City Commission Meetings - Regular Meeting
About this meeting
- Government Body
- City Commission Meetings
- Meeting Type
- City Commission Meetings
- Location
- Panama City, FL
- Meeting Date
- November 18, 2025
Transcript
92 sections
I am calling to order the Panama City Commission meeting for November 18th at 4:30 p.m. We're going to start by an opening prayer by Reverend Friday, pastor of Living Waters Ministries, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance led by Commissioner Granger. Please rise. Let us pray. Father God, we thank you for another day that you've given us. We thank you for your loving kindness and your grace, your mercy. And Father, I pray that you would give us your divine insight tonight, even Lord, as these proceedings go forward. Like, God, I pray that you would speak into the minds and the hearts of our commissioners and our our mayor, God, guiding them, Father, that they might utilize your righteous agenda and coming up with answers for this community, God, that you might be glorified and that your name might be praised. in Jesus name I pray. Amen. Amen. If you'll join me in the pledge of allegiance. I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Please call the role. Mayor Branch, present. Commissioner Granger present. Commissioner Street here. Commissioner Hughes here. Commissioner Lucas present. Mayor, you have a quorum. You've received the meeting minutes from October 28th. Do I have a motion to accept? So move. Second. Second. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Commissioner Hughes? Yes. Commissioner Lucas? Yes. Mayor Branch? Yes. Motion passes 5-0. Any additions, deletions, or modifications to Yes, Mr. Mayor. Uh item 6, Bravo. The applicant has requested it be removed regarding uh mixed use at uh 1906 Louise Avenue. Again,
item 6, Bravo. Uh removed at the request of the applicant. Uh would request the commission remove it. Uh with no uh no intent or expectation for to return at this time. Okay. Anyone else? Mayor, we I would like to defer I'm asking to defer item 9K to the December 16th meeting. Uh that was the charter re charter officer evaluations. Um the deadline for the December 16th is December 8th at end ofend end of business. Okay. So removal of 9K and the removal of 6B. Do I have a motion to accept? Uh motion to remove 6B and defer 9K to the December meeting. Second. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Stre. Yes. Commissioner Hughes. Yes. Commissioner Lucas. Yes. Mayor Branch. Yes. Motion passes 5-0. Community announcements. Please make note that during the months of November and December, there will only be one commission meeting per month to make accommodations for city and staff holiday schedules. The date for the next commission meeting will be Tuesday, December 16th, and the meeting will be held here at the Bay County Government Center beginning at 4:30 p.m. The Harrison Avenue streetscapes project is coming to completion, and the city is celebrating with a ribbon cutting ceremony at 2 p.m. on Monday, November 24th. A block party celebration will follow in downtown Panama City. The offices of the city of Panama City will be closed on Thursday, November 27th, and Friday, November 28th, in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. Normal business hours will resume on Monday, December 2nd at 8:00 a.m. Garbage and trash collections will not take place on Thanksgiving Day. Residential and commercial garbage collections, the blue cans, will resume the following day. December is full of holiday fun in Panama City. Celebrate the season with the
Millville Christmas Parade on Friday morning, December 5th at 10:00 a.m. The mayor and city commissioners and staff will participate in this beloved tradition alongside Bay District School students. For the parade route, check out our city website. Also, join us that evening downtown for a magical evening at the Center for the Arts at Four Points Plaza starting at 5:30 p.m. for the annual downtown Christmas tree lining ceremony. Let's light up the Christmas holiday season together. Get ready for the 2025 Downtown Christmas Parade in Panama City. It's going to be Saturday, December 6th from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. This year's route begins at the downtown marina and travels north along Harrison Avenue all the way to Tommy Oliver Stadium. Also occurring in December is the 39th annual Boat Parade of Lights scheduled for September, December 13th from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Watch decorative boats travel from St. Andrews Bay from the yach club west to the Haway Bridge. There are many ways to give back this holiday season. The Panama City Police Department will host its annual Blue Santa gift donation program and the city is partnering with Bay District Schools for its giving tree program. Both created to help children in Panama City this Christmas season. For more information and to learn how you can get involved with these two worthwhile efforts, visit panama city.gov. Come join us for the MLK Rec Center soft opening on Monday, December 15th at 2 p.m. A grand opening for the facility for the public is planned for later in January 2026. Never miss a beat. Sign up for city communications to get important updates straight to your inbox or to your smartphone. From the monthly newsletter to real-time alerts, stay informed and engaged with what's happening in your community. Scan the QR code on the screen or
visit our newlyesed website at panama city.gov to sign up today. All right, Mr. Mayor, moving into public hearings. Item 6A is the second and final reading to consider and approve ordinance 3274 adopting the proposed water and wastewater connection or impact fees of $1,350 per equivalent residential connection or ERC for water and $1,610 per ERC for wastewater to become effective February 16th of 2026. I'll just note that that date is required because it is 90 days from the time that the comm uh commission would adopt the ordinance. As background information, the city of Panama City continues to face increasing capital investment requirements necessary to expand water and wastewater system facilities to serve new growth. Uh connection fees are collected from new development to recover the city's investment in existing and future capacity that is available to serve this growth. The city utilities division has not updated our connection fees since 2003 and therefore an updated connection fee increase is proposed to manage the increase and demand on current monthly utility rates. The current user fees were adopted by the commission on September 23rd of 2003 pursuant to ordinance 1914. Last year during fiscal year 2025, the city hired Ruffellisk financial consultants to complete the water and wastewater impact fee study for the city's water and wastewater utility system. The report recommended the updated connection fees based on the cost of capital expenditures for both existing and new infrastructure to provide capacity to serve new development. The report proposes a water connection fee of 1,350 per ERC, which represents an increase of 8.85 85 compared to the existing 465 and a wastewater connection fee of 1,610 per ERC which represents an increase of $360 compared to the existing $1250. The
proposed water and wastewater impact fees will help offset the growth to the system uh the cost of the growth to the system rather that would otherwise have to be funded by current monthly user fees and will not become effective until Monday, February 16th of 2026. Staff recommends the city commission conduct the second and final public hearing of ordinance 3274 adopting the new ERC rate for water and wastewater beginning February 16th of 2026. Mr. Mayor, commissioners, as y'all directed at the last meeting, um I did get together with representatives from the BBIA uh as well as uh I know Commissioner Hughes met with them and Mayor Branch uh as well as city engineer uh Stacy Roush. Um we were uh willing to put forward a recommendation to move forward as laid out here today uh with Panama City North and for Panama City proper uh move forward except raising the rate of the increase uh by 25% each year over the next four years. Uh however, I do know that Mr. Nevin Zimmerman and Mr. Jared Jones did have a conversation with Rafelis today. Uh, and I believe that um, uh, it's it's not quite that simple. Uh, and another rate study would be required uh, at a pretty substantial expense. So, I'll turn it over to Mr. Zimmerman and Mr. Jones to to to add clarity to that. Mr. Zimmerman. Uh, the question that was asked is, is there a rational basis for treating Panama City North differently as far as an impact or connection fee as as compared to Panama City proper or the historic Panama City area? And the answer is maybe. uh because it uh you do have to have a reason and there are a lot of reasons why the impact on the system from Panama City north could be greater than the impact on the system from greater Panama
