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Hey, Jack, What’s That Sound?

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There was an odd little comment made by Polk County Commissioner Jack Myers last week. it was ably reported by the Ledger’s Tom Palmer:

Just seconds before the Transportation Planning Organization adjourned today, County Commissioner Jack Myers blurted out something about living not far from the CSX tracks in Auburndale and not being bothered by the sound of the passing trains.

That caught County Commissioner Jean Reed,who lives not far from the proposed CSX freight terminal in Winter Haven, by surprise. She could be heard saying she wanted to respond, but by then the microphones had been turned off. — CSX fun and games

You might wonder how far Myers lives from those tracks? What about Reed? Polk County election records, property appraiser’s records, and 10 minutes with Google maps and I can give you an approximate answer:

Jack Myers’ home has nice thick walls.

(I’m guessing. I’ve seen it only on a satellite photo.)

Myers lives near the interchange where the CSX S-Line and the A-Line converge. He is approximately 3400 feet from that intersection, but closer to the A-line at 2160 feet. Now, if the commuter rail plan goes through, A-Line traffic will reduce, if not dry up, near Myer’s home.

Commissioner Reed? She is approximately 2142 feet from the CSX tracks. Reed is also about 8.5 miles closer than Myers to the proposed Winter Haven Rail Center.

What can we conclude from all this?

How did a discussion about trains blocking traffic become one about noise?

Click that link and you’ll find an article I wrote 14 months ago. That makes one still wonder: why do rail proponents keep mentioning “noise” when opponents bring up “traffic?”

It’s an old tactic best known as a Red Herring. You might call it a smoke screen. By either name it is a fallacy of logic. It’s an effort to direct attention away from the true argument:

The Winter Haven Rail Hub will negatively impact auto traffic on State Road 60 and miles away in Lakeland, Ocala, and other Florida communities. Moving freight traffic from the A-Line to the S-Line will negatively impact auto traffic in many communities.

I’d call that a “regional” impact? Wouldn’t you?

Creative Commons License photo credit: shadeofmelon

Medicare Fraud and Town Center Woes for August 18, 2008

“McCray has defrauded Medicare by selling his government-issued health card number to private clinics in exchange for kickbacks of $150 to $300 a visit - as often as three times a day, three times a week over seven years, according to federal records and his own admission.” — Medicare Fraud Rampant In South Florida

“Designed to revitalize aging downtowns or create a downtown-like focus for sprawling suburbs, town centers are popular with both community planners and developers, offering a mix of new-urban housing, offices, retail space and open areas for community events and foot traffic. But as the housing slump and economic downturn have proven, making a town center work can be a tough job.” — Tough times for town centers

Daily Don’t Miss to Change Publication Time

The Daily Don’t Miss column will change publication time for the rest of the month. Since we feature articles that are not breaking news, we don’t believe this should impact the column’s function: to highlight stories important to the region that might have been missed on the busy main stream media sites.

For the rest of August, at least, we plan to publish around dinner time. Our dinner time. Not necessarily yours.

Flood Insurance, Teachers, Construction and More for August 15, 2008

“Hillsborough residents with homes built before June 18, 1980, can get reduced flood insurance rates if they hurry.” — FEMA Updates Flood Maps

“Teachers in Central Florida public schools are headed back to the classroom this year without a pay raise.” — Teachers ‘not going to get a penny’ in raises

“Gov. Charlie Crist told state agency heads Thursday that he wants construction projects sped up so more money can be pumped into the sluggish state economy.” — ‘Accelerate Florida’ With Construction, Crist Says

Bonus:

Now the true costs start… “The construction of two new roads that could help relieve traffic problems that the planned CSX rail freight terminal will make worse should be top priorities for seeking state road funds, the Polk Transportation Planning Organization agreed Thursday.” — CSX Project Pushes 2 Roads Higher on Construction Request

“On Aug. 29, Garcia and thousands of other Spanish-speaking Hispanics in Central Florida will read El Nuevo Dia for the last time.” — Spanish daily El Nuevo Dia Orlando about to fold

One of the sillier editorials you’ll read. Don’t miss the reader comments. “District 19 deserves better than Mr. Siplin. But a weak opponent compels us to endorse Gary Siplin in the Aug. 26 Democratic primary.” — A weak primary opponent compels us to endorse the senator

Note: MI4’s Don’t Miss column will be missing in action this weekend. See you Monday.

