Minutes 08-06-13MINUTES OF THE CITY COMMISSION MEETING HELD ON TUESDAY,
AUGUST 6, 2013, AT 6:30 P.M. IN COMMISSION CHAMBERS, CITY HALL,
100 EAST BOYNTON BEACH BOULEVARD, BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
PRESENT:
Jerry Taylor, Mayor
Woodrow L. Hay, Vice Mayor
David T. Merker, Commissioner
Michael M. Fitzpatrick, Commissioner
Joe Casello, Commissioner
1. OPENINGS
A. Call to order - Mayor Jerry Taylor
B. Invocation by Rev. Randall Gill - First Presbyterian Church
C. Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag led by Mayor Taylor
Lori LaVerriere, City Manager
James Cherof, City Attorney
Janet Prainito, City Clerk
Mayor Taylor called the meeting to order at 6:55 p.m. An invocation was given by
Reverend Randall Gill from the First Presbyterian Church. Mayor Taylor led the Pledge
of Allegiance to the Flag.
D. Brand Promise Statement
The Brand Promise Statement was read: "It is time to take a look at Boynton Beach.
Complemented by excellent schools with a mission to educate, nurture and inspire."
E Agenda Approval:
1. Additions, Deletions, Corrections
Commissioner Merker requested an item be added to Future Agenda Items to discuss
changing the name of Oceanfront Park to reflect the name Boynton Beach. Mayor
Taylor agreed to add it for discussion at the next meeting.
Commissioner Casello pulled Item 6.L for discussion.
2. Adoption
Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
Motion
August 6, 2013
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve the agenda as amended. Commissioner Fitzpatrick
seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
2. OTHER
A. Informational Items by Members of the City Commission
Vice Mayor Hay thanked City officials who had attended Reverend Chaney's funeral. It
was well attended by City staff. Reverend Chaney had touched many lives and left a
positive mark with his words and wisdom. He requested prayers and support for the
family and St John Missionary Baptist Church while they continue the work Reverend
Chaney started.
Commissioner Casello reported he attended the Chamber of Commerce luncheon at
Benvenuto Restaurant. As a first time Commissioner, he thanked all the department
heads who made their budget presentations with professionalism and knowledge that
made it easy to navigate through the budget process. He was present at the opening of
the Old Dixie EcoWalk at the Seabourn Cove project and Interim Police Chief Katz's
town hall meeting that was very informative. Commissioner Casello agreed with Mayor
Taylor that similar sessions should be held throughout the City and commended Chief
Katz on the presentation. Commissioner Casello was inspired with the joy, love and
celebration of the life of Reverend Chaney. It was a tribute to his many
accomplishments.
Mayor Taylor agreed with the comments relating to the various meetings and functions.
3. ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
A Accept presentation by Andrea Bradley, President and CEO of Palm
Healthcare Foundation, regarding City of Boynton Beach's participation in the
Let's Move Commit to Change Campaign.
Ms. Bradley from the Palm Healthcare Foundation, Palm Beach County's largest public
foundation for healthcare with a mission to inspire funding and solutions to the
healthcare issues in the County made the presentation. Since 2001 they have donated
more than $4 million to provide tools to help prevent diabetes or manage diabetes.
She recognized the City's participation in the Let's Move Commit to Change challenge
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last April. The City of Boynton Beach constituted the largest team among 50 zip codes.
More than 100,000 minutes of physical activity were logged during the month of
competition. The City of Boynton Beach contributed 79,980 minutes and she applauded
those efforts. Partnering with CBS12 the campaign was run across the community.
Ms. Bradley noted 100,000 minutes could be a walk from West Palm Beach to Los
Angeles two and a half times. The effort was undertaken to raise money, but more
importantly creating community health. It was widely embraced. There would be
another campaign in January of 2014.
Awards were presented to the number one team, City of Boynton Beach ITS
Department that logged in 10,331 minutes and received a plaque. Three top employees
who logged approximately 5,000 minutes were Melissa Dyer, Debbie Reamsnyder and
Rani De Marco. Mayor Taylor expressed his appreciation of all the staff who
participated and put the City of Boynton Beach on the map once again.
B Tribute to Reverend Lance Chaney
August 6, 2013
Mrs. Marilane Chaney, family members and members of the St. John Missionary Baptist
Church came forward for the Tribute. Mayor Taylor read the Tribute outlining the many
achievements of Reverend Chaney and his contributions as a pillar of leadership in the
City of Boynton Beach.
Mrs. Chaney related both she and her husband were grateful to have had the
opportunity to be part of the City and serve its residents. She thanked the Police
Department for their escort on the evening of the funeral. In honor of Reverend
Chaney's memory, she challenged everyone to continue to work to help those less
fortunate and do the very best to serve the Lord. She thanked everyone for their
prayers and acts of kindness shown to the family of Reverend Chaney and the family of
the St John Missionary Baptist Church.
C. Presentation by the Lake Worth Drainage District given by Patrick A. Martin,
PE, Director of Engineering for the LWDD.
Carisse LeJeune, Assistant City Manager, introduced Patrick Martin representing the
Lake Worth Drainage District. The District manages water resources in southeast Palm
Beach County and has committed to advance community outreach and education on
topics such as flood mitigation and preparedness. Mr. Martin is the Director of
Engineering and responsible for 200 square miles of projects and inspections.
Mr. Martin explained the LWDD area runs from Hillsboro Canal north to Okeechobee
Boulevard and the conservation area on the west to 1 -95 on the east. There are over
500 miles of canals with east to west canals every half mile north to south. There are
north /south canals along SR 7, both sides of the Florida Turnpike, a mile west of Military
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Trail and the Lake Ida, Lake Osborne, Lake Eden chain. There are 20 major control
structures and the LWDD reviews and permits any construction to meet the strict
guidelines. The water is collected from the various communities into the LWDD system
and takes the water out to tide.
