Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Trib article on anti-tethering:

By MIKE SALINERO | The Tampa Tribune
Published: January 19, 2012
Updated: January 20, 2012 – 6:36 AM

TAMPA —

Leaving a dog tied up outside and alone for more than a few minutes is now illegal in Hillsborough County.

County commissioners approved by unanimous vote Thursday one of the toughest anti-tethering laws in the state. The vote was greeted with an explosion of applause from an audience full of animal welfare activists, many of whom had been pushing for such a law for nearly 19 months.

“I feel great,” said Susan McClung of Tampa. “It will prevent many instances of animal cruelty and neglect, while still allowing humane tethering.”

The law prohibits tethering unless dog owners or keepers are outside watching and supervising their pet. That language is tougher than wording approved by the county’s Animal Advisory Committee, which said tethered dogs must be “supervised” by the owner or keeper.

Critics pushed for tougher restrictions, arguing that the term “supervised” is vague and would allow dogs to be tied up day and night as long as their owners are in the house and can see the animals.

“You are doing yourselves and you are doing your community and your constituents, who have been very vocal on this, an injustice, allowing a loophole in the definition of supervision,” said Dan Hester, who helped write the anti-tethering ordinance in the Pinellas County city of Seminole.

Most of the 30 or so people who spoke before the vote favored stronger language. But there were others, including a few dog breeders, who argued that existing laws prohibiting abuse and neglect are sufficient to prevent excessive tethering.

Charles Palmer of Lutz told commissioners he watches his daughter’s dog while she works. Palmer said he tethers the dog because it’s a “digger.” But in every other way, the dog is pampered with two or three daily walks, premium dog food and plenty of toys, he said.

“If I’m not mistreating my dog, what is the county’s compelling interest to regulate how I confine my dog on my property?” Palmer asked.

But commissioners were clearly swayed by the breadth of support for a stronger law. Most animal welfare groups say excessive tethering is inhumane and damaging to a dog’s mental and physical well-being.

Commissioner Les Miller argued for a total ban on tethering with no exceptions.

“I just don’t see how we can pass an ordinance that has a loophole in it,” Miller said.

Commissioners wouldn’t go that far, and animal advocates had not asked for a total ban. Instead, a majority favored language proposed by Chairman Ken Hagan requiring an owner to be outside and in sight of his or her dog when the animal is tethered.

Dick Bailey, interim director of Animal Services, wanted to add an exception for “momentary interruptions” when an owner has to step inside. But commissioners decided they could trust the discretion of animal control officers not to cite otherwise responsible pet owners who leave their pets alone for short periods.
Animal activists said there is little danger the law will be applied too broadly.

“Animal Services does not have the time or the will to interfere with people who take good care of their dogs,” said Gael R. Murphy. “This will only be used against terrible abuse and neglect.”

The law does ban tying up puppies, but commissioners rejected language proposed by Commissioner Sandy Murman, and supported by many in the audience, to restrict the weight of chains used for tethering. Bailey assured commissioners his officers know when a chain is too heavy for a dog and constitutes abuse.

Commissioners also approved a motion by Victor Crist to have staff draw up an ordinance increasing fines for animal abuse and neglect.

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article about Ballyhoo’s and Upper Tampa Bay Trail:

By CHRISTIAN M. WADE | The Tampa Tribune
Published: January 18, 2012
Updated: January 18, 2012 – 8:39 AM

CITRUS PARK —

The Upper Tampa Bay Trail is a winding, seven-mile, recreational path that stretches from Memorial Highway through rural northwest Hillsborough County.

The trail, patched together in the past 15 years as land and funding has become available, meanders past rivers and farmland, housing subdivisions and oak-tree lined swaths of old-growth forest and eventually Ballyhoo Bar & Grill off Ehrlich Road.

For nearly a year, Ballyhoo’s owners say, they have been trying to get permission from the county to build a road over the trail, allowing patrons to pass from the restaurant’s main parking lot to an overflow lot when the recreational path is closed to the public at night.

So far, they’ve gotten nowhere.

“You would think that we were seeking an act of Congress,” said Carl Hinson, a Tampa attorney and co-owner of the restaurant. “I just don’t understand what the problem is.”