Homeless Families, Amendment 5, CSX and More for August 14, 2008

“Amid a foreclosure crisis and sour economy, the number of homeless families is growing. In Seminole County alone, more than 600 school-age children are expected to spend at least part of the year in motels, shelters or even tents in the woods, according to a new report. An additional 450 homeless children in the county are younger than 5, officials estimate.” — Number of homeless families grows amid foreclosure crisis

“The campaign to wipe out most school property taxes in Florida moved to a courtroom Wednesday, with an openly skeptical state judge raising the possibility that the ambitious tax plan could be torpedoed before it ever reaches voters.” — Judge has issue with wording of Amendment 5 tax ballot

“The Central Florida Regional Planning Council on Wednesday approved the proposed 318-acre rail terminal site in southern Winter Haven. The approval, with 61 conditions on traffic, the environment and other factors, has been forwarded to the city of Winter Haven.” — Planning Council Approves CSX Project

“Remember the scene in “Airplane II, The Sequel” where two airport security guards get their kicks watching a special camera “undress” female passengers? We laughed about it then, but real-world technology that peeks under your clothes is now headed to Tampa International Airport, and it’s nothing to smile about.” — A Step Too Far For Airport Scanners

Taxes, Insurance, Home Sales, and More for August 13, 2008

“What has voters - in addition to most of the state’s business, education, and political organizations and lobbies - so concerned is that proponents haven’t offered any definitive plan for fulfilling the amendment’s requirement that the Legislature replace the lost property-tax money with other public funding.” — Swapping What For What?

“As Florida’s coffers shrink in the face of a dour economy, confusion over a tax statute threatens to choke the flow of home sales at a time when the state is struggling under the burden of millions of unsold properties.” — Tax ‘Mess’ Muddles Short Sales Of Homes

“Orlando’s home-resale market recorded its second-best sales month of the year in July, and local Realtors said a marked improvement in the number of pending contracts bodes well for the rest of 2008.” — Home sales: Good news peeks out from the gloom

“Skeptical state regulators grilled representatives of Florida’s largest private property insurer on Tuesday as State Farm officials tried to make a case for their 47.1 percent rate increase for their 950,000 residential customers.” — Fla. Regulators Question State Farm Rate Hike

Bonus:

“The Florida Parole Commission will remain all-white with the reappointment of an existing member Tuesday after a move to seek a more diverse slate of finalists failed.” — Reappointment Keeps Florida Parole Panel All-White

Sugar, CSX, and Taxes for August 12, 2008

“Sugar grower Florida Crystals is lobbying for an inland port with the development of an industrial and commercial center just south of Lake Okeechobee, smack in the heart of the state’s proposed pathway for Everglades restoration.” - Sugar Grower’s Port Proposal May Affect Everglades Plan

“Thirty-one miles of the 61-mile Central Florida Commuter Rail project has been approved for final design, project backers announced Monday.” — Orlando Commuter Rail Takes Another Step

“With a boost from some tax-break incentives, Orlando-based Planar Energy Devices Inc. says it plans to establish a microelectronics plant in Central Florida within the next three months.
” — Tax incentives to fuel energy startup’s presence in Orlando

Schools, Car Pools, Tax Swaps, and More for August 11, 2008

“For years, school leaders juggled their budgets to prevent the state’s chronic money woes from creeping into the classroom. But they’re out of options now and scaling back popular programs for gifted students and troubled kids.” — Schools on a shoestring: Specialized programs cut to the core

“The sharp rise in gas prices has created a dilemma for the industry’s human-resource departments: How to keep commuting costs from eating up their workers’ wages.” — Businesses go extra mile to help workers save on gas

“Gov. Charlie Crist surprised few last week in announcing his support for Amendment 5, the proposed constitutional measure that would eliminate most school property taxes in Florida. What is surprising is the governor is so blinded by ideology that he will not acknowledge the ever-growing evidence that it would cause long-term economic and educational harm to our state.” — Tax- Swap Treachery

Bonus:

“In Central Florida, there are almost a quarter of a million swing voters, most of whom are Puerto Ricans or other Hispanics. Until now, they have remained a largely untapped resource. But both political campaigns are gearing up to target them during the next three months.” — Orlando-area Hispanics’ votes will be vital to campaigners

Voting, Taxes, Medicine and More for August 10, 2008

“Florida voters can cast early ballots for the Aug. 26 Republican and Democratic primaries starting Monday. Many will be greeted by changes since 2006. Statewide, 15 counties — including Lake in Central Florida — are switching from touch-screen technology to paper, optical-scan ballots.” — Expect some changes at Florida polls when casting early votes

So many reasons why you should oppose Amendment 5 and Homebuyers, Beware: Tax Aid Is Loan

“Nagging complaints about some generic drugs are casting doubt on one of medicine’s most widely held assumptions: that generics are just as good as brand-name versions, only cheaper.” — Rx for trouble? Generics don’t always work as well as brand names, critics say. The FDA disagrees. We take a look.

“In 2015, just a few years from now, Florida will be in deep trouble. Who wants the dubious notoriety of “last in the nation?”" — Florida’s Coming Medical Disaster

Bonus:

The Sentinel is still mad at Paula Dockery

Blood, Groceries, Overtime and More for August 9, 2008

(Note: Yesterday’s Don’t Miss column was missing. We apologize for the mix up.)

“If you get blood at Lakeland Regional Medical Center after 7 a.m. Monday, it won’t be coming from BloodNet USA. LRMC’s blood and blood products, like platelets or plasma, will come instead from Florida Blood Services, which officially starts providing LRMC’s blood supplies that day. The two signed a contract three months ago and have spent the time since then finalizing arrangements.” — LRMC Taps Into New Supply of Blood

“Publix Super Markets has long stressed its customer service and cleanliness, but with rising food and gas costs it’s now courting a lower-priced image. The Lakeland-based grocery chain has started a program of deep discounts on certain staple items, starting with milk and soon expanding to other products, company spokeswoman Shannon Patten said.” — Publix Grocery Bill May Be Less

“Orlando officials say they have little choice but to raise property taxes because city government is run as efficiently as possible. But records show that the Orlando Police Department — with a $111 million budget that amounts to nearly a third of the city’s general spending — has seen its overtime pay nearly triple in the past four years as the city deals with a wave of violent crime.” — Overtime could tax Orlando Police budget to tune of $4 million

Bonus:

“With John McCain likely only days from announcing his running mate, the chances of his choosing Florida Gov. Charlie Crist took three hits this week: a poll, a controversy over campaign contributions and an important newspaper non-endorsement. Recent speculation about Crist has put him in the lower tier of potential running mates and focused more on former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.” — Governor May Have Faded As VP Choice

Catalytic Converters, Changing Counties, Faculty Fleeing and more for August 7, 2008

“Since January there have been 15 cases, with a total of 28 missing converters — some cars have more than one — the Orlando Police Department said. Between January and July 2007, there were just two cases.” — Thieves want your catalytic converter

“Like countless other Central Floridians, Stofko is hunkering down to ride out the economic crisis rather than taking a risk looking for work elsewhere. Similar decisions to stay put have led to a slowdown in Orange County’s growth, even as Central Florida’s largest county continued to change its complexion and inch toward becoming an area where minorities are the majority.” — Counties’ complexions change with economy

“Florida’s public universities are seeking $65 million from the Legislature to stop the exodus of talented faculty members who are drawn to better opportunities in more financially stable regions.” — Faculty Losses Hurting Florida’s Universities

Bonus:

Value Of Property In State Drops $153 Billion In Year

Lynx needs more money, not misplaced morality

Voters to Decide Tax Break Plan

Oil, Water, Wireless, and More for August 6, 2008

“Thus, he shared this bit of bad news. “As crude-oil prices go down, we may not see gasoline prices go down as much, because they didn’t go up as much.”" — Oil is getting cheaper - then why is gas still so expensive?

