Sunday, July 04, 2010

Credit Union Merger Fails

I noted here on May 26th that the Keys Federal Credit Union (our bank since 2004) was merging with the Dade County Federal Credit Union.

Mysteriously, and with very little information as to why, the Dade County FCU backed away from the merger, keeping KFCU under the supervision of the National Credit Union Association.

There doesn't appear to have been a Plan B in place.  Nevertheless, we're OK with leaving our deposits where they are, since they are well below the NCUA deposit insurance that covers them.

It seems to me that a membership organization, which KFCU is, owes its members some kind of explanation or, if not them, the NCUA, but I guess bank secrecy has some kind of exemption from that rule.  God knows, the Federal Reserve is a model for that.

Maybe we'll take a trip to the mainland and stay at a Red Roof Inn.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Does any one know the way to Kokomo?

In my current role, which I think of as Conservator, at the Bahama Conch Community Land Trust, I'm starting to really understand the depth of the shortage of affordable workforce housing in Key West.  It's been on the City's agenda for at least five years now, thousands of hours and millions of dollars have been spent to try to ameliorate it, but it never gets better and slowly grows worse.

I had a conversation with a Haitian man today that got me thinking more about this.  He's been in Key West for four years now.  He shares housing with friends even though he's married and has small child.  He came to see me in November, when I first moved in to the BCCLT office to manage affairs for the board of directors, while still a director myself.  He came in to ask about an application for housing that he filed early in 2009.  I managed to find his application, noted that he was income-qualified to rent, and said I would take a look at it once I discovered what might be available.

Since then, he comes in every month to see if anything developed, but it never does.  I have, or soon will have, but two rentable units and both have been committed to other applicants whose applications were older, whose needs were greater, and who were diligent in pursuing their opportunity.

The man from Haiti explained that he is on the waiting list for a unit with the Key West Housing Authority.  Over a year ago he was number ninety-something on the KWHA waiting list.  Lately he's climbed to a number in the sixties.  He only found out about the land trust last year, and he hoped to be able to rent in order to be eligible to work odd jobs that the land trust occasionally hires tenant-members to do perform, either for extra money or to offset some of their rent.

I explained the BCCLT's situation to him and told him that I wasn't at all optimistic that he'd ever make it into one of our apartments or houses.  The Housing Authority will most likely take over all of the BCCLT properties sometime in the next few months, as well as its liabilities, and the BCCLT will fade away after nearly fifteen years of existence, a victim of hard economic times, the loss of several state contracts, and a crumbled organization structure.

He talked of many of his friends, mostly his countrymen, who left Haiti years ago in the midst of political and economic turmoil and have never gone back.  Some came here, took the most menial jobs, and managed to survive for a time, but now, he says, more and more are leaving for brighter shores elsewhere.  We spoke of what a great place this is to live, of the increasing cost of any kind of half-way decent rental housing, the high cost of living generally, and the general lack of work opportunities for anyone lacking specialized skills of some sort.

Key West and Monroe County are trying to census-count just about every living soul in the Keys, even going so far as to dispense with mail-in census questionnaires in favor of a door-to-door-to-campground-to-parked van-to-mangrove stand survey.  There's news developing that questions whether they census takers are getting an actual count or just fudging some numbers.

Between the year 2000, when the census showed about 78,000 Florida Keys residents, including some 27,000 Key West residents, and now, 2010, the population of full-time residents is known to have shrunk, perhaps by as much as 15%, and that affects the amount of money sent from Washington and Tallahassee, for schools, roads, and many other programs.

At some time in the future, the shark will be jumped and the tipping point will be reached, and the place Janet and I have grown fond of will disappear, replaced by ... by ... by what?  And if some things remain, even if only for the tourists, just who will be here to do the work that must be done, in the stores, the restaurants, bars, theaters, the gas stations?  Who will drive the trucks, the buses, sweep the streets, keep the lights on, and the water clean, and the trash removed?

Does anyone know the way to Kokomo?

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Parks Are for People

I wrote this flier in August of 2005, just prior to a City Commission meeting that approved a Conceptual Development Plan for the Truman Waterfront.  

Parks are for People

The Truman Waterfront Park is for the entire Key West community, but especially for the residents of Bahama Village who, for too long, have been been alternately exploited, disrespected, or ignored by the rest of Key West, and sometimes by City officials.

Despite the efforts of some of us to draw attention to the severe impact of 3,800 additional vehicles a day on the narrow, residential streets of our Village, the City Commission recently gave conceptual approval to a plan that would do just that.

Two City Staff people, both engineers with traffic planning experience, have this to say about the plan awaiting final approval by the Commissioners:

Our professional opinion from an engineering traffic flow and overall community view point is that the current plan, if implemented, could cause severe traffic problems in the area, would be a safety risk to residents of the area, would be detrimental to the quality of life and safety of residents of the Bahama Village community as a whole, and could result in the overall degradation of a historical residential community.
- John Jones, Assistant City Manager
- Roland Flowers, Director of Public Works - City Engineer

We residents of Bahama Village have an opportunity -- perhaps our last opportunity -- to tell the City that we don't like their plan, and that we want something better.  We even think we know what that better plan is.