Hinson said the restaurant has been accommodating of trail users, allowing people to use its parking lot during the day when business is slower.

He said restaurant customers should be able to access the overflow parking lot without going onto Ehrlich Road.
“The reality here is that we were there before they were,” Hinson said.

This month, Hillsborough Commissioner Sandy Murman made an attempt to get the two camps together, asking county staffers to set up a meeting with the owners.

“They haven’t been able to work this out,” Murman said of her decision to intervene in the dispute. “So I put this in the public spotlight to hopefully get the parties together.”

Tina Russo, trail manager for Hillsborough County Parks and Recreation, said county staff is reviewing the situation and expect to meet with Ballyhoo’s owners.

She said the county also is concerned that a patio deck in back of the restaurant might be encroaching on the trail. County officials are conducting a survey of the restaurant’s property.

Stanley Kroh, chairman of the Hillsborough County Greenways Committee, said the county frequently receives requests for easements over the trail but seldom approves them.

“There’s always a huge concern about public safety,” he said.

In this case, however, the county might benefit from the road because it would provide more access to the trail for parks department trucks and emergency vehicles, he said.

The committee – it’s a volunteer board that advises the county commission on funding and planning for the countywide trail system – is reviewing the restaurant’s proposal and later will make a recommendation to commissioners, who ultimately will decide.

Kroh said at least two board members have expressed support for the proposal but said he didn’t know when the board, which meets monthly, will vote on a recommendation.

County officials are working on plans to extend the trail eight miles north from Peterson Road Park to Lutz-Lake Fern Road, the southern end of the 41-mile Suncoast Trail.

More than 300,000 people use the trail every year, according to county estimates.

 

Lake Hutto changes approved

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on getting people back to work:

Published: January 11, 2012
By Mike Salinero

Developers of a massive, mixed-use community in east Hillsborough County won approval Tuesday for changes that will save the company $30 million on roadwork around the development.

On a 5-1 vote, county commissioners approved Newland Communities’ proposed changes to the Lake Hutto Development of Regional Impact. County officials approved the development agreement in 2006 when Pulte Homes was planning to develop Lake Hutto, a residential and commercial development on three parcels totaling 1,127 acres.

Newland Communities, a developer of upscale subdivisions, acquired the property on FishHawk Boulevard in 2007 as the local housing market began to collapse.

With demand for new housing still soft, Newland asked the commissioners to reduce the number of homes in the development agreement from 3,192 to 2,599, while increasing retail and office space by 160,000 square feet.

“Only 56 homes have been built and sold since Lake Hutto was approved,” said attorney Andrea Zelman, who represented Newland at the commission meeting.

Zelman said the reduction in residential units and increase in commercial and office space will result in fewer trips in and out of the development. County transportation officials agree.

“People who live in the houses, some of them will work in the development,” Mike Williams, county manager of development review, said before the meeting. “It makes it less likely they’ll travel downtown.”

Newland used the lower number of projected vehicle trips as justification to scale back road improvements the company is responsible for funding. Instead of the $72 million Pulte agreed to in the original agreement, Newland will widen roads and improve intersections to the tune of $42 million.

County officials pointed out that Newland is spending $19 million more on roadwork than the company would be required to under a law passed last year by the Legislature.

But that explanation didn’t satisfy a handful of community activists who argued that additional commercial use in Lake Hutto will increase traffic in and out of the development. They pointed to FishHawk Boulevard, which Newland has agreed to widen from two to four lanes, but only for the 1.3 miles between the development and Bell Shoals Road. The original agreement called for the road to be widened its entire length from Bell Shoals to Lithia Pinecrest Road.

“Even in the present time, even without Lake Hutto and its traffic, we get backups every afternoon,” Dave Kulow of the Boyette Springs homeowners association said after the meeting.

Pam Clouston, a member of Rural Lithia Neighborhood Defense, said the commissioners were doing a “disservice to citizens of FishHawk and beyond” by removing requirements to widen FishHawk Boulevard and a section of Lithia Pine-crest Road.

Commissioner Sandy Murman agreed with the activists that all of FishHawk Boulevard needs widening. But more important, she said, is getting the road projects under way that Newland has agreed to fund.

“Let’s get something moving,” Murman said. “Let’s get people back to work.”

