Commissioner Murman quoted in this Times article on Starting Right, Now, a program for unaccompanied youth:

 

Starting Right, Now secures a home for young people near Bayshore

ERNEST HOOPER, Tampa Bay Times

May 2, 2013

http://www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/starting-right-now-secures-a-home-for-young-people-near-bayshore/2118568

 

Vicki Sokolik hovered between unyielding gratitude and sheer joy Wednesday.

 

Sokolik, the executive director of Starting Right, Now, spent Wednesday officially assuming control of the old Haven Poe Runaway Shelter near Bayshore Boulevard. Under Starting Right, Now’s watchful eye, the Tampa shelter will serve as an apartment complex for the unaccompanied youths her upstart nonprofit organization serves.

 

The students, who will soon call the complex home, will no longer live alone in apartments after being abandoned by their parents. Starting Right, Now’s teens — good kids who through no fault of their own end up without a stable place to live — embark on a path of success by going through a holistic process that focuses not only on improving schoolwork but growing as a person.

 

In bringing about the needed stability, the nonprofit has put the kids up in apartments either by themselves or in suite-style units where they don’t know their roommates.

 

“They end up feeling alone and if they feel alone, they’re not going to do what they need to do,” Sokolik said. “But when they see other kids and meet other kids overcoming the same obstacles they’ve gone through, it gives them the incentive to make their lives better.”

 

At its new training center in New Tampa — another recent addition, thanks in part to a Bank of America Neighborhood Initiative Grant — the kids come in to get tutoring and learn about leadership skills. But they also come in to share in the camaraderie offered by the staff and the fellow students.

 

That sense of community will only grow in the apartment complex. It also gives the organization greater contact in a centralized location and allows for easier transport to events and activities, but it’s the connectivity that excites Sokolik the most.

 

“So many things had to happen to make this come to life,” she said.

 

Things like getting Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandy Murman to Starting Right, Now’s annual luncheon. She attended in October with a subsequent meeting on her agenda that would force her to leave early, but she couldn’t pull herself away after she began hearing testimonials from Starting Right, Now students.

 

“I could not leave,” Murman said. “The stories — and the film we viewed — that was very compelling. Homeless youth are a very unique group of kids that are part of a larger group experiencing homelessness. What Vicki has done is tapped into the potential of that and given them the opportunity to succeed.”

 

Kudos to Murman, who worked with the county staff to make the home available. Starting Right, Now will handle all the upkeep and improvements.

 

The home is the latest step in an amazing journey for Sokolik, who initiated Starting Right, Now just five years ago to help homeless families. The focus has since narrowed to unaccompanied youth, but the results remain impressive.

 

Nearly all of the kids touched by Starting Right, Now have rebounded from dire situations to go on to a university or tech nical school on scholarship. Not only are most of them first-generation college students, they are first-generation high school graduates.

 

We can only hope that when the organization looks to expand to other counties, it will find a community just as supportive.

 

That’s all I’m saying.

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on Medicaid budget plan:

Advocacy group says Senate Medicaid budget plan would hurt Hillsborough

Mary Shedden | Tribune Staff

April 19, 2013 

TAMPA – Tampa General Hospital could lose $7.4 million next year under a Florida Senate plan to recalculate payments for treating the poor. That’s an even bigger hit than originally expected, a hospital advocacy group said Friday.

Hospitals in metropolitan counties like Hillsborough could lose more than $112 million next year under the plan, Tony Carvalho, president of the Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida, said in an updated analysis of the bill.

The alliance criticizes the Senate plan in part because it diverts a portion of local sales taxes from Hillsborough and other counties to a statewide Medicaid reimbursement fund. It also doesn’t like that the state’s for-profit hospitals benefit more from the new formulas than the alliance’s 14 public and nonprofit facilities.

In Hillsborough County, roughly $26 million from a local tax would go to help counties that don’t have a local source of revenue. Much of that money currently is used to help offset costs at Tampa General Hospital, which serves a large portion of uninsured patients.

“More (uninsured) people will show up at the emergency rooms … and there will be no money to pay for their care,” said Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandy Murman, a former state legislator.