City for example you have to bring the flow uh I'm thinking primarily of uh sewage right now but the sewer has to go travel 5 six miles to get to the treatment plants and that is uh infra transmission infrastructure that's not uh part of downtown Panamos or the downtown proper. So that is an additional cost probably lift stations are more expensive. There's a lot of reasons why the impact the cost of the impact would be greater in Panama City North, but it has to be u something that has been thought through and uh some rational basis for treating uh the system as two different service areas. Uh traditionally a utility system is not separated by service areas. Everything is treated the same. same cost for treatment capacity, same cost for lines. Uh but it is possible to separate it. It has not been done that way. The study was, you know, treated everything as one system, but it is possible to break out and treat Panama City North differently. There would be a cost. I don't know what the cost is, but it would it would take time. uh it's not something that there's the math has already been done and the analysis has been done and it just wasn't prepared that way. That analysis separating the system hasn't been done. Another point may be that you need to save money for a future uh wastewater treatment plant in Panama City North. That's different than what you would be doing for downtown uh Panama City. So, it's
not uh we I can't say that uh a 25% u increase of the impact fee in Panama City proper as opposed to 100% is there's a rational basis that Raph Telus who who is our rate consultant they they can't sign off on it because they don't know that might be right but they'd have to do um an analysis. Did we have an estimate, Mr. Jones, on what that study might cost or even a slight range? Um, as it would be an entirely new study, um, these run between, and this is rough order of magnitude, between 40 and 60,000 depending on complexity. Um, treating the service areas as two different areas would add some complexity to this. Thank you, Mr. Mayor. Yes, this is a public hearing. If you wish to speak about item 6A, please come forward. Yes, sir. Good evening. W 614 Map Avenue City. Uh I thought the city was already had all these things in order planning. North. North ain't just thought about. North has been out there for over 25 years. Got sewer already out there behind the prison. Got lift got in manholes already set. Put lift stations in. Uh, I know that. I know we got to grow and and city Ben knows that. It ain't just It just not came
up. Just not came up. These lines are already ran. Water is already ran. Don't have to run it. Might have been out there so long. I doubt it have anything destroyed. it. Uh but I just said that we are still on that wire that we can take folks that's not tied in the city sewer and we don't get the taxes for them. That's how we about lost. That's why that's why the beach bop took Panama City over cuz we said sit down didn't do nothing. We could be a better city than what we are today. But I just sat there did not do anything. We're still not doing anything. It's good. The county's getting a good break. They getting your tax money where you don't have to where y'all don't want to put folks in that tithe onto the city line. Make them a part of the city of Peno City. It helped to build streets. My street, I can tell you my street hadn't been paid in over 20 close to 30 years that hadn't been paid. I know y'all going to get ready to tear it out, but those who are supposed to been dead every 10 years, every commissioner was supposed to make get
there in their district and get where they want to have a street paved in their district. It's had my whole happen might happen somewhere else but it hadn't happened around my house. I got a pretty good street but still the job is not being done. Yes, sir. Thank you. Anyone else on item 6A? [Applause] Good evening. Good evening. Derek Thomas, 1100 West 10th Street. Um, I feel that the uh the rates are not being passed along evenly. The like hooking up water to 19th Street, which used to be a wetland area, that's going to cost money going into a residential neighborhood that's already there that already has the plumbing, is not going to require as much money. So to charge everybody the same rate in order to financially subsidize large housing projects which are causing uh the actual problem with the infrastructure and adding a single family house in a residential neighborhood doesn't really have that same impact. So to charge everybody the same across the board, I think that's not right. It's not just Penwell City North and the main part of the city. It's new developments as opposed to adding on to existing um infrastructure. Thank you. Anyone else on item 6A? Seeing no more comments, closing public comments. I'll entertain a motion. A motion that we approve and I would like to discuss the memorandum that I provided. We have a second. I'll second for discussion. Okay. So uh I had provided this memorandum. I hope that you all had time to digest it. But the basic idea was is that we raise the rates but that we also make it
to where people can pay on the the raised rate over time. Uh depending on who that customer is, whether they're a new build or whether they're an older home. uh new bill, they would pay what they currently pay today and then uh they would be able to pay monthly on the remainder amount. The the uh existing older homes they would be able to pay over the course of many or four years or so the uh the rate uh that would be just be divided by that many months. So, it allows for uh two different scenarios where people would be coming onto the city's uh water and sewer systems and um not necessarily hit them with a large bill. So, any thoughts on the memo? The only um the only comment I had on that one was how do we prevent a builder from basically just passing it on as a surprise to the person that purchases the house? So I would suggest that in order to get usually you don't establish a water count as one of the last things on a construction site because usually you need water. Um it's not necessarily the first thing you do, but it's also not one of the last things that you do. Uh so the builder would wind up paying several months on the account and therefore on the uh the uh impact fee but uh they would have to disclose that at the time of closing otherwise I mean we have a real estate agent on the board. I mean disclosure is part of that upfront. Mhm. Yes. So, uh, and in the event that that somebody has an older home, they're on a a septic tank, they're
on a well, and all of a sudden they're forced by the state to to come on to Panama City water and sewer, um, and then turn around and sell their home, they would also have to disclose that. So, it would just be part of the disclosures of of the home that, hey, this is uh this is something that you're buying into. There's there's actually a section in a contract that allows for any assessments which I'll call this can either be paid at closing or paid after and the buyer picks them up. So that would be written into the it was a check box on the contract. So that be part of I kind of have an overarching question like does everybody we we like walked out last meeting with like four like mine was like hey let's find a program set up for ship funds specifically for this specific piece. I didn't see that in this. I guess there's this this other component that's here. There were four things that we walked out of last meeting of saying like, hey, alongside this policy decision, having these programs available um if I recall last time and um and I I I'm not really seeing those alongside this. Is that Did I miss something? I just want to make sure I didn't miss something cuz I kind of I kind of thought we kind of hit pause because we had these like four action items to come back with alongside this. I know you guys have had meetings so maybe they weren't relevant. So I just love to hear I think I I have a question for Deon the we talked about the 25% maybe and then going to 50 and 100. Can we do that if we do it to everybody in in Panama not separate the two? Yes. Okay. Um, and so what I think in my conversation with uh one of members of the homebuilders association, their angst, if you will, is it just here it is surprise. And we got to figure that out. But they're okay with it, but just as it all comes up,
