Guidelines

I am one member of a five person board. The opinions I express on this forum are mine only, and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the Escambia County Staff, Administrators, Employees, or anyone else associated with Escambia County Florida. I am interested in establishing this blog as a means of additional transparency to the public, outreach to the community, and information dissemination to all who choose to look. Feedback is welcome, but because public participation is equally encouraged, appropriate language and decorum is mandatory. Although this is not my campaign site for re-election--sometimes campaign related information will be discussed, therefore in an abundance of caution I add the following :








Saturday, April 8, 2023

Dystopian, Fearful, Defeatist, Pessimistic Emails---and My Enthusiastic, Positive, and Realistic Response!

Dystopian, Fearful, Defeatist, Pessimistic, and emotionally-charged emails to me regarding OLF-8's pending development will, in return, receive factual, rational, educated, enthusiastic, and emotionally neutral (Think "Spock-like") responses!  

I've lived the OLF 8 issue since I bought my house right across from the field nearly 20 years ago.  At that time, it was people complaining about the noise of the choppers.  Little did I know then that a nearly decade-long effort was already well underway for the county to acquire that property for jobs from the Navy.....but it was.

Fast forward 11 years to 2015 and I became well aware of the history of the project---and I campaigned in support of a world class, high-tech, clean tech commerce park on OLF-8 to create and provide high-tech, clean-tech, high-paying jobs for the entire region--along with amenities along the 9-Mile Road frontage for nearby residents----as I successfully ran for and won the D1 seat on the BCC.  

Yes--I've lived this issue for a long time now.

Although some will now attempt to re-write history, the facts are the facts:  I supported jobs, and I vehemently DID NOT support any, not one, residential dwelling on that field. NONE.

But then came the upswelling of anger and frustration from neighbors, politically connected companies, and stong special interests----and the original plan went out the window faster than lightning in favor of a watered down footprint for jobs--favoring a much larger mixed use development and some amenities. And yes, some residential on the field was incorporated into this "new direction"--even though very few in Beulah wanted any more residential built there on OLF 8.  Even my most ardent, staunchest political enemies in the area agreed with my assessment that we should NOT be competing with the private sector by sourcing land for homebuilders on OLF 8 because there was too much residential being built in Beulah already and the infrastructure couldn't support more on OLF 8.  

But I was outvoted.  

And then I went through the master planning, swallowed hard, held my nose, gagged and in the spirit of compromise went along with the rest of the board in supporting the master plan as the blueprint going forward for this parcel. It was a hard-fought compromise that left a little something for everyone, a lot of stuff a lot of people didn't want, and very little of what a few people wanted.  Nobody was 100% happy-it was the epitome of a compromise.

That's the fact, Jack.  That's how this happened, and that is how we came to be where we are today, period, end of story.

And now that we have chosen a group with which to partner-----as only one group came to the drop dead meeting yesterday-----I am receiving some emails that are negative.  I am also receiving some that are positive.  The negatives outweigh the positives roughly 2-1.  Here, below, is an example "negative" email and my upbeat, positive, rational, and factual response:

"Jeff,

Please [do] not [use]DR Horton (sic), he is a cheap builder and will add nothing to our area and OLF-8. It would be nice to have decent restaurants. Would be great to have a Post Office,  but as you told me the USPS is closing offices, although there are 2 close together on 29. I go back to MLK and Fairfield by the School District Warehouse to purchase stamps and do mailing. Very inconvenient.

But we say no to DRA Horton(sic), not that it matters. Sounds like a done deal. And traffic will be horrific with more homes and apartments. Oh well, the end of paradise.

Thanks,"

My response:

"Thanks for the email.  I believe we did the best we could-- given the fact that the stronger bidder (Breland) didn’t show up to the selection meeting and given the fact that DR Horton is now teaming with Stirling and upped their offer significantly.  Additionally, to their credit, DR Horton acquiesced to our insistence that they accept a deed restriction limiting their ability to build residential on the light industrial/commercial areas of the parcel.  And they did set aside a 20 acre piece of the parcel for potential sale to the school board for a school if the school board decides they want to pursue that.  And their plan has a town center, Class A medical and office buildings, retail, restaurants, and other amenities for the Beulah community. The half-hearted Breland “rendering” sent to us the night before the meeting that they did not attend indicated a small, miniscule retail parcel on the nine mile frontage, a tiny, miniscule parcel for job creation (commercial, light industrial) on the northeast corner----and the entire balance of the land residential.  It was DOA the minute I saw it, so it was wise they ghosted us and did a no show.

 Remember XXXXX—from the get go I powerfully advocated against ANY residential on that field.  I wanted amenities, retail, restaurants on the frontage and the balance of the land for the creation of high-tech, clean tech jobs (like NFCU in aesthetically pleasing buildings).  But due to the pressure put on my counterparts by local residents, and powerful and politically connected special interests,—that original plan (you know, the reason we spent $18.5 million and 25 years working on this project in the first place—as a regional jobs generator) was thrown out the window.  Over my objections.  That is the true history, well documented, of how we got where we are today. So we did the master plan which I ultimately endorsed and voted to support, in the spirit of compromise.

