Town-Crier Newspaper July 13, 2012

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INDIAN TRAIL AWARDED GRANT FOR PARK COUNCIL TO REVIEW COMMUNITY CENTER SEE STORY, PAGE 3 SEE STORY, PAGE 7 THE

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

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Volume 33, Number 28 July 13 - July 19, 2012

HOLIDAY FISHING TOURNAMENT

Look For The July Issue Of ‘Forever Young’ In This Week’s Paper Wellington Preliminary Tax Rate Stays Same

The Wellington Village Council gave preliminary approval Tuesday to maintain its property tax rate at 2.5 mills, the same rate as the previous four years. But for the first time in five years, Wellington will see an uptick in its property tax revenue. Page 3

The Royal Palm Bassmasters hosted the 22nd annual Red, White & Blue Fourth of July Fishing Tournament on Wednesday, July 4 at Lakeside Challenger Park in Royal Palm Beach. In addition to the tournament, participants enjoyed raffles, food and more. Shown here are Six & Under Bass winners Christopher Recchio, Ashlyn Nutter and Gabi Ferer. RESULTS & MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 35 PHOTO BY LAUREN MIRÓ/TOWN-CRIER

RPB Firecracker Golf Tournament

The annual Royal Palm Beach Firecracker Golf Tournament was held Wednesday, July 4 at the Madison Green Golf Club. The day included golf, raffles and prizes, longest-drive and closest-to-the-pin contests, and a barbecue lunch. Page 5

RPB Seniors Group Fourth Of July Party

The Royal Palm Beach seniors activities group held an early Fourth of July party Tuesday, July 3 at the Royal Palm Beach Cultural Center. Page 12

OPINION PBIEC Hearing Puts Wellington Council In Dangerous Waters

At a special public hearing Tuesday, July 17, Wellington Village Council members will decide whether to revisit changes made to the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center property approved last October by the former council. Beware: the council is about to enter extremely dangerous territory. Page 4 DEPARTMENT INDEX NEWS ............................. 3 - 12 OPINION .................................4 CRIME NEWS .........................6 NEWS BRIEFS........................ 8 SCHOOLS ............................ 13 PEOPLE ........................ 14 - 15 COLUMNS .................... 23 - 24 BUSINESS .................... 25 - 27 ENTERTAINMENT ................ 29 SCHOOLS SHOWCASE ... 30 - 31 SPORTS ........................ 35 - 37 CALENDAR ...................38 - 39 CLASSIFIEDS ................ 42 - 46 Visit Us On The Web At WWW.GOTOWNCRIER.COM

Indian Trail Board Inks New Policy Addressing Fuel Spills By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Indian Trail Improvement District Board of Supervisors approved a fuel spill policy Wednesday that was developed by staff at their direction after a recent oil spill prompted a scare in TheAcreage. On April 25, a piece of equipment turned over on an Acreage property, allowing about 25 gallons of fuel to leak into a swale. Residents, almost all of whom use wells for potable water, raised concerns about the lack of a policy, due to the possibility of wellfield contamination. ITID Attorney Charlie Schoech said the company that owned the equipment was slow in cleaning up the spill, although state statutes place the responsibility on the owner to report the spill promptly. ITID Administrator Tanya Quickel said the policy had been

reviewed by legal staff as well as the county’s Department of Environmental Resources Management. “Staff has undergone training, and spill kits have been ordered and are in place,” Quickel said. ITID Vice President Carol Jacobs said she was surprised that the district did not already have a fuel-spill policy in place. “I can’t believe with the fuel tanks that we have that we haven’t had a policy,” she said, pointing out that she was aware of one large fuel tank right by a canal. Often it takes an incident such as the April fuel spill to make people aware that they need a policy, ITID President Michelle Damone said. “In the past, Palm Beach County always handled it whenever we had fuel spills,” she said, although this one was on a district road. “We obviously feel more responsible in making sure that those things are

