Commissioner Murman was quoted in this Times article on budget priorities:

Hillsborough commissioners discuss budget priorities

By Tia Mitchell, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Jun 09, 2011 07:11 PM

TAMPA — Hillsborough County’s transportation and infrastructure continues to lag far behind its resources, forcing leaders Thursday to discuss ways to prioritize projects and spending in the coming fiscal year.

The community investment tax, used to fund a large chunk of the county’s capital projects, is generating much less money than was projected. Income during the 2011 fiscal year was initially expected to be around $135 million. It came in at just $90 million.

“The CIT has pretty much been our sole source of funding,” said county administrator Mike Merrill. “We kind of put all our eggs in one basket.”

Proceeds from the CIT are split among the school system, the county and its cities. The county expects to receive about $1 billion through fiscal year 2027, but more than $600 million is owed on existing debt.

That leaves about $355 million for everything else, with the county on the hook for projects totalling $482 million.

County commissioners discussed other funding sources, including additional tolls, community development areas and tax increment districts, at Thursday’s budget hearing. Commissioners also said they wanted to re-create a task force that would unite various government and planning agencies, such as HART, the Planning Commission, Expressway Authority and Metropolitan Planning Organization.

Commissioner Sandra Murman said it was “ridiculous” that only 3 percent of the county’s budget goes toward transportation. She advocated for a “transportation czar” that would lead the discussion.

“Something so important is getting so little attention,” she said.

During discussion on parks spending, Murman lobbied for the redirection of $1.5 million budgeted for skateboard parks in Apollo Beach, Brandon and a yet-to-be-determined northwest location. They didn’t seem like a good use of money during such tough times, she said.

Apollo Beach residents have even asked for a trade, Murman said, saying they would rather cut the skateboard park instead of after-school programs.

Merrill told her the parks were funded by impact fees, and that money can only be used for certain projects. But he said county officials will come back to the commission with alternative options for the money.

Tia Mitchell can be reached at tmitchell@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3405.

 

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Boys & Girls Club Ground Breaking

Area residents and officials gathered at Resurrection Catholic Church on June 3 for the Boys & Girls Club of Riverview groundbreaking ceremony. From left are Anne Garcia, Joe Garcia, Dan Campo, Diana Campo Ekonomou, Christine Hogan, Earl Lennard and Antonio Diez

Work is under way on a project that will mark the latest step in the development of Riverview.

On June 3, area residents and officials — including Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandy Murman — attended a groundbreaking ceremony for the Boys & Girls Club of Riverview.

The club is located on the grounds of Resurrection Catholic Church, 6819 Krycul Ave., Riverview.

“This marks the start of a great future for Riverview and its kids,” said Lynn Dumais, board chairwoman for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Tampa Bay.

The ceremony marked the start of work on the first two of the three-phase project.

Phase one features a 6,000 square foot building, which will feature areas for tutoring, a computer lab and other recreation space. Phase two is a covered outdoor pavilion for basketball and other activities.

The first two phases are expected to be completed in August to coincide with the start of the fall semester.

“I spent over 40 years working with kids in this county,” said Earl Lennard, former Hillsborough school superintendent and chairman of Riverview Boys & Girls Club leadership team. “In my experience, kids aren’t as prone to trouble or mischief when they are active.”

 

Work on the first two phases of the Boys & Girls Club of Riverview is scheduled to be completed in August.

Phase three — which involves the closing of the pavilion and building an indoor gymnasium — will begin when the additional required funds are raised. In total, about $1.5 million has been raised for the $3 million project.

The leadership team is presently working toward raising money for a $250,000 matching grant. So far, the team has raised $114,000.

“There are a lot of generous people in Riverview who have stepped up,” said Joe Garcia, board member for the Boys & Girls Club of Tampa Bay.

Once completed, the facility will become the 16th Boys & Girls club in Hillsborough County and will serve up to 150 kids from the Riverview area every day.

“As our community has grown, the need for places for our youngsters has grown as well,” said Lennard, who is the county elections supervisor.


jceballos@tampatrib.com

(813) 627-4762

 

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Times article regarding Hispanic commission district:

 

Hispanic group forms to have voice in Hillsborough County redistricting

By Bill Varian, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Tuesday, June 7, 2011

TAMPA — Hispanics fueled well more than half the population growth in Hillsborough County during the past decade.

