Town-Crier Newspaper August 17, 2012

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‘TELL THE TRUTH’ RALLY IN WELLINGTON SEE STORY, PAGE 3

LGWCD’S SAUNIER CONTRACT DISCUSSION SEE STORY, PAGE 7

THE

TOWN - CR IER WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE

Your Community Newspaper

INSIDE

Volume 33, Number 33 August 17 - August 23, 2012

MEDICAL DIRECTOR WELCOMED

Look For The August Issue Of ‘Forever Young’ In This Week’s Paper

WRMC’s Expansion Nears Completion

Wellington Regional Medical Center’s $50 million expansion project is well underway, with a grand opening scheduled for Oct. 3. The three floors of the 103,000-square-foot Alan B. Miller Pavilion will add 80 new private patient rooms and upgrade the comfort and overall patient experience. Page 3

Local Water-Skier Ready To Compete

A Wellington resident, Ashley Stevens was destined to be a water-skier. She comes from a long line of professional waterskiers, from her mother Judy Stevens to her grandfather George Stojanovich, both of whom still ski. Page 7

OPINION Mecca Farms Land Swap: Best Possible End To A Bad Situation

The Palm Beach County Commission this week took the necessary first step in relieving taxpayers of the ongoing burden known as Mecca Farms. Ideally, we would have loved for Mecca Farms by now to be a bustling biotech campus bringing jobs and economic growth to the western communities. But that was not to be. At this point, we need to move on and get this boondoggle off our backs. Page 4

The Royal Manor Skilled Nursing Facility held a welcome reception for new medical director Dr. Shamsad Begum on Thursday, Aug. 9. Staff and vendors joined in welcoming Begum. Shown above is Begum (fourth from left) with Royal Manor department heads. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 5 PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

Wellington Extends Cheatham Tennis Contract Two More Years By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report The Wellington Village Council abandoned plans this week to rebid its tennis contract in favor of a two-year contract extension with current provider Tommy Cheatham Inc. The unanimous decision is the culmination of a months-long process to solicit bids for management and programming of the Wellington Tennis Center. When council members decided to re-bid the contract last month after an appeal by unsuccessful bidder A1A Tennis, staff members were directed to negotiate a 90-day contract extension with Cheatham to keep the tennis center running during the bidding process. The current contract with Cheatham ends Sept. 30, and the bid process could take several months. But representatives for Cheat-

ham argued that with the tennis season beginning, a short contract renewal created uncertainty. “It wasn’t that Mr. Cheatham wasn’t interested in a 90-day extension,” attorney Howard Sohn said. “A 90-day extension would basically put Mr. Cheatham out of business. His staff would leave. His suppliers would not bring more merchandise. His members would not purchase annual passes, which come due Oct. 1.” Further, Sohn said that Cheatham has difficulty operating under a one-year term as he has for the past two years. In light of council discussion last month about whether to move the tennis center during the rebuilding of the Wellington Community Center, Sohn suggested a three-year contract extension. “It’s not fair for… anyone to be making bids and investing large sums of money with that uncer-

Dressage Arena Given Council’s Blessing For 2013 By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report The 2013 Global Dressage Festival got the green light this week when members of the Wellington Village Council agreed to suspend revocations of plans for the Equestrian Village property — with conditions. In a meeting that dragged on until early Wednesday morning, council members voted 4-0 to suspend a decision they made earlier this year that removed Equestrian Sport Productions’ ability to hold the shows for the upcoming season. As conditions of approval, show promoters must abide by 21 regulations, including limiting the number of spectators to 2,000, ending the show by 10 p.m. and coordinating show times with those at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center to limit traffic. Changes to the special-use permit process by the former council made it impossible for show promoters to apply for a conditionaluse permit, Village Attorney Jeff Kurtz explained at an agenda review meeting Monday. He noted that in February, the council made some changes decreeing that “if you want to get a seasonal equestrian use permit, and that permit is for more than two events or eight days, you have to go through the exact same process as a conditional-use process.”

That, Kurtz said, would require that the Equestrian Preserve Committee and the Planning, Zoning & Adjustment Board review the issue before the council does. “Ordinarily that process takes, at minimum, three to four months,” Kurtz said. Council members agreed to instead discuss suspending revocations on the site at Tuesday’s meeting. “I applaud the village council for their decision,” Equestrian Sport Productions CEO Mark Bellissimo told the Town-Crier Wednesday. “I believe this was the right decision for the community. I felt the council took the decision very seriously. They understood the facts and distanced themselves from the rhetoric and some of the crippling conditions offered up by the Jacobs family.” Council members were asked in a letter by nearby Deeridge Farms owner Lou Jacobs to impose stricter conditions, including ending all weekday shows by 6 p.m., limiting use of the on-site barns and disallowing use of the site’s derby ring for four jumping competitions. “This not only calls for dressage events, but also for jumping events,” said attorney John Shubin, representing the Jacobs family. “I don’t know that we embrace the jumping events as enthusiastically as we embrace dressage.” Supporters of dressage came See DRESSAGE, page 16

OLYMPIC SWIMMER

Peterson Win Sets Up Faceoff With Abruzzo For Senate Seat By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report Equestrian activist Melanie Peterson’s narrow victory over attorney Geoff Sommers in Tuesday’s Republican Primary for the newly drawn District 25 Florida Senate seat has set the stage for a faceoff against State Rep. Joseph Abruzzo (D-District 85), the Democratic nominee for the seat.

