Former St. Augustine Mayor GEORGE
GARDNER is both right and wrong on the 450th.
He is right that there is a need for
greater public participation, as always, in our City.
He is wrong in assigning blame to his –
and WILLIAM B. HARRISS's – successors as Mayor and City Manager of
our Nation's Oldest City, St. Augustine, Florida.ne commenter on the
Recored's website, “sour grapes.”
Full disclosure: I proudly voted for
former Mayor GEORGE GARDNER when he ran for Mayor the first time,
providing one of the ten votes in his original margin of victory. His service
was disappointing, on many levels. But on February 14, 2012, I
saw a different side, as I shared a van with GARDNER and some sixteen other city residents,
including our city Manager John Regan: I was impressed with
GARDNER's poise in testifying to the Senate K-12 Education Committee:
he contributed to our community's efforts, which successfully
winning permanent exemptions from Florida School for the Dear and
Blind eminent domain legislation exempting the historic Fullerwood
and Nelmar Terrace neighborhoods forever, and exempting the rest of
the City of St. Augustine for ten years.
Ex-Mayor GEORGE GARDNER is a
third-generation politician. He can be interesting to watch. “Like
a rotten mackerel by moonlight, he both shines and stinks” (in the
words of John Randolph of Roanoke).
This morning, GEORGE GARDNER shamelessly blasted
St. Augustine's 450th anniversary commemoration in
quotations in an article published in the St. Augustine Record,
asserting there was a lack of community participation. There could
always be more, but, “What chutzpa!” That dog won't hunt. Since
the Sunshine violating First America Foundation was abolished, our
entire community, and all of its many groups, are participating in
the 450th – it is organic and a joy to watch it unfold.
GEORGE GARDNER conflated the 450th
with the Spanish Quarter Village, when former City History Director
William Adams said our City's “business model has failed.”
GARDNER then inaccurately accused the City of “divest[ing]”
itself of the City's historic properties, which are now being
administered by the University of Florida after enactment of state
legislation the City supported, in a contract with former
Philadelphia 76ers owner Pat Croce and his Colonial Quarter LLC.
GARDNER was Mayor when the UF arrangement was first proposed. The
City and UF are now partners in preserving St. Augustine historic
properties, instead of allowing them to fall apart. Our City was
involved in writing the RFQ and in picking Croce's company.
GEORGE GARDNER “doth protest too
much.”
GEORGE GARDNER's 450th
critique would be taken much more seriously if he stuck to facts, and
if he had more often practiced as Mayor what he now preaches.
On the one hand, Mayor GARDNER
empowered neighborhood associations. He deserves credit.
But the “real” GEORGE GARDNER
intensely disliked public participation, as when he, DONALD CRICHLOW
and ERROL JONES all voted May 23, 2005 against flying Rainbow flags
on our Bridge of Lions, violating the First Amendment and resulting
in a Federal Court Order two weeks later (on June 7, 2005) that
Rainbow flags fly on our Bridge in honor of Gay Pride, based on St.
Augustine's 11,000 years of GLBT history (including the 1566 murder
of a Gay French interpreter of the Guale Indian language, whom Pedro
Menendez de Aviles called “a Sodomite and a Lutheran” – his
brother-in-law wrote it down). Only Commissioner Joe Boles, now
Mayor, voted in favor of GLBT free speech rights twice (Susan Burk
supported it once, but was out of town the second time). GARDNER twice voted for bigotry, costing our City and the National League of Cities insurance pool tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees.
First as Mayor and then as a Commissioner, GEORGE GARDNER was overtly
hostile to public participation on Environmental Justice concerns, 2006-2008 when a group of
us repeatedly raised concerns about illegal dumping of 40,000 cubic
yards of solid waste in our Old City Reservoir – he called it
“clean fill” on February 24, 2006, but as EPA regulator John
Marler told me at the time , “there are no bedsprings (or toilets)
in clean fill.” Every fortnight, when environmentalists spoke of
the environmental crime by then-City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRIS, Mayor
GARDNER bristled, insulting us, once even asking me, “Do you have
lint in your pocket?” (That's apparently an ancient idiom from New
England).
Then-Mayor GEORGE GARDNER used his
valedictory speech as Mayor on November 13, 2006 to attack me
personally, resulting in the St. Augustine Record's November 19, 2006
editorial defending my honor against Hizzoner. See November 19, 2006
Record editorial, here. Thus, GARDNER reminds me of Ann Richards' 1988 remarks about George H.W. Bush: "Poor George. He can't help it. He was born with a silver foot in his mouth!"
GEORGE GARDNER never kept his campaign
promise to do something about former City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS
(e.g., make a motion to fire him). So HARRISS took advantage of
GARDNER's human flaws to first co-opt and then control GARDNER.
It took community activists to expose
HARRISS's flummery, dupery and nincompoopery, resulting in coverage
by Folio Weekly and the St. Augustine Record and HARRISS'
“retirement” in 2010, the same year that GARDNER “retired” as
commissioner.
GEORGE GARDNER's existential
unhappiness is not rooted in the 450th. GARDNER feels
badly that he did not do a better job as our Mayor, and that he
disappointed so many of us by not keeping his campaign promises. We
don't need ten word answers, Mr. GARDNER. We need ideas. We need
solutions.
GEORGE GARDNER, a former GANNETT
journalist, is a good writer. His newsletter, while sometimes
inaccurate and skewed, is often more informative than the St.
Augustine Record (although he omitted coverage of our Fair Housing
ordinance victory for GLBT rights December 10, 2012).
GEORGE GARDNER should use his considerable talents to help, instead of acting like a cognitive miser from Left Field. GARDNER, author of “St. Augustine Bedtime Stories,” should write his own memoirs, and tell all about former City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS, the ancien regime, and its dictatorial ways.
That would be quite a gift to future generations, perhaps rivaling Lincoln Steffens.
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