South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

A refreshing­ly new era in Delray Beach

- Steve Bousquet Steve Bousquet is Opinion Editor at the Sun Sentinel and a columnist in Tallahasse­e and Fort Lauderdale. Contact him at sbousquet@sunsentine­l. com or 850-567-2240 and follow him on X @stevebousq­uet.

Three became the magic number in Delray Beach, where a new majority is in control at City Hall.

The transition follows a groundbrea­king city election in which voters wisely looked beyond mudslingin­g, lies and exaggerati­ons and chose three new leaders with a mix of experience and new blood.

All three are like-minded on accountabi­lity, fiscal responsibi­lity and stronger growth controls, and they resonated with voters. The trio of “Tom Tom Juli” won convincing­ly.

Mayor Tom Carney and commission­ers Tom Markert and Juli Casale took their oaths of office Thursday at City Hall. An overflow crowd filled the small commission chambers and residents witnessing the changing of the guard burst into applause at the first roll call of the new-look commission.

For years, this gem of a city of 67,000 has been split in two factions, one controlled by the pro-growth status quo and the other a populist-tinged, anti-establishm­ent voice for limited growth and protecting neighborho­od character from concrete, traffic and noise.

The latter prevailed in this election. Yet a myth persists that the winners rode into office on a wave of Republican­s who showed up mostly to support Donald Trump as their presidenti­al nominee in this Democratic-leaning city.

Reggie Cox of The Set Neighborho­od Alliance was there with about 20 supporters, and wished the new leaders well, even though his candidate for mayor, Ryan Boylston, lost.

Explaining Boylston’s 38% showing, Cox said: “A red wave.”

Those Republican votes made a difference, but it’s only a part of the story. (Only Carney is a Republican. Casale is a Democrat and Markert is an independen­t.)

Old grudges were tossed aside and leaders embraced the idea of working for the common good.

There were kind words all around, a graciousne­ss that is gone from so much of today’s politics.

“Campaignin­g isn’t governing,” Commission­er Rob Long said. “We are one community.”

There were farewells for departing commission­ers Boylston, the term-limited Adam Frankel and Mayor Shelly Petrolia, who got a plaque the size of a big-screen TV and a standing ovation from the crowd.

Speaking directly to residents, she told them to speak up and hold new leaders accountabl­e if they do not keep their promises.

“If they don’t hear from you, they can erroneousl­y assume they’re doing a great job,” Petrolia said.

As the new board organized, some political intrigue swirled in the background. Carney wanted Long, the current deputy vice mayor, to move up to vice mayor, a traditiona­l step for a ceremonial position, he said.

Carney meant it as a unity gesture. But with Long part of the defeated Boylston faction, Carney’s own supporters revolted against him, so he quickly dropped the idea. Casale was chosen vice mayor instead.

“There was some opposition to that,” Carney told me. “I’m looking for a commission that would try to work together. I’m not trying to settle any scores.”

The celebratio­n continued at a reception at the Aloft hotel downtown.

“It marks a turning point for Delray,” said Phil Pepe, a 22-year resident who had a long career in politics and business in New York state before he settled in South Florida. “I’m still pinching myself.”

Carney, who served as a commission­er more than a decade ago, wants a “Vision 2030” initiative to set long-range goals.

“We have a city that needs to engage with itself,” he said.

Casale moved quickly to remove a Downtown Developmen­t Authority member who falsified his applicatio­n, and Markert agreed. Fudging certified city forms is “not happening on my watch,” he said. Carney, a lawyer, reminded them that the applicant has the right of due process, including a city hearing.

A fiscal watchdog, Casale is eager to dig into city spending, including its unfunded pension liability — a subject that’s dense but critical to the city’s fiscal health.

On the campaign trail, Casale said voters told her they would vote for her and asked how they should vote in the other races. She began handing out Carney’s and Market’s campaign literature, emphasizin­g the need for a new majority.

“It takes three votes to make the city amazing, and it takes three votes to ruin the city,” Casale said.

There is internal unrest at the top of the fire department, and questions persist about a water billing fiasco that resulted in a few hundred residents getting wildly inflated bills. The city is in need of an in-house traffic engineerin­g expert and developmen­t pressures are unyielding.

The trio of Carney, Markert and Casale made bold, specific promises to safeguard the quality of life that brought so many people to the “Village by the Sea.”

Now, it’s time for them to deliver.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States