handled, no differently than if it were a county road.” Damone pointed out that the district’s policy is stricter than what the county requires. “I think that shows that we are being responsible,” she said. Supervisor Carlos Enriquez said they were fortunate that the spill happened in a district easement and ITID employees who saw it had the insight to report it. “If they hadn’t, we would never have known there was a fuel spill there,” he said. “The stuff would have been in the water.” Damone said the policy would correct deficiencies that existed before. “It’s exactly what the public has asked for,” she said. “It’s what the board has asked for, it’s what the Acreage Landowners’ Association has supported, and I think it’s a good policy.” Supervisor Jennifer Hager was glad to see that the policy allows See ITID, page 16

Wellington Seniors Finally Get Their Own Committee By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report After years of requests from Wellington seniors to have an official voice in village matters, on Tuesday the Wellington Village Council unanimously approved the creation of a Senior Advisory Committee. At the same time, council members directed staff members to give all committees and boards a larger capacity in Wellington affairs. The idea of a standing committee has been on the minds of senior activists in the village since 2005, when the short-lived Senior Citizens Task Force was created to evaluate the needs of Wellington’s aging population. Though an advisory committee was high on the list of task force recommendations, it never gained traction among village leaders. But

late Tuesday night, seniors finally got their wish. Senior activist Tony Fransetta applauded council members. “Your logic is not flawed,” he said. “I agree with what you’re doing.” According to the staff report, the Senior Advisory Committee will have seven members, five appointed by the council and two atlarge members. Inaugural members include some of Wellington’s most prominent, longtime senior activists. Councilwoman Anne Gerwig appointed former Senior Advocate Howard Trager, Vice Mayor Howard Coates appointed Sam Nebb, Councilman John Greene appointed Barbara Phillippi, Councilman Matt Willhite appointed Fransetta and Mayor Bob Margolis appointed Sharon Zimmerman. The mutually appointed at-large

members are Peter Granata and David Schumacher. Committee members will act in an advisory capacity and discuss matters involving senior citizens in Wellington, including developing and recommending policies, programs and legislation. It will also “provide a forum in which village residents 55 and older [can] state views and concerns,” according to the staff report. Margolis took the opportunity to address the function of committees and boards in Wellington, noting that many meet only at the council’s direction. Village Attorney Jeffrey Kurtz said that could be changed. “My understanding is that your desire is to have them generate some ideas and items without specifically being directed by the See SENIORS, page 16

Serving Palms West Since 1980

Final Remaining Equestrian Village Approval Revoked By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report A divided Wellington Village Council on Tuesday revoked the commercial dressage arena designation given earlier this year to the controversial Equestrian Village site by the former council. In a move that Vice Mayor Howard Coates said will create “uncertainty for the equestrian industry,” council members voted 32 to revoke the site’s “compatibility determination.” Coates and Councilwoman Anne Gerwig dissented. Approved in February, the compatibility determination on the site allowed for year-round operation as a commercial dressage facility. A second item, a master plan that allowed several new access points, was also approved at that time. Both were subject to conditions that a plat be recorded by March 31, a deadline applicant Wellington Equestrian Partners failed to meet, Director of Growth Management Bob Basehart said. Council members revoked the master plan amendment in May. Basehart said that without an updated master plan, the compatibility determination could not stand. “[Staff] feels that the appropriate action in this case is to also revoke the approval,” he said. Basehart noted, however, that council members could choose to modify the conditions of approval or extend the time to allow the property owners to get a new master plan approved. There was extended debate over