 With that as the backdrop, we are where we are now with one interested party.  And while the plan is not perfect, I do think this team will work with us.  And over the next 6 months or so we will hammer out an agreement that will result in between a $20-$27 Million dollar “profit” for the taxpayers—which proceeds can be used throughout Beulah, District 1, and the county to address deficiencies in stormwater and traffic infrastructure as well as other quality of life needs.  And remember this, as well:  We have a $155 Million Dollar interchange coming in Beulah which will divert half of the current 9-mile road traffic which all utilizes exit five.  Additionally, Beulah Road—now a state road—will be widened in that plan.  The state is currently constructing significant upgrades on Mobile Hwy from Blue Angel all the way to 9 Mile road through Beulah.  And the Governor’s newly-announced Florida Forward initiative earmarks $162 Million for an ambitious 6-year plan to 6-lane 1-10 through Beulah from the weigh station to Pine Forest road along with a significant re-work of the entire interchange at exit 7.  So infrastructure upgrades and modernization projects are in the works right now and have been in planning since I first took office 6 years ago.

 And the built up field will create jobs and generate significant new ad valorem tax revenue for the county and the school board—which is the real, long horizon plus of this deal.  This added revenue allows us to maintain what we have done this past year:  ensuring our sheriff’s deputies, EMTs, paramedics, firemen, and corrections guards are the highest paid in the region.  All of this without raising the year over year millage (property tax) rates.  Growing the economy allows us to do these great things while keeping the tax burden low.

 So thanks for your email of concern, and please know I am going to do my level best to shepherd this deal toward a finale that produces a huge win for Beulah (where I have lived for 20 years right across from OLF 8), the county, and the region.

 Happy Easter, and have a great weekend."

 



2 comments:

Mel Pino said...

Such a shame. This is what happens when you combine a well-meaning person who had no clue that she was way in over her head politically--Theresa Blackwell--with Doug's disinformation team over on ECW being led by the nose to shill for the developers he was chummy with and downtown special interests.

Those of us who cried out those tactics were not dismissing the very understandable desires of many in Beulah who were having the dream (more like mirage) of an ab ovo town center held out to them on a platter of fool's gold. It wasn't that we didn't understand why they wanted it--it's a beautiful concept. It's that they didn't see how badly they were being played, and continually bated to fight the clean industrial off by residential builders and their water carriers, backed by Navy Federal vying for their company town. Hey, if it had turned out to be stacked residential in a model village style, great. But make no mistake the primary thing was the company town.

And now that the inevitable has happened--those of us who better understand how the politics work saw it coming a mile away--things have devolved into lord knows how much residential on that property.

If anybody could stick in for such a negotiation with DR Horton to keep some nice things, it's you, Commissioner Bergosh, but sadly you'll be doing it while the same people who have always had it by the wrong end of the stick are lashing out at the person who recognized from the beginning that you *cannot* leave a door cracked open for residential.

They didn't get it then; clearly they still don't get it now.

I really wish that, letting bygones be bygones, Theresa and all of Beulah would have been awarded the field of their dreams. I really wish people in Navy Point wouldn't have bought the mixed use red herring on the Navy Point townhomes project hook line and sinker--and Lord knows some of us tried getting something, anything out of ADoor better than what is currently being reported will happen there with the unsurprising bait and switch: direct to rental construction. (If they think OLF8 is going to destroy Beulah, and we're all supposed to be howling at the moon over it, they should consider that when the Navy Point development news finally got around to Studio 850 about a year after the neighborhood knew about it, the usual suspects on ECW were throwing down laughing that "her advocacy doesn't work" and that "she lost the battle"--when I never advocated to try to stop the development, because there was no way to get that done with our low-rent, no-account previous commissioner and his continued failed dreams of being a big boy in the development world).

The thing that is most astonishing to me is to see red-meat republicans who have turned this state into an environmental wasteland in the making go berserk when it hits their own backyard. (Not speaking of Theresa, as I know she leans liberal.) Duh, folks. You've elected republican development values and handed Tallahassee off to vultures, who are now preempting home rule to the degree that they are cutting off *any* avenue towards controlling growth. For years the voters here have welcomed a lord of the flies, anything goes mentality as "freedom." The same people decrying overdevelopment are advocating for term limits and recall because they don't understand that it's their political values that are hopelessly lost, and not the people they vote in to enact them.

Welp, enjoy the fruits of your labors. Nobody who has been heralding the super-majority in Tallahassee as the government of their dreams should be surprised by what they have wrought. I hope Theresa does keep fighting for Beulah. I just wish she'd wake up out of her spell some day and realize that some of the people she thought were her best friends were in fact her worst enemies.

Anonymous said...

Yep, I never supported a master plan. Should have advertised it nationally for Industrial, or HighnTech Industry. One of the last great opportunities lost due to an attempt at Mob rule.

You tried to hold the line.

That the truth.

"I've got Cancer.. Let me Speak!" in a COW ... eyeroll