Yet they potentially stand to lose ground politically when it comes to their ability to elect someone whose interests resemble theirs to the Hillsborough County Commission, or force that board to listen to them.

A hastily formed group of Hispanic civic leaders is mobilizing to try to change that as commissioners finalize proposals for new political boundaries for themselves in coming weeks.

“We need to be united, not try to get anyone elected,” said Lydia Medrano with the League of United Latin American Citizens heading an effort calling itself the Hispanic Redistricting Initiative. “We’re just trying to get a district with a large percentage of Hispanics in it.”

Hillsborough County has seven elected commissioners. Four of them represent separate, defined regions of the county, while the other three are chosen in countywide elections.

As with Congress and the Legislature, political boundaries for the four district commissioners are redrawn every 10 years to ensure each represents roughly the same number of people.

Commissioners draw their own boundaries with the help of county demographers and feedback from representatives, not to mention behind-the-scenes political arm wrestling. That process is going on now.

Much of the public debate so far has centered on ensuring that District 3 — representing much of central Tampa and parts of east Hillsborough — maintains roughly the same percentage of its African-American population share, about 40 percent.

On Monday, the Hispanic Redistricting Initiative heard a presentation from John Garcia, redistricting manager for LatinoJustice PRLDEF, a New York group that advocates on behalf of Hispanics. He said Hispanics are arguably worse off under each of the new boundary proposals.

He noted that District 1 — representing much of South and West Tampa, as well as neighborhoods along the south Hillsborough shoreline — currently includes a 35 percent bloc of Hispanics. The existing proposals each have the percentage declining, to no more than 33 percent to just less than 30.

That’s true although the Hispanic population grew countywide by 71 percent to 307,000 people during the past decade.

“You’ve got to work real hard to do something like that,” said Garcia of the fact that all six of the redistricting proposals so far dilute the Hispanic vote in District 1.

Four of the proposed new boundary maps under consideration by the county were drawn largely by county planners, with public input. The two under closest consideration as of the last County Commission meeting emerged from the offices of Commissioners Victor Crist and Sandy Murman, both Republicans.

Crist represents much of northern Hillsborough — or District 2 — and he has to give up some of his territory to other districts that didn’t grow as fast. He is seeking to ensure he doesn’t lose all of the city of Temple Terrace to District 3, represented by Commissioner Les Miller, a Democrat.

Another map with origins in Murman’s office has the south Hillsborough part of her district spreading east to take in the heavily Republican retirement community Sun City Center.

Commissioners hold a public hearing at 6 p.m. Thursday at the County Center to consider the maps they have so far.

 

 

Hispanic leaders: County commission should reflect changing demographics

Hillsborough County’s population

By ELAINE SILVESTRINI | The Tampa Tribune
Published: June 07, 2011

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TAMPA Now comprising 25 percent of Hillsborough County, the local Hispanic population grew more than any other group in the last 10 years, and some community leaders say it’s time the county commission reflected the change.

A coalition of Latino community organizations is preparing to petition the Hillsborough County Commission to take their concerns into account as commissioners set new voting districts as a result of the 2010 census.

Some are pessimistic their issues will be addressed and say if they’re denied, they will turn to the Justice Department or the courts.

“By continually ignoring the Hispanic community, for whatever argument they want to use, it’s only going to get worse,” said Victor DiMaio, president of the Hillsborough County Democratic Hispanic Caucus. “The numbers are just too big to ignore anymore.”

Hispanic leaders say they want an opportunity to put a Latino on the commission.

‘We have been traditionally a large part of the community for over a century now,” DiMaio said. “I really think that we deserve an opportunity to be represented as well as the African-American community…I think it’s time.”

“We want to be heard,” said Norma Reno, a community activist.

Al Frederick, president of the Tampa Latin Chamber of Commerce, said Hispanics don’t have a voice in county government. “There’s no one there to speak up for the people, to speak out for that ethnicity,” he said.

