Showing posts with label Dale Holness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dale Holness. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2022

Shameful! South Florida Business Journal, showing no regard for ethics, aims to give an "Achievement Award" to Keith Koenig, Robert Runcie's #1 financial backer, apologist and puppet-master, who as the front-and-center FACE of #Broward's White Biz Estab., did NOT want to know the truth abt rampant corruption, thievery, + incompetency, just wanted to ensure access to BCPS contracts! He loves the $ gravy train that is BCPS!

Shameful! South Florida Business Journal, showing no regard for ethics, aims to give an "Achievement Award" to Keith Koenig, Robert Runcie's #1 financial backer/apologist, who was the front-and-center FACE of #Broward's White Biz Estab., who did NOT want to know abt rampant corruption, thievery, + incompetency, just wanted to ensure access to BCPS contracts! He loves the $ gravy train that is BCPS!

Like so many other galling things that we've observed in the South Florida media scene of 2022, just when you think that you have a reasonably-informed understanding of just how low low really is, there's someone or a platform who by sheer dent of their sheer imbecility, takes your breath away with their brazen disregard for the known facts and the history of the area.

Someone who will act as if all the evidence of unethical behavior and conduct you see all around you is really not there. It's all just our imagination we are told. Or, possibly a frame-up.

But what are we to make of all the self-evident fingerprints belonging to people whose names are well-known to us, and whose alibis, excuses and explanations for why they looked the other way fails every smell test?

And so it is that with these questions In mind that I share the rather shocking news with you today that I have just learned that the South Florida Business Journal, despite having plenty of time to vet and choose someone worthy, aims to go ahead and reward Keith Koenig, the CEO of City Furniture, with their 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award at a ceremony in April. 

Koenig is the person who was the safe, White face of Broward's Business Establishment for most of the recent past during the ruinous cult-like reign of Robert Runcie as Broward Schools Superintendent, that only ended recently. Koenig is someone who continually defended someone in great authority who was charged with lying to a grand jury, even while other charges were not brought that should have been.

Keith Koenig is someone who could not be bothered to answer any questions from the South Florida news media at any point over the last few years about his personal role in any of these matters, to say nothing of his personally paying for an attempted public whitewash via $ to Smith-Knibbs PR.

Which, fortunately, failed.

Here's the thread that brought us to today's incredible news... with more information below it that connects-the-dots!

















































Video above of so-called press conference where no questions from media were allowed is at: https://youtu.be/y0EuPhn2FDo

The folks behind it? The Usual Suspects: 


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Puppet-master Keith Koenig's role in this sordid story is below in red. I'm printing this Sun Sentinel editorial and Scott Travis article in its entirety here, so that you will know exactly what was said and written last year, which was easily searchable by the SFBJ if they really cared about... facts.

And optics.

When you reward the people who were in a unique position to demand much better of elected officials and government functionaries but who instead, FOR YEARS, looked the other way, as rampant corruption, incompetency and inefficiency that harmed all the kids in Broward and in many cases kept them in unsafe schools with moldy walls and missing roofs.

All of that, even while lots of honest and forthright people in this community -including me- have been sharing all the known facts about what was going on and didn't blanch from the unpleasant reality. 

Koenig and his gaggle of behind-the-scenes puppet-masters at The Broward Workshop as well as his  many allies in the crony capitalism pay-for-play scene of Broward that is SO dependent on government largesse, teat money, in this case, taxpayer money controlled by Broward Schools and the all-female, all-Democratic Broward School Board, are as morally responsible for the continuing mess that is the Broward Schools as Robert Runcie and former School attorney Barbara Myrick and Schools mouthpiece Kathy Koch.

South Florida Sun Sentinel
Editorial
Here's more evidence of why Runcie has to go
July 21, 2021

Like every school superintendent, Broward County's Robert Runcie says that it's all about the kids.

Whenever a crisis came, however, it was all about Robert Runcie.

Kathy Koch supposedly serves as the school district's chief communications officer. As the Sun Sentinel reported Sunday, however, Koch considers herself to be keeper of the Runcie flame.

After Runcie's April 21 arrest for allegedly lying to a grand jury, Koch secretly organized a rally for the superintendent two days later. To the public, it was to look spontaneous. It was anything but.

Koch worked with such Runcie fans as Keith Koenig, the Broward Workshop chairman and City Furniture CEO, to turn out a friendly crowd. Koch arranged for the school district's TV station to cover the event. As for herself, Koch said, "I would remain invisible."