Peterson received 8,539 votes (50.54 percent) to Sommers’ 8,357 votes (49.46 percent). “I appreciate the opportunity, and all the voters who came out and voted for me,” Peterson told the Town-Crier Wednesday. “I am looking forward to representing Palm Beach County in the state senate.” Peterson said that while the race

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tainty,” he said. “This would give the council time to review the plans.” Sohn said that council members had no obligation to re-bid the contract, and Village Attorney Jeff Kurtz agreed. But Laurie Cohen, attorney for A1A Tennis, contended that they did have to re-bid the contract. “To throw [the bid process] away and give Mr. Cheatham an extension is really a circumvention of bidding laws,” she said. “We would submit to you that it is improper and illegal. This is not a question of fairness. This is a question of your obligation to protect the public purse.” She argued that the existing contract between Wellington and Cheatham required that any extension be done by June 1. “If you fail to exercise that option, the option expires,” she said. See TENNIS, page 16

Serving Palms West Since 1980

Melanie Peterson (second from left) and supporters celebrate the election results Tuesday night at Flanagan’s in Wellington. PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

was closer than expected, she is proud of the campaign she ran. “We went to all the editorial boards,” she said. “We were very transparent with who I am and what the issues are.” But, she said, her eye has been set on the general election from the beginning. “I think we always had our eye on November and on job creation in the county,” she said. “We’ve taken a pretty large approach. There are so many different needs in different areas of the county.” The top issue for all areas is jobs, she said. “We have got to get people in Palm Beach County back to work, and create an environment where small businesses can grow and thrive, Peterson said. She noted that Palm Beach County has a high home vacancy rate, which continues to be an issue for her. Another issue she is focusing on is homeowners’ insurance. But all of these issues tie back to one thing: jobs. “If we can get more jobs here, we can get people in homes,” she said. “We can make the insurance See PETERSON, page 16

Former Wellington youth swimmer and 1988 Olympic Gold Medalist Matt Cetlinski hosted a clinic for kids Friday, Aug. 10 at the Wellington Aquatics Complex. Shown above are Cetlinski with swim coaches Daphne Markey and Jeni Hollister, and head coach Rich Whalen. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 9 PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

Countywide Officials Cruise To New Terms By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report Tuesday was a great day to be an incumbent constitutional officer in Palm Beach County. Five countywide officials were up for re-election, and all five were returned to their positions by large margins. Sheriff Ric Bradshaw easily defeated two challengers, taking 78.5 percent of the vote (97,473 votes). Challenger Joseph Talley garnered 17.6 percent (21,829 votes) and Cleamond Lee Walker took 3.9 percent (4,833 votes). “That is a mandate by the citizens of Palm Beach County that

the men and women of this agency have been doing a great job for the past eight years,” said Bradshaw, who celebrated his big win with supporters at E.R. Bradley’s in West Palm Beach. “They want to keep doing what they’ve been doing, which is to stop these gangs and stop this violent crime. It’s all about keeping their neighborhood safe.” While operating Tuesday’s election, Supervisor of Elections Susan Bucher was also on the ballot seeking a second term in office. Despite a few high-profile election glitches over the past four See ELECTION, page 9

Mecca Farms Land Swap Gets Tentative County OK By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Palm Beach County Commission gave tentative approval Tuesday to a deal trading the 1,900-acre Mecca Farms property for $30 million and 1,400 acres of land. The proposal could resolve what has been a years-long conundrum for the county. The county bought the land, off Northlake Blvd. just north of The Acreage, in 2004 for the development of Scripps Florida’s planned biotech complex. The location was challenged by environmentalists, and Scripps eventually ended up

building its campus in Jupiter. This left the county holding the partially built Mecca property as a white elephant. Under the proposed deal, the South Florida Water Management District is requesting free title to the 1,919-acre Mecca property minus some county right-of-way. In exchange for the property, preliminary negotiations would transfer about 1,495 acres in five separate parcels of SFWMD land with an assessed value of about $24.66 million to the county, plus a cash payment of $30 million. Additionally, existing leases on the SFWMD properties will gen-

erate $305,000 in income per year, and it is possible some parcels could be sold. The county originally bought the property for $60 million and then put millions into infrastructure improvements. Mecca costs the county about $250,000 a year to secure and maintain, in addition to debt service payments of about $6.5 million per year from 2012 through 2015, about $3.8 million per year between 2016 and 2025, and about $610,000 per year for the remaining three years of debt service. Proceeds from the sale would be used to offset future debt ser-

vice requirements. Although the county still owes about $45 million in principal on the Mecca Farms acquisition and other costs associated with the purchase, the debt would not need to be paid off before swapping the land. Lisa Interlandi of the Everglades Law Center said it wholeheartedly supports the deal. “We see this item as a great end to the saga of Mecca Farms and a really great result for the citizens of Palm Beach County,” she said. “The water management district, to my knowledge, has already identified funding for the design and construction of the water stor-

age features on Mecca Farms, so we’re very hopeful that the project in the near future [will provide] water flow to the Loxahatchee River.” Interlandi said that one of the main reasons environmentalists opposed the Scripps project at Mecca Farms was that the land had been identified by the water management district as an important location for water storage for the Loxahatchee River. “We really were concerned that we wouldn’t have the water that that river needed if we didn’t put water storage there,” she said. See MECCA, page 16


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