges, lengthy delays, “nondisclosure agreements,” and other bureaucratic roadblocks before receiving the terse reply: “There are no records responsive to your request.”  

Eventually, we begin to suspect the worst…

For those on both sides of the dais, it has now become an “Us v. Them” mentality – fueled by mercenary insiders and bureaucrats who know that persistent questions and outside inquiry can result in embarrassing revelations for those who control the rods and strings of government.

Sharing the blame is the egoistic vanity of some elected officials who believe anything they are told by those fawning flatters with a self-serving motive who laugh at their jokes and invite them to all the right parties (only to forget they ever existed once they are out of office), and you begin to understand the importance of controlling the narrative in the Ivory Tower of Power.  

Unfortunately, like many of you, I perceive a real sense of despair in many local communities, a feeling that nothing will change so long as those political manipulators who control the political landscape are committed to defending the stagnant status quo, and apathy takes the place of activism…  

We hear a lot of mewling from elected officials about how heavy the crown can be – especially when talk turns to councils and commissions giving themselves a pay raise, or they are required to make a difficult decision on a controversial issue. Poor babies.

Somehow, they always seem to miss the basics of elective service:

Developing relationships with their constituents by being trustworthy, keeping promises, being open, honest, and sensitive to their civic concerns.  Always being present and attentive during times of crisis, maintaining open communication, sharing thoughts in advance rather than ambushing those effected by decisions, being open to constructive criticism, truly listening, being a cheerleader, celebrating accomplishments and sharing defeat, being respectful of the priorities of those who pay the bills, admitting mistakes, and being compassionate with those who appear before them seeking help navigating the byzantine maze of government.  

Over time, a mutual trust will develop – the civic bond strengthens – and elected and appointed officials come to know their well-meaning efforts will be championed by those they serve in an authentic way.  

I’ve seen it happen.

By building personal connections – not just at election time – and putting the needs of others ahead of their own self-interests, good things will result as their constituents’ respond in kind, giving their trust and respect when and where it is earned.     

That starts with an organizational commitment to servant-leadership, putting the needs of real people above those of the bureaucracy, and developing a “people-first” atmosphere where excellence, efficiency, and innovation is valued over the individual self-interests of those insiders and elected dullards who gorge greedily at the public trough…

And Another Thing!

Sports competitions have referees for a reason. 

Good umpires avoid bias, ensure a level playing field, manage external influences, and foster a respect for the rules by ensuring accountability. Based upon recent evidence, I would argue that modern politics and governance here on Florida’s “Fun Coast” has become a brutal bloodsport in desperate need of impartial guardianship of the ethical and professional standards one expects from elected and appointed officials.

In my view, what passes for Florida’s ethics apparatus – comprised of political appointees, toothless watchdogs, and staffed by easily distracted pro wrestling refs with attention deficit disorder – is now totally hamstrung by an “evidentiary standard” that prevents state and local ethics commissions from launching investigations unless the complaint came from an individual with first-hand/eyes-on/personal knowledge of the violation.

That means complainants must have physically observed the unethical conduct – and those who learn of potential violations through a third-party, anonymous tips, a media report, audit review, or the whispers of a frightened whistleblower are strictly prohibited from even mentioning the matter to the Ethics Commission.

In June 2024, when Governor Ron DeSantis signed the bill, Daytona Beach News-Journal editorialist Mark Lane wrote a cogent commentary on the changes that gutted Florida’s ethics enforcement arm which read, in part:

“Florida voters put the commission into the state Constitution in 1976 as part of the Sunshine Amendment reforms backed by then-Gov. Reubin Askew. Passing with almost 80% of the vote, it was the state’s first successful constitutional initiative. It’s not like the Legislature would have voted to create an ethics commission on its own. I’m kind of surprised it took legislators this long to neuter it.”

