June Village Council Rundown
The June Coconut Grove Village Council meeting focused on new developments, improvements, and changes in the Grove.
The most surprising change announced at the meeting was the resignation of CGVC Chairman Patrick Sessions who shocked the council with a prepared statement that cited unforeseen occurrences in his personal and business life as his reason for stepping down. However, Sessions also acknowledged conflicts between himself and city officials, which he felt had resulted in the unfair treatment of the CGVC and Grove residents, as another factor in his resignation.
“I am hopeful that whoever follows me will be able to mend some fences,” Sessions said. “I think the best thing I can do for the council and the constituents is to step down.”
Improvements at Ransom Everglades School and developments in the Village West were also brought before the council.
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Open letter from Stephen Murray to Commissioner Gimenez regarding Affordable/Workforce Housing Project
Dear Commissioner Gimenez,
I would like to express my formal support of the proposed affordable housing project in Coconut Grove. After meetings with various stakeholders to discuss the plan, I now believe it is crucial that we as a community join together to back this project and allow it to go forward as soon as possible. Never before has there been such a viable, shovel-ready proposal that involves so many key community stakeholders (such as Thelma Gibson and the University of Miami). From my understanding, this proposal has been thoroughly vetted by Miami-Dade County staff and now eagerly awaits your approval.
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Grove agency’s departure leaves questions, concerns, calls for audit
A neighborhood organization created 30 years ago to boost economic development in the West Grove has been missing in action in the community and is no longer receiving funding from its major contributor, the city of Miami.
According to public records provided by the city, the Urban Empowerment Corporation, whose mission was to create jobs and provide affordable housing in the community, has been without funding since September.
“The services that they were providing were not up to par,” said Lillian Blondet, assistant director of the city’s Department of Community Development.
More than a year ago, the city began receiving complaints from residents that the UEC office at 3672 Grand Ave. was closed. City officials called some of the businesses that were created by the UEC and housed at the organization’s headquarters, but many were no longer in operation, said George Mensah, the department’s director. By June of last year, the UEC office had closed completely, he said.
In September, former City Manager Pedro G. Hernandez formally wrote the UEC’s executive director, Cecilia Holloman, to clear up issues the city had with the organization, which received more than $500,000 from the city from 1998 to 2001 and 2007 to 2009.
“The city understands the need to support small businesses and to provide technical assistance through local agencies such as UEC,” Hernandez wrote. But in the letter, he itemized the city’s concerns, which ranged from the agency’s closed doors to discrepancies the city had noted with the UEC’s monthly budget figures.
However, it was a lack of UEC’s productivity that led to the city’s decision, Mensah said.
“We didn’t think it was appropriate to provide funding to an agency that was winding down,” he said.
Holloman, who had been a consultant to the city of Miami and a consultant for the U.S. Department of Justice’s National Training and Technical Assistance Center, took over in January 2007, said she did not want to comment about the status of the organization
“I don’t have anything to say about it,” she said in a brief telephone interview in May. “UEC is not in Coconut Grove.”
Some community leaders are asking why.
The Coconut Grove Village West Homeowners and Tenants Association passed a resolution at its March meeting calling for an audit of the UEC, said Jihad Rashid, the association’s second vice president and former interim director of the UEC. The group sent its request to Mensah, Blondet and several commissioners including Marc Sarnoff, Rashid said.
David Alexander, the UEC’s first executive director, and community activist Thelma Gibson, back the tenants association’s call for an audit.
“I really don’t know who the group is anymore,” said Gibson, a former UEC consultant when Alexander headed the group.
The organization, originally known as the Coconut Grove Local Development Corporation, formed in 1980 as a nonprofit set up by the Miami City Commission. Alexander served as executive director for 15 years, followed by Rashid as an interim director, then by the late Yvonne McDonald, who took over in 1999 through the end of 2006.
UEC board chairman and developer Manuel Alonso-Poch said he was outraged that Rashid and Alexander were questioning the agency’s integrity.
“It’s galling for them to be asking for account,” Alonso-Poch said. “They were not part of the solution but part of the problem.”
The organization often has been plagued by internal squabbles and has come under city scrutiny.
When McDonald took over from Alexander and Rashid in 1999, the group had a net operating loss of $259,000 in 1998 and $148,000 in 1999, according to a September 1999 audit.
In 2000, the Miami Commission turned down the group’s request for $750,000 after learning the agency sold a building it owned at 3671 Grand Ave. for $16,000 – one-fifth of the $90,000 it paid in 1994 to buy it. And in 2002, Miami Commissioner Johnny Winton said he could no longer support city funding of the organization, citing the group’s lack of productivity in building affordable housing.
