Tag Archives: city

‘Operation Medicine Cabinet’ this weekend

LEE COUNTY, Fla. – It’s time to gather up all of your unused or expired medication. The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is partnering with Florida Crime Prevention Association for “Operation Medicine Cabinet”, the latest installment of the Pharmaceutical Take Back Program. Three locations will be available to drop off your old, unused prescription and over the counter medications for proper disposal. Needles and other sharp objects cannot be accepted.

The following locations will accept your old medications on Saturday, November 13 from 10:00 am until 2:00 pm:

1) Coconut Point Mall in Estero in front of Hollywood Theaters (U.S. 41 between Corkscrew Road and Coconut Road).

2) Wal Mart Supercenter, 1619 Del Prado Blvd, Cape Coral.

3) Winn-Dixie, Sunshine Plaza, 1145 Homestead Rd North, Lehigh Acres.

Every day in the United States approximately 2,500 youths between the ages of 12 and 17 abuse prescription drugs for the first time. The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is taking a proactive stance in removing and properly disposing of unused medications. This can keep them from falling into the wrong hands and also prevent the drugs from being flushed down the toilet which poses an environmental danger.

Back in February, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office hosted a Prescription Clean-Out with the City of Bonita Springs which resulted in nearly 50,000 prescription and over the counter pills and liquids being turned in for proper disposal.

There is no cost to turn in your medications and all participants will remain anonymous.

‘Operation Medicine Cabinet’ this weekend

County agrees to start Bonita Beach Road widening in 2011 — ahead of schedule

After about two years of back and forth, Lee County Commissioners agreed on Tuesday to Bonita Springs’ request to widen another mile of Bonita Beach Road ahead of schedule.

Old 41 Road to Imperial Street, fronting Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track and the proposed Lowe’s, will be widened to six lanes.

The $7.5 million project will be split between the city and the county, with the county borrowing $3.75 million from itself to pay its share.

Bids have yet to go out, but Lee County’s transportation planning manager, Dave Loveland, said he anticipated ground could break in the first quarter of 2011 and may take up to two years to complete.

It’s a huge accomplishment for Bonita Springs, said Mayor

Ben Nelson.

“Anybody who commutes on this road knows all the development that is closest to coming to fulfillment is between Old 41 and the interstate,” Nelson said. “Plus it’s an access road to Bonita Beach and to I-75.”

Bonita Springs has, for at least two years, tried to convince the county that it is ready to move ahead with the plan originally slated for 2012-2013.

“We proved we have the money and they kept telling us we didn’t” Nelson said. “We kept after them because it was so important.”

The county completed widening between Interstate 75 and Imperial Street. Other phases include widening east of I-75 to Bonita Grande Drive and continuing west of U.S. 41 to Vanderbilt Drive. Though Loveland said there may be a move to stop the widening at U.S. 41 because acquiring the right of way could prove too complicated.

Additionally, Lee County agreed to an interlocal agreement with Bonita for beach renourishment on the northern end of Little Hickory Island.

The state would pay for about a third of the $1 million project. The remaining cost would be shared by the county at 55 percent and the city at 44 percent.

In 1996, two groins were installed near Big Hickory Pass with sand infill along 4,100 feet of the beach. More sand was replaced in 2004 with expectations that it would be done again in 2010 or 2011.

Nelson said the city doesn’t have the money now and it would need to develop a plan for determining public and private interest and who should fund renourishment on an on-going basis.

Also, the Six Mile Cypress public safety building will soon get its power from the sun. Commissioners agreed to the final requirement before a new solar panel project could go live, allowing Florida Power & Light Co. access to the panels in case of an emergency.

It’s Lee County’s first project using solar panels installed on top of the building to move almost entirely off the electric grid.

On a cloudless day, panels will generate 54,000 watts, enough to power 10 homes, said Rich Beck, facilities director.

If the new panels creates more energy than needed, the county will get a credit from Florida Power & Light. A refund is unlikely, he said, because the building houses a sheriff’s office and emergency medical services – a 24 hour operation.

The $326,000 project was paid for with grants funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Beck said there are no current plans to put more buildings on solar power, but if more grants become available that could change.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

County agrees to start Bonita Beach Road widening in 2011 — ahead of schedule

Home video captures St. James City restaurant fire

St. JAMES CITY, Fla- The Low Key Tiki restaurant on Stringfellow Road went up in flames early Thursday morning. A WINK News viewer captured the fire on home video.