The intent of the Clean Water Act was to provide clean water and eliminate water
pollution. It has been ongoing with various programs that are important to provide good
water quality both for human sport and recreation. There are now detention and
retention mechanisms that collect the stormwater from the inlets and discharge the
water into the lake systems. The systems have control structures that slow the water
down for water quality and quantity purposes. It prevents the canals from being
overloaded and flooding the communities.
It is a three - tiered system with the main block being the South Florida Water
Management District, then the Lake Worth Drainage District and then the communities
that have to work together. The impact of rainfall levels was explained up to 15 to 20
inches of rain that could result in homes being flooded. The LWDD has not flooded a
single home within their service area that includes over 700,000 residents within the
district. The County has 1.2 million people so the majority is covered by the LWDD.
The communities have to take care of their systems of swales, lakes and roads to get
the water from the roofs to the lakes. Permission from LWDD to release any water must
be obtained. The communities are encouraged to create storm teams within a
homeowners' association for communication purposes. The control will operate on a
passive gravity manner without human intervention. Mr. Martin cautioned homeowners
should not plant trees in the right -of -ways because removal, if damaged, can be costly.
Most manholes open to the local sewer system and removing the manhole covers can
result in sewer backup creating a water quality problem.
The LWDD provides speakers for the homeowner associations, seminars and public
events and workshops for property managers to educate the public, as well as storm
teams in large developments. Flyers, newsletters, videos and social media outlets are
all being utilized to enlighten the public. There is a 24/7 call -in system and regular
meetings are scheduled with local organizations involved.
Complacency is a constant challenge, especially after hurricane season. In the spring,
assessments should be made to ensure the inlets are clear and the control structure is
operating before each season. Another problem is the aging population which becomes
fearful and assuring them the system is working properly is essential. Gaps in
communication occur when property managers and board members are constantly
changing.
The future goals include continued cooperation with the Water Management District, the
municipalities and other utilities. Discussion with legislators is also instigated when
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necessary Education materials would continue to be supplied to keep the public
engaged. The control structures are being modernized through the use of telemetry
and developing an interactive GIS mapping system.
Working together by co- hosting presentations would be very helpful. Flyers could be
created for distribution through the utility billing system a couple times a year. Sharing
the directories and databases would be essential. Approval of drainage plans is
ongoing.
Commissioner Fitzpatrick understood bikeways or walkways are not allowed on any of
the 500 miles of canals. Mr. Martin responded they are not allowed because of a
liability issue. Many of the areas are encumbered with heavy equipment or stock piling
of fill for maintenance dredging. The bike paths require continuous ownership
throughout and the LWDD does not necessarily own the property. The canal is on an
exclusive easement through private property. It would require approval from each and
every individual that owns the property to create a bike path. Many homeowners do not
want the bike path running through their backyards. It is threatening.
Commissioner Fitzpatrick inquired if there has been any sea level rise or future plans to
deal with the issue. Mr. Martin replied he had worked on another canal in Dade County
that is dealing with combatting sea level rise. The water level there is much lower than
Palm Beach County. The water level table in this area is maintained at approximately
eight and a half feet above sea level. It is being monitored between Dade, Broward and
Palm Beach County. As the sea level rises there is a flood protection problem and an
issue of contamination of the coastal well fields.
Vice Mayor Hay questioned if there was any possible threat to the acquifer in this area.
Mr. Martin cautioned the coastal well fields need to be closely monitored. It could cause
problems with the acquifer. The City of Boynton Beach has been very progressive in
their efforts and has an incredible recovery rate with a 97% capture.
Mayor Taylor thanked Mr. Martin for the presentation and data.
D. Request a private attorney - client session of the City Commission to discuss
pending litigation in the following cases:
1 BOYNTON OLD SCHOOL PARTNERSHIP, LLC., Plaintiff vs. CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, Defendant - Case No 502013CA011391XXXXMB AH
2. BOYNTON OLD SCHOOL PARTNERSHIP, LLC., Petitioner vs. CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, Respondent - Case No. 502013CA011436XXXXMB AY
Attorney Cherof advised the two cases arose out of the occurrence with the Boynton
Old School Partnership, LLC vs. the City of Boynton Beach and another case with the
same title. The cases are pending in different courts in Palm Beach County. They arise
out of the Commission's denial of the petition for rezoning and site plan approval.
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Approximately 45 minutes would be needed for both cases. There was consensus to
hold the closed -door session at 5:30 p.m. on August 20 before the Commission
meeting.
4. PUBLIC AUDIENCE
August 6, 2013
INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO 3 MINUTE PRESENTATIONS
(at the discretion of the Chair, this 3 minute allowance may need to be
adjusted depending on the level of business coming before the City
Commission)
Mack McCray, 806 NW 4 Street, recalled he was one of the Commissioners who had
voted to conduct a study of the Police Department. Whatever the study may show, Mr.
McCray supported the Police Department and thought they were the greatest people in
blue.
Mark Karageorge, 240A Main Boulevard, pointed out the recent back -to- school health
fair was a continuation of Reverend Chaney's vision that has advanced and served over
2,000 children with school supplies, health screenings and physicals to participate in
sports. Mr. Karageorge was glad the abatement money was included in the budget
because there is an issue with properties on Ocean Parkway that need to be
addressed. Ms. LaVerriere replied demolition was planned in the next two weeks.
Shirley Cassa, 217 SW 14 Street, indicated a site plan had been presented for a hotel
at 2001 West Ocean Drive adjacent to Palm Beach Leisureville. A committee was
formed opposing the hotel then and it continues. She hoped the Commission would
stand with them in the future.
Commissioner Merker advised he had spoken with Ms. Cassa previously and wanted to
know what had been done since that time.
Ms. Cassa related the developer submitted a new site plan and would be before the
Commission for approval in October.
Mayor Taylor advised the developer had eliminated the height issue Ms. Cassa
remained concerned about the entrance on Ocean Drive. There was the possibility of
an entrance by the bowling alley or onto Congress Avenue. Mayor Taylor understood
the entrance by the bowling alley was not an option.