can we can we parcel it out? And I think the 25 and 50 and go to 25% today, 50% next year, and and 100% the following year after that. And that's there's 25% today. That's all you're going to face. Is that in this this I'm bring as an example as my conversation with him. And that way you wouldn't need any of the disclosures or any of the extra money because it's paid the develop whoever's building the house pulling the permit they're paying that right now. So so I would say that if if support is contingent upon programs for assistance being provided alongside this then then we should have that kind of settled. Um, so you cuz that's what happened last time. Like I walked in with like one thing and I'm like, "Hey, if we do this, like I'm I'm good." But then there were like multiple other things that were with that and then so we kind of stepped back. But I also didn't have conversations with the builder association afterwards. I didn't have those. So if there's if it's resolved then that's fine. If it's not then I'd like us to resolve it or have a mapped plan to resolving it in which it comes back to the commission at a set date before these things get implemented. Okay. So, so that's another way that this could work. From my perspective, after my conversation with them, they're okay with that tiered system. Yeah. But Jonathan, did you get back in touch with them after our conversation about, you know, Well, I I didn't get any really feedback that there was an issue with it until late this afternoon, that the whole tiered approach. So, what But here's the thing. So, I'm I think I agree with you, Commissioner Hughes. Let's just do the tiered approach for everybody. But I would say potentially let's drag it out even more. Let's say 50% for like the next year and a half even maybe all the way into 2027 and then you know and then maybe up to 100% after that. I I you know I wish there was a way to only do it for Panama City proper and and not you know and go full speed for Panama City North but
again absent some some reason to differentiate or doing a whole another study and I don't think we want to spend 60 to 80k for that. So I I would be willing if you're if you guys would support that even maybe dragging it out a little bit longer since we're doing it for everybody to to further help them out rather than having four different iterations. We could just consider having two and then maybe putting a longer period in between them just as another option. Josh, I have a question. Yeah. I don't remember that part when we were talking about it. I remember the the extra help from the home when the house mind stuff. Yeah. So, yeah. So um yes that that program and someone correct me if I'm wrong but those options are already there if you meet certain income that it's already there and we are working to provide I guess better appearance on not appearance is the right word but just more visibility on the website but that already exists you know like utility type assistance down payment assistance all of that stuff. Go ahead Mr. Jones. Yes. So, our current uh local housing action plan uh does include uh utility assistance with that includes uh deposit assistance whether that's power, water, uh sewer um or um or or anything else with the exception of like internet or or things like that. So, let me be clear what I'm looking for that does not exist today. A a very clear path that a builder because all the guys that were here last time, those are all small builders. they're building for one homeowner. Like that's it. They're not going out and building a 100 homes or anything else like that. If they don't know about it, we're obviously not communicating it. So someplace clearly on the website, how much money are we allocating to that program? That's the other thing. I don't want to like get into it and then all of a sudden we've got, you know, 50 bucks designated to the program. I want to understand like hey there's this much allocated to this specific program for utility assistance and offsetting these impacts for affordable housing because what we are doing right now if we do not
have that clearly advertised and clearly notated we are increasing the cost of affordable housing in the city as as long as the the builder has has a buyer that qualifies I don't see any issue with that. I think that's where it gets a little tricky is in order to access those ship funds. Um, if they've got a buyer that that qualifies, it's no issue. But I'm happy to under the current program parameters, but I'm also looking for price point incentives. Like if somebody's building a home in a certain amount of price point, like I'm looking for something that says, "Hey, you don't have to pay utility fee." Or, "Hey, we we offset this utility fee because you're building in this exact price point." If that makes sense. So, what you're suggesting may be a new incentive. Mhm. Because what is existing has uh program rules that we have to follow for the existing program. So what I'm hearing is is an incentive that we want to create perhaps. Um I'm happy to bring that back as uh it's I believe it would still fit under our util like our down payment assistance and deposit assistance. So I I'll read back through the LHAP and then I can gladly provide Mr. Hayes a uh a policy recommendation. uh the overarching the way to create a mechanism that that helps expedite the affordable housing is by just focusing on price point. And so that that includes smaller lot sizes. It could be smaller homes. Um it could be these kind of incentive programs that help reduce that overall cost. Gifting land like th all of those things work together to creating a a runway of affordable homes that people can afford to buy. Um, you know, that that's that's the piece. Yes, I understand we have income qualified applicants that come in through our program, but I'm looking for things that we can equip our builders to build the type housing stock that our people need and and that's the that's the what I'm specifically focused on. And I agree,
but what you got to get past the impact fee first before those incentives show up. So to say we'll we'll give you 50% off to say the builders and if they're building in an affordable housing and you build in this price point and I agree price point is very important and um uh in a certain you know certain uh size house now now you're hitting you're getting a family in there. We'll give you there's some incentives that you can apply for but you got to get so you're you're helping on the front end by the 50%. and then they're getting help because their buyer qualifies or I don't or is it they just get that because they're building an affordable area? I don't know. So, I think both work. Yours is a step two, I think, to get we got to have step one first to get to that point cuz they're getting a break up front under under this idea of 50 and 100 if you extend it out. Right. So, back to step one. If we stretch it out and stretch it out, we'll be within a year of our next mandated 5year study and having to raise it again. That would be 2030 because we did it in 2025. So, just as a point of clarification, it's not it's it's not mandated, but it is recommended. I mean, we haven't touched these fees in 20 years, and so we wouldn't be at the point where we're ripping the band-aid, if you will, to the degree we are today. So, we have some option as to whether we looked at these every 5 years as as law associations recommend, we this would be an incremental increase instead of so dramatic as it is today. So just from a mathematical standpoint, if we go with what I have presented here, there's no real reason to step it out and say, well, we're going to do 50% this time and then 100% later. Because what it allows for is it allows for the builder to pay what they're currently paying now and then anything above that would they would be able to pay on it monthly. So, but the idea is is that the house would be sold by a certain point in time in the future. And so really all they're saving is I mean it's very it's kind of nominal. So it's a it's a problem
and there's like four proposed solutions here to it. I mean that's what I got last time. I'm okay. And I think that we're at that same spot. You're at a tiered approach. You're at divided up over the the bill. I'm at creating Senate programs. Allan's quiet and uh and Janice is just trying to figure out how do we navigate through that to get to get passed on the on the lake. That's kind of what I'm getting the same thing we realize. For the purposes of deliberation, for the purpose of deliberation, just know that impact fees are paid prior to the CO being issued. So, if we allow people to make payments, I mean, that's we're going to have to change the system uh in order to adopt that because we we do require impact fees to be paid prior to the CO being issued. Got to be paid up front. Yes, sir. Okay. Stretch stretching it out 25% 50%. Doesn't that put us in the same situation? No. He's paying no it's about 25% of the proposed fees. So we would we would gradually increase it. Yeah. When we say the the either when we say the 25 over four years or the 50% and the 100% as commissioner Hughes suggested that's 50% of the increase. So it would be about $600 and then you know I think 2027 it would then be the 100%. Yes ma'am. they would pay 100% of the impact fees at only a 50% increase effective 90 days from now and then whatever date we pick down the future it would be the 100%. So and Josh from there there's your incentive package that comes in for the for the home built for the buyer of that home builder. So if they're in that if they're in that area, I recognize you go ahead. I've been quiet. Uh when we met with the BBIA, Jonathan and I, they were in favor of a sort of a tiered approach, which is similar to what you're mentioning. I like the flexibility of the plans. My worry is there's a cost to maintain a plan. What happens if they stop paying for it? Someone's going to get surprised by it. even though there
