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Islamorada

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Advocacy For Residents, Education and Preservation




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  • 15 Jul 2026 11:34 AM | Anonymous

    Last week my editorial was about the Council treating the budget as if they are spending monopoly money. Not those paper bills printed at the print shop – real money locals worked hard to earn.

    The Council did reject the 3 mills starting rate the staff wanted, lowering the maximum millage to 2.8, still a significant tax increase of  approximately 12%.


    Let’s hope it goes down a whole lot more. We will certainly give the Council their standing ovation if they get down to the 2.4756 mills: the rollback rate - the rate needed to generate the same tax revenue in the coming year as what we got this year.


    We surely could find surplus funds we could cut – if we really want to. But then, when we do find ways to cut costs, we just seem to keep the excess for new things we don’t really need.

    •       We are saving about $200,000 per year, now that we don’t send two employees down to the Fill to earn overtime every weekend monitoring the “No Parking” signs 8 hours a day.

    •      We are anticipating significantly less tax dollars will be needed for Ridesharing with $2 ride fees and promised credits for Freebee ads.  

    •      We hired Langton, a grant consultant, expecting to find opportunities to get significant grant help.

    •      We hired Bishop, Rosasco And Co, at $111,000, government finance consulting services to assist with oversight of budget concerns, particularly with wastewater and the village marina, expecting to find major improvement in the budgeting of those department.


      Bishop, Rosasco And Co serves as Marathon’s entire finance department for $461,000.  Our finance department costs us $1.6 million.  

       

    Budget workshops this year have been scheduled – 3 PM in the afternoon, 3 days in a row, August 4-5-6.  How’s that for encouraging public participation?


    Three Budget Task Force meetings were held last July. The committee came up with some excellent ideas.  But no Budget Task Force meetings are scheduled this year.


    Islamorada has talented residents with amazing business successes that should be encouraged to help with our budget issues. Yet it looks like the Village would prefer little public involvement and the shortest budget meetings possible.  No line item discussions, that’s for sure.


    Budget Facts from last year:


    Staff: 126 fulltime employees, 6 parttime and undisclosed # of seasonal employees


    Final budget last year, all Village Funds:

    ·      Total Revenue: $59,481,183

    ·      Total Expenditures: $65,461,709

    ·      Total Reduction in Reserves, all funds last year: $5,821,537


    Final budget last year – General Fund only:

    ·      Total Revenue: $24,180,783

    ·      Total Expenses: $23,254,051 plus Transfer out of 1,985,811

    ·      Total Reduction in Reserves, General Fund: last year: $975,090


    In the minutes from last years’ budget hearing: “Manager Saunders stated that the reserves were acceptable from a legal standpoint, but not from a risk standpoint.


    Manager Saunders noted he had negotiated an emergency line of credit with Centennial Bank and that the Village would only pay interest fees if we needed to use the funds.”

    The Village approved a $20 million line of credit at 5 ½% intended for use if we experience a hurricane and do not have sufficient reserves.


    Pay Raises: We keep hearing that the staff is expecting to get a significant pay increase to make up for not getting one last year (except for the fire department, where an increase in salaries of $521,000 was approved last September). 


    Personnel costs in the current budget are approximately $17.2 million.  A 3% increase would likely add about $500,000 to our budget.


    Wastewater: Last week the Council selected a contractor to replace the North Plantation Key Wastewater Pump Station.  The staff selection committee’s #1 ranked contractor, at $6.7 million, was bypassed for #2 at $7.3 million, almost $600,000 more than the low bid. Looked like a problem with the selection process.


    With wastewater costs like these, let’s hope the Council made the correct decision. We’ve been paying excessive costs for wastewater problems for far too many years.


    The Village expects to use grant funding to pay for most of the $7.3 million – taking funding away from important canal restoration funding. 

    But $7.3 million may not be the only major project needed to actually fix the ongoing MM92 raw sewage pipeline rupture problem. 


    Last September, the Village had estimates of over $2.2 Million/mile to replace portions of the PVC pipe that carries raw sewage to Key Largo for treatment. That potential cost would be on top of the $7.3 million.  Did we hear the staff right – costs above the $7.3 million would be borrowed from the line of credit?


    Window screens: We still can’t get over this… the Council approved a $24,400 contract a few months ago to fix the windows in the Russell Cottage at the Green Turtle Hammock.  $24,000 just so we can open and close the windows.   