???? Firefighters worked pretty quickly to get the flames out.? No word yet on the fire started.? No one was hurt. Investigators will be on scene to look for the cause.

Home video captures St. James City restaurant fire

Naples council’s board appointment procedure called into question

New Naples City Council member Teresa Heitmann converses with Sharon Kenny after being sworn in at Naples City Hall Wednesday, February 6, 2008.

Photo by MICHELLE LE, Daily News

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New Naples City Council member Teresa Heitmann converses with Sharon Kenny after being sworn in at Naples City Hall Wednesday, February 6, 2008.

“It’s always been sort of an awkward process,” Councilwoman Teresa Heitmann said.


They have a process in place, but one Naples City Council member wants a thorough review of that procedure before another community member is appointed to an advisory board.

“It’s always been sort of an awkward process,” Councilwoman Teresa Heitmann said.

Heitmann earlier this month asked City Council to review the process the city follows to appoint community members to a volunteer advisory board.

The request comes less than a month after some residents and council members said they were unhappy with council’s decision to reappoint two members to the Naples Airport Authority.

But Heitmann said recently her request wasn’t based on the airport board appointments. Instead, she was concerned about the overall board appointment process.

The process involves submitting an application and interviewing with City Council members during a televised workshop. The city’s ordinance requires interviews of all applicants _ both new applicants and incumbents.

Some citizens cried foul when City Council opted against interviewing the two incumbents who were reapplying _ and eventually reappointed _ to the board.

Naples resident Bill May said Naples City Council failed to follow the city ordinance that every person who is going to be appointed or reappointed has to be interviewed.

May said it’s “unbelievable” that the mayor said that he didn’t know about the ordinance last month during the reappointment of John Allen and Cormac Giblin to the Naples Airport Authority.

“The mayor and City Council should have followed the law,” May said.

May said that if the city expects citizens to obey the law, then local government leaders should also have to obey it.

But the same ordinance that requires an interview also allows for council members to waive interviews if it’s “in the best interest of the city to forgo such procedure.”

Interviews with incumbents are often waived, City Manager

Bill Moss said, “since they’ve already been through the process.”

Incumbents also generally are reappointed, Mayor

Bill Barnett said, unless he or she did something “flagrantly horrific.”

Naples resident Sharon Kenny speaks during a public hearing on a draft environmental assessment for the proposed Naples Municipal Airport expansion project at the Norris Community Center on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010 in Naples. David Albers/Staff

Photo by DAVID ALBERS

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Naples resident Sharon Kenny speaks during a public hearing on a draft environmental assessment for the proposed Naples Municipal Airport expansion project at the Norris Community Center on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010 in Naples. David Albers/Staff

Sharon Kenny, who applied for the Naples Airport Authority last month, said she doesn’t agree with the incumbent board members automatically being reappointed, especially on committees without term limits such as the Naples Airport Authority.

Kenny, president of the Aqualane Shores association, said each applicant should be interviewed and the best-qualified person appointed.

Kenny said the current process is awkward, broken and embarrassing.

“This is embarrassing for the council and for the citizens and there is no sense of fairness involved,” Kenny said in an e-mail. “I think the board appointment process needs to be looked at by council and a more fair and equitable system established.”

But Barnett disagrees. He said in all of his time at council there have been no complaints about the process.

“I don’t think the system is broken,” he said. “I don’t see anything wrong with the way we appoint.”

Naples is the only city in Collier and Lee counties that interviews candidates in front of a full board. Neither Marco Island nor Bonita Springs uses interviews as a way to appoint advisory board members.

Marco Island has a more informal process of making appointments to its boards and committees compared to Naples, Marco City Clerk Laura Litzan said.

File photo of City Clerk Laura Litzan

City of Marco Island

File photo of City Clerk Laura Litzan

Because Marco Island is a small community, each council member nominates one person to a vacant board throughout the year, whether it’s a planning board or a committee, and then the nomination is part of the consent agenda and voted on.

Generally, Litzan said volunteers seeking appointments will submit resumes to the board.

“The people who volunteer are very well known to council,” Litzan said.

But if it’s somebody that council doesn’t know, they may call the candidate, she added.

In Bonita Springs, the process is similar, Bonita Springs City Manager Gary Price said.