With the school board set to debate Runcie's status four days later, Koch and others surely hoped that the staged event would save the superintendent's job. It didn't. Runcie had lost majority support and announced that he would resign.

Perhaps Koch hoped that in saving Runcie's job, she could save hers. It's a cushy gig. Koch makes $168,000 from the district and gets to remain as president of Ambit Advertising and Public Relations in Fort Lauderdale.

Barbara Myrick, the school board's former attorney and another Runcie acolyte, ruled that Koch could moonlight. More about Myrick in a moment.

Runcie's fans cite academic progress during his decade running the district. Whatever good Runcie did, however, is outweighed by his record since the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas shooting.

District officials lost track of and mishandled the shooter. Runcie and Myrick sought to cover up that culpability by sanitizing the district's report.

The Sun Sentinel won a Pulitzer Prize for publishing the truth. It made Runcie look bad, but the public deserved - and needed - to hear it.

A technological mistake allowed Sun Sentinel reporters to see blacked-out portions of the report. When the reporters used that blunder to inform the public, Myrick tried to have them arrested.

Damaging news continued. Two statewide grand juries criticized Broward County for its poor record on enforcing school safety laws that the Legislature passed after the Parkland shooting.

Runcie dismissed such criticism as blithely as Gov. DeSantis ignores rising COVID-19 numbers. Runcie's board enablers forgave him, as they forgave him for bungling the school construction bond that they praised him for getting voters to pass.

Sunday's story made clear again that Koch's priority had become Runcie. Koch tried to defend her actions by saying that she was on personal time. In fact, she was exploiting her professional role and trying to keep the public from knowing about it.

This is a terrible time for any school district in Florida to be looking for a superintendent. Record numbers of them are retiring or switching jobs.

The COVID-19 pandemic and the grind of distance learning is the main factor. But superintendents face unprecedented pressure, especially in this state.

This year, the Legislature again expanded the school voucher program. Republicans in Tallahassee remain focused on privatizing public education.

Meanwhile, DeSantis and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran offered almost no help to school districts on how to reopen safely last year, as the pandemic raged. Corcoran threatened to withhold money from districts where students stayed home for the second half of the year.

This year, seeking to stoke his presidential campaign, DeSantis falsely accused districts of teaching critical race theory. The Board of Education approved a rule supposedly to prevent indoctrination of students.

Last week, Sarasota County Superintendent Brennan Asplen reiterated that the district teaches to Florida standards and does not use critical race theory. A speaker responded, "You can tell me all year long, 'We're not doing it, we're not doing it.' And I don't believe you."

But Runcie has to go, even if Rosalind Osgood, his chief enabler on the board, seemingly tried to orchestrate as expensive a severance as she could. Runcie had created a cultlike atmosphere. It was Runcie above all.

Myrick already resigned after her own indictment linked to that grand jury. Other top administrators have left. So one early sign of whether Runcie's successor has changed the culture will be whether Kathy Koch keeps her job.

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South Florida Sun Sentinel

Director: 'This is where we get off the rails' - Schools PR chief set up secret effort to save Runcie's job

Scott Travis, South Florida Sun Sentinel
July 18, 2021

The communications chief for Broward Schools orchestrated an aggressive but secret operation to try to save the job of Superintendent Robert Runcie within hours after he was arrested on a perjury charge, newly released documents show.

Amid calls for Runcie to step down or be fired after his arrest April 21, Kathy Koch, a veteran public relations professional, hurriedly organized a pro-Runcie rally on school district property.

She helped some of the county's most prominent business leaders craft their remarks for the event April 23, but she carefully tried to distance herself from the effort, according to emails obtained by the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

"I would remain invisible in the conversation," she wrote in her notes.

Koch's campaign failed to save Runcie's job. His last day will be Aug. 10.

Koch, 72, has worked for the district since 2018 and makes $168,000 a year. She said she organized the rally on her own personal time.

"I support the work of this District and its dedicated employees. In my personal time, I have the same rights as all others to use that time as I choose," Koch said in an email to

the Sun Sentinel. "I have supported Mr. Runcie in his role as superintendent."

But critics, including several School Board members, say she's misused her position, putting her boss's interests ahead of Broward County students, parents, employees and taxpayers.

