Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Broward County pols fear Florida Hometown Democracy

Last week I received the proposed agenda for Wednesday's City of Hollywood city commission meeting and noticed that they will be voting on a resolution regarding the Florida Hometown Democracy amendment to the FL constitution.
That is to say, Item #8 on Wednesday afternoon's agenda,
http://www.hollywoodfl.org/docdepotcache/00000/673/Agen%2010-03-07.pdf
This is, no doubt, a vote urged upon the city's powers-that-be by the usual quasi-govt. suspect groups that always evade scrutiny in local media, esp TV, like the Broward League of Cities, currently headed by Hallandale Beach's own Evita, Mayor Joy Cooper, to oppose what yours truly believes is a much-needed if somewhat imperfect amendment to the Florida state constitution.

Why do I support the amendment?
Because experience has taught me that local governments in South Florida do such a piss-poor of delivering even the most basic of services, why should I just trust them -for perpetuity- on matters that the area will be forced to live with forever?
It's a valuable tool which, if used properly, can act as a veto on local politicians' neverending myriad bad decisions/strategy on planning and development, among other things.
No longer would citizens be permanently hamstrung, on the hook and in the hole for decisions to green-light projects for developers under the pretense of gaining jobs or raising local taxes, much less, campaign contribution$.
And then, perhaps most galling of all, as happened here in Hallandale Beach a few months ago, having the audacity to pat themselves on their back and asking for and voting on a 300% salary increase.
(Can I help it if 99% of the city can't quite picture the HB city commissioners as "corporate executives," which I believe is the phrase that HB Vice Mayor Bill Julian used to describe himself and his colleagues a few months age.)

Believe me when I tell you, even though I'm a lifelong Democrat, of the DLC stripe, I saw a lot of crazy things that defied logic and reason on a regular basis during the 15 years I lived in overwhelmingly Democratic Arlington County, VA, the smallest county in the U/S., just west of Washington, D.C.
It's a place that had a very high quality of life, but you sometimes paid a heavy price for it in unexpected and unintended ways on the flip side.


Chief among these was a county power structure and machine that often resembled the worst of Soviet central planning, where county pols and employees often treated Arlington County citizens like lab rats in an maze experiment, like something they needed to do before they gained their PhD. in Political science at in Madison at U-W, the University of Wisconsin.
Unable to keep residents of a nearby homeless shelter from camping out on chairs and small couches seats in the halls and lobbies of the county building HQ during the winter, the county decided to simply
remove them completely, rather than have a heart-to-heart talk with the small number of people taking advantage of something intended for people having business in the building during the business day.
Like Arlington County taxpayers.

County commissioners were so politically tone-deaf that even after 9/11 -and justly praising the Arlington Fire Dept.'s performance at the Pentagon- they felt so perfectly immune to any and all public and media criticism, that when the Arlington citizenry wanted to have the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance before public meetings, they said nyet, and then went on to congratulate themselves, as if they were characters in a an Arthur Miller allegory, casting themselves as the true patriots, don't you know. It was perfectly preposterous and galling.

But even the folks in Arlington County would blanche at the sort of self-congratulation that regularly takes place routinely in local government, witness almost any Hollywood or Hallandale Beach city commission meeting, as being over the top.

Consider for instance the recent case of HB Vice Mayor Bill Julian.

At the last HB city commission meeting, he went off the rail on a self-congratulatory rant about his participation with a local group that picked up litter on the (perfectly and consistently
dirty) beach in Hallandale.

It was all I could do to not walk up to the microphone during the public comment part of the meeting and read him the Riot Act, dissecting his comments by bring up some very Inconvenient Truths:
1. Never mind that the small beach has looming condo towers that block out the sun because the city never bothered to do a 'shadow study.'
2. The beach where police never make an appearance, even on boisterous three-day weekends
3. The beach where the supplies in the bathrooms are almost always out by 4 p.m. on Friday afternoon, never to be refilled 'till the following week.
4. The beach where garbage cans don't have lids and where the contracted lifeguards constantly complain about having to clean up garbage debris that pops up out of the bins on even slightly breezy days.
That is, when the guards themselves aren't being saved by Hollywood's lifeguards, as has been told to me by any number of Hollywood guards because the HB-contracted guards are "out of shape," and,

5. Don't have access to jet skis, which is especially important during times of rip tides, as was the case for the better part of the beginning of this year.]

