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May 08, 2008

 

The Price of Kindness

Think twice before helping out someone in need — especially if you’re an elderly man on your way to the market. It could cost you thousands.

 

A Silver-Lining Legacy

Miami City Commission may rename a Little Haiti park after disgraced late Commissioner Arthur Teele Jr.

 

The Sound of Hope

Barton G. Weiss turns his efforts to his most important challenge yet: helping the deaf to hear.

 

NEWS

 

Miami-Dade County overrides mayor’s UDB vetoes

 

Miami-Dade County eliminates 600 bus routes

 

Miami-Dade County extends trailer park moratorium for 180 days

 

Teachers outraged that Dade School Board pays $1 million a year to United Teachers of Dade officers

 

Related Group founder Jorge Pérez is sharing the principles that made him billions

 

Miami Beach union files a lawsuit against building department heads

 

Miami Beach Transparency, Reliability and Accountability Committee not so sure where to begin

 

Miami Beach Green Committee envisions a green city of the future, but needs support

 

Aventura approves a transit impact fee 40 percent lower than what it initially approved

 

Sunny Isles Beach plans to build a bridge on North Bay Road to ease traffic

 

Sunny Isles Beach voters will get to decide on two charter changes

 

Broward County is refining its management strategy and its budget

 

Hollywood High students may find out what they want to be when they grow up—at Hollywood City Hall

 

Letters

 

COLUMNS

 

Bound

Aleksander Hemon resurrects us all in The Lazarus Project.

 

Make Me The President

Gandhi, Rocky or Rooster Cogburn — who would you like to drink a beer with?

 

The 411

Don’t know what to do now that season is ending? Neither does Kris Conesa.

 

Groundwork

Miami topped Forbes’ list of “America’s Worst-Selling Housing Markets.” Who knew?

 

Bites

Danny Brody takes a second look at three Miami restaurants to see if they really deserve their accolades.

 

Wakefield

Miami-Dade commissioners just don’t get it. Neither do the voters who keep electing them.

 

Film

Go See Speed Racer, Go!

And: Film Capsules

 

Theater

The Accomplices at GablesStage details a shameful chapter in American history.

 

Avenue Q

If you want to know what happens to Muppets when they grow up, go see Avenue Q.

 

Calendar

Did you forget Mother's Day?

 

Special Sections 2007

Special Sections 2006

Wakefield Archive

Make Me The President Archive

 

 

 

News

 March 27, 08

Miami Beach

Political Semantics

Are politics really what govern charter interpretations in the city of Miami Beach? Sorry, rhetorical question.

Richard Steinberg

By Ben Torter

The political winds in Miami Beach have changed direction since 2006, and with them certain interpretations of the city’s charter.

It seems laws for appointing versus electing to fill a commission vacancy have gotten stricter this year. Well, actually the rules haven’t changed — just the way the lawyers are reading them.

Commissioner Richard Steinberg (a lawyer) will be stepping down later this year to run for state representative, District 106. On March 12, commissioners voted 6-1 that if they decide to appoint rather than hold an election, which is their right, former Mayor David Dermer is their man. Commissioner Jerry Libbin was the one dissenter.

Deputy City Attorney Jean Olin told commissioners that, by law, they could only appoint Dermer between Nov. 5 and Dec. 5, and had until July 16 to decide to call an election instead.

A couple of days later, Commissioner Jonah Wolfson (a lawyer) threw a curve ball at the City Attorney’s Office. Not only would commissioners have to wait 30 days after Steinberg left the dais to make an appointment, but also to call an election, opined Wolfson.

City Attorney Jose Smith decided Wolfson’s read of the charter was right. If Steinberg’s last day isn’t until Nov. 4, “the remaining members of the city commission must fill the vacancy by appointment within the 30 day period commencing Nov. 5, 2008,” Smith wrote. “If no appointment is made, then a special election must be held to fill the vacancy.” That would be too late for a Miami Beach election to be put on the Nov. 4 presidential ballot, a much less expensive proposition than holding a special election, weeks later.

Semantics aside, Wolfson wants Dermer appointed, while Steinberg prefers a special election.

The last time the city found itself with a commissioner stepping down a year early was in 2006 when Luis Garcia ran successfully for state representative, District 107. In that case, the city attorney allowed a different interpretation of the same section 2.07 of the city charter.

Garcia submitted a letter of resignation on July 7, 2006. His last day as commissioner was to be Nov. 7, 2006. The commission was left with a decision: Should it appoint someone to fill the remaining year of Garcia’s seat, or hold an election? On July 12, 2006, it voted to hold an election. Michael Gongora eventually won a runoff against Deede Weithorn. He then had to run a year later, and lost a close race to Ed Tobin.

Wolfson claimed last week that the election to replace Garcia violated the charter because it was called before Garcia’s last day as a commissioner. Smith disagreed with Wolfson. He ruled that although the election may not have followed the “literal reading of the charter, it was lawful.”

It appears the appointment versus election debate will continue for some time as the rhetoric heats up between Wolfson and Steinberg.

“I would like the person who replaces me on the commission to be the people’s choice, not my colleague’s choice,” Steinberg said March 25 at the unusually crowded Tuesday Morning Breakfast Club, a weekly political breakfast in the back of David’s Café.

Samuel Cherry, son of local gadfly Harry Cherry, said at the breakfast he wants an election “mainly because Dermer has been up there long enough. If he wants to run again, he should.”

Activist Gabrielle Redfern and businessman Luis Salom are registered to run and don’t want to wait until 2009.  Salom lost a tough race to Wolfson last year. Bower has suggested it would make more sense for them to run in 2009 when she and Libbin will be up for re-election, Steinberg’s full term will have ended and Commissioner Saul Gross will be termed-out of office.

Vernon Garraway, another breakfast club attendee, is against holding an election this year. “The cost of an election is too expensive and we don’t get enough turnout to justify it,” Garraway said.

Wolfson sent out another memo Tuesday afternoon that challenged Steinberg to step down early if he wants to make an election more likely. He suggested Steinberg clean out his office by July 1.

“The commission could then make an appointment within 30 days or set the special election on the date of the presidential election so that local taxpayers are not forced to bear the full expense of a special election in December 2008 or January 2009,” Wolfson wrote.

Steinberg shot back that Wolfson’s pressing the issue was politics to hurt him in order to bolster his opponent Geller, who supported Wolfson’s election.

“The memorandum can be viewed as nothing more than a concerted effort by Commissioner Wolfson and [Geller] to improperly use City of Miami Beach resources to further [Geller’s] campaign while attempting to prevent me from continuing to serve the people of Miami Beach who elected me,” Steinberg wrote in an e-mail.

Wolfson fired back by saying, “Obviously, the only one campaigning here is Steinberg. My points were points of law. He has no honor and is not fit to serve us in Tallahassee.”

Wolfson argued that when a commissioner is elected to a short term, he or she is locked in perpetual campaign mode, and thus doesn’t have time to serve the people. Dermer has pledged not to use the seat as a platform to run again.

A special election would mean the people of Miami Beach have gone to the polls every year between 2005 and 2009, which Wolfson called “an absurd situation that serves no good public purpose.”

Comments? E-mail ben@miamisunpost.com

Comments? E-mail letters@miamisunpost.com