Instead, the alliance backs a House plan that doesn’t divert local taxes and also increases state reimbursements to hospitals treating Medicaid patients, Carvalho said.

Both proposals are now in the hands of legislative negotiators.

Hillsborough County Commissioners this week also voiced opposition to the Senate’s plan, which would take away 45 percent of federal matching funds for the tax, which covers acute and preventive health care for uninsured county residents.

 

A county attorney also is looking at whether the state legally can claim any of the local tax or federal match, both of which totaled $93.8 million last year.

 

 

 

Commissioner Murman was quoted in this Times article on Human Trafficking issue:

 

Human trafficking issue rises to the forefront

Caitlin Johnston, Tampa Bay Times

April 18, 2013

TAMPA – The room of more than a hundred fell silent as the woman on the tape recording sobbed.

“I thought I was going to die, I swear,” she cried.

Her strained voice filled the room at the Department of Children and Families Community Alliance Meeting as she described how a pimp held her head under water over and over again because she didn’t bring home enough money. The woman is one of hundreds of possible victims, many believed to be children, of human trafficking in Tampa Bay.

Whether it’s the emotion, the loss of innocence or the criminal nature of these heinous acts, human trafficking has arisen as a prominent issue in the minds of many in Hillsborough County and Tampa Bay.

On Wednesday, Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandra Murman proposed an ordinance to establish guidelines limiting business hours of massage parlors and preventing workers from living there. The board voted unanimously to have its staff draw up a measure, which came about after police raided a massage parlor on Henderson Avenue for prostitution believed to be linked to human trafficking.

The subject of human trafficking in Tampa Bay isn’t new. Many acknowledge the problem has lived here and in cities throughout the United States for decades. But only recently has awareness risen enough to permeate multiple layers of the community, including law enforcement, prosecutors, community advocates and the political sphere.

Quantifying domestic human trafficking has proven challenging. A limited number of cases come before law enforcement and even fewer reach the level of prosecution. Still, the Clearwater/Tampa Bay Area Task Force on Human Trafficking gathered data as of August for 131 arrests with 47 convictions in Tampa Bay. Nearly 200 potential victims were reported, with 45 confirmed as victims of severe human trafficking.

Growing like ‘wildfire’

Community leaders point to the increase in documentaries, legislation and training regarding human trafficking as the reasons for growing awareness. Just last year, Gov. Rick Scott signed the Safe Harbor Act into law, allowing children who are rescued from prostitution to get help from child welfare professionals instead of being placed in juvenile delinquency.

For years, area organizations have made domestic human trafficking a priority. But many call the Nov. 16, Fall Forum organized by the Hillsborough Coalition on the Status of Women the catalyst pushing the subject to the front of the community’s radar.

“There were women in that audience that are strong, community-minded and active women,” said Friends of Joshua House executive director DeDe Grundel. “Were there smaller groups that were already formed and trying to do things? Yes. But the coalition had the right audience to represent the message to, and from there it just turned into wildfire.”

The movement gained further traction when more than 350 people gathered at the Stetson University College of Law’s Tampa Law Center in February for a human trafficking symposium sponsored by the Junior League of Tampa. Because the Junior League doesn’t have a political or financial stake in the game, it allows them to work as the mutual convener, president Stephanie Wiendl said.

Human trafficking presentations and seminars are lined up through the summer, including a three-day seminar for human trafficking investigators in Clearwater and a conference at the University of South Florida expected to draw as many as 500 attendees.

“I think the rise in awareness is a combination of the task force doing its job really well and people starting to understand that, yes, this is in our community,” said Dot Groover-Skipper, vice chairwman to the Commission on the Status of Women. “And if this is really going on, we need to stand up and take action.”

Defining the problem

Even though awareness has increased, identifying human trafficking remains complicated. Visions of drugged women smuggled into the country in boxes permeate culture.

“People don’t even know what human trafficking is,” Wiendl said. “They think if Tampa is number three in human trafficking, they think that’s people shipped into the port of Tampa in containers. There’s not a lot of education about what the actual issue is.”

It’s those more insidious cases — young girls wooed by men promising them travel, love and an escape from the struggles of their current lives — that can be harder to recognize.