Dr. Piotr Blass, 113 W. Tara Lakes Drive, proposed Oceanfront Park be renamed to
Boynton Lance Chaney Beach. He had been honored with the friendship of Reverend
Chaney who was one of the few community leaders dedicated to the University of
Boynton and was very supportive.
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The proposed hotel is a no brainer and a crazy idea. He suggested Attorney Barry
Silver be contacted to assist the residents of Leisureville.
It was incredible to have the Police Department and Dr. Blass contended the City was
lucky to not have the Sheriff's office in the City.
Finally, Dr. Blass was emphatic that the Old High School belongs to the City and it is the
University of Boynton Beach. It has been a game and he urged the Commission not to
waste any more time or money on further ventures in the building.
No one else coming forward, Mayor Taylor closed Public Audience.
5. ADMINISTRATIVE
Motion
Vote
A. Appoint eligible members of the community to serve in vacant positions on City
advisory boards. The following openings exist:
Arts Commission: 1 regular and 2 alternates
Building Board of Adjustment and Appeals: 3 regulars and 2 alternates
Code Compliance Board: 1 regular and 2 alternates
Community Relations Board: 2 regulars and 1 alternate
Education & Youth Advisory Board: 1 alternate
Financial Advisory Committee: 2 regulars and 2 alternates
Historic Resource Preservation Board: 1 alternate
Library Board: 2 alternates
Recreation and Parks Board: 1 alternate
Planning and Development Board: 1 regular
Senior Advisory Board: 3 regulars and 1 alternate
Special Events Ad Hoc Committee: 1 regular and 1 alternate
The motion passed unanimously.
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August 6, 2013
Mayor Taylor indicated there were only two possible appointments. One was for the
Code Compliance Board and Mayor Taylor chose to table the appointment.
The second appointment was a regular on the Planning and Development Board.
Mayor Taylor proposed moving Stephen Palermo from an alternate position to a regular
position. Vice Mayor Hay seconded the motion.
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Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
Motion
B. Authorize Vice Mayor Hay, as the City of Boynton Beach Voting Delegate to the
Florida League of Cities to support or oppose proposed resolutions submitted
by the FLC Resolutions Committee at the 87th Annual Conference, according
to consensus of the City Commission.
Commissioner Fitzpatrick moved to appoint Vice Mayor Woodrow Hay. Commissioner
Casello seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
August 6, 2013
Ms. LeJeune interjected there needed to be a consensus if the Commission supported
or opposed the resolutions. Mayor Taylor indicated most of the resolutions were
routine. One did relate to giving the State permission to tax Internet sales.
Commissioner Merker would support the resolutions. Vice Mayor Hay supported the
measures. Commissioner Fitzpatrick had no opinion.
6. CONSENT AGENDA
Matters in this section of the Agenda are proposed and recommended by the
City Manager for "Consent Agenda" approval of the action indicated in each
item, with all of the accompanying material to become a part of the Public
Record and subject to staff comments
A PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -068 - Approve and authorize signing of
an Agreement for Water Service outside the City Limits with Fenel Mene for the
property at 1124 Peak Rd, Lantana, FL
B. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -069 - Approve and authorize signing of
an Agreement for Water Service outside the City Limits with Sashi L. Maharaj &
Sheerin M. Maharaj for the property at 3695 Edgar Ave, Boynton Beach, FL.
C. Accept the FY 2012 -13 Budget Status Report of the General Fund & Utility
Fund for the nine (9) month period ended June 30, 2013.
D. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -070 - Adopt the City of Boynton Beach's
Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) One Year Action Plan for fiscal
years 2013/2014
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E. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -071 - Accept the offer of $6,000 as
settlement of the City's Second Mortgage that exists on this property as a result
of the proposed short sale for Diane Dolphin of 318 Glen Arbor Terrace,
Boynton Beach, Florida, 33426, in the amount of $50,000, and Waive the Right
of First Refusal for this same property.
F PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -072 - Approve Subordination Agreement
allowing for a subordination of the City's Mortgage for James and Karen
Hannigan of 2389 S.W. 13th Way, Boynton Beach, Florida, 33426 and
authorizing the City Manager to execute the Subordination Agreement.
G. Approve additional funds in the amount of $4,152 for an estimated total annual
expense of $28,500 to Thyssen -Krupp Elevator for elevator service in City
facilities. Thyssen -Krupp is an authorized vendor via The Cooperative
Purchasing Network (TCPN) Contract #R5042. Blanket Purchase Order
#130388
H. Approve the Vehicles /Equipment submitted by Public Works /Fleet Maintenance
for disposal
I. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -073 - Ratify the actions of the South
Central Regional Wastewater Treatment and Disposal Board at their July 18,
2013 meeting and give authorization to do the following:
1) Approve the Third Amended Interlocal Government Agreement for biosolids
processing and recycling ( "Agreement ") on the express condition that this
agreement shall not be finalized by SCRWT &DB and delivered to the Authority
until the Authority provides written confirmation that it has the funds on hand
($2,037,588) to pay SCRWT &DB and that upon delivery of the Agreement to
the Authority, the Authority will pay SCRWT &DB the sum of $2,037,588;
2) Amend paragraph 5, Section 4 of "Vacation Leave" of the Board Rules;
3) Add the following subsection to section 5 "Sick Leave" of the Board Rules;
4) Accept the 2013/2014 Organizational Chart and Salary Ranges;
5) Establish user rate (O &M at $1.0326/1,000 Gal and R &R reserves at
$0.1985/1,000 Gal) to Delray Beach and Boynton Beach for fiscal year
2013/2014: 1.2311/1,000 Gal;
6) Establish reclaim user rate at $0.19813/1,000 Gal to consumers Delray
Beach, Boynton Beach and South Central Regional for fiscal year 2013/2014;
7) Accept the 2013/2014 Wastewater and Reclaim O &M Budgets
J. Approve the piggyback of General Services Administration (GSA) Contract GS-
27F -0002V (SBSA) & GS- 27F -0003V with Office Elements (Adden Furniture
distributor) with the same terms, conditions, specifications and pricing for the
purchase of bunk room furniture for Fire Station #3 in the amount of $28,233.23
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K Approve payment of $14,272.50 to Hy -Byrd, Inc. of Lake Worth, Florida as final
payment on Blanket Purchase order #130494 for a total purchase order amount
of $32,877.50 for plan review and inspection tasks on an "as- needed basis."