No, I'd rather hear him justify his being able to leave his political signs and their support stands along Gulfstream Park & US-1 for months after March's election, while HB's code compliance office acts like they either don't see them, or, can't quite recall whose signs were there for weeks on end.

Not laissez-faire government of the worst sort, just lazy.
Me, I'm more interested in seeing some local pols convicted, but what can I say, I'm old-fashioned that way. Just chalk it up to the political romantic in me.

That, plus, within the past two weeks, I once again watched Washington Merry-Go Round again for the first time in ten years.http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0023673/
It got me focused all over again to do a much better job of explaining the rationale of my blog to new comers and shining a light on the endless problems in the area that local pols ignore, mismanage and look the other way on, even while telling me during breaks
in city commission meetings that they've read what I've said.
Yet, months later, the problems, even the easily-solved ones, remain for everyone to
see.

As to the amendment itself, prior to this great column by Carl Hiaasen on Sunday, the Miami Herald had only written five stories about it over the past 12 months, and much of those was only tangentially interested in discussing the ramifications.

http://www.hollywoodfl.org/docdepotcache/00000/673/R-2007-320.PDF
City of Hollywood REGULAR CITY COMMISSION MEETING October 3, 2007

This item will be discussed and voted upon after 1:30 p.m.LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS8. R-2007-320 - Resolution - A Resolution Of The City Commission Of The City Of Hollywood, Florida, Opposing Florida Hometown Democracy’s Proposed Amendment To The Florida Constitution That Would Force Voters To Decide All Changes To A City Or County Comprehensive Plan; Urging Municipalities Throughout Broward County And The State Of Florida, As Well As Florida Electors, To Oppose The Florida Hometown Democracy’s Proposed Amendment To The Florida Constitution; And Providing For An Effective Date.
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"Who's Lesley Blackner?" Published 3/1/2007 in Florida Trend Cover Story - Growth Planning, Who's Lesley Blackner? Meet the woman whose ideas are hated by every business group in Florida. by Mike Vogel http://www.floridatrend.com/article.asp?aID=53568373.4436903.599885.1313125.1614023.979&aID2=46136

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/opinion/content/opinion/epaper/2007/09/27/w17a_edletters_0927.html Palm Beach Post
Letter to the Editor: 'Hometown Democracy' best in growth decisions
Time and time again, we find ourselves in a fight with an elected official over land development. Burt Aaronson continues to stand by his decisions as those of the people he represents ("Aaronson defends farmland roadway," Sept. 20).
Isn't this the same old cry when an elected official wants something done? How can we check? There are no votes to count. There is nothing official to verify that the voters want development or growth. The answer, however, lies in the Florida Hometown Democracy Act, for which many Floridians are collecting petitions, to change the way things are done. Hometown Democracy is a citizen campaign to change the state constitution in the 2008 election. The idea is for local voters, not elected officials, to make major growth decisions.
Of course, developers and a lot of politicians don't want this law passed because it would take the power away from them as decision-makers. But it gives the power to the people, where it should be. The grass-roots campaign needs about 120,000 more petitions signed to put it on the ballot for the 2008 election, and time is running out. If politicians really wanted to make decisions based on their constituents' benefit and wants, then they should go to http://www.floridahometowndemocracy.com/ and sign a petition. We all need to. I wonder how many commissioners, if any, have done that?
RON GOFORTH, West Palm Beach
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Crist opposes growth limits by Jason Garcia, Orlando Sentinel Staff Writer September 25, 2007 http://www.sun-sentinel.com/orl-crist25_107sep25,0,3647880.story
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Treasure Coast growth questions may split 2008 vote by Hillary Copsey September 24, 2007 http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2007/sep/24/growth-questions-may-split-08-vot/
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2 are leading drive to rein in Florida development by Kevin Spear, Orlando Sentinel Staff Writer September 24, 2007 http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl-hometown2407sep24,0,4123900.story
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http://www.miamiherald.com/news/columnists/carl_hiaasen/story/253942.html
Miami Herald
Land-use initiative facing sneaky tactics
by Carl Hiaasen
September 30, 2007

