Website last updated
Sunday June 07, 2009 06:49:56 AM
Photos by OurTown50.com
Join our
Sarasota ViewsTM
|
||||||
|
www.thecanadianpharmacy.com
|
Editor: OurTown Sarasota .com 3-09
Editor OurTown50.com 3-09
Florida needs progressive
solar policies
March 2008 The Argus Foundation Supports the Rights of the Citizens of the City of Sarasota to Elect Their Mayor The City of Sarasota currently experiences a low level of turnout in its elections, to the point that Sarasota suffers from a crisis of legitimacy as a representative form of government. Each districted commissioner runs on a platform that narrowly represents the interest of selected neighborhoods. At large candidates, despite being elected by all citizens, offer no greater ability to carry out an agenda that reflects the vision of all Sarasotans, as they have no more influence at the Commission table than do district elected leaders. Currently there are five agendas at the table, with a plethora of priorities, and no well articulated community direction. A popularly elected Mayor is needed to galvanize public consensus for the overall direction of the City. In addition to energizing voter turnout, a vision supported by the voters, would give the elected Mayor the need to be accountable, while providing predictability to the direction of the City. The fact that the Mayor is elected by all of Sarasota’s citizens, gives the Mayor greater ability to work with Commissioners to adhere to a strategic direction while influencing certainty in long term planning and goal setting. A popularly elected Mayor would also be a legitimate voice of the community. In the past Sarasota has lost untold opportunities of influence and tax dollars by not having an elected Mayor who could be an active participant in the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Having a highly visible, articulate, elected Mayor would not only represent Sarasota, but would also provide influence at both state and Federal levels. To reject the opportunity to popularly elect the Mayor, is the ultimate rejection of taxpayer’s rights. If it is the intention of elected leaders to represent the voice of the people, a popularly elected Mayor should be at the heart of the process. The Argus Foundation encourages all to vote their right to elect the Mayor of Sarasota.
Dear Congressman Buchanan,
How has the Sarasota School District saved taxpayers money? The following was submitted by the Communications Office of the School District. 11-08-08
The School Board of Sarasota County Florida Nov. 5, 2008 Schools operations division committed to driving down costs SARASOTA – Taking an aggressive approach to the harsh economic realities the Sarasota County Schools must address for the foreseeable future, the district Operations Division has worked tirelessly to improve efficiency and productivity over the past year. Their efforts have saved the district more than $13 million and improved services to students at the same time. The Operations Division is responsible for most of the services that support teachers and other instructional staff in schools, including facilities planning, construction management, maintenance, custodial services, food service; transportation and security. The division includes some 1,400 employees and manages an annul budget of about $130 million. The individual departments provide services on an industrial scale. Each year they serve more than five million meals, clean more than seven million square feet of floor space and transport 22,000 students a day more than six million miles a year. An enterprise of that size can generate significant savings with even minor improvements in efficiency. Some of the significant recent initiatives from individual operations departments are described below. The full 2007-2008 Operations Department activities report is available on-line at http://www.sarasotacountyschools.net/operations.asp.Planning and Construction (MORE) Page 2 Operations report Maintenance and Custodial time and familiarize staff with their target service areas.