Hy -Byrd, Inc. was selected from written quotes in connection with this blanket
purchase order. Accordingly, purchase orders exceeding $25,000 requires the
City Commission approval.
L PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -074 - Approve Third Amendment to
Professional Services Agreement with American Traffic Solutions "ATS"
Commissioner Casello had pulled Item 6.L for discussion. The City was being asked to
cover the administrative cost of implementing the new rule. He did not agree that the
City should absorb any more of the expense. In 2012, $2 million was generated from
the red light cameras. Of that figure, the State gained $1 million, ATS received
$650,000 and the City received only $200,000. His contention was any additional cost
should be at the vendor's expense. The City has been very generous
Commissioner Merker inquired if the benefit to the City would be reduced. Ms.
LaVerriere responded the cost for the hearing process at the local level was estimated
and included in the $85 additional assessment. The volume of hearings is unknown so
an estimate was calculated that can be adjusted in the future. All the costs should be
recouped by the $85 fee. Commissioner Merker had suggested the fee should be higher
to the guilty party to secure the costs.
Vice Mayor Hay agreed with Commissioner Casello that ATS should consume more of
the cost. He inquired about the number of magistrates being utilized and the
frequencies of the hearings. Ms. LaVerriere advised only one magistrate was being
contracted at this time. A formal solicitation has not been undertaken. There was an
urgency since the change went into effect on July 1 It would be best to have at least
two magistrates with the hearings being held once a week depending on the volume.
The hearings would be conducted in Chambers scheduling 10 to 15 per hour.
Commissioner Casello questioned why the mailing and administrative costs incurred by
the vendor should be an expense for the City when the vendor receives triple the
amount of revenue of the City.
Juan Delsaro, of ATS, with offices at 1330 W. Southern Avenue in Tempe, Arizona was
based in Miami and did the work for ATS in South Florida. The current contracts involve
ATS reviewing the violations, sending them to the Police Department for their review,
notice to the violator with the option to pay or file an affidavit they were not the driver or
go to court. The new law requires a period of 60 days for a hearing and filing of the
affidavit. The vendor has to set up the hearings, send out the new mailings and new
affidavits involving a new system for the process to move smoothly.
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Commissioner Casello confirmed the cost of the magistrate and the clerk would be a
cost of the City with only mailing costs the responsibility of the vendor. Mr. Delsaro
agreed, but understood those costs would be covered by the administrative fee charged
to the violators. Commissioner Casello asserted the additional five new cameras would
produce even more revenue for the vendor and Mr. Delsaro agreed. Commissioner
Casello questioned why the cost was being passed to the municipality and not absorbed
by the vendor. Mr. Delsaro countered it was an added layer of work that has to be done
to set up the hearings, the schedule, train the magistrates, train the clerks and new
mailings for scheduling hearings, rescheduling hearings, affidavits that will be a new
system that the vendor has not created yet.
Commissioner Merker inquired if Mr. Delsaro felt the $85 fee was appropriate to cover
the costs He also questioned if the percentage of the expenses the vendor would be
passing on to the City would be the same or more. Mr. Delsaro noted the $85 charge
was similar to what cities of similar size have assessed. Palm Beach County passed
their fee at $75. A maximum of $250 was allowed by the legislature. It was not
contemplated it would go that high.
Commissioner Merker surmised there was a percentage of profit being made and
questioned if it was due to an increase or increase of responsibility and work to be
done. Mr. Delsaro indicated it was work that had been done on the back end. There
could be a scenario that the City does not pay the $2 fee at all. All the violators could
just pay the fee and there are no appeals. It is a work in progress. Commissioner
Merker asked if the issue was negotiable.
Attorney Cherof advised all the issues were negotiable.
Motion
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August 6, 2013
Commissioner Casello moved to go back and renegotiate the contract so the City did
not have to pick up the administrative cost incurred by the vendor. Vice Mayor Hay
seconded the motion.
Ms. LaVerriere qualified the legislation put the burden on the local government as well
as ATS, both incurring additional cost. All the costs are captured in the $85 fee. The
fee is passed through to the City and the City pays it, is all factored into the $85 fee,
including the $2 increase that the violator ultimately pays. There is a built -in assumption
that not everyone will pay too. It is anticipated with the additional cameras there will be
an increase in violations in the new areas and then people change their behavior and
the violations decrease. There will be more revenue and ATS and the City will benefit.
Attorney Cherof understood Commissioner Casello's concern that Boynton will be
making Tess and the vendor will be making more and not sharing the increase with the
City. Commissioner Casello agreed with that interpretation.
Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
Shana Bridgeman, Assistant City Attorney, clarified it was the goal of the City to pass
through the cost to the violator, but it is not a guarantee the violator will pay the fine.
The City will have to pay the $2 cost per piece of mail to ATS and the City will pass that
cost to the violator when a fine is assessed. It will be the goal to recoup the cost, but
not all violators will necessarily pay the required amount to recoup all costs
Attorney Bridgeman was confident in the figures Tim Howard, Director of Finance, had
quantified. ATS will be providing an additional service to the City by having staff mail
out the notices to schedule the hearings on behalf of the City and set up the
infrastructure for the local hearings and train the new hires on conducting the hearing. It
will be an entire new system and ATS will be charging an additional service fee.