“I read stories in the paper now and these cases are presented as prostitution, but when you read what happened you say, ‘This is completely human trafficking,'” Wiendl said. “You have to explain the whole domestic prostitution type of human trafficking. Because people don’t define it that way unless you help them define it that way.”

Taking action

After hearing a presentation from the Coalition on the Status of Women in early April, the Hillsborough County Commission agreed to coordinate a public awareness campaign and look into providing safe housing for victims at the county’s Lake Magdalene campus for children in crisis.

“They seemed extremely interested and extremely concerned at the same time and really wanting to help resolve this horror in the community,” Groover-Skipper said.

Murman said there are victims of human trafficking in the program at Lake Magdalene, but the county is evaluating how much space it will have available.

“We have to keep the pressure on,” Murman said. “We don’t want anybody’s child to be a victim of one of these predators.”

In Tallahassee, Rep. Ross Spano, R-Dover, tackled human trafficking in one of the first bills he sponsored as a freshman legislator. Spano became aware of the issue from a friend in law school. Through studying human trafficking, he saw how many victims were prevented from moving on with their lives because of criminal convictions obtained during their time as a trafficking victim. His legislation would allow judges to vacate certain criminal convictions if the offender can prove that they committed them under duress.

Spano’s bill is one of several bills addressing human trafficking this session, including restrictions on massage parlors and protections in court for minor victims.

“This is a nonpartisan issue,” Spano said. “It’s easier to gain momentum from a legislative standpoint when there’s almost no resistance. You’ve got to be an idiot to not understand and acknowledge that we have to do something to address this.”

Working together

Different panels and seminars the last six months have allowed nonprofits, law enforcement, judges and volunteers to conference on the issue, but many are still determining how to work together.

“Everybody’s still a little discombobulated,” Wiendl said. “We are continuing trying to bring the right people to the table so everyone knows what everyone else is doing and we can have a true collaboration.”

Spano sees the same complication in the legislature: There’s no shortage of passion, but the problem is being addressed bit by bit instead of with a unified approach.

“I’d love this summer to see the interested legislators come together for two or three summits and decide what do we have to do to form a global perspective omnibus bill that addresses every single critical issue,” Spano said. “We’ve seen movement along the way, but I think we can do better working together.”

 

 

Commissioner Murman was mentioned and quoted in this Westchase Patch.com article on human trafficking:

 

Tension Increasing for Local Massage Parlors?

Hillsborough County is looking into passing a local law that would regulate these establishments to discourage them from being used as fronts for prostitution and human trafficking

By Sherri Lonon

April 17, 2013

Recent allegations of human trafficking at a South Tampa massage parlor have Hillsborough County Commissioners taking notice.

During its April 17 meeting, the board discussed creating local legislation that would limit the hours massage parlors can operate in the county. The law would also forbid parlors from letting employees live on site.

Commissioner Sandra Murman brought up the proposal, she said, to give law enforcement another tool in its arsenal to crack down on trafficking and prostitution both. She wants the county to consider an ordinance that’s similar to what the City of Tampa has already put on its books.

Florida alone is home to thousands of human trafficking victims, perhaps as many as 40,000, Murman said. Many of these victims, she added, are forced to work in massage parlors that stay open 24 hours a day and serve as fronts for prostitution.

The issue of human trafficking is one that has come to the forefront in the Tampa Bay area in recent years. The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office is a member agency on the Clearwater Tampa Bay Area Task Force on Human Trafficking. The multi-agency force investigates trafficking cases throughout the region.

The task force website says there are between 18,000 to 50,000 people trafficked into the United States each year, according to its website.

There have been a number of high profile cases in recent years, including the South Tampa investigation at Ocean Health Spa at 3631 Henderson Blvd.

A new law would not only provide a way for county deputies to clamp down on illegal activity, it could also help raise awareness about trafficking, Murman said.

“If we can educate the public – especially parents and school children – we’ll really make a difference on this human trafficking activity,” she said.

Murman’s request to have the county attorney’s office look into drafting a proposed ordinance was met with unanimous approval.