"It is simply NOT the job of the communications department to be a superintendent's personal promotional machine," School Board member Nora Rupert said in a text after the Sun Sentinel asked for comment.

One document that especially raised concerns is two pages of typed notes Koch wrote detailing the many steps she took to organize the April 23 rally, which happened during work hours outside the front entrance of the district's K.C. Wright administrative building in Fort Lauderdale. Runcie had been arrested two days earlier, accused of lying to a statewide grand jury.

The Sun Sentinel obtained the notes, attached to an email Koch sent to herself the morning of the rally, through a public records request.

The notes describe her contacting business leaders, arranging speakers and confirming security in the 48 hours before the rally.

Koch got approval from Runcie on April 21, the Wednesday he was arrested, to hold the rally that Friday, her notes say. Runcie did not respond to a request for comment about this story.

Over the next day, Koch reached out to about a dozen Runcie allies in the business and nonprofit community, edited a letter of support from County Commissioner Dale Holness, wrote a news release for the event, sent the release and her media contact list to an outside public relations firm and organized logistics with district staff and the PR firm, her notes say.

But Koch didn't want the public to know any of this, her notes suggest, so she asked for help from Runcie ally Keith Koenig, CEO of City Furniture and president of the Broward Workshop, a business group that has been one of Runcie's staunchest defenders.

"Spoke with Keith. Agreed he would present it to the Workshop Executive Committee. I would remain invisible in the conversation," she wrote.

Later, she wrote: "Keith presented to Executive Committee. Called him after with plan. He did not want his staff to help and he agreed if I would plan and execute the event, he would pay his PR firm to distribute the press release I wrote to media, and to have someone attend this morning's event."


Koenig said in a text Saturday that he felt Runcie had been unfairly targeted, especially by the Sun Sentinel.

"I supported Bob as a citizen and asked a PR friend to help organize it," Koenig said. "Many of us came together and Bob was grateful."

Koenig added: "As I remember, the event was my idea and I hired the firm that did all the work. ... My recollection was that Kathy did not want to be involved."

Koch's notes show she confirmed the rally speakers with Koenig's PR firm April 22 and asked the company to invite the Broward PTA, the Broward League of Cities and local chambers of commerce.

"I think we should expect anti-RR people to show up," she wrote, referring to Runcie's critics.

About 50 religious, political, business and nonprofit leaders attended.

While planning the event, Koch asked district Safety Chief Brian Katz to alert Fort Lauderdale police, her notes say. She also alerted Juan Ruperez, who manages operations of the K.C. Wright building "to give him heads up."

"However [it] was clear this is not our event," Koch wrote. "In fact, there is a generator being brought so that they are not using our electricity."

Koch's role in the event raises concerns, School Board member Debbi Hixon said.

"I do not think it's appropriate for [district] staff to organize personal events on district time in the context of their district job," she said.

Lisa Maxwell, executive director of the Broward Principals and Assistants Association, said she found Koch's efforts contrary to the job of a government communications chief and a public servant.

"It is imperative that people believe that there is neutrality, that information is simply factual and is not intended to sway opinion or generate an outcome to a specific event - in this case, the protection of the superintendent," Maxwell said. "This is where we get off the rails."

Maxwell said Koch's notes are "probably the clearest example I have ever seen where this has just gone off the rails."

Koch started with the district in November 2018, beating out 158 other applicants. She owns the firm Ambit Advertising & Public Relations, which has been a member of the Broward Workshop and was a strong advocate for Runcie even before she took the district job.

Koch maintained her private firm after she joined the district. Although Runcie initially said she would turn over her Ambit client list to the district's procurement department to ensure there were no conflicts of interest, she declined to do that after then-General Counsel Barbara Myrick told her in 2019 it was unnecessary, emails show.

Koch did not respond to whether she plans to remain with the district after Runcie leaves Aug. 10. She and Runcie have faced frequent accusations that she focuses her PR efforts on the superintendent, not the district.

Former board member Robin Bartleman wrote in Runcie's 2019 evaluation, "Press releases and social media links consistently have [Runcie's] image as opposed to students, teachers, staff or even our logo."

However, board Chairwoman Rosalind Osgood praised Koch's work.

"Kathy Koch is a valued part of the District's team. The Public Relations Office has improved the District's communication to the community tremendously under Ms. Koch's leadership," Osgood wrote in a text message to the Sun Sentinel. "As a Board Member, I have no way of governing what any employee does with their personal time."