While not required, Bonita Springs council members tend to nominate board members based on district and council votes on the nominations during regular council meetings.

Gary Price, Bonita Springs city manager

Photo by Cary Edmondson

Gary Price, Bonita Springs city manager

Like Marco Island, no public interviews are conducted, but council members can call applicants to chat about their individual qualifications before the meeting.

But it’s not just the interview process that has some Naples residents up in arms. Heitmann said she finds the process of nominating _ council members nominate a person, and the nominees are then voted on based on the order in which they were nominated _ frustrating.

Kenny knows how uncomfortable that nomination process could feel. She said she recalled her name being shouted out for a nomination for the airport board, but said the mayor didn’t acknowledge it and accepted a different nomination instead.

Heitmann said she also was concerned with the voting process, saying some council members may feel pressured to vote for someone because everyone else is voting the same way.

Instead, Heitmann said, council should look at another way of voting _ like a ballot _ so it didn’t feel like “you had peer pressure or some other reason to vote for someone.”

Those ballots wouldn’t be secret though, since any decisions like board appointments need to be made according to the Florida Government-in-the-Sunshine law.

Heitmann also called for a moratorium on board appointments until the process is reviewed, but Moss said he didn’t recall there being any support for that request.

Naples City Council is expected to review the board appointment process during its October workshop.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Naples council’s board appointment procedure called into question

New Orleans-style party in Estero remembers Katrina

ESTERO, Fla. – Hundreds showed up for a N’awlins style feat at the Grape Restaurant to remember Hurricane Katrina and raise money for Gulf relief efforts.

Shrimp & crawfish covered the plates, and zydeco and cajun music filled the air at the Grape Restauant in Estero Sunday night.

The event fell on the 5th anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and helped raise money towards cleanup efforts on the Gulf coast.

“The Shrimp & Crawfish Boil is an event dedicated to the distressed areas of our beloved Gulf Coast,” said Joseph Sofia, owner of The Grape at Coconut Point.

“We are very excited to be able to donate funds to the rescue and restoration of the environment.”

Abita Beer, a Louisiana-based beer, recently established ‘SOS – A Charitable Fund’ and donated 75? of each SOS bottle sold to assist with the rescue and restoration of the environment, industry and individuals fighting to survive the disastrous oil spill.

“I guess its just something you’ll never get over, i’ve visited the city a couple of times since then and unfortunately there still is a lot of devastation,” said Lisa Hatch, who grew up near New Orleans.

The event raised nearly $3,000.

New Orleans-style party in Estero remembers Katrina

Neighborhood seeks Cape’s help with median maintenance

CAPE CORAL, Fla. – A Cape Coral neighborhood paid its own way to beautify their street; but now they’d like the city to chip in to help maintain their new palms.

Neighbors paid out of their own pockets for the palms and landscapping that now line the median on Sands Boulevard; perhaps no one has put in more than Chuck Liptak.

“I wanted this median to look beautiful, I think it does now,” Liptak said.? “I probably have got 14-thousand invested in this.”

Besides rounding up the original support for the project, Liptak is now maintaining it.? He got the OK for the project by promising to keep it trimmed.? However, recent lung surgery has made that work difficult.

Now he’d like the city to help out,? saying it would be their benefit: their boulevard beautification helped sell a long-vacant property next door.

‘It sold after the people from Canada saw this,” he said, pointing to the palms.? “They said, this is the place to buy, on this street.”

The city does maintain major medians, like the newly widened Santa Barbara Boulevard; and the council helps out some private neighborhoods.

But the Sands’ project promise of self-maintenance kept it out of a recent public works contract.

“The key is to make certain before we sign a contract is to make sure we know exactly what’s included,” said council member Kevin McGrail, who says it’s possible for the city to take over the Sands maintenance.

“If people are willing to contribute to make the city of Cape Coral look nice, why isn’t the City of Cape Coral willing to pitch in?”? Liptak said.

The city is looking into the costs to take over median maintenance on Sands Boulevard, which could come before council in the coming weeks.

Neighborhood seeks Cape’s help with median maintenance

Dangerous intersections: A closer look at crashes in several Collier communities

(Monday, it will be your chance at naplesnews.com to Sound Off about traffic. Return to our website on Monday and take several polls about traffic in our area.)