 

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on Mary Jane Martinez event:

 

South Tampa News

Shelter named for former first lady Mary Jane Martinez

BY LENORA LAKE
Published: April 18, 2013

TAMPA – Florida’s former first lady Mary Jane Martinez always wanted to help children, said those who helped honor her recently.

The Hillsborough County Children’s Services Girls Shelter at the agency’s Lake Magdalene campus was named the Mary Jane Martinez Cottage in a recent ceremony.

Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandy Murman told about 150 guests: “She has wanted the best; she has given her best.”

While serving as Florida’s first lady from 1987 to 1991, she founded and served as president of the Board of Trustees of the Youth and Family Foundation of Florida. The foundation provided support to a network of organizations that provide shelter and crisis counseling services with the goal of keeping families together.

“My experience as a high school teacher and a media specialist helped me understand the many problems they (teens) have,” Martinez told the guests, which included her husband, former Gov. Bob Martinez; Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn; former Mayor Pam Iorio; former U.S. congressman Jim Davis; and other community leaders.

“I knew I had an opportunity to make a difference in the lives of many young people,” she added, saying the network has a 90 percent success rate with the families.

The shelter can house 12 girls, said Danielle Husband, program director for the services center. The campus is licensed for ages 10 to 17. The average age is 14.

Some girls are runaways and “the idea is to stabilize the family,” Husband said.

When Martinez started the foundation, there were about 15 shelters across the state. That number is now doubled, with more than 500,000 youth and families served statewide.

“The network allowed them (youth in need) to be with people who really cared about them instead of being part of the juvenile court system,” Martinez said.

In January, the former first lady, who is active in Tampa in Red Cross Angels and other organizations, was recognized by the foundation in a ceremony in Tallahassee.

At the Tampa ceremony, Murman, a Davis Islands resident, said was honored to participate because “Mary Jane has been a personal friend” for many years.

“The opportunity to name this is so fitting,” she said. Laughing, she added, “It’s good to have Bob in the backseat for once.”

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on Ybor social clubs:

 

Hillsborough bends rules, pays Ybor social clubs for RNC repairs

Mike Salinero | Tribune Staff

April 17, 2013 

TAMPA – Hillsborough County commissioners decided to bend their own rules today and reimburse four Ybor City social clubs for repairs the clubs made on their early-20th century buildings.

Back in July 2011, the commission approved giving $2 million to the clubs Centro Asturiano, the Cuban Club, the Italian Club and Sociedad La Union Marti-Maceo – because their historic buildings were deteriorating and the clubs didn’t have the money for the repairs.

But the county never handed over the money because the clubs failed to meet all the county’s requirements for funding, including having their financial reports audited.

“We’re kind of in a holding pattern until we receive the audits,” Tom Fesler, county budget director, told the commissioners.

Fesler said the clubs borrowed money and made the repairs, in part because holding off would speed up the buildings’ deterioration, but also because the clubs wanted to be ready for business during the Republican National Convention in August.

The Cuban Club reported making $200,000 in bookings for parties and dinners during the RNC, Fesler said.

Reimbursing the clubs for the repairs would violate the board’s capital project funding policy approved in November 2011, Fesler said.

Commissioner Sandra Murman asked Fesler if anything could be done short of an audit to move the process along more quickly.

 

“You know audits are very expensive for an organization: $10,000 or $15,000,” Murman said. “I’m trying to figure out some other internal review of finances that would satisfy that requirement.”

Fesler pointed out that the county funds other nonprofit organizations at much lower amounts, such as $10,000 or $15,000 a year, and they all are required to produce independent audits.

What’s more, Fesler said the county found some concerns in reviewing the clubs’ financial information accompanying their funding requests. An audit would give the county some assurance that the financial information provided by the organizations was accurate.

“My professional opinion is we should get the audits,” Fesler said.

Rick Duran, executive director of Centro Asturiano, told the commission his club has signed a contract for an audit. Italian Club leaders Joe Capitano and Andy Scaglione told The Tampa Tribune outside the meeting they have also contracted with an auditing firm.

“I like the idea of an audit because it protects the taxpayer,” said Scaglione, former chairman of the Tampa Sports Authority. Scaglione said the audit would cost the club $15,000.

