Florida Keys News - Key West Citizen
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Add to FacebookAdd to Twitter
Locals may get leg up on bids
Proposed law is intended to help Keys economy

The Monroe County Commission is expected to consider an ordinance Wednesday that would give preference to local firms that bid on county contracts.

Under the provisions of the proposed ordinance, businesses must have paid a business tax for at least one year prior to the county's request for bids. The business must have a physical business address in Monroe County in which day-to-day business functions are being conducted. Post office boxes would not be considered a verifiable physical address.

"The important thing is that money is kept in the local economy," said Chris Gratton, president of the Florida Keys Contractors Association. "This helps keep local people employed. It's mainly going to be beneficial for the smaller contracts, as the bigger ones like the airport and other large jobs, the county will have to go to bigger contractors from outside of the county. This is going to help the little guy."

Even if a job is beyond the scope of local firms, they still may benefit. One provision of the proposal says that in such circumstances, an out-of-county firm can enhance its chance of winning a contract if it agrees to employ local workers or subcontract some of the work to local businesses.

"I think we should do everything we can to help our local business people, especially in these tough times," said County Commissioner Mario Di Gennaro, who has been pushing the issue for the past year. "We need to keep the money in the local economy."

The local preference ordinance could be waived for specific projects if the county administrator gives written recommendation and the County Commission approves it.

The city of Key West has had a local preference ordinance since 1986. The city of Marathon passed a similar ordinance earlier this year. Islamorada does not have such an ordinance.

Also on Wednesday's agenda, the commission is expected to:

• Hear a request from developer Ed Swift for an 18-month extension to complete Islander Village, a work-force housing complex on Stock Island. Of the 89 units, 43 are completed and 33 are occupied. All 89 units have access to power and water. The complex was supposed to be completed by the end of June, but that has been delayed due to the slow economy.

• Vote on a plan that would allow commercial power to be extended to No Name Key. County Mayor George Neugent is expected to ask the board whether it objects to allowing Keys Energy Services to run power lines across the No Name Key Bridge and county property.

The power debate has divided segments of No Name Key, as some residents want to the island within the National Key Deer Refuge to remain without commercial power.

• Vote again on whether or not to send a series of proposed changes to the county's land use plan to the state Department of Community Affairs, which oversees development in the Florida Keys and other areas of critical state concern.

The amendments are intended to preserve historic use of Keys waterfronts. The state rejected the county's previous proposals, submitted by a previous County Commission.

At a commission meeting earlier this month, the commission voted to scrap the amendments and start over. However, Commissioner Heather Carruthers has asked for a rehearing, saying she is concerned that the commission did not have time to digest a memo from the Department of Community Affairs, as it was introduced shortly before the vote.

The memo cites a need for coordination between the county and Navy on waterfront projects near Naval Air Station Key West. The Navy has objected to the amendments because they call for increased residential density in an area subjected to loud jet noise and increased risk of an air accident.

• Vote on issuing a request for proposals for developing a master plan for Higgs Beach.

tohara@keysnews.com

Share your thoughts and opinions related to this posting. Login or register to post comments. More Info

Every Time the Locals (read: bubbas) Get a Leg Up ...

.....the Taxpayers grab their ankles

If this passes, assume the position

It's not about being a

It's not about being a bubba, it's about anyone who invests into a business and living in the Keys getting a chance to work in the Keys.If you people hate the locals ( read :Native and Fresh water Conchs ) so much, don't be one, LEAVE.

ED SWIFT can't sell Islander Village - ITS ALL RENTALS NOW

Ed Swift can't sell Islander Village homes and no one can get a loan. So he is going AGAINST what was told to anyone who bought (and against the HOA) and is renting out the units to low and moderate income people. All you that bought are screwed royally as now you can't sell and you will live with all rental tenants and who wants that? It will become another Stock Island eyesore soon. Hope Ed is happy with all the LIES he told to everyone. He and his office staff promised to all that the community would NOT include rentals, transient or not, at any time. I bet you got some very upset buyers and would-be buyers Ed. Can you say lawsuit?!

Anyone Remember the $8 Million Conch Train Judgement?

When an assistant city attorney, now Judge David Audlin, crafted a similar ordinace for the city commission to give bubba Ed Swift a monopoly in Key West the bubbas all patted themselves on the back

That worked out really well

Now they want to reduce the bubba system to county ordinace??

The process isn't corrupt enough now that they need to help people win judgements with stupid legislation like this after they fill their cronies pockets??

We should be in the streets like the people of Iran

Anyone remember the $8M

Correcting misperceptions is needed it seems. Diane Coven was the assistant city attorney who in collusion with the then local federal magistrate who was also the Conch Tour Train and Old Town Trolley private lawyer Hugh Morgan crafted the train and trolley franchise ordanance in 1995 which was found to violate the Florida Anti-Trust Act of 1980 and the United States Constitution under the Commerce Clause which was a civil rights violation by a judge and jury at a 3 week trial in 2005 where David Audlin was one of the contracted attorneys along with Hugh Morgan that the city hired amoung others to defend against the Duck Tours Seafari law-suit in which the jury found the city guilty and awarded $13.5M to the ducks. The city then appealed to the 3DCA using an appelate specialist from a Miami law firm and won the overturn only of the 13.5M jury verdict based on the method of 'lost profits' used for the damage finding but lost all of thier law arguments and the decision of the citys guilt of the violations of the Anti-Trust laws and the United States Constitution remained standing. The 3DCA than remanded the case back for another trial strickly on damages using the 'market value' method which was held this year in march 2009 not attended either by David Audlin nor Hugh Morgan nor the infamous 'grind them into the dirt' Diane Coven and was successfully settled between the City and the Ducks for $8 Million Dollars before any jury verdict on the damage claim and in the middle [Wednesday-Thursday] of the second week of a two week trial. These are the facts of the matter. submitted by: Duck Tours Seafari Inc.

So Audlin Took the City's $ to defend Ed Swifts Monopoly ??

And then he was placed unopposed on the bubba bench only to become the city's favorite home Court

Is that a simple read of the facts?

Please explain to me again what a hooker does for money and why that's unlawful

local bidder preference....OH !..........REALLY ! ?

This proposal is another invitation to fraud and waste. Anyone can have a local office (say, Bank of America, Delta Air, Hertz, K-Mart to name a few) that cannot guarantee profits, if any, will stay local. The less a project costs the more money local taxpayers will keep in their very local pockets. This just panders and caters to 'bubba' systems old and new. Heck, isn't Acevedo Enterprises local. More childish naivete, just grow up and hire an independent outside auditor who is paid a percentage of the waste and fraud they uncover. Guarantee: More local dollars stay local, no matter where a vendor lives. Ed Gillis, Key West
More Florida Keys Headlines
Friday, July 30, 2010
2 comments
Friday, July 30, 2010
Friday, July 30, 2010
1 comment
Friday, July 30, 2010
Friday, July 30, 2010
1 comment
Available Only in the Electronic Edition
Friday, July 30, 2010 -
Thursday, July 29, 2010 -
Wednesday, July 28, 2010 -
Tuesday, July 27, 2010 -