is a disclosure, someone's going to show up furious with us saying, "I can't afford this $1,000 water bill or whatever it might be, $500 water bill, including the impact fees." And so, I'm more more in favor of the of a tiered approach over the course of a few years. Um, I think going to your point that we can use the BBIA and their resource and their network and every quarter be sending them an email of our incentives. I've already reached out to CPAR. I want to be going to CAPAR every quarter talking about CRA districts and what we have. We should be going to these networks constantly. They are our they're the group that spreads the word on things and so uh we should be utilizing them. That's what they're there for. So I proposed a tiered payment option. Tiered payment. Yes. I think what he's proposing is a tiered roll out. Correct. It's a tiered payment. Yes. Okay. Tell me what's tiered about it. you have two different you have the new build and then you have the existing older homes actual payments and so when you have somebody who and this is going to start happening a lot more frequently um as people's wells and their septic tanks are um having to be reinspected or fail uh if they're near Panama City water and especially if they're near the coast uh they're going the state will force them to come onto our water And when that happens, it is going to be a surprise and they're going to be very upset with us. We've already had one one gentleman come and he was very upset with us and I mean there's not a whole lot we could do about it, but um I'm trying to solve for that as well. Any idea the cost? My hang-up is the the worry of the cost to run the program and and the pay ongoing payments there from staff. What's the what's the temperature of a payment plan? Jan sent me an email. Can you please elaborate? Yeah. Um I believe Charlotte sent the sent the
um email to you about um her interpretation of um making installment payments. Um our our uh system is set up to make installment payments um by a systematic um with a systematic approach. So, anything that varies outside of that systematic approach is going to is going to entertain a manual process. You enter manual processes, then you enter human error factors into the into the game. Um so that was her main um concern is that anything outside of the installment payment plan would it would um could upset the balance of you know the the system the human interaction with the system errors we'd have to do you you'd have be relying on a human to do the math instead of the system you know all those little other cities doing little things that can go wrong doing Well, there's that. Is doing it well, but I mean, there are other places that do this. Yes. Unlike not paying your water bill, we can't shut it off. They haven't. If they don't pay, they're still living in their house. The impact the impact is gone and they've already connected. So, my concern there is if they don't pay, what's what's the consequence? You're not going to kick them out of your house. Um, that would be my concern about that. Well, having just gone through a construction project, you're shaking every pillow to get every penny and um it's uh it's pretty tough. And so having to know that you got more money is a concern, but it works because it helps it helps move it out. Um not all up front. But we got to remember the person building the house, the builder, they're the ones that are pulling this permit. It's not the owner. It's not the the ultimate, you know,
even if now an owner can pull their own permit and build a house for themselves one time a year, but um in this particular case, it's going to be primarily a builder pulling it for somebody else and paying it. So, they're going to pay some and then if they aren't, are they going to pay some and be done? Uh, one thing I'll add and and you know, I know Mayor Branch was in the meeting and I know Commissioner Hughes had a conversation, but uh, as well as again, Miss Roush, city engineer. Um, but I would I would describe our interaction with BBIA as that they um, yes, they would love things to still be this, you know, as much as they were 20 years ago. They understand that it costs more to build a house today than it did 20 years ago. Um, they uh, understand, uh, the need of this. they understand the difference between this and the transportation impact fees. Um, you know, because we can still go the route of requiring for a larger development, you know, a transportation study, a traffic study and and and put that as part of, uh, you know, the DO or the DA or something like this. So, um, you know, I don't I don't want to speak all by myself, but Mayor Branch, I think that's what what what they communicated back to us and they they would appreciate anything that we could do. Y and that's when I said I was willing to to suggest a tiered approach. Yeah. My worry I was going to buy my first house or second house and and you're so excited. You're like, I'm going to get a rug for this area and you're going to you have all these things you're doing and you're working with your wife or your spouse and then you get hit with a giant bill and you're like, oh no new rug. Uh and welcome to Panama City. Here's a giant bill. Um and so I'm I'm in favor of I think the flexibility of the plans is really creative, but I'm in favor of the tiered approach. I'm in favor of this tracking with CPI as I mentioned before super price index and that way we don't have these ongoing battles with these large adjustments uh in 10 years the next commission you know 10 years goes we got to jump the rates
up again and you create these battles every year every 10 years or 20 years you know so I I think the only thing I would say is that I mean and I understand that the the the you know the potential increase in cost and pricing surprise but you know if if they're not paying it then the your existing utility account holders are paying it. So someone's going to pay this. The question is is it new development in the future or is it folks in the city right now that are paying a water bill each and every month? Yeah, I think you hear about our turn none of us are excited to talk about this this at all. We're all like, "Oh gosh." Um I'm in favor of like Robbiey's approach the 2550 100%. I think if we do have people that are coming to us with they're coming out to the system with existing houses, well issues and they're coming to us, let's address that when that happens and and potentially might address those as they come differently. So I just want to be just want to be clear on the dates, Commissioner Hughes. So obviously 25% only this is for the whole city. We're not splitting them up. um at the 90-day mark, February 16th, uh January 1st of 2026, it'll go to 50% and then January 1st of 2027 to 100%. Is that is that the understanding? I just want to make sure that we're talking the same dates. February 2026, January 2027. Well, I mean, you're skipping over 2026. Did you mean to skip over I'm sorry. You're right. 2027. So, you're correct. I'm still stuck in 2025. Yeah. So, all right. Yes. February 16th, which is 90 days from today, it can't be even if y'all adopted everything, it cannot be before that. That's 90 days. That would be 25% of the of the increase. And then January 1st of 2027, it would be 50. And then January 1 of 2028, it would be the 100%. Is that your intention? Yes, sir. Okay. Thank you, sir. I just wanted to clarify that. And that would be for the entire city of Panama City. Yes,
sir. Okay. And I'd make a motion to that effect. We have a motion on the table. Do we need to amend the motion? Who had the second? Oh, we have a motion. Was you had you had the second? Yeah, you had That's right. I had a second to uh motion was to just approve. So, um what is it that we're trying to do here? Would you like me to rest it? I'm happy to restate it. So, it's um we're moving forward. Uh we are not trying to differentiate between Panama City North or Panama City proper in order to avoid another study or to split the city between. So this applies to everything in all of the city of Panama City. Um so on February 16th of 2026, which is 90 days from today, only 25% of the increase will be effective and that's all they will owe. January 1st of 2027, 50% of the increase will then be effective and that's all they will owe. And then January 1 of 2028, it will then go to 100% the number that you have before you now. And that was what will be effective for everyone with again no differentiation between Panama City North or Panama City Proper. Yeah. So I I didn't like the differentiation there, but yeah, I'll amend my motion to reflect what you've just said and I'll second that. Okay. Well, I think for a procedural standpoint, Lucas has the second. I thought No, Robbie second. Second. Oh, my apologies. My apologies. It's been a It's been a minute. Okay. So, Robbie's in favor of that, I'm guessing. Any any discussion related to the tiered approach? I'd like to uh offer some words of that as far as uh the ordinance because I think it'd be appropriate to put it in the ordinance. So the ordinance would read under that approach. Might I suggest like we did earlier this year that we table this issue to city manager. Give you and your team time to square it away or are you ready to go right now? You love that idea earlier this
