Barker’s View for June 26, 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…

Volusia Flooding – Now, two can play that game…

In my view, for far too long real estate developers have been gifted carte blanche to build when, where, and what they want here in the Sunshine State. 

The results have been wide-ranging – a virtual blanket of zero lot line cracker boxes (“Starting in the mid $300’s”) and ugly sticks-and-glue apartment complexes covering the state – terribly destructive to our sensitive environmental processes and the quality of life of existing residents.

We are repeatedly told by our ‘powers that be’ they have some bizarre moral obligation to approve more, more, more to accommodate a wave of transplants to Florida.  Rather than allow supply and demand to dictate higher resale prices while controlling the pace, suitability, and quality of growth state legislators have openly shit on the concept of Home Rule in a bid to consolidate power. 

As a result, malleable “rent a representatives” in Tallahassee have given their political benefactors in the real estate industry extraordinary statutory protections that increasingly limit local government’s ability to control growth, and there’s not a lot We, The Little People can do about it.

Or is there?

Here in Volusia County, the majority of the County Council have proven to be little more than lapdog lackeys – running interference for their uber-wealthy donors in the real estate industry, rubber stamping development, and strategically dragging their heels on any attempt to slow growth or require low-impact construction practices – adding to the problem while refusing to act decisively to alleviate the scourge of development-induced flooding.

In January, officials in the City of Underwater in Southeast Volusia voted to tap the brakes on development with a temporary moratorium on new construction to give the community a chance to modify stormwater protections and find commonsense solutions to repeat flooding.

In May, the behemoth Lennar Homes – reportedly the second-largest developer in the United States – filed an action in Circuit Court seeking judicial review and reversal of the City of Edgewater’s denial of their final Phase II plat for Edgewater Preserve (in my view, another one of those perverse and antithetical monikers that only a real estate marketing firm could conjure) citing stormwater concerns.

It appears that Lennar is intent on pressing forward with its plans for Phase II – regardless of the community’s attempts to protect existing residents from what has been described as “severe and repeat” flooding – something many suggest is the result of changes in topography brought by new development.  

During Florida’s 2025 Legislative Circus, legislators passed a bill amending the platting statute which now takes the local elected body out of the approval process.  Instead, the local governing agency must appoint an “administrative authority” to process and review plats and replats for developments, and an “administrative officer” to approve the plat.

If signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, the law smoothing out the humps and bumps for developers intent on fast tracking projects would take effect on July 1, 2025.  

Last week, the Volusia County Council approved a fox in the henhouse resolution appointing the Land Development Division of the Growth and Resource Mismanagement Department as the administrative authority and County Manager George “The Wreck” Rectenwald or his designee as the approving official… 

So, who looks out for existing residents? 

Unfortunately, so far there was little that existing residents could do but bend over and bear it… 

Now, it appears the influential law firm of Morgan and Morgan is letting waterlogged homeowners know that two can play that game.  Last week, the firm filed suit on behalf of two Deltona couples alleging that a Lennar Homes development near Deltona has resulted in “repeat flooding issues” on their properties.  

According to a report by Sheldon Gardner writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal:

“The 13-page complaint, filed June 11 in Circuit Court in Volusia County by Morgan & Morgan’s Business Trial Group, focuses on Lennar’s “alleged flawed design and construction of the stormwater management system” in Vineland Reserve, according to a statement from the law firm. The plaintiffs are Suzanne and Mark Duda and Jerry Woods Jr. and his spouse, Robin.

Morgan & Morgan recently filed another lawsuit dealing with flooding complaints in Volusia County; the firm is representing multiple people over flooding around Miller Lake in Orange City.

Lennar Homes started building the development off Doyle Road in 2022. Before the development came along, “homes in the area allegedly had no history of substantial flooding during rainfall event.”

“Now their homes are alleged to be sustaining ongoing damage, and they are allegedly unable to use or enjoy their property,” according to the law firm. “The lawsuit claims that the plaintiffs communicated with Lennar several times to express their concerns, and despite allegedly being fully aware of the drainage issues, Lennar has not adequately repaired the system or paid for the damages already incurred.”

(Find the News-Journal report here: https://tinyurl.com/y3z3bzwm )

This lawsuit represents a quantum shift in the power dynamic that has squeezed Florida homeowners between voracious developers and their shills in government, leaving many with the option of selling their homes in an after-the-fact stormwater mitigation scheme, making expensive renovations after each event, or living in fear of the next unstoppable inundation.

In my view, even here in the Biggest Whorehouse in the World, the idea of existing residents being repeatedly victimized while out-of-state developers haul untold millions out the denuded pine scrub – with no legal recourse against either those who planned it, or those who permitted it – is counter to our concept of basic fairness, due process, and a respect for the property rights of everyone effected.

City of Palm Coast – Dissecting the Obvious

From the earliest origins of participatory government, anthropologists have struggled with the question of why humans developed the social, judicial, and bureaucratic institutions that are now such an integral part of our society (and individual tax burden…)

According to social scientists, the “cooperative theory” suggests that governments were initially developed as a means of coordinating common tasks between early tribes, a communal contract of sorts, where everyone gave up some of their own resources in exchange for collective benefits, a collaborative agreement that avoided conflict to meet shared needs.

By contrast, the “extractive theory” assumes that “might makes right” – with powerful groups extracting tributes, taxes, and resources from weaker ones – then ensconcing themselves as the ‘political elite’ and perpetuating a pernicious cycle using what has been described as “institutional bullying.”

Sounds eerily familiar, eh? 

According to Leander Heldring, an Assistant Professor of Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences at the Kellogg School of Management:

“We see it clearly in the archaeological and historical record,” he says. “Initial assembly meetings become less important, and you see people becoming enforcers within bureaucracies. So even if the initial push for developing these institutions was coordination, afterwards you’d still have to protect them. And that tension is very much still with us.”

Look, I’m not an educated man, but I spent the bulk of my adult life serving in a small municipality, which I still believe is most accessible, responsive, and efficient level of government.  Based upon that experience, I learned that the élan vital of any government organization is a fundamental commitment to service. 

At least it should be.

An organizational dedication to provide those essential functions that protect the safety and welfare of citizens, deliver essential services, maintain public infrastructure, mitigate threats, manage sanitation and stormwater, and provide the myriad other services that address common needs, improve quality of life, and meet the collective goals of the community.

In a modern council/manager system, the citizens elect representatives to act in their interest, handle legislation, allocate resources, and hire a competent manager to direct the multifaceted day-to-day operations of a working local government under the provisions of the city or county’s charter.

But what happens when things go awry and the finest traditions, protections, and social contracts of good governance come apart like a bad flywheel? 

Typically, that’s when governments in crisis turn to a highly compensated “consultant” – the proverbial “expert from out-of-town,” someone with a nice suit and briefcase – someone who rides into town and spends a copious amount of the people’s time and money dissecting the obvious.

At the end of the day, the “expert” will prepare an elaborate report based on their “findings” and present it to the exasperated council or commission who hired them. 

Unfortunately, many consulting firms (at least those who want other government contracts) will often play the role of the distracted wrestling referee – failing to point out the gross dysfunction, personal agendas, and mercenary loyalties of the elected dullards – as the root cause of the organizational inefficiencies and whale-shit staff morale they were hired to study in the first place…  

Last week, the tumultuous City of Palm Coast, a community in a neck-and-neck competition with the Lost City of Deltona as the most disastrously dysfunctional municipality in the Metropolitan Statistical Area, voted to spend some $60,000 to bring in the national consulting firm Plante Moran to conduct an “EntityWide Risk Assessment” this summer.

According to recent media release by Palm Coast’s municipal mouthpiece: 

“The scope of the assessment includes evaluating current City capabilities and developing a framework the City can use to assess risk on an ongoing basis. Plante Moran will conduct interviews with key stakeholders to identify operational, strategic, financial, and compliance-related risks. Based on those findings, the firm will work with City leadership to prioritize risks, create targeted mitigation strategies, and recommend ways to align these efforts with the City’s long-term objectives. Additionally, the City will receive guidance on actionable measures that can enhance operational efficiency and improve services across all departments.”

I know what you’re thinking – those basic operational goals (spelled out with such flourish by the Palm Coast Communications & Marketing division) are exactly what most communities expect from their city/county manager… 

You’re right.

In my unscientific view, you don’t need a $60K study to see that the fissures so prevalent among the competing entities – divisions that have resulted in the public castration of Mayor Mike Norris, and exposed the self-serving allegiances of certain elected officials (and senior bureaucrats) intent on facilitating Palm Coast’s shove ten-pounds of shit in a five-pound sack growth management strategy – are the result of mercenary loyalties and piss-poor leadership.

And it’s getting worse…

This week, we learned that Jason DeLorenzo, Palm Coast’s community development director and chief of staff, has fled the city government’s troubled ziggurat for greener pastures as the assistant city manager of Palm Bay. 

In my view, with a list of city manager applicants now eliminated (or having fled for anywhere else amidst the internal shitshow) and senior officials beginning to jump ship, the experts at Plante Moran have their work cut out for them.

Let’s hope the most recent “experts” to peek behind the curtain of this horribly dysfunctional government demonstrate the professional integrity and civic honesty to place the blame where it rightfully belongs…   

Bunnell City Commission – A Startling Betrayal

“The Bunnell City Commission in a stunning move at the very end of its meeting Monday night, before a nearly empty chamber, voted 3-2 to revive the 8,000-home Reserve at Haw Creek development the commission rejected just two weeks ago. The item was not on the agenda.

Mayor Catherine Robinson prompted the motion, which Commissioner Pete Young offered without batting an eye–or asking questions–though Young had been in the 3-2 majority to reject the proposal on June 9. Robinson had met with the city manager and the developer for three hours Monday morning. She said the developer was prepared to submit a revised plan that takes public concerns into account.

Young said he’d met with City Manager Alvin Jackson and others on Friday to discuss the development and to let Jackson know he was supportive of Haw Creek as long as it made certain changes. “I met with the city manager and our people,” Young said in an interview today. He wasn’t sure if the developer was among those in the room. “All know is I told them what I would like to see and they said OK, we’ll pass it on to them.”

With Young’s reversal, the motion to reconsider carried, 3-2, with Commissioners John Rogers and David Atkinson as if in too much shock to comment. Rogers walked out immediately after the vote and the gavel to end the meeting, not addressing anyone in the room.”

–Pierre Tristam, writing in FlaglerLive.com, “Bunnell Mayor in Stunning Maneuver Revives 8,000-Home Development Commission Killed 2 Weeks Ago,” Tuesday, June 24, 2025

You read that right.

In a viciously underhanded use of an off-the-agenda public policy by ambush, Bunnell Mayor Cathrine Robinson waited until the end of Monday’s City Commission meeting to resurrect the prospect of the Reserve at Haw Creek – an 8,000-home monstrosity that will blanket over 2,800 acres between SR-100 and SR-11. 

Before her incredibly suspicious switcheroo – on Monday morning, Mayor Robinson said she met with the developer (out of the public’s prying eyes) – where she was told a “revised plan” would be submitted that addressed some of the myriad concerns expressed by frightened residents who see the development as a threat to their quality of life and the character of this small community.

Because it is. 

Among other potential impacts, once built out, 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 already stressed area roadways. 

After strategically waiting for interested residents to leave the chamber – Mayor Robinson sprang her clearly choreographed surprise:

“I have a request based on a meeting with city staff and the Northeast Florida developers about the Haw Creek development to address both the public and the commission’s concerns,” the mayor said. “I would like a motion to reconsider the denial of the rezoning application and move forward with the development agreement.”

Once the motion was made and seconded, the vote to approve reconsidering both the planned unit development and the development agreement passed 3-2, with Commissioners John Rogers and David Atkinson dissenting.

Now, shocked residents of Bunnell are left to ask the troubling questions…

Such as, how was the developer was so conveniently able to persuade Mayor Robinson to bring this wildly controversial project back for reconsideration just two-weeks after the commission voted 4-1 to reject it?

Or why the massive development – one that threatens to fundamentally change everything about the community – was resurrected by a backstabbing mayor at the end of a public meeting with no public notice, substantive information, or citizen participation?

This was wrong, duplicitous, and horribly deceitful

In my view, Mayor Robinson and those elected officials who pushed this sneaky scheme have sold their political souls to push an agenda, and they will never be trusted again

The residents of Bunnell deserve better from those they put their solemn trust in…   

Quote of the Week

“At their June 18 meeting, (Daytona Beach) city commissioners voted to amend their agreement with Protogroup to allow the company to be partially reimbursed for its costs for a beach access improvement and the new one-story building. Once those projects are complete, Protogroup will be reimbursed up to 50% of the property taxes for them paid to the city’s community redevelopment area fund over five years.

The agreement originally said Protogroup would have to completely finish the condo tower before it would get some of its money back for things such as new pedestrian beach access and improved water and sewer infrastructure. Now the agreement says the company just needs to complete the new one-story building.

“I just want to hide that ugly rebar we’ve been looking at for three years,” said City Commissioner Ken Strickland. “I don’t want to do anything that hampers getting that out of our eyesight.”

–Reporter Eileen Zaffiro-Kean, writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Long-idled Daytona Beach condo project set to resume construction in July,” Thursday, June 26, 2025

What a joke…

For the umpteenth time since the decade-old debacle of the Protogroup’s abandoned mess of stained pilings and rusted rebar in the heart of our core tourist area began, it appears the Daytona Beach City Commission has simply given up – now deciding to do away with any semblance of holding the developer to his word. 

Instead of initiating condemnation procedures to ensure compliance, it appears city officials are going to incentivize a façade – anything to camouflage the suppurating eyesore that serves as a monument to another failed “panacea project” all the right last names promised us would change our fortunes for the better.

Bullshit.

According to the News-Journal’s report, “In early September 2022, the city’s chief building official issued a condemnation and demolition order that said portions of the unfinished structure were dangerous and “likely to partially or completely collapse or to become detached or dislodged” due to faulty construction, neglect, abandonment, exposure to the elements, damage and decay.

The city backed off the condemnation and demolition threat after Protogroup cleaned up the site and agreed to a plan to have structural engineers inspect the foundation work before resuming construction.”

So, is the unfinished structure “likely to partially or completely collapse,” or not? 

Unfortunately, the City of Daytona Beach and Volusia County have allowed developers to get them over a barrel, and there’s not a damn thing anyone can do about it now.

In an October 2018 piece in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, the former chairman of the ill-fated Beachside Redevelopment Committee, Tony Grippa, prophetically said:

“The city still lacks an overall strategy as it relates to A1A and the beachside corridor, and this is what happens when you put all your eggs in one basket.”

At this point, however, completion of the (Protogroup) project is imperative, Grippa said.

“It would be absolutely devastating to have, in addition to all the old boarded-up buildings, now a new partially completed building,” Grippa said. “That sitting vacant and empty would really hurt the beachside, optically, economically and emotionally.”

Tragic, indeed.

In my view, it is time our elected and appointed officials start representing those of us who pay the bills and demand the provisions of performance assurances and completion deadlines are enforced – or else.

This mercurial capitulation sends a bright signal to other developers that if you defy regulatory authority long enough, the ‘powers that be’ responsible for protecting the health, safety, and welfare of the public will simply cave and give you whatever you demand to complete (insert “game changing” project here.)  

And Another Thing!

Last week, a dear friend and I traveled to “La-La Land” – Los Angeles, California.  

Beverly Hills, to be exact. Swimming pools.  Movie stars.   

And more bone-crushing traffic than I’ve ever seen my life…   

The purpose of our trip was to check on another lifelong friend who has been under the weather of late, courageously participating in a cutting-edge experimental treatment at UCLA’s impressive Ronald Reagan Medical Center.  An exciting technology that may eventually help doctor’s treat cancer in a more precise way.

While I’ve visited Southern California in the past, this was the first time I saw much of what Los Angeles has to offer. Great experiences like dinner at the classic “Old Hollywood” restaurant Dan Tana’s, and a wonderful afternoon over cocktails at the iconic Polo Lounge in the Beverly Hills Hotel.

Our bartender, Vladimir, could not have been more accommodating, and treated two ballcap/blue jean clad yokels from Florida like gold – taking time to explain the rich history of the hotel (now owned by the Sultan of Brunei) – and jokingly offered to pour us a McCallan 72 from a lacquered case behind the bar – a rare Scotch offered at $10,000 a shot…   

“Make it double, Vlad…”

Just kidding. As it stood, I needed a second mortgage to cover the bar tab.

The conspicuous wealth, glitz, and glamor of Tinseltown set up a classic Jed Clampett meets George Jetson story – an up-close and jaw dropping exposure to some incredible technological/AI advances currently in operation on the west coast.   

For instance, I took advantage of the new (to me, anyway) Waymo self-driving autonomous vehicle for local transportation.  A product of Google that was a decade in development, the service utilizes the all-electric Jaguar I-PACE – a sleek four-door sedan with a whirring array of sensors on the roof and each corner of the vehicle – to include an illuminated sign on the roof that displays the riders name at the point of pickup. 

Much like Uber or Lyft, the ride is summoned (and the fare paid) from your phone.  Once the location is entered, the Waymo drives to your GPS location and with the touch of a button on the app, handles emerge, and the doors unlock. 

Once inside the comfortable rear seat, the rider fastens the seatbelt, touches a “start ride” button on the screen, and you are literally along for the ride.   

What happens next is a little scary – and infinitely fascinating. 

From the back seat, the rider watches as the vehicle enters traffic and proceeds by the most expedient route – the steering wheel eerily turning independently, as though operated by a spectral “driver” – smoothly navigating to your destination.   