whether village staff or the property owners were at fault for missing the deadline, which arrived during the confusing days of Wellington’s contested election. Engineer Michael Sexton, representing Wellington Equestrian Partners, said that his client was waiting on a sign-off by Village Attorney Jeff Kurtz before submitting the plat but never received confirmation of that approval. “I had a conversation with [Kurtz] where I asked him if we were going to be on the agenda for the [March 27 council meeting],” Sexton said. “I was told no. I asked him if the [documents] were approved. My recollection was he said something in the order of, ‘I believe they’re OK.’” But Village Engineer Bill Riebe said that he had given Sexton verbal confirmation of Kurtz’s approval on March 21. Wellington Equestrian Partners attorney Dan Rosenbaum said that Sexton had asked for written confirmation of approval several times but did not receive it. Sexton agreed. “The reason I wanted it in writing, is I do know that items sometimes get walked onto an agenda,” he said. “I wanted the item to get walked onto the [March 27] agenda no matter who was sitting [on the council].” But Gerwig pointed out that there was concern among former council members that any action they took in the wake of the election controversy could have been seen as “sneaking in” an item. Council members questioned See REVOKED, page 7

POSSE BARREL RACES

The Palm Beach County Mounted Posse held Firecracker 1400 Barrel Races on Saturday, July 7 and Sunday, July 8 at the Jim Brandon Equestrian Center. Shown here is Marla Gulsby aboard Dixie Girl. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 12 PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

RPB Council Reviews $32 Million Budget By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Royal Palm Beach Village Council heard a formal presentation on the village’s budget for the upcoming fiscal year Thursday, July 5. The proposed property tax rate will be unchanged at 1.92 mills to help finance a total $32 million budget, with about $5 million for capital projects freed up from reserves due to accounting principles changed this year. Village Manager Ray Liggins said the primary intent of the bud-

get is to prepare a financial plan with the same tax rate despite decreases in revenue, yet also deliver improved services with the completion of Royal Palm Beach Commons Park. “The tax rate is proposed to remain the same at 1.92 mills per thousand dollars of taxable value,” Liggins said. At that rate, the owner of a home assessed at $150,000 after exemptions would pay $288 in village property taxes next year. The budget includes a first-time See RPB BUDGET, page 16

Wellington Out Of The Hunt For 2018 Equestrian Games By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report Equestrian Sport Productions, organizers of the Wellington Equestrian Festival, withdrew their bid this week to host the 2018 World Equestrian Games. Wellington was one of five communities under consideration to host the games, regarded as the world championships of the equestrian industry. Promoters cited recent decisions by the Wellington Village Council that they say could endanger local equestrian venues as evidence of a lack of support from the village.

But several council members expressed puzzlement over the withdrawal, noting that they had yet to see information on the bid in order to give support or withhold it. “It wasn’t so much a lack of support for the games,” Equestrian Sport Productions President Michael Stone told the Town-Crier Tuesday. “It was that they are attacking the venues.” Stone cited recent decisions by a majority of council members to revoke the master plan and compatibility determination of the Equestrian Village property, as well as an unusual hearing scheduled

next Tuesday to examine and possibly reconsider a decision last October by the former council to approve a master plan that governs the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center. “It makes it impossible to have a successful bid,” Stone said. “The mere fact that they are challenging the venues puts the bid in jeopardy.” Stone said that the Fédération Équestre Internationale (more commonly known as FEI, or, in English, the International Federation for Equestrian Sports), which is the international body that governs the games, looks for support

from the host government. “One Google search shows the reality of the situation in Wellington,” Stone said. “We didn’t want to embarrass ourselves, the United States Equestrian Federation or the FEI.” But withdrawing the bid means Wellington could have a chance at the 2022 games, he said. Mayor Bob Margolis said that the decisions cited by Stone didn’t necessarily mean that the council would be against supporting Wellington’s bid to host the competition. “I don’t think one has anything to do with the other,” he told the

Town-Crier Wednesday. “The actions taken and the hearing have nothing to do with the venues. It’s about the process.” Margolis noted that Wellington’s government could change several times before the 2018 games. “How will it turn out? I don’t know,” he said. “Basing their decision on what happened yesterday and next week is shortsighted.” Council members were expecting to hear a presentation on the games at Monday’s agenda review meeting, Margolis said. “When [Village Manager Paul See WEG BID, page 16


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