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this article in the Tampa Tribune regarding gas pumping assistance for disabled persons:

PETER MASA/STAFF

For Kevin Poindexter, refueling at a busy service station can be arduous, but a new county ordinance requires stations to post a phone number for attendants, so he can contact them for help.

By HOWARD ALTMAN | The Tampa Tribune
Published: January 09, 2012

TAMPA —
Kevin Poindexter pulled the red 2000 Chrysler Town & Country minivan up to pump 7 at the Mobil gas station on Busch Boulevard and 46th Street and began what for him is an ordeal.

A wheelchair user, he hit a lever in the van that opens the sliding side door and another that lowers a ramp. He moved out of the drivers seat, into the chair and rolled down the ramp, which extends about five feet from the van.

“I hope no one runs over my ramp,” he said. “I had that happen before when someone pulled up right behind me, then tried to drive around me instead of waiting.”

Poindexter wheeled into the store, up to the attendant and paid for gas.

As he did, a man in a pickup with a long utility trailer pulled up to the pump behind Poindexter. After a few minutes in the store, Poindexter wheeled back and began pumping, all the while, he said, thinking back to last year when an impatient driver destroyed his ramp.

Poindexter, a Navy veteran, survived his service to the country intact. But he has been confined to a wheelchair since 1997 after being shot in the back as someone tried to carjack him in Chicago while he was on leave.

For most people, filling up the gas tank is no big deal. Pull up to the pump, get out, pay, gas up and go.

But for Poindexter and other disabled drivers, a trip to the gas station is inconvenient at best and dangerous at worst.

Some relief arrived Jan. 1 for the more than 63,000 drivers in Hillsborough County who, like Poindexter, have permanent handicap stickers for their vehicles.

Thanks to an effort by Paralyzed Veterans Of America — of which Poindexter is a member — and County Commissioner Sandy Murman, Hillsborough County now requires gas stations to provide a number at the pump that handicapped motorists can call to get an attendant to come out and pump gas for them.

Murman and representatives of other disability groups say the ordinance appears to be the first of its kind in the nation.

Though federal law requires stations with two or more attendants to pump gas for handicapped motorists, the law does not specify how stations should comply.

Some have call buttons. But those are often placed so high that someone in a wheelchair can’t reach them, Murman said.

Some stations do nothing at all, she said, and handicapped drivers are often forced to resort to “honking, waiving their handicapped cards trying to get attention.”

That often doesn’t work.

“The new ordinance fills in a big gap in the federal law,” she said.

Murman, whose brother Richard Murman had Down syndrome and passed away a few years ago in a group home at age 56, is a supporter of efforts to help people with disabilities.

She said she opted to back the gas pumping assistance ordinance after hearing from Sandy Sroka, the county’s Americans with Disabilities Act coordinator, who told her of the problems handicapped motorists experience.

The ordinance is the brainchild of Ben Ritter, government relations director for the Florida Gulf Coast Chapter of the Paralyzed Veterans of America. He said he wanted an equitable solution, not just for veterans, but for all handicapped drivers. Nearly 7 percent of the county’s 940,000 licensed motorists have a permanent handicap sticker, according to the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

A 70-year-old retired Marine sergeant who was paralyzed from the chest down after a post-service surgery went awry, Ritter said the idea came to him about four years ago after being unable to reach a call button at a gas station.

“My background is in sales and marketing, said Ritter, a real estate broker. “Sometimes, the common-sense, easiest solutions work best.”

Ritter’s solution was to require stations to display placards at the pumps carrying the International Symbol of Accessibility logo — the white wheel chair on a blue background — with a number to call to get an attendant, as federal law requires.

“It is easy and inexpensive,” Ritter said.

Mike Aldred, sales manager for J.H. Williams Oil, likes the idea.

“It is easy to implement, not costly, and a simple plan,” Aldred said.

About 18 months ago, Ritter contacted the company and they agreed to test the program at their Citgo station at 19th Street and Adamo Drive.

Aldred said the company spent about $100 on the placards and gets about four or five requests a week.

“It was simple. It worked and is really something that needs to be done everywhere,” said Aldred.

The Hillsborough ordinance has no penalty provision, said Murman. “If we find there is a problem complying, we may come back and address that later,” she said.