You can be sure you're on the right side of an issue if John Thrasher is on the other.
The former Florida House speaker and big-shot lawyer-lobbyist has sent out a mass-mailing to scare voters into removing their signatures from a statewide petition in favor of the ''Florida Hometown Democracy'' amendment.
The Hometown Democracy initiative would let citizens vote to approve or reject major changes to the comprehensive land-use plans in their counties or cities. For the first time, Floridians would have some direct control over how their communities grow.
Thrasher's deceptive and slimy letter is proof of the panic that has set in among those who've made a fortune raping the state and are afraid of losing their sweet ride.
The lobbyist ominously warns that, if the Hometown Democracy amendment passes, ''special interests'' will triumph and ''Big Developers'' will wreck Florida's ``scenic beauty.''
Like it's not happening now?
Special interests already manipulate many county and city commissions -- not to mention the Legislature -- while Florida's green space continues to disappear under bulldozers at the rate of hundreds of acres per day.
What Thrasher neglects to reveal in his fright mailing is that big developers and landholders are the ones most frantically opposed to the Hometown Democracy movement, and that he himself represents some of the biggest, including the St. Joe Co., which is currently selling off the Panhandle.
He says that allowing the voters to decide whether they want a new megamall or condo tower down the street could stifle growth and cause taxes to go up -- another cynical fiction designed to frighten middle-class workers and the elderly.
What really causes taxes to soar is the need for increased services due to overdevelopment and overcrowding. Bad planning means that the public ends up paying dearly and repeatedly for more roads, fire stations, police patrols, water-treatment plants and schools.
Lots of folks in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties will tell you that runaway growth has done nothing but push up their tax bills and diminish the quality of their family's lives.
All over the state, Floridians are disgusted by the failure of their elected officials to do restrained, responsible planning. That's why the Hometown Democracy petition has momentum.
While it might not be the perfect answer to derailing the engine of manic greed that's ruining so many lovely places, many residents are so heartsick and frustrated that they would welcome a dramatic change.
According to the website, www.hometowndemocracycom, petition supporters have collected about 331,000 verified signatures of the 611,009 needed to place the amendment on the November 2008 ballot.
Thousands more signatures are awaiting validation. The deadline for signing is Feb. 1, only four months away, which has lent urgency to the opposition's propaganda blitz.
Nothing is so horrifying to some developers and corporate interests as the prospect of having to deal directly with citizens when trying to get a building project passed. It's much easier to woo politicians, whose loyalties often can be purchased with a hefty campaign contribution or (as in recent cases in Palm Beach County) outright bribes.
That's the way things have always worked in Florida, which explains the plague of ugly sprawl. The Hometown Democracy petition would throw a wrench in that whole cozy, corruptible process.
Predictably, opponents grandiosely calling themselves Floridians for Smarter Growth have cooked up a rival constitutional amendment that would require 10 percent of voters in a city or county to sign a petition, before any land-use referendum takes place.
The petitions could be signed only at the office of a municipal clerk or elections supervisor, an inconvenience that virtually guarantees a fatally low turnout.
Obviously, the forces behind Floridians for Smarter Growth aren't interested in participatory democracy. They want the public to shut up and let the politicians do their thing.
According to The Sun-Sentinel, the group raised $841,000 between April and August. Major donors included the National Association of Home Builders, the Florida Chamber of Commerce and U.S. Sugar.
It's a motley roster of special interests whose motives are anything but pure.
The Hometown Democracy movement undoubtedly was the prime target when pro-development legislators passed a law allowing voters to revoke their signatures from amendment petitions.
That opened the door for John Thrasher's specious letter pretending to denounce the very developers for whom he's shilling. In urging citizens to abandon the Hometown Democracy campaign, he blames ''slick lawyers'' for tricking them into putting their names on the petition.
Thrasher himself is one of the slickest lawyers in Tallahassee, and it is he who has stooped to shameless trickery.
His scare letter comes with a postage-paid envelope. Mail it back with the two-word reply of your choice.
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Miami Herald
Strippers swirl around growth-plan push
By Marc Caputo, mcaputo@MiamiHerald.com
September 19, 2007