“We’re looking at empowering the community so the people who get elected to represent them will be responsive to them,” said John Garcia, national redistricting manager for LatinoJustice PRLDEF, a national legal and civil rights organization that is working with local Hispanic activists.

Four of the seven county commissioners are elected in geographic districts. The other three are elected by the entire county.

One of the four geographic seats – District 3 – was created to be a “minority district” under the federal Voting Rights Act. The federal definition of “minority” includes Hispanics and African-Americans. District 3 is 40 percent African-American and 25 percent Hispanic.

Les Miller, who was elected in District 3, is the only African-American county commissioner. About 17 percent of Hillsborough County residents are black.

Hispanics make up 35 percent of District 1, the highest percentage of Hispanics in any of the geographic districts. The district is represented by Sandy Murman, who is white.

“I think all minority groups should be represented in some fashion,” Murman said. “I make a big effort to reach out to Hispanic groups.”

But some activists think the absence of a Latino county commissioner means the concerns of their community are too often ignored. They point to their unsuccessful fight for years to obtain funding in heavily Hispanic areas for historic community club buildings that have fallen into disrepair, noting commissioners found millions to funnel into a lavish community center in Brandon.

Among those taking up the cause is Patrick Manteiga, publisher of the trilingual weekly, “La Gaceta.” He said Hispanics make up a relatively small percentage of county workers and argues that might be different if there was a Hispanic county commissioner.

“When you look at county government and they govern a diverse group of people, you would like to see that diversity naturally move up through the ranks,” Manteiga said.

Manteiga thinks it’s possible to form a district that is 40 percent Hispanic by linking West Tampa and Town ‘n Country. That, he said, would greatly increase the chances of electing a Hispanic county commissioner.

Steve Valdez, client services manager for the commission’s redistricting task force, said none of the current redistricting proposals specifically address the issue of Hispanic representation. He said that could change, depending on public input and direction from commissioners.

“That is something that can be brought up at public hearings on the 9th or the 20th of this month,” he said.

If commissioners don’t respond to the coalition, Manteiga said, he will “do everything I can to get people together to fund-raise and organize” to get the Justice Department to exert pressure.

“Maybe the Department of Justice doesn’t have the last word,” Garcia said. “Maybe the courts have the last word… Redistricting invariably leads, in my experience, to litigation.”

Murman said she doesn’t know what the commission will do but said the question is still open. “I say to everyone in the community, just make your voice heard about how these maps should be drawn. We tend to respond to large cries for assistance in matters like this.”

esilvestrini@tampatrib.com

813-259-7837

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Creative Loafing article on HART:

HART board approves budget that will raise taxes and reduce some services

Posted by Mitch Perry on Mon, Jun 6, 2011 at 2:50 PM

Sandy Murman said she didnt want to balance HARTs budget on Hillsborough homeowners.

When Hillsborough county voters rejected the penny transit tax last year, officials with HART knew it would have a major impact on their budget going forward.

That impact was felt directly today after the HART board approved the 2012 budget that will include a 3.7 percent reduction in service, and an increase in Hillsborough homeowners property taxes, from .4682 to .5.

HART’s Katharine Eagan, who runs the agency’s Service Development Division, gave a detailed presentation to board members on the staff’s recommendations. She said that there would be some reduction in current services – such as eliminating service on holidays like Christmas and New Years, as well as reducing bus routes on Sunday evenings. The bulk of south and east county would have no weekend service. There would be no south Tampa service east of Dale Mabry, and only hourly weekend service in the Town ‘N Country/northwest Hillsborough region.

There would be some reduction of employees through attrition, but there are no plans to eliminate any other workers.

Voting for an increase on ad valorem taxes is always a sensitive issue, and these days, it’s become a third rail of sorts for Republicans. The only two votes on the board who voted no on the budget were the only two GOP elected officials, County Commissioners Sandy Murman and Mark Sharpe.

Their Democratic party colleague on the BOCC, Kevin Beckner, said he would proudly support the millage increase. He said that though he doesn’t have kids in the school system, he understands fully why it’s important that some of his taxes go to support public education, and said that was his same philosophy in terms of supporting HART, even though he doesn’t utilize their services.