Koch's campaign happened during a busy time for her office staff, as they received dozens of media requests from around the country seeking interviews and information about Runcie's arrest, emails show.

Koch tried to avoid any interaction with the media during the April 23 rally, her notes show.

"I will be in [K.C. Wright] and am meeting PR firm early, but do not want to be visible in any form at the event itself - to school board members or to media, which might ask me about Mr. Runcie," Koch wrote.

A Sun Sentinel reporter ran into Koch inside the building and asked her why BECON, the district-run TV station that Koch supervises, had a camera crew at the rally if the event wasn't sponsored by the district.

"They're a TV station and it's an event on our property," Koch responded.

BECON was used again on April 26 to benefit Runcie as he recorded a video saying he would be vindicated from the criminal charge.

'Your team did a great job, and I appreciate everyone staying late last night," Koch wrote in an April 27 email to Eric Powell, production manager at BECON.

The video was widely distributed to media, employees and parents on the morning of April 27, hours before the School Board was scheduled to discuss Runcie's future.

At that meeting, board member Sarah Leonardi said she found the use of BECON inappropriate. "Those cameras should have been focused on students and educators."

Runcie realized at the meeting he didn't have the support to stay on long term as superintendent. A majority of School Board members wanted to either fire him or place him on leave. He offered to resign.

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Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Some preliminary thoughts about #Broward's 2021 #redistricting process. Final map gets voted on at what's likely to be a very spirited December 7th meeting, where some political careers may well be snuffed out


Some preliminary thoughts about #Broward's 2021 #redistricting process. Final map gets voted on at what's likely to be a very spirited December 7th meeting, where some political careers may well be snuffed out

Even as I was writing my first draft of this post this afternoon, I got word that an additional Broward County redistricting meeting has been scheduled for Saturday October 30, 2021 at 10AM, but it's... virtual. 🙄 Zut alors!

It's the last "public" meeting to comment before the last 4 draft maps are presented to the Broward County Commission for their thumbs up or down, scheduled for December 7th.

20210927_201323.jpg

My experience in the past is that the Sun Sentinel's Lisa Huriash is usually a fair-minded reporter, with a good sense of perspective re how simple or complicated an issue might be and what's necessary to present an accurate account of what's really at stake.
But here, on the issue of Broward reconfiguring its nine Commission districts, noticeably, she has failed badly

Also not mentioned is that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will be naming two interim Broward County Commissioners next month, as Barbara Sharief and Dale Holness had to resign in order to run in the #FL20 primary election that takes place two weeks from today, on November 2nd.

An election with nearly a dozen candidates where the winner will likely be someone who has failed to get 75%+ of the overall Democratic voters. Most of you longtime readers of the blog know that I hold both of these two Broward Commissioners in very low regard for their serial unethical machinations, serial poor judgment, and propensity for telling self-serving lies and half-truths, and general desire to play #IdentityPolitics at the worst possible times.
You never have to ask whether they are doing something for political reasons: they ARE.

Sharief's District 8 seat is up next November while the Holness' District 9 seat runs thru 2024, so my educated guess is that both seats will be on the ballot in just over a year, one for a full-term, and one to fill out the final two years.
You should start seeing articles next week about who DeSantis might choose and why.

Migration changes face of Broward, bringing new ideas and fresh flavors
By Lisa J. Huriash
October 11, 2021 

There were and are some very obvious and important facts and relationships that, at a minimum, should have been disclosed to readers there, but which, for whatever reason, weren't.

That includes connecting-the-dots on some of the people she quotes who I know with certainty have glaring conflicts of interests as it affects the public and public policy, including on the matter of redistricting, but Huriash stays quiet as a church mouse, which is why I have included the piece by Red 
Broward blogger Tom Lauder that accurately connects-the-dots that Huriash chooses to ignore,

If you can't access the Sun Sentinel article, let me know and I'll try to send a copy to you.

And yes, the Sept. 27 meeting I reference below is the one that was held at the Hollywood Library that I sent some of you an email about last month, before it took place, because there was no info about it anywhere in Hollywood, not even at the library itself, so the librarians knew nothing about it just two days beforehand.
Which is clearly not a good sign of the county's level of engagement on this.

Click screen grab below to enlarge!


