I’ll admit, the first trip was a bit freaky, and, over time, I discovered a few “wrinkles in the matrix.”

For instance, during one trip, the Waymo passed my hotel and dropped us inconveniently a block away, another time, the car circled the block at our destination before getting its bearings and returning to the drop-off point.   

In each case, the artificial intelligence and various sensors powering the navigation system were “learning” – getting better, more precise with each trip – a weird digital cognition training a complex decision-making capability – gathering data from each “experience,” never forgetting the lessons learned, becoming “smarter” and more accurate with each “mistake.”

During the course of the week, I found myself relying more on Waymo and less on manned ridesharing programs that work much the same, but with a person at the wheel. 

In another weird revelation, while having lunch in Westwood, I was surprised by what appeared to be an orange Igloo cooler on wheels trundling down the sidewalk outside the restaurant. 

I did a double-take…   

It was “Coco” – a purpose built “robocourier” – which autonomously transports groceries, prepared food deliveries, or other goods along city sidewalks at a brisk walking speed (or faster in a bicycle lane) – a device that became so ubiquitous that the novelty quickly wore off and I stopped noticing the little buggers.

As Coco went about its appointed rounds, the cart would stop for people walking on the sidewalk, and I realized that human beings were an impediment to its progress – in more ways than one…    

According to Coco Robotics, the urban logistics service is now available in Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, and Helsinki.

In retrospect, it is somewhat unsettling that in time I preferred to deal with a self-driving car than a fellow human being trying to earn a living – no tip and no complex social interaction (including one awkward exchange with an Uber driver who offered to provide us with Russian hookers and Armenian vodka during our stay in LA…true story.)  

I now realize that the ease and rapidity with which I relinquished control and acclimated to an autonomous vehicle and a robotic delivery cart is ultimately how we, living/breathing/emotional beings, may ultimately become obsolete – mere impediments to “progress” – as artificial intelligence “learns” from experience and interactions, just like we do.

Which prompts disturbing question like what role will “we” play in a world dominated by (sentient?) machines, and, ultimately, how will we address the Frankensteinian conundrum of how to control the monster once it escapes our control? 

Welcome to the future, Barker… 

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to spend some quality time with my toaster.  It missed me while I was gone…  

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

Barker’s View

Note to the Loyal Barker’s View Tribe:

Barker’s View will be taking a break this week.  

During our short intermission from the “Fun Coast’s” civic/political théâtre de l’absurde, please feel free to enjoy some past asides from the BV achieves at the bottom of this page.  It’s fun to take a look back with the clarity of hindsight and see what has changed, and what remains the same, where we call home.

See you next week!

Barker’s View for June 12, 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…

Hey, Volusia.  Where did the money go?

In the 1940 Looney Toons cartoon “Of Fox and Hounds,” the dim-witted but loveable hound, Willoughby (in our parody, Volusia County taxpayers), and the sly fox, “George” (played to perfection by County Manager George “The Wreck” Recktenwald).

During a fox hunt, the hapless Willoughby runs into the forest intent on finding a fox – except he is clearly oblivious to what a fox actually looks like – searching every tree he comes to.  When Willoughby runs into his new friend George, he repeatedly asks where the fox went.  

Of course, George gives Willoughby directions to a rail fence, ensuring him the fox is on the other side which invariably sends Willoughby off the edge of a steep cliff.

All the while, Willoughby never suspects that his “friend” George is the fox…

“Which way did he go, George? Which way did he go?”

I was reminded of that farcical comedy last week when Volusia County’s Chief Financial Officer Ryan “The Alchemist” Ossowski – the greatest illusionist since Harry Houdini – presented various mind-numbing PowerPoint slides showing forecasts for Solid Waste, Volusia ECHO, Volusia Forever, Mosquito Control, Ponce Inlet Port District and County Transportation Trust funds, along with the county’s capital projects plan.

Like a game of Three-Card Monte, none of it makes sense. 

Because it’s not supposed to – and despite their contemplative head-nodding – our elected officials are just as clueless as the rest of us. 

Last year at this time, a similar forecast showed the $3.5 million in Volusia ECHO funds (for “planning purposes”) which was later approved to fund Councilman Don Dempsey’s pet motorcross facility and lashed to the controversial expenditure of Volusia Forever conservation funds to purchase 356 acres of cow pasture to put it on…

Then came the inevitable doom and gloom when Ossowski began prepping the budgetary battlefield with scary stories of reduced federal funding for expenditures we already pay for.

In an article by reporter Sheldon Gardner writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal last week, we learned:

“The county is bracing for spending cuts by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The agency plays a key role in helping fund major — and sometimes very expensive — projects to repair and strengthen communities after a storm.

“Current guidance that we’ve been getting from FEMA is that they’re going to be pulling back on especially non-public-safety-critical items like (beaches) and parks,” Ossowski said.

Big projects are coming up, too.  

The county’s five-year capital projects plan includes a new Volusia County Sheriff’s Office headquarters for $30 million, a new Mosquito Control facility for over $23.9 million, which officials plan to finance; and a landfill expansion for over $20.1 million.”

Whoa.

For the record, Volusia County now operates with an astronomical annual budget of over $1.3 billion

You read that right.  

Following Tropical Storm Ian, the county established the Transform386 program to allocate an additional $328.9 million in Community Development Block Grant funds received as part of a massive federal assistance package. 

In January, it was reported that the U.S. Housing and Urban Development awarded Volusia County $133.5 million in Hurricane Milton relief… 

It doesn’t end there. 

Last year, the county brought in some $391 million in property tax revenue, in addition to various other taxes, fees, state and federal grants and allocations, funds carried over from the previous budget year, etc. 

Add to that the county’s pernicious process of dipping into tax supported Volusia Forever and ECHO funds under a “direct county expenditure” program (read: sneak thievery) where repair, replacement, and capital improvement projects that are normally budgeted for annually are instead funded with millions in looted conservation and passive outdoor recreation funds. 

In my view, the county’s expenditure program is “Exhibit A” in the case against the proposed “stormwater and flooding” half-cent sales tax money grab that is slowly being resuscitated from the ash heap of bad ideas by a political insulation committee of county/city officials. 

Bullshit.                   

I harp on this a lot, but the last time the Volusia CEO Business Alliance and others – in confederacy with their friends in municipal and county government – tried to sell us on a sales tax increase, it was ostensibly to fund transportation infrastructure

Remember?  I do.

Unfortunately, our ‘powers that be’ approved malignant sprawl at a rate that has now exceeded our transportation needs while ignoring critical infrastructure concurrency requirements – something that should be prosecuted as criminal negligence – and allowing environmentally destructive slash-burn-fill-and-build construction practices to flood existing residents across the width and breadth of Volusia County. 

Typically, engineers, planners, and growth management experts call that a compounding problem – something to avoid – a situation where added factors exacerbate an existing problem, making problems worse or more complicated. Example: The heavy rain compounded the problem of development-induced changes to the topography of the land, causing extensive flood damage to existing houses, businesses, and roads…

Now, those self-described “fiscal conservatives” on the dais of power in DeLand are being “prepared” by senior staff for a new budget year – and still no substantive road improvements, major utility upgrades, effective stormwater management, or the countless other must haves necessary to keep pace with development. 

Just more Taj Mahal facilities, upgrades, and comforts that benefit the bureaucracy, or the pet projects of shameless elected officials who know better, and the inevitable salary and benefit increases for senior staff which ensures they don’t have to feel the same pain their constituents experience.

In my view, it is time for Volusia County taxpayers to ask these pompous asses the tough questions, like, “Where did it go, George?” and “When is this bloated, lethargic, and obese monstrosity of a bureaucracy going to stand on its own two feet?

To quote the loveable dupe Willoughby after his “friend” sent him off the cliff, “Thanks a lot, George, thanks a lot…”

City of Bunnell – A Threatened Community Fights Back

“A development of this size has the potential to change the entire character of our city.”

–Bunnell Vice Mayor John Rogers, Monday, June 9, 2025

The request by a Jacksonville-based developer was the largest in modern history:

An 8,000-home monstrosity, to include an 800 space RV community, blanketing over 2,800 acres between SR-100 and SR-11 west of the community of Bunnell.  A life altering project which, among other massive impacts on existing residents, was 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… 

The controversial project has been declared the Reserve at Haw Creek – one of those cockamamie appellations that only a real estate marketing group could manufacture – a signature that always seems the exact opposite of what the development represents, is the single largest planned unit development proposed for Flagler County since ITT’s Palm Coast.   

There was nothing reserved about it…                

Once finished, the gargantuan Reserve at Haw Creek would increase the population of the City of Bunnell by 500% – forever changing the quaint culture and small town feel of the closeknit community – leaving residents rightfully concerned about traffic congestion, density, schools, flooding, infrastructure, environmental impacts, and their quiet quality of life.

To their credit, threatened citizens of Bunnell and its rural areas banded together early to fight for their small community at every step of the process. 

On Monday evening, citizens turned out en masse to voice their vehement opposition to “The Reserve” before the Bunnell City Commission – while a representative for the developer schmoozed the elected officials with tales of riches beyond their local-yokel comprehension.

According to an article in FlaglerLive.com this week:

“Yes, you will have to hire staff. Yes, you will have to maintain the sewer plants, the water plants down the road,” Grim said. “But you can have millions of dollars coming in to pay a few $100,000 worth of salaries.” It was a shocking misrepresentation: the city’s costs in added staff, added police, added firefighters, fire trucks, police cars and operational costs manyfold more than its current budget supports would be in the tens of millions of dollars.

The public comments were invariably brutal to the proposal. “The bigger picture of all of this is flooding, flooding, flooding, flooding,” Melanie Brian said. “I don’t care what St John’s Water Management says. I live there. I live right there. We had 3 feet is all I had left before that water entered my home just this last hurricane, just the last hurricane. And that is including the trees that are still there. So now you’re going to rip all that out. I’m going to have water in my house. It’s going to happen. I don’t care what they say on development. What is in black and white on a piece of paper is not what really happens.”  

At the end of a long evening, the Bunnell City Commission voted 4-1 to reject the proposed development, marking a rare victory for long-suffering “Fun Coast” residents who have literally been steamrolled by real estate developers armed with “voluntary regulations,” lucrative incentives, and state legislation that has all but preempted local control of future growth.  

Unfortunately, the David v. Goliath fight against the Reserve at Haw Creek is far from over. 

The developer now has 30-days to file an appeal in Circuit Court… 

Stay tuned.  This one bear’s watching.

Quote of the Week

“Gov. Ron DeSantis is giving a vote of confidence to the University of Florida Board of Trustees, even after they advanced a failed pick for President of the state’s flagship school.

DeSantis has reappointed Mori Hosseini and Fred Ridley to the Board, even after both men were part of the unanimous vote in favor of Santa Ono.

The state Board of Governors (BOG) summarily rejected Ono amid concerns about his adherence to left-wing ideology like diversity, equity and inclusion, and a firestorm from people on the Right, including onetime DeSantis favorite Christopher Rufo, U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds and Donald Trump Jr.

The Governor offered weak criticisms of Ono, saying past comments made him “cringe,” but expressed confidence in the Trustees publicly before the BOG spiked their pick. Even after it was final, though, the usually outspoken DeSantis avoided saying anything relevant about the controversy, a measure of the political complications he faced.

Hosseini has been one of DeSantis’ most influential supporters since his run for Governor in 2018, with the Governor backing a $92 million highway interchange at the ICI Homes developer’s behest. In turn, DeSantis enjoyed private flights and a golf simulator at Hosseini’s expense.”

–Reporter A. G. Gancarski, writing in FloridaPolitics.com, one of the most respected media outlets covering government, politics, policy, and lobbying in the Sunshine State, “Gov. DeSantis reappoints Mori Hosseini, Fred Ridley to UF Board of Trustees despite Santa Ono snit,” Tuesday, June 9, 2025

Wait.  Did I read that right?

“…with the Governor backing a $92 million highway interchange at the ICI Homes developer’s behest. In turn, DeSantis enjoyed private flights and a golf simulator at Hosseini’s expense.”

Wow. No mincing words, no “allegedly,” no chocolates and flowers…

In most places that value good governance, that shocking revelation of quid pro quo politics by a respected Northeast Florida journalist would have resulted in outrage from those who pay the bills.

The acknowledgment that massively expensive infrastructure beneficial to well-heeled benefactors is up for sale to the chum who offers the best spiffs, like private jets and expensive toys. But not here.

We’ve become inured to the stench of transactional politics in Tallahassee. 

Florida.  The biggest whorehouse in the world. 

The rules truly are different here…

And Another Thing!

One need look no further than the Lost City of Deltona – now the largest municipality in Volusia County by population – for all the frightening earmarks of a city in crisis.  

A key symptom of a civic malignancy on the heart of a community is when the elected body cannot form a quorum; and it appears the majority of those the taxpayers of Deltona cast their sacred vote for simply cannot be bothered to show up…   

Or is there something more sinister at play?

According to a report by Al Everson writing in the West Volusia Beacon last week, in the hours prior to the Deltona City Commission’s June 2 meeting, City Clerk Joyce Raftery began receiving calls from elected officials begging off that evening’s public meeting, “They said they had family issues. One didn’t feel well.”   

Huh.  It’s almost as if someone coordinated it, eh? 

In total, four of the seven, including Mayor Santiago Avila Jr., abdicated their sworn obligation to conduct the people’s business – a position for which they receive public funds to serve in the public interest – which means the City Commission failed to achieve a quorum, and the meeting had to be cancelled.

Why the last-minute exodus?

In the Beacon’s report we learned, “Among the items on the agenda of the June 2 meeting were an ordinance to ban the opening of new medical-marijuana dispensaries in Deltona and consideration of a moratorium on new development. The proposed moratorium on new construction and development follows from stormwater problems in various parts of the city, especially after hurricanes Ian and Nicole in 2022 and Hurricane Milton last October.

Ahh.  The old ‘one-two’ of the “M” word and Impact Fees…   

According to an excellent report by WFTV-9 reporter Demie Johnson, “Hundreds of new homes have already been approved in the city so far this year, according to Commissioner Dori Howington. Meanwhile, hundreds of existing homes are still dealing with the effects of flooding from the past few storm seasons.

“We can’t sustain that with the infrastructure we have, and if we aren’t charging enough in impact fees, then the developers aren’t doing it which means our residents have to pick up the pieces,” said Howington.

Howington said the cost to develop in Deltona hasn’t gone up in a decade. It’s an issue the city has been working to address since December. Because there hasn’t been much movement, she’s suggesting a temporary pause on building altogether.”

In turn, Commissioner Howington made a valiant effort to call for a special meeting of the Deltona City Commission. 

Unfortunately, her attempts were ignored…      

Last Friday, Greg Gimbert, administrator of the popular social media civic forum Volusia Issues, expressed the concerns of many when he asked Volusia County Councilman David “No Show” Santiago – who many believe is the behind-the-scenes Pied Piper of Deltona Politics – why his wife, Deltona Commissioner Emma “No Show II” Santiago, and his acolyte Mayor Avila, failed to appear? 

“It’s frustrating to watch people take the check but not do the job. Thank you for adding them. David Santiago do you think you can get your wife and your boy to show up for work?”

In a revealing reply, Councilman Santiago explained:

“My wife is an independent woman who makes her own decisions. Not sure what you mean by my boy. Maybe there is a possibility they disagree with what Dori is proposing? Maybe they feel this doesn’t need a special emergency meeting and could be addressed at the next regularly scheduled meeting and save tax dollars? Maybe this is all to build up someone’s popularity tactics. Maybe people are waiting to see what the Governor is going to do with SB 180 which can make this a waste of time? One thing that I do know is that I don’t speculate and or guess what others think because most of the time it’s incorrect. Have a good day.”

Disturbing. 

I have a few “what ifs” of my own, like maybe someone functioned as a conduit to prevent a quorum and circumvent the discussion of impact fees and a development moratorium?

Or maybe they took a page out of Councilman “No Show” Santiago’s pernicious political playbook – sitting on their ass, refusing to participate, and spinelessly sidestepping controversial issues until they see which way the political wind is blowing?   

In a curious twist, during a workshop on Monday evening, the Deltona City Commission took action to direct that an ordinance authorizing a nine-month building moratorium be drafted for consideration – to include a timeline for approving the measure before July 1 – along with provisions for repealing the measure should a developer sue the city (inevitably).

According to Commissioner Howington, the city currently has 23 development applications awaiting approval, and “The proposal for a temporary moratorium puts a pause on everything new coming at us,” she said. “It does not impact commercial or industrial development.”

“I’m hearing from residents. They want to take a pause.”

In a follow-up report by the West Volusia Beacon, we learned, “The vote was 5-0. Two members of the governing body, Vice Mayor Davison Heriot and Commissioner Emma Santiago, were absent.”

Go figure…

During the workshop, Deltona’s City Attorney Gemma Torcivia stressed the importance of having a quorum at the required special meetings to ensure timely action on the moratorium.

Time will tell. 

Perhaps last week’s exodus from the dais by Deltona officials was just another symptom of the epidemic of mass political cowardice – the inability of compromised elected officials to take a position in front of their frightened, frustrated, and claustrophobic constituents – taxpayers desperate for solutions to the disastrous effects of overdevelopment?  

In my view, that virulent malady seems to be spreading like a cancer through councils and commissions across Volusia County…

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

Barker’s View for June 5, 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 Miller Lake Twenty-Three – A Demand for Justice in Orange City

Waterlogged residents throughout Volusia County cheered the news that twenty-three current or former property owners in the Miller Lake (formerly Miller Pond) area of Orange City have filed a lawsuit alleging that Volusia County and ten commercial property owners failed to manage stormwater drainage systems contributing to devastating lake flooding. 