The only large-scale accomplishment by the nonprofit has been a single-family development, the Grovepoint project, said Coconut Grove Village Council member Renita Samuels-Dixon. Grovepoint’s 32 single-family homes were built along U.S. 1 under Alexander’s direction.
City officials say they did their best to monitor the UEC and won’t be investigating funds already given to the organization, with the exception of the 3659 property the UEC purchased for $160,000 in 1994, possibly with the help of a $120,000 city grant, Mensah said.
The project, which was slated for a mix of commercial and residential units, did not materialize. Instead the UEC sold it in 2008 for $750,000.
“If the city gives them the money to secure the property, then that comes back to the city,” Mensah said.
For her part, Village Councilwoman Samuels-Dixon does not fault the UEC if it was not able to make progress in the Grove.
“In recent years, it’s probably been struggling to identify its market,” Samuels-Dixon said.
“You look on Grand Avenue and it’s blighted,” she added, “but you can’t blame that on the UEC.
Still, accountability is called for, Samuels-Dixon said.
“What’s important to me as a person from the community is that we at least know how much public money was provided and from that how much was used.”
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Coconut Grove Village Council Meeting Rundown for May

UPDATED
The May Coconut Grove Village Council Meeting included updates from community leaders, discussions about new developments and changes with Coconut Grove Sailing Club membership and information about an event to honor Grove peacocks.
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Village Council discusses Brown House, Glass House, Playhouse
Determined to help beautify historic Charles Avenue, Renita Samuels-Dixon recently told the Coconut Grove Village Council that “the oldest street in Coconut Grove” needs and deserves some attention.
One of two members representing the West Grove on the Village Council, Samuels-Dixon said the street’s historic homes include E.W.F. Stirrup Residence, 3242 Charles Ave., and the Mariah Brown House, 3298 Charles Ave. The Stirrup home was built by one of Miami’s first black millionaires, the Rev. Ebenezer Stirrup, a Bahamian who made his fortune in real estate. The Brown House is a replica of the original house built in 1889 by Mariah Brown, one of the first black Bahamians to settle in Coconut Grove. Plans have been under way to do repairs and enhancements to the Brown House and later open it as a museum. But the effort needs money, Samuels-Dixon said.
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Grove Village Council might get back
City Hall meeting place
The Coconut Grove Village Council still is without a permanent meeting place, but a decision might come as early as this week about whether the group can return to City Hall.
The Village Council was forced to move its monthly meetings from City Hall after Miami Mayor Tomás Regalado, who was elected in November, said he wanted to allow more access to City Hall to non-governmental groups. The council has met at the Abanico Theater at the Academy of Arts & Minds Charter High School and at middle school campus of Ransom Everglades.
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Village Council still without a permanent meeting place
A new policy from Miami Mayor Tomás Regalado has forced the Cocoanut Grove Village Council to change its meeting location from City Hall to Ransom Everglades Middle School, where the council met on Jan. 21 for its first meeting of the year.
“It is unfathomable to me that the Village Council has had our meeting venue taken away with very little notice and no real explanation,” newly elected Village Council member Stephen Murray said on a recent blog post. Murray is one of two councilmen representing the West Grove.
The Village Council had to find a new location after Regalado, who was elected in November, said he wanted to allow more access to City Hall to non-city affiliated meetings, said Village Council Chairman Patrick Sessions.
“The city manager then told us we couldn’t meet there every month. We thought we had approval, but now we have to meet elsewhere,” Sessions said.
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3-5AM Bar Closings debate – feedback is requested
December 7, 2009
To: All Coconut Grove Residents, Residential Associations, Business Owners, Commercial Associations, and interested individual parties.
From: Patrick Sessions, Chairman-elect, The Cocoanut Grove Village Council
As you are undoubtedly aware, there is an ongoing debate in Coconut Grove regarding the 3 AM versus 5 AM bar/restaurant closing times. In June, 2008, a revision to the Miami City Code went into effect which changed the closing times to 3 AM for Coconut Grove. Specifically, the underlined language was added at that time:
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What time should the bars close?
Here is a summary of the discussions about the 3 a.m. versus the 5 a.m. closing times for bars that occurred on the Coconut Grove Village Council meeting on Nov. 18.
Video by Paul Franz and Jesse Swanson – Full video of the meeting coming soon.
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Meet the new Coconut grove Village Council
Meet the newsly elected Coconut Grove Village Council. View their video interviews here.
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