HOME | CALENDAR |  33133 STORE |  AD RATES
Welcome to the Grapevine

News you can use. - Sunlight is the best disinfectant

Friday, May 18, 2007

Mayor is slapped on the hand for ethics breach

The Miami-Dade Ethics Commission has fined Mayor Manny Diaz $250 for his role in a controversial land deal in Coconut Grove.
Story here.

Reprimand letter here.

YOU MAY NOT LIFT THE PHOTOS & TEXT. IT'S COPYRIGHTED INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY. YOU CAN HOWEVER SHARE A STORY ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY USING THE LINKS HERE.
For linking to this one story, just click on the time it was posted & just this story will open for sharing - only through social media. Not copying and pasting.

12 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mayor Manny Diaz was only fined $250 by Ethics and Public Trust for his scandalous dirty little secret real-estate partnership with Joe Arriola and Johnny Winton.

That $250 is a slap on the wrist for Manny and a slap on the face for our community.

That $250 fine is about the same price as a speeding ticket.

Former City of Miami Commissioner Johnny Winton will have his day in court of June 8th to determine the penalty imposed on him for kicking a police officer in the crouch.

If the same Ethics and Public Trust standards apply, then in all probability Winton may expect to receive a fine of $18 that is equal to that of a overdo parking meter fine.

Harry Emilio Gottlieb
Coconut Grove, FL.

May 19, 2007 8:04 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Harry is WAY over-heated. Must be off his meds.
The "scandalous dirty little secret real-estate partnership" was duly reported in Diaz's financial disclosure reports on file with the proper authorities.

May 19, 2007 11:26 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Winton must be pretty slick kicker. Personally I wouldn't even know where to find a person's "crouch" much less kick them in it!
But in defense of Harry, when you have a quota of writing 10 silly self-righteous letters to the editor a day, you can't slow down to edit.

May 19, 2007 11:35 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good point. Harry IS horribly error prone. For example, is an "overdo parking meter fine" one that you pay over and over again?

May 19, 2007 11:45 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

When Manny Diaz was elected mayor he owed the city over $100,000 in back taxes for the Monty Raw Bar Restaurant. Is that still unpaid?

May 19, 2007 12:18 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Manny Diaz was reprimanded by the County Ethics Commission for an ethics violation.

Harry writes very well. Luckily for Harry there is so much corruption in Miami and so many sleazy lobbyists that he has plenty of material for inspiration.

May 19, 2007 12:50 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks to the previous anonymous contributors for pointing out grammatical errors in my post.

I hope that the corrections made here are satisfactory.

Please be so kind as to include your name and e-mail so I may forward all future text to you in advance for your most helpful and appreciated expert editing assistance.

Mayor Manny Diaz was only fined $250 by Ethics and Public Trust for his ill-conceived real-estate partnership with Joe Arriola and Johnny Winton.

That $250 is a slap on the wrist to Manny and a slap on the face to our entire community.

That $250 fine is about the same price as a speeding ticket.

Former City of Miami Commissioner Johnny Winton will have his day in court of June 8th to determine the penalty imposed on him for kicking a police officer in the crotch.

If the same Ethics and Public Trust standards apply, then in all probability Winton may expect to receive a fine of $18 that is equal to that of an expired parking meter fine.

Harry Emilio Gottlieb
Coconut Grove, FL.

May 19, 2007 1:22 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Harry Emilio takes himself WAY too seriously. Thank goodness no on else does.

May 19, 2007 3:07 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I always thought Harry was the ultimate aging Grove yuppie - pompous, judgmental, and arrogant; hurling pontifications in every direction. Now I’m beginning to see that he is just a little bit slow. I like him more now!

May 19, 2007 3:48 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This blog is not about attacking Harry! You finger pointers are more self righteous, pompous, judgmental and arrogant than he is!

You know what they say about finger pointing - there are four more pointing back at you. Yes a stupid cliche, but how appropriate.

Why don't you spare us all and just write about the subject at hand? You sissies were probably the butt ugly bullies in the school yard. Nowadays your bullying would only be tolerated with an automatic weapon.

You're much older now...grow up.

Diaz was found guilty by the "County Ethics Commission" - not Harry. Take your frustrations out on them.

Diaz deserves what he gets. The miniscule fine is not the point. The intrinsic corruption in the way these men do business is what has been further proven through this exposure.

Mark your calendars for June 8. The way overdue demoralization of arrogant Johnny promises to be good entertainment for all.

May 19, 2007 6:22 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sometimes a slap just is not enough.

Why on earth would Florida state officials want to reign in the over the top spending of local governments? Why would all taxpayers deserve to have their money saved by themselves rather than wasted by out of control local politicians? There are lots of examples. One can be found in Surfside, Florida, where there used to be outstanding government, but now there is the most wasteful, inefficient, incompetent government ever in the town's 70+ year history. This year they passed the most bloated, fat, wasteful, unproductive town budget ever, serving up a perfect reason for strong state imposed medicine to cure this growing disease.

