In secret, behind locked gates, our Nation's Oldest City dumped a landfill in a lake (Old City Reservoir), while emitting sewage in our rivers and salt marsh. Organized citizens exposed and defeated pollution, racism and cronyism. We elected a new Mayor. We're transforming our City -- advanced citizenship. Ask questions. Make disclosures. Demand answers. Be involved. Expect democracy. Report and expose corruption. Smile! Help enact a St. Augustine National Park and Seashore. We shall overcome!
Celebrate! March 18, 2025 was a big victory for the environment. It was a triumph of We, the People, a victory for wildlife and tree protection. Common sense and decency won. We, the People, defeated the so-called "Developers," foreign-funded satraps, often using dodgy Limited Liability Corporations and louche lawyers. These owners and controllers, led by the likes of ex-Senator developer TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON, are accustomed to buying elections and electing County Commissioners.
We, the People triumphed.
Tree protection ordinances were proposed for some 25 years, failing some five times before due to a lack of will and skill on the part of our poltroons politicians. Thanks to Board-certified Master Arborists Chuck Lippi and his son, Danny Lippi, and to all who spoke. Thanks to Commission Chair Krist Keating-Joseph, Vice Chair Clay Murphy, and Commissioner Ann Taylor. From Jacksonville Today/WJCT by Noah Hertz:
Some St. Johns County residents are worried that development will gobble up their county's rural character. l Steven Ponson, Jacksonville Today
St. Johns County moves ahead with ideas to protect trees
The St. Johns County Commission is once again trying to determine whether to strengthen its tree protection rules. After 2½ hours of discussion Tuesday, a handful of policy changes took one step forward.
The County Commission decided by a 3-2 vote to send a number of tree preservation ideas drafted by Chair Krista Joseph and county staff to a hired consultant. Consultant Inspire Placemaking will create drafts of new policies for some of Joseph’s ideas and provide insight into how others could be implemented.
Among Joseph’s ideas:
Making developers maintain as much as 20% of wooded and grassy areas compared to the 5% currently required,
Increasing the amount of money developers must contribute to the county’s tree fund if they choose not to replace trees removed during the process of development,
Preventing developers from clearing land long before any construction actually begins.Tree preservation has long been a priority of Joseph’s, and it’s something she said she intended tobring backbefore the County Commission after residents electedtwo new commissionerscommitted to slowing the county’s growth.
But not everyone was on board with Joseph’s approach to fighting for tree preservation.
Commissioners Anne Taylor and Clay Murphy supported her motion to move forward, but Commissioners Sarah Arnold and Christian Whitehurst opposed it.
Rather than scheduling a workshop that would allow more stakeholders to comment on the proposals, as Arnold argued for, Joseph advocated for moving ahead and asking questions later.
Arnold called the multihour discussion “political theater, not policy,” and Whitehurst said he couldn’t support a number of the policies that sounded to him like government overreach and a “land grab.”
“I think the trees on people’s private property belong to them; I think that’s philosophically where I’m at,” Whitehurst said Tuesday afternoon. “I think I’m not for no regulation, but we’ve got, up in my office, we have a 5-pound book of regulations in our land development code. That’s just the local-level regulations. That does not include the state binder, which I’m sure is bigger, or the federal government’s binder, which regulates what we can do on private property.”
Murphy shared some of Whitehurst’s concerns about government overreach as well as how policies aimed at big developers affect farmers and homeowners. But he voted to move the measures forward in hopes that a future discussion could iron out some of the finer points of the proposed rules.
A growing concern
St. Johns County’s tree regulations became a flashpoint in 2023 when Joseph pitched a multipronged approach to preventing clear-cutting of land and protecting more trees. Many of Joseph’s proposals from nearly two years ago were carried forward to today, but her collegues at the time did not support her suggestions.
Fast forward to 2025: Commissioners Murphy and Taylor campaigned on slowing the growth in St. Johns County, and Taylor pitched herself as someone who would vote in line with much of Joseph’s proposed slow-the-growth agenda.
Taylor and Joseph specifically acknowledged residents who they said put them in office because they wanted to see a change in St. Johns County — residents like Kerri Gustavson of Ponte Vedra who shared her thoughts with the county commissioners Tuesday morning.
“I’m not happy with the direction that the county is going, and that’s why I voted for change. I’m not saying that everything laid out today makes 100% sense, but what I’m saying is time is money,” she said. “What we voted for is to make it so that St. Johns County does not become a city county that looks like it’s just strip mall, strip mall, strip mall.”
Still, other speakers weren’t as supportive of Joseph’s agenda.
One speaker representing the Northeast Florida Builders Association said the regulations would put an undue burden on homeowners and encourage developers to fill in wetlands and pack preserved trees into far-flung corners of developments.