According to a report by Sheldon Gardner writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Attorney Jack Taylor, of the law firm Morgan & Morgan, is representing the plaintiffs. The firm filed the 234-page lawsuit, including attachments, in Volusia County Circuit Court.”

In the preamble to the legal action, Taylor asserts “This is a case about property rights, mismanagement of stormwater infrastructure, and the consequences of development without accountability.”

That’s powerful.  Especially when so many property owners across the region have had their lives repeatedly upended by the effects of development-induced flooding.

In addition, the Miller Lake residents have filed a notice of tort claims against Volusia County for “mismanagement” of the lake, alleging that the county’s bungling “…has led to the rise of stormwater, persistent flooding, and damage to homes near Miller Lake.”

According to the News-Journal, “Plaintiffs bring this action to stop the continued intrusion of stormwater, to repair the harm already caused, and to reinforce a basic principle of Florida law: one property owner may not use another’s land as a drainage basin.”

For their part, to further isolate our county government from those it exists to serve, Volusia County officials circled the wagons in a canned email to the News-Journal, “Unfortunately, we cannot comment on current, pending, or threatened litigation matters.”

Bullshit.

In April, Spectrum News 13 reported that residents of the Miller Lake area are still experiencing the impacts of Hurricane Milton some seven months after the event.  Inundation that resulted in a drastic rise in lake levels that blocked access to their homes, rendered potable water wells useless, and left their property submerged in standing water.

Last December, during a townhall meeting to address the concerns of flood victims in West Volusia, county officials spewed more hot air – more of the strategic procrastination that has become their tired modus operandi – with Volusia’s Public Works Director Ben Bartlett falling back on more timewasting studies to tell everyone what they already knew:  

“What are some typical solutions you might see to come out of these studies? The first one is a traditional stormwater system, stormwater ponds to store the water during the event, gravity conveyance system to bring the water to the pond, and then some sort of gravity system with a positive outfall to take the water away,” Benjamin Bartlett said.”

We understand the basics of how a stormwater system works, Ben. 

So what do you plan to do about the ones that are overwhelmed due to massive overdevelopment and no longer serve their intended purpose across the width and breadth of Volusia County?

And how did we get in this disastrous predicament to begin with?

For the record, last month, the Volusia County Council finally got around to approving water-engineering studies of four areas in DeLand – that’s five months after Bartlett’s announcement – when they voted to hire a Texas consulting firm (?), to analyze stormwater issues and recommend workable solutions.

If history repeats (and it always does here on the “Fun Coast”) any “recommendations” resulting from the $828,010 in grant funded studies will be wholly ignored and quickly forgotten – but another year of foot-dragging inaction will have passed under the transom…   

Why is that?  

Perhaps these are questions Mr. Bartlett and other senior members of County Manager George “The Wreck” Recktenwald’s coterie of enablers, and those elected puppets on the dais of power will be asked under oath as the Miller Lake lawsuit progresses? 

To add insult, in coming months, Volusia County taxpayers are going to hear of a pernicious plan hatched by something called the “sustainability subcommittee” of the Volusia Knights of the Roundtable – a political insulation consortium of county and municipal elected officials – that will suggest a 2026 referendum to increase our sales tax ostensibly to pay for “stormwater and flooding” solutions. 

In January, after the Volusia County Council’s obstinate “Old Guard” callously suppressed an attempt by Chair Jeff Brower to implement a temporary building moratorium until desperately needed infrastructure needs could be met, we learned in a News-Journal report:

“At-Large Representative Jake Johansson pointed out that the Volusia County Elected Officials Roundtable, which brings together cities and county leaders, has formed a subcommittee that will address flooding concerns. Johansson is serving as co-chair.

He talked about the importance of collaborating with city leaders on issues like a moratorium.”

Instead of “addressing flooding concerns” as promised, it appears all Jake the Snake Johansson and his fellow tone-deaf knights could come up with is raising taxes on goods and services for every man, woman, and child in Volusia County? 

I don’t know about you, but with Volusia County’s budget now topping an astronomical $1.3 billion – I think we’ve all given enough of our hard-earned money to the same blundering dullards who got us into this mess in the first place… 

Folks, this isn’t about flood control – it’s about another revenue source for this horribly bloated bureaucracy.  

I commend those inundated homeowners in Orange City and their intrepid team at Morgan and Morgan for standing up to those do-nothings in the Ivory Tower of Power at Volusia County government and let them know there is some shit we won’t eat.

In my view, it is time for victims of overdevelopment and bureaucratic ineptitude to hold those who knew of the devastating consequences of fill-and-build sprawl, and did absolutely nothing to mitigate it, legally and politically accountable for their strategic negligence.    

Clash of the Titans – The Sound of Distant Thunder

Things turned ugly this week when Florida’s State University Board of Governors morphed from a pro forma rubberstamp into the role of interrogators on Tuesday as they dug deep into the political leanings and past practices of former University of Michigan president Dr. Santa J. Ono, who was recently selected by unanimous vote of the University of Florida Board of Trustees to assume the 14th presidency of UF.

It was the first time in history that the 17-member Florida Board of Governor’s failed to approve the leadership recommendation of a university’s trustees… 

Normally, I could care less – the only thing that kept me out of college was high school – but Ono’s appointment was publicly supported by several of our local “movers-and-shakers” who draw a lot of water in Volusia County…

According to a report this week in FlaglerLive.com, “Tuesday’s 10-6 vote was a major rebuke to the UF Board of Trustees, which last week unanimously selected Ono for the post, and trustees Chairman Mori Hosseini, an influential Republican donor with longstanding ties to the state university system.

Ono, an immunologist who recently stepped down as president of the University of Michigan, drew fierce criticism from high-profile conservatives inside and outside of Florida for such issues as his past embrace of diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs, as well as his handling of on-campus protests following the 2023 attack by Hamas in Israel.”

Find the rest of FlaglerLive.com’s article here: https://tinyurl.com/y5vsay4t

In recent weeks, conservative critics have slammed Dr. Ono’s nomination – including Donald Trump Jr., who took to X last month to lambaste UF’s “decision-makers,” and referred to Ono as a “woke psycho” – partisan denunciations that ultimately led the governing board to block Ono’s appointment earlier this week.

Regardless of the reasons (or rhetoric) Ono’s controversial nomination set up a clash of the titans involving some of our area’s heaviest hitters – including the heaviest of the heavy, our High Panjandrum of Political Power Mori Hosseini – who chairs the University of Florida’s Board of Trustees – and former Florida Speaker of the House Paul Renner, who was among those leading the charge against Dr. Ono’s appointment.  

In addition, influential local insurance executive Charlie Lydecker – in my experience a good guy and member of the State University Board of Governors (who also served on the UF presidential search committee) questioned the intensity of the board’s withering interrogation of Ono.

“Critics’ probing of Ono was so intense that it sparked heated pushback from Lydecker, who said the Board of Governors was intended to “ratify, up or down” a selection unanimously made by UF’s trustees.

“This is not a court of law. I’ve been on this board for five, six years, and we have never used this as a forum to interrogate and in this case, it feels to me patently unfair,” Lydecker said. “Candidly, this process does not feel fair to me.”

According to FlaglerLive.com, Mr. Hosseini also questioned the board’s motivations and “…called the skepticism around Ono “heartbreaking” and pointed to former President Ronald Reagan’s metamorphosis from a Democrat who supported unions to one of the nation’s most beloved Republicans. He said the Board of Governors needed to rely on UF’s trustees, who stepped in after questions were raised about former UF President Ben Sasse’s short tenure.

“The board of trustees are there as a backstop. So if this man doesn’t do what he says he’s going to do, we’re there. We’re your boots on the ground … That is the basis of this board of governors and yet you all decided today is the day we’re going to take somebody down,” Hosseini said.”

Adding to the intrigue, during the discussion, board member Eric Silagy – past chairman, president, and CEO of Florida Power & Light – asked Mr. Hosseini (who was conspicuously seated next to Dr. Ono) about “a number of detractors in this process” who may have been sniffing around the UF presidential post themselves…

“Who on the board of governors wanted to be president of the University of Florida?” Silagy asked.

“Paul Renner,” Hosseini said, sparking an immediate response from the former House speaker.

“I did not initiate that,” Renner said.

Renner said a UF trustee asked him about the presidential post.

“I contacted the governor’s office. I was told to go talk to Mori Hosseini, and he said he wasn’t interested, and that’s the end of it,” Renner said. The conversation took place before DeSantis appointed him to the Board of Governors in February.

“Under no circumstances, would I serve at this time at the University of Florida,” Renner said.

Whoa.

For his part, it appears Dr. Santa Ono is now damaged goods as his critics tout the board’s vote as “a massive win for conservatives,” while progressive academics around the nation chide him for playing the politics of appeasement and “selling his soul” to secure the UF appointment.

As one gloating University of Michigan professor still sore about Ono’s attempt to jump the Blue State/Red State gulf put it, “Karma caught up with Ono…”

Governor Ron DeSantis didn’t openly oppose Dr. Ono’s appointment – choosing instead a delicate tightrope act between his biggest donors/supporters and Ono’s equally influential detractors. 

But once the deed was done, Gov. DeSantis took a short victory lap in the form of a post on X by newly hired state staffer Jordan Schachtel:

“Santa Ono is OUT. The Florida Board of Governors has voted to Reject Ono as President of the University of Florida. 

Florida has voted to reject wokeness, DEI, CRT at our flagship university.  Go Gators!”

According to a report by NBC News, the rejection of Ono “…put DeSantis in a thorny political position, and it was a notable outcome in a state Republican ecosystem generally defined by donors and influential figures’ getting their way.

One of DeSantis’ longtime biggest political supporters — Mori Hosseini, the billionaire chair of the University of Florida Board of Trustees — strongly backed Ono’s bid to become president of the state’s flagship university.”

Something tells me that won’t soon be forgotten, and that distant thunder may well be the rumble of war drums…

Look, I don’t presume to know the behind-the-curtains dynamics at play in Tallahassee, Gainesville, and beyond (and I really don’t care) – but influential donors/insiders like Mr. Hosseini aren’t accustomed to being told no – or publicly humiliated by a politically appointed board of governors.

In my view, this sets up a classic power struggle that is ripe for serious repercussions during an already strange time in Tallahassee…

Stay tuned.

Quote of the Week

“The Palm Coast City Council is moving forward with two of the three impact fee studies, one of which will increase the fire service fee by 117%.

The council is reviewing the impact fees for transportation, fire service and parks and recreation. At the June 3 council meeting, the council unanimously approved the first of two votes raising the fire service and parks and recreation fees. The transportation fees were sent back for more revisions, which will reviewed on June 10.

Vice Mayor Theresa Carli Pontieri said it is the council’s job to make sure its position is legally defensible if the council is going to increase the impact fees at such high rates.

“We have to make sure that we are buttoned up every which way to Sunday on this,” she said.  “And I just don’t think we’re there yet.”

Typically, Florida law prohibits increasing impact fees by more than 50% of the current rate but once every four years and increases must be phased in over a two- to four-year period. But the state statute does provide an exception, if a municipality proves there are “extraordinary circumstances.”

–Reporter Sierra Williams writing in the Palm Coast Observer, “Palm Coast Council votes to increase developer-paid fire service fees by 117%,” Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Florida residents don’t hear much from real estate developers.  

For the most part, their lawyers, lobbyists, and elected shills do the talking for them…

Unfortunately, you and I are shut out of the discussion – silenced by the roar of bulldozers churning acres of greenspace into a foul black muck, the acrid odor of splintered hardwoods burning to ash, and the resultant dust storms that blow across the denuded landscape – all before construction of more, more, more zero lot line cracker boxes “starting in the mid $300’s” begin to blanket the land.

Oh, on occasion We, The Little People kick and bitch – approaching that wall of silence comprised of our elected representatives – our fears falling on deaf ears blocked by wads of campaign donations and the subliminal return on investment that accompanies each dollar. 

And the lucrative status quo prevails…

But if you want to see what an angry hornet’s nest looks like, just mention the concept of a temporary building moratorium until infrastructure can meet demand – or suggest an increase in impact fees to pay for needed improvements – then look out

Suddenly, the development community mobilizes, literally building a steel curtain around City Hall, and begin broadcasting stories of the economic Armageddon that would result from even a tap of the brakes on growth. 

Complete with tall tales about how raising impact fees to reduce the burden on existing residents would actually result in homeowners paying more in the long run…

My ass.

On Monday, ahead of a vote by the Palm Coast City Council to increase impact fees for transportation, fire service, and parks and recreation, a cast of development-friendly mouthpieces took to the airwaves on WNZF Radio’s “Free for All” talk show.  

Former Florida House Speaker Paul Renner (boy, he gets around, huh?) – who apparently retained his role as a shameless developer shill – used the forum to tell flashlight under the chin scary stories of what happens if developers are required to pay their fair share for the impacts of growth:  

According to the Observer report, “Renner said “dollar for dollar,” impact fees are passed on to the new homeowners, “artificially” increasing the property’s cost. That higher home value then likewise will increase the property assessments of surrounding homes, eventually leading to current homeowners paying more in property taxes, he said.”

Meanwhile, spinmeisters from the Flagler Homebuilders Association tag-teamed with Renner, claiming the studies Palm Coast relied upon to establish the “extraordinary circumstances” necessary for the more than 50% increase were “full of holes,” comparing them to “Swiss cheese,” and crying the Poor Mouth Blues over increased construction costs.

Admit nothing, deny everything, make counteraccusations, eh?    

To her credit, Palm Coast Vice Mayor Theresa Pontieri brought a modicum of common sense to the discussion by pointing out the burden already borne by existing taxpayers:

“Current Palm Coast residents will also feel the effects if the fees aren’t increased enough, either, she said. According to the recreation impact fee studies, she said, increasing the fire service fees just 50% would mean the city would need to recoup $3.9 million over 10 years from current residents to make up the difference. 

“You’re just moving it from one column to the other,” she said. “We know we’ve got expansion related costs. And expansion related costs should weigh on the shoulders of the people that are coming in more so than the people that are already here.”

And the beat goes on…

And Another Thing!

…before it is an honor, leadership is trust; Before it is a call to glory, Leadership is a call to service.

…before all else, forever, and always, leadership is a willingness to serve.

—Father Edson Wood, OSA, Chaplain, United States Military Academy

The first week of June…  Wow, how time flies. 

In two months, Good Lord willing, I’ll turn 65 and officially become a senior citizen

A Florida Senior Citizen.  The worst kind….

As a pending geriatric with my productive life behind me, I now look back on so many wonderful memories of a lifetime spent in public service with a small municipality – the privilege of doing work worth doing for people who genuinely appreciated the effort. 

I wouldn’t change a minute of it.

This week, our local news was filled with the shining faces of high school and college graduates receiving their diplomas, the culmination of a journey that began in earliest childhood, now preparing for the great adventure of ‘what comes next.’

From the precipice of old age, by squinting hard enough, I can look back into the murky distance and remember that special time in my life when anything seemed possible, and I never regretted my decision to serve a small community, and all the trials, errors, blunders, and triumphs of overcoming significant challenges for the greater good.  

After all these years, I still believe in the importance of ethical, responsive, and transparent public servants working to ensure essential service delivery and good governance. My hope is that some of today’s altruistic and enthusiastic graduates will answer the high calling to public service – devoting themselves to a cause greater than their own self-interest.  

In my beloved profession of law enforcement, we continue to experience a nationwide crisis of recruiting and retaining qualified officers.  In my experience, it has never been easy to find candidates with the innate attributes necessary for the difficult, dangerous, and demanding work – now made worse by the gross villanization of law enforcement in the wake of hyper-politicized events across the nation. 

I’m not going to lie; as police administrators, we’ve brought some it on ourselves… 

It’s a hard dollar, and it always will be. 

Those who serve in law enforcement with honor, courage, and a personal commitment to protecting their communities remain my personal heroes and they have my enduring love and respect.

In my view, another growing civic crisis is the quality and caliber of those standing for local elective office on the various city and county councils, commissions, and boards that make important policy decisions that affect our lives and livelihoods and allocate our hard-earned tax dollars. 

In my view, those with the impulse to serve, a fire in the belly, that was once a hallmark of community involvement have largely been replaced by head-nodding sycophants with a proclivity for quid pro quo transactional politics. 

An institutional (and individual) willingness to serve the highest bidder, rather than the personal instinct to improve the quality of life, well-being, and economic prosperity of their neighbors.   

The problem isn’t limited to local governments.

The sordid stories out of Tallahassee exposing the machinations of state legislators, and scandals that now reach the Governor’s office and the Florida Attorney General, are increasingly prevalent and corrosive to the public trust. 

At the federal level (as is our luck), United States Rep. Cory Mills, who represents the 7th Congressional District stretching from areas of Daytona Beach to Apopka, is now widely mocked as the “most corrupt Congressman in America…”  

Sadly, it appears the personal qualities of leadership, integrity, and selflessness are now seen as impediments to the lockstep conformity required to further the greed-crazed wants of their political puppeteers at all levels of government.

In the decade since I retired from municipal service, many things have changed, while some traditions, both good and bad, remain. 

In my view, the proliferation of a skewed campaign finance system that allows uber-wealthy “King makers” to conspire with horribly dysfunctional partisan political committees to hand-select malleable candidates – then underwrite their campaigns with massive donations from the various businesses and entities under their control – has completely compromised local elections here on Florida’s “Fun Coast” and beyond.