“Orange County commissioners enlisted as allies Tuesday, approving a resolution that backs up Lake’s opposition to a permit for Niagara Bottling to withdraw 177 million gallons of water a year.” — Orange County, Groveland join Lake County’s fight against water-bottling plant

“But in the past nine months, carriers, software developers and cell phone makers have embraced a new attitude of openness toward consumers.” — Wireless Providers Grudgingly Accept Open Networks

Bonus:

PCC Considers Three Sites For New Campus

Sentinel help team: How to avoid foreclosure

Pop & Circumstance: Moviegoing Gets More Costly

“About 150,000 people nationwide have been affected by the theft of laptops with personal information about current and former employees of Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc.” — Busch Tracking Laptop Thefts

Car Pools, Bus fares, Budget Woes, and More for August 5, 2008

“”I have XM radio, a roomy CRV, and I promise not to talk unless you want to have a conversation,” read a recent Orlando plea on Craigslist.com. “Please help! The cost of gas is killing me!”" — Save gas: How to find a carpool buddy

“The Hillsborough Area Regional Transit board agreed Monday to raise fares across the board and gave tentative backing to a property tax increase to pay for more buses and a long-range transit study. The tax increase must survive two public hearings and be passed by a super-majority of the board before becoming reality.” — Bus Fares Going Up, Maybe Tax Too

“Florida’s sagging economy will push state government back into the red this month and force Gov. Charlie Crist to either further cut spending or tap deeper into the state’s reserves.” — ‘Big’ budget deficit ahead for Florida

Bonus:

“The federal government on Monday barred a registered-traveler service launched three years ago at Orlando International Airport from enrolling new members after an unencrypted company laptop containing personal information for about 33,000 prospective customers was stolen from a locked office.” – ‘Clear’ registration halted after laptop theft

I have to ask, What kind of loon puts that kind of data on a laptop??

“Restaurant industry experts say they don’t expect a wave of shutdowns of other national chain restaurants, noting that Bennigan’s and Steak & Ale had been struggling for years. But Florida is in the midst of a shakeout among small chains and independent restaurants, and that could lead to more job losses, experts warn.” — Restaurant Industry In Midst Of Shakeout

Cheap Houses, School Vouchers, and Citizen patrols for August 4, 2008

“Hundreds of houses in Greater Orlando are bought each week for just $100 apiece — even in upscale subdivisions such as Baldwin Park. But don’t run to the ATM just yet. There’s a catch.” — Houses sold for just $100! But banks’ deals short taxes

“About 300,000 students in Florida attend private schools in kindergarten through 12th grade, according to the state Education Department. If all became eligible for tuition reimbursement — or vouchers — districts could lose as much as $2.3 billion in state and local revenue, said Wayne Blanton, executive director of the Florida School Boards Association.” — Proposal ties school vouchers to more popular issue

“She is one of 70 volunteers with Hillsborough County’s Citizen Patrol Program and one of 18 who take to Bloomingdale streets to help the sheriff’s office keep the neighborhood safe. Volunteers also patrol in Apollo Beach, Westchase and Town ‘N Country.” — Citizen Patrols

United Way, Tax Swap, Landscaping and More for August 3, 2008

“Heart of Florida United Way is radically changing the way it does business: going after “root causes” of hunger, homelessness, crime and family violence instead of “putting a Band-Aid” on the problems, leaders say.” — No more ‘Band-Aid’ approaches, Heart of Florida United Way vows

“Home builders demanded answers Saturday to questions about a proposed constitutional tax amendment that voters will decide on the Nov. 4 ballot. While state leaders who favored the tax-swapping Amendment 5 promised builders their tax bills would drop, opponents assured an audience of about 100 that their taxes would increase.” — Rival claims of tax-swap backers and foes baffle Florida home builders group

Editorials:

“Someone in state government needs to step up and address the standoff over the proposed commuter-rail project in Orlando.” — DOT Should Review Other Options To Build Commuter Rail In Orlando

“The old maxim that Central Florida officials couldn’t care less about conserving resources no longer holds water — especially when you consider how so many of them literally are now working to change the landscape.” — Smarter landscaping could help relieve water crisis

Bonus:

“He was a playboy bachelor, the first Republican governor of Florida since Reconstruction and a promising candidate for the vice presidency. His name was Claude Kirk Jr.” — ‘Claudius Maximus’ Blazed Trail Followed By Crist