Saturday, January 31, 2009
More in the never-ending stream of information from the City of Punta Gorda
Friends and Neighbors,
Aside from the weekly report attachment I have also attached a schedule of road rejuvenation work beginning next Monday. Road rejuvenation if a stop gap method that is expected to add a few extra years to our streets before repaving is necessary.
The 2009 State of the City Report was presented by Larry Friedman this past Wednesday for members of the chamber of commerce; he will be presenting it several more times the schedule is in the weekly report and I urge you to attend.
The University of Florida released its “Florida Estimates of Population for 2008” this week and you may be interested to know That the estimated population for Charlotte County for 2008 was 165,781 of which 17,651 reside within the city. In 2000 the counties population was 141,627. Of the 67 counties Charlotte is the 28th most populated. Charlotte continues to have the distinction of having the highest percentage in the state of those over the age of 65 [34%] and the lowest percentage in the state of those under the age of 17 [15.1%]
Friday, January 30, 2009
Important Correspondence re Public Safety at the Beach

What in the H-E-double toothpicks is going on? Here it is addressed in our own Code of Ordinances:Sec. 7-3. Compliance with regulations posted at beach; obedience to lifeguards.
Improvement Noticed in City Press Releases
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
However, the last one leaves me wanting as it relates to subject matter. Here is an excerpt:
The Lake Worth Resource Center (LWRC) is pleased to announce the launch of “Hire One Worker For One Week”; an economic and employment relief initiative to help struggling families, while stimulating our local economy. The goal of this initiative is to match 500 registered jobseekers from the LWRC with local employers for one week during the month of February.
Registered workers are at the ready to perform such jobs as: cleaning the pool, yard or house; painting; packing or unpacking; moving; polishing; repairing patio screens, fences or sprinklers; pressure cleaning; foreclosure cleaning; landscaping; roofing; filing; stuffing envelopes; typing and companion and elderlycare!
“Our President has told us that it will take a bold, unprecedented approach and requires all of us to turn the economy around. This is our audacious plan! We are appealing to the good people of
This is the press release many would like to see instead:
Lake Worth, Fl. - The Mayor of the City of Lake Worth announced the relocation of {Fill in name of high tech research or information technology or green product manufacturing company here}. The company selected a site within the City's Community Redevelopment Agency district and will employ 500 local people once fully staffed. Offices for the firm will be state-of-the-art and eligible for gold LEED certification - further establishing Lake Worth as the center for the "Green Revolution" in the United States. Ms. Amelia Longterm, the company's CEO, stated, "We really enjoy our relationship with the City of Lake Worth. They have been very helpful through the zoning and permiting of the project. It's great to feel like we are part of a team that knows where they are going and how to get there." The Mayor commented, "This will solidify Lake Worth as a place of economic re-birth and the model of redevelopment in the region."
By the way, how do the 1099s and income taxes in general work at the LWRC?
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Interesting Planning Related Links
The FDOT Office of Policy Planning issued this publication, which looks at transportation trends and conditions in Florida. This Pocket Guide to Florida Transportation Trends and Conditions is organized into four areas: the growing demand for transportation facilities and services; the current system or supply of transportation; the impacts of the transportation system on our society; and the resources, expenditures and costs associated with providing transportation. The guide can be accessed at http://www.dot.state.fl.us/ NEW ALSA PUBLICATION ON SMART GROWTH AND SUSTAINABILITY The Florida Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) has recently published "Visions of Smart Growth and Sustainability- A Florida Chapter ASLA Charrette to illustrate tools for better urban growth and environmental stewardship." Conducted as an adjunct to the "How Should We Grow" initiative in Central Florida, this post-charrette publication offers the public, leaders and planners a vision of what communities and countryside if future growth is approached with sensitivity to supporting core economic and environmental requirements. Topics covered include open space, natural environment, civic space, marketplace, neighborhoods, corridors, and infrastructure. Download this report at http://www.flasla.org/docs/ OREGON'S MILEAGE FEE CONCEPT AND ROAD USER FEE PILOT PROGRAM FINAL REPORT Issued in November 2007 by the Oregon Department of Transportation, this reports summarizes the 6 year effort to study and test an alternative revenue collection system for roads and highways. The 2001 Oregon Legislature established the Road User Fee Task Force "to develop a design for revenue collection for Oregon's roads and highways that could replace the current system for revenue collection." After considering 28 different funding ideas, the task force recommended that the Oregon Department of Transportation conduct a pilot program to study two strategies, called the Oregon Mileage Fee Concept: (1) Study the feasibility of replacing the gas tax with a mileage-based fee based on miles driven in Oregon and collected at fueling stations; and (2) Study the feasibility of using this system to collect congestion charges. The final report concludes, among other things, that the concept is viable, paying at the pump works, the mileage fee can be phased in, and administrative costs are low. To learn more, go to http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/ | |||
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Paws on the Plaza
Paws on the Plaza will be held on Saturday, February 7, 2009, from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the Cultural Plaza.
