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My
Unrequited Pen Pal
Why Won’t
City Attorney Jorge Fernandez Write to Me? And Who’s
That New Girl in Economic Development? Wait, the City of
Miami Has a Department Like That? For Real?
“My conclusion is that whatever process I may be
involved in, it is exempt from public records.'
by
Rebecca Wakefield
“I’m
not required to put anything in writing to you.” — Miami
city attorney Jorge L. Fernandez to impertinent
columnist. “I don’t want to create another public
record.”
What I
had asked Fernandez for was a written notice he’d
allegedly given to the city that a Florida Bar
investigation into his role in the fire fee debacle had
advanced to the next level. The investigation was first
reported in March by the Daily Business Review.
What I had heard more recently was that the Bar’s local
counsel had found cause to refer the matter to a
grievance committee, and Fernandez had notified staff at
the city.
Usually
Florida Bar investigations into lawyers are private
until the process runs its course. But I reasoned that
since a) Fernandez works for the city, b) the city works
for the public and c) this investigation was regarding
his professional conduct in his public capacity, this
notice, if it existed, must be a public record. So I
asked for it, first in writing to the city’s press
handlers, then via a phone call to Fernandez’s office.
Fernandez said he’d reviewed the public records laws and
found an exception regarding the privacy of Florida Bar
complaints until a finding of probable cause was made.
“My conclusion is that whatever process I may be
involved in, it is exempt from public records,” he told
me. “Beyond that, it is my position that on any matter,
even a city matter, I don’t provide comments on matters
under litigation.”
That
sounded like $200 an hour worth of impressive legalese,
but I’m woefully undereducated in these matters. Could
you, I asked sweetly, just put that in writing for me?
That’s when Fernandez, in the nicest tone possible, told
me that, no, he wouldn’t.
The
clever devil knew that I would just take that piece of
paper and send it to public records godsends such as Pat
Gleason of the Florida Attorney General’s Office, or the
good folks at the First Amendment Foundation. On
deadline and sans papel, I called them up anyway.
Neither FAF director Adria Harper, nor Gleason could
provide an immediate off-the-cuff rebuttal to Fernandez,
but both were a little skeptical. “It seems critical to
get some basis for denying the request [in writing],”
Gleason advised.
Then I
talked to Carlos Leon, the Bar counsel handling the case
not only of Fernandez, but four other attorneys involved
in the fire fee deal — Mayor Manny Diaz, former city
attorney Alejandro Vilarello, former assistant city
attorney Charles Mays and private attorney Hank Adorno.
He confirmed that all five cases were referred and are
pending the grievance committee process, which he
expects to be wrapped up sometime in October. Leon
stressed that just because the investigation made it to
a second level does not imply anyone is guilty of
anything. It just means he wasn’t able to easily resolve
(or absolve) the cases.
Lest it
be forgotten, this issue is, at bottom, about who the
four public servants with the professional experience to
know better actually worked for when they signed off on
a highly questionable deal to pay a handful of people $7
million to make an inconvenient lawsuit go away.
Taxpayers? Joe Arriola’s blind ego?
Lisa
Lisa
Lisa
Mazique was hired on June 5 as the city of Miami’s new
director of Economic Development. It was one of former
City Manager Joe Arriola’s last acts of hiring via his
favorite method, that of fiat. According to city
officials, the $135,000-a-year position was not
advertised.
Economic Development has traditionally been a great
department (one of several) to stash connected yet
less-than-stellar people because it has a broad, nearly
indefinable mandate and a constituency with virtually no
political pull. If this department is ineffective, no
one notices. The job description for Mazique’s position
is sufficiently vague as to render it completely
dependent on political whim — the director “directs,
coordinates, and administers municipal policies and
regulations pertaining to the acquisition, development,
management and disposition of City owned property, and
the City of Miami’s real estate and economic development
activities.”
Lisa
Mazique is not necessarily a usual suspect. She comes
from New Orleans and, originally, Chicago. She’s got the
requisite college degrees. She ran the New Orleans
Redevelopment Authority (NORA) for eight years, until
just before accepting the position in Miami. But the Big
Easy wasn’t always easy on her. NORA was a chronically
underfunded state agency charged with addressing
“blighted housing,” but near as I could tell from a
reasonably vigorous Google search, the agency hadn’t
impressed critics of the city’s “vacant, blighted
neighborhoods bleeding from years of neglect,” such as
John McIlwain, a senior fellow for housing at the Urban
Land Institute, quoted in the Times-Picayune this
summer.
Earlier
this year, the city of New Orleans stopped contracting
with NORA altogether. NORA had stopped accepting blight
removal-type applications sometime before. In June
aspects of the
Bring New Orleans Back Commission became interesed in an
Urban Land Institute recommendation to create something
other than NORA to oversee redevelopment.
But the
icing on the cake was Mazique’s bashing by her New
Orleans critics for moving a blighted-as-hell
4,000-square-foot Victorian-era house to a lot that was
too small for it. According to the Times-Picayune
in a 2005 article, Mazique had acquired the lot and the
house from a colleague on a not-for-profit board. “It’s
awful, and a moral outrage, that the woman in charge of
the agency that is charged with eradicating blight has
allowed a piece of property that she controls to remain
in the condition that it’s in,” complained Owen
Kendrick, one of Mazique’s critics.
I
heard that Mazique got to Miami because she went through
a Harvard fellow program with an assistant to Arriola’s
foxy former operations chief, Alicia Cuervo Schreiber.
Commissioner Linda Haskins (right), who was bureaucrat
Haskins prior to Johnny Winton’s airport fracas, recalls
doing the due-diligence on Mazique before she was hired.
“I got great references on her,” she recalls. “Nothing
came up in the background check and there was never any
push from a commissioner.”
Haskins
said that after Mazique was hired, the city rumor mill
about her background caused her to check again. She
found a couple of articles about the house deal, but
nothing that would lead her to think that Mazique wasn’t
perfectly qualified.
Mazique
declined to talk about her past, although she mentioned
she’s excited to be in Miami. “When you’re in public
office, you take your licks,” she told me. “I realize
it’s fair game, but it’s a private business matter and I
don’t think it has a bearing on what’s going on here.”
“New
Orleans has got its warts,” she continued. “There’s much
of the pain and angst of the past year, and the
‘crawfish in a barrel mentality.’”
Commissioner Michelle Spence-Jones, who briefly met
Mazique in New Orleans shortly before she came to Miami,
said she’s a “nice young lady” who is “on the ball and
wants to do the right thing.”
The
right thing? OK, well that sounds pretty good. What is
it that the Department of Economic Development does
again?
Comments? E-mail
wakefield@miamisunpost.com.
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