After pumping his gas, wheeling back into his van, hopping back into the driver’s seat and hitting the levers that roll up the ramp and shut the side door, Kevin Poindexter said he appreciates the new rule.

“The gas pumping ordinance will be very helpful,” Poindexter said.

 

Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners Meeting; 1/5/2012.

Commissioner Murman, on behalf of the Board of County Commissioners, presents a commendation congratulating the Tampa Prep Varsity Swim & Dive Team on their stellar, undefeated season which sent them to State competitions.

 

Ruskin clinic gets a facelift

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Tribune article on the Ruskin Health Center:

By PAUL CATALA | The Tampa Tribune
Published: December 28, 2011 Updated: December 28, 2011 – 12:00 AM

RUSKIN —
Until a month ago, Bradley Herremans said some aspects of the Ruskin Health Center had become dysfunctional, broken or outdated and had the aura of an “old Greyhound bus station.”

But through a major renovation project, the clinic now has the ability to treat and counsel patients in a new facility, using state-of-the-art equipment and, most importantly, in less-intimidating surroundings.

Since re-opening Oct. 26 at 2814 S.E. 14th Ave. and expanding, an average of 200 patients have been seen, said Herremans, chief executive officer for Suncoast Community Health Centers, which operates Ruskin and three other health clinics in Hillsborough County.

Herremans and Betsy Martinez, the Ruskin center’s office manager, met with nurses, doctors, a pharmacist and some patients during a recent workday. Herremans, who has been with Suncoast Community since 2008, said the staff is working to get away from the health center’s reputation as a place for “health care for the poor.”
“Through our staff and technology, we’re trying to get away from the sense that this place is just for the poor. We want to be a place where all of the community goes for health care,” he said.

Thanks to the renovation — which used a $3.8 million U.S. Health Resources & Services Administration stimulus grant awarded Oct. 19, 2009 — services, rooms and patient capacity limits have grown.

Among the services the clinic offers are family practice, pediatrics, dentistry, pharmacy, laboratory work, social work, health education and transportation for unfunded patients. There are 34 examination and seven waiting rooms, and an average of 300 prescriptions are filled in the pharmacy daily.

Patient-focused renovation highlights include an expanded obstetrician-gynecologist area; a larger pediatric area with sick-well waiting room; a renovated dental clinic; and 10 examination rooms. Structural improvements include complete renovation of 14,000 square feet of existing interior, updated exterior and a new roof, air conditioner, plumbing and electrical infrastructure.

Martinez, who has worked for the clinic for 30 years, said positive feedback on the changes have come from not only employees and patients, but from vendors and patients’ families.

“I’m excited, especially about the technology and (computerized) medical records upgrade. It’s easier to get records for the doctors and it’s more expedient for the patients,” she said.

The range in cost for a visit to the Ruskin Health Center is $15 to $96, with medication costs based on a sliding scale and averages about $6, based on family size and income. The clinic is part of the Hillsborough County Health Care Plan, said Herremans.

Additionally, the clinic’s women’s health services are affiliated with South Bay Hospital, and mothers can deliver at Tampa General Hospital, Brandon Regional Hospital and South Florida Baptist Hospital in Plant City.
The clinic’s changes are significant in giving health care workers the ability to perform at high standards and changing the perception of a public health care facility, said physician Sathya Rau, who has worked at Ruskin facility for five years.

“In the old clinic, it was hard to keep sick kids away from the healthy ones; we had no safety nets to keep that from happening. We have them now,” he said.

A grand opening reception and public tour was given Oct. 29, featuring Herremans, Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandy Murman and state Rep. Greg Steube, R-Bradenton.

For information, call (813) 349-7800 or visit www.suncoast-chc.org.

 

By MIKE SALINERO | The Tampa Tribune
Published: December 20, 2011

TAMPA —

Four companies filed a federal lawsuit against Hillsborough County and Sheriff David Gee on Tuesday, challenging a recently passed ordinance that bans so-called Internet sweepstakes cafés.

The lawsuit asks the court to stop the sheriff from enforcing the ordinance passed Dec. 7.

Lawrence Walters, a Longwood lawyer who filed the lawsuit, said the ordinance violates the four companies’ constitutionally protected speech.