year. I just want to remind you of that. He loves doing it on the fly though. He loves I'm just If you needed a few minutes to work with your team to circle it back since it's an ordinance change. Up to you, sir. I'm happy uh to delay, but I still want to read what I've written here. So, um, just real quick, so right now the water impact fee is $465. It's being increased to $1,350. And subject to my math being corrected, u, it would read, "The water impact fee shall be determined by multiplying the total ERC value for water by 1,350." That's exactly what it reads. Then I would add the increase will be phased in as follows. $686 water impact fee commencing February 16th, 2026. $97 water impact fee on January 1, 2027. and then 1,350 water impact fee on January 1, 2028. On the sewer uh impact wastewater impact fee, the language is u as written, the water impact fee shall be determined by multiplying the total ERC value for wastewater by 1,250. That's been stricken. It's now 1,610. Uh and so the new language is the increase will be phased in as follows. It would be $1,340 sewer uh wastewater impact fee as of February 16th, 2026. $1,430 wastewater impact fee commencing January 1, 2027. and then 1,610 wastewater
impact fee commencing March 1, 2029. Happy to um have it tabled and we can bring it back so you can actually read it rather than just hearing me verbalize it. Whatever you'd like to do. I mean, if we're good, I'm not trying to delay it. I just Forward. We got a first and a second. Any discussion? Call. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. And I will work on a policy for impact PE impact feed um tiered approach for people impacted by mand mandated hookups to the water and sewer. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Okay. I'd like to read the title. Ordinance number 3274 and ordinance amending Ordinance 1914 and Ordinance 2617 revising chapter 23 utilities of the municipal code. Amending division 2 rates and charges of article 2 water. Amending division 3 rates and charges of article 3 sewers and sewage disposal. Providing for increased connection fees for water and wastewater. Providing that this ordinance shall be codified. providing that all ordinances in conflict be repealed and providing for an effective date. Item 6B was removed. Item 6 C is the second and final of two public hearings on ordinance 3285, an ordinance amending chapter 102, administrative processes, article 2, development review procedures, section 102-37, final s inspection and acceptance. Chapter 110, supplemental standards section 1110-1, determination of density. Chapter 111, Subdivision of Land. Chapter 116, Definitions of the Unified Land Development Code. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Uh same reading as the last
uh and first reading. Um staff recommendation to the director of development services that the city commission conduct the second and final public hearing and approve the ordinance. Mr. Mayor, this is the public hearing. If you wish to speak about item 6C, please come to the podium. Good evening. Even Sarah Thomas, 1100 West 10th Street. I think the uh the the final site um preparation where you you dig a hole and put water in it for 2 weeks or something. That shouldn't be the only thing that you're using for that. you should look at how the uh the land has been used over time, whether it's the wet season or the dry season might have an effect on that. And when you're increasing the density, you're getting rid of all the trees in the residential neighborhood. So, I don't like that. Thank you. Anyone else on item 6 C? Seeing none closing public comments, I entertain a motion. No motion for discussion. Do I have a second? I'll second discussion. Um I I had sent staff providing an appeals process to this um to this state mandate. Um one of the things that I've experienced is anytime that we give blanket um ability to the team like we need to have a process in which our citizens can come if they disagree with the decision. And so this is um this one would no leave no no other recourse other than just accept the way that it is. And you know, hey, you got a 800 unit development next door to your property. Guess what? You know, staff made the decision. There's no formal appeals process to we still may not be able to change that decision. It may be something we're legally required to do. Um but the language that I
provided the team was please provide this appeals process. Any person agreved by the decision of an administrative authority may appeal to the city commission within 30 days of the decision. The commission shall review uh shall be the commission review shall be limited to whether or not the plat or replat complies with the specific statute that's listed here in this report and applicable city regulations. So that was really the component. I I would I also just like to see what plats are getting approved as well. like like a monthly update process something because these are big decisions. These are not like this is not like a little tiny thing that's happening. I mean this is like this is like Panama City North kind of decisions. So I mean I I want to be informed of what's going on and I want there to be a process that our citizens can come and at least air um their concern if needed. I like that. Why are we changing what things are called? The planning board is now going to be a committee. We're going to be Everybody knows it's a planning board. Everybody knows we're we're the commission. Um why are we going backwards and getting back with people? We're giving from 5 days to 7 days. Um you might want to answer that. Michael Dam. Yeah. Come on down. I just it it we might confuse people is what I'm asking. Michael Fuller, director of development services. So the TRC is a the staff um made up of city staff people um and it's not replacing the planning board. Planning board is still going to be the planning board. The name Yeah. You're you're calling it committee instead of the planning board. That's because the current method is to take a preliminary plaque to the planning board. Uh this would change it
to that it's a staff level determination. Okay. Uh the staff is the PRC that never goes through the plan. Never goes through the plan. It never comes to us. Yeah. And that's a statute now, right? That is a stat that is Senate Bill 784. I mean, we have to follow it. Well, until you're caught until you're think, Josh, it requires us to put to put the authority into somebody else's hands, right? But I think what you're getting at is in doing so, we want that person, if it's Jonathan or one of you to uh to come back to us and say, "Hey, this is what's in front of me. What do y'all think about it?" Right? That's ultimately and that's a good process and just a process that our citizens like if they feel agrieved by a decision, they can come and petition us. We have had previous accounts where there is not in our land development code or regulations that allows for that and this is an opportunity for us to kind of create that built into this. Yes, we're required to do this and there's nothing we can do to stop this from happening. But we can add further rules on ourselves that require additional steps. Yes, that's all I'm because they didn't spell out exactly how it has to happen. They just want us to change who can sign the plat over to somebody else. Whether it's Jonathan, whether it's Michael or or what have you. Right. So, Michael, today planning, you're going to bring a preliminary fat flat to the planning board. They're going to look at it, approve it, a vote on it, bring it us, we approve it, sign it. Mhm. That's correct. But now, you're going to have it. Mhm. And who is the who is the TRC? You say staff. Who's Who is that? It's made up of city engineer, planning, uh, fire department, um, uh, utilities. It's the people that review site plans and plats. Okay. And everybody, that's not new. That's not new. They already exist, right? But those
are the only people that are going to be looking at it with him. And y'all make that decision and then you sign it or you give it to Jonathan. He signs it. Yes. The statute says that now it has to be a a administrative official. um to that signs off on it. And in this case, it would be the city manager. Put a lot of onus on hiring the right city manager. Mhm. And creating this process allows us to keep a prize. Not that I think Jonathan wants to go and do something that's that's that's against against the board, but we don't I mean, heaven forbid Jonathan's not in that position, you know, 10 years from now, 5 years from now, whatever it is, 100 years from now, Jonathan, that you say choose to to live that long. So, but I I I would feel better with the with the appeals process defined as well as a reporting process that allows us to at least have view of what's actually, you know, um being approved. So, I what I would request is I would do two separate votes. I would direct staff to bring back it sounds like an amendment to to the ordinance to specifically at commission's direction spell out the appeals process. Um and uh and then second move forward with this, but we'll move forward as quick as possible. When do you think you could have that provision back? We should be able to have it back the next December meeting. Okay. It doesn't have to go through the planning board. Um it might have to be the January meeting. Yeah. Yeah. I'll defer to our city attorney. There is that is an excellent approach. Uh, another approach would be to provide instruction to include the appeal process and then just have and then have another final hearing in December and then adopt the the ordinance with the appeal process. I like that. Okay. I I'll make a motion
