Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Broward Health wants land that was previously bought for a new school

- By Scott Travis

A plot of land once envisioned as the site of a Parkland elementary school could become the future site of a Broward Health medical complex.

The hospital system, operated by the taxpayer-funded North Broward Hospital District, is seeking to acquire from the Broward School District a 10-acre parcel at the southwest corner of University Drive and Trails End Drive in Parkland.

The School Board bought the land for $5.85 million in 2005 with plans to build a new elementary school. The city of Parkland contribute­d $850,000 toward that purchase. But the project was one of many that got shelved during the recession a few years later.

Parkland is one of the few areas of the county where schools remain crowded and there’s a demand for more facilities. But the state won’t allow the district to build any new schools because it already has 54,100 empty seats elsewhere in the county where students could attend.

Broward Health already acquired a 7-acre site directly adjacent to the land, paying $14.5 million in 2020, according to the Broward Property Appraiser’s website. That land and the school district’s property both remain vacant.

The hospital system would like to create a complex with a specialty care physician practice clinic within the next three to five years, David Clark, senior vice president of operations of the hospital district, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

The facilities would likely include an educationa­l component where Broward high school students in health science programs could get training. He said there may also be retail spaces available for

The decision of the arbitrator became the final decision by the circuit court judge.

When Sackett inquired about the dog, she was told it had been promised to one of the county’s rescue partners, Noah’s Rescue, court records show. Sackett reached out to Noah’s Rescue, and went to the shelter to pick up Wesley as her foster dog, the records show.

Sackett also had no idea there would be a propensity to violence, or that he was on medication including an anti-depressant, according to the complaint filed in Broward courts.

Broward’s advertisem­ent described him as a 52-pound, 2-year-old who was “very friendly with the family that found him prior to entering the shelter but his behavior once in the shelter declined rapidly and has not improved.”

The advertisem­ent described him as highly stressed in a kennel environmen­t, and needed to be moved immediatel­y into a home “that will allow him to decompress from kennel life and relieve his anxiety appropriat­ely.”

Sackett agreed to the dog after a video ad of Wesley “at a pool hanging out with little kids,” she said.

But the arbitrator wrote in his finding that Wesley was “food, animal and people aggressive and that (Broward animal care and control) knew that informatio­n prior to the” incident with Sackett.

The arbitrator also noted that Sackett wanted the county agency to “amend its policies and procedures to assure that in the future, full disclosure is made when potentiall­y dangerous dogs are released,” but that was out of his control.

“While improved safety measures are to be encouraged in every area of society, the undersigne­d has no authority to render judgment in this regard,” he wrote in court documents.

“This pursuit was not about money, it was about holding the county accountabl­e for a preventabl­e incident,” said attorney David Gillis, who represente­d Sackett. “If they had just provided the knowledge they have to fosters and people adopting these dogs, this incident would not have happened.

Gillis added that, “Our main goal is to provide the public with knowledge.”

Attorneys for the county presented a list of defenses in an 8-page filing, Broward court records show. Among the county’s defenses was the argument that “if the plaintiff has suffered injuries and/or losses as alleged, these are the proximate result of plaintiff ’s own negligence.”

They also argued that it was “open and obvious as it is common knowledge that pit bulls are known to (be) one of, if not the most, aggressive and unpredicta­ble breeds of dogs.” And it argued that the woman “was owed no duty of care as the incident did not occur on the county’s property, but rather at the plaintiff ’s own home where she had sole and complete possession, dominion and control of the dog and its conditions.”

Sackett, who has since moved from Fort Lauderdale to a northern part of Florida, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel she is still emotional about the trauma.

She said she has several other dogs, and “I love all my animals. They are my life, I treat them like they were children because they are.”

She told the Sun Sentinel it was difficult after the attack, where she was left to question what happened. “It was such a mental game that the shelter played with me, by me questionin­g myself as an animal lover and them playing it off that it was something I did with this animal.”

County spokeswoma­n Lori Shepard said the Animal Care Division “continuall­y works to improve its policies, procedures, and documentat­ion” and while the result of this case “has led to no specific changes,” they have since improved its agreements with other agencies “to better clarify, disclose, and document critical animal informatio­n exchanged with a partner.”

Sackett’s lawyer said there was no evidence that Noah’s Rescue had any idea about Wesley’s history. Noah’s Rescue’s founder Flor Vargas said it’s her policy to keep everyone safe: “I don’t ever put a dog with behavior issues in a foster’s home, they go straight to trainers. I had no idea, if I would have had an idea, I have trainers for that.”

Vargas told the Sun Sentinel that the dog was sent for training and a boarding facility after being with Sackett. But Vargas said there was a subsequent unprovoked attack, resulting in the dog, deemed a danger to society, being euthanized in 2021.

 ?? ARIEL SACKETT ?? After a ferocious dog attack, a woman has been awarded $132,000 by Broward County. Here, Ariel Sackett poses with Wesley, who would ultimately send her to the hospital to get more than 50 stitches.
ARIEL SACKETT After a ferocious dog attack, a woman has been awarded $132,000 by Broward County. Here, Ariel Sackett poses with Wesley, who would ultimately send her to the hospital to get more than 50 stitches.

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