“It’s been well settled that video games are protected by the First Amendment and recently by the (U.S) Supreme Court,” Walters said. “What Hillsborough County has done is ban video games because they resemble gambling even though they are not gambling.”

Café patrons pay for Internet time and are given a card that allows them to access video games that look like slot machines. But owners of the cafés say winning numbers for the games are predetermined. That makes them no more illegal, they say, than scratch-off cards used by fast food and retail stores to drum up business.

“The ordinance restricts the ‘computer simulation’ of an activity but allows the exact same activity to be done on paper, verbally or through any other non-electronic means,” the lawsuit states.

County Commissioner Sandy Murman, backed by the sheriff’s office, pushed for the ban, saying the cafés are a form of gambling but are not regulated or taxed like other gaming establishments.

Murman further charged that the parlors were preying on older residents and poor people. Supporters disagree, saying the cafés create jobs and provide wholesome fun for seniors and others with free time.

Chris Brown, legal counsel for Sheriff David Gee, said Tuesday he had not seen the lawsuit and couldn’t comment.

Murman could not be reached for comment.

Walters said he hopes to have a discussion with the sheriff’s office about stopping enforcement of the ordinance without an injunction. The Tampa Tribune reported Tuesday that about 30 cafés operating before the ban have closed. A spokesman for the sheriff’s office said investigators have been visiting the cafés to inform the owners and managers of the ban.

“The problem the county has if they try to shut down my clients by enforcing the ordinance and then it is declared unconstitutional is that the county is then on the hook for substantial damages for loss of business,” Walters said. “It’s in the county and taxpayers’ interest to let the court consider these complicated constitutional issues before they take any knee-jerk reaction.”

Walters said his clients have changed the way they operate in hopes that they will not fit the language in the ordinance, thereby giving the sheriff leeway to halt enforcement.

Previously, they gave patrons electronic swipe cards that contained personal identification information and how much time they had purchased on the Internet. Now, customers will enter a personal identification number manually.

“By changing this business operation and method, we believe we are in compliance with the ordinance,” Walters said.

The cafes that filed the lawsuit are Paradise Internet & Sweepstakes on Cortaro Drive in Ruskin; Five Star Internet & Sweepstakes on West Brandon Boulevard in Brandon; Happy Mouse Internet Café and Sweepstakes, Sheldon Road in Tampa; and The Lucky Palms on Waters Avenue in Tampa.

 

Special letter to the Tribune about the Job Creation Program; Commissioner Murman spearheaded the Small Business Job Creation Program.

 

By ELLEN BROWN | Special to The Tampa Tribune
Published: December 19, 2011 Updated: December 19, 2011 – 12:00 AM

 

The importance of the role that small businesses play as “job creators” in their local communities is often heralded as one of the keys to a successful economic recovery. But high unemployment, rising costs and a depressed economy present great challenges to today’s independent business owner.

We have choices. Do we “wait it out” by decreasing staff, inventory and marketing, adding to the downward cycle and slowly going out of business? Or do we work to expand our share of the market?

Is there any help out there for us? The answer is yes. Hillsborough County’s Small Business Job Creation Reimbursement Program provides funding to businesses with 10 or fewer employees to help facilitate job creation in the county.

My husband, David, and I have faced a number of obstacles since we opened the Old Tampa Book Company, a used and rare bookstore in downtown Tampa, in 1995. We were often told that our store was the first sign of revival in a city of empty storefronts with few reasons for people to come downtown.

Seventeen years later, our store is now a destination in a revitalized city. The vacant stores of the 1990s are now unique cafes and restaurants.

Last fall we signed a five-year renewal lease demonstrating our commitment to, and faith in, the future of downtown Tampa. Our mission is to build a more profitable business that will secure the store’s future. To that end, we were fortunate to find out about Hillsborough County’s job-creation program.

The Small Business Information Center staff was extremely helpful in guiding our application efforts; within two weeks our request was approved. We hired two full-time employees, and the county will reimburse us for 50 percent of three months of their total salary.

By doubling our staff, we have been able to extend our store hours to 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays.

By listing many of the 40,000 books in our inventory on Internet websites dedicated to selling books, we will expand our share of the global market to generate a significant increase in income, enabling us to maintain our full-time staff and continue to grow our business.