Commissioner Fitzpatrick wanted to know, if the motion was passed, would it delay a
State mandate. Attorney Bridgeman responded the magistrate would be hired even if
the amendment is not approved. It would mean ATS would not set up any hearings at
this time Currently, anyone requesting a local hearing is being scheduled for January,
2014. It would only delay when the hearings begin. The options are to pay the ticket,
request a local hearing and if not paid within 60 days a citation would be issued and
they can request a court hearing.
Commissioner Merker established the administrative fee can be modified.
Vice Mayor Hay confirmed staff had no objection to the assessment at $85. Ms
LaVerriere concluded ATS will increase profit and the City will likely see increased
revenue. It was anticipated the cost would be recouped from the violators so the City
would have no additional cost. Attorney Cherof advised there could be a condition of
approval that the $2 pass through be approved for a limited period of time, review the
data and revisit the issue.
Commissioner Casello wanted to know if most of the violators are Boynton Beach
residents. Attorney Bridgeman advised an ATS survey last year revealed most of the
tickets were not issued to Boynton residents. She cautioned it was unclear how many
requests for hearing would be received so there is speculation. Staff made their best
educated guess as to how much it would cost to fund the program and staff based on
the number of people who have requested court hearings over the last year. The
legislation says only the costs can be recovered. They cannot be charged a penalty,
only an administrative fine to cover the cost expended by the City.
Motion
Vice Mayor Hay offered a substitute motion to allow the amendment to go through with
the contingency that it be addressed in one year. Commissioner Merker seconded the
motion.
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August 6, 2013
Commissioner Casello argued the City is in partnership with the vendor who is making
$600,000 on the contract and the City receives only $200,000. Any extra costs are
being absorbed by the City of Boynton Beach even though it can be recouped and
assessed up to a $250 fee. He asked why? The vendor, as a partner should step up
and incur the cost
Commissioner Merker suggested it be tested for a year and see if the job gets done and
have a clear picture of the revenues The concern should be for the City of Boynton
Beach and not the vendor's profits.
Vote
The motion failed 2 -3 (Mayor Taylor, Commissioners Fitzpatrick and Casello
dissenting).
Attorney Cherof suggested a motion to table be made. The City Manager can meet with
each Commissioner and decide the direction to be taken in the negotiations.
Mayor Taylor asked if there was a motion to table the matter to the next meeting.
Motion
Vice Mayor Hay so moved. Commissioner Fitzpatrick seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed 4 -1 (Commissioner Merker dissenting).
M. Approve the minutes from the Regular City Commission meeting held on July
16, 2013
N. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. 13 -075 - Authorize the City Manager to enter
into agreements with Jon D. Gurney, P.A. and James D. Stokes to provide
Special Magistrate services for the local hearings of the Red Light Camera
violations.
7. BIDS AND PURCHASES OVER $100,000
A. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -076 - Approve a contract with Ric -Man
Construction Florida, Inc. for the Raw Water Main - Section B project, Bid No.
041 - 2821- 13 /DJL in the amount of $3,112,000 plus a 10% contingency of
$311,200 if needed, for staff approval of change orders for unforeseen
conditions for a total expenditure of $3,423,200.
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Motion
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve. Commissioner Merker seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously
B. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -077 - Approve the piggy -back of the
GSA contract # GS-07F-9491G with Xylem for the purchase of four Dri -Prime
Pumps to provide back -up pumping at Lift Stations 708, 102, 207 & 922 for a
total price of $157,008.80. The GSA contract meets or exceeds the competitive
procurement process required by the City of Boynton Beach.
Motion
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve. Commissioner Casello seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
Motion
C. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -078 - Approve a one -year extension to
the Provider Agreement for "GROUP BENEFITS MEDICAL CLAIMS
ADMINISTRATION (TPA) SERVICES AND /OR FULLY INSURED PLAN" with
CIGNA Healthcare for the plan year October 1, 2013 through September 30,
2014 as provided under the Terms of the contract with CIGNA and the City of
Boynton Beach.
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve Commissioners Fitzpatrick and Casello seconded
the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
D. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -079 - Approve provider agreement with
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of Plantation, FL (MetLife) for City's
"FULLY INSURED DENTAL PLAN ", this is the last renewal period provided for
under RFP #060 - 1610- 11 /JMA
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August 6, 2013
Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
Motion
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve Commissioner Merker seconded the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
Motion
E. PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R13 -080 - Approve and authorize a Two Year
Agreement between Vision Service Plan Insurance Co. (VSP) and the City of
Boynton Beach for Vision Insurance per the Request for Proposal for a "Two
Year Contract for a Fully Insured Vision Plan" for the Employees of the City of
Boynton Beach; RFP No.: 052 - 1610- 13 /JMA
Vice Mayor Hay moved to approve. Commissioners Merker and Fitzpatrick seconded
the motion.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
8. CODE COMPLIANCE & LEGAL SETTLEMENTS
None
9. PUBLIC HEARING
7 P.M. OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS THE AGENDA PERMITS
The City Commission will conduct these public hearings in its dual capacity
as Local Planning Agency and City Commission.
None
10. CITY MANAGER'S REPORT
A Presentation of Police Department Management Study report by Berkshire
Advisors for acceptance by the City Commission in connection with RFP #067 -
2110- 12/TWH "A POLICE DEPARTMENT MANAGEMENT STUDY ".
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
Ms. LaVerriere recalled it has been a long process to conclusion, in terms of a
management review requested by the Commission over a year ago. Mike Walker, with
Berkshire Advisors, was the representative with the consulting firm that conducted the
study. He worked diligently with staff and spoke with some of the Commissioners
individually.
Mr. Walker thanked the City. A great deal of data had to be gathered, meetings
scheduled and support required from the Department. He specifically thanked Tim
Howard who had to organize everything from the City's perspective and now Interim
Chief Katz, who was in charge of assembling all the data needed from the Police
Department The quality of an analysis depends on the quality of the information
provided.
The request of the Commission was to conduct a comprehensive review of the Police
Department, including how it was managed and operated and examine staffing needs.
