Guidelines
Thursday, March 31, 2022
The 2022 Florida Legislative Session is Over. Which Passed Bills Could or Will Most Impact Escambia County?
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
On "Real News with Rick Outzen" on AM 1370 WCOA Later This Morning
I was invited to appear once again and will be a 7:10 AM morning guest on the area's #1 morning drive talk show--"Real News with Rick Outzen" on 1370 WCOA. Lots to discuss! |
Monday, March 28, 2022
Weekend Expression of Outrage, Part II
When in doubt, don't swim where someone is fishing for sharks. |
Part II is about Shark Fishing from shore.
One angry condominium owner fired off a bunch of emails, in rapid succession, about someone fishing from our new Perdido Key beach public access point #4.
"Great work Bergosh. Certainly hope this comes back and lands on your door step!" was the subject line in his first email. He went on from there:
"Fishing for sharks from the public beach access next to us, happened all weekend. They were set up with tents, flags, poles etc... Unit 202 actually saw a shark near our beach and was fed up with the situation. I have attached a photo of the email response she got from the County. Please join Kim in trying to keep our waters as safe as possible for all to enjoy. The email address to the person she contacted is in the photo."
The email had a screen capture of a response to a condo owner from County Employee Dave Greenwood--it was a polite response.
The next email had this as the subject: More good news from my son who is down there with his wife and his three young children. Just keeps getting more interesting, doesn't it?
He went on from there:
"I went and talked to them Saturday night. They had a
bunch of kids with them who's Dads had chartered the guide service. They were
excited and said they were going to "try to break the record," which
is apparently 6 tiger sharks in 1 night"
To which I responded, in part:
"..you wrote to me in your email “I hope this comes back and lands on your door step” in reference to shark fishermen fishing near swimmers and as I read this it seems as if you’re hoping something tragic happens like a shark attack. Do you really hope for this? Wow! What a dreadful thing to wish upon anyone, just absolutely diabolical. Meanwhile, back here in real life away from your fantasies of violent interactions between swimmers and sharks———-perhaps you should channel your simmering frustration to those who actually control this activity—(and here’s a newsflash for you, “Jones”)—It ain’t the county—it’s the State of Florida. According to staff with whom I have conversed on this particular topic(copied)—I’m told the State has usurped local control on the regulation of shark fishing from public beaches. So, meanwhile, it may be prudent to NOT swim next to where fishermen have set up to fish for sharks. I’d certainly dissuade my family and children from swimming near the shark fishermen out of an abundance of caution.
(Full disclosure, this particular individual and I have had a number of back and forths about public beach access, including this one from earlier this month where he called me a moron and a jackass. Maybe this will be a twice a month thing with him?--I hope not. We ended up talking and I did my level best to explain to him that the state controls the regulations pertaining to shark fishing from shore, not the county, and I did tell him that if someone is legally fishing for sharks [chumming for sharks from the shore is unlawful and should be reported]--I certainly would not swim nearby)
I wonder what the next outrage from him will be?
A Camel's Nose Under the Tent?
Weekend Expression of Outrage!
No, no--it wasn't about the embarrassing spectacle of a smackdown, B!&$h slap Will Smith delivered to Chris Rock in the middle of a live, worldwide broadcast to tens of millions of people. It wasn't about this.
No, no it wasn't about the disgustingly tragic story (you don't know about it because the national media won't report it) of a grandmother targeted by four "youth" in New Orleans with a violent beating that led to her death by murder during a carjacking. (She was pulled from her parked car, punched, kicked and beaten unconscious before these youth drove off with her dragging beside her own car until all her clothes were ripped off and her ARM was ripped out of the socket and she died of blood loss in the arms of two passers by that tried desperately to first stop the carjacking and second save this victim.) Nope--it wasn't about that either.
And No--it wasn't about the ongoing violence against women and children in Ukraine by the Russian Military.
Nope. Wasn't about that, either.
It was about the spectacle scene that is our old jail and our new jail.
This citizen is outraged. He's right to be. But, put in context, there are lots of things to be outraged about, a lot of issues far more urgent, pressing, and sad.
So here's the back and forth from the weekend about our jail, below.
Friday, March 25, 2022
City is Requesting the County Look at Adopting a Graffiti Ordinance Similar to Theirs....
Late this afternoon I received this written correspondence, below, from City Attorney for the City of Pensacola, Charles Peppler.
I'm willing to take a look at it and I'll certainly consider it. This coming week I will ask staff to assess the City Ordinance to see how it meshes with County Ordinance(s) already on the books dealing with this topic. Then I'll ask Alison Rogers to add it for discussion at a subsequent meeting so it can be discussed with my four board counterparts.
