Town-Crier Newspaper December 14, 2012

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COUNTY LEADERS PLAN STATE PRIORITIES COPELAND DAVIS PLANS JAN. 26 CONCERT SEE STORY, PAGE 3 SEE STORY, PAGE 7 THE

TOWN-CRIER WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE

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INSIDE Nursing School Set To Open This Winter In Royal Palm Beach

Volume 33, Number 50 December 14 - December 20, 2012

CROWDS GREET HOLIDAY PARADE

Daniel Splain of Shaker Health Holdings gave a presentation Monday to the Royal Palm Beach Education Advisory Board on his plans to open a nursing school in the village and offer a scholarship annually to a qualifying student from the community. Page 3

Wellington Zoning Board OKs Variances For PBIEC Riding Rings

After more than two hours of discussion, members of Wellington’s Planning Zoning & Adjustment Board approved variances last week for several riding rings at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center. Page 7

The 29th annual Wellington Holiday Parade took place Sunday, Dec. 9. The afternoon parade featured a variety of floats, marching bands and cars. Shown here is the Palm Beach Central High School Bronco Band, which took first in the marching band category. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 9 SEE VIDEO AND ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY AT WWW.GOTOWNCRIER.COM PHOTO BY JESSICA GREGOIRE/TOWN-CRIER

Jennifer Hager Chosen As New Indian Trail President ‘Change A Life’ Winner Debuts Her New Look

Connie Christman, winner of the “Change a Life” contest sponsored by Visions Salon: The Color Group and Dr. G’s Weight Loss & Wellness of Wellington, debuted her new look Wednesday, Dec. 5. Page 12

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report There’s a new supervisor on the board and new person holding the gavel after Wednesday’s organizational meeting of the Indian Trail Improvement District Board of Supervisors. After a shift on the board’s political balance, Jennifer Hager was unanimously elected ITID president, replacing longtime ITID President Michelle Damone, who re-

mains on the board but without an officer position. Also taking his seat Wednesday was Supervisor Gary Dunkley, who unseated former Supervisor Carlos Enriquez in last month’s election. Both Dunkley and Damone took the oath of office at the start of the meeting. The other officer positions also changed. Supervisor Carol Jacobs was named vice president, Dunkley was chosen as treasurer, ITID

Local Day Spa Helps Out Back To Basics

Sanda Gané European Day Spa presented donations to the local nonprofit Back to Basics on Friday, Dec. 7. Spa staff members gave a percentage of their sales to Back to Basics and also bought toys, sneakers and socks, which the nonprofit gives to children in need during the holiday season. Page 13

OPINION Stop Treating Similar Businesses Unfairly

The tricky topic of regulating business hours came up again last week. After discussing a proposal to remove limits on the hours of operation for businesses within 300 feet of homes, Wellington’s planning board objected to the change. While they brought up good points, we don’t agree that keeping these outdated rules is the best thing for the community. Page 4 DEPARTMENT INDEX NEWS ............................. 3 - 13 OPINION ................................. 4 CRIME NEWS ......................... 6 NEWS BRIEFS ........................ 8 SCHOOLS ............................ 14 PEOPLE ........................ 16 - 17 COLUMNS .................... 25 - 26 BUSINESS .................... 27 - 29 ENTERTAINMENT ................. 31 SPORTS ........................ 37 - 39 CALENDAR ................... 40 - 41 CLASSIFIEDS ................ 42 - 47 Visit Us On The Web At WWW.GOTOWNCRIER.COM

New ITID Board — (L-R) Ralph Bair, Jennifer Hager, Carol Jacobs, Michelle Damone and Gary Dunkley. PHOTO BY RON BUKLEY/TOWN-CRIER

Attorney Mary Viator was tapped as secretary and Supervisor Ralph Bair was named assistant secretary. All officer appointments carried on unanimous 5-0 votes. Hager said she wanted to initiate some changes immediately, starting with allowing more discussion from the audience. “I know that in the past, the three-minute cutoff has been a big thing for some of you,” she said, addressing the residents in attendance. “If you’re at the end of your three minutes and you think it’s legit that you go over and have an active conversation, that’s fine and great. If it’s packed, and we have a million of these [comment cards] in, we’ll tighten it up a little bit.” In the event of a major issue cropping up — such as last summer’s flood — Hager said she would change the meeting venue rather than have people standing outside. She also wanted to move supervisors’ comments to immediately See ITID, page 7

LGWCD Releases Short List Of New Administrator Candidates By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Loxahatchee Groves Water Control District Board of Supervisors approved a short list of five candidates Monday to replace 15-year veteran Clete Saunier, who was dismissed as district administrator last month. Since the board’s last meeting, Saunier had accepted the district’s offer of a separation package worth $80,547.83. Supervisor Don Widing said that he and Supervisor John Ryan had met and narrowed the list of 22 candidates who applied for the position down to five and one alternate. The candidates are engineer Anthony V. LasCasas, Steve A. McKown, engineer Stephen E. Yohe, James Anaston-Karas, and engineer Raul Mercado of Water Resources Management Associates. The alternate is engineer W. Erik Olson. Widing explained that the board

had delegated him and Ryan to narrow the list down in a publicly advertised meeting Friday, Dec. 7. Widing also passed out a list of suggested guidelines to follow in the selection process. The 22 applications amounted to 365 pages that they reviewed, he said. “In all my years of human resources work in hiring and going through human assessment processes personally, I have never experienced the bulk in single resumes ever,” Widing said. “We had submissions from three pages to 35 pages on a single candidate, and we looked at every single piece of paper.” Widing said that neither he nor Ryan had contacted any of the candidates or their references, but they had assembled a set of suggested guidelines for the board to follow in the selection process. “We’re recommending that the board determine a date and a time for an initial candidate interview, and establish an allotted time

frame for each candidate,” Widing said. “The board will review and approve an invitation to participate.” Candidates will be provided a salary range and benefits for the position, and will be given a selfevaluation form for them to fill out and return to the district for distribution to the board to review prior to the interview. Each board member will be given an option to develop a maximum of three questions for the initial candidate interviews based on their own review of the applications and the candidates’ self-evaluations. “That gives the potential for a maximum of 15 questions, which is quite a lot, but we feel that with the diversity on the board and the self-evaluation, if each board member does their work, after 15 questions and the interviews with the candidate’s response, we should get a pretty good initial interpretaSee LGWCD, page 20