The process involved understanding the Department from a number of perspectives.
The fact finding entailed interviews, briefings and focus groups with members of the
Commission, other governmental perspectives from external stakeholders and most of
the time was spent with the personnel within the Department itself
Two surveys were completed; an employee survey and an activities analysis survey
where Officers explain how they spend their time among various activities. There were
also focus groups with community representatives, benchmark analysis and best
practice analysis. Extensive data and documentation was reviewed.
There are core challenges that face the Department and a number of significant
challenges. By following the proposed plan, the Department can emerge a much
stronger Department that is organizationally capable of providing more responsive
services to the citizens. It is to the Department's credit that most of the issues are
internal. There is strife within the Department, but it does not seem to affect the quality
of service that the citizens receive.
The factors that create strife within the Department were identified. The Department
lacks a clear sense of organizational identity and shared norms. It creates problems
because different people in the Department have different perspectives about basic time
management for individuals. There is no sense of organizational purpose for the
Department, as a whole, that contributes to the significant amount of factionalism within
the Department. Different factions form and people focus on the needs of the smaller
groups rather than the overall Department needs.
The Department has gone through significant challenges in terms of employee
misconduct that served to lower morale and reduce employee pride for some of those
interviewed. The employee survey revealed some employees did not want to admit
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
they worked for the Department in some instances, while overall they are generally
proud to work for the organization. It is a mixed story.
The civilian employees do not feel valued by the Department. The problem was larger
than other departments studied because the recent cutbacks were borne by the civilian
staff. It contributed to the sense the civilian staff is not valued by the Department as a
whole.
To address the challenges, the magnitude of the issues facing the Department does not
allow for the option to take an incremental approach. Forceful action needs to be taken
in the short term to signal all stakeholders that change is occurring and the problems
are being addressed. In the meantime, systems and processes have to be put in place
to sustain the changes long term.
In the short term, a number of suggestions were made. First, a vision needs to be
developed and articulated that emphasizes how services can be improved to the
Boynton Beach community. The focal point could be community policing that provides a
vision for change that all employees in the Department can embrace. Second, the
organizational structure should be changed. The interim layer of the Majors became a
magnet for some of the factionalism that was discovered. It also created a situation that
the Chief lost a connection with the troops. The Chief needs to be more actively
involved in the Department with a major presence in terms of bringing about change.
The suggestion was to create two Captain positions in patrol that would provide a focal
point for establishing how the services can be tailored to meet the needs of the different
communities in the City. Where there are sworn officers in positions where civilians
could be utilized, civilians should be hired. It would demonstrate the belief in the
management competency of the civilians and have civilians as leaders of the groups
that are predominantly staffed by civilians.
Third, basic performance expectations should be established for key positions There
are no shared norms in terms of the focus of patrol officers and how officers should
spend their time. With standards developed, people can then be held accountable for
their job. Three new Lieutenants have been promoted and are already addressing
some of the suggestions. Training has to be provided so the expectations are clear and
fully understood. In the short term, additional training is needed for the first -line
supervisors, the Sergeant who will be responsible to implement any changes.
The short term changes should be accomplished over the next six months.
Over the long term there are three types of systems that should be developed. First, a
system to support the Department's vision for community policing should be
established. Three themes emerged from discussions that could be the foundation for
the vision. They would be to ensure Officers create a personal relationship with the
community residents, tailor services to meet their needs and project a friendly customer-
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
oriented attitude. They are easy to say, but hard to implement consistently. To do that,
there needs to be a performance monitoring system that tracks progress. Training has
to be initiated and organizational changes will assist in the process. There has to be a
plan for precise services to be offered and what resources are needed to address the
needs of the community as they emerge. Deployment of discretionary staff to focus and
support the efforts has to be determined. The Department's use of social media can be
used to help support the vision for community policing.
Another system for long term improvement is the quality and integrity of Department
staff. The process for hiring, training new officers and ongoing support was assessed in
light of the issues of misconduct. The hiring process was pretty good. Training new
recruits was examined and it was suggested the field training program be strengthened
and assure the best Officers are the field training officers. Those officers not performing
well during the first year of probation should be dismissed to avoid future problems.
Ongoing improvement continues with the theme of the importance of first -line
supervision. There has to be a continued focus on high quality and consistent first -line
supervision to address problems before they get out of control.
A system should be established to ensure consistency in the application of discipline.
The disciplinary guidelines should be appropriate. The Department should review the
guidelines and their application systematically. If the guidelines are revised, there must
be roll call training to ensure the expectations are completely understood. The process
has to be as transparent as possible. Privacy issues are a concern with employee
discipline. If a consistent approach is related and any variance from guidelines clearly
understood, it will help address the concerns of favoritism. The employee survey
revealed there was widespread perception that favoritism exists. The best way to avoid
the issue is make the process of discipline as transparent as possible.
There are other management issues that would benefit the Department. It was
suggested there be labor negotiations to allow more flexibility in making supervisory
management assignments. The process for making promotions is generally sound;
however, there was a recommendation to consider past performance in the
determination rather than only performance during the testing cycle. There was a Rule
of Five in place that takes the top five candidates and the Chief selects who should be
promoted among those individuals. Mr. Martin agreed with that process. There should
be a policy rotating specialty assignments so everyone can broaden their experience.
Some functions, such as drug related investigations, can increase the risk of
malfeasance if rotation is not done. Another benefit would be the Officers would have
the opportunity to return to patrol functions, one of the most important functions of the
Department, on a regular basis.
There are legitimate concerns about the physical facilities that should be addressed
long term. The facility maintenance issues should be addressed in the short term.
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
Many of the employees felt the lack of attention to those issues reflected how they were
valued within the organization. Those needs should be accommodated
In terms of budget and management, it should be a tool for holding managers
responsible for expenditures, especially overtime expenditures, and to improve
performance and obtain the necessary resources. It will be an opportunity, once a year,
for managers to discuss and evaluate long -term goals and available resources.