Looking for potentially new sources of revenue, Commissioner Murman suggested buses that would drop off sports fans who go to Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg or to the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa. But HART officials say that federal law prohibits that – later attorney Mary Ann Stiles suggested that the agency’s lobbyist seek a waiver from the feds on that potential source of new revenue.

HART’s interim CEO Philip Hale, who took over for David Armijo back in April, said one reason why the agency is facing this a tough budget situation is that is that it’s been drawing off of reserves in recent years. “We’ve been kicking the can down the road,” he said, sounding like members of Congress discussing Medicare and other daunting issues in the federal budget.

Board member Fran Davin noticed that there was no funds allocated in the budget for recruitment for a new CEO, prompting her to ask Hale if he was amenable to staying on for the next year or two.

“If you’ll have me,” he replied.

During her presentation Eagan scribbled down suggestions for possible ways to save money from other board members. John Byczek suggested cutting expenses withthe agency’s health care program might turn up some savings. In addition to the plan paying 100 percent benefits for HART staffers, the plan also pays 70 percent for that staffer’s family members who sign up on it.

Another proposal that was on the table was a 3.2 percent step pay increase for drivers and others with the Amalgamated Transit Union. Commissioner Murman said she was puzzled by that request, since it was in the same budget where staffing and services were being reduced. HART’s Eagan said that a one year freeze on that step increase would be implemented, with the board’s consent, which they obviously supported.

There is the chance that the budget could change by the time it must be voted on in late September. There will be pubic hearings in August.

 

Coffee with the Commissioner

Come out and meet me for coffee at Sava Café on Friday, June 10th at 8:30 a.m.

Share your ideas for our community and our county.

I look forward to seeing you there.

When: Friday, June 10, 2011 – 8:30 a.m.

Where: Sava Café, 143 Harbor Village Lane, Apollo Beach, FL 33572

 

 

Regent Should Disclose Financial Records

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on the Regent:

Hillsborough commissioners want Regent to disclose financial records

By RAY REYES | The Tampa Tribune
Published: June 02, 2011

 

TAMPA —

Hillsborough County commissioners want to take a closer look into not only how taxpayers’ money contributed to the construction of The Regent but also how profits from the opulent structure in Riverview are used.

“I’d like to know the financial flows of how those funds are used and how those monies are accounted for,” Commissioner Kevin Beckner said of the rental fees charged by The Regent. “There were public funds used to construct this. I think it’s absolutely appropriate we ask this.”

Commissioners voted unanimously for the Clerk of the Court to conduct an audit and assessment on The Regent and the Brandon nonprofit that runs the building at 6437 Watson Road.

The audit would delve into the financial records of the nonprofit Brandon Community Advantage Center and trace how $2.5 million from the county’s Community Investment Tax was used to build The Regent.

Another $3.9 million came from state and federal grants.

How various county departments approved the project during its development will also be part of the audit and assessment. Dan Pohto, the clerk’s audit director, told commissioners he would report back to the board with his findings in about 90 days.

“We need a clear process,” Commissioner Sandy Murman said of approving CIT funds. “Maybe an accountability check-off sheet. I do believe the process and management of CIT money is really an issue here.”

The $2.5 million in county money for The Regent was initially approved by commissioners in 2008. The issue was a consent agenda item, which is a long list of items that the commission usually votes on as a package without a public hearing.

Beckner said the information he and the board was given at the time was that The Regent could be used as a hurricane shelter and a community center for Brandon.

Commissioner Les Miller said today that that kind of oversight must stop.

“This was placed on the consent agenda, which just flew through this body,” he said. “We have to do better.”

At the meeting today, Pohto provided commissioners with a copy of the scope of service between the county and the Brandon nonprofit regarding how the tax money would be used.

The agreement listed only that the $2.5 million from the county would be used for construction costs.

“I don’t see anything about it being a hurricane shelter,” Pohto said. “That came after the fact.”

Miller said the document left him baffled.

“This is the scope of service?” Miller said. “Is this supposed to outline what this building is supposed to be?”

The nonprofit that runs The Regent has come under fire from commissioners and other community leaders for not being accessible as a community center.