By the way, before the public meeting was held, there was a preview meeting held by the FIU redistricting consultants that was largely composed of area local elected officials, so they'd have a better handle on what the process is supposed to be and the issues involved in creating districts that are roughly equal population-wise, though they're allowed to have up to a 10% variance.
I saw many familiar faces coming out of the room before I and a handful of other Broward citizens went in for the public meeting.


Above, the evening's moderator, FIU professor Dario Moreno, the county's lead consultant on redistricting.

Above, District 6 Broward Commissioner Beam Furr, an official Friend of the Blog. As per usual, we spoke for a bit on some local matters before the meeting started.






Broward Commissioner Steve Geller in center



Because facts matter, and are worth recalling: At least three members of the county commission in the past 20 years not lived in their districts – Ben Graber, Lois Wexler and Stacy Ritter. 

"The law requires your legal residence to be in the district, while apparently your physical body can sleep somewhere else." -Buddy Nevins at Broward Beat, Dec. 4, 2011


Broward Beat
Gerrymander! County Commission Carves Out A Seat For State Rep. Marty Kiar

BY BUDDY NEVINS
December 16, 2011

State Rep. Marty Kiar of Davie is “extremely likely” to run for the Broward County Commission after commissioners on Tuesday gerrymandered District 1 to include Kiar’s home.

The opportunity for Kiar suddenly surfaced late Tuesday when commissioners suddenly placed a tiny sliver of northwest Davie in District 1.  That section just happens to include Kiar’s home.

Districting boundary lines are not drawn by accident at the county commission. Somebody wants Kiar in the race, either the Commissioners Lieberman and Stacy Ritter who redrew the district or those behind the scenes…or both.

Read the rest of the post at


A reminder: After resisting getting a Facebook account for... well, years, because I could not be bothered with one with everything else I was already doing, I finally gave in last month and created a new platform for myself at https://www.facebook.com/DavidSmith0215/,
mostly so that I could finally read and comment on what i saw at the Hollywood Residents - Speak Up group page, https://www.facebook.com/groups/1023412084491625/ which I urge you to join if you are a Hollywood resident not already reading it.

Don't agree with everything there, of course, but it's a much better informed group that a random group of residents, and includes almost daily posts by people I know and trust who want this city to be MUCH-BETTER than it is and has been in recent years. Just like me.

Typically, I comment on both my page and the group page a few times a week, but I'm trying to allow a few days in-between posts, plus, I usually try to mention things that I don't necessarily mention in my popular group emails, here on my blog, or at the very repetitive and often innocuous Hollywood Nextdoor page, so consider checking me out there as well.

Also, if you add my current phone number to your contact list and use WhatsApp, you can even see my occasional commentary on things important and otherwise via the STATUS page, so consider that, too.




Some other Florida redistricting stories worth catching up on:

Miami Herald
Miami-Dade has - a new redistricting map: Let the fights begin over voting boundaries
Douglas Hanks; Staff Writer
October 3, 2021
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article254682422.html


Understanding the Florida Legislature redistricting effort with former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Florida, Peggy Quince.
From WEDU-TV, PBS Tampa: Florida This Week, taped Sept. 24, 2021

Florida lawmakers look to avoid running afoul of courts when redrawing districts
'My promise to you is … we will do this right,' one lawmaker said

John Kennedy, Capital Bureau
USA TODAY NETWORK-FLORIDA

POLITICO Florida Playbook: The GOP’s redistricting promises
Tuesday, Sept. 21, 7:02 AM
BY GARY FINEOUT
https://www.politico.com/newsletters/florida-playbook/2021/09/21/the-gops-redistricting-promises-494407

Florida Trend
Senate kicks off redistricting process
Jim Turner | News Service of Florida | 9/21/2021
https://www.floridatrend.com/article/32208/senate-kicks-off-redistricting-process

South Florida Sun Sentinel 

Monday, June 15, 2015

Thoughts on the continuing Burnadette Norris-Weeks ethics problem in Broward County: Thru her actions, attitude and behavior, Broward SOE attorney Norris-Weeks has come to personify the worst unethical excesses of Broward County's pay-to-play culture and the insider's sense of entitlement that pro-reform pols and citizens have fought hard to eliminate.

Thoughts on the continuing Burnadette Norris-Weeks ethics problem in Broward County: Thru her actions, attitude and behavior, Broward SOE attorney Norris-Weeks has come to personify the worst unethical excesses of Broward County's pay-to-play culture and the insider's sense of entitlement that pro-reform pols and citizens have fought hard to eliminate.