Other speakers, like Travis Minch of Ponte Vedra, argued that widening the criteria for protected trees would discourage residents from having towering live oaks on their properties to begin with.
Tense decorum
Joseph has been a vocal critic of Whitehurst and Arnold, two commissioners who she has accused of being in the pocket of big development companies.
While Arnold’s and Whitehurst’s campaigns for office did receive substantial contributions from members of the development community, the two have denied the assertion that they are developer mouthpieces or, as Joseph accused Whitehurst of Tuesday afternoon, in support of clear-cutting.
Including the period when the public attendees to the meeting were able to weigh in, the County Commission discussed the three conservation proposals for nearly three hours, some of which included accusations of undue behavior from one county commissioner to another.
The meeting began at 9 a.m. Tuesday with a move that set the tone for the discussion to come. Joseph argued that Arnold, who was absent from the county auditorium and attending the meeting by phone, should not be allowed to vote on matters because of her absence.
What followed was 45 minutes of back and forth that ended with Joseph following the advice of the county’s interim attorney that Arnold be allowed to vote.
Arnold told Jacksonville Today she chose to attend the meeting by phone because she is on a spring break vacation with her family — something the rest of the County Commission and the county administrator said they were unaware of until days before the meeting.
Arnold says she is “frankly shocked” that Joseph considered preventing her from fully participating in the meeting.
Noah HertzReporteremailNoah Hertz is a Jacksonville Today reporter focusing on St. Johns County.
One superficial St. Johns County Commissioner, SARAH ARNOLD, was allowed to phone it in from vacation on Monday March 18, 2025, a date that will live in infamy.
She was on vacation, There was no emergency. There was no good cause. There was no legal basis for her phoning it in. I cited State Attorney General opinions dating back to 2000 about the issue.
But one louche lackadaisical conflicted corporate lawyer hired on 4-1 vote as the "friend" of then-Commissioner ROY ALYRE ALAIMO, JR. issued an edict. The Interim St. Johns County Attorney is not one lawyer, but his law firm, and he seeks to have his law firm designated as the permanent County Attorney. This unscholarly hired knife thrower advised Commissioners that SARAH ARNOLD had the right to attend meetings by phone, ignoring the weight of authority. SARAH ARNOLD informed County Administrator on Friday March 14, 2025 that she would attend by telephone, County Commission Chair Krista Keating-Joseph was not informed until the evening of March 17, 2025, the day before the meeting. So much for "transparency."
During the March 18, 2025 County Commission debate over tree protection, ARNOLD was not on video (she could have used Zoom). Thus, we could not know who was in the room with her, advising her to make petty porcine debate'r's points, interrupt, and disrespect Chair Krista Joseph. Anyone who has ever participated in a telephone deposition knows that its can be abused if someone is in the room with the deponent, as when NORMAN R. AUGUSTINE, the LOCKHEED MARTIN CEO gave a deposition in the landmark environmental and nuclear whistleblower case of Varnadore v. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, with the late GAITHER WILSON HORDE, JR., a dodgy corporate lawyer was in the room with him, unseen by the complainant, or me, or the Administrative Law Judge in that case.
ARNOLD repeatedly expressed the need to have "stakeholders' involved in the process, as if they weren't already. Commissioner CHRISTIAN WHITEHURST repeatedly urged that "industry experts" be consulted, as if they weren't already.
I think the term "stakeholders" is offensive; reflects a bumptious bias toward the Money Power in St. Johns County.
ARNOLD and WHITEHURST tried to delay the tree protection ordinance, demanding it be rescheduled on March 2025 because of "Spring Break."
I first heard the term "stakeholders" in 1993, used by Clinton Energy Secretary Hazel F. O'Leary, a former electric power utility executive.
"Stakeholders" sounds like "stakeholders" to me.
I once thought that St. Johns County was as crooked as a dog's hind leg.
I know believe that St. Johns County is as crooked as a barrel full of snakes.
Three of five current Commissioners --- Chair Joseph, Vice Chair Murphy and Ciommissioner Taylor -- are trying to make St. Johns County a better place. They deserve our support.
We need thorough reforms, starting with tree protection. We need lobbyist registration and the other reforms that I proposed three years ago, when all the the then-majority on the County Commission wanted to talk about was raising our sales taxes by 15%. We, the People defeated them .
Is our historically mismanaged Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County engaged in "massive resistance" to compliance with Florida's Open Records law? It is part of the Sunshine Constitutional Amendment that 3.8 million Florida voters (83%) approved in 1992. What's going on here? You tell me. Here's my March 20, 2025 e-mail to the District, with its belated responses to my December 11, 2024 requests in RED.