Bringing that amount of traffic onto our streets, even if only to travel into and out of the park, will clog our already crowded streets.  The City plans 425 parking spaces inside the park, and that will reduce the amount of real park space, unnecessarily endanger visitors to the park, and result in pollution and litter.  During events like boat races, festivals, and concerts, the 425 spaces will not be enough anyway and we'll have people from outside the area taking up what little parking space we have on our streets -- streets that are already crowded with tourists visiting local attractions like the Hemingway House, the Key West Lighthouse, and others.

Commissioner Carmen Turner has scheduled a citizens' workshop at the Douglass Nutrition Center on Olivia Street at Emma Street, behind the Douglass Gymnasium, this coming Thursday, August 4th, at 6:00 P.M.  We need a large community turnout for this meeting to tell the Commission that we Don't accept the current plan.  Even if you aren't normally an activist in community affairs, we urge you to come out on Thursday night, and to encourage your families, friends, and neighbors to do the same.

When:   Thursday, August 4, 2005  6:00 PM
Where:  Douglass Nutrition Center, Olivia Street at Emma, behind the Gym







On March 26, the Truman Waterfront Advisory Board held its regular monthly meeting and heard a progress report from Robert Spottswood on what is known as the Meisel & Spottswood (Marina and Park) Project.  In his presentation to the Advisory Board, Spottswood stated that "all elements [of their plan] are tourist related", and that the plan is designed to bring "incremental tourism" to Key West and the Florida Keys.  I immediately wondered, "where is the passive park we were told of in the conceptual plan of 2005?"


Then on Wednesday, March 31, Spottswood repeated his presentation, this time to those attending Commissioner Jimmy Weekley's Town Hall meeting.  And this time, the presentation included a new wrinkle, to make use of the 6.6 acres for purposes other than those called for in the conveyance documents.

The Key West City Commission sitting as the Naval Properties Local Redevelopment Authority selected the Meisel & Spottswood proposal over a rival one from Harbour Group in 2009, after a selection committee made up of four City employees and a City-employed consultant ranked the two proposals.  Assistant City Manager Mark Finigan, one of the members of the evaluation group, noted that the City does not have the resources to manage such a development and that it would be "outgunned" by developers with access to lawyers, accountants, marketers, economists, et al. Finigan sought to have the City Manager recommend that developers provide money to the City to engage in the development negotiations.  I'm not sure if that stipulation was included in the LRA Resolution.


To refresh my memory, I went looking for the website that used to be the official record for the Conceptual Plan.  It's gone, not accessible on the internet,but I still have my hard copy and will endeavor to make it available here, or elsewhere on the internet.
Update:  


In the meanwhile, there are some important meetings scheduled for April.  If residents of Bahama Village don't get personally and directly involved in these meetings and in many other meetings that will follow, then folks, you're about to get it done to you as it has been done before.


Thursday, April 8, 2010  6:00 PM
Bahama Village Community Meeting
VFW, Emma St.

Saturday, April 10, 2010  10:00 AM
Truman Waterfront Walk-through
Truman Waterfront, Southard Endtrance

Saturday, April 24, 2010  9:00 AM - 12 PM
Joint Meeting regarding 6.6 acres
Truman Waterfront Advisory Board
Bahama Village Redevelopment Advisory Committee
Key West City Commission
Douglass Gym, Olivia St at Emma St.



Now developers have clearly and loudly announced their intentions, to create another tourist attraction on the last and best piece of vacant land on the entire island.  Think about what that means for the residents of Bahama Village and for our Little Island Home.


I'll be talking about it here -- and there.  Join me?


Saturday, March 27, 2010

Time to reactivate

I set this blog aside almost four years ago in favor of another Bahama Village blog.  That one has now disappeared, so I'm reactivating this as a vehicle for discussing matters that affect Bahama Village and its residents.

We moved out of Bahama Village since this blog began.  We've lived in three other locations in Key West in the intervening years, one in New Town and two in Old Town.  We're in Old Town now, and still in Commissioner District VI which encompasses Bahama Village, but we're not living in BV now.

Nevertheless, I've maintained a strong connection to the Village through my membership on the Bahama Conch Community Land Trust Board of Directors, and my continued interest in the development of the Truman Waterfront.

There's room here for more than one voice (mine), so I invite your liberal use of the Comments feature here.  I'd also be happy to have  co-authors if anyone is of a mind to commit to something like that.

I can be reached in a variety of ways.  E-mail is what I prefer:  kwshoes@spamcop.net.  Leave a comment here and I'll be automatically notified by e-mail.  If you want to talk to me by phone or in person, leave a message and I'll get back to you to set that up.

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Sunday, July 09, 2006

A neighbor of ours created a web log for Bahama Village and put some real content into it. I'm de-activating this blog for the present. To get up-to-date news about Bahama Village and what's going on here, go to Tom Kemper's Bahama Village Blog.

Friday, March 10, 2006

This is about Bahama Village, a last little bit of old Key West. Well, actually, Schooner Wharf claims that title, but some of us think that our neighborhood, one of the last real neighborhoods in Key West could also describe itself so.

We're still figuring out what to do with the 'blog', so give us a little while. In the meanwhile, if you'd like to make suggestions, feel free to leave us a comment here.