Miami Herald

Paul Schwiep wins back seat on ‘half-penny’ tax CITT board

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

One of the leading opponents of Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez’s transporta­tion agenda won his seat back on a county board after an appeals court ruled his ouster violated the law.

The Third District Court of Appeal restored Coconut Grove lawyer Paul Schwiep to the county board that oversees the more than $200 million generated by Miami-Dade’s half-percent sales tax for transit and road projects.

In late 2018, commission­ers effectivel­y removed Schwiep from the Citizens

Independen­t Transporta­tion Trust at the urging of Gimenez after Miami-Dade lawyers cited a county rule barring board service by someone suing Miami-Dade over a policy decision. His removal was triggered when commission­ers declined to waive the rule for Schwiep.

Schwiep is the lawyer on Tropical Audubon’s legal challenge of the proposed 13-mile extension of the 836 into West Kendall, a project endorsed by the County Commission and championed by Gimenez in his role as chairman of the toll agency that would build it.

Schwiep sued MiamiDade to take back his seat. In August, a Miami-Dade judge ruled Schwiep’s role in Audubon’s administra­tive action fell short of the lawsuit required to remove him from his unpaid board seat. The appellate court agreed, and county lawyers this week said Schwiep could retake his seat.

Along with opposing the 836 extension, Schwiep pushed for a Metrorail extension in South Dade over the rapid-transit bus plan that Gimenez enacted in 2018. It will be funded by the “half-penny” tax.

Gimenez’s office had no comment on the decision. Schwiep issued a statement that said in part: “This administra­tion decided to waste time and energy on a personal vendetta rather than address our mobility crisis.”

Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

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