Fort Lauderdale Commissioner Steven M. Glassman (D-Selfie) cancelled a meeting with concerned Rio Vista residents after receiving large campaign contributions from AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) employees and a political committee tied to a former AHF lobbyist. Last summer, Rio Vista asked Glassman to take a “walking tour” of the proposed site of the AHF apartment building dubbed “Trantalis Tower.” The residents were concerned over the lack of transparency over who would live in the fifteen story building made up of tiny “micro unit” apartments as well as the type of social services AHF would provide to residents.
According to Kevin Cochrane, the tour organizer, Glassman received an e-mail invitation on August 12, 2019 to join the residents’ walking tour. Glassman was told District 4 Commissioner Ben Sorensen was joining residents for an August 13, 2019 tour of the site. On August 14th, Glassman responded to Cochrane. “I am sorry we missed the first tour,” Glassman wrote. “I will get back to you on Friday with some potential dates. How long was the tour?”
On August 16th, Cochrane told Glassman that Mayor Dean Trantalis scheduled a September 5th tour and asked him to find dates before the Mayor’s tour. On August 20th, Cochrane sent a fourth follow up email to Glassman advising him that Commissioner Heather Moraitis scheduled a September 19th tour with his group.
On August 29th, Cochrane sent his seventh email to Glassman. He told Glassman that Commissioner Robert McKinzie scheduled a September 25th walking tour.
The next day, Glassman finally responded. He said he could meet Cochrane’s group on October 10, 2019. Cochrane immediately accepted.
Nearly one month later, Cochrane contacted Glassman about the tour. On September 20, 2019, He told Glassman the AHF project was due to be heard before a City board before his tour. Cochrane mentioned nearly 300 residents had joined Trantalis, Sorensen and Moraitis on their tours and asked if he could scheduled a date before the AHF was to be heard.
Glassman took two weeks to respond. He told Cochrane the Fort Lauderdale City Attorney issued an adverse opinion regarding the AHF project. Glassman cancelled his tour with no further explanation.
So, what changed?
GLASSMAN MEETS WITH AHF OFFICIALS
Official City records show Commissioner Steven M. Glassman met with AHF lobbyists, lawyers and employees four times since 2018. On September 5, 2019 Glassman met with AHF attorney Debbie Orshefsky, AHF employee Ebonni Chrispin and “Trantalis Tower” architect Margi Nothard at City Hall.
One week later, the AHF checks started coming in.
On November 12th Glassman received a $1,000 contribution from David Poole of Santa Rosa Beach, Florida. Poole is the legislative affairs director for AIDS Healthcare Foundation.
That same day, Glassman received a maximum $1,000 contribution from Florida AIDS HIV PAC, a Tallahassee based political committee. State records show Towson Fraser as the chairperson of Florida AIDS HIV PAC. State lobbyist records show Fraser was a lobbyist for AIDS Healthcare Foundation.
Seven days later, Glassman received another $1,000 check from an AHF employee. Michael Kahane, AHF Southern Bureau Chief, made his contribution on the day of Glassman’s re-election campaign kickoff on Fort Lauderdale Beach.
Other guests at Glassman’s fundraiser included Mayor Dean Trantalis and Glassman political adviser Blake MacDiarmid of Miami Beach.
What was Steve Glassman doing on October 10th instead of meeting with residents? On Facebook, he was posting about the great success of his September fundraiser.
If the City Attorney made the AHF project a moot point, why didn’t Glassman return the contributions to Poole, Kahane and the Florida AIDS HIV PAC?
As REDBROWARD reported, Glassman loves to attend cultural events with lobbyists or talk about his BFF David Beckham. Instead of talking to residents of Rio Vista about “Trantalis Tower” or the sewer break disaster, Glassman poses with the Scooby Doo Gang, chows down on cupcakes after Zumba class or attends Oscar parties.
“You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it’s an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.”–Rahm Emanuel
Mayor Dean Trantalis’ continued push for a public-private partnership (P3) solution to Fort Lauderdale’s failing water infrastructure could reap big rewards for his closest political advisers. For several years, the City of Fort Lauderdale promised to fix the aging Fiveash Water Treatment. One month after the disastrous sewer breaks in Rio Vista, Victoria Park and Coral Ridge, Mayor Dean Trantalis held an infrastructure update meeting at City Hall. Trantalis tried to combat public perception that he was not doing enough to address the infrastructure issues plaguing the City. After laying out a plan to fix sewer lines, Trantalis brought up the Fiveash Water Treatment Plant.