Ellen Brown is a Tampa businesswoman.

 

By CHRISTIAN M. WADE | The Tampa Tribune
Published: December 19, 2011

NORTHDALE —
It was one of several businesses in the Northdale Shoppes plaza, a strip mall in this northwest Hillsborough County enclave of subdivisions and retail outlets.

Other plaza tenants say the man who rented the small storefront spent thousands of dollars on the property – located among a tanning salon, a neighborhood pharmacy and a yogurt shop – installing computers, leather chairs, a kitchenette and other amenities.

Then, about six months after opening, the Tampa Internet Entertainment Sweepstakes Cafe closed down.

As quickly as they appeared, the Internet sweepstakes cafes that flocked to Hillsborough after other counties outlawed them are disappearing from the local landscape. Some, like the one that occupied a spot in the Northdale plaza, were shuttered days after a Dec. 7 county commission vote to ban what they called “simulated gambling devices.”

“That’s how these guys operate,” Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Larry McKinnon said of the Internet café owners. “If they know heavy enforcement is coming, they just pack up and go somewhere else. And it’s usually just across the county line.”

Hillsborough sheriff’s investigators, who are visiting the cafes to inform owners of the ban, are finding many of the 30 or so outlets in the county already are closed.

McKinnon said that’s what happened when Pinellas County voted to ban the cafes.

“We started seeing them popping up like mushrooms all over the county,” he said.

Tenants said they knew little about the man who ran the Internet café at Northdale Shoppes. But they say he spent a lot of money setting it up and didn’t seem to get a lot of business.

“I never saw anyone going into that place,” said Silvia Clarke, owner of Britan’s Yogurt Mill, who has been a tenant in the plaza for nearly a decade. “It was very strange.”

* * * * *

The café was open 24-hours, served food and drinks and catered mostly to seniors.

Attempts to reach the owner were unsuccessful. A man who answered the door at the business on Friday said the owner was a real estate agent, but didn’t know how to reach him. The man, who wouldn’t give his name, said he was helping the owner move out.

Dozens of other sweepstakes cafes, including several along Hillsborough Avenue, also have closed their doors within the past week, following approval of the countywide ban.

Alan Petzold had operated a café near Hillsborough Avenue and Racetrack Road with a business partner and planned to open another one, before the ban was approved.

He said the county’s crackdown on the cafes is hurting small business owners.

“We’re not getting rich doing this,” Petzold said. “They’re just putting people out of work.”

He said he knows of a few café operators – particularly those financed by corporations with deep-pockets – who are digging in their heels for an expected legal challenge.

“They’re going to fight to stay open,” Petzold said. “Honestly, I don’t blame them.”

* * * * *

Similar moves by Pinellas, Seminole and other Florida counties to ban the games have been challenged in court and Hillsborough officials are bracing for possible legal action.

“We haven’t seen any litigation yet, but we have been told that it’s forthcoming,” said Chris Brown, an attorney representing the Hillsborough Sheriff’s Office.

Justin Kaplan, a Miami-based attorney, represents Arcola Systems, which makes software and hardware used in cyber cafes including several in Hillsborough.

He said many café operators are worried about being treated like criminals.

“They’re shutting down because they’re afraid of getting raided,” he said. “These are mostly independent mom-and-pop operations that are being driven out of business.”

Casinos, race tracks and other gambling establishments in Florida must adhere to strict regulations, but the Internet sweepstakes cafes operate beneath the radar of regulators.

The legality of the cafes is in dispute throughout the state because state law is vague on what constitutes a slot machine. Operators of the cafes say they are offering a chance at cash prizes to customers who buy Internet time. Though the players see a slot machine on their computer screen, the winning number is predetermined, supporters say, much like a scratch-off ticket used as a promotion at fast food and retail outlets.

Hillsborough Commissioner Sandy Murman, who pushed the ban, calls the cafes illegal gambling houses that don’t pay taxes and siphon money from elderly and poor people.

She wasn’t surprised to hear many of them already had shut down.

“They’re just going to pack up and find somewhere else that they can prey on vulnerable people,” she said. “It’s the nature of these kinds of businesses. They’re predatory.”

 
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