Warning! "Slick lawyers" and "special interests" are tricking citizens into signing petitions for a development-limiting amendment that actually helps "big developers." The message comes courtesy of lawyer John Thrasher, a lobbyist for one of the state's biggest developers, St. Joe Co. and Associated Industries of Florida, among others. He's urging people in his letter sent throughout the state to take advantage of a new business-backed law allowing voters to revoke their signature on a petition to get a constitutional amendment before voters.
In this case, the proposed "Florida Hometown Democracy" amendment would give voters the right to veto or approve any growth-plan change made in their area. And that has developers, the business lobby and local governments worried.
For starters, the amendment could delay some developments by months, and subject even minor projects, such as the siting of a gas station, to a citizen vote. And that could tie the fate of the smallest, least controversial projects to larger developments.
The Florida Chamber of Commerce is hitting back with its own group, Floridians for Smarter Growth, and an amendment that seeks to all but cancel the Hometown plan.
The rival petitions, Thrasher's letter, the Wednesday debate here and a Tampa Bay debate last week -- in which apparent strippers showed up with misspelled placards in favor of a Hometown Democracy supporter who owns a strip club -- show that this will be one of the more spirited campaigns.Thrasher said in a Wednesday debate at Tallahassee's Tiger Bay Club that the ramifications of the Sierra Club-backed amendment are "very terrifying:" higher taxes, more politics in the planning process and less accountability from local government commissioners abrogating their duties via plebiscite.
His rival, Ross Burnaman with Florida Hometown Democracy, said Thrasher is misleading people during the forum and through his recent letter. Burnaman said this amendment would just give citizens a final say over how their community is growing, and he pointed out that bid developers oppose this plan.Burnaman said his group is only 100,000 signatures shy of the 611,000 needed by Feb. 1 to get the measure before voters in November 2008.
Thrasher, a former Florida House Speaker who lobbies for Associated Industries of Florida as well, hopes to cancel some of those petitions through his letter, which says people have been "tricked" into signing the petition by "mercenary" signature gatherers.
Thrasher said he's not affiliated with the chamber's group, which is using paid signature gatherers.If the Hometown amendment makes the ballot and passes, citizens could vote on growth changes once a year, twice yearly or even more often.
Said Thrasher: "Democracy's not cheap."

Copyright (c) 2007 The Miami Herald
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Miami Herald
Campaign flier mystery solved
By CARLI TEPROFF AND TANIA VALDEMORO, cteproff@MiamiHerald.com
April 29, 2007

