Monday, May 26, 2008
A Not-So-Quiet Day In The Park
Saturday, May 17, 2008
School Board Meeting on Wednesday, May 21st...
Be advised that you MUST register in advance with Miami-Dade Schools to address the Board. The required form can be downloaded here. It is easiest to print out the form and fax it to the number indicated. This form must be received no later than Monday, May 19th AT 4:30 PM, so be sure to ACT QUICKLY!
The meeting will be held on the first floor of the Miami-Dade Schools Building at 1450 NE 2nd Avenue. The official meeting agenda can be found at the following URL:
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Eye on Wednesday...
Monday, May 12, 2008
Help Pound the Pavement...
Saturday, May 10, 2008
Rabin Gets it Right...
The reason? Building community facilities and expanding infrastructure within this buffer serve to promote further westward development. Housing such services on the edge of rural areas only provides greater incentive to convert presently vacant land to denser uses. This is particularly troubling, given that builder Lennar is actively seeking an exemption to construct a mixed-use development on nearly 1,000 acres between Southwest 162nd and 177th avenues, and 136th and 152nd streets.
Miami Herald reporter Charles Rabin spelled out the implications of this issue in his May 4th article, Glades Invasion Already Under Way. In recognizing the current siting of HHH1 will have much broader implications than a simple widening of local roads, we encourage the School Board to relocate the project site in favor of a location in accordance with the CDMP. Allowing this Pandora's Box to be opened will literally pave the way for greater sprawl to the west... literally!
Sunday, May 4, 2008
April 30th Meeting Highlighted in Miami Herald
Saturday, May 3, 2008
An Open Letter of Thanks to Facilities Planning...
Dear Fernando,
I just wanted to send a quick letter to sincerely thank you, the regional superintendent, and the rest of the Miami-Dade Schools Facilities Planning staff for your participation in our recent public meeting on Wednesday, April 30th. We greatly appreciate your acceptance of our invitation to address the residents of our community with regards to proposed school HHH1. I would also like to thank Principal Ortiz for providing Jorge Mas Canosa Middle as a venue, and providing support for our gathering.
I do hope you and the entire Facilities Planning staff found value in what transpired that evening. Since the inception of our talks only three weeks ago, we have consistently maintained that your office has failed to provide for proper public process with regards to this project. I would maintain that having engaged our community more than two years ago, in advance of your efforts, might have saved this project from several regrettable issues that now plague its continued development. Our meeting has, in my mind, thrown that reality into far greater relief. Myriad questions and concerns have emerged directly in response to your presentation that evening, including:
· The assertion that public notice published via classified advertisements or poorly circulated periodicals, ie. Miami Daily Business Review, is not sufficient for publicly funded projects that far exceed $50 million dollars in cost (the true value being withheld by your office) and require the controversial use of eminent domain
· The clear disregard for limitations set forth in the Miami-Dade County Comprehensive Master Development Plan (CDMP) regarding construction east of the Urban Development Boundary (EDU-2A), proper assessment of suitable infrastructure (EDU-2E) and consistency with present and projected surrounding land use (EDU-2F)
· A conspicuous failure to acknowledge the likely need for, and possibility of, future expansion on the site that would drive student numbers far above that which is currently projected. Such an expansion would not only threaten to undermine the mandatory acreage required for sizable facilities as stipulated in the 2007 State Guidelines for Educational Facilities, but would necessarily demand infrastructure beyond that currently allotted in the present plan.
I hope the overarching theme of the evening became crystal clear: while we acknowledge the need to comply with class size limits, this is simply the wrong location for a high school. The desire to be heard and have proper input in the process was clearly expressed very early on in our gathering, and I hope you now understand the need to involve communities early on in your process. Though in this matter your office has historically made little effort to do so, we nonetheless happily offer our assistance in locating a more appropriate location for this school going forward.
On a happier note, I was gratified to hear that the proposed school would boast a greenhouse and “agricultural component”. In the very near future, students might look upon such areas as their only reminder of what’s been lost to careless development.
cc: Dr. Wilbert “Tee” Holloway, District 1
cc: Dr. Solomon C. Stinson, District 2
cc: Dr. Martin Karp, District 3
cc: Ms. Perla Tavares Hantman, District 4
cc: Mr. Renier Diaz de la Portilla, District 5
cc: Agustin J. Barrera, District 6
cc: Ana Rivas-Logan, District 7
cc: Dr. Marta Perez, District 8
cc: Ms. Evelyn Langlieb Greer, District 9
cc: Rudy Crew, Miami-Dade Public Schools Superintendent
cc: Commissioner Dennis Moss, District 9
Thursday, May 1, 2008
A Clear Message...
…was relayed on Wednesday night to Miami-Dade Schools Facilities Planning staff on hand for a public forum on HHH1. Residents, many of whom saw site plans for the first time that evening, expressed serious concerns regarding potential impacts from the proposed school. Though there was unanimous acknowledgement that a new school is needed, residents voiced their clear disdain for the surreptitious manner with which the project has been developed over the past two years, and expressed a clear desire to see the school moved to an alternate location.
Over two hundred residents gathered in the cafeteria at Jorge Mas Canosa Middle School to discuss the matter. Pointed issues were raised in the course of the meeting, including:
•The lack of transparency that has plagued this publicly funded project from its inception.
•The proposed project’s violations regarding proximity to the Urban Development Boundary (UDB), as stipulated in the Comprehensive Master Development Plan (CDMP).
•Uncertainties regarding future unilateral expansions beyond what is currently planned for the site.
•Numerous ways in which the project will inevitably compromise many of the values that initially brought residents to the area, and dramatically impact current infrastructure and traffic in an otherwise quiet residential community.
We would like to personally thank Miami-Dade Public Schools staff for accepting the invitation to address our residents. Most importantly, we would like to thank ALL the residents that took time out of their busy schedules to attend the event. While a lot of language was thrown around last night about a “benefit to the community”, it must be recognized that the community itself should decide what constitutes a benefit, and be considered an equal partner in site acquisition and planning.