Add to that the vicious knife-fight that passes for modern political races – an unrestrained blood bath of dirty tricks, scandalous insinuations distributed on those infamous “glossy mailers,” gross distortions presented as fact, and cruel character assassination – shameful tactics that result in the personal and professional destruction of anyone who dares challenge Volusia’s “Old Guard,” and you begin to see why elective service in these parts is not for the faint of heart…   

Once elected, their likeminded “colleagues” – politicians often supported by the same donors and special interests – convince them that the elected body should be a clubbish, homogenized, and well-choreographed echo chamber, where protected (and highly compensated) senior staff create public policy behind closed doors, and the elected officials are expected to rubberstamp it.

To enforce compliance, the compromised majority begin passing rules and “civility ordinances” to silence dissent on both sides of the dais, while strictly enforced conformism ensures the outcome of votes when everyone starts thinking alike.    

Absurd “rules” that permit our elected officials to stare catatonically into space like stone gargoyles – refusing to even acknowledge the presence of taxpayers who approach the gilded dais of power – let alone answer their questions and fervent cries for help.    

Fortunately, there are a few with the courage to stand for their constituents, demonstrate independence, and buck a compromised system that abhors individualism and free thought. 

For their resistance, these bold public servants who hold firm to their campaign promises are marginalized, maligned, and see their every idea and initiative crushed under the boot of those slavish loyalists who are passionately committed to preserving the stagnant status quo. 

Perhaps a new generation of aspiring servant-leaders – those who have seen the environmental atrocities and civic claustrophobia of overdevelopment, the corruption in plain sight, and the bureaucratic subservience to the profit margins of well-heeled political insiders – will rise and vow to return public confidence and respect to our government institutions through adherence to highest standards of integrity, transparency, and service over self.   

I hate to say it, but we’ve made a mess of things.

Now, it’s up to those who come next…

As policy analyst, educator, and former dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University reminded in his essay on civic participation, Reviving the Call to Public Service, in a thought by Margaret Thatcher on the fate of the Athenians:

“In the end, more than freedom, they wanted security. They wanted a comfortable life, and they lost it all – security, comfort, and freedom. When the Athenians finally wanted not to give to society but for society to give to them, when the freedom they wished for most was freedom from responsibility, then Athens ceased to be free and was never free again.”

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

Barker’s View for May 29, 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…

Impact Fees – “Extraordinary Circumstances” Require Action

One thing I’ve never understood is the phenomena of governments who pay handsomely for an expert opinion – involving exhaustive (and expensive) studies and analysis by consultants, then openly ignore the conclusions – the resultant voluminous report relegated to a dead records morgue where it collects dust on a shelf groaning with other “out of sight/out of mind” findings…    

In Volusia County, I call it ‘paralysis by analysis’ – a strategic procrastination that allows the bureaucracy to say, “See, rube, we’re studying the problem,” while putting time and distance between the clamor of angry residents and substantive solutions to the myriad problems of overdevelopment.

That calculated foot-dragging allows influential insiders in the real estate development community to haul more, more, more money out of ravaged greenspace rather than helping fund projects that protect existing residents – stalling that becomes especially evident whenever impact fee increases are mentioned… 

Impact fees are one-time charges imposed on new development to help recover costs of new infrastructure, services, and equipment required to meet the demands of new growth.

This week, despite studies which proved the City of Palm Coast’s transportation, fire service, and parks/recreation needs qualify it for the “extraordinary circumstances” provision needed to bypass Florida’s statutory cap on increasing impact fees, the elected officials took an approach obviously more palatable for development concerns.

According to an informative article by Sierra Williams writing in the Palm Coast Observer this week:

“The transportation study found that the city’s transportation fees – which include specific rates for different types of developments – should be increased by 137% per dwelling unit for single family residential homes and 162% for multi-family developments.

Fire service impact fees are recommended to be increased from $434.51 per dwelling unit to $859 per unit for residential developments, a 97.7% increase. For non-residential developments, the fee similarly increases 94.9%, from the current rate of $700 per 1,000 square feet to $1,364. These fees do not include replacing current equipment, but instead the costing of adding facilities, equipment and firefighters to maintain the city’s current service level as it grows.

Parks and recreation impact fees, which are calculated based on a minimum ratio of eight-acres of recreational land per 1,000 people and the city’s 10-year capital improvement projects, were recommended to increase 98% to $3,620 per dwelling unit from the current rate of $1,828.01.”

In March, the Palm Coast City Council saddled residents with a 31% water and sewer rate increase to be phased in through October 2028.  The increase is necessary to finance needed upgrades to the city’s outdated and grossly overcapacity utility infrastructure that is now under a consent decree issued by the Florida Department of Environmental Destruction.

In Florida, the biggest whorehouse in the world – a fiefdom controlled by the real estate development bund through their rental representatives – impact fees can only be spent on expansion, not improvements or maintenance of existing infrastructure, so the bulk of the upgrades will be borne by existing ratepayers, which further proves growth doesn’t pay for itself…

On Tuesday, the Palm Coast City Council (with beleaguered Mayor Mike Norris absent) agreed to ignore the massive increase proposed by its experts, proposing instead a toned-down version calling for a 70-90% increase to avoid a “shock to the system.”

Which, I think, means limiting the needed increase in the face of overwhelming need to appease their political puppeteers in the real estate development community…although the reason given was “balancing interests,” so as not to price essential members of the workforce, like police officers, firefighters, and teachers, from buying homes in Palm Coast.

Earlier this year, the Daytona Beach City Commission voted to approve “linkage fees” on new construction to fund affordable housing and are considering a second revenue source taken from a portion of property taxes generated from rising property values.

In addition, the City of Daytona Beach recently announced it was considering increasing impact fees – something it hasn’t done since 2006 – as the malignant sprawl continues.  Mysteriously, earlier this month public workshops to discuss the proposed 45.4% increase were postponed with “new dates to be announced once established…”  

According to the Observer, in Palm Coast “All four council members present – Mayor Mike Norris was absent – agreed to enact the fire services impact fees as recommended by the study. The parks and recreation fees, however, were cut by around 20% by removing projects from the 10-year Capital Improvement Plan.

The projects removed from the list were a recreation center, an event center and clubhouse and a cultural arts center.

For the transportation fees, the council decided to remove Highway U.S. 1 from the list of major roadways in the study that would need improvements on Palm Coast’s dime to keep up with growth. That road, they argued, is managed by the state. As well, the council asked the amount of anticipated state funding in the equation be doubled from $25 million to $50 million over the next 25 years.”

For the uninitiated, “state funding” is not a guarantee. 

Last year, Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed some $10 million appropriated for much needed Palm Coast utilities infrastructure, drainage improvements for flood-prone areas, and wastewater projects – while authorizing funds for road construction to facilitate the city’s asinine “westward expansion” (at a time when Palm Coast utilities are under a state mandate due to overcapacity for current needs?)

The Palm Coast City Council will vote on impact fees at their June 3 and June 17 business meetings.

Halifax Area Homelessness – Putting All the Eggs in One Basket

Last week, The Daytona Beach News-Journal published a piece by Eileen Zaffiro-Kean touting the personal accomplishments of 21 alumni of the First Step Shelter housing program.  According to the report, the former participants have transitioned from the shelter to the WM at the River, a subsidized riverfront apartment complex in Daytona Beach.  

In my jaded view, the luncheon had the appearance of another choreographed attempt to rehabilitate the tarnished image of the program and its beleaguered executive director, Victoria Fahlberg…

However, I must admit, it was nice to finally see the tangible results of our sizeable collective investment in First Step, nearly a decade after the homeless occupation of the county administration building on Beach Street…

According to the News-Journal, as residents dined on a catered meal that included “hors d’oeuvres and fancy mini cupcakes,” they were treated to the accolades of Daytona Beach Mayor Derrick Henry, who serves as president of the First Step governing board, and the self-appreciating remarks of Director Fahlberg.

“You are worth every minute of every day that we spend, all the challenges that we face as a staff, you are worth it,” said Fahlberg, who got choked up as she spoke. “Seeing you sitting here today, it means everything.”

Fahlberg said when she’s old and looking back on what she accomplished in her life, she will think of every First Step Shelter resident who rebuilt their lives and got a roof of their own over their head.

“You are my legacy,” she said. “I know when all of you do well, you give my life meaning.”

Great.  Glad we could help affirm the Fahlberg legacy…    

And by “We” I mean you and me. 

The thankless Volusia County taxpayers who underwrite the enigmatic First Step program with our hard-earned tax dollars but have yet to receive adequate answers to the serious allegations of mismanagement (and worse) lodged by whistleblowers last year.

Serious claims that are now the subject of expanding lawsuits naming both First Step and the City of Daytona Beach… 

According to First Step, the “housing program” has helped 822 people go from the streets to housing (the News-Journal reported the number at 940) which the News-Journal reports is about half of all participants who have come to the program since it started in 2019.

I assume “permanent housing” means successful program participants are being placed in publicly subsidized apartments where residents pay a percentage of their meager income under voucher programs?  

According to the News-Journal, the newly renovated Windsor and Maley Apartments, now known as WM at the River, are “privately run and owned,” with the Daytona Beach Housing Authority maintaining 1% ownership interest.

“The new ownership charges market-rate rent, but utilities are included and residents only pay 30% of their income, which for many residents is just Social Security checks. Housing vouchers provided by the Housing Authority cover the rest of the rent.

Monthly rent for studio apartments is $787-1,295; one-bedroom units are $1,544; and two-bedroom apartments are $1,889.”

In my view, the work of Louisiana based Knight Development at WM at the River is an excellent example of what private entities with the expertise in renovating and revitalizing distressed affordable housing can accomplish – especially in a region where the need far exceeds limited resources as evidenced by the perennially closed “waiting lists” at area housing authorities.

Given the market rate price of a two-bedroom apartment with a guaranteed subsidy, looks quite lucrative too… 

Which brings me to “Barker’s uncomfortable question of the week.”

Is First Step little more than an expensive conduit between one publicly subsidized program and another?  An unnecessary “middleman” that temporarily houses participants who meet specific admittance criteria until they transition to privately operated public housing? 

In my previous professional experience with the chronic homeless, I find it remarkable that First Step can take someone from the depths of destitution, debilitation, addiction, and homelessness to productive rehabilitation and a sustainable “roof of their own” with an average stay of 60-days?

And what happens to those low-income families with children who are forced to wait for space to come available on a “first come/first served” public housing and Section 8 list?

While the demand continues to grow…     

In addition to the enigmatic First Step “transitional housing” program, there are several faith-based organizations – such as the wonderful efforts of Halifax Urban Ministries – who are working tirelessly to provide food, shelter, and basic services to homeless persons and low-income households that remain dependent on private donations.   

Which raises the question – what are the benefits of area governments putting the bulk of limited homeless assistance funds into one basket?  A mysterious “low barrier housing program” that clearly falls short in meeting the needs of Volusia County’s increasingly visible homeless population.  

I’m asking…

Where I live, the brain trust at the City of Ormond Beach contributes a reported $85,000 to First Step annually.  As taxpayers, my neighbors and I are wondering if we are getting the best bang for our buck?   

Recently, the Ormond Beach City Commission started one its tempests in a teapot when Mayor Jason Leslie publicly asked if the city’s substantial contribution to First Step was paying dividends on the street? 

For asking the obvious, Mayor Leslie was beaten like a borrowed mule for his temerity – while his “colleagues” unabashedly toasted the First Step Shelter to embarrass him – clearly oblivious to the wretched refuse shuffling along the sidewalk outside the Commission chambers… 

For the edification of my elected representatives Mizaru, Kikazaru, and Iwazaru here in what the late, great civic sage Big John referred to as the “fingerbowl district,” last week, a dear friend reported driving north on busy Ridgewood Avenue in Ormond Beach when she observed two homeless gentlemen building an open cookfire just off the sidewalk near the intersection of Granada Boulevard.   

An odd scene in a place that considers itself one of the poshest communities in the eclectic mosaic that is the Halifax area…

Recently, my wife and I drove past a zombie at Hand Avenue and Nova Road. 

He was notable for the tufts of hair and bald patches that gave the appearance someone had made a half-try at scalping him – all his possessions in a dirty backpack – catatonically ambling down the sidewalk, seemingly oblivious to his surroundings. 

Driving east on Granada Boulevard, my wife and I looked for the two obviously homeless women who regularly range from Orchard Street to the beachside, always seen together, perhaps taking care of one another on the mean streets.

Last weekend, on my way home from the grocery, I came upon two “urban outdoorsmen” – straight out of a Steinbeck novella – loitering with their bedrolls and plastic garbage sack luggage on a very tony section of John Anderson Drive. 

Perhaps the most exclusive neighborhood in all of “Old Or-mond.” 

I could keep going, but you get the idea…

Despite the fact Volusia County’s clueless ‘powers that be’ seem fine throwing good money after bad, the sight of homeless bindlestiffs wandering the streets and neighborhoods in Ormond Beach (and beyond) has become a frequent occurrence.

This isn’t a law enforcement problem.  You can’t “arrest” your way out of it with ordinances or official harassment of the lame, sick, and crazy – those living their lives under difficult (often self-created) circumstances – an intractable civic and social ill that requires a multidisciplinary approach.

That takes money – and vision.  

In my view, it is time for Volusia County governments to push past the distraction, self-aggrandizement, and questions at the First Step Shelter and begin a serious discussion of how best to allocate increasingly scarce funds to better meet an omnipresent problem with serious civic, social, and economic consequences for the Halifax area.  

Quote of the Week  

According to the (Florida) chamber, more than 730,000 children live in poverty statewide, including many in Volusia County.

“32114 (in Daytona Beach) is one of the poorest ZIP codes in the state of Florida,” said Forough Hosseini, the founder and chair of Food Brings Hope, a local nonprofit that provides food for families with children struggling to make ends meet. Hosseini is also the chair of this year’s Florida Prosperity & Economic Opportunity summit.

–Business Editor Clayton Park, The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Casey DeSantis to speak at Daytona economic summit on reducing childhood poverty,” Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Last week, I took some well-deserved ribbing in the News-Journal for pooh-poohing the obvious renaissance we’re experiencing here on the “Fun Coast” – a virtual rebirth – as foretold by the celestial “signs and wonders” in the form of a Trader Joe’s grocery and Tesla dealership…

I guess the positive economic “puzzle pieces” former Daytona Beach Mayor Glenn Ritchey spoke about, the “compounding momentum” former Daytona Beach City Commissioner/Realtor Carl Lentz mentioned, and the “rising median income that brings us nice things” cited by J. Hyatt Brown can’t get here quick enough, eh? 

Don’t take my word for it. 

Because when I try and say it, for some reason the words come out, “That’s not a gamechanger.  It’s just another insurance office,” or “Using our tax dollars to underwrite risk for all the right last names isn’t revitalization, it’s an artificial economy,” or, well, you’ve heard them all… 

But you better damn well listen to the sage wisdom of Prosperity Summit Chair Forough Hosseini – the penultimate civic influencer next to her husband, our High Panjandrum of Political Power Mori Hosseini, which is why everyone who is anyone is attending the summit today.

Whatever it takes to get them around the table I say…  

To her credit, Mrs. Hosseini – who genuinely cares about the plight of underprivileged families in our region as evidenced by her generous philanthropic efforts like Food Brings Hope, Homes Bring Hope, and Hope Place – announced this week that the City of Daytona Beach is one of the poorest zip codes in Florida

Hey, she said it.  I didn’t.

Unfortunately, the problem is not limited to Daytona Beach.  Not by a longshot.   

Two years ago, the United Way noted that some 47% of Volusia County families are living below the ALICE threshold – Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed.  Households that earn more than the Federal Poverty Level, but less than required to meet the essentials of housing, childcare, food, transportation, health care, technology, and taxes.   

Which also means nearly half of Volusia County families could give two-shits about a Trader Joe’s…

In a shocking op/ed in The Daytona Beach News-Journal this week, Mark Wilson, President and CEO of the Florida Chamber of Commerce, described the stark neighborhood-to-neighborhood disparity in the Halifax area when he pointed out that 2,787 children are living in poverty in zip code 32114 (Daytona Beach) when compared to just 270 in 32128 (Port Orange). 

(Find Mr. Wilson’s disturbing essay here: https://tinyurl.com/bd9p2sd5 )  

In my view, the prevalence and entrenched nature of the problem in Florida tells me that most elected and appointed officials only care about childhood poverty when there is an election on the horizon – or a scandal brewing that desperately needs virtue signaling…   

Here’s hoping this year’s Florida Chamber Prosperity & Economic Opportunity Solution Summit is a rousing success – something more than an opportunity for the capos of local business, industry, and education to polish the apple.  More substantive than a photo-op, another social media pose, or a cheap attempt to clean up the abject shit-show that is First Lady DeSantis’ Hope Florida debacle, which has now resulted in bipartisan calls for an expanded criminal investigation.

Call me a jaundiced asshole, but I won’t hold my breath…

According to the News-Journal, “Casey DeSantis and Dr. Audrey Gregory of AdventHealth will give a presentation on “Hope Florida: Building Pathways to Prosperity Through Community Partnerships across Florida.”

Great.  

Let’s hope our best and brightest find actionable solutions this time and make good on their promise to find workable answers to the root causes of generational poverty.  Then develop neighborhood strategies to end to the economic, civic, and social drain that ensues when the cost of life’s basic necessities exceeds the area’s median wage. 

The summit will be held today from 9:00am to 4:00pm at Daytona International Speedway.  According to the Florida Chamber of Commerce, in-person registration is $385.  Each.

Interesting.