So look for the discussions to begin in late April on this.
First 8 Palm Trees for Relocation or Removal Have Been Marked on Perdido Key
Appeal will Move Forward--No Cash for Doug
Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Perdido Key Roundabout: Over Budget and Construction Won't Commence Until After Peak of Summer Season....
A rendering of the proposed roundabut to be constructed at Perdido Key Drive and Johnson's Beach Road--from the Perdido Key Master Plan |
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Saving the Perdido Key Palm Trees in 90 days--This Is How We're Going to Do It
Monday, March 14, 2022
70th Coffee with the Commissioner this Wednesday at 6:30
Join us for our 70th Coffee with the Commissioner event this Wednesday, March 16. The live stream will take place from 6:30-7:30 a.m. To join the meeting, visit our D1 Facebook page here: www.facebook.com/CommissionerBergosh/.
Attendees will include Interim County Administrator Wes Moreno; Public Safety Director Eric Gilmore; and Florida House Representatives Michelle Salzman, District 1, and Alex Andrade, District 2. Moreno will give an update on county business and Gilmore will share the latest public safety information for Escambia County. Representatives Salzman and Andrade will join us to give a legislative wrap-up, discussing the bills that were recently passed and how they will impact the citizens of Escambia County.
Residents are encouraged to send virtual questions and comments they would like to discuss during the event through Facebook.
For more information, contact District 1 at 850-595-4910 or district1@myescambia.com. For District 1 updates, follow @MyDistrict1 on Twitter.
On AM 1370 WCOA's Real News with Rick Outzen Show Later this Morning
I'll be a guest later this morning, at 7:10, on WCOA's hit morning radio show "Real News with Rick Outzen" |
Escambia County and PBA Reach Agreement on Record Setting Starting Pay and Salary Increases for Corrections Officers!
We have issues in our jail. Everyone knows it.
Staffing, morale, and facility issues.
So we are working as hard as we possibly can to correct all three of these issues.
And a HUGE part of the equation, we are told, has been the pay.
So our administrator, Wes Moreno, at the direction of the board, recently completed a review and a revision of the staffing grid and allocations for the corrections division, which resulted in the ability to take back thirty positions, or FTE's, (of the nearly 100 vacant positions) in order to utilize these unspent funds for the express purpose of raising starting pay and providing record-setting salary increases for existing corrections employees to address some of our staffing issues (and hopefully morale issues) as well.
We are working the facility issues simultaneously, on a separate track.
So the increases the removal of the 30 positions yields is as follows:
Starting pay for certified corrections officers increases to $45,000.00 yearly
For existing corrections officers, raises equalling about 16% were offered as well.
Late Friday evening, the PBA membership voted, nearly unanimously, to accept the BCC's offer.
This is great news, and hopefully now that our starting pay is higher than any entity in the area--including the state---hopefully we will be able to fill the vacancies we have in this division in short order.
Thanks to Administrator Moreno and the PBA for getting this part done very quickly.
Saturday, March 12, 2022
Prisoner Moves from Old Jail have Commenced--239 Moved out Friday Afternoon
According to administrator Wes Moreno who emailed the following to all commissioners late yesterday afternoon.
"Good Afternoon Commissioners,
We have moved 239 inmates out of the old jail
as of the writing of this email.
Please do not respond all.
Wes
Sent
from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
Get Outlook for Android"
Friday, March 11, 2022
No WAY We Will Let Them Cut Down 70 Palm Trees on Perdido Key!!
"Below is a list of addresses and tree count proposed for
removal. This work has to be complete by 3.26.22 (funding
constraints). They intend to start and complete the work in 1 (one) day."
Commissioner,
Thursday, March 10, 2022
Simmering Anger from a few Because We Were Able to #OpenOurBeach for All
There are a few that really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, DID NOT want us to open Beach Access #4 on Perdido Key. They lost, the taxpayers who own the property (you) won! |
One week ago today we opened Beach Access #4 at Perdido Key. It was a love fest--one of the most positive days I remember in my five + years on the Board of County Commissioners.
After 9 long years, we finally were able to #OpenOurBeach !!
Since that time, though, there have been a few folks who have tried to rain on the parade. Like "Jones"....
"Bergosh:
Are you the moron that is responsible for opening up another access to the beach to let a flood of trespassers on to the beach? This is going to allow every red neck drunk up and down the highway to come on to the beach and campout on private property that belongs to the folks owing homes on the beach These people using this access will not respect private property. If this does in fact pan out like I think it will I will find a way to make sure you are held personally $ accountable. I look forward to meeting you one day.