Since last Spring when I took advantage of the Ultra Music Festival being downtown to also take some photos for the last time of what was then left of the partially-destroyed Miami Herald building from directly in front of One Herald Plaza -a building overlooking Biscayne Bay that I had been in dozens and dozens of times from the 1970's thru the mid-'90's when visiting The Miami News, but which by this time was also missing some of the letters from its iconic sign- I've been meaning to write something about what I have long sensed is the real lack of backbone and community engagement and push back among many of Broward County's current and in some case well-known civic groups and their leadership that, in the abstract, ought to be doing MUCH MORE publicly to lead the fight to make Broward's future better for everyone.
Not least, among those in civil society who actually follow the letter and spirit of the law, especially ethics laws meant to provide transparency to the public and inspire trust in institutions by them.

Push back by actually taking people to task by putting their feet to the fire and publicly embarrassing them or shaming them when their unchecked egos, ambition and sense of entitlement to go off the charts the way that Burnadette Norris-Weeks has clearly done the past few years, given that in the current environment, with our present collection of sleepwalking news reporters, she has absolutely no fear that the South Florida news media would ever hold a mirror or TV camera up to her, and show it to the public to inform them and educate them about her behind-the-scenes dealings.

As would happen in most though not all parts of the U.S. -or at least used to.

So, to better understand this vexing issue involving one Broward insider's ego and over-the-top sense of entitlement, I've posted this collection of information in reverse chron order, most recent at top.

I remind many of you, especially you newcomers to the blog, that for many months, I was often the only Broward citizen present at those early morning meetings of the Broward County Ethics Commission meetings at Broward County Govt HQ, which I dutifuly videotaped and took notes on to be entirely accurate, in-between sips of McDonald's coffee.

Week-after-week, month-after-month, I saw who was and who was NOT trying their best to fullfill the hopes of Broward's long-frustrated citizens on the issue of finally getting the much-needed, stronger ethical rules for Broward elected officials and employees and the people they interact with. I saw who was and who was NOT making the honest effort to change the unacceptable status quo that then-existed and markedly improving it in both letter and spirit.

So with that in mind, I can tell you that Burnadette Norris-Weeks was NOT a Profile in Courage 
then and she was NOT years later when serving on the appointed Broward County Charter Commission, where she had the rare opportunity to serve the long-term best interests of Broward citizens, businesses AND incorporate notions of Good Government Best Practices.

But instead of doing that, Norris-Weeks voted AGAINST Broward citizens like you and me from even being able to vote at the polls that November, and to decide the outcome of the issue of a countywide-elected mayor for Broward County, as the public would be able to do in 99% of America.

But NOT here in Broward County, and Burnadette Norris-Weeks was one of the small handful of people who voted AGAINST you and I even being able to vote for or against it, much less, voting and deciding it one way or the other.

A helpful reminder from me in 2009 of Burnadette Norris-Weeks' anti-democratic sensibility: 

And now we read that last week Norris-Weeks was appointed by ethically-challenged Broward County Comm. Dale Holness to the new incarnation of the Broward Charter Review group. 
Why?

What possibly justifies this woman's continual bad judment and curious sense of ethics and propriety from being represented over-and-over on important Broward panels in ways that are genuinely harmful to both Broward citizens and the larger business community?
Why should the public expect anything different from her this time but more of her anti-citizen actions that prevent genuine accountability and oversight, to say nothing of actual improvement in governance?

If you wonder why Broward County is still mired in the state of continual funk it's been in for years, and why no matter where in the county you go, the public (and the news media) consistently is bewildered at what they hear about what's REALLY going on, wonder why the public has so very little trust and respect for Broward's myriad govt. agencies and functions, it's because of the accurate perception that establishment insiders like Norris-Weeks have consistently used her position to give herself unfair, anti-competitive advantages over others.

And the public perception that Norris-Weeks, when on Broward govt. panels, uses that role to further special interests, NOT for the benefit of the majority of Broward taxpayers and Small Business owners, who are very much against crony capitalism and pay-to-play govt., is right in the records for everyone to see.
Once Broward gets around to making it public a year later...

So tell me, why haven't you or I seen a single story yet on Norris-Weeks' multiple episodes of curious behavior and bad judgment on Channel 4, 6, 7 or 10's newscasts? 

Or in the Miami Herald?

Good question.