Although funded with public dollars, The Regent’s upper floor is rented for lavish banquets, wedding receptions and parties with rental fees of up to $4,250. Hillsborough Community College uses space on the building’s lower floor for classrooms.

State Rep. Rachel Burgin, R-Riverview, said her office had fielded complaints from groups and organizations who wanted to rent out rooms at The Regent, but the fees were too high.

A local Boy Scout troop was told a $700 fee was needed to hold a two-hour event on a Tuesday night and a women’s counseling group was asked to pay $3,000 to use the building for a few hours, Burgin said.

County Commission Chairman Al Higginbotham asked County Administrator Mike Merrill earlier this month to investigate how county money was spent on a building that boasts a 10,000-square-foot ballroom with hardwood floors, 20-foot tall ceilings with chandeliers, grand staircase and outdoor terrace. Commissioners later expanded the investigation and asked the Clerk of the Court to conduct an audit.

Before Merrill was appointed county administrator, he was director of a county department that approved the business plan for The Regent. The plan outlined the extravagant high-end details of the buildings and how its upper floor would be rented for private events.

Merrill said he had one person in the department who reviewed all the business plans and the purpose of the plan was to “look at the operation feasibility of a project. Could the nonprofit that was proposing the project afford to operate it? He would focus on that and nothing else.”

The business plan said the nonprofit estimated $444,750 in revenue in the first year of operation. The plan did not include a commitment for private money to help pay for the building and its furnishings. Neither did it mention a commitment for community programs.

Merrill said the Debt Management Department, which reviewed the business plan, was not interested in design or engineering.

“”It’s really a situation where the scope is limited to looking at feasibility of operation,” he said.

The Brandon nonprofit has since outlined a six-step plan to make The Regent more accessible to the public.

The steps include the creation of a task force of local community leaders to provide input on programming and outreach, revamping The Regent’s rental prices and contacting groups across eastern Hillsborough County to offer the building as a possible venue and ask what their needs are.

 

 

Regent Facility in Brandon

Commissioner Murman quoted in this story from News Channel 8 on Brandon Community Advantage Center:

Merrill headed department that OK’d Regent plan

By STEVE ANDREWS | News Channel 8
Published: June 01, 2011

» 1 Comment | Post a Comment

The opulence of The Regent should come as no surprise to Mike Merrill, Hillsborough’s county administrator.

In 2009, Merrill was director of a county department that approved the business plan for the $7 million upscale community center near Brandon, in Riverview.. The plan outlined the extravagant high-end details of the building and how its upper floor would be rented for weddings, receptions and other private events.

Now, Merrill is overseeing an investigation of whether Hillsborough County’s $2.5 million for The Regent was spent appropriately.

The county required that the business plan be approved by its debt management department before it provided $2.5 million to the Brandon Community Advantage Center, the nonprofit group building The Regent.

“I don’t recall reading the whole thing myself,” Merrill says of the business plan.

He said he had one person in the department who reviewed all business plans.

“The purpose of it was to look at the operational feasibility of a project,” Merrill said. “Could the nonprofit that was proposing the project afford to operate it? He would focus on that and nothing else.”

County commissioners recently expressed surprise that tax dollars were the only source of funding used by the Brandon organization to pay for The Regent.

State and federal emergency management agencies contributed $3.9 million toward the project.  Hillsborough Community College provided $750,000.  The Brandon nonprofit group deeded the building to HCC once construction was finished.

The business plan said the nonprofit entity estimated $444,750 in revenue in the first year of operation. The plan also pointed out that the building’s design plan included a grand event space opening onto a covered terrace, with a grand outdoor staircase.

“Adding to the stately nature of the (Regent) are its classical columns at the porte cochere, open balusters at parapet walls, classical entablatures, and marble tile finish,” the business plan stated.

The plan did not include a commitment for private money to help pay for the building and its furnishings.  Neither did it mention a commitment for community programs.

The Brandon nonprofit group has said it will have more of a focus on community programs in the future.

Merrill said the debt management department was not interested in design or engineering.

“It’s really a situation where the scope is limited to looking at feasibility of operation,” he said.