Serving Palms West Since 1980

Plan For Meeting On EV Settlement Dies Amid Attorney Switch By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report Litigation over the controversial Equestrian Village property will not be settled this year. Instead, Wellington Village Council members asked Tuesday for a private meeting with the village’s interim attorneys to discuss a counteroffer. Discussion on what to do about litigation also led to a request by Vice Mayor Howard Coates that the Palm Beach County Office of the Inspector General look into communication between some council members on the matter. At Tuesday’s meeting, council members abandoned tentative plans to have a rehearing on the issue in order to have further discussion with attorneys now that they have new representation. “I think a shade session would be appropriate, only because we have new counsel,” Mayor Bob Margolis suggested. “That way, [attorney Claudio Riedi] can understand where this council is coming from, because he hasn’t had an opportunity to sit down and discuss this with us.” Riedi acted as the village’s rep-

resentation in July during discussion of the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center master plan, and will be taking over the Equestrian Village litigation while the council discusses its options for hiring a new village attorney. Equestrian Village representatives proposed a settlement in late November, but council members rejected it Tuesday. It would have allowed for existing structures to remain, Village Manager Paul Schofield said. “It would allow the two barns, the covered arena and other existing structures to stay in place and continue to be used,” he said. Equestrian Sport Productions CEO Mark Bellissimo told council members that the settlement was an attempt to come to an agreement on what is currently built on the property. “We’re willing to accept what has been done,” he said. “There is no more hotel, just the structures already on the site. We will accept that so we can move forward as a community.” But council members said they See EV PROJECT, page 20

WINTER WONDERLAND

Wellington hosted ZMC Entertainment’s Winter Wonderland on Saturday, Dec. 8 at the Wellington Amphitheater. The event featured holiday performances by professional singers and dancers. Guests enjoyed fair rides and midway games, and there were vendors offering food and other items. Shown here, dancers from the Dance Attack Studio gear up for their performance. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 13 PHOTO BY LAUREN MIRÓ/TOWN-CRIER

Wellington Council To Keep Current Firm During Legal Search By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report The Wellington Village Council voted Tuesday to continue to work with its current law firm while members decide whether to make the village attorney’s position inhouse. In a 3-2 decision, council members chose to stick with the law firm of Glen J. Torcivia & Associates temporarily until they hire a new attorney on an interim or permanent basis. Councilmen Matt Willhite and John Greene cast the dissenting votes. Last month, the council was split on a decision to end its contract with the law firm, which former Village Attorney Jeff Kurtz worked for. But council members had not selected new representation as of this week.

In the meantime, a consulting firm has been crunching numbers to make a recommendation whether Wellington would save money by moving its attorney in-house rather than having a firm on retainer. “We have asked if they could move up their completion date,” Village Manager Paul Schofield said. “They said they will try to accelerate the process, but given the approaching holidays, they are not willing to commit and say they can. They will, however, be providing recommendations as they become available rather than waiting until the end.” But because the contract with Torcivia was to end Thursday, Schofield said council members had to choose an interim attorney See NEW LAWYER, page 20

Royal Palm Commons Park Inching Toward Completion By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The new Royal Palm Beach Commons Park is making slow, yet steady progress toward completion. As of Oct. 29, contractor West Construction began paying a $1,000-a-day default fee for the $22 million project, which is estimated to be done sometime next month. The park will bring Royal Palm Beach to 30 acres of recreational space per 1,000 residents — three times the amount required by the village charter. Only 60 acres of the 160-acre park will be finished during the project, with several acres set aside for a future amphitheater, 90 acres for a possible par-3 golf course

and several more acres for development by nonprofits. The park has 3 miles of paved pathways and 20 pavilions, some with docks for access to the park’s numerous lakes, according to Village Manager Ray Liggins. “There are six docks total,” said Liggins as he gave the Town-Crier a tour of the park Monday. All the pavilions and play sets are finished, Liggins said, while the main things remaining to be finished are the sodding and portions of the main clubhouse. The great lawn remained unsodded this week, but the contour of the land reveals a great bowl shape, surrounded by several pavilions where bands could play or exhibitors could set up.

“We have areas where four bands could set up at the same time,” Liggins said. “This is an event park,” he said. “It’s not a ball field, but we could actually do sports events there if we wanted. It’s going to be a sports lawn. We can have unbelievable festivals out here. We could make it a go-to place for a festival.” To the southeast of the threestory main clubhouse is a hexagonal steel structure that will eventually be a canvas-covered pavilion, complete with stage, suitable for a wedding and/or reception. On the opposite side of the clubhouse will be the main courtyard, with an interactive fountain adorned by four statues of FloriSee COMMONS PARK, page 20

The main building at the almost-completed Commons Park. PHOTO BY RON BUKLEY/TOWN-CRIER


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