Fesler said the Cuban Club is in the process of finding an audit firm, and Marti-Maceo expects to have an audit completed in the next few months.

 

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on East Bay Little League:

More than 800 play ball in East Bay Little League

TBO.COM | Staff

February 25, 2013

GIBSONTON — The night before umpires officially yelled, “Play ball!” East Bay Little League kicked off the 2013 season in style.

 On Feb. 23, the organization hosted its Friday Night Under the Lights opening ceremony. The family-friendly event was highlighted by the introduction of current players from almost 80 teams as well as a brief program honoring last year’s Junior Division state runner-up squad, the most successful team in East Bay Little League’s 42-year history.

 Cheri Wilder, league secretary, said there are more than 800 players registered this season, which had its first slate of games the following day and will conclude in May. Among the guests at the ceremony were Hillsborough County Commissioners Al Higginbotham and Sandy Murman.

 “This park is beautiful, and I want to congratulate the parents, volunteers, and board for the stellar work they’ve done,” Murman said. “Make us proud here in Hillsborough, and especially here in South County.”

 ************

Commissioner Murman mentioned and quoted in this Times article on battling Synthetic Drugs in Hillsborough County:

Hillsborough County to fine sellers of Synthetic Drugs

Jessica Vander Velde, Times Staff

Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013

 TAMPA — Bath salts and synthetic marijuana will likely be harder to find in Hillsborough County within the next few weeks.

On Wednesday, county commissioners unanimously passed an ordinance that will fine people selling synthetic drugs up to $500 for each package. They expect it will persuade store owners countywide to take the dangerous products off their shelves.

“This hits them financially, which is where they’re benefiting,” said Hillsborough sheriff’s Col. Donna Lusczynski.

This approach avoids an uphill legal battle. Currently, drug manufacturers can tweak the formulas of illegal designer drugs to come up with similar, but legal, versions.

It is also difficult for law enforcement to verify whether the drugs they come across are illegal because they do not have street-level testing kits. Synthetic drugs must be sent off for expensive testing, and arrests often are not immediate.

Under this ordinance, the county does not care about the particular drug inside the packages. If it looks like bath salts or synthetic marijuana, they can fine the seller.

“The problem with these synthetic drugs is they’re marketed toward kids,” said Tampa police spokeswoman Laura McElroy. “So anything that gets them off the shelves and keeps them out of the hands of kids is a good thing.”

Senior assistant county attorney Paul Johnston says he hopes the store owners will voluntarily get rid of the drugs.

Workers from Hillsborough County’s Code Enforcement Department and the Consumer Protection Agency plan to warn workers at stores known to sell synthetic drugs. They’ll visit the shops and mail letters to inform them of the ordinance before authorities start to enforce it.

And they will enforce it, said Kevin Jackson, chief investigator for the Hillsborough County Consumer Protection Agency. County workers will go back to the problem stores to make sure the product is gone, he said.

He and Commissioner Sandy Murman likened this effort to previous ordinances passed regarding sweepstakes cafes and pain management clinics. When the laws are not doing enough, administrative approaches can persuade people to stay in line, they said.

“We hit them where it hurt, which is in their business, in their pocketbooks,” Murman said. “And I think this is the way to attack it.”

Pinellas County, meanwhile, plans to ask the Legislature to outlaw additional formulas of these synthetic drugs. The state already has made more than 100 versions illegal, and in December, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi used emergency powers to ban 22 additional substances.

Last summer, the Pinellas County Commission considered the idea of banning the county’s estimated 500 convenience stores from selling synthetic drugs, but the board never took a vote.

Jessica Vander Velde can be reached at jvandervelde@tampabay.com or (813) 226-3433.

 

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned and quoted in this Bay News 9 story on homelessness:

 

Apartment style living a step forward to solving homelessness

 

By Ashley Jeffery, Reporter
Last Updated: Wednesday, January 23, 2013 mation

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY — 

For years, Hillsborough County has been looking for a way to end chronic homelessness and with the idea of giving those in need homes first, they believe Cypress Landing is the place to start.