to to approve this. So, we have we have the motion on the floor. Motion retracted for discussion. for um approval of this of this ordinance with the addition of an appeals process um to be brought back forth. And I thought we were deferring or deferred. Yeah, technically you're not approving the ordinance. You're signaling you'll approve it if there's an appeal process that you like, but we're actually deferring this hearing till the next meeting and bring back the appeal process. Motion to defer till our next meeting. um with a appeals process brought forth back into this ordinance. Okay, there you have a second. I'll second that. Any discussion? Please call the RO. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. I' uh I'll read the title again and uh I know I read it the first time but it has not been adopted but this will just be another reading of the title. An ordinance of the city commission of the city of Panama City, Florida, a mending. Chapter 102, administrative processes, article 2, development review procedures, section 102-37, final site inspection acceptance. Chapter 110, supplemental standards. Um, acceptance determination of density. Chapter 111, subdivision of land. Chapter 116 definitions of unified land development code relating to the subdivision combining and planting of land providing for modifications a repealing clause severability codification and correction of scrier's errors and providing an effective date. Item 6D is the second and final of two public hearings on ordinance 3288, an ordinance amending chapter 106 environmental protection section 106-12, developer storm
water and erosion control plan and chapter 109 infrastructure and public improvement section 109-43 infrastructure and public improvements of the unified land development code. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet as this is the second and final reading. staff recommendation through the director of development services is uh recommends the city commission conduct the second and final public hearing uh and approve the ordinance. I'll just point out that city engineer Stacy Rouse is here if there's any additional questions. Uh and the question was asked and just to be reminded uh by one of the elected officials that yes, this would align our u our policy and our uldc with uh very similar to what the county in Panama City Beach has. Mr. Mayor. Yes. You'd like to speak about item 6D, please come to the podium. Yes, sir. Derek Thomas, 1100 West Street. Um, currently the city doesn't have a plan to address the uh the the drainage issues in neighborhoods. If an individual property owner can come in and flood the neighborhood and change the drainage for the entire neighborhood, that's a problem. And I don't see anything in this um amendment that's going to fix that. Uh when you come in and build a retention pond in somebody's backyard and block the flow of water to the drain, that has an effect on everybody in the neighborhood. if you don't have to file permits if you're connected with the right families or you can go to the EPA and say, "Hey, this was declared a wetland, but now I want it changed to a marsh land and I want to go in there and fill it in." You wouldn't have been allowed to do that. If it was a protected wetland, but if you can just change that, then that's not working. If your plan as a city is to allow people to flood other people's property, I don't think that that's respectful to the people that live here. And I would like to see something
done to prevent that in the future if you can't do it through code enforcement because some people the code enforcement you file a complaint and it's not even recorded with them if you file it in writing and it's up to the code enforcement office who they enforce the codes on. I I think that that if you did in put in place a code enforcement ordinance that says it's a a violation to flood other people's property that might have an effect on it. I know it's a violation of civil law to do that, but then you have to go to court, spend years, spend tens of thousands of dollars fighting it. I don't think that that's appropriate to put that on the back of somebody living on a fixed income, a retiree living in an older home. I don't think that those people should be forced out of their homes and order to change the neighborhood into high density or whatever you want to change it into. I think you should protect R1 neighborhoods. You should protect the people's houses that are currently there. And you should stop people from destroying other people's property. And I don't see how you're going to manage to do that with the changes you're making in this ordinance, but I think you should do that. Thank you. Thank you. Anyone else on item 6D? Seeing none, closing public comments. I'll entertain a motion. Oh, yes, sir. Go ahead. Yes, sir. W 614 May Avenue. I just wanted this uh have anything to do with the letters that we that was sent out to the to the citizens of Panimo City about their water pipes. Yes, sir. All right. But I see you in next meeting or we going to talk about it. I got a letter, too. Yes, sir. Anyone else on item 16? Closing public comments. I'll entertain a motion. Motion to approve. Second. Any discussion? Mr. Mayor, I'll just add it's already illegal to to make
modifications to your property to create adverse off-site impacts to other people's property. So, we don't need to add that to this. So, please please do not um Thank you. Does this get rid of the or does this have uh enforced the one-year requirement for um for the geotech? For the geotech? Yeah, I think it needs to be out more. Okay. I'm getting a head nod. Yes. So, can can I I have a question along that same piece and the requirements on the back side of the road um rather than just built to city standards. Can we ask a question? Mr. Mayor, can M sounds like we sounds like we've got engineers talking to us. So, I like I had the same thing happen over the weekend. So, so, so Stacy, I'm going to try to break this down into a way that name and title for the public. Thank you. Stacy Ralph, city engineer. So, I'm not going to pretend that I understand exactly what I'm going to ask you, but um what I do understand is there's a way that the county calculates for freeboard and there's a way that the city is calculating for freeboard. And it is possible that when they start road construction that the water table could be different than when they finish road construction. Is that correct? And so it could lead to fully compliant on the front side but not compliant on the back side. Is that is that correct? Am I understanding? And I'm asking question as elementary as I can because I don't fully understand even what the question I was being asked. Yes. So that's freeboard and and the seasonal high water table for the road are two separate things. Freeboard is the elevation in of the water in your pond when it gets to essentially its max modeled amount and then the top of the burm. Okay. So, so maybe I'm asking the road questions, but but I think I know what you're saying is so essentially is if you have an undeveloped property, you know, a completely green site, trees and everything, you go out there and you do a geotech on it and you know, they'll they'll tell you where
the seasonal high water table is at that time. But whenever you get rid of all of the trees, you add a bunch of homes, you start putting ponds, the water table can shift. Um, part of engineering design is a factor of safety. And whenever you're going to take a green site and completely develop it, you're obviously going to use a higher factor of safety than you would if you're, you know, adding, you know, a minimal amount of impervious surface. So, in that, we're relying on the engineers to use good judgment to know, you know, well, I'm going to be putting a pond right next to this road. The water table's going to be higher in this area. I need to account for that. and we're not really seeing that happening and that's one of the reasons why this ordinance came about. And and is that the difference between the county and the city's ordinance? Um the I I don't know of anything in the county ordinance that is any different than that. I know that the county calculates the distance from the bottom of the subgrade and we're calculating from the bottom of the base. So I think the county says 2 foot from the bottom of the subgrade and the subgrade's 12 in. So where ours says 3T from the bottom of the base, it's actually the same number. It's just different. Okay. A different verb. That sounds like the question I'm asking. And I think that's where there's some confusion. So I don't know how like that that is clear. And we're not saying that you absolutely cannot do it. And I think I had had this conversation with a couple of you guys about we're not saying it's an absolute no rejected you have no chance of building. It's a it needs to go through the proper channels and I think it needs to come before you guys because in reality when you do raise that water table below a road you are impacting the life of that road. So it's an ongoing financial responsibility that the city is taking on. And I think that you guys need to know when that's happening because a few of you have those roads in your wards and you