Thursday: Collier’s most dangerous intersections

Friday: South Lee’s most dangerous intersections

Weekend: Dangerous intersections, by community

Monday: Readers’ choices and several polls for you to Sound Off about Southwest Florida traffic

(Pick up copies of the Daily News this Sunday and Monday for newspaper versions of this series and a full-page map showing the most dangerous intersections)

Naples

As part of an analysis of more than 40 of the biggest intersections in Collier County to determine where the most wrecks occur and which intersections are the most crash-prone, the Daily News looked at four intersections within the city limits. They were Goodlette-Frank Road at Golden Gate Parkway; U.S. 41 North at Golden Gate Parkway; Goodlette-Frank Road at U.S. 41 East; and Four Corners, where U.S. 41 East, U.S. 41 North, Ninth Street South and Fifth Avenue South converge.

?Dangerous intersections: Naples has heavy traffic, but few crashes at corners

Golden Gate and Golden Gate Estates

To residents of the area, it’s probably no surprise that several intersections in Golden Gate and Golden Gate Estates rated among the most dangerous ones in Collier County in a Daily News analysis of more than 40 of Collier’s biggest intersections in 2006 to 2008. The analysis shows where crashes are more likely to occur in the county, and what kind of crashes are more likely at each intersection. The analysis looked at total crashes and the crash rate projected out to each one million vehicles.

?Dangerous intersections: Golden Gate Estates has several of Collier’s worst

Marco Island

Most vehicle accidents on Marco Island aren’t occurring where you might think. That’s because, statistically, there aren’t a lot of crashes on the streets of Marco. Instead, Marco Island police data shows most accidents last year occurred on private property, including strip mall and condominium parking lots. Of those, the largest grouping was within a quarter mile of the Bald Eagle Drive and Collier Boulevard intersection.

?Dangerous intersections: Most Marco accidents aren’t happening on the streets

Immokalee

In Immokalee, traffic grows along with the crops. During the growing season, large trucks full of tomatoes and oranges clog the roads, and people from Lehigh Acres drive S.R. 82 to work the fields.

?Dangerous intersections: Immokalee drivers face seasonal traffic, not many crashes

DANGEROUS INTERSECTIONS: The series so far

?Dangerous intersections:The series

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash rates

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash totals

?Dangerous intersections: Most Marco accidents aren’t happening on the streets

?Dangerous intersections: Golden Gate Estates has several of Collier’s worst

?Dangerous intersections: Naples has heavy traffic, but few crashes at corners

?Dangerous intersections: Where you’re most likely to crash in Collier County

?Dangerous intersections: Immokalee drivers face seasonal traffic, not many crashes

?Dangerous intersections: A closer look at five of Collier County’s worst

?Dangerous intersections: Collier data

?Dangerous intersections: Lee data

?Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

?Dangerous intersections: How we did our analysis in Collier, south Lee

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Dangerous intersections: A closer look at crashes in several Collier communities

Governor appoints former Lee commissioner to fill Bob Janes’ seat


Lee County’s newest commission member is making his second go-around.

On Wednesday evening,

Gov. Charlie Crist appointed John Manning, of Cape Coral to take the open seat in Lee County’s District 1.

Manning, 60, is a former two-term Cape Coral council member and Lee commissioner. He served 12 years on the commission, starting in 1988 when he was appointed by Gov. Bob Martinez.

The seat has been vacant since March, when Commissioner Bob Janes passed away after 10 years of service. He was 78.

Manning was one of five people to interview for the vacant seat, and one of 29 applicants. The seat is up for an election in November, and the finalists for the appointment also represent the five qualified candidates seeking the voters’ approval to hold the seat for the next four years.

Those other four people are Chris Berardi, Bob Chilmonik, Mike Jackson and Carla Brooks Johnston.

Every candidate is a resident of District 1, which includes Cape Coral, Sanibel and Captiva.

All five people also have experience of one form or another in local government.

Berardi, 38, is a Realtor and a former Cape Coral City Council member from March 2007 to November 2007.

Chilmonik, 56, is a former two-term Lee County School Board Member, who resigned last month from the board to run for the commission seat after a miscommunication about paperwork deadlines.

Jackson, 62, is a former economic development director for the city of Cape Coral, where he served from 2003 to 2008.

Johnston, 69, a former Sanibel City Council member and mayor, challenged Janes to his District 1 seat in the 2008 election.