County Commissioner Sandy Murman took office after the deal to build The Regent was approved.  She says there should have been more county oversight. “You could tell that they were trying to make it look like a private facility more than a public community center, and that should’ve been the red flag that went up,” she said.

The business plan presented to the county stated that the building’s features “establish the (Regent) as a prime venue for formal parties, … weddings, graduation celebrations, anniversary gatherings, grand reunions, elaborate functions, community get-togethers” and more.

The plan was submitted to the county by Earl Lennard, current county supervisor of elections, who was working as a consultant for the nonprofit group at the time.

The plan also showed that the group intended to keep less upscale events on the ground floor of the building. “The so-called ‘community room’ will ensure that groups that tend to be more ‘messy,’ such as children’s theatre performances and rehearsals and scouting luncheons, will be accommodated in spaces that are outfitted less expensively,” the business plan said.

The plan also stated that the building’s attributes put “it in great stead to compete in the grand space venue market that includes such Tampa options as Higgins Hall, the A La Carte Event Pavilion, Pepin’s Hospitality Centre, University Area Community Center and Centro Asturiano de Tampa.”

“We don’t need our public facilities to be competing with private,” Murman says.

 

 

Renee Lee’s Severance

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Times article on County Attorney:

 

Hillsborough commissioners ask about County Attorney Renee Lee’s severance

By Bill Varian, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Tuesday, May 31, 2011

TAMPA — It’s deja vu all over again at Hillsborough County Center.

For the better part of a year, commissioners wrestled with how to get rid of former County Administrator Pat Bean. A majority thought she should go, but they choked on severance terms in her contract that guaranteed Bean a nearly half-million-dollar payout if fired without adequate justification.

In an ominous note for embattled County Attorney Renee Lee, at least two commissioners have confirmed they are seeking a legal opinion on the meaning of the severance terms in Lee’s contract.

They aren’t as favorable for Lee as they were for Bean.

A majority of commissioners say they want a decision on Lee’s future with the county to be made expeditiously. Commissioners are scheduled to talk about it Thursday.

“Hopefully, she’ll come to some decisions by herself maybe and relieve everybody of their misery in that way,” said Commissioner Sandy Murman.

• • •

Like Bean, Lee is guaranteed a year of pay, but only part of future benefits, if fired without cause. Though paid nearly as much as Bean at $212,722, the value of her benefits is not nearly as much since she has been with the county just seven years.

Lee’s current estimated payout: $233,813, according to the county human resources department.

But Lee has a contract that appears to give commissioners broader justification to fire her without paying her anything.. Bean’s contract specified that to deny her severance commissioners had to find she committed a crime or other illegal act that benefited her personally.

Lee’s contract, which was extended to Aug. 6, 2014, two years ago, says she can be terminated without a payout if “convicted” of certain crimes, if she loses her license, if she takes another office, but also for “flagrant neglect of duty.”

Clearwater-based labor lawyer Ryan Barack said he does not believe “flagrant neglect of duty” has accepted meaning under the law.

Tampa-based labor lawyer Tom Gonzalez, who works often with local governments, agreed. “I do think it’s much more broad than the provisions in Pat Bean’s contract,” Gonzalez said.

Commissioner Mark Sharpe, the one unequivocal voice on the board calling for Lee’s termination, said he believes that’s a wide enough opening to deny Lee severance given recent circumstances. “Flagrant means obvious to anyone, including a first-year law student,” Sharpe said.

• • •

The board is scheduled to have a discussion Thursday on whether to ask the Florida Bar to look into the circumstances surrounding an April lunch Lee had with former Commissioner Kevin White. The discussion could prove wide-ranging.

Lee, 58, the county’s top legal adviser, has acknowledged she had lunch with White, with whom the county is locked in a bitter lawsuit. The county and White are fighting over who should pay legal bills from a 2009 federal court verdict that said White discriminated against a former aide by firing her for refusing his repeated sexual advances.

Florida Bar rules prohibit a lawyer representing a client in a legal dispute from discussing the issue in question with the client’s adversary without that person’s lawyer knowing about it.

Lee says the lunch was an innocent get-together with a former colleague (White lost a re-election bid last year). She said the case was not discussed. She notes that she is not even involved with the lawsuit since the county hired outside counsel to take it on because of her conflict while he was still in office.