But first things first...




Clearly, one of the few times that one of the most ardent opponents of ethical reform in Hallandale Beach, Andrew Markoff, was said to be correct.







Broward Elections Lawyer Owes Nearly $11,000 In Broward County Taxes 
Posted on January 29, 2015 by Red Broward

Commissioner: Ban elections office attorney from politics  
WRITTEN BY THE SUN-SENTINEL POSTED: 06/04/2015, 02:29PM 

Broward Beat
Some Commissioners Fed Up With Elections Chief
By Buddy Nevins

It was Broward Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes’ turn in the barrel this week.


Snipes got grilled – her word for the 30-minute cross-examination was “bullied” – by Broward County Commissioner Mark Bogen on Tuesday.


Like a prosecutor questioning a murderer, Bogen started out something like this: “Would you agree the most important thing for any supervisor is to run efficient and impartial elections?”


It went downhill from there for Snipes.



Read the rest of the post at 
www.browardbeat.com/some-commissioners-fed-up-with-elections-chief/










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Broward Beat

By Michael J. Ryan

The following is an open e-mail Mayor Mike Ryan of Sunrise calling for a policy governing political activity by any Elections Office lawyer.
The background:  Commissioner Mark Bogen last week called for a clear policy governing Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes’ attorney. He did this after discovering that the office lawyer Burnadette Norris-Weeks had actively taken part in campaigns.

Read the rest of the column at:
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Broward Beat
By Buddy Nevins

Burnadette Norris-Weeks — the beleagued Elections Office attorney who is embroiled in a fight over her politicking — obviously hasn’t heard the age-old expression: If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen.
Norris-Weeks has lashed out at Sunrise Mayor Mike Ryan for daring to criticize her actions — campaigning for candidates at the same time she is supposed to be an impartial Broward Elections Office official.

Read the rest of the column at:






Other than the fully-engaged reaction from Sunrise's mayor, I'm unaware of anything by the people who ought to be The Usual Suspects.
Just silence from The Broward League of Women Voters, The Broward Workshop, The Broward Alliance CEO Council, or even the Good Government Initiative at the University of Miami, under former Miami-Dade County Comm. Katy Sorenson, who was long known as the most pro-reform supporter of strong and effective ethics on that ethically-challenged and corrupt group that seems to be on perpetual probation for crimes against taxpayers and common sense.

How much of this is because of business and political connections, large and small, and how much of this is because of race, and the fear of being taken apart publicly for simply saying the facts aloud while the local news media largely averts its eyes for whatever reason?
That latter point is something that Buddy Nevins references above in his June 5th account of Broward Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes appalling performance the past few years and the public criticism of her that has only grown MUCH LOUDER.

Up to a point.

And that point in my opinion is the same one that explains the silence now on Norris-Weeks.
Commissioners won’t say much of this publicly because of politics:Its politically incorrect to attack one of the few black office holders in Broward.Perhaps more important, Democrats – eight of the nine commissioners  — fear they would be alienating their base in the African American and Caribbean American community if they publicly condemn Snipes.
Another aspect of this whole matter that I have written about a lot in recent emails but not yet here on the blog concerns the selection by crony capitalism-loving Broward Comm. Dale Holness of Burnadette Norris-Weeks to the Broward Charter Review panel for the second time in a row: why does #SoFL have so many more unethical and incompetent political and government officials than other areas of the U.S. its size? Especially among African-Americans?

Is it the lack of a large enough pool of educated, Middle Management types who DON'T depend on the public payroll for their personal & professional advancement?

You don't have to be a political junkie or news junkie to realize that #SoFL and #Broward are lacking in the very type of people who in most parts of the country actually make up a good portion of the middle management of well-run companies that actually manufacture tangible consumer and industrial goods, instead of selling the hope of sand, surf and sun to visitors.

Also, how is it that in the year 2015, the Broward Workshop,with all the access to resources and media professionals they have, do NOT have a Twitter feed? 

Seriously.
Their charming and always-helpful Exec. Director, Kareen Boutros, is someone whom I like, after first meeting her at the previous edition of the Broward Charter Review meetings in 2008, but it's time for them to get into the 21st Century.

I'm grew up and was educated in South Florida in the 1970's, but still I continue to be #dumbfounded and #frustrated by what is tolerated and passes for "Normal" around here that would simply NOT be acceptable behavior and conduct in the rest of the U.S. then or now.