NORTH MIAMI BEACH
North Miami Beach resident Bill Borkan has contributed tens of thousands of dollars to a South Miami-Dade County-based electioneering communications organization, or ECO, that has put out at least five fliers attacking two incumbents in Tuesday's elections. The glossy, color fliers have been circulating around the city charging Kenneth De Fillipo and David Templer with voting for higher taxes and an increased crime rate, and became an issue as residents speculated who was behind them.
Borkan's role was not confirmed until earlier this week, after confusion arose over the name of the entity that financed the ECO's work.
The confusion arose when the ECO's contribution report listed a total of $53,500 in contributions from Florida Hometown Democracy Inc.
The problem: the address listed for Florida Hometown Democracy on the report doesn't match that of a New Smyrna Beach political action committee registered under that name with the state. Instead, the address listed was 12000 Biscayne Blvd., Suite 502 -- the same as several businesses owned by Borkan.Leslie Blackner, the registered agent for Florida Hometown Democracy in New Smyrna Beach, was angry when first asked if her group was connected to the donation. Her group is leading a statewide petition drive to get an amendment on the 2008 ballot requiring voter approval for zoning variances.
"I have no idea why he would use our name for this, but I can assure you I have no idea what this about," Blackner said.
Borkan and Keith Donner, a political consultant who is the treasurer and chairman of the South Miami-Dade ECO, would not comment about the confusion for several days, but on Wednesday Donner said it was an "unfortunate oversight."
As it turns out, Borkan was behind the creation of a corporation by the same name in Delaware in February.
On Thursday, Borkan downplayed the incident and said he was sorry for the confusion over the name.
"Everyone uses corporations" to donate money to ECOs, he said.
Borkan said that as soon as he realized that it was the same name, he sent a letter to the Florida Elections Department agreeing to retire the name.
The pamphlets bear pictures of De Fillipo and Templer, with the general message that taxes are too high and crime rates have skyrocketed -- and that the two incumbents are to blame.
De Fillipo and Templer "are more concerned about helping their Big Developer friend than residents," one mailer states.
"Everything is factual," Borkan said of the fliers.
Templer says he is outraged by what he calls "the lies being spread in the pamphlets."
"The fliers are a pack of lies resulting from someone who has a personal agenda against me," he said. "[Borkan] must believe that people are deaf, dumb, blind and probably dead not to understand what's going on."
De Fillipo was livid, saying the ads manipulate the truth.
"The educated voter will see right through it and throw it in the garbage," he said.
Borkan heads the North Miami Beach Citizens Coalition, which last year mounted a petition drive to place an amendment on the ballot requiring voter approval of zoning variances.
That petition fell short by just 11 signatures -- after 1,680 signatures were disqualified by the county elections department.
The coalition subsequently sued the county and city, claiming the signatures should not have been disqualified. Months later the city and the coalition reached an agreement, and Borkan agreed to drop the suit.
Borkan said that although he is not running for office, by contributing to the ECO he can help challengers put up a fight against incumbents who he said have collected money from developers.
"I am doing this to level the playing field," he said.Electioneering communications organizations, commonly known as ECOs, allow individuals and groups to feed money for paid political advertisements.
Unlike contributions to candidates or campaigns, which may not exceed $500 per person or company, there is no limit to how much individuals or companies can donate to ECOs.
There are some restrictions on ECOs, mainly that their ads must be "issue-based."The general rule is they can't use the magic words 'vote for' or 'vote against,' " explained Mark Herron, an election lawyer based in Tallahassee.

Copyright (c) 2007 The Miami Herald
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Miami Herald
Activist: Voters can rein in growth
By TANIA VALDEMORO tvaldemoro@MiamiHerald.com
January 17, 2007

DEVELOPMENT
It's the residents -- not politicians -- who should decide whether new homes, roads or other developments are built in their communities, said Lesley Blackner, president of a grass-roots group that says growth has gotten out of control. Florida Hometown Democracy wants to change the state Constitution to put the power to manage growth in their communities back in the hands of the people who live there.
"We have to change the politics of growth from the status quo: government of the developer, by the developer and for the developer," Blackner told about 25 members of Miami Neighborhoods United meeting Tuesday night at the Legion Park Community Center.
"Miami is a classic example of the status quo," Blackner said in an interview earlier Tuesday. "Local government is an apparatus of the development industry. Its main goal is to continue construction. Before it is all over, Miami will be Hong Kong."
Blackner spoke before the group, a coalition of homeowner groups and other activists concerned about the scope and pace of development in South Florida. She passed out petitions to get an initiative on the 2008 ballot. She needs 611,008 signatures by the end of the year; to date she has 85,235.If the ballot initiative passed, politicians would still vote on land-use matters. But people would be able to overturn those approvals by voting on the issue in a general election, Blackner said.
Critics say the Florida Hometown Democracy initiative would hijack local governments by forcing them to hold a referendum every time there is a proposed change in a city or county's comprehensive land use plans. They say it could be years before voters decide whether to build new schools, hospitals and buildings because of the volume of land-use changes that counties make every year.
"We already get the opportunity to vote for people who represent us in a democracy. If you don't like the decisions they make, you should vote them out," said Mark Wilson, who chaired Protect Our Constitution, a political action committee that raised $3.2 million last year to support Amendment 3, which requires a 60 percent vote -- not a simple majority -- to change the Constitution.
"Very few things are a bigger disaster for job growth than this. Imagine if a company wanted to move to Florida but it couldn't build new facilities or housing for its employees until people voted on it. Do you think they'd come here?" he said.
Despite well-funded opposition from local governments and business groups, Susan MacManus, a professor of political science at the University of South Florida, predicted the Florida Hometown Democracy initiative would prevail.
"There's such a strong anti-growth movement in Florida right now," MacManus said. "People are frustrated about overcrowding and traffic. They want to freeze the image of Florida like it was when they got here. This backlash on growth accompanies a backlash against the rise of property taxes and [hurricane] insurance rates."
A poll taken last October by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research, Inc., showed that 52 percent of those surveyed do not believe their local governments are effectively managing growth in their communities.
Wendy Stephan, a member of Miami Neighborhoods United, said she supports Florida Hometown Democracy because she believes it would protect her historic Buena Vista East neighborhood from overdevelopment.
"The Miami comprehensive plan talks about protecting neighborhoods. But there's no teeth to it," Stephan said. "It gets changed all the time and we can't stop it."