-----Jones"
To which I responded
“Jones”
I’m the commissioner who pushed for, found the funding for, and fought against the special interests FOR opening this parcel of land. The “Morons” (your term) are the ones who favored having a taxpayer-paid for, 300 foot parcel of gulf front property (purchased expressly FOR public beach access and habitat conservation) sit behind a locked gate with no trespassing signs keeping taxpayers out---- while nearby condo owners and others used and trashed the lot with litter and trampling walks up and down and all through the sensitive habitat-----all the while preventing the owners (the taxpayers who bought it) from using it for 8 years. Yes, those were the “morons” (to coin your pejorative term) that lost this issue, thankfully.Call me anytime if you’d like to discuss 😊 850-293-1459"
"Jones" didn't call........ And then I got this one from "Jeanette":
"...I just watched the YouTube Video you did at the opening of the new public access on Perdido Key and as a resident of Perdido Key was deeply offended. Your comments regarding the “locked beach walkover” showed your complete ignorance of deeded beach access. That easement has existed since the land was sold to the County and the walkover was paid for and maintained by private funds and those same private funds pay to clean that area of beach because the County does nothing..."
"Sundown North has “deeded access” to 6’ of beach between the
Crab Trap and Beach Access #4. There are no additional rights for Sundown North
residents over the general public to utilize the county property."
"...The County owns the 4.04 acre property on the Gulf front, south of Perdido Key Drive, which it acquired from the Trust for Public Land, which acquired it from Sundown Owners Association, Inc...The only recorded easements excepted from coverage in the County’s title insurance policy are Gulf Power’s. There is a six foot strip that runs along the western boundary of the County’s parcel. The County does not own this. I assume that the Sundown condo owners on the north side of Perdido Key Drive retained the six foot strip"
Wednesday, March 9, 2022
County Responds to Congressional Inquiry about The Escambia County Jail
About a week ago or so, Congressman Matt Gaetz sent a letter to Interim Administrator Wes Moreno regarding some significant concerns he was hearing about the conditions within our jail.
This comes on the heels of several media outlets picking up the stories coming out of the jail.
This morning, Interim Administrator Moreno sent the below response to the Congressman.
On WCOA's Real News with Rick Outzen
I was a guest on the area's #1 morning drive radio program, "Real News with Rick Outzen" yesterday morning.
We talked about last week's meeting and the important takeaways from the Thursday meeting.
In particular, we discussed the jail and the surprise turn of events surrounding Doug Underhill's complete reversal on the county's newly passed resign to run ordinance (Underhill went from staunch disapproval and vocal opposition to such an ordinance to actually voting to approve and making the motion to approve this ordinance.
This flip flop by Underhill has led to some significant consternation and infighting on at least one Facebook chat site.
Meanwhile, many of us simply believe he lost his place on the agenda and made the motion and voted for the ordinance because he was confused or didn't know at the time what it was he was moving and voting for.
Regardless, it happend. And, if it was by accident due to confusion, such an admission would never come from Underhill, so far as I can tell.
It was a good conversation--Listen to the Podcast here
Monday, March 7, 2022
Big Media's Hair Will Be On FIRE if this Goes Through and Senate Passes HB 7049 (Local Government Legal Notice Reform)!
"In an 11th-hour move, the Senate has scheduled a
committee meeting Tuesday to take up a House bill that would make changes in
laws about publishing local-government legal notices. The House voted 78-39
last week to approve the bill, which has faced opposition from the newspaper
industry. The Senate had not considered the proposal during the legislative
session that started Jan. 11. But with the session scheduled to end Friday, the
Senate posted notice of a Rules Committee meeting Tuesday to take up the issue
(HB 7049). If it passes the Rules Committee, the bill could go before the full
Senate. The bill, in part, would allow local governments to publish legal
notices on publicly available county websites if it would be cheaper than
publishing them in newspapers. The Rules Committee also will take up a House
bill (HB 861) about terms related to medical specialties."
Bear Trap Part III
The legal saga over a 401(a) plan's "legality" will eventually be settled. But for the clerk of the court and comptroller--either outcome produces a pyrrhic victory so far as I can tell..... |
As I discussed via multiple blog posts way back in June and August, respectively, of last year--the ratcheting up of legal wrangling back and forth by the Clerk's office really does not help the Clerk's case.
It's simple. The 401 a plan is either legal for commissioners--or it isn't.
And a judge will decide this.
And then we can all move forward---- as the legality of the plan is and aways has been the seminal question that needs to be answered so far as I am concerned.