know how difficult that can be for the citizens. So I just think that it needs to be brought to you guys cuz I don't think that's a decision we should we should really be making when it's a financial long-term decision. Okay. So so it is possible that it could be different but it's going to have to go through us. Yeah, absolutely. Okay. All right. Thank you. That I think that answered my question. Freeboard's my favorite women song. start singing. So heard on the roads done and and I and I remember you saying the other day you'll have it to our standard when it's our standard but afterwards now you're requiring four items to be completed I guess before CO can be issued or whatever they issue for a road. Um what what's what type of expense is that increasing and what kind of time frame it you think that's going to put on the So currently we do it. Oh, you knew it. Yeah. So, currently that kind No, like right now we do that. We're asking the contractor to do that to prove to us. So, at this point, we say you need to build it to our standards for our us to accept it. And then they say, okay, here's the road. Take it from me. And you know, we don't have anything to say, okay, prove to me that it meets our standards. So we go out and we look at it and we say by looking at all these samples that it meets our standards. But I think that's also a a financial burden that we shouldn't be taking on. I think that's a financial burden of the person who is asking us to take this road. Is that asked upon contractors in other areas? Uh I'm I'm not sure if Well, so a lot of this stuff is stuff that they're already doing in building it. So the asphalt cores, they're already doing that throughout their project. So, we're just asking for that data because they don't provide that info to us. And then the only thing that I think is kind of maybe unusual or different or new would be the post construction groundwater
monitoring because you can't really do a geotech um right after construction and just say, "Yep, this is this is it." Because it's a brand new construction. So, you want to monitor it over time. So, we've done that in projects. We've monitored it over time, seen where the water table sits, and and you can make an accurate assumption based on on that. So, we're asking them to come back and do that same thing to tell us, is this road operating the way your engineer designed it to operate? If it doesn't, what happens? So, there are options. Um, there's different mechanisms we could do. we've there's also potential maybe a a if we're compensating for that road maybe there's a discussion there but um in reality what I'm hoping that happens is when they know that they have to prove it to us they don't you know shave it that close they they use that factor of safety and don't put that don't just like cross their fingers and hope that it passes because we don't we don't want something in the city that has that barely passed So, you're I'm going to build your road. Mhm. You want me to come back afterwards, put something in and monitor it, come on down the line, let's say two years down the road, it's not meeting your standard, and you're going to come tell me and I got to pay for it. Not. No, this would be immediately when you ask me to accept it. You would provide me all this data, say, "Hey, I'm ready." It's the same. So, but you said after the fact, you're monitoring the the water. Yeah. Right after it's built. So whenever they built it, whenever it's completed, they would monitor it, tell me what the water table is, and they would come back and say, "Hey, we have all this data. This is what we said it said it is." It's it's exactly what they do essentially for a a pond. When they submit us the asbuilt, so when you survey your pond, you know, you know whether or not your water cuz the water table where it's sitting is is a one of your design parameters. So we can tell whether or not it's operating the way it's supposed to
be. So that kind of stuff is done for ponds. It's done, you know, for water and sewer. They have to air pressure test. They have to do um flushing for the for the utility lines. There's all of this testing that we require on all this other expensive infrastructure, but not our roads, the stuff that people see every day and drive on every day. Yeah. This keeps them from taking on a a liability. That's true. But time and cost, I mean, you're doing it now. So, what's what's the kind of time frame that you're on this is on the city right now to do these things? So some some of the testing is already happening so it's not going to be any additional and it happens as they build the road. So that's really the only built into their cost already. Yeah. The only additional expense would probably be the monitoring wells depending on the length of the road. Um like I said we bought monitoring wells. They're reusable. Um, so Matt and I have installed them in quite a few places and you know it's we take about 2 weeks to look it over and I can tell you right now like that really wouldn't impact most developers because they build that road and they're not asking me for acceptance of the road immediately. Um, there's roads in some of the neighborhoods here that people are actually already living on those roads and they have not asked us to accept the roads yet. So I mean it's not like people are rushing which means it's still a private road and so on. Well so it's platted to us but we have not officially accepted it. So if there's a failure of that road before we accept it it's on them. It's on them in that development. Yeah. Which we do a full a visual inspection but this point all we have is a visual inspection which is not really going to tell us a whole lot about what's going on underneath. Any other questions? Good. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, ma'am. Any other discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 50. Nope. 6E. Oh, excuse me. Got to read it. Is
this ordinance 3288? 6 Delta. Yes. Yep. 3288. An ordinance of the city commission of Panama City, Florida, amending sections 106-12 and 109-43 of the Unified Land Development Code concerning developer storm water and erosion control plan and design standards repealing all ordinances and conflict here with providing for severability codification and providing an effective date. Item 6 C is the second and final of two public hearings on ordinance 3289, an ordinance amending section 104-2 mixeduse MU2 of the ULDC. Relevant background information and closing your packet as this is the second reading. Staff recommendation to the director of development services is that the city commission conduct the second and final public hearing and approve the ordinance. Mr. Mayor, yes, this is a public hearing. If you wish to speak about item 6E, please come forward. Anyone on 6E? Seeing none, I'll entertain a motion. Motion to approve. Second. Any discussion? Please call the roll. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Commissioner Hughes. Yes. Commissioner Lucas. Yes. Mayor Branch. Yes. Motion passes 50. Commission is adopted. Ordinance 3289, an ordinance of the city commission of the city of Panama City, Florida, amending the city's unified land development code, revising chapters 104 zoning districts, amending the bulk regulations and mixed use 2 zoning district as provided in section 104-31, repealing all ordinances in conflict herewith, providing for severability, providing for codification, and providing for an effective date. Item 6F is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3294, an ordinance amending section 102-40 conditional use permits or cups and section 104-66 gateway overlay of the unified land development code. As background information,