Rather than bolster aggressive policing, demand accountability, and the stress the importance of protecting the public trust, Florida legislators placed a befuddled Toody and Muldoon on the ethics beat – put a bag over their heads – and limited what they can and cannot investigate… 

When you couple the castration of our ethics apparatus with Florida’s fast-and-loose campaign finance laws – essentially blanket permissions that have turned local political contests into a Turkish bazaar – you begin to understand how the proliferation of questionable conduct by elected and appointed officials at all levels of government no longer shocks our conscience.

This week in the Lost City of Deltona, frustrated residents attempted to address their elected officials regarding swirling speculation that Mayor Santiago Avila, Jr. may have illegitimately associated his sketchy “Winter Ball” with city government for credibility – then fraudulently misrepresented the beneficiary of the event to deceive financial donors.   

In addition, questions remain about why entry fees received for the Deltona Christmas Parade were apparently routed through a private school with apparent ties to Mayor Avila – then passed to something called the Deltona Fire Foundation ostensibly to fund a holiday toy drive. 

Say what?

The City of Deltona sought out a private entity to provide bookkeeping services for the city sponsored Christmas Parade so they could, in turn, funnel the money to a private foundation associated with the Deltona Fire Department?

Why?

Adding to the frustration, on Monday evening demands for answers were met with Avila furiously pounding his gavel followed by gruff demands that Deltona taxpayers stop applauding and congratulating their neighbor’s fervent questions from the gallery – or face physical expulsion from the public meeting.

So, what agency or individual do repeat victims in Deltona and elsewhere turn to for help?

As I understand it, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) regulates the solicitation of charitable donations under the Florida Solicitation of Contributions Act.  Compliance with the statute requires that anyone involved in planning, conducting, or executing any solicitation for charitable contributions must first register with FDACS – and obtain written authorization from the benefiting not-for-profit.

A check of Florida’s Check-a-Charity website finds no listing for either Mayor Avila or the Volusia County Hispanic Association.

Further, all solicitations must contain the following:

“A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE WITHIN THE STATE. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE.”

Maybe I missed it, but I don’t recall that statement displayed on any promotional material for the Mayor’s Winter Ball, did you? 

Also, persons or organizations soliciting contributions are governed by strict accounting rules, which includes a prohibition on commingling charitable contributions with noncharitable funds…

To add gross insult, according to a citizen’s report on social media this week, Mayor Avila is also alleged to have been reimbursed with public funds for travel to a purely partisan political event having no connection to the City of Deltona or Mayor Avila’s elected role. 

Sound familiar? 

Recently, a majority of those baldfaced enablers on the Deltona City Commission voted down a call for a formal forensic audit of city finances and fiscal management practices, resulting in more questions of what city insiders may be trying to hide.

So, when is the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the state Department of Government Efficiency – or anyone with a badge in their pocket – going to get off their collective ass and do something to protect the good citizens of Deltona?  

This raging dumpster fire of alleged corruption and malfeasance cannot be allowed to continue.

In my view, the behind-the-scenes junta that controls the Lost City of Deltona, questions of purchasing card and spending irregularities in Daytona Beach, the recent fear of retribution from our state legislators that prevented local communities from defending their sovereignty and right to home rule, and goofy distractions like the asinine shenanigans of Orange City Mayor Kellianne Marks – an off-the-hook tyrant with a seething God complex and the political instincts of a vindictive snake – are disgusting examples of what happens when official government watchdogs are forced play the “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” charade and look the other way.

Now the normal checks and balances of government we came to rely on no longer provide stability – or personal accountability for those who receive public funds to serve in the public interest.  

Don’t expect anything to change here in the Biggest Whorehouse in the World.

It is important that anyone who cares about good governance supports quality candidates for public office next year. 

Then get out and vote.

Our fundamental concept of government of the people, by the people, and for the people depends upon it…   

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

3 thoughts on “Barker’s View for December 18, 2025

  1. wild how you have nothing to say about white mayors doing the same thing in other Volusia cities or the fact that Chitwood has been off his sh*t this week but

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  2. I see we have another DARVO mayor this week. Is it something in the water?

    Not sure how Deltona is escaping scrutiny while Daytona gets a full colonoscopy…?

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