For the record, according to the USDA, in April the average per-person food cost for a child was $234.40 a month…

And Another Thing!

“At the request of District 4 Councilman Troy Kent, the Volusia County Council plans to talk about the possibility of creating another inlet along the coast, specifically, one near Highbridge Road in the area of Ormond-by-the-Sea.

Kent floated the idea to discuss the topic during closing comments at Tuesday’s meeting. He received unanimous support to have staff bring back information on what that would entail and have a discussion at another meeting.

“Recreationally, it would be incredible. But it would also clean up the Halifax River, the Intracoastal in that area as well,” Kent said.”

–District 4 Volusia County Councilman Troy Kent, as quoted by reporter Sheldon Gardner, The Daytona Beach News-Journal, “Troy Kent wants to discuss making a new inlet in Volusia County,” Wednesday, May 21, 2025

I consider myself reasonably well-informed.

No smarter than the next tax-strapped rube – just a blowhard with too much time on my hands – who keeps a critical eye on current events, parses the “news” and spin, then speculates on the weird machinations of what passes for governance here on Florida’s “Fun Coast.”  

To be honest, it’s like watching a trainwreck.  You can’t turn away.

Scientists say there is a physiological reason we are paradoxically drawn to rubbernecking at the scene of a disaster.  Something about how the brain evaluates our perceptions, determines if what we are witnessing is a threat, then evokes the ‘fight or flight’ response. 

I suppose it’s that same morbid curiosity (and a whole lot of Pepto-Bismol) that allows me to watch the petty melodramas that we call public meetings, ruminate on what I’ve just subjected myself to, then write down my shambolic opinions and pass them around in this space. 

I don’t recommend it as a hobby. 

Playing the role of community curmudgeon doesn’t make me many friends among our dull-normal “decision-makers” and those uber-wealthy insiders who influence them – our “movers and shakers” who would prefer We, The Little People simply pay the bills and keep our pieholes (and prying eyes) shut… 

Regardless, this sense of civic vigilance causes me to question how those we elect and appoint to govern – ostensibly sentient beings who are literally in the eye of the political storm – can be so completely out of touch with Volusia County’s growing hierarchy of needs?

Gotta admit – a multi-million-dollar motorcross facility paid for with public funds to facilitate the recreational pursuit of Councilman Don Dempsey, dredging a new inlet north of High Bridge, and studying the feasibility of horses on the beach wasn’t on my triage of urgent problems requiring the immediate attention of Volusia County’s senior staff… 

Look, I get it. 

I’m just not sure when the house is on fire the priority should be raking the lawn and erecting a swing set in the backyard… 

Councilman Troy Kent’s exuberance for improving the quality of life of his constituents exceeds that of an overstimulated puppy – a good instinct which brought us the highly successful dog-friendly beach in Ormond Beach and freed Volusia County residents from the yoke of beach access tolls and parking fees – but on Sunday, we’re going to hear a whole lot about the ominous start of the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season.

A time when many Volusia County residents are reminded of the inundation heavy rains, tropical systems, and afternoon thunderstorms will bring to their waterlogged neighborhoods – while those overcompensated incompetents in Volusia County’s growth management and engineering departments continue to dream-up ways to waste time and deflect from what residents from Edgewater to Deleon Springs already know:

Unchecked sprawl, slash-and-burn land clearing, the environmental impacts of fill-and-build construction, and overwhelmed stormwater systems have resulted in widespread flooding across the width and breadth of Volusia County. 

In my view, trying to distract flood victims with tales of horses frolicking on the beach – and the astronomical expense, environmental destruction, and physical disruption that would come with dredging a manmade inlet on the North Peninsula, installing a bridge on A-1-A, etc. – is like trying to satiate starving children with stories of cookies and pictures of cake.

That’s not helping.  It’s cruel.

While I have no doubt Mr. Kent’s motives are pure, the notion of looking beyond immediate needs – pending disasters that frightened families routinely remind the Volusia County Council of each meeting – with pie-in-the-sky horseshit (literally) seems as detached from our collective reality as a motorcross facility being purchased with tax dollars earmarked for conservation and passive outdoor recreation.

Yet here we are…

In my view, now is the time for our elected and appointed officials to remain focused on those pressing issues they promised us were important to them – like improving infrastructure, retroactive “concurrency,” and reversing the engineering failures that have contributed to development-induced flooding and civic claustrophobia that is destroying our quality of life.  

Especially at a time when none of the various taxing schemes and scams coming out of Tallahassee bode well for funding the exponentially expanding needs of local governments that have allowed malignant growth to far exceed our ability to pay for it.

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

Today We Remember: The Men of Spike Team Asp

Memorial Day is a day of remembrance now officially established as the last Monday in May.  It is the day we honor and memorialize those brave men and women who have given their lives in defense of our nation.

Each Memorial Day, Barker’s View publishes the remarkable story of Spike Team ASP – an incredible tale of the heroism and ultimate sacrifice of three United States Army Special Forces soldiers on a covert mission in the Laotian countryside on March 28, 1968 – and their enduring legacy of service and devotion.

Never forget.

________________________________________________________

In late March 1968, United States Army Sergeant First Class George “Ron” Brown of Holly Hill, Florida, Sergeant Alan Boyer of Missoula, Montana, and Sergeant Greg Huston of Shelby County, Ohio, along with six indigenous personnel – collectively known as “Spike Team Asp” – conducted a top-secret intelligence operation behind enemy lines approximately 12-miles northeast of Tchepone, Laos.

tchepone

Assigned to the Military Assistance Command Vietnam/Studies and Observation Group (MACV/SOG) this team of elite Special Forces soldiers was tasked with setting Air Force wire-tapping equipment and sensors along the labyrinthine Ho Chi Minh trail system, the main north-south supply line for the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army.

The men had been covertly inserted into the area after launching from Nakon Phanom, Thailand aboard a CH-3 from the Air Force’s 20th Helicopter Squadron call sign “Pony Express.”

More than 25 special forces soldiers and many indigenous troops had already been killed or gone missing in our deadly secret war in Laos.

At approximately 11:00am on the morning of March 28, the team reported that they were in contact with an enemy force and requested an immediate emergency extraction from the area.

A helicopter arrived in the area a short time later and quickly located the team on the ground.

Due to thick canopy jungle and rough terrain the pilot was unable to land so a rope ladder was dropped from the open doorway of the aircraft to the men below.  Five of the six indigenous troops climbed the ladder and were safely taken into the helicopter.

As the sixth was going up, Sergeant Boyer was seen beginning his ascent on the bottom rung of the ladder.

Al Boyer
Alan Boyer

Just as Boyer started climbing, one of the rope’s mounting brackets either broke free or was shot away by heavy enemy ground fire.  Personnel on the helicopter reported observing the indigenous soldier and Sgt. Boyer falling to the ground.

According to reports, Sgt. Dave Mayberry, who served as the chase medic on the extraction helicopter, observed the Green Berets still very much alive and heroically returning fire and defending their position.

When Sgt. Mayberry turned to treat one of the wounded he lost sight of the men on the ground.

Brown, Huston and Boyer were never seen again.

Numerous air assets were diverted to the area and a rescue team was assembled, but the mission was called off later that afternoon when there were no further communications from the men.

On April 1, 1968, Special Forces Sergeant Chuck Feller, along with several indigenous soldiers, launched on a mission to locate the lost men of Spike Team Asp.  After just six hours on the ground, Sgt. Feller and his team came into direct contact with the enemy and called for an emergency extraction.

Ron 3
Ron Brown

Again, a rope ladder had to be dropped and one of the indigenous soldiers was forced to dangle from the rungs as the helicopter returned to the airbase in Thailand.  Sgt. Feller later reported that his search found no evidence of Spike Team Asp.

Interestingly, after Al Boyer went missing in action, his best friend since childhood, Doug Hagen, was attending North Dakota State University when he heard the news.  He decided he needed to find out what happened to his friend, and enlisted in the Army, ultimately joining the 5th Special Forces Group, just as Boyer had done.

On August 7, 1971, 1st Lieutenant Doug Hagen was killed during heavy fighting while leading a reconnaissance team – RT Kansas – on a secret mission deep within enemy controlled territory.

For his heroism, Doug received the Medal of Honor, the United States highest decoration for valor.  He was the last United States Army soldier to earn the Medal of Honor during the Vietnam war.

In January 2000, a team from the former Joint POW/MIA Accounting Office conducted extensive excavations of the Laotian countryside near where Spike Team Asp was last seen.

During the latter part of the war, the Ho Chi Minh trail was heavily bombed leaving the earth deeply cratered and much of the topography completely different than it had been in 1968, making search and recovery efforts extremely difficult.

However, the archaeological excavation uncovered several personal artifacts attributable to U.S. military personnel, to include a metal boot insert and several uniform buttons.

In addition, a single human tooth was recovered at the site.

The tooth was later linked to Ron Brown through dental x-rays at the Department of Defense Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii.

In May 2003, Sergeant Brown’s daughter, Ronda Brown-Pitts, was notified by the Army that her father’s remains had been found in Laos.  Unfortunately, dental records provided to her showed that her father’s tooth had a filling – and the tooth recovered did not.

Due to the confusion, Ronda demanded a DNA test, but it was refused based on the Army’s policy of “body desecration.” A DNA test would have destroyed “all of the remains.”

In 2006, a casket containing the remains of Master Sergeant George “Ron” Brown was delivered to his daughter and later interred with full military honors in Dayton, Texas.

Many years ago, I received a POW/MIA bracelet bearing Ron’s name.

When I was a young boy growing up during the Vietnam era, these bracelets were a fairly common sight, but not so much anymore.  In the 1970’s many school children wore the bracelet as a means of ensuring that the POW/MIA issue remained a priority until they all came home.

For those whose adopted POW didn’t come home, the bracelet holder became the keeper of the eternal memory of one man’s sacrifice.

The silver band has become both a personal memorial, and a public reminder, that there are some debts of gratitude that cannot be repaid.

This small token has allowed me to learn about Ron’s military career and his incredible heroism; and I have had the honor of speaking with his friends and family, and to meet and correspond with some of the men he served with on Okinawa and in Vietnam.

He was a husband, a father, a former member of the U.S. Army Parachute Team “The Golden Knights,” and a professional soldier of incredible skill and dedication.

Even though Ron’s “remains” have been repatriated, I still wear his bracelet as a personal remembrance of one man’s sacrifice to the high cost of freedom – and in memory of Greg Huston, who remains missing.

Greg Huston

Incredibly, the story of Spike Team Asp continues.

On March 7, 2016, one day before what would have been Sergeant Alan Boyer’s 70th birthday, United States Army and DOD officials presented his sister with Alan’s military decorations, to include the Silver Star and Purple Heart.

During the visit, Judi Boyer Bouchard, now of Leesburg, Florida, was notified that a single leg bone fragment had been located by the Defense Department POW/MIA Accounting Office.  The bone shard was apparently purchased by a Laotian activist from Lao nationals described as “remains dealers,” and later positively identified through mitochondrial DNA analysis.

On June 22, 2016, Sergeant Alan Boyer was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery in Section 28.

He was laid to rest just 15-feet from his best friend, Doug Hagen.

hagen
Doug Hagen

Currently, more than 1,582 Americans remain missing after the Vietnam War.

Overall, there are more than 81,600 missing personnel from past conflicts, including World War II, Korea, the Cold War and the Global War on Terror.

On this Memorial Day, and every day, let us remember the extraordinary service of men like Ron Brown, Al Boyer, Greg Huston and Doug Hagen – and all those brave souls who paid the ultimate sacrifice in service to our great nation.

Never forgotten.

Barker’s View for May 22, 2025

Hi, kids!

It’s time once again to turn a jaundiced eye toward the news and newsmakers of the day who, in my cynical opinion, either contributed to our quality of life or detracted from it in some significant way…

Hard Lessons Learned.  And Ignored…  

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

–George Santayana

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

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

It is what it is. 

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

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

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

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

Bullshit.

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

Never mind all that. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ratings?   

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

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

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

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

In three-days

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Small things that matter.

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

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

Remarkable people.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Don’t take my word for it.

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

That didn’t happen overnight.

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

Cui bono?

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

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

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

Cowards.

Good Times are Here Again!  Again… 

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

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

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

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

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

Fire up the Halifax Area Goodtime Brass Band! 

Happy days are here again!

The skies above are clear again!

So, let’s sing a song of cheer again!

Happy days are here again!

All together shout it now!

There’s no one who can doubt it now!

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

Is this our moment? 

I sure hope so…

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

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

Don’t take my word for it. 

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

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

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

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

You’re welcome.  

Yeah.  Happy days are here again.  Again…  

Quote of the Week!

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

2018-2019: $768,755,651

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

A 72% increase.

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

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

Amen. Preach it, Joe…

And Another Thing!

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

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

Insatiable (adjective)

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

Sound familiar?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Hard lessons forgotten…

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

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

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

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

Vote like your quality of life depends upon it.

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

Barker’s View for May 15, 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 Volusia Knights of the Roundtable – Another Bite at a Rotten Apple

“Don’t look now – but here it comes again…

And by “it” I mean the macabre spectacle of Volusia’s half-cent sales tax money grab slowly clawing its way out of the mass grave of bad ideas after voters drove a stake through its greedy heart in 2019.

Unfortunately, this comes as no surprise to those cynical observers of Volusia County politics who understand that no tax increase is ever dead – just lying in wait for its next rehashed opportunity to suck more blood out of this exsanguinated turnip.”

–Barker’s View, “Here it comes again…,” November 28, 2021

During a panel discussion at the West Volusia State of the Region event last month, DeBary Mayor Karen Chasez “dropped the bombshell” that a “committee” of elected officials are considering resurrecting Volusia’s half-cent sales tax increase – this time camouflaged as a “stormwater and flooding” solution…

You read that right.

Reporter Al Everson laid out the latest money grab in the West Volusia Beacon last week:

“There is a move afoot to put a half-cent sales tax on the 2026 ballot, but it has nothing to do with roads. It has to do with stormwater, because we believe that that is the issue that is the most pressing issue on most residents’ minds. However, a lot has been learned since the effort the other year [2019], which was defeated by the residents.”

According to the report, “Chasez recalled the 2019 referendum on the half-cent infrastructure sales tax, which was a single-issue voting event that used a mail-in ballot. The result of the issue election was clear: a decisive majority of the electorate said, “No thank you.”

Asked who specifically is talking about resurrecting the proposed add-on sales tax, Chasez said a subcommittee on flooding and stormwater by the Elected Officials Roundtable — an informal group of elected municipal leaders that meets monthly, and formed to replace the now-defunct Volusia Council of Governments — has talked about the tax as a means of dealing with drainage woes.”

Here we go again…

For the uninitiated, The Volusia Knights of the Roundtable is a political insulation committee where local mayors, managers, county officials and hangers-on cobble together the groundwork for significant public policy decisions without any external input or questions. 

The exclusive club (which meets at the Daytona “International” Airport while you are at work) is devoted to groupthink, shielding themselves behind the cowardly notion “If everyone is thinking alike, then we can’t be individually criticized.”  A closed klatch where political insiders can insinuate “suggestions” into the process without any legitimate public challenge.

In my view, it represents a ‘pseudo-government,’ the antithesis of the open and honest debate of ideas and citizen participation.  

Each time this greed-crazed idea of saddling every man, woman, and child in Volusia County with another tax increase is revived, it has been shot down by wary taxpayers who see – time-and-again – what happens when we give that monstrous bureaucracy in DeLand access to more of our hard-earned money… 

In each case, the take is tied to the gross incompetence and lack of planning that led to insufficient transportation and utilities infrastructure across Volusia County – coupled with the strategic foot-dragging that permitted massive overdevelopment without concurrency – punishing us with inaction on the consequences until we acquiesce to their demands.

This time, it appears these half-brights are lashing the increase to “flooding and stormwater” – playing on the panic of residents desperate for relief from development-induced flooding.

When the sales tax increase was forced to a vote in 2019, taxpayers were still reeling from a damning 2016 external study that found Volusia County officials had not increased impact fees on their influential benefactors in the development community for 15-years.

In the lurid scandal that ensued, we discovered the shocking truth that county officials had intentionally hidden the study from the public – including its core recommendation of “…fees almost three times higher in some categories and a change to a county ordinance the consultants deemed overly generous to developers.”

With the walls closing in, Clay Ervin, Volusia’s director of Growth and Resource Mismanagement, blatantly lied like a cheap rug in front of God and everyone – forever cementing his professional reputation as a cheap fixer for developers – when he pathetically claimed the report was a “draft” that “we felt was incorrect.”

Now, we are paying for Ervin’s sins – and his ineptitude…  

Although Ervin kept his job by proving his worth as a malleable stooge, willing to obscure and conceal the truth when the chips are down – former County Manager Jim Dineen ultimately did not survive the fallout – but the ugly fiasco proved to residents that Volusia County government cannot be trusted. 

When the tax increase was resuscitated from the ash heap of bad ideas in 2019 – a horribly bungled initiative spearheaded by the mysterious Volusia CEO Business Alliance, an elite galère of millionaires who seem to think they know what is best for us rabble outside their gilded tower of power – it became apparent those wealthy insiders ham-handedly plotted the worst possible strategy for selling a sales tax increase to an already overburdened constituency.

In my view, when that iteration of the half-cent tax grab went down in flames, it was a resounding indictment of those gutless politicians who ignored their best instincts and succumbed to the slimy motivations of a few well-heeled insiders with a profit motive, selling out their neighbors for the promise of a few crumbs of a much larger pie.

They destroyed the public’s trust in the process.