    Now the windows have been fixed, but we need screens to keep the mosquitoes out!  The Council approved another $24,400 contract to repair the screens.  We wonder who will give up the comfort of air conditioning to enjoy the $48,000 spent to open the windows there?


    Marathon versus Islamorada

    Why is Marathon so thrifty compared to Islamorada?


    They have a population of 10,000…. 43% more than Islamorada’s 7,000 population.


    Their current millage rate – 2.0631; Islamorada’s 2.65. 


    Why can’t our budget be more like Marathon’s?


    Difference in dollars:


    Marathon’s property tax for 2025-2026: just over $10 million ($1,000/resident)

    Islamorada’s property tax for 2025-2026: just over $18 million ($2,571/resident)

    Marathon’s Reserves: $27.5 Million

    Islamorada’s Reserves: $13 million.    


    And to top that off, the sheriff charges Marathon less for law enforcement services than he charges Islamorada. Better negotiators?


    Everyone all over this country and the state are trying diligently to find ways to cut their budget.  Why not here?


    Come on guys.  Let’s tighten the belt!  If you can’t find ways to do it – try inviting DOGE to town to do what they do - “identify and eliminate unnecessary spending, maximize efficiency, and improve fiscal stewardship.”


    I bet they could help us. Give it a try. What are we afraid of?


    An election is coming!


    Tom

  • 15 Jul 2026 11:30 AM | Anonymous

    On July 7, a contract was signed by all parties to implement the terms of service, following Freebee’s  selection as the # 1 ranked proposal at the June Council meeting.  

    The total contract price of $665,000 is an increase of approximately $111,000 over their previous contract with the Village.


    An FDOT grant will cover up to $276,665, a 50-50 split of the net amount the Village pays to Freebee after credits for rider fees and advertising credits from Freebee.

    • Riders will be charged $2/rider, intended to reduce taxpayers’ burden.

      In 2025 there were just over 55,000 riders (a possible $110,000 credit for future riders).  Islamorada will receive the “net” fee per rider, after Freebee deducts what credit card companies charge, expected to be up to 3%.

    • Service will continue to be available from 7 AM to midnight, seven days a week, with 3 vehicles available all 17 hours.

    • There will be no rideshare service for several holidays - New Year's Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve and Christmas.

    • Freebee to pay the Village at least $60,000 in advertising revenue they receive. The village must agree to any advertising.

    • The Village can request a change of vehicles used from the 5-passenger Tesla sedan to the 7-passenger VW Buzz with 60 days’ notice to Freebee and a setup cost of $1200/vehicle.

    • A Sienna Hybrid XSE will provide ADA-accessible service.

    • Freebee will provide documentation and assistance to help the Village utilize the rider data to improve rider experiences, including reduction in wait times.

    • Cost reductions to the Village will occur if all 3 vehicles are not in service for the hours required by the contract.

    • Riders cannot use cash to pay for rides.  If they do not have a credit or debit card, they can buy a pre-paid credit card at places like Publix or CVS.

    • Each rider will have a Rider profile where they can “store” prepayments for multiple rides instead of paying for individual rides each time.

    • Territory: South end of Village to Mariners Hospital.


    If you haven’t used Freebee in the past, try it!  Save some gasoline!


    Click Here to see contract

     


  • 15 Jul 2026 11:27 AM | Anonymous

    Still no agreement at last Tuesday’s council meeting!  At the meeting, one notable speaker was Doug Mientkiewicz, a  former pro baseball star.  





    He played first base from 1998 to 2009, most prominently as a member of the Minnesota Twins where he was a Gold Glove Award winner. Doug is one of six players to win both an Olympic gold medal and a World Series championship.


    How lucky is Islamorada to have Doug as a local resident! Doug has helped coach the high school baseball team here for about seven years. Ask any of the baseball players at Coral Shores. Doug has shown the student athletes a path to success - the value of hard work, dedication, and perseverance.


    At the Tuesday Council meeting, Mientkiewicz expressed his thoughts about the merits of the baseball field upgrades planned for Founders Park - as both a taxpayer and a coach.  He questioned where the energy and concern has been for all the years when the field has been subpar.  


    He probably remembers when he played for Westminster Christian and traveled to Islamorada to play ball when high school baseball and football shared space here at the school campus. But times have changed. Coral Shores now has so many new sports… lacrosse, soccer, tennis… and a new bigger school on the same property where space is certainly at a premium.  


