Recent Comments

Archives

  • parking.fiu.edu
Advertisement
The Newspaper for the Future of Miami
Connect with us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
Front Page » Opinion » Are city commissioners desperate, insensitive or greedy?

Are city commissioners desperate, insensitive or greedy?

Written by on October 4, 2022
  • www.miamitodaynews.com
Advertisement
Are city commissioners desperate, insensitive or greedy?

When Miami commissioners a decade ago were moving ahead to allow illuminated billboards on three highly visible city-owned buildings, this column was headed “Are city commissioners desperate, insensitive or greedy?” Now they’re at it again, planning billboards for three pristine city bayfront parks, and we ask the same question.

How in Heaven’s name could commissioners look at Bayfront Park, Maurice Ferré Park and Virginia Key Beach Park and think they are the least bit suitable for lighted billboards with changing messages? Have they any sensitivity at all for what a park is supposed to be?

Apparently not. They just agreed to lease the city’s largest park to developers for 99 years to create a mixed-use project far larger than the vast Brickell City Centre. But at least that handover of the Melreese golf course won’t gobble up bayfront – that’s the only thing good you can say about it.

The ostensible reason for wanting billboards in three waterfront icons of Miami, according to the legislation by Commissioner Joe Carollo, is to “attract more revenue to ensure funds necessary to improve and maintain the parks.”

I see. Apparently, the lighted billboards that will be allowed to show a new ad every eight seconds would be considered an improvement for the parks. Perhaps the visual pollution of lighted advertisements will create enjoyment for a family visit. What am I missing in that?

What do great cities do with their waterfronts? They strive to make them attractive and inviting. Think of the long expanse of green space on Chicago’s lakefront centering on Millennium Park.

What does the City of Miami do with its expanse of green space on the bayfront? It looks at it as a revenue center to attract not families but the equivalent of clicks on digital advertising.

The last time city hall approved advertising signs was in 2012 during the Great Recession, when real estate values and taxes had plummeted and the city was desperate for cash. Today, a real estate boom has escalated values and handed the city a cash bonanza used for a hiring spurt at city hall and a general fund budget increase of $88 million.

So in 2012, when the city decided it would be OK to plaster advertising on its Knight Center, Olympia/Gusman theater and Miami Children’s Museum, the city was seeking money anywhere and, as Commissioner Marc Sarnoff snarled at billboard opponents, “If you don’t like visual pollution, avert your eyes.”

Today, Mr. Carollo says “putting something that’s reasonable in size 1,000 feet apart, it’s not like … a sign every few hundred feet.” 

No, it’s not like every few hundred feet – it’s spaced-out visual pollution headed for our parks so, hey, it could be worse. On the other hand, it could be a whole lot better – like, not polluting at all.

At least Commissioner Manolo Reyes had the grace last month as the city passed a first vote on the signs in parks to be concerned about their brightness. “I don’t want us to become another Vegas … food for thought, let’s picture how it [the sign] can be and how it would impact the environment and city residents.” If commissioners did that candidly, there would be no signs at all.

Mr. Reyes is right – we don’t want to be another Vegas, or a Times Square. When Mr. Sarnoff backed the signs in 2012, he argued that property values had boomed in Times Square in New York, so why not in Miami? 

Look at Miami now, where the property value boom outpaces by percentage any gains in New York. Doesn’t that indicate that lighted billboards decrease the values of property?

As Miami moves toward a final vote to allow billboards to deface our parks while destroying the greenery that makes Miami desirable and its properties valuable, Miami-Dade County commissioners may be moving to protect valuable parkland.

Legislation put on this week’s county agenda by Commissioner Javier Souto would strengthen protection for a charter requirement that “parks, aquatic preserves, and lands acquired by the county for preservation shall be held in trust for the education, pleasure, and recreation of the public and they shall be used and maintained in a manner which will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations as a part of the public’s irreplaceable heritage.”

What part of that statement should not apply as well to city parks, Miami commissioners? Does anyone really believe adding freestanding advertising billboards 20 feet high by 20 feet wide leaves parks unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations?  

It’s not like we have an excess of parks fronting Biscayne Bay. Miami commissioners are about to attack the three most visible of those parks and Vegas-ize them. Once they’re gone, like Melreese and any other city asset, they will be gone forever. Chicago’s lakefront was dredged out of Lake Michigan more than a century ago, but they just aren’t creating new bayfront in Miami these days.

Oh, you can put grass in the center of Biscayne Boulevard downtown and call it a new park – yes, that is on the city’s drawing board. That’s like what they plan at Melreese, which is to put soccer fields on top of a 4,000-plus car garage and call it replacement for some of the present park. But calling a cow a horse doesn’t make it a horse, nor is sticking grass in the middle of US 1 downtown creating a park, or sticking billboards in parks a way to leave them unimpaired as parks.

