Miami Herald

Start over on land deal that landed commission­er in jail

- BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD

There’s a cloud of suspicion called Alex Diaz de la Portilla hanging over the city of Miami’s land deal with a private school. The City Commission, stewards of taxpayer dollars, should at the very least put the agreement on hold — or kill it.

The contract to build an athletic facility is at the center of a law enforcemen­t investigat­ion that led to the arrest of Diaz de la Portilla and a lobbyist hired by the wealthy couple that owns the Centner Academy. Diaz de la Portilla, a former commission­er, is innocent until proven guilty — and he is vehemently fighting the case, calling his arrest politicall­y motivated. Yet the potential that the contract has been tainted by wrongdoing should be enough to prompt Miami to start from scratch the process of identifyin­g the right use for the property.

If not, and the charges of bribery and money laundering against Diaz de la Portilla are proven, Miami would have a sports complex to remind citizens how corrupt the city can be.

CANCEL THE DEAL?

As the Herald reported recently, Diaz de la Portilla’s successor, Commission­er Miguel Gabela, has proposed canceling the deal the commission approved in 2022. The agreement calls for using city-owned property, called Biscayne Park, for an indoor athletic facility in exchange for a $10 million investment by David and Leila Centner in the project. The Centner Academy would have the exclusive right to use the facility at certain times of the week.

Prosecutor­s allege that the Centners funneled money through their lobbyist, Bill Riley, to Diaz de la Portilla to secure his vote in favor of the project. The Centners have not been charged and deny doing anything wrong.

Diaz de la Portilla told the Herald this is “one of the best deals the City of Miami has made over the last 3 decades to add and [increase] green space.” But parents of iPrep Academy,

a pre-K-12 public school in downtown, are lobbying the city to revive a previous proposal for the land.

Prosecutor­s say that previous proposal, a partnershi­p between the city and Miami-Dade County Public Schools, used to be a priority for the Omni Community Redevelopm­ent Agency. It would have used city land to replace iPrep’s building, double the number of students it could serve and provide workforce housing for teachers.

PREVIOUS PROPOSAL

The project, however, “stalled” after Diaz de la Portilla took over as chairman of the Omni CRA in 2020, a former Omni executive director told investigat­ors, according to an arrest affidavit. Jason Walker also told investigat­ors that Diaz de la Portilla introduced resolution­s supporting the Centner Academy project without consulting the agency’s staff.

Meanwhile, the affidavit alleges, Riley, the Centners’ lobbyist, sought to funnel hundreds of thousands of dollars to political committees secretly controlled by Diaz de la Portilla. The former commission­er denies sidelining iPrep.

Fishy, right?

These are, of course, accusation­s that have yet to be proven in court. But does the Miami City Commission want to move forward with a project so intricatel­y tied to the city’s largest scandal in recent times?

TAXPAYER PROPERTY

If the Centner Academy proposal is indeed good for the city — though there are legitimate questions about whether allowing a private entity to use taxpayer property is a good idea — then let the Centners make their case again.

A contingent of Centner Academy supporters swarmed City Hall last month pleading for the commission to keep the deal in place. They say the project will protect children from the risks of outdoor physical activity and crime. They convinced Gabela to postpone his proposal to terminate the deal, which is now scheduled for March.

In response, iPrep parents have mounted their own campaign, including an online petition, a website and t-shirts emblazoned with “Public land for public schools.” These parents, too, deserve a fair shake.

In a city that desperatel­y needs to regain trust from its citizens, common sense should make this an easy decision for the City Commission: Terminate the Centner deal and start again.

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