    As Doug pointed out, the other Keys schools have vastly better ball fields. “It’s time for the kids in the Upper Keys to have quality facilities.  This is a critical step - upgrading the baseball field.  The momentum will build from here. Sports opens doors for kids and they deserve that.”



    Plans (hopes) are underway to have a joint workshop with the Islamorada Council and the School Board sitting down together to work out their differences and develop a plan to move forward Jul 21 when the School Board meets in Marathon…. School Board willing.  


    A special call Council meeting is scheduled for Jul 27 with hopes that the Jul 21 sit down with the School Board succeeds and a Baseball License Agreement can be finalized.

  • 15 Jul 2026 11:23 AM | Anonymous

    Coming Soon to the Ocean/Bay near you!



    In Islamorada it is unlawful to dive or snorkel in any navigable canal or marina or within 300 feet of an improved residential or commercial shoreline beginning three days prior to the opening of and during the entirety of the lobster mini-season and for the first five days of commercial lobster season.

     

  • 15 Jul 2026 11:22 AM | Anonymous

    Talking about lobsters: Betsy the Lobster is a very famous 30’ long sculpture depicting a large spiny lobster. Made out of fiberglass, it is anatomically correct. Betsy is the second-most photographed attraction in the Florida Keys, after the Southernmost Point Buoy in Key West.


    The story of Betsy can be found in Wikipedia: It took Richard Blaze 5 years to create the lobster sculpture when he was hired by a local restauranteur in 1980. The sculpture was meant to represent the impact the species has had on the culture of South Florida. When it was finished in 1985, the restaurant that had commissioned the sculpture had closed, so the owner of Treasure Village, Tom Vellanti, bought it and displayed it at his property. Vellanti’s property was eventually turned into a school, so Betsy was put into storage. In 2009, the sculpture was moved to the Rain Barrel and became a popular roadside attraction.

     

  • 15 Jul 2026 11:20 AM | Anonymous

    In 1921, Miami held a special election that created the city's first city commission—five members, all bankers, which became known as the "bankers' commission." It replaced the old 13-member city council system.  
    Suggestion for the Village:You need all environmentalists on council.


    Governor Ron DeSantis established DOGE, directing state agencies, universities, and local governments “to identify and eliminate unnecessary spending, maximize efficiency, and improve fiscal stewardship.”

    Suggestion:DOGE is a must, not a suggestion

  • 15 Jul 2026 11:18 AM | Anonymous


    EV. Fowler's Caribee Yacht Basin Modern Cabins 1948. Wright Langley Collection. Monroe Co Public Library, Florida Keys History Center https://www.keyslibraries.org/news/categories/today-in-keys-history

    Papa Joe’s Waterfront - 2026


    Papa Joe’s Waterfront | Dining, Events & Tiki Bar in Islamorada

     

  • 7 Jul 2026 12:47 PM | Anonymous

    Steve Forbes: “The politicians say ‘we’ can’t afford a tax cut. Maybe we can’t afford the politicians.”



    Thomas Sowell: “Elections should be held on April 16th — the day after we pay our income taxes. That is one of the few things that might discourage politicians from being big spenders.”



    Arthur Godfrey: “I am proud to be paying taxes. The only thing is, I could be just as proud for half the money.”



    Marco Rubio:"The government can’t just take our money; we must have a say on how it is spent."



    Warren Buffett:"I'm not an economist, but I know this: a tax hike is a great way to kill a recovering economy."



    George Bernard Shaw: government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.


    Bob Thaves: “I don’t know if I can live on my income or not — the government won’t let me try it.”


    George H.W. Bush: “Read my lips: no new taxes.”



    Gerald Barzan: “Taxation with representation ain’t so hot either.”


    Mark Twain: “I shall never use profanity except in discussing house rent and taxes.”


    Robert Half: “People try to live within their income so they can afford to pay taxes to a government that can’t live within its income.”

     
  • 7 Jul 2026 12:45 PM | Anonymous

    The Founders Park synchronized swimming team, coached by Isla Crawford, just returned from Michigan after competing in the Junior Olympics. 


    Qualifying for the national competition was especially difficult this year.  The “home” pool at Founders was closed for renovations for the 5 months leading up to the competition in Michigan, making their training extremely challenging.


    And yet… they managed to qualify, do an amazing routine, and finished 12th in the Junior Olympics!  Way to go girls.