Call those billboards what you like. I call them rape of parkland.

A decade ago this column noted that the worse the economic situation, the more willing the city becomes to prostitute itself. Today, with more tax money than ever rolling in, what is the city’s excuse?

12 Responses to Are city commissioners desperate, insensitive or greedy?

  1. Peter S Balsam

    October 5, 2022 at 11:05 am

    We’re outraged by the stupidly & chosen ignorance to natural beauty around us. We have new high rise buildings going up in every hole in this area. & now these men want to damage the small bit of green we have. Why not spend some money & fix the fountain that’s non working for years. Another political selfish act against the people. You all should be ashamed of yourselves. Peter Balsam 50 Biscayne Blvd

  2. Concerned Citizen

    October 5, 2022 at 11:36 am

    Everyone against this terrible proposal needs to speak out against it ASAP or it will be almost impossible to reverse..

  3. Insanely Mad

    October 5, 2022 at 1:46 pm

    Billboards, especially LED billboards are visual pollution. They are ugly. Their bright lights can distract residents and tourists up to 2 miles away. Blight. LED billboards are disgusting. But Miami elected officials Christine King, Crazy Joe, Alex DLP, Ken Russell and Manolo Reyes all VOTED YES. Corruption.

  4. Rev. Pedro Martinez

    October 6, 2022 at 3:36 pm

    I agree 100% with the article written by Mr. Michael Lewis. If the Commissioners approve allowing billboards on Bayfront Park, Maurice Ferré and Virginia Key Beach Park they can change their tittles from “Commissioners” to “Financial Pimps”, because they would be Prostituting our Parks and our City. The tax income revenue we give the City, has increased greatly over the years. Many people move in to South Florida because we have great green spaces and gorgeous water views. A lot people are moving from New York, New Jersey, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago and Boston and all the Cities are full of billboards. I encourage the Commissioner to VOTE NO to billboards in our Parks.

  5. Raidel Oviedo

    October 7, 2022 at 5:24 pm

    Stop this nonsense NOW. joe carollo needs to retire.
    I hope we all start voting out these last century politicians.
    Keep Miami green.
    Plant trees, not billboards.

  6. John

    October 7, 2022 at 6:36 pm

    I think officials do not appreciate calm and silence. We already have sound and light contamination everywhere. Protect our parks. Save the few spaces for peace and quiet.

  7. Gerhard Rossbach

    October 10, 2022 at 11:16 am

    We CANNOT BELIEVE the audacity of your plan to install billboards in Miami PARKS, including Bayfront Park. Not only is Bayfront Park already being misused as a concert venue (Ultra Music etc) and an amusement park now and then, now you want to permanently spoil its natural beauty by installing a billboard? Same with the other parks. We cannot even picture the ugliness of a billboard in Virginia Key Beach Park. Do you at all know the purpose of a PARK? To have some green for recreation and beauty for the residents in a vast desert of high-rise buildings. Miami must have at least doubled their tax income from a few years ago through all the people moving here, how greedy can you be? Even New York has left Central Park a park and not spoiled its beauty. The only reason for this terrible decision has to be the personal benefit of the commissioners.

  8. On PZAB

    October 10, 2022 at 1:12 pm

    LED Billboards are the worst form of visual pollution. Condo owners and tourists will be abused by the light 24/7. If you object show up at the City PZAB Meeting on October 10 at 6:30 pm. The item is on the Agenda.

  9. Rev. Pedro Martinez

    October 10, 2022 at 3:56 pm

    All residents opposing the billboards should: 1) Write each Commissioner and the Mayor: adelaportilla@miamigov.com; krussell@miamigov.com; jcarollo@miamigov.com; mreyes@miamigov.com; cking@miamigov.com; fsuarez@miamigov.com and 2) Attend and Speak at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, on Thursday, 10/13 at 9 AM. United we can stop this environmental tragedy.

  10. Feds Investigate

    October 10, 2022 at 9:53 pm

    City of Miami commissioners have had a reputation for being corrupt for over 30 years. This group might be the worst. Putting LED billboards in very visible public parks is stupid but perhaps it means commissioners got money from billboard companies and from billboard lobbyists? The Feds should investigate.

  11. Show Up

    October 16, 2022 at 10:27 pm

    Citizens can attend another PZAB Meeting at City Hall on 10/19 at 6:30 pm. The City is presenting another item that will bring more billboards and more LED billboards to City buildings and public parks. Please come and voice your objections.

  12. Desperate Commish

    October 19, 2022 at 12:00 pm

    Why is Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla so desperate to approve billboards in parks and throughout Miami? Why is this commissioner in such a hurry?

  • www.miamitodaynews.com
Advertisement