Meanwhile--a bona fide contract approved by the Escambia BCC has been terminated by the clerk (constructively) via her failure to uphold the terms of it by the withholding of payments stipulated within said contract. That's what my issue is and has been from the beginning--I don't take the plan at issue but I jealously guard the powers, rights, and responsibilities of this board, just as constitutional officers like the clerk guard their powers, duties and responsibilities under statute. The passive allowance of this unilateral decimation of a bona fide contract of the BCC by the clerk is bad precedent to set, outside the purview of the clerk, and in very poor form if----as many believe-----the contract and stipulations as to 401 a payments are in fact legal.
But again, that is now in the hands of one judge and a bunch of lawyers, and now even more lawyers(with new lawyers signing up recently to jump on the clerk's side churning up legal bills, fees, costs and $$ invoices the clerk will likely ask us to pay--not unlike orcas and sharks churning the bloody water feeding on a decaying whale carcass out at sea....it's an ugly display. Meanwhile-the legal team the county is utilizing has provided their service pro-bono).
So yes the legality question will get worked out--some lawyers will churn fees and costs others are
Jail Issues Front and Center this Week
- An action
plan to, as quickly as practicable, to move personnel and inmates
from the areas where facility conditions are borderline unacceptable
within our corrections department.
- a plan to enact a near-term strategy to harden other existing county owned corrections facilities to safely allow
the movement and relocation of all prisoners out of our old jail and into
acceptable new buildings/spaces.
- Utilize the $9 Million
we (BOCC) have allocated toward old-jail repairs to quickly implement #1 and #2
above.
Additional guidance and information, as well as the way
forward, will be discussed between staff, the board, and the administrator at the board’s committee of the
whole meeting this Thursday, March 10th at 0900.
Friday, March 4, 2022
Public Beach Access # 4 Opened Today!
See the video of the event here, below, followed by a photo gallery of the event. Today was a great day for Escambia County!
Photos below:
The Old Jail Must Come Down.....It's Time
It's time to demolish the old jail. |
The cat is out of the bag now. The old jail must come down.
I made quite a lot of noise about the unacceptable conditions in the jail two weeks back. And the local media picked up the story from my blog and ran with it.
Now everybody is talking about it.
But where are the members of the BCC on this subject?
In listening to my counterparts on the board yesterday at the meetings on this topic--it is apparent that the sentiment of the majority is that we demolish the old jail and move forward with Administrator Wes Moreno's evolving plan to house inmates temporarily in other facilities which we are in the process of upgrading to accomodate this move.
Our new jail can hold 850 inmates. (Probably a hundred more than that with some minor adjustments) The Road Prison can hold 200. The county's work release facility on Fairfield Drive can hold another 400, and a facility we own and are in the process of taking back, a state work release facility on L street, can hold another 150.
That adds up to 1600-1700 capacity--and our average daily "census" of prisoners in Escambia County is 1500 or so.
With this as the scenario--we can move the existing inmates out of the unacceptable, third-world conditions of the old jail--and I'm not going to vote to spend another dime on anything at the old jail. We have $9 Million earmarked for repairs to the old jail--but in the condition that facility is in at the moment-$9 Million won't add up to a drop in the bucket of what is needed to bring that facility back to useability.
It has simply been allowed to deteriorate due to poor maintenance for decades.
So now it's time to move forward with the new plan, empty the old jail, and demo it.
Then we can determine the long-term fix which will more than likely include bonding the cost(s) of constructing a planned "expansion" wing on our new jail.
Thursday, March 3, 2022
County's "Resign to Run" Ordinance Passes Unanimously
This evening at the BCC's regular meeting an ordinance was passed which addresses employee participation in elections for the County Commission.
Although the topic has generated no interest among the public--it had elicited much conversation from insiders, partisans, at least one (1) facebook chat/fanboy site, and entertainment radio talk show host Andrew "Tallman" McKay. He, Tallman-McKay- even threatened to come to our meeting and "scold" us for even bringing such an ordinance. He didn't show up to speak, though. Nobody else did either. Nope--no keyboard warriors, no Tallman Mckay, nobody.
And now the item has moved forward.
The reason there was no pushback from anyone so far as I can tell, and that nobody spoke to the item at tonight's public hearing is because such ordinances are ubiquitous in Florida. And everywhere else around America to boot.
But the truly amazing thing was this:
The motion to approve the ordinance was made by County Commissioner Doug Underhill.
Not only did he (Commissioner Doug Underhill) make the motion to approve the ordinance--he also voted "yes" on the item-which subsequently passed unanimously 5-0.