Unfortunately, our ‘powers that be’ never learn from previous mistakes – they just repackage them with a bigger bow…

What’s changed?

In my view, there is a fundamental cruelty in a government – so irretrievably detached from those it exists to serve – that essential infrastructure is withheld, low-impact solutions strategically slow walked, and the resultant damage and fear used to leverage another shameless money grab. 

Add to that the county’s construction of multi-million-dollar Taj Mahal public facilities, routine pay increases for grossly overpaid senior administrators, millions in corporate welfare giveaways, layers of “planning and administration” that siphon federal grant funds to the bureaucracy, the arrogant dismissal of our concerns, calculated procrastination, the lack of citizen input in policy decisions, routine gaslighting by elected and appointed officials, and you begin to see they are waiting us out.

In coming weeks, residents will be reminded of what happened the last time we voted to tax ourselves when the Volusia County Council approves the gross misuse of Volusia Forever and ECHO funds to construct Councilman Don Dempsey’s pet motorcross facility on 356-acres of cow pasture we purchased off State Road 44 for $4.62 million in tax generated conservation and passive outdoor recreation funds… 

Never vote to levy another tax on your family. 

Instead, demand that our elected representatives begin hacking the thick rind of fat off that bloated hog and learn to live within their already excessive means. 

Volusia County government does not need more of our hard-earned money.

With an obscene annual budget now exceeding $1.3 billion (read that again), it is clear Volusia County government now exists to feed and expand the bureaucracy.  In my view, waterlogged residents should not be expected to give the same compromised dullards who got us into this intractable mess more of our money with the expectation of a different result.

Volusia County Council of Cowards – The Sick Joke of Flood Mitigation

As I write this, outside my window at Barker’s View HQ a steady rain is falling.

It’s welcome relief.   

The first appreciable precipitation in weeks and a much-needed respite from the extended drought that has resulted in extremely dry conditions affecting everything from the increased threat of wildfires to air quality. 

Unfortunately, many Volusia County residents are suffering from Ombrophobia – an intense fear of rain – a civic anxiety disorder stemming from our collective experience with development-induced flooding. 

For damn good reason…

You don’t have to be a hydrologist to understand that development-induced flooding is the result of piss-poor planning that permits development patterns which effect the gravitational flow of water.  Due in part to “fill and build” construction – including the proliferation of impervious surfaces that alter the natural drainage, retention, and percolation of stormwater – these impacts on natural processes increase the damaging effects of runoff, making once dry areas now prone to flooding.  

In response, anxious residents who have had their lives upended by repeat inundations have packed government meetings across Volusia and Flagler Counties demanding mitigation efforts – to include temporary building moratoriums – to allow infrastructure to catch up with current demand.  

Dream on, you waterlogged rubes… 

Last week, Volusia County Councilman Danny “Gaslight” Robins let soggy property owners know that reducing development-induced flooding is no longer the imperative we were promised it would be.  

Now, the choice has been left to the discretion of profit-driven developers who have been gifted the lucrative option of implementing low-impact strategies, or not.

How is that possible?   

Well, in a county known nationwide for widespread flooding (and transactional politics) – where government is actively spending public funds to purchase homes that are subject to repeat inundation – the compromised Mr. Robins recently said he is “trying not to add bureaucracy and more red tape,” (for his cronies) as he voted to make low-impact development practices voluntary… 

In Danny’s world, even the thought of regulating factors that contribute to widespread flooding should be avoided if they hinder the ability of his political benefactors to haul millions-of-dollars out of once pristine recharge areas.    

In the face of unprecedented suffering, last week those rent-a-representatives on the Volusia County Council concluded by unanimous vote that not only should the most flood prone county in Florida make best practices optional – but those soulless shills also agreed to provide lucrative incentives for their puppeteers in the development community who chose to apply accepted industry standards to projects.

In perhaps the most profoundly stupid (and telling) statement ever uttered from the dais of power in DeLand, Councilman Robins said, “If there was data that would show mandatory LID practices would solve the county’s flooding concerns, Robins said “there wouldn’t be any question up here.”

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

To their credit, Robins’ preposterous hoaxing was too much for the Ormond Beach Observer to accept, and the newspaper countered his perverse lie with an explanation of low-impact development strategies:  

“According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, a holistic implementation of LID — which includes standards to preserve natural drainage processes or mimic them for replacement — “reduces the volume and speed of stormwater runoff and decreases costly flooding and property damage” as well as help retain more rainfall onsite.”

Rather than mandate that developers incorporate best practices to limit flooding and protect existing residents, instead our ‘powers that be’ opted for a nonsensical “…flexible and voluntary process for implementing LID and green stormwater infrastructure standards with incentives.”

Now, if a developer elects to follow what should be mandatory LID best practices, they will be eligible to choose from a Chinese menu of lucrative “incentives” in the form of more environmental impacts, to include higher density, increased building height, reduction in tree replacement requirements, and reduced building permit and land use development fees.

For simply doing the right thing by existing residents?

Think about it:  They want my family and yours to pay a higher sales tax on goods and services to address “stormwater and flooding” – while making flood mitigation voluntary for their campaign contributors in the real estate development industry?

Bullshit.   

Good luck, my fellow ombrophobes. 

With the Atlantic Hurricane Season two-weeks away, something tells me luck is all we have…

Daytona Beach Convention & Visitors Bureau – Lies, Damned lies, and Statistics

Perhaps it’s just my skeptical nature, but I always questioned the dubious numbers coming out of our ossified hospitality apparatus. Horribly inflated annual visitor counts that routinely reported that the Daytona Beach Resort Area was attracting nearly a million visitors a month.  

That didn’t seem possible.

Shockingly, it now appears those “statistics” were little more than a wild-ass guess… 

According to a report by Jim Abbott writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal last week, “Volusia County attracted 4.5 million visitors in 2024, a figure that’s down more than 50% from the 10.1 million reported in 2023, according to figures from the Daytona Beach Area Convention & Visitors Bureau.

While that appears to be a startling decline, the reality is that the difference is due to new methodology used by Downs & St. Germain Research, a Tallahassee-based tourism market research firm now calculating the annual totals, said Lori Campbell Baker, executive director of the Daytona Beach Area CVB.”

The reality is somebody told a whopper.  For decades…   

In my view, this isn’t just another example of the toxic optimism that has destroyed the public trust in government and tax-supported agencies – it appears to be a complete fabrication

Accurate visitor analysis is important for economic development purposes, investor research, business starts, grant funds, entrepreneurial due diligence, the allocation of bed taxes, staffing decisions, marketing efforts, etc.

Only in the wacky world of Halifax area tourism would a decline of over 50% in the estimated number of visitors – and the resultant complete loss of credibility – be considered a positive.  Yet, the CVB found a way to put a happy face on it with a few pithy talking points:

“Although the year-over-year raw visitor estimates differ widely, Baker praised the Tallahassee firm for its overview of the broad impact of tourism on a destination.

“For us, what we do in terms of bringing folks into the community is really all about what they do for our community,” Baker told a crowd of hoteliers, tourism leaders and county officials. “How much are they spending in our local businesses? How are they leaving this community better than when they arrived?”

So, why the enormous disparity between what we were sold for decades and the reality as reported by our new pollster?

According to the report, the updated visitor total includes only those who intentionally spent time in the area, not “pass-through travelers.” I assume that refers to living/breathing tourists who actually rented a room and stayed a spell, as opposed to sitting on the shoulder of I-95 counting passing cars…

Now, the CVB and those hospitality dinosaurs who have controlled our tourism industry for decades are wiping egg off their face and covering their tracks – jabbering about how this massive discrepancy in visitor estimates could have occurred (for years) – while spewing astronomical numbers touting the impact of the tourism industry on our local economy.  

I don’t believe a word of it.

Given the Florida Legislature’s nascent push to redirect tourist development taxes – a move that would eliminate redundant Tourist Development Councils – those who told us things were better than they actually were (as we watched while the repeat recommendations of consultants were ignored as the core tourist product deteriorated into blight and dilapidation) are sounding the klaxon that their bed tax teat may be running dry.

According to the News-Journal, “At the same time, the tourism impact of international trade wars with allies such as Canada and efforts by the Florida legislature to re-direct tourist development tax funds require continued vigilance, said Bob Davis, president and CEO of the Lodging & Hospitality Association of Volusia County.

“We have a very, very serious challenge,” Davis said, quoting New York Yankees legend Yogi Berra that “it ain’t over until it’s over. The Florida legislature wants to steal our precious bed tax. We all must persevere.”  

In my view, the true challenge faced by Mr. Davis and his cohorts at the CVB is how to overcome the complete lack of confidence that now permeates every data package coming out of our compromised hospitality apparatus at a time when the Daytona Beach Resort Area is struggling desperately for market relevance.   

Quote of the Week

“The Bunnell planning board on Tuesday approved the comprehensive plan change and rezoning of nearly 1,900 acres from agriculture to industrial, on land stretching from U.S. 1 to County Road 304. It is the single-largest rezoning of the kind in the city’s or county’s history and would reshape the character of both as surely as would the massive 8,000-home residential development proposed for west of the city.

Yet the planning board recommended approval on a pair of 3-1 votes without a single question, inquiry or comment.

The changes, which must be ratified by the city commission, are raising fears among neighboring residents that heavy industrial uses–like the fuel farm Palm Coast and Ormond Beach rejected–will be built there. The sudden proposal also has residents perplexed, and at times furious, over the breadth of the request and the speed of the process, with little vetting, no workshop, and limited public notice. 

Planning Board member Lynn Lafferty is one of the owners of the land. She recused herself from Tuesday’s votes but not the meeting, though her silence merely echoed that of her colleagues on the board. It was an inexplicable display of collective muteness, if not irresponsibility, raising questions about what board members know and are not saying.

–Editor Pierre Tristam, writing in FlaglerLive.com, “Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents,” Thursday, May 8, 2025

On Monday, to their credit, the Bunnell City Commission agreed to table further discussion of the rezoning request after residents turned out to protest a move that will fundamentally change their lives forever. 

If approved, the rezoning would amend the future land use map from “agriculture” to “agriculture community industrial” for around 459 acres, and change approximately 1,383 acres near US-1 and County Road 304 to “L-2, heavy industrial” – a rezoning many believe paves the way for the orphaned plan to put a 20-million-gallon petroleum terminal in the area…

According to an informative report by Spectrum News 13’s Devin Martin:

“We do not want a huge, big landfill coming in our backyard,” Lila Pontius, who lives 300 feet away from the proposed rezoning plan, said. “What is that going to do to our water? What is that going to do to the animals? It will change everything that we know of.”

In response, Bunnell officials said they would not move forward with the first reading of the proposal on May 28, tabling it for the time being.

Joe Parsons, community development director for city, reiterated, though, that there are currently no plans for a development on the land.

“The application in question is for rezoning only,” Parsons said. “There is no use that has been applied for or being proposed in conjunction with this application at this time.”

Bullshit. 

There’s a reason Planning board member Lafferty and her fellow property owners off 304 are seeking a rezoning to heavy industrial, and something tells me “Community Development” Director Joe Parsons knows that…   

This one bears watching, folks.    

And Another Thing!

A few years back, a smart friend of mine sent a clipping from the Tallahassee Democrat published in 1972, which contained the glaring warning “Halt Florida’s Chaotic Growth, Experts Plead.”

That chilling headline by Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Mike Toner of the Miami Herald News Service, was followed by an eerily prophetic report explaining why “Florida’s growth is outstripping the efforts to plan properly for it, and, in some parts of the state, growth should stop until planning can catch up…”

In his article, Mr. Toner quoted the recommendation of two groups with competing interests – the American Institute of Architects and Florida Defenders of the Environment – who collaborated on a list of “temporary solutions,” which included:

“A halt to all major transportation programs, especially I-95 and I-75 in south Florida and I-10 in north Florida, while a comprehensive study of their environmental impact is made,” and “…a moratorium be placed on areas “of new and potential growth” where the growth is certain to affect natural resources…”

Wow.  Fifty-three years ago.

Now, the mere mention of the “M word” by a sitting elected official results in their personal and professional destruction.  A public humiliation orchestrated by the development community and executed tag-team style by their compromised “colleagues.”

A political castration that ensures they can never threaten the lucrative status quo again.

That conformity is why, when given the opportunity to do the right thing and demand mandatory development standards to protect our environment and mitigate flooding, they fold like the cheap tools they are…

In my view, there remains one fundamental democratic mechanism which, if exercised broadly, will allow waterlogged residents to prevail over the political insiders who seem intent on paving every square inch of our sensitive environment for personal enrichment:

It is the ultimate power of the ballot box.

With next year’s Volusia County Council contests beginning to take shape, some of our claustrophobic neighbors are beginning to announce their candidacy.  Fortunately, some good people have already announced they are ready to put it all on the line to affect positive change.

It appears an increasing number of “Fun Coast” residents are mad as hell, and aren’t going to take it anymore…

Earlier this week, some 80 protestors waving “Slow the Growth” and “No More Greed” signs appeared at the New Smyrna Beach City Commission meeting to oppose the massive Deering Park Innovation Center Planned Unit Development. 

Although commissioners Jason McGuirk, Valli Perrine, Brian Ashley and Mayor Fred Cleveland ignored the concerns of their constituents and voted to approve the PUD rezoning, Vice Mayor Lisa Martin voted against a project that will change the character and culture of the community in perpetuity.

Something tells me the “Deering Park Four” will ultimately pay a hefty political price for their acquiescence…

In truth, losing power and influence is the only thing that strikes fear in these self-serving shills on councils and commissions across the region who are actively shitting on our quality of life – wasting precious time with insulting diversions like incentivizing voluntary low-impact development practices – and approving additional development in the most flood prone county in Florida.

As rainclouds build on the horizon…     

That’s all for me.  Welcome to Rockville, y’all!

Barker’s View for May 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…

The City of Palm Coast – Lex Talionis…                         

Move over, Deltona.

There’s a new civic dumpster fire in the Metropolitan Statistical Area and it’s called the City of Palm Coast…

Embattled Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris – whose term was intentionally upended the exact second he called for a building moratorium in the face of astronomically expensive utility upgrades required to keep pace with current needs – filed an emergency lawsuit on Monday seeking the removal of quasi-Council member and developer shill Charles Gambaro.

Many in the community believe Gambaro is a plant, a useful tool with strategic alliances with former Mayor/Realtor David Alfin and other influential development interests outside City Hall.   

In his legal action, Norris requests the court declare the District 4 seat vacant and remove Gambaro from office, claiming his October 2024 appointment violated the city charter by failing to put the seat up for election last November.  

According to The Daytona Beach News-Journal this week, “Palm Coast District 4 Councilmember Cathy Heighter resigned in August, and the council appointed Gambaro 3-1 (with only four members on the panel at that point) to replace her Oct. 1. Those in favor were previous Mayor David Alfin, previous Vice Mayor Ed Danko and previous Councilman Nick Klufas. All three were voted out in November. Theresa Carli Pontieri, the only one to retain her seat after the election, supported Darryl Boyer.

According to Norris’ complaint, the city charter would have required Gambaro’s appointment to expire after the Nov. 5 election. It is Norris’ position that the city “has continued to allow Gambaro to occupy the seat beyond the term authorized by the charter.”

Interestingly, Norris is represented by Attorney Anthony Sabatini, the perennial politician who served two terms in the Florida Legislature and is currently a member of the Lake County Commission. 

It appears Mr. Sabatini is making a cottage industry of extricating “Fun Coast” mayors from sticky political wickets (a lucrative niche, always in high demand), having recently received nearly $11,000 from the citizens of Deltona to represent Mayor Santiago Avila, Jr. against allegations he violated the city’s travel policy…

Although Norris has long-held that Gambaro’s appointment was invalid, it appears this week’s filing is an eye-for-an-eye – retaliation for Gambaro’s recent attack from the dais asking the council to request Gov. Ron DeSantis remove Norris from office after the council commissioned an “independent investigation” into allegations brought by Gambaro.

A subsequent kangaroo kourt (which anointed Norris’s confrontational “colleagues” judge, jury, and executioner) found Mayor Norris guilty of asking senior staff members to resign.  In turn, Norris was sentenced in absentia to a vote of no-confidence, a public censure, and set to be referred to the Florida Commission on Ethics for reasons that have never been fully explained…

Adding to the shitstorm, during a special meeting last week to discuss the results of the investigation, onlookers were shocked when Mayor Norris dropped a veiled allegation he had been “offered a quid pro quo” by someone listed as a witness in the investigation in exchange for his favorable vote on the 2025 comprehensive plan.

Whoa.

If true, that’s something that should interest the state’s ethics apparatus – and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement…     

According to a report by Sierra Williams writing in the Palm Coast Observer last week:

“The investigation – performed by Adam Brandon of the third-party firm Lawson Huck Gonzales, PLLC – encompasses 13 witness statements, including one from Norris, and three from individuals outside the city: former councilman Ed Danko, Jeff Douglas of Douglas Property & Development and Paul Rice, director of Real Estate Development with Raydient.

Before the discussion of the investigation, Norris passed the gavel over to Pontieri and called for an emergency closed-door City Council meeting to happen 24 hours after the end of the May 1 meeting to discuss four of the witness statements in the investigation. Norris said he was offered a “quid pro quo” by one of the witnesses if he were to allow the 2025 comprehensive plan to pass as is written.”

Disturbing.

Amidst the tut-tutting and consternation of Mr. Norris’ “colleagues,” on Tuesday it was decided the mayor would pursue the matter with law enforcement, working his way from the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office to FDLE and beyond as necessary, including the option of filing an ethics complaint of his own.