Consideration should be given to disbanding the S.W.A.T. division. The Department is
not small or large and the cost of S.W.A.T. operations is very intense compared to the
volume of activity. The Sheriff's Department could provide the service or work with
other local communities to create a regional S.W.A.T. task force type organization to
share the cost The cost is a burden for any individual community. Sharing the cost
and still providing the capacity would be the best solution.
The patrol response times could be faster. Lack of sufficient personnel was not the
cause. Other steps could improve the response times. The priority of various districts
rather than a quick response to all calls is not handled consistently. It was suggested
the relationship between the districts and priority of response be more efficiently
managed. There are some calls where more officers respond than is necessary and it
should be reviewed.
Other areas of concern related to supervision and officers returning to service quickly
after a call is completed. Oofficers taken out of service to perform an administrative
activity should not be during time of high -call volume. There is a dedicated
transportation person staffed on most shifts. It was suggested it only be staffed on an
as- needed basis
There has been a problem with insufficient vehicles so each Officer can respond in their
own vehicle and it was suggested the take -home car policy be revisited to maintain
deployment in one officer units. All of the concerns would have a significant impact on
response time. The staffing levels are more than sufficient to respond twice as fast as
currently done.
The use of the lights and sirens should only be used when the type of call demands it.
Automatic Vehicle Locators (AVL) should be installed on patrol cars to help managers
monitor the Officers and it is an issue of Officer safety so they can be quickly located if
needed. Traffic enforcement worked well. Their activities should focus on reducing
traffic accidents. Code Compliance should be more fully utilized to develop policing
plans to address community needs.
In the area of Investigations there are Detectives 1 Grade who are supervising each
unit. For a long -term solution, the training of Sergeants should include this as first -line
supervision responsibilities. In Communications there is a lot of turnover that is not
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
unusual. If possible, hiring should be done in advance of need. Technical Services is
an area of strength for the Department. A contractor could be used to replace at least
one of the positions because the work load ebbs and flows.
Staffing and scheduling is an analytical function of the study to determine how many
officers are needed to meet a given service expectation. Then, the resources have to
be scheduled to meet the need of the community. The response to 90% of the calls is
used rather than the average that can be very deceptive. In the narrow category of
emergency calls, the current response time is 13 minutes. Non - emergency calls have a
response time of 30 minutes. The City should do better. The analysis was based on a
six - minute response time at the 90% of call for emergencies and 15 minutes for non -
emergency calls. A much higher level of service should be provided.
It was determined there is ample capacity to achieve the higher levels of service. In
fact, the higher levels of service could be provided with a significant reduction of patrol
resources. Two scheduling options were studied. Under the current schedule 21 fewer
officers could meet the expectation with the addition of eight civilian positions to handle
calls they can deal with, resulting in a net reduction of 13 positions in patrol. With an
alternative schedule there could be a net reduction of 15 positions It was not
recommended that the number of Patrol Officers be reduced. Rather it is capacity that
could be redirected to support other initiatives. It can only be done if the management
issues are resolved and efficiency of patrol operations is improved. It would also bolster
discretionary resources if needed.
The suggestion was made to have fewer Patrol Sergeants and only utilize three per shift
to provide adequate supervision resulting in a reduction of nine Sergeant positions.
Some of those positions need to go to Investigations where there are no Sergeants.
In Communications there needs to be two additional positions. There is not enough
capacity to replace vacant positions when there are absences of the current staff. The
number of supervisors in Communications was not a problem. The Professional
Standards area had a low workload and it could be handled with one Tess Investigator
with the provision that a contractor be used for any hiring spurt and increase in
background investigations.
The Commission had asked for performance metrics that were developed by Berkshire
Associates for each unit. Mr. Walker emphasized both the cost and quality needs to be
considered. It is easy to improve performance if cost is not a factor. Both cost and
quality have to be factored into the equations. Surveys would assist in determining not
just the performance measures based on data, but develop information to have a more
robust ability to understand the qualitative aspects of performance.
Outsourcing some services was studied. There are risks and costs to outsourcing that
have to be weighed together. Not many functions were found that could be outsourced.
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
The S.W.A T. division was the major one. Automated traffic enforcement was
discussed. The processing of traffic tickets that is done by Community Service Officers
could potentially be put out for bid. Grant consultants could be utilized for those
projects. There may be things the Department and City can share services such as
Human Resources.
Civilianization was considered for each position. There are a handful of positions
performed by sworn officers that civilians could perform. The crime scene and evidence
detectives' work had previously been done by civilians that were removed during
cutbacks. The activities did not disappear so sworn officers are now completing the
tasks. The City should avoid the cycle of replacing civilians with sworn officers.
In terms of implementation there are three primary steps. The recommendations should
be adopted by agreeing in principal the recommendations are things that need to be
addressed and reviewed. Next an implementation task force should be established to
study the recommendations and determine if they should be adopted or modified. The
personnel and labor implications have to be considered also. The real challenge is to
mold the implementation to bridge the gap between the consultants' suggestions and
what the Department and City agrees need to be done. A plan for implementation,
including a timetable, was outlined in the study to be used to develop the City's plan to
hold the Department responsible for implementing.
Mayor Taylor asked for a motion to accept the Police Department Management Study.
Motion
Commissioner Merker so moved. Vice Mayor Hay seconded.
Vote
The motion passed unanimously.
Mayor Taylor commended Mr. Walker on the study and felt everything was covered as
requested. He felt the basis for improvement was good management for the
Department. The study brought out that changes need to be made and the message
has already been sent that top management has been changed. There is a new vision
for the Department and Interim Chief Katz has done a good job getting the message
across. Many of the changes have already taken place. Mayor Taylor wanted to see
sworn Officers really doing police work. Civilians can do the filing and paperwork.
Supervisory training is very important and the Commission needs to give the
Department the resources to train the supervisors to do an adequate job.