On Thursday, March 20, 2025 at 12:05:07 PM EDT, Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com> wrote:
Dear Dr. Qualls:
1. Your responses are, at best, facetious.
2. Will AMCD kindly agree to mediation by the Special Counsel for Open Government, Ms. Pat Gleason?
On Thursday, March 20, 2025 at 11:59:00 AM EDT, Dr. Whitney Qualls <wqualls@amcdfl.org> wrote:
Mr. Slavin,
Please see responses below.
From: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com> Sent: Thursday, March 20, 2025 11:49 AM To: Dr. Whitney Qualls <wqualls@amcdfl.org> Cc: 'Management Team' <management-team@amcdfl.org>; 'Hodges, Lawsikia' <lhodges@sgrlaw.com>; 'rxue' <rxue@amcdfl.org>; tbecker@amcdfl.org; 'Trish "The Commish" Becker' <tbecker4amcd@protonmail.com>; publicrecords@amcdfl.org; T.J Mazzotta <t.j.mazzotta@outlook.com>; Gayle Gardner <ggardner@amcdfl.org>; ginaleblanc492@yahoo.com; R.J. Larizza <larizzar@sao7.org>; Bryan Shorstein <shorsteinb@sao7.org>; Nicholas Weilhammer <nicholas.weilhammer@myfloridalegal.com>; governorron.desantis@eog.myflorida.com; Robert Hardwick <sheriff@sjso.org>; Matthew Cline <mcline@sjso.org>; Executive Investigations Complaints <executiveinvestigationscomplaints@fdle.state.fl.us>; taxcollector@sjcfl.us; Wayne Fusco <wfusco@votesjc.gov>; Eddie Creamer <eddie@sjcpa.us>; bpatty@stjohnsclerk.com; inspector_general@stjohnsclerk.com; inspectorgeneral@fdacs.com; FL_GOV Inspector General <fl_gov.inspectorgeneral@eog.myflorida.com>; Commissioner Krista Joseph <bcc4kjoseph@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Christian Whitehurst <bcc1cwhitehurst@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Sarah Arnold <bcc2sarnold@sjcfl.us>; bcc3cmurphy@sjcfl.us; bcc5ataylor@sjcfl.us Subject: Re: AMCD SPENDING ON TRAVEL, LODGING AND ENTERTAINMENT, INCLUDING TRIPS TO CHINA, 2003-2024
Dear Dr. Qualls:
1. Who or what caused AMCD's long months of delays in responding to my several 2024 requests, including this one? This is not a records request
2. I am mystified by your rote incantation; please explain to me why a request for records is "not a records request." This is not a records request
3. Please send me the records today. Answered below that there are no records responsive to your request pertaining to AMCD SPENDING ON TRAVEL, LODGING AND ENTERTAINMENT, INCLUDING TRIPS TO CHINA, 2003-2024
4. I have repeatedly asked AMCD to agree to mediation. No response. This is not a records request
5. Will AMCD kindly agree to mediation by Ms. Pat Gleason, Special Counsel for Open Government, in our State Attorney General's Office? This is not a records request
6. Curious. Why was this March 20, 2025 e-mail signed by "AMCD staff, and not by a named, living breathing person? This is not a records request
7. Please call me to discuss my 2024-2025 requests and mediation today. This is not a records request
1. Would you please be so kind as to send to AMCD Commissioners and to me a complete spreadsheet of all spending from 2003-2024 on travel, lodging and entertainment, including every single trip to China by Commissioners and staff? This is not a records request
2. Please include any and all expenses paid for by third parties, including corporations, non-profit groups and governments, including China and the CCP. This is not a records request
3. Please provide all trip reports that were ever filed to explain the nature of the travel and the asserted benefits to AMCD and St. Johns County residents and taxpayers. There are no records pertaining to this request
There's a culture of foot dragging, delay and desuetude of Sunshine and Open Records compliance here in St. Johns County. Key offenders include the St. Johns County Administrator, County Attorney and Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County. Enough flummery, dupery and nincompoopery from unjust stewards or developer doormats, who disdain open government. Editorial from Orlando Sentinel:
Editorial: Florida Sunshine laws are dimming. Here’s how to find brighter days ahead
A sign along an interstate welcomes visitors to Florida, the Sunshine State (Getty Images)
Welcome to Florida. Where Sunshine needs lobbyists and lawyers, and the state motto could just as well be “nothing to see here.” Where elected officials shamelessly reject attempts to let the people who voted for them know what they are up to. Where government bureaucrats seem increasingly inclined to simply ignore the law, particularly in the agencies overseen by Gov. Ron DeSantis.
When Florida first started observing an annual “Sunshine Week,” it was billed as a celebration of the state’s 1967 Government in the Sunshine law that codified open meetings and access to public records. Today, it’s more like the award-show reels of the year’s casualties. This year, there are a few bright spots — albeit in legislation that faces a high bar to become law. Meanwhile, a flock of brand-new exemptions to the state’s open-records laws are clustered at the gates of the state Legislature, fueled by support that’s often bipartisan and likely to pass.
