Miami-Dade Policy Council’s first meeting: transit, courts, jails

Miami-Dade Policy Council’s first meeting: transit, courts, jails
  • Sumo

After Miami-Dade Commissioner Esteban Bovo became the board’s chairman in December, he created the Chairman’s Policy Council, a new sort of super committee to take up the most important issues the county faces in the next two to four years — including the renovation of the historic downtown civil courthouse, which was once a $400-million tax grab emergency many moons ago. 

According to the county website, the Chairman’s Council will be responsible for:

  • Identifying innovative transportation funding solutions
  • Developing a courthouse capital improvement plancourthouse
  • Identifying critical capital needs, and a corresponding funding plan for the county’s jail system to ensure and promote the humane treatment of inmates while maximizing the safety of county correctional officers
  • Developing a coherent and proactive sea level rise response plan
  • And preparing a workable county response to gun-related youth affecting our community

That’s a lot of responsibility, ain’t it? It hits all the main community issues and some of the more expensive ones.

And it’s all in the hands of the seven commissioners who voted for Bovo as chairman: Jean Monestime, Audrey Edmonson, Bruno Barreiro, Sally Heyman, Rebeca Sosa, Dennis Moss and Javier Souto. They were rewarded with a  juciy spot on this new and important board while Commissioner Xavier Suarez and those who voted for him were left out.

Read related story: Carlos Gimenez, er, Stevie Bovo wins commission chair

Thursday’s meeting has the eight-member board longbuslooking at three $11-million contracts for engineering services for the Department of Transportation and Public Works (including one that has the mayor’s BFF listed as a subcontractor, again). The three contracts look like they are for the same thing — engineering work on a variety of projects, including the study of using driverless vehicles (though we need to get cars off the road, not drivers) — and also include side deals for 41 subcontractors.

But they will also be looking at and discussing different possible transportation funding sources, including:

  • Tax increment financing
  • Local option gas tax
  • Auto tag renewal fees (which is what Suarez has been pushing for but he’s not on the committee)
  • Fees on parking violations
  • Whatever is left in the People’s Transportation Plan surtax after Mayor Carlos Gimenez takes out millions for operations and maintenance
  • Tourist bed taxes
  • Monies from the Miami-Dade Expressway Authority
  • Public-private transit-oriented development opportunities

Bovo also wants to talk about “deficiencies” in Transportation and bovoheadPublic Works and an update on the construction repairs or renovation to the civil courthouse. 

There’s also a $1.5 million contract to consider for Perez & Perez Architects Planners for an update to the 2008 master plan for the court system and the county jails. That money will come from the Building Better Communities general obligation fund.

The Policy Council — or the Bovo Buddies Bunch, because you can call them that — meets at 9:30 a.m. in commission chambers at County Hall, 111 NW First St.

3 Responses to "Miami-Dade Policy Council’s first meeting: transit, courts, jails"

  1. Everyone is grumbling at his leadership, but no one did anything to prevent him from taking reigns. Everyone knew what they were getting…. I am not sure Gimenez is completely thrilled. Bovo is going to put pressure on a system that has been cut so thin as it is. He is not very forgiving…

  2. Save the historic courthouse as a transportation hub. That was once its intent initially… A mini Grand central station would be of great value & community benefit long lasting!

  3. I agree that Bovo is Gimenez’ puppet but somehow I hope that he breaks the strings and finally prove that he is twice the leader that Gimenez never was.

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