But she has also called it a “boneheaded” lapse in judgment. She didn’t know White would have a newspaper publisher stop by to witness the lunch.

Lee did not return a phone call seeking comment for this story.

Two commissioners, Chairman Al Higginbotham and Kevin Beckner, have said Lee told them the luncheon happened after a chance encounter. She says that was a misunderstanding.

White’s lawyer, Michael Laurato, has since released text messages between White and Lee that show the lunch was indeed planned, as she now says she has always stated it was. Laurato has also suggested the meeting breached the Bar’s legal ethics because he was not alerted even though the texts show Lee had been asking White about his purchase of a new home in Riverview.

Laurato said that information is relevant to a case in which the county is seeking to recoup legal expenses from White, who has said he doesn’t have money to pay them.

• • •

Sharpe has focused on one text message in particular from Lee, in which she responds to White asking her why she wants to know about the house. Lee told White that either her office or the outside counsel hired by the county to handle the case is aware of the purchase, though it was a week before it was reported in news outlets.

“The litigator got a report somehow but no problem,” she wrote in the message. “Are you my neighbor? I live off Riverview Dr.”

Sharpe said his research showed Lee’s meeting with White without his lawyer present violates accepted legal norms. Alerting him to information the county has that could be relevant to its lawsuit against White was “egregiously bad judgment,” he said, even a “treasonous act.”

“It would be in the best interest of all if this were concluded on Thursday,” Sharpe said. “It would be in the best interest of all if it were concluded before Thursday, but I don’t control that.”

No other commissioners are speaking as firmly. But within the past 15 months, two sitting commissioners, Higginbotham and Ken Hagan, have said Lee should be fired. Their rationale: repeated poor decisions.

Lee was entwined with Bean in some of the key issues that led to Bean’s dismissal. Commissioners had blasted Bean for awarding herself a 1 percent pay raise that had been given to other county executives as a recognition for making budget cuts. They cited the raise as reason to deny her full severance, since the county’s charter and state law say commissioners set the administrator’s pay.

Commissioners also faulted Bean for seeking a copy of e-mails to and from auditors who unearthed the raises, though she said she never looked at them.

Bean said she accepted the raise after getting an opinion from Lee, who also got the pay hike, that said it was okay. Lee said the raises were essentially benefits that were open to other employees. She noted that both their contracts entitle them to any benefits offered to other county workers, even though this was a raise that permanently changed their salaries, not a bonus.

Bean told commissioners she only sought the auditors’ e-mails after hearing Lee had gotten them. Lee read them and shared choice bits with a commissioner critical of the head auditor.

Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigators subsequently wrote that Lee likely lied to commissioners when she said she saw the e-mails only after her office fulfilled an anonymous public records request. State Attorney Mark Ober, however, concluded it could not be proved that Lee lied.

Commissioners suspended Bean and Lee with pay as they initially looked into the raises and e-mail claims. They fired Bean last June but allowed Lee to return when civic leaders in the black community rallied around one of the Tampa Bay region’s top African-American government officials.

The Florida Commission on Ethics and Florida Bar are both still reviewing complaints about the raises and e-mail trolling made against Lee.

Higginbotham and Hagan declined to say whether they still feel Lee should be fired. They said they want to hear from her first. But each said they are troubled by the latest allegations.

“I do have grave concerns that there is a pattern of poor judgment on Ms. Lee’s part,” Hagan said. “That being said, I want to get all the facts and hear from our counsel before making a final decision.”

Higginbotham and Sharpe have both said they asked outside counsel Richard McCrea to be prepared to discuss the severance provisions in Lee’s contract.

Beckner said he is most troubled that Lee changed her story about the lunch meeting to him. While he has asked himself whether his memory could be faulty, he said he is feeling more confident given that Higginbotham and a television reporter both have said the same thing.

“That certainly raises more questions in my mind about what really happened and the motivation behind what happened,” he said.

Murman said she thinks Lee at least should be suspended with pay once again while commissioners figure out what happened and how to proceed. Commissioner Victor Crist, while concerned with reports about Lee’s actions, said he wants to hear the facts directly from the players before casting judgment.