According to a report in the Palm Coast Observer on Wednesday, the Palm Coast City Council also agreed to send the investigation into Mayor Norris’ actions “…violating the Palm Coast City Charter to the Florida Ethics Commission, but with the witness statements sworn under oath,” along with a cover letter ensuring everyone knows the council passed a vote of no confidence… 

Wait. The council’s “investigator” failed to obtain sworn statements from witnesses at the time of their interview?  Allowing “witnesses” to say whatever they want without penalty of perjury?     

Whatever.

Apparently, no one who should at Palm Coast City Hall understands the role and function of the Florida Commission on Ethics – and it has nothing to do with sorting HR complaints and charter violations…

During a February meeting, Mayor Norris said, “I move that we table this Comprehensive Plan to a date uncertain.  I know the plan, and I don’t think that our city is ready for what’s coming with this Comprehensive Plan.”

Then, in March, Norris dropped the “M” word – calling for an indefinite building moratorium – and that’s when developers, and their shills inside City Hall, began to circle the wagons…   

At the time, Mayor Norris warned, “We’re not going to keep building on something that we can’t sustain and putting it on the back of our residents. They don’t deserve it. I don’t deserve it. Nobody in this room deserves it. So either the developers are going to start doing industrial growth to bring in jobs, offset our tax base, or we’re going to stop doing houses altogether. When I propose it I will say to a date uncertain. Now, I know I’m going to get pushback– ‘we can’t stop building, we can’t stop building.’ Well, if we don’t stop building, we’re going to be broke, and we’re going to force lifetime residents of Florida, Flagler County, to flee their homes, because they cannot afford to live in this state anymore. Plain and simple. Like I said, we are at an inflection point, and we need to fix it.”

In the view of many, that represents the moment things went horribly sideways for Mayor Mike Norris and the 63% of now disenfranchised Palm Coast voters demanding stability at City Hall and protection from rampant overdevelopment.

Make no mistake, none of this melodramatic backstabbing has anything to do with progressing the City of Palm Coast, recruiting a competent city manager, finding solutions to the crushing ramifications of overdevelopment and insufficient infrastructure, or setting a strategic vision for responsible growth based on sustainability and sound public policy.

It is about retribution and sending a clear message.

In my view, this internecine warfare is what happens when internal and external forces conspire to retain the very lucrative status quo at a time when development interests are seeking an obscene and irresponsible “westward expansion” into thousands of acres west of U.S.1 – something Mayor Norris has vehemently opposed based upon his distrust of developers.

On Tuesday, the final approval of the comprehensive plan was approved 4-1 – with Mayor Norris casting the lone dissenting vote…

Volusia County School Board v. City of DeBary – The Bullying Begins

“Your aggressive, dogmatic message is reprehensible. You pretend to be protecting the interests of your constituents,” wrote attorney Ted Doran. “Your actions belie the true focus of your self-serving financial greed. When the school is built, and you have long since left your position with the city, you will be remembered for having been on the wrong side of history…. You speak of a broken trust. It is you who will have broken trust with the community.”

–Attorney Ted Doran, representing the Volusia County School Board, as quoted by reporter Mark Harper writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, Schools lawyer accuses DeBary officials of ‘self-serving financial greed’ in school fight,” Tuesday, May 6, 2025

In my view, few things are more nauseating than when a massive taxing authority – one with an obscene budget now exceeding $1.6 billion annually – uses our money to pay a vicious mouthpiece to intimidate, bully, and harass a smaller municipality for trying desperately to determine its own destiny.  

Is this really how the Volusia County School Board treats other elected officials with a sworn and fiduciary responsibility to their constituents? 

In my view, there is a difference between an aggressive attorney employing legal maneuvers and interpreting the law in a manner favorable to their client – and the use of cheap thuggery, name-calling, and baseless accusations of public corruption against duly elected city officials as a means of steamrolling them.  

So much for well-intentioned negotiation and compromise, eh? 

According to Mr. Harper’s informative report, “In April, the School Board voted 4-1 to spend $8.4 million on two parcels totaling 25 acres at the intersection of Spring Vista Drive and South Shell Road.

DeBary City Manager Carmen Rosamonda sent the school district a cease-and-desist letter on April 28 and held a press conference a few days later to warn the district that the city will fight to stop any school from being built there.

Doran’s letter, obtained through a public-records request on May 5, challenges DeBary’s contention that a school at the Spring Vista site violates its comprehensive plan and the 2007 interlocal agreement between the school board, DeBary, Volusia County and 15 other municipalities.”

According to reports, Doran says the obstinate District intends “to proceed with the development of the property as a school.” 

What I found interesting is why Superintendent Balgobin and her lapdogs on the School Board unleashed Mr. Doran now, authorizing a scorched earth antagonistic diatribe that does nothing to foster trust or establish lines of communication. 

Instead, they almost force a protracted and incredibly expensive lawsuit that benefits who?

Oh, yeah….   

For the uninitiated, Doran was “swapped out” with Aaron Wolfe as the School Board’s front facing attorney in 2022 after board members expressed dissatisfaction with his performance during long overdue evaluations.

At the time it was reported “the swap was decided by the firm rather than the school board,” and Mr. Doran’s law firm still serves as the School Board’s contracted legal counsel.  

Interestingly, in a September 2022 News-Journal article announcing the Doran switcheroo, it was reported that now School Board Chair Jamie Haynes – the hell-bent-for-leather driving force behind constructing the school in her hometown of DeBary – was quoted:

“Jamie Haynes gave Doran the lowest score on the evaluation, a 2 out of 19, citing communication and professionalism issues.

“I have been put in situations where I was threatened and then received a text trying to skew what was said and turn it into a different type of statement. I’ve had a family member that was texted and asked to set up a meeting (between Doran and Haynes),” she said, which she believes was inappropriate.”

So, has Chair Haynes agreed to overlook Mr. Doran’s previous “professionalism issues”

Has she developed a newfound trust in his communication style – or is it a case where desperate times call for desperate measures – and she needs his brash style to ramrod her legacy project?

I find it equally interesting that in 2024, the school board purchased some 48-acres east of U.S. 17-92 across from the SunRail station in DeBary, reportedly paying nearly $5 million ostensibly to locate a school on the site. 

As I understand it (and I’m not sure I do), it was later determined that it would cost up to $20 million to “dewater” the site and prepare it for construction – which raises another disturbing question:  Did anyone bother to complete a due diligence investigation prior to the purchase – or is the Volusia County School Board getting us into the speculative real estate game? 

More important: Why? 

Especially at a time we were told the District is $25.8 million in the red due to declining enrollment.

Cui bono?

As usual, more questions than answers emerge from Superintendent Balgobin’s Ivory Tower of Power in DeLand.  But perhaps deflecting those annoying details explains why Mr. Doran is putting so much dust in the air so early in the fray? 

Your guess is as good as mine… 

Regardless, with a legal strategy of counteraccusations and character assassination now in play, it appears there is little left to talk about between the City of DeBary and Volusia County District Schools – a stalemate that could eventually prove far more expensive for taxpayers caught in the middle.

Quote of the Week

“First Step Shelter representatives came before the Ormond Beach City Commission on Tuesday asking to continue their partnership, worried that the city was on the cusp of pulling its support for the homeless shelter.

City officials side-eyed each other on the dais. They’d never discussed pulling funding from the shelter, they said.

“I will say that there is strong evidence that our board appointee has misspoke on my position regarding the First Step Shelter,” Commissioner Travis Sargent said. “I support the First Step Shelter. I think they do an amazing job. Yes, we may not utilize it like we could, but look at our neighboring municipalities and how they’re utilizing it, and those are less people coming into our communities.”

–Managing Editor Jarleene Almenas, writing in the Ormond Beach Observer, “Ormond Beach says support for First Step Shelter remains unchanged,” Wednesday, May 7, 2025

In February 2024, former Ormond Beach Mayor-turned-State Representative Bill Partington sought a workshop to discuss strategies and ordinances to address the burgeoning homeless issue in his community. 

At that time, Mr. Partington was quoted in the Observer, “The request for a workshop comes after the city has received various complaints about the rise of homelessness and panhandling in Ormond Beach.

“We’ve been a part of First Step (Shelter) for years, since the beginning, and I don’t feel like we’ve gotten the value out of it just because we haven’t utilized it as much as we could,” Partington said.”

When former Mayor Partington said the quiet part aloud, it resulted in a full-court press – an urgent meeting of the minds – a collaborative effort involving legal departments from DeLand to Ormond Beach as officials worked collaboratively to find solutions to persistent issues the beleaguered First Step Shelter wasn’t capable of addressing.

Mayor Jason Leslie

During a February meeting, Commissioner Travis Sargent asked Mayor Leslie, as Ormond Beach’s representative to the First Step’s government board, “As our representative on the (First Step) board, I would like to know what your thoughts are on regarding the city to continue funding this.  Is the city making good use of this facility, and also, if we’re not using, how can we better use this facility?”

Given the fact Ormond Beach taxpayers are funding First Step to the tune of $85,000 annually, I thought Mr. Sargent’s questions were on point.

Then, last month, during discussions surrounding an absurd Teflon agreement crafted to protect embattled First Step Executive Director Victoria Fahlberg – in the face of expanding lawsuits from whistleblowers whose serious allegations of mismanagement remain unanswered – Mayor Leslie  “…warned that his city commissioners have concerns about the number of homeless people in Ormond Beach, and that voting on Fahlberg’s contract now could jeopardize the roughly $85,000 Ormond Beach contributes to the shelter each year as well as the money other local governments contribute.”

Now it appears that Mr. Sargent and his colleagues are no longer concerned about the number of homeless people in their community, or the fact that Volusia County has similar concerns with First Step that has resulted in decreasing contributions over the next five-years? 

Or is it simply another opportunity for Mayor Leslie’s determined detractors on the dais to embarrass and marginalize him during a public meeting?

Per usual, when Mayor Leslie explains his direct observations and concerns, he’s lambasted by his fellow elected officials, accused of speaking for the group, and ostracized in front of First Step representatives – who spend more time trotting around explaining how wonderful they are than alleviating the “homeless problem” in Volusia County?

As a life-long resident of Ormond Beach, I can tell you that homeless people are now ubiquitous in this often-presumptuous community – seen daily on main thoroughfares and side streets, mainland and beachside, along both East and West Granada Boulevard – unfortunates who have apparently fallen through the cracks or fail to meet “referral” requirements for the First Step Shelter (whatever those are…)

On a personal note, a few weeks ago while visiting friends in a quiet and long-established Ormond Beach neighborhood, I was approached by a gentleman who lived in a wooded area near Central Park; his possessions in a bindle on his back, who was in desperate need of socks to protect his blistered feet. 

Fortunately, we were blessed to help him with a few pairs.

As I watched that man dressing his feet on the shoulder of a residential street in Ormond Beach, I thought how far we have to go to meet the needs of those less fortunate, and the fallacy of putting all our eggs in First Step’s leaky basket…

In Ormond Beach, as elsewhere, it is no longer about finding lasting solutions to civic, social, and economic issues – but establishing political dominance – a cheap power grab by established politicians to keep newcomer Jason Leslie under thumb and in his place.  

While allowing the deliberately suppressed issues at First Step to fester until the next debacle becomes known…   

And Another Thing!  

Last week, I had a great conversation with Clayton Park, the highly respected business editor of The Daytona Beach News-Journal.  In my view, Clayton is a genuinely nice guy, a wonderful musician, and a bright spot in local journalism. 

We discussed some encouraging (and long-awaited) ‘signs and wonders’ that may foretell a possible Halifax area “renaissance” in the form of some specialty grocery stores and a luxury auto dealership.

During our talk, the astute Mr. Park reminded me that in February I made a snarky remark in the News-Journal about a group of celebrities opening an extravagant “Five Star” hotel in Daytona Beach – a place where, for years, we were told didn’t have the “demographic” to support a Trader Joe’s – let alone a South Beach-style luxury resort.

You know, a swanky place where wealthy stars and global jetsetters can pay $1,132 a room night (after winging in on an Avelo flight from Wilmington…) to spend a few days playing Skee Ball at what the Daytona Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau describes as “…the iconic Daytona Beach Boardwalk! Your family will be able to spend hours upon hours at this entertainment hub, all accompanied by the ocean breeze…” 

Just days after my quote appeared in the News-Journal, I ended up with free range, pasture-raised, organic egg on my funny face when cryptic plans were unveiled that a Trader Joe’s is coming to the Tomoka Town Center off Boomtown Boulevard in Daytona Beach.   

Hey, when I’m wrong, I’m wrong.

Since this blogsite’s inception, I have explained it as one man’s jaded view on the issues of the day – a cynical look at the news and newsmakers through a bloodshot eye – neither always right nor always wrong.  An alternative to the pathological optimism of our civic “leaders” who tell us one thing while we see something completely different with our own eyes… 

Regardless, my goal has always been to stimulate a larger discussion of the issues we collectively face, often using hyperbole and a sick sense of humor to make a point – because I learn from those who disagree with me – and nothing is more enlightening (or humbling) than when I am proven wrong.

Since I have always lacked the good sense to look the other way, I knew the first time I published Barker’s View it wasn’t going to make me any friends among the Halifax areas “rich and powerful” or those malleable marionettes their campaign contributions help elect to high office.   

Who cares.

Given the deteriorating conditions in many parts of our region – the abject blight and dilapidation that gave rise to eye-opening exposés like the News-Journal’s “Tarnished Jewel” series – it seemed cruel to remain silent while the hopes of residents and small business owners were taken advantage of.  

From the “panacea” projects from Ormond Beach south we were assured would fundamentally change the DNA of a slightly down-at-the-heels resort area suffering from a lack of maintenance, vision, and investment – to the myriad “game changers” – a term so ubiquitous it became a sick joke, even among our most enthusiastic cheerleaders, as the constant “rah-rah-sis-boom-bah” left many in our community disillusioned when the promises didn’t materialize.

Something that became more infuriating when our hard-earned tax dollars were used to underwrite the for-profit projects of our uber-wealthy insiders with a chip in the game…

Remember?  I do.

Extravagant gifts like the collective $40 million in “grants” and tax incentives we gave to One Daytona (where shoppers continue to pay a privately imposed “amenity fee” on all purchases), the $4.5 million granted to Tanger Outlets, the $4.5 million Tomoka Town Center received in “government funding,” the millions in tax credits, infrastructure, and incentives taxpayers gifted to Brown & Brown to build their headquarters on Beach Street (billed as a “gamechanger on steroids” that would also “help the beachside.”)

Or the $2.5 million in incentives offered to Amazon (the largest e-commerce retailer in the known universe) to locate a robotic fulfillment center at the very attractive nexus of I-95 and I-4, the millions in tax credits and $500,000 in incentives for an untested European aircraft manufacturer, the “quarterly revenue guarantees” for start-up airlines, $7.5 million in tax breaks for a new apartment complex, etc., etc., etc.   

Unfortunately, I rarely speak to the owner of an established local mom-and-pop – one that helps form the backbone of an economy historically marked by the same five people passing the same nickel around – that has received a cash infusion from public coffers…   

Over time, failing to acknowledge the challenges we face in Volusia County while constantly “polishing the turd” has resulted in trust issues

An uneasy sense we have been lied to by those we elected and appointed to represent our interests – and taken advantage of when local governments use our own tax dollars to pick winners and losers – by skewing the playing field.

In my view, cynicism is the unacknowledged consequence of the strategic decision to craft an overly optimistic narrative and embellish the impacts of the latest corporate welfare scheme that ultimately leaves We, The Little People groaning an apathetic “We’ve heard it all before…”   

Look, I grew up in the Halifax area, raised a family here, and spent my entire productive life serving with a local municipal government.  Now I have three beautiful grandchildren who I sincerely hope will be able to make a happy, healthy, and productive life here on Florida’s “Fun Coast.”

No one wants our area to succeed more than I do.

I think that’s the way it’s supposed to work – leaving things better than we found them for those who come after. 

In my view, that means protecting our sensitive environment, preserving our water quality and quantity, planning for growth, reducing the impacts of development, stimulating true economic development by getting government out of the marketplace, asking government to live within its means, while focusing on adequate and safe infrastructure for existing and future residents. 

Those results don’t come from toxic positivity alone.

It takes a holistic and collaborative process where all stakeholders have substantive input (not just influential insiders with a chip in the game), where challenges are addressed in an open and honest way, and a civic vision can emerge that doesn’t rely on grandiose fabrications resulting in unrealized promises…

That’s all for me.  Happy Mother’s Day, y’all!

Barker’s View for May 1, 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…

Volusia County School Board – Remain Silent, or Else… 

On April 8, Volusia County District Schools chief bean counter Todd Seis issued a dire warning to board members explaining the district is facing a $25.8 million budget deficit due, in part, to declining enrollment that has resulted in a reduction in state funding for traditional brick-and-mortar schools.

An initial report in the Ormond Beach Observer painted a grim picture:

“The school district has an operating budget of $588.1 million, but its revenues total $562.30. Without an increase in funding, or a decrease in its operating cost, the district will have to dip into its fund balance — its available reserves — of which it has $28M currently unassigned. School districts are mandated by the state to keep 5% of its budget in reserves.  

But these reserves would only cover a little over half-a-month’s worth of reoccurring expenses, Seis said. And if the district depletes its reserves below that number, the state would takeover the school district’s operation.”

The desperate suggestions for keeping the district afloat included “reducing staffing ratios,” the “consolidation” of schools, and hoping-against-hope district “experts” can find innovative ways to increase enrollment.  