Unless champions step forward. The good news: It’s not too late.
House Speaker Daniel Perez and Senate President Ben Albritton have positioned themselves as empowered advocates for principled government. If they are willing to stand up for government in the sunshine, they have a good chance of turning this dark tide. Floridians should reach out to both leaders, along with their own representatives, to ask for their support of the public’s right to know.
A lost legacy
Once upon a time, this state enjoyed a reputation for open government that was second to none. Florida’s leaders took pride in the fact that almost every document produced by a governmental agency was available to its residents, even in the days when that meant records kept on reams and reams of paper and meetings that could only be viewed in person. Those who violated these laws had reason to fear serious consequences, including prosecution and the penalty of watching secretive deals unwound in the light of public condemnation. Meanwhile, any attempt to pass exemptions to public information met with fierce, often fatal opposition — and new laws that passed the Legislature often died quickly in court challenges.
With the advent of the internet, video streaming and easy, self-service access to government documents online, it should be easier than ever before to access the information that belongs to the public by right. In some cases, that’s true — politicians, as it turns out, love to see themselves on video. The websites for the state Legislature provide ready access to session documents and, on the House side, considerable data on the vast lobbying apparatus that seeks to wield influence. And Florida’s court system continues to shine as a beacon of openness, in large part thanks to the longstanding collaboration between state court leaders, judges’ to-the-letter interpretation of state law and local elected clerks of court, who work hard to make court documents ever more accessible.
But the forces of darkness are formidable, and for decades, they played the long game. A tweak here, a nip there —- gradually, more and more documents were officially obscured through exemption bills that officially blacked out records. Year after year, lawmakers hide public records. They make it easier for public officials to do business behind closed doors. Worst of all, local and state government agencies have shown an increasing tendency to fend off public-records requests with barriers like unjustified fees or a simple cold shoulder, letting records requests lie dormant for weeks or months with no response.
Over the past few years, the Orlando Sentinel has had to send attorneys to fight for information on several fronts: We fought for records regarding the oversight of publicly funded vouchers that divert hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars into unregulated private schools. It took months to uncover information about a shadowy new department that DeSantis set up to provide guidance for ultra-conservative local politicians who were turning school board meetings across Florida into three-ring circuses with endless discussions of drag queens and book bans. The Sentinel even needed attorneys to get public records from local police departments about questionable incidents involving officers.
If one of the state’s biggest newspapers had to fight for these records, what chance do ordinary citizens stand?
Reclaiming the light
That’s why state lawmakers who care about good government should embrace a proposed bill (SB 1434, by Sen. Darryl Rouson, D-St. Petersburg) that would put teeth back into the state’s defanged Sunshine-compliance laws by setting strict timelines for governmental agencies to acknowledge public-records requests. It limits fees for agencies that slow-walk demands for records, and even levies fines when delays become egregious. It doesn’t go far enough — certainly, not back to the days when state employees took records demands seriously.
But it would be a pivot. And lawmakers have their own recent snub to fuel their ire: The decision to conceal, for nearly two years, a state report that detailed how property-insurance companies bled billions of dollars from their own ledgers and then screamed that they were on the verge of economic collapse. That fake narrative helped convince lawmakers to provide additional taxpayer support, while weakening consumer protection laws to the point where half of all hurricane-related claims following a series of killer storms were denied.
Right now, Rouson is the only name attached to SB 1434, which was drafted with the assistance of Florida’s First Amendment Foundation and the Florida Center for Governmental Accountability. Perez and Albritton should make it a priority.
There’s one more way they can immediately claim the mantle of champion. Back when DeSantis’ presidential ambitions burned bright, he demanded legislation that made it impossible for Floridians to track where he went (even when he was supposedly traveling on public business) or who he met with. Rolling that sweeping, completely unjustifiable shroud of darkness — and then daring DeSantis to veto it — would be a power move on behalf of Florida’s citizenry, making it harder for DeSantis to cut secretive deals in the last few years of his lame-duck administration.
There are a few more bright spots. One bill (HB 671/SB 798) would make it easier to track requests and pay any costs of sourcing and copying records via electronic means, making it easier to hold agencies accountable when they stall or “lose” payments. Another (HB 1321/SB 1726) would strip some of the secrecy from state-university-president searches, letting the public take part in the process of hiring some of the state’s highest-paid employees.
There’s one more crucial way that Albritton and Perez could step up as champions of public access: Say “no” to most (if not all) of the 130 new exemptions that have been filed this session. Many of them are small, but some are doozies. We’ll cover them in another editorial, but for now, “just say no” is the guidance the president and speaker can offer — and the least Floridians should expect.
The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Opinion Editor Krys Fluker, Executive Editor Roger Simmons and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. Contact us at insight@orlandosentinel.com