For more information, visit the City's website at www.lakeworth.org.
Passive Park Groundbreaking
This Friday, January 30, 2009, a groundbreaking will be held at 9:30 a.m. to celebrate the creation of a passive park along an unused right-of-way along 5th Avenue South.
In December 2006, the City Commission unanimously approved a request made by the Lake Worth Rotary Club to create a passive park in the unused, existing 5th Avenue South right-of-way from South F Street to the alley. The Lake Worth Rotary Club has supported and promoted community projects in the community for over fifty years.
A first for the Lake Worth Rotary Club, the project encompassed the preparation of a site plan; securing approval from the Lake Worth Planning and Zoning Board; installing a water meter and entering into an agreement with the City of Lake Worth to maintain the property for a period of eighteen months. The concept included the installation of landscaping, walkways and benches for the passive park. Additionally, the Club has agreed to donate $1,000 to the City of Lake Worth Tree Board to support their efforts in creating a tree canopy throughout the City.
For further information, contact Dr. Albert Endruschat, Lake Worth Rotary Club at 561-385-4620.
Massive West Palm condo approved
The city commission Monday overrode staff recommendations and neighbors' objections in approving a 299-foot-tall condo tower for 1515 S. Flagler Drive, nearly three times as massive as the hurricane-damaged building it would replace.Proof of a different world view. I am hoping that it is somehow tied to building enough value on the property in order to take the existing building down. Perhaps it will never be built, but perhaps it will. I refer to West Palm Beach as the Land of Dragons - something beyond our horizon. Remember, Lake Worth is the yin to West Palm's yang.
Opponents urged commissioners to deny the proposal, which envisioned a building that on some sides has setbacks of 34 feet where city zoning codes call for 142 feet.
Monday, January 26, 2009
A word about the Commission and CRA meetings on Tuesday - 1/27
There are two meetings scheduled for the about the same time in City Hall tomorrow. A joint City Commission/CRA workshop (that was on the books for quite a while) was to take place on January 27th. This in a continuing effort to foster communication between the two entities and to make sure that efforts are coordinated and fit within expectations of the community. At the Commission meeting last week, the Commissioners and Mayor started on a long discussion of the beach redevelopment project. This discussion ended up in the creation of a workshop on the beach. The date chosen for this was the date of the pre-scheduled joint meeting with the City Commission and CRA.
The Chair of the CRA and executive director decided to hold a regular workshop meeting of the CRA in its place to discuss the possibility and details of an Economic Summit for the community and the Cultural Redevelopment program that is about to go forward.
So, the long and the short of it is that I will start my late afternoon/early evening activities with the Commission - since their beginning time is 5:30 p.m. The CRA's meeting will begin at 6 p.m. which I will attend. I am not sure how long the CRA meeting will go on, but I plan to attend what remains of the City Commission workshop on the beach at the conclusion of the CRA meeting. It looks as though the City Commission will be in the Chambers and the CRA will be in the conference room. If you can come to City Hall tomorrow night, it might be your two-for-one chance to see both groups in action - just not in the same room.
Important - Click here for link to complete back-up for Tuesday's City Commission Workshop re Beach
As much as we don't like the current style of the building, it is historic in its own right. I am not advocating for that, but that is what many would think in the historic preservation community.
Thank you staff for putting this report together in a short amount of time.
Remember, as some still have a conceptual problem with this distinction:
Palm Beach County ERM E-News for January 23
Loggerhead Marinelife Center: Annual Sea Turtle Nesting Recap and Annual Meeting
Date: January 26, 2009
Time: 6:00 p.m.
The public is invited for this informative presentation as the 2008 sea turtle nesting counts are revealed. A wine and cheese reception is included, and the event is free. An RSVP is required by calling Ann at (561) 627-8280 ext. 101. For more information visit http://www.marinelife.org
Date: January 27, 2009
Location: Florida Atlantic University, Jupiter, Administration Building Auditorium, AD 119
http://www.ces.fau.edu/
Guest Presentation: Harmful Algal Blooms on Caribbean Coral Reefs
Presenter: Brian Lapointe