Copyright (c) 2007 The Miami Herald
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Miami Herald
SIGNATURES PAY PETITIONER'S BILLS
By Nicholas Spangler, nspangler@MiamiHerald.com
November 7, 2006

Gail Fein is a 58-year-old ex-makeup artist and sometime psychic counselor from Queens who has, for the last seven years, made her living as a freelance petitioner in South Florida. Much of her work is for political committees petitioning to amend the state Constitution.
Forty-one petitions are circulating now, including one to abolish the practice of alimony, and another to force legislators to take the FCAT each year until such time as they have received a score equivalent to the passing grade required of 10th-graders.
Gail's current cause - less of an obviously great idea, but with a better chance of making it onto the 2008 ballot - calls for a municipal referendum before a local government may impose a new comprehensive land-use plan.All that is needed is signatures from 8 percent of the number of Florida voters from the last presidential election, which comes out to 611,009 names.
That's a lot of ink, particularly if you know, as Gail does all too well, that Floridians are generally loath to sign their names to anything somebody hands them in a shopping center parking lot.
"They think I'm selling something, or they're worried about identity theft,'' said Gail, who maintains that the right to petition is one of the things that makes America great. She, herself, signs every petition she works on.
"This,'' she said, both hands brandishing clipboards, "is a blessing.''
Yet during a three-hour period one recent afternoon, in front of a Pembroke Pines Publix, a Target and a Wal-Mart, most potential signatories claimed to be Canadian, felons, out of time or simply not interested. One actually admitted to being an apathetic Ottowan on the lam.
"Just imagine your community has been promised a park, and then the local government decides to put in condominiums instead,'' Gail kept saying. "
If we pass this, we'll be able to put it to a vote first.''The potential signatories looked at the short blond grandmother wearing a fanny pack with mild shock, or ignored her outright.
Some peered into the mid-distance, as if trying to determine the source of an annoying buzzing sound. A young woman with her friends said, "I don't know what you're talking about,'' and walked away laughing.
A mother walked by, chatting on her phone with a toddler in tow. She ignored not just Gail but also her son, who walked into the path of an oncoming Buick.
"The baby!'' Gail shouted, and raised her hands to her head. "Watch the baby!'
'The Buick braked. The woman grabbed her toddler but didn't stop talking.
"Isn't it amazing?'' Gail asked after a while. "I know they hear me because I'm loud. I came from five kids and I took acting lessons, so I project.''
When someone expressed any interest at all by slowing or not ignoring her, Gail moved in to engage. "Well, I don't know,'' said one woman. "If they give us this, they're just going to take something else away.''
"Wow!'' said another. "We have an issue just like this in my neighborhood!''
Those two signed. Gail was averaging about one signature for every seven or eight shoppers she approached. A typical day will garner about 100 signatures, she said.
At Publix, aproned employees walked past every few minutes, possibly, Gail darkly mused, to intimidate her. At Target, a security guard approached as Gail was in mid-pitch with a dad and his two boys in Catholic school uniforms.
"You can't do this in front of the store,'' the guard said.
"I was told I could be 20 feet from the entrance,'' Gail said.
"I don't want to break any laws,'' the dad said, and hurried his boys away.
"Sometimes,'' Gail said, "I don't know why I do this job,'' and packed up, Wal-Mart-bound.
The client on this campaign was a political committee called Florida Hometown Democracy, but Gail's employer was PCI, a petition-gathering company based in California. PCI pays about a $1 for each signature.
"It's a very tough job,'' said Angelo Paparella, PCI's head. "You have to be able to take rejection, no doubt about it.''