“This is a model. This is a model that helps to solve a problem,” said Hillsborough County commissioner Sandy Murman.

The apartment style living for the homeless is a first of its kind in the county. Thanks to Mental Health Care Gracepoint, “Steps Forward” and both public and private donors; people who’ve been on the streets for more than a year and have a mental disability will now have a place to live and a place to get the services they need.

“If they’re having a tough time at night, there’s someone that’ll answer the phone or come down and talk to them. We’ll help them get through the system to get their needs met so they can be individuals in our community giving back,” said Jenine LeCoe of Mental Health Care Gracepoint.

The 24-unit apartment building was funded with $2 million from the federal government. It’s completely furnished and ready to move in.

Officials say while it’s only 24 they can get off the street for now, they’re looking forward to changing the lives of many more.

“We’re taking a small step but it’s a big step forward to what we need to do to solve the problem of homelessness in Hillsborough County,” said Murman.

The goal is to not only give homeless in Hillsborough County a home but also give them hope.

Commissioner Murman said they want to open 500 units within the next five years for homeless in the community.

 

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned extensively and quoted in this Observer article:

 Murman Hosts Morning Coffee Social In South County, Promotes Economic Development

Tamas Mondovics, Osprey Observer

Dec. 10, 2012

Following her re-election to the Hillsborough County BOCC just weeks earlier, Commissioner Sandra L. Murman Board Vice-Chair District 1, got back to work, which includes hosting a morning coffee social hour with local residents.

 Such was the case last month, as Murman and her staff, including aides Della Cury and Jeffrey Huggins met with members of the SouthShore community at the Waterset Landing Club & Café, located at 7012 Sail View Lane in Apollo Beach.

 With coffee in hand, attendees got a chance to discuss their thoughts and concerns on various projects and community issues taking place in Hillsborough County.

 The meet and greet session allowed Summerfield resident Roger Rolewicz to ask the commissioner about her take on the proposed trash removal options currently weighing on the minds of many area residents.

 Commenting on all the issues and topics currently affecting Hillsborough County residents, Murman replied that her main focus continues to target the economic development within the coastal district.

 Feeling optimistic about the SouthShore communities, Murman said she is specifically focusing on the two new recreation centers in Gibsonton and in Ruskin, as well as getting businesses interested in relocating to the area.

 “One way we will be successful is by bringing public bus transportation service down here and arrange for express routes from here to downtown,” Murman said.

 Murman joined the Board as a County Commissioner in 2010, representing District 1.

 Prior to joining the County Commission, Murman completed eight years as a member of the Florida House of Representatives from 1996-2004. Representative Murman was the first Republican woman to hold the position of Speaker Pro-Tempore in the Florida House of Representatives.

 An Indiana native, Murman is a graduate of Indiana University with a Bachelors of Science degree in Marketing and is married to local attorney Jim Murman of Barr, Murman, Tonelli, P.A. They have a daughter, Michele, who graduated from Florida State University.

 To learn more, visit her web page located on the county’s website at www.hillsboroughcounty.org.

 

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Tribune article:

Published: December 05, 2012
Updated: December 05, 2012 – 9:13 PM

County delays decision on Bass Pro Shops

By Mike Salinero

An $8.25 million incentive package to land a Bass Pro Shops store in Brandon was almost too good for Hillsborough County commissioners to pass up _ almost.

Commissioners discussed the merits of the incentive package for more than two hours Wednesday before putting off a decision, scheduling further talks for Feb. 6.

The chance of quick passage was hurt by more than two dozen opponents, many small business owners, who showed up at the commission’s morning session. The opponents said it was unfair to use tax money to help a large, well-heeled competitor that would hurt their businesses.

Commissioners said they had heard the same concerns from small business people around their districts and in phone calls.

“It concerned me when I heard the people, not only today but over the last 10 months campaigning,” said Commissioner Al Higginbotham, who won re-election in November. “These folks look to us for encouragement and they look to us for direction and to make the right decisions.”

The delay was a setback for commission Chairman Ken Hagan, who has been involved in negotiations for more than two years to bring Bass Pro Shops to the county. Hagan felt so strongly about the deal that he stepped down from the dais so he could make his sales pitch facing his fellow commissioners head on.