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
Mayor Taylor believed in a good work environment and people react to their
environment The Commission needs to proceed as quickly as possible to give the
Police Department a new facility that he fully supports.
The long -term recommendations should be considered. Union negotiations should
include giving management the flexibility to assign management positions to get the
best people for the jobs. He liked the Rule of Five concept for promotions gave the
Chief flexibility
The response times were of concern. There are many factors and the recommendation
does not include reduction in staff, rather better assignment of the resources to improve
efficiencies and response times
The study was an intense report and provided a good road map for the future. The
community feels the Police Department is doing an excellent job and Mayor Taylor
agreed and was very proud of the Department.
Mr. Walker emphasized there was a need to focus on first -line supervision. The
Department does have some outstanding Sergeants. The problem relates to
consistency.
Commissioner Merker concurred with the statement relating to the citizens' view of the
Police Department. It was very positive. He believed there is always in -house
disagreement that can be positive and foster more open discussions. Defining the roles
within the Department is very important and opens lines for communication. He
questioned if elevating from within rather than going outside the Department would be
better as things come together. Redefining the position of patrolman to show the quality
of the position would create pride in being a patrolman. Another factor was the lack of
police vehicles in emergencies and routine patrol that should be carefully scrutinized
and resolved. He commended the Police Department because the community respects
them and their job and it is a major element of the report.
Commissioner Casello felt Chief Katz had already implemented many of the short-term
recommendations and the purpose, vision and goal of the organization has been
redefined and disseminated to all. The break from the past is done and the future lies
ahead. He looked forward to great things happening for the Police Department
Vice Mayor Hay agreed with the prior comments. It was too early to see the full impact
and he looked for consistency over a period of time. The internal conflicts appear to
have been resolved and the City is on the right path. There is a significant amount of
work that needs to be done as suggested. Training is monumental because each
section of the City has its own needs that must be met. The community policing is an
important step. Vice Mayor Hay was concerned about S.W.A.T. and wanted a cost -
benefit analysis before any decision is made.
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
Commissioner Fitzpatrick questioned why it is the Rule of Five and not three or four or
six. Mr. Walker responded it gave the Chief more flexibility. With Tess there would be
more confidence in the selection process to identify the right candidates. The
Department previously had the Rule of Five and it is reasonable. Flexibility would be
the main factor. Commissioner Fitzpatrick disagreed because favoritism would continue
to be a factor that would negate the testing process. Mr. Walker pointed out the top five
would have to be pretty qualified. Commissioner Fitzpatrick inquired how many
individuals actually do the testing and if it is less than five the flexibility is gone. He felt it
perpetuates the "good old boy" network because test scores are not highly factored into
the ultimate decision. Mr Walker conceded there has to be confidence in the Police
Chief to select the best person for the job and not based on favoritism Any number
would be acceptable rather than just using the highest score in the testing process. He
was not aware of any studies on the specific number. Mr. Walker noted there are
concerns within the Department the best people are not being promoted. The recent
promotion of three Lieutenants was based solely on the top three test scores and it
worked very well and they are highly regarded and initiating change. Leaders are
supposed to make good decisions about who is promoted.
Commissioner Fitzpatrick was shocked to hear the 13- minute response time on
emergency calls because, in his experience, the Police Department frequently arrived
on scene before the Fire Department. He would review the data. Mr. Walker advised
the time was based on the information provided by the Department. The reliability of
the data was questionable. There is no time stamp. The staffing analysis was based
on the six minute and 15 minute response time standard.
Ms. LaVerriere thanked Mr. Walker and Berkshire Associates and commented the
report was very intuitive which is extremely valuable. Many issues were not a surprise
and are human resource issues. They are fixable. Overall the Department is
outstanding with outstanding performance in terms of making arrests and participation
in task forces. It is an exciting opportunity to bring about positive change within the
Department. The officers see the change and most are positive about the transition.
The majority is a fair statement. The implementation task force will be established and
review the recommendations. There will be Department representatives, as well as
other City department representatives, to develop a timeline and scrutinize the
recommendations. Updates would be provided.
Ms. LaVerriere recognized the entire command staff that was present and introduced
them individually. She thanked them for attending the meeting demonstrating their
support and interest in the Department.
Mayor Taylor pointed out the Commissioners are not managers. They have to make
sure the best managers and supervisors are provided with the resources needed to be
the best they can be. He thanked all the Officers and pledged them support
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
August 6, 2013
11. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
None
12. NEW BUSINESS
None
13. LEGAL
None
14. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
A. Re- establishing a Community Investment Fund for distribution by the Mayor
and Commissioners for qualified programs or projects. - 8/20/13
B. Establishing a Special Event Grants Program - 8/20/13
C. Establishing an Economic Development Special Events Incentive Program -
8/20/13
D. Announcement of First Budget Hearing to Adopt Proposed Budget at the
regularly scheduled City Commission Meeting to be held on September 3, 2013
at 6 p.m. in the City Hall Chambers.
E. Announcement of Second Budget Hearing to Adopt Final Budget and Final
Millage Rate at the regularly scheduled City Commission Meeting to be held on
September 17, 2013 at 6:30 p.m. in the City Hall Chambers.
F Announcement of Special City Commission Meeting for the Adoption of Final
Fire Assessment Resolution to be held on September 12, 2013 at 6:00 p.m. in
the City Hall Chambers.
15. BRAND PROMISE STATEMENT
"BREEZE INTO BOYNTON BEACH - AMERICA'S GATEWAY TO THE
GULFSTREAM"
All present recited the Brand Promise Statement.
16. ADJOURNMENT
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Meeting Minutes
Regular City Commission
Boynton Beach, FL
There being nothing further to come before the Commission, Mayor Taylor properly
adjourned the meeting at 9:24 p.m.
ATTEST:
m.
t M. Prainito, MMC
ity Clerk
eputy City Clerk
dith A. Pyle, C
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
o Casello, Commissioner
25
August 6, 2013