If you have a story idea, e-mail nspangler@MiamiHerald.com
Copyright (c) 2006 The Miami Herald
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Miami Herald
AMENDMENT 3 STRIPS POWER FROM THE PEOPLE
By FRED GRIMM, fgrimm@MiamiHerald.com
October 8, 2006

Voters will find the ballot language of Amendment Three misleading. The real intent is to stop Lesley Blackner.
"Maybe the powers-that-be aren't happy with the idea of citizens fighting back,'' ventured Blackner, arch-enemy of a cabal of builders, landowners, lenders and land speculators who have long had their way with this state. Amendment Three doesn't mention the West Palm Beach lawyer or the cause she champions - the Florida Hometown Democracy Amendment. But her initiative terrifies developers used to bulldozing through comprehensive growth plans like rubbish on a vacant lot.
Her amendment, if she can find the 610,000 signatures needed to place it on the 2008 ballot, would require voter approval before cities and counties can alter their growth plans. Heretofore, a little grease from a well-connected lobbyist, a bundle of campaign contributions, a selection of Godiva chocolates have been enough to convince a city or county commission to cast aside nettlesome growth restrictions.

POLITICAL PLOY
But developers know that if citizens are ever given a say, their days of willy-nilly to-hell-with-what-the-people-want building are over. Amendment Three, also known (for those who cherish misnomers) as the Save Our Constitution Amendment, would preempt the Florida Hometown Democracy Amendment. It may sabotage the whole notion of citizen initiatives in the process, but if it stops Blackner, who cares?
Amendment Three raises the threshold for approval of a constitutional amendment from a simple majority - 50 percent plus one vote - to 60 percent. But maybe I'm being paranoid on behalf of Blackner. Maybe the real intent is to stop Bob Graham.
The former senator and governor, an unassailable political icon in Florida, feels downright assailed by Amendment Three. Graham led the 2002 initiative to undo political meddling in higher education.
"I can tell you that if we had started that effort knowing we had to get 60 percent of the vote, it would have been much more difficult to find volunteers.'' Graham said just the perception of difficulty created by a 60 percent requirement would keep worthy amendments off the ballot.

MONEY TALKS
The initiative system gives citizens the opportunity to circumvent powerful special interests who, Graham said, ``have a stranglehold on the Legislature.''Voters bypassed Tallahassee to create universal pre-kindergarten (which passed with 59.2 percent of the votes) and cap class sizes in public schools (52.4 percent). Neither would have passed under the rules imposed by Amendment Three.
Voters managed an electoral end-run around the state Legislature to ban smoking, approve slots machines (51 percent), regulate net fishing, mandate term limits, create the Everglades Trust Fund (57.2 percent) and limit tax increases on homestead property (which passed with only 53.6 percent.)
Those amendments would amount to minor irritants compared to Blackner's revolutionary initiative. Which probably explains why the National Association of Home Builders has anteed up $300,000 toward the $3 million "save our constitution'' campaign fund. "Compared to that, I can tell you the opponents [of Amendment Three] throw a dim shadow,'' Graham said.
Graham, who was in Tallahassee Thursday, said he could have guessed the content of the initiative just by driving through the capital city's office district.
"The Florida Homebuilders Association, the state Chamber of Commerce, all the big lobbyists all have gardens sprouting `vote for Amendment Three' signs, raising the question: `What are these people really interested in?' "Graham asked.
Maybe I was being too paranoid on behalf of Blackner and Graham. The real intent of Amendment Three is to stop you.

Copyright (c) 2006 The Miami Herald

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