After declaring we “simply need a new plant,” Trantalis revealed, “several international players in the water industry have expressed an interest in a fast-tracked public-private solution that can bring more efficiency, more stable cost, guaranteed maintenance and higher water quality.” Trantalis said “we’ll see” if it is the right solution for Fort Lauderdale.
Less than one year earlier, Fort Lauderdale wanted to fix the existing Fiveash plant. In February 2019, the City Commission gave Carollo Engineers a $650,000 contract to create a “road map for use, reuse and/or potential replacement” of Fiveash. In April 2019, the City asked for proposals from companies interested in completing Fiveash “reliability upgrades and disinfection systems replacement. The City budgeted $30 million dollars for the project to fix Fort Lauderdale’s yellow water.
Bids were due by 2:00pm on Friday June 7, 2019 at City Hall.
On June 8, 2019 Mayor Dean Trantalis took a taxpayer-funded trip to Israel.
According to the Sun-Sentinel, Trantalis’ entourage included city manager Chris Lagerbloom, Trantalis’ chief of staff Scott Wyman, Police Capt. Bill Schultz and Director of Sustainable Development Anthony Fajardo. For the ten day trip, “Taxpayers paid $33,411.96 — $6,682.39 per person — for Trantalis and the four city officials, according to city spokesman Chaz Adams.”
City Commissioners questioned Trantalis’ overseas tour. “The trade mission has city commissioners questioning the process that goes into planning a ‘trip that no one knew about,’ according to Commissioner Robert McKinzie.”
The Road To Hadera
According to the Westside Gazette, Dean Trantalis met with five major Israeli investment groups for “discussions involving partnerships for major infrastructure and public works projects in Fort Lauderdale.” While in Israel, Trantalis took a field trip to Hadera:
“Mayor Trantalis’ delegation will also visit the Hadera desalination plant, which uses cutting-edge technology in the production of drinking water. City officials want to learn more about the facility because Fort Lauderdale’s Fiveash Water Treatment Plant is at the end of its life expectancy. It soon must be replaced or substantially renovated, but at the same time, the future supply of water in the region faces challenges due to continued population growth and climate change.”
Trantalis posted pictures of his visit to the water plant on his Facebook page.
Dean Trantalis in Israel
After returning to Fort Lauderdale, Trantalis wrote about his trip to Israel in a Sun-Sentinel op-Ed. He wrote, “a critical aspect of the trip was our visit to the Hadera water desalination plant. The builder/operator of the plant has been pursuing public-private partnerships around the globe and provided insights about long-term water solutions.”
At its August 20, 2019 meeting, the Fort Lauderdale City Commission rejected the two bids it received to fix issues at the water treatment plant. According to a City staff memo, both bids were “significantly over budget” with the lowest bid coming in at $47.3 million dollars. The City’s projected cost was just $32 million dollars.
With the rejection of bids to repair Fiveash, the push for a public-private partnership (P3) began in earnest.
On October 7, 2019, Mayor Dean Trantalis and City Works Director Paul Berg attended the City’s Infrastructure Taskforce Committee meeting. When the topic of Fiveash was brought up, Berg said Carollo Enginners warned the process to remove the yellow color from City water would cost $100 million dollars per year, so they recommended rebuilding the Fiveash facility. While the Carollo Report would not be issued until December, Berg said the Fiveash reliability project would be rebid “this week.”
According to the meeting minutes, “The Chairperson reminded the committee that it had decided to not second guess the Fiveash report. The Committee will be proactive in reviewing the funding sources.”
Trantalis went on to describe his trip to Israel. He said he “met with Israeli companies, Poseidon and Suez, both companies want to forward a P3 proposal regarding the water plant.”
When asked about the P3 process by a committee member, Trantalis said, “that at this it isn’t known specifically how the process of using a P3 approach will work with competitive job bidding.”
“The Mayor expressed when the private sector gets involved projects get done much quicker. He used Lockhart Stadium as an example. He expressed that the water, wastewater and water plant systems were more complicated…but he would like to explore the P3 approach to the projects as well.”