Here's the factual background.

Surfside 1935: Local residents obtain state approval and create an independent municipality, the Town of Surfside, based on their desire to maintain a community with independence from Miami Beach and to have a small, accountable, and efficient local government to reflect the priorities and well being of its own residents. Over the 7 decades to follow, Surfside has its ups and downs, but generally does a superb job at serving its residents, remaining debt free, and being a widely recognized example for cities and towns and villages all over the nation.

Surfside 1990 - 1992: Mayor Eli Tourgeman enacts foolish budget policies with a 3-2 vote of his Town Commission that put the Town into the red, ending his term with town deficits. Tourgeman supports a number of major zoning variances and tries to break down the zoning code to get approval for a 20 story condo despite a height limit in the code of 12 stories. The voters turned back Toureman's approval in a referendum that defeated and reversed the condo project's variance approval. In 1990 he was elected mayor, in 1992 he was voted off of the commission when voters saw his real priorities and he came in last from a field of 10 candidates.

Surfside 1992 - 2004: Mayor Paul Novack and a new Town Commission unanimously enact budget corrections and fiscally responsible policies and every year for 12 years the town operated under balanced, stable and efficient budgets, with production of increased levels of town services, and numerous capital projects undertaken and completed that upgraded the parks, playgrounds, streets, drainage system, business district, Veterans Park, Town Hall, and much more, all with no debt, no bonds, and with the building of significant town surplus funds to serve the town's present and future. The town attracted a new Publix and many new restaurants and shops for the business district and made improvements and expansions to town parking facilities. Plans are made for a new town library and hi-tech information center to go on newly acquired property on the west side of Collins Avenue. The town was internationally recognized as a model community, and in 2003 Novack was honored as the state-wide "Community Steward of the Year" in Tallahassee. Mayor Novack was elected by the voters six times to serve as mayor, not one variance for height or density or setbacks or uses were ever approved during his tenure, and he retired from office in 2004 with official tributes from the Florida House of Representatives, the United States Congressional Record, and many others.

Surfside 2004 - 2006: Mayor Tim Will and a new Town Commission operate the town carefully and responsibly with balanced budgets, continued expansion of town surplus funds, obtaining a grant to help pay for the new library project, and making plans for the renovation and upgrading of the Community Center. The project would have made vast improvements to the facilities and would not have involved any closure or reduction in use by residents. There was no debt, no bonds, and yet there were even further enhancements of many town services. The town was honored by statewide organizations for superb levels of municipal accounting and auditing and outstanding transparency and performance with public funds. After several productive terms on the Town Commission, and service on the Town's Planning and Zoning Board, and a term as Mayor, Mayor Will retired from public service.

Surfside 2006 - 2007: Mayor Charles Burkett and a new Town Commission spurs, devises, creates and presides over a new town budget that is the largest and by far the most expensive and bloated budget in the town's history, spending more on lawyers than ever, needlessly paying millions of dollars of town funds to "settle" dubious law suits that objective outside reviews found had no merit at all with payments made to the claimants (Burkett campaign supporters) just before Courts were set to rule in the Town's favor, spending over $300,000 on a town charette to document Burkett's plans to change zoning laws and other pre-conceived notions for the benefit of non-resident commercial interests, hired a large law firm for a minimum annual fee of $600,000, no town projects or improved service levels, serious draining of town surplus funds, hired many new consultants with large fees paid by the town, and initiated plans for a public relations campaign to approve putting the town into deep debt with bond issues for as much as $50 million to substantially raise tax burdens on residents for many years to come. The town newsletter is expanded to include political attacks and misinformation every month at a cost of approximately $100,000 in taxpayers' funds for the one year alone. No projects are undertaken, and the community center pool is closed on a ruse after a pool pump has a minor short that the town fails to repair or replace. During his first year in office many respected town employees leave Surfside including its Police Chief, Town Engineer, Town Comptroller, Tourist Director, Public Works Director, and others, all of whom are replaced with "old friends" and campaign workers of Mayor Burkett. Burkett refuses to release his financial disclosure documents from court cases and his membership on City of Miami Beach boards and committees. Information surfaces that indicates he is really a resident of Miami Beach despite owning a house (one of his many, many properties in Florida) in Surfside. Mayor Burkett seeks to contract out services such as fire service, sanitation services, police services, and administrative services to the City of Miami Beach and private companies. His first year in office ends with a disastrous record of misfeasance, a vastly inflated town budget, and negative results for the community.

May 19, 2007 9:59 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The post above was a complete buzz kill. Learn how to edit! Blog posts shouldn't be an unabridged history of mankind!

May 20, 2007 8:43 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home