Attempts to reach Commissioner Les Miller, the board’s lone African-American member, were unsuccessful. Recovering from back surgery, he phoned in during an impromptu discussion of the issue by commissioners Wednesday to urge them not to take any action until he returns.

Bill Varian can be reached at (813) 226-3387 or varian@sptimes.com.

 

 

Redistricting

Commissioner Murman is mentioned in this article on redistricting in Creative Loafing:

News

Hillsborough Commissioners agree on new redistricting map

Posted by Mitch Perry on Tue, May 24, 2011 at 3:29 PM

 

Sounding slightly frustrated with the process, the Hillsborough Board of County Commissioners on Tuesday unanimously approved the idea of posting the latest of seven drawn maps of proposed new district lines in newspaper ads. The ads will inform citizens about the possible changes to those voting districts.

Hillsborough County’s Charter requires reapportionment of the County Commission’s single-member districts,1-4, every 10 years, when the U..S. Census is completed. But during their discussion today, commissioners expressed unhappiness with how the process has played out so far, though they admitted that it was too late to change it for this once-in-a-decade go-round.

There have been several public meetings about the changes, such as Monday night in Temple Terrace. The public can view those seven different maps and make written comments, but no public testimony is allowed at the meetings. There are three more such meetings in the next month, followed by two public hearings, at the second of which, on June 20, commissioners will ultimately vote on the new boundaries.

Commissioner Sandy Murman said she felt the process was a “little backwards.” She also expressed unease with the fact that the public — including Temple Terrace Mayor Joe Affronti on Monday night — has not been allowed to speak at the meetings, a disappointment shared by Commissioner Ken Hagan.

The most significant changes from the current configuration is that Districts 1 and 3, represented by Murman and Les Miller, respectively, are expected to gain more potential voters, and Districts 2 and 4, chaired by Victor Crist and Al Higginbotham, will lose voters (the idea is to keep all four districts around 300,000 people).

Also, District 3 is officially listed as a minority district seat, created to maximize the opportunity for a minority representative candidate to be elected, which also plays a part in how that line is drawn.

After staff officials said they intended in the ad to inform voters about the changes by posting one new map of the current district lines (out of seven that have been drawn up), Miller worried about how the BOCC would determine that map.

However, Commissioner Kevin Beckner wondered why that was a big deal, since that map would clearly be listed in the ad as simply a potential new map, with information containing a website and phone number where residents could learn more about the process.

But Miller countered that it did matter, since he said there was considerable confusion among the public about the change, especially since one map ripped Progress Village completely from his currently drawn District 3 seat.

That’s when Beckner burst out with his obvious frustration with the process, calling it “so flawed.” He said that in the future, the public should see all of the proposed maps concurrently, whereas right now new maps are being added from meeting to meeting.

Commissioner Victor Crist then chimed in, disputing a story published days ago in the Tampa Tribune that claimed he was making a grab for Temple Terrace in his District 2 seat, taking it out of Miller’s District 3 area.

“There’s a lot of confusion even in the media,” Crist snarled, referring to the allegation that he was trying to pick off Temple Terrace, when he said it was already in his district.

The board ultimately voted to publish an ad that contains a map of the county with firmly drawn lines representing the current boundaries, with a dotted line superimposed on it that shows one particular map, the latest version known as Map F.

After Tuesday night, when there will be a showing of the seven maps at the C. Blythe Andrews Jr. Public Library, 2607 East Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Tampa between 6 and 8 p.m., there will be two more
public viewings. They are:

* May 31, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Plant City Hall, 302 West Reynolds St., Plant City

* June 2, 10 a.m.-noon, Sun City Center Community Association, 1009 North Pebble Beach Blvd., Greater Sun City

Other key dates:

* Public Hearing — June 9, 6-8 p.m., County Center, 2nd Floor Boardroom, 601 East Kennedy Blvd., Tampa. Commissioners to discuss alternatives to proposed district boundaries.

* Public Hearing — June 20, 6-8 p.m., County Center, 2nd Flood Boardroom, 601 East Kennedy Blvd., Tampa. Commissioners to adopt district boundaries.

 

 
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