At the November meeting the Infrastructure Taskforce Committee received a thirty-page presentation entitled “To P3 Or Not To P3” which explored the benefits of water system public-private partnerships. The Committee would vote to recommend a P3 solution to Fiveash as well as the hiring of a P3 consultant.
Even though he pushed for a P3 solution since June 2019, Trantalis would not have an official meeting with the “international water industry players” until December.
TRANTALIS POLITICAL TEAM HIRED BY POSEIDON
According to official meeting logs, on December 2, 2019 Mayor Dean Trantalis met with a Poseidon Water lobbyist. Trantalis had a noon lunch with attorney Stephanie Toothaker at Doc B’s restaurant in Fort Lauderdale. Trantalis and Toothaker were joined by Poseidon Water Senior Vice President and General Counsel Kelly Huffman.
According to the logs, two hours later, Toothaker met with Commissioner Ben Soresensen at the neighboring Kelley Uustal (KU) law firm to discuss Poseidon Water. The logs indicate Sorensen and Toothaker also discussed the Beckham/Lockhart Stadium project. Toothaker is the registered lobbyist for Beckham’s Inter Miami CF MLS soccer team. Nearly two hours later, Toothaker traveled to City Hall to discuss Poseidon Water with Commissioner Heather Moraitis.
While she logged the meetings with Trantalis, Sorensen and Moraitis, City records show Stephanie Toothaker is not the only registered lobbyist working for Poseidon Water.
Records show Carol Howard, the former executive director of the South Florida Water Management District, registered on October 31, 2019 as a Poseidon Water lobbyist. On November 19, 2019, Toothaker registered as a Poseidon Water lobbyist. One day later, Eric Johnson of Johnson Solutions registered as a Poseidon Water lobbyist. Then, on December 2, 2019, (the same day Toothaker met with Trantalis, Sorensen and Moraitis), James MacDiarmid of Layline Solutions registered as a lobbyist for Poseidon Water.
Published reports state Eric Johnson (via Johnson Strategies) represents Dean Trantalis. In his 2018 run for Mayor, Trantalis paid Johnson Campaigns $6,600 for consulting. According to State of Florida records, Johnson Campaigns is owned by Eric Johnson. City of Fort Lauderdale records show Johnson represents several clients.
While these same records show James MacDiarmid only represents one client, he is no stranger to City Hall. State records show Layline Solutions LLC was formed by twenty-one year Ian MacDiarmid in March 2019. The State records list a Miami Beach address as Layline Solutions’ place of business.
Official voter registration records show Ian MacDiarmid’s father, James Blake MacDiarmid, is registered to vote at the same Miami Beach address.
During the 2018 campaign, Blake MacDiarmid was a paid consultant for Commissioner Heather Moraitis. On November 14, 2017 Moraitis paid $10,000 to Blake MacDiarmid Inc (at the same Miami Beach address) for “professional fees.”
On his website, MacDiarmid, the self-proclaimed “mayoral whisperer,” claims to be an adviser to Dean Trantalis, Steve Glassman, Ben Sorensen and Heather Moraitis.
Pictures from the January 9th Infrastructure Update meeting show MacDiarmid seated in the front row. The night before, MacDiarmid and Trantalis Chief of Staff Scott Wyman sat together at the Board of Adjustment meeting hearing the AIDS Healthcare Foundation appeal.
Is it a coincidence that Dean Trantalis’ political advisers stand to profit from a public-private partnership to build a new water plant?
Is a deal with Poseidon Water imminent?
Will Mayor Dean Trantalis seek any public input?
Did any Trantalis advisers work on the the AHF, Lockhart Stadium and Holiday Park/Florida Panthers projects?
City of Fort Lauderdale voters deserve answers, right?
REDBROWARD asked Mayor Dean Trantalis for comment. We will update story if he responds.
More to come…
Blake MacDiarmid
Stephanie Toothaker with Commissioner Steve Glassman
Blake MacDiarmid, on right, at recent fundraiser for Commissioner Steve Glassman
Websites store cookies to enhance functionality and personalise your experience. You can manage your preferences, but blocking some cookies may impact site performance and services.
Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the proper function of the website.
Name
Description
Duration
Cookie Preferences
This cookie is used to store the user's cookie consent preferences.