Energy Conservation Food and Nutrition Transportation Security (MORE) Page 3 Operations Report In addition to the savings represented by the examples above, the Operations Division is investing in long-term efficiencies with a number of environmentally friendly initiatives. The new middle school and elementary school in North Port are being built to the specifications of the U.S. Green Building Council for certification under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program. The division also is using only environmentally friendly cleaning products and has developed a catalogue of low-maintenance, Florida friendly plants for use in all future district landscaping projects. The district also is piloting the state’s concurrency program that will require residential developers to pay the costs of the impact of new development on schools in advance of construction. These initiatives are particularly important in the current challenging economic environment, but COO Lempe said they would have been pursued regardless of the health of the economy. "We never lose sight of the fact that the entire purpose of the Operations Division is to support teaching and learning," Lempe said. "Efficiency and productivity are crucial to our mission because every dollar we save is a dollar that can go back into the classroom." -SCS-
|
Communities don’t have to accept the idea of "inevitable growth" November 2008 A local magazine published the following quote from a representative of the homebuilding industry: "It would be nearsighted, if not hypocritical, to try to deny the future growth of our area … in fact, it would be impossible to stop it." This is hardly a newsworthy quote – we’ve routinely been told that growth is inevitable and cannot be stopped. It has even been suggested that there is a state law that prohibits local efforts to curtail development. We are admonished of Sarasota’s failed effort to slow growth in the 1960’s by not building infrastructure. Growth occurred anyway and the County was forced to retrofit excessively expensive infrastructure. If growth is inevitable, does that mean that growth never stops? Sarasota has 367,000 acres of land and if we built to the same densities as New York City or Tokyo, we could presumably accommodate millions of people. While many of us would consider this scenario ridiculous (some may not) I use it to suggest there will be a point where the population of Sarasota County stabilizes. The question is when and how that stabilization will occur. The concept of inevitable growth has always bothered me. Many communities have had no population growth for years, even decades, and some have even declined. Why doesn’t this rule apply to them? Populations grow because people choose to live in a community that offers the best quality of life that they can afford. This means growth is inevitable only as long as an area remains attractive. For Sarasota, weather alone will allow us to remain attractive long enough to lose the charm and character that endears this special place to many of us. For this reason growth management and long-range community planning become critical decisions. While Sarasota may be experiencing a no population growth during this economic recession, most experts agree that a, a growth trend is sure to return. For most counties, build-out isn’t deliberately planned, but results from a series of incremental and isolated decisions. Development approvals overstress infrastructure such as roads, parks, schools and jails. When more infrastructure is built, more development is approved that again overcrowds the infrastructure. This mindless cycle repeats itself until all available land is developed and open space amenities are lost. As bizarre as it seems, this is a standard planning model for many Florida counties. Pinellas, Broward and Miami-Dade are classic examples. Rather than planning what their future community could look like and determining what facilities would need to be built and what resources should be preserved, they develop by default. Thousands of uncoordinated development decisions are made with no regard to a long-term coordinated plan. Certainly conditions change, and plans will need to be changed, but revising a destination plan is a much better option than making chaotic decisions with no destination in mind. Sarasota County is at a critical point. We can follow the default planning model of over-developed counties, or we can determine what amenities, assets and characters are worth protecting, and adopt a plan that preserves them. Rather than competing with other counties or cities to see who can become the next Orlando, Sarasota should strive to become an exemplary mid-sized county that recognizes open space, agriculture and environmentally sensitive areas as permanent uses, rather than lands in a holding pattern for mindless "inevitable growth" yet to come. Creating a sustainable Sarasota means focusing more on promoting economic, capital, social and spiritual growth than on population growth. Many communities with stable populations develop these assets and amenities and provide a high quality, attractive living environment for their citizens. A community that deliberately plans to preserve its unique character will prosper economically and distinguish itself from other areas that accept the defeatist slogan of "inevitable growth" at any cost, and over-develop themselves into oblivion. The 1960’s effort to slow growth didn’t fail simply because they did not build infrastructure. It failed because they not only didn’t build infrastructure, they approved the development. This makes about as much sense as buying a fish but not an aquarium. Sarasota’s existing Comprehensive Plans have enough growth approved today to double the County’s existing population. Considering the difficulty in financing the infrastructure needed to accommodate the first 350,000 people, it would be foolhardy to add more now, before we solve the problems of the past. It is by NOT adding additional development capacity to these existing Plans that we are most likely to assure that Sarasota County doesn’t become an accomplice in the same botched planning exercise that created Florida’s lower East Coast. Instead we have an opportunity to offer the community a chance to avoid wall-to-wall suburbanization. Jon Thaxton is a Sarasota County Commissioner (District 5)
|
||||