The appointment comes just two day after the Lee Commission cast a tie a vote on the county property tax rate, which could cause the rate to jump 17 percent. The lack of consensus on the issue means a default rate of 4.2835 percent may tentatively go into effect, equating to an extra $63 per year for each $100,000 of a home’s value in unincorporated Lee County.

For most homeowners, however, that likely won’t mean an increase in taxes, compared to last year. Because property taxes in Lee County continued to fall in the last year, the increased tax rate is expected to bring in the same amount of money next year.

Commissioners Brian Bigelow and Frank Mann cast the dissenting votes.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Governor appoints former Lee commissioner to fill Bob Janes’ seat

Naples Fire Chief heading to Pensacola

NAPLES, Fla. – Wink News has learned the Naples Fire Chief is heading to Pensacola. ?Chief Steve McInerny says he wants to learn first-hand what works in case the oil spill comes here.?
“Anything is possible with this leak the way its been going,” says Chief McInerny.?
McInerny says preparation is a necessity in his job. ?Right now, his job isn’t just fighting fires, it could be fighting oil.?He ordered two-thousand feet of oil containment boom for the city. ?It arrived this week. ?Today, firefighters inspected the boom for any holes and practiced attaching it together. ?The boom will be set up at Gordon Pass and at Doctors Pass if the oil reaches the shore.?
“We as a city want to protect our inlets, our way of life, our beaches,” says Chief McInerny.?
The boom cost taxpayers $17 thousand. ?But, McInerny says if the oil never reaches Naples, its still important to have.
“We could use this boom in the future for a hurricane if we had any sort of spills, vessels go down,” says McInerny.?
On Tuesday, he is traveling to Pensacola to meet with fire officials there.??”We wanted to get ahead of the curve see cleanup operations firsthand,” says McInerny. ?”What works and what doesn’t.”
He’s staying true to his motto.
“Prepare for the worst hope for the best,” says McInerny.?

Naples Fire Chief heading to Pensacola

Mann-aging Estero’s future: Commissioner to put cityhood to straw vote

Estero incorporation faces a test on Tuesday.

Commissioner

Frank Mann will ask the Lee County Commission to consider a straw poll to put Estero incorporation on November’s ballot.

The matter would be a non-binding show of hands to determine whether residents are interested or not.

“It’s been talked about long enough,” Mann said. “I don’t think we should ever be afraid to let the people speak to their own destiny.”

Resident Jim Boesch has been pushing for Estero’s incorporation for years, Mann said, and Mann agreed to Boesch’s request to ask the commission to consider this step.

A non-binding referendum is not required for incorporation. Residents could take the matter straight to the legislative delegation.

However, Mann said a straw poll is seen as the best way to sway the lawmakers that cityhood is the best step.

The matter has at least one no vote in Commissioner

Ray Judah.

“This is the same old saga brought in year in, year out by a minority group of malcontents,” Judah said, adding that if brought forward at Tuesday’s commission meeting he would vote no.

Two votes on the four-person commission would kill the item for a few years, however, Mann said it would probably eventually find its way back to the surface.

Estero has faced this question before with several roadblocks that still seem to plague the effort.

The state requires a 2-mile buffer between cities and that 2-mile band around its neighbor, Bonita Springs, includes such areas as Coconut Point mall and much of The Brooks development.

Bonita Mayor Ben Nelson has said the city would not surrender this land, at least not any time in the foreseeable future.

The state could waive the 2-mile buffer requirement, but it is unclear that that would happen.

There is also some question about the boundaries of the proposed city. Some say it would have to include all territory within the Estero Fire Rescue district boundaries. But others say residents in the more rural parts are not interested in becoming a city.

Mike Maloney, of the Vote Estero group, has also pushed hard for incorporation.

“We could have lower taxes,” he said, “increased services and maintain adequate reserve funds.”

He is hopeful the commissioners will give them a chance to put the matter to residents.

“I can’t believe that any elected public official who asks the people to vote for them would turn around and deny the people the right to vote,” Maloney said. “That would be hypocritical of them.”

But Judah maintains that the county and Estero representatives of the Estero Council of Community Leaders have always worked well together.

Commissioners Tammy Hall and Brian Bigelow could not be reached for comment.

Connect with Tara E. McLaughlin at www.naplesnews.com/staff/tara-mclaughlin/

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Mann-aging Estero’s future: Commissioner to put cityhood to straw vote