During the meeting, School Board Chair Jamie Haynes went into one of her trademark monotone drones, mewling about the rigidity of state funding and claiming that most people “fail to realize” those funds are also apportioned to private and charter schools, homeschooling programs, and scholarships.

“A lot of it is categorized and we can’t move it from one category to another category, but we are supposed to be supportive of the superintendent, our chief financial officer and support them and make the decisions needed to run a financially, fiscally responsible school district where our children receive the best education that they can receive, and that means we’re going to have to take the stand to make some very tough decisions…”

Then, Board Member Krista Goodrich raised the shocking specter of “consolidating” schools. 

While Ms. Goodrich stopped short of putting individual campuses on the chopping block, the fear of the unknown left stakeholders speculating if their lives, careers, and education would be upended by “consolidation.”    

For the uninitiated, Ormond Beach residents are all too familiar with school “consolidation.” 

There, many families and city officials are still reeling from the stonewalling, lack of transparency, and baldfaced bait-and-switch they experienced from the Balgobin administration during the ham-handed merger of historic Osceola Elementary – the community’s only beachside school – with Ortona Elementary in Daytona Beach.

When the district’s three-card monte flim-flam was over, Riverview Learning Center – an alternative school for students with intense emotional and behavioral needs – now occupies the former Osceola campus…

As a result, we learned two things the hard way: “Consolidation” means one of the schools goes away and it never comes back – and Superintendent Carmen Balgobin and her senior coterie cannot be trusted.   

So, given the gravity of the current situation as presented by senior district officials, one would expect school board members to act proactively, ask tough questions, gain a street-level perspective, spend time with teachers, administrators, and stakeholders, calm fears, gather questions, and be prepared to provide substantive input during a fiscal crisis, right? 

Not in Superintendent Balgobin’s hierarchical superior-subordinate relationship she uses to effectively control the Volusia County School Board.   

In Volusia County, proactive engagement by a duly elected official is considered insubordination to Balgobin’s supreme authority over those malleable milquetoasts on the board that taxpayers have elected to look after our interests. 

In fact, in an environment dominated by pathological optimism – where conformism and control are omnipotent – acting independently or demonstrating initiative is considered “irresponsible behavior,” especially when a board member’s input isn’t “presented through proper channels,” or cleared in advance by district administrators…  

Any act of independence or creativity is considered an inexcusable breach that earns the offender a condescending lecture from Superintendent Balgobin and her elected toadies as they seek to regulate the flow of information while feigning transparency.   

When Board Member Donna Brosemer mentioned that a district employee told her Ormond Beach Elementary was being considered for closure – a revelation that prompted Ms. Brosemer to collaborate with school officials to find ways to make OBE more attractive to potential students – she was discredited as a liar and marginalized as “irresponsible.”   

Last week, to ensure no more “misinformation” leaks from district employees, Ms. Goodrich returned to the issue and announced that Brosmer’s “alarming claims” were not “rooted in fact,” before issuing a chilling warning to anyone who would dare break the district’s Code of Omertà:

“Let me be clear, I believe that any staff member that is deliberately spreading misinformation to board members needs to be held accountable, whether that means discipline, reassignment or termination,” Goodrich said. “There’s simply no place for that behavior in our district. It’s an unacceptable waste of taxpayer dollars and time to have this community chasing down conspiracy theories and fake news.”

Wow.   

Now that Ms. Goodrich has anointed herself the Grand Arbiter of Truth on the Volusia County School Board – district employees have a right to feel threatened – and you can bet your bippy it will be a chilly day in hell before anyone in Balgobin’s sphere of influence speaks freely again… 

Hope Florida Scandal – Floridian’s Deserve Better  

“We don’t have all the facts yet,” (Florida House Speaker Danny) Perez said. “At this point, all options are still on the table with Hope Florida. We have not closed the door on that. I think there is still more information to find out.”

To be very clear: The House has not done enough yet.

Sure, if the goal here was simply to slime DeSantis and his inner circle — and maybe muddy up Uthmeier’s bid for re-election or a long-rumored Casey DeSantis campaign for governor — then mission accomplished, I guess.

But if this was a sincere attempt to find answers on behalf of Florida taxpayers — and demand accountability from people entrusted with positions of great power who abuse their offices — then there is still a lot of work left to do.”

–Journalist Jason Garcia, as excerpted from his essay in Seeking Rents, “The attorney general has some explaining to do. Will anyone make him?” Sunday, April 27, 2025

What a difference a week makes, eh?  

Only in the Sunshine State can senior legislators announce to residents that our Attorney General is a criminal fraudster and money launderer who secretly funneled $10 million through a circuitous maze to fund Gov. Ron DeSantis’ war to defeat a citizen-led ballot initiative – while systematically destroying any hope First Lady Casey DeSantis may have had of succeeding her husband as governor – then shutdown the investigation seemingly overnight without explanation or logical conclusion…

According to reports, Rep. Alex Andrade, chair of the House Health Care Budget Subcommittee investigating these serious allegations, announced last week they were taking their football and going home after the Hope Florida Foundation’s lawyer, Jeff Aaron, and leaders of two nonprofits that received separate $5 million “grants” from the foundation defiantly refused to testify before the panel.

“While I’m firmly convinced that James Uthmeier and Jeff Aaron engaged in a conspiracy to commit money laundering and wire fraud, and that several parties played a role in the misuse of $10 million in Medicaid funds, we as legislators will not be the ones making the ultimate charging decisions.  “I believe our work on this topic in this capacity as a subcommittee will be concluded,” Andrade said last week.

You read that right. 

No subpoenas.  No saber rattling.  Just, “Welp, okay.  Guess that’s it folks…”

Then, in an uber-weird twist, State Attorney Jack Campbell, a Democrat with responsibility for prosecuting crimes in Tallahassee’s Leon County, played the blind umpire routine this week, claiming he isn’t investigating the burgeoning controversy surrounding a suspected “conspiracy” involving the misuse of public funds that implicates the most powerful offices in the state capital.   

Really?

In a report published in the Tallahassee Democrat last week, Mr. Campbell explained, “As for (an) investigation, the only source of information I have received is from members of the press,” Campbell added. “The Florida Legislature has many good lawyers including some former prosecutors. I am sure they would refer any evidence of crimes to me if they found them.”

So, I guess that leaves anxious Floridians – who are rightfully concerned that our chief law enforcement officer and others may have engaged in a criminal conspiracy – to hope that the FBI and United States Department of Justice will pick up the mantle and rightfully investigate potential public corruption at the highest levels of Florida government?

Unfortunately, it was also reported last week that a “…spokesperson for federal prosecutors in Tallahassee was equally noncommittal.”

Yeah.  I know.  It doesn’t instill trust when senior state legislators dump a steaming pile of shit in the middle of South Monroe Street, wallow around in it on the frontpage of every news outlet in the state, then fold up the tent and go home with the stench still lingering in the humid air…       

Is this an intra-party contretemps gone horribly awry? 

A politically motivated witch hunt, fueled by defamatory allegations ginned up to smear the DeSantis’ and Attorney General James Uthmeier to prepare the battlefield for next year’s gubernatorial race? 

Or are things truly as filthy as they appear? 

In my view, this half-assed hybrid investigation/political smear campaign by a House subcommittee may well have exposed criminal acts committed at the highest levels of Florida government, to include the misuse of public funds for political purposes.   

If so, our elected and appointed officials in state and federal government have an ethical, moral, and fiduciary obligation to leave no stone unturned, lance the boil of public corruption, and allow the disinfecting light of day to shine in Tallahassee. 

Given the grave allegations brought by senior legislators – accusations that have cast doubt on the credibility of Florida’s Governor and Attorney General – in the absence of a thorough investigation both the Florida House and Senate are now in danger of losing their last shreds of integrity and believability. 

It’s that serious.    

Floridians deserve to know the truth.  We deserve better…  

Quote of the Week

“Paul Trombino, one of the last two finalists for the Palm Coast city manager job, withdrew his candidacy this morning, less than 24 hours after the Palm Coast City Council made clear in a series of split votes that he doesn’t have the council’s full confidence or enthusiasm. That leaves one man standing: Richard Hough. The council did not feel any differently about him. Three other finalists had dropped out before they were interviewed.

“I can confirm that Paul dropped out,” Brittany Kershaw, the city’s communications director, said in late morning today. Doug Thomas of SGR, the recruiting firm a previous city council hired to lead the search for a city manager, “talked to Lauren and Renina this morning and let them know that Mr. Trombino had removed himself from consideration.” Lauren Johnston is the acting city manager. Renina Fuller is the director of human resources.”

–Editor Pierre Tristam, FlaglerLive.com, as excerpted from “Yet Another City Manager Candidate Drops Out After Palm Coast Council’s Debacle, Leaving Last One Standing in Uncertainty,” Wednesday, April 30, 2025

And then there was one…

On Wednesday, the horribly dysfunctional Palm Coast City Council learned that another city manager finalist ran like a scalded dog following a series of clumsy votes the day before that made it clear neither of the two remaining finalists have the confidence of council members.

Tragic. Like watching a train wreck, over-and-over-and-over again.

According to reports, later today, the council will meet again – not to discuss the languishing manager search, which remains the most pressing issue facing their anxious community – but to hear the verdict in the outside investigation of Mayor Mike Norris. 

Last week, Mayor Norris was sentenced in absentia to a vote of no confidence, public censure, and a referral to the Florida Commission on Ethics (?), after an external inquiry found him guilty of pushing the limits of his role while seeking fundamental change in a terribly broken city government.

This afternoon, the Palm Coast City Council will have an opportunity to publicly humiliate Norris a second time, reinforcing to everyone watching why all but one clearly masochistic candidate for the city manager position has fled the building…  

Unfortunately, the City of Palm Coast continues to reap the whirlwind of petty politics – the raging tumult and suspicion that naturally results when personal agendas, outside influence, and insatiable greed prevail over community stewardship.  

The beleaguered community is now faced with an inescapable dilemma, one compounded by a fractured elected/appointed City Council, a weak interim manager who is looking more like a viable option all the time, and an ineffective senior staff in desperate need of strong leadership.

In my view, the Palm Coast City Council have no one to blame but themselves, and their behind-the-scenes handlers with a profit motive who continue to fan the flames of chaos…

And Another Thing!

“The administration of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) steered $92 million last year in leftover federal coronavirus stimulus money to a controversial highway interchange project that directly benefits a top political donor, according to state records.

The decision by the Florida Transportation Department to use money from the 2021 American Rescue Plan for the I-95 interchange at Pioneer Trail Road near Daytona Beach fulfilled a years-long effort by Mori Hosseini, a politically connected housing developer who owns two large tracts of largely forested land abutting the planned interchange. The funding through the DeSantis administration, approved shortly after the governor’s reelection, expedited the project by more than a decade, according to state documents.”

–The Washington Post, “DeSantis agency sent $92 million in covid relief funds to donor-backed project: Mori Hosseini, who donated a golf simulator to the governor’s mansion, championed a new exchange on Interstate 95 that feeds into his housing and shopping center project,” Thursday, June 29, 2023 

“No one can stop it. It’s on its way. We are building homes. People are moving in. Kids are playing outside…”

–Boss Mori Hosseini, chairman and CEO of ICI Homes, as quoted by reporter Mark Harper writing in The Daytona Beach News-Journal, How David beat Goliath: Spruce Creek conservationists block I-95 interchange – for now,” February 7, 2024  

Per usual, our “High Panjandrum of Political Power” Mori Hosseini was right and environmental activists seeking to protect the sensitive waters of the Doris Leeper Spruce Creek Preserve were wrong.

I never doubted him for a minute…

This week, a panel of judges from the Fifth District Court of Appeal ruled without uttering a peep beyond “Per curiam. Affirmed” (which, I think, is Latin for “Nice try, rubes”) permitting the Florida Department of Transportation to proceed with the controversial ecological disaster-in-the-making at I-95 and Pioneer Trail.

Look, I’m not a soothsayer.  Just another experiential learner who has touched too many hot stoves – but it was clear from the beginning that Mr. Hosseini would not be denied…

In 2022, Volusia County Council Chair Jeff Brower publicly called for an investigation into the Florida Department of Transportation’s decision to ignore serious environmental concerns surrounding the interchange and its interface with a protected waterway.

His efforts were immediately ridiculed by his “colleagues” on the Volusia County Council and wholly ignored in Tallahassee.    

Doris Leeper Spruce Creek Preserve

Then, in October 2023, a small group of intrepid environmentalists and concerned residents – armed with the facts – valiantly defended the sensitive Spruce Creek watershed from the threat of the proposed interchange by challenging a contentious stormwater permit issued by the oxymoronic St. Johns River Water Management District.

To say it was a ‘David & Goliath’ tale is an understatement…

Despite all odds, area environmentalists Bryon White, Derek LaMontagne, and a handful of local witnesses – which included biologist and Stetson University Professor Wendy Anderson, Professor Hyun Jung Cho of Bethune-Cookman University, and Chairman Brower – presented a commonsense argument challenging the public benefit of the stormwater permit.

During the hearing, the witnesses exposed the SJRWMD engineers who made the ridiculous claim that the project would “…reduce phosphorus, nitrogen and other harmful elements being diverted to Spruce Creek” – a threatened ecosystem which has been designated an Outstanding Florida Waterway which requires special protections because of its exceptional natural attributes.

After considering the evidence, an administrative law judge ruled that the SJRWMD’s stormwater permit should be revoked and determined its issuance was “not in the public interest.”

Of course, those who make the rules around here disagreed, the decision was appealed, and now we know ‘the rest of the story…’

For his efforts to oppose the interchange, Chairman Brower was publicly gibbetted – branded a liar, his motives questioned, and his work to protect our environment labeled a “political stunt” – during a sustained tag team mauling by Volusia’s Old Guard.   

The faux indignation was comical to watch as those marionettes on the dais danced feverishly to distance themselves from Brower’s opposition and ingratiate themselves with Mr. Hosseini – but many of their constituents saw it for what it was – one more example of the pernicious influence of “Big Money” donors on public policy here in the Kingdom of the Damned

In my view, “Fun Coast” residents come by these jaded suspicions honestly, especially in an era where all the right last names legally stuff hundreds of thousands of dollars into the war chests of hand select candidates each election cycle, then wait for these lucrative “coincidences” happen.

Like when funding for a $92 million interchange gets moved to the top of a very long list, while truly dangerous roadways – like that two-lane Monument to Mediocrity that is the Tomoka River bridge on LPGA Boulevard – continue to languish on the books…   

Perhaps our ‘powers that be’ should understand these expedited solutions – things that never happen when we demand answers to widespread flooding and quality of life issues associated with overdevelopment – are why the perception of favoritism persists here on Florida’s “Fun Coast.”  

In 2018, I penned a blog on the topic entitled “The Faustian Bargain,” my rambling take on the disturbing corollary between Volusia County politics and the legendary bluesman, Robert Johnson, who grew up dirt poor in the hardscrabble Mississippi Delta.  

According to legend, one dark night, Johnson stood at the crossroads of Highway 61 and US 49 and sold his very soul to the devil in exchange for mastery of the guitar and the incredible success – and ultimate escape from poverty – that talent would bring.

It’s a tale as old as time, really.

Throughout history – from St. Theophilus of Adana to Doctor Faustus – cautionary yarns tell of ambitious people who, in a misguided pursuit of personal riches and power, fall victim to temptation and sell who and what they are for what they desperately hope to become.

Unfortunately, it appears folklore has become reality…

For years, I have wrestled with the ethical questions surrounding Florida’s normalization of transactional politics – asking myself which side of this strategic assignation is more culpable – the “John” or the prostitute? 

Now, it appears those considerations no longer matter here in the Biggest Whorehouse in the World…

As a result, many believe these massive campaign contributions represent a legal return on investment in a system that permits a privileged few to obtain direct access to the public teat in the form of preferential tax breaks, “corporate welfare,” infrastructure beneficial to for-profit projects, and even direct subsidies for their private endeavors.

It’s easy to point fingers, but that’s not Mr. Hosseini’s fault. 

If that’s the way the ‘system’ functions, he would be a fool not to use it to his advantage.

And Mori Hosseini is nobody’s fool…

In fact, I consider him a true American success story.  An example of what this country offers for those willing to chase a dream, work hard, and persevere; and he has repeatedly denied receiving favoritism from Gov. Ron DeSantis – or anyone else.

In a 2023 article in the News-Journal, Mr. Hosseini said, “I have never, ever in my life gone to any governor and asked for anything. Not a governor, not a speaker of the house, not a Senate president, nothing about me. Nothing about my projects.”

Maybe not. Perhaps my jaded perspective has been skewed by repetitive “coincidences” that always seem to favor those with a chip in the game…

In politics, perception is reality, and in my view, so long as our campaign finance system allows for it, these incredibly influential individuals who drive public policy in Volusia County and beyond will continue to provide a financial advantage to those candidates willing to return the favor by placing the “donor class” at the nexus of public funds and private interests.

Call it ‘business as usual,’ but many are beginning to despise the stench of insider access in a pay-to-play environment that undermines the foundational principles of our democracy because it is patently unfair and detrimental to the future of our state.   

I don’t make the rules.  Neither do you. 

But those who do understand which side their bread is buttered on, and their strategic stalling on solutions to overdevelopment and approving environmental atrocities like what is about to befall the Doris Leeper Spruce Creek Preserve, will continue until a majority of voters decide they’ve had enough.

Perhaps then we will begin electing honorable servant-leaders who understand that political power originates with the will of We, The Little People – not the almighty dollar – and return a sense of fairness and equality to the playing field…   

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