“What we have is an incredible economic development opportunity that’s been over two years in the making,” Hagan said as he shed his usually reserved manner to hammer home his points. “The end result of many hours of hard work meetings and negotiations is a cost-sharing agreement that delivers a significant return on investment and an immediate annual revenue stream for the county.”

The county’s $8.25 million investment would be used to build and improve roads around the proposed development between Interstate 75 and Falkenburg Road. Hagan insisted the money would not be a subsidy to Bass; it would be an investment in needed infrastructure that would bring a quantifiable return on investment.

The store would create 3,200 construction and permanent jobs, Hagan said, while boosting sales and property tax collections by $2.6 million after Bass Pro’s fifth year of operations.

Hagan showed commissioners a list of subsidies that communities around the country have paid to secure a Bass store. The average subsidy for a Bass store and surrounding development was $29 million, he said.

“Irrespective of how you feel about the value of subsidies for Bass projects, the bottom line is our subsidy is zero. Zero,” Hagan said. “We’re not giving Bass a dime.”

Almost every commissioner found something to like about Bass Pro, the outdoors store famous for its theme-park attractions such as waterfalls, fishing ponds with real fish, even bowling alleys.

“I for one am very excited about the opportunity for Bass Pro Shops to come into our community,” said Commissioner Kevin Beckner.

“Let’s find a way to make this work,” chimed in Higginbotham, even as he was about to make a motion to delay an agreement.

As each commissioner spoke, however, the list of concerns about the deal lengthened.

Commissioner Les Miller wanted guarantees that minority businesses would share in the construction bonanza. He also asked Bass representative Martin MacDonald about a discrimination complaint filed against Bass with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

MacDonald wouldn’t discuss the EEOC complaint but said Bass Pro Shops is an equal opportunity employer that values minorities. About 50 percent of the chain’s human resources employees are women or minorities, he said.

“We value all races, we value ladies and men related to what we can do in the outdoors … we also like to hire to the diversity of the community we’re in,” MacDonald said.

Several commissioners also questioned Hagan’s argument that the road improvements, including widening Falkenburg Road to six lanes, are projects the county eventually would do anyway.

Beckner punched a hole in that assertion when he asked Public Works chief Mike Williams when the county had planned to make the road upgrades without an agreement with Bass Pro Shps.

Williams answered that the road improvements were not on the county’s long-range transportation plan and weren’t “planned for the very near future.”

Commissioner Sandy Murman admitted to being “conflicted” about the deal, saying she recognized the value of Bass Pro Shops coming to the area. Still, the concerns she’d heard from small business people in the Brandon area weighed heavy, she said.

“I know all the small businesses out there,” Murman said. “I hear, I feel what they’re going through.”

Of the eight people in the audience who spoke on the matter, seven opposed any money for Bass Pro Shops. Most were small business owners who said it was unfair to spend any taxpayer money to help a business that would be their competitor.

“The institute that I work for, they didn’t get any kind of help, just like all the other people that have spoken here before me,” said Raymond Grau, who works with Lee Fisher International, a sport-fishing and net-fishing outfitter. “And I think it’s just a travesty that my hard-earned tax dollars are going to a company that doesn’t need it.”

Thomas Mahoney, whose grandfather started T.A. Mahoney Co. in 1946, said he and other marine equipment service stores have suffered during the long economic slowdown. Business is off at Mahoney by 30 percent over the past five years, he said.

“I was not offered any incentives to my business,” he said. “Now (Bass Pro Shops is) trying to put me completely out of business.”

MacDonald, speaking after the meeting, said Bass Pro Shops creates, rather than destroys, businesses in the area where it locates. People come from 50 miles or more to shop at their store, he said, and that excitement “trickles out” to surrounding companies, increasing their customer traffic.

The commission voted 6-1 to continue the discussion. Mark Sharpe, the only no vote, indicated he opposes using financial incentives for retail stores.

The delay did not discourage MacDonald, who said Bass Pro Shops is still excited about opening a store in Brandon.

“After everything we’ve heard today, we feel we’ll be able to work something out,” he said.

 
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