  • 7 Jul 2026 12:42 PM | Anonymous

    Last month, the Everglades Foundation brought dozens of partners, board members, and clean water advocates to Washington, D.C. for two days of conversation in support of America’s Everglades.



    The teams met with elected officials and staff, celebrating the historic bipartisan support behind restoring and protecting the source of drinking water for millions and a trillion-dollar economic asset.


    Islamorada’s Mary Barley, founding board member of the Foundation, attended. For decades Mary has led the effort to restored and protect America’s Everglades and Florida Bay.  


    From  Mary Barley: There is no substitute for showing up. When 75 of us fanned out across the halls of Congress last month, we weren't just telling the story of Everglades restoration, we were proving it. Together, we've helped secure billions in bipartisan funding and accelerated completion of the EAA Reservoir by five years. Restoration is working, and it’s worth the investment.


    For those of us in Islamorada, this isn't just about the River of Grass, it's about Florida Bay. The Everglades Foundation was founded more than 30 years ago because Florida Bay was in crisis. Seagrass was dying, fish populations were declining, and local economies were feeling the impact. In Everglades restoration, Florida Bay is the "canary in the coal mine" because it reflects the health of the entire Everglades ecosystem. When the Everglades suffer, Florida Bay suffers.”


    To read more of Mary’s thoughts - Click here.


    Mary has lived in Islamorada for many decades.  She works diligently campaigning to protect the waters that surround our islands.

     

    According to the Everglades Foundation website: Mary Barley served as Board Chair of The Everglades Foundation from 1995 through 2002, was Vice Chair from 2003 to 2012, and remains a vital member of the Board today. She has served on the World Wildlife National Council since 2007, and its Marine Leadership Committee since 1996. She has also served on the Boards of the National Parks Conservation Association, the Everglades Trust, the Atlantic Salmon Federation, Clean Water Action, the Sierra Foundation, the Florida Keys History and Discovery Foundation, and the Community Foundation of the Florida Keys.  


    Last year Mary was inducted into the Everglades Coalition Hall of Fame. Click here

     


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Your Chance to Speak Up!  


Attend a Meeting - Get involved!

Wednesday, July 15, 2026 10:00 AM

Historic Preservation Commission Meeting

Where: Islamorada Administrative Center & Public Safety Headquarters, 86800 Overseas Hwy, 3rd Floor Conference Room, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Wednesday, July 15, 2026 2:30 PM

Ron Levy Aquatic Center History & Records Wall Task Force Meeting

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Tuesday, July 21, 2026 5:15 PM

NEAR SHORE WATER REGULATION CITIZENS’ ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING

Where: Islamorada Administrative Center & Public Safety Headquarters, 86800 Overseas Hwy, 3rd Floor Conference Room, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Monday, August 3, 2026 5:00 PM

WORKFORCE / AFFORDABLE HOUSING CITIZENS ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING

Where: Islamorada Administrative Center & Public Safety Headquarters, 86800 Overseas Hwy, 3rd Floor Conference Room, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Tuesday, August 4, 2026 3:00 PM

VILLAGE COUNCIL BUDGET WORKSHOP #1 FOR FY 2026-2027

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Wednesday, August 5, 2026 9:30 AM

LAND ACQUISITION CITIZENS ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING

Where: Islamorada Administrative Center & Public Safety Headquarters, 86800 Overseas Hwy, 3rd Floor Conference Room, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Wednesday, August 5, 2026 3:00 PM

VILLAGE COUNCIL BUDGET WORKSHOP #2 FOR FY 2026-2027

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Thursday, August 6, 2026 3:00 PM

VILLAGE COUNCIL BUDGET WORKSHOP #3 FOR FY 2026-2027

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Monday, August 10, 2026 5:30 PM

LOCAL PLANNING AGENCY MEETING

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

Thursday, August 20, 2026 5:30 PM

REGULAR VILLAGE COUNCIL & LAND USE MEETING

Where: Founders Park Community Center, 87000 Overseas Highway, Islamorada, Florida 33036

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Our vision

To enhance the community of Islamorada by preserving the quality of life of the residents as well as the beauty and vitality of the native ecosystems and to stop any further degradation of our community from over-development.

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Islamorada Community Alliance

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Tavernier, FL  33070-1507


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Our vision

To enhance the community of Islamorada by preserving the quality of life of the residents as well as the beauty and vitality of the native ecosystems and to stop any further degradation of our community from over-development.

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Tavernier, FL  33070-1507




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