ordinance 3294 as proposed for the commission's consideration will amend section 102-40 conditional use permits in section 104-66 gateway overlay of the ULDC by allowing for certain conditional uses in the gateway overlay district. The proposed amendment will add vape shops and stores to the list of prohibited uses in the gateway overlay and will allow for several several currently prohibited uses such as bail bonds, pawn shops, bottle clubs, etc. to be allowed in the gateway overlay. This amendment provides for specific standards for conditional uses. This item was previously reviewed by the planning board in November 10th of 2025 and I assume was recommended for approval. Yep. Okay. Uh with staff concurrence, the following documents are enclosed. Staff analysis report and recommendation ordinance number 3294. Staff recommendation through the director of development services that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor. Yes. If you wish to speak about item 6F, please come to the podium. Anyone on 6F closing public comments? I would like to see storage facilities added to this list of the um to potentially get a sub uh the list for the bail bonds, pawn shops, bottle clubs. I I would if we're going to allow those things, then I would I would like to see us allow storage units as well. Okay. I would like to absolutely oppose that this like all of it. Like I mean I I think I think some of it is like like okay um I get it. We've got a ton of eight shops. Um fine. I mean like that's that piece. But a lot of these have been I'm just going to tell you guys they've been
helpful in creating more positive momentum in our corridors. And I I'm getting very nervous like a self-s storage unit. There is no auxiliary benefit to the community that's at. It's just a a land grab and it doesn't ever go away. Um there's no benefit other than just a building that just sits there um doing nothing except storing our junk. And you know, it's not bringing any like community true value to it. And these gateway overloads are part of of revitalizing the districts that that at least I feel like they're a helpful tool in and how we address, you know, blight and um and increase economic activity, not decrease it. So that's that's where I'm at. So, I I'm not I mean, I don't know where all this is coming from from all like all these different uses and things like that, but I'm like I'm like I'm looking more like a surgical knife, not like a giant hatchet to the gateway overlay. That's where I'm at. So, as I understand it, this would still uh these conditional uses still have to come before us for uh review. They're not automatic. They're not added to the gateway automatically. Correct. They There's a process. Yeah. Yeah. They go to the planning board. So, can we make them come to us? They need to come to us. I think they have to. You You are the bosses. So, yeah. They're going to the planning board. They need They're going to plan board, but they don't come to us currently the way this is written. This overlay is so big that they need to come to the commission. I I will tell you this and I think I think um the mayor said it best one or two meetings ago. Everything is a good idea and a bad idea at the same time. So, like like like there are a lot of places like like like I mean like I think of Steel Boys Bales Bonds like I I mean I think they're a great community partner. They've got an auxiliary use that's
alongside that. Awesome. Great. Um I think about Dan's Pawn Shop and um and Avery. Great. But I also think about things that I've seen happen on the beach and I've seen happen other areas where it's not a great experience for the community that's surrounding. And so I think it's very important if we're going to use like these things. I'm I'm all for like what you're saying now, whereas it's like, hey, we can still be surgical in our approach and how these things happen. Um versus, you know, this patch of yes, patch of no. Um but I I would be I would be very apprehensive to just start slashing these uses and leave it in the hands of just the planning board or some other uh some other scenario. So, so the reason I say storage is because I've had a couple of folks who have approached me various times in the past about uh storage in Ward 3, not actually on the road, but it's just close enough. Well, that's under the 400 ft, which I want to estimate why 400 ft off the road. So, for me, a lot of this is just it's not about the business, it's about the appearance. And so if there was a liner building, you know, if he could have self storage, if there was a liner building of some other use, uh, that sort of protected the corridor visually with the facade. Yeah. And it was in a whole another business, you know, if you're going to put something out. So to me, it's it's not about yucky businesses being near us. It's it's a visual appearance being near the road. And some of that is outlined in here. You know, the the conditional use would have to have a smaller sign attached to the building. no clustering of the same use of buildings over and over, you know, or the same businesses over and over again. Um, and so, yeah, this makes me nervous. Uh, and it's hard telling someone like, "No, we don't want your business." Um, but to me, you can still accomplish the goal of this by having a uh maybe playing with the footage off the road and saying you can have an entrance to this business, but you can't have visual road frontage usage or something like that or something some way to word that planning wise.
I don't really know. What if we included the architectural review board in looking at these items? I mean, that's how some communities do it where when we're talking more taste elements, um, they gets sent into the architecture review board, they they kind of weigh in as far as like, yeah, this works, but you like this is how it needs to needs to look. Storage unit's a great example. I had one person ask me about it and I think we worked through some some issues before is if the bottom's retail I mean what's vertical doesn't really affect anything you know from that standpoint. So, I think that there's probably a lot of ways to Yes. in certain instances, but I I'm very hesitant to just remove and then all of a sudden the next corporation I mean guys, this is what happens with gas stations and what's happened all across our city is like this is a good example of you get a hedge fund behind a certain certain thing and then all of a sudden you know what before you know it that's all you have in your entire city. And um so yeah um so it sounds like they need to do some massaging of this before they bring it back to I see. Yeah. And when you're when you're talking about what it looks like, let's say there's a brand new build on the 800 block of Harrison Avenue right now. There's two spots they're going to they've already rent in one under this. It looks the facade looks like it's brand new building. Mhm. but allow you now you're going to have um whatever is allowed to go in there on a on a um it has to be conditional use so we have to okay it but the architectural review board what would what purpose would they have there and I get why you're asking that because you're going to have an old dilapinated building and you want to come in maybe they have a saying what it looks like from the outside well some cities will require um gosh I've seen like that you're talking about climate control storage multi story they'll even put fake windows on it to make it look like it's not I'm a control storage and disguise parking garage and things like that and kind of push push the
the aesthetic element a little bit more. Um that's what I'm in favor of of seeing this could be born out of the conditional use request. So cuz each one of these individual types of businesses on top of every single location, it's going to be a little bit different. And so I think that that the probably one of the best ways for it is to have a condition if somebody wants a conditional use um v or variation. I don't know what we want to call that. Um uh for this a gateway overlay that they they put it forward to staff and then um it goes to the planning board. Then it comes to us. We can refer it to the architectural review board, have them do a report and then come back to us a second time. I I just that could take 90 days. I I but it's a conditional use. It's the time. Okay. But it's a conditional use on a gateway overlay. And every time you do it, you you set a precedent every time you do it, right? So it shouldn't be something that we do very fast. That's true. So, but yeah, I agree. Uh, Commissioner Street, I I don't like I don't like changing this, but um, you know, we have we have uh I think we do need a a lever here that is allows for some kind of flexibility. So So let me make sure I understand. So all the ones that we're removing from from uh from prohibited uses are all following underneath the conditional use. So there's nothing that's automatically granted, right, out of anything that we're removing? That is correct. bait shops in your ward they're automatically it sounds like you're saying bait shops which is funny you take away a bait shop this whole one day you'll understand so um you know and yeah and I mean I even think from from just from the vape shop owners perspective I mean I've had
several have reached out to me and said hey we're getting oversaturated in the market like is there a way that we can be distances between so this is a way of addressing that so I don't even I think there's going to be resistance to that. But I do think that if we can kind of identify how we get to the commission for the final approval and um and I like Brian's idea, maybe there's some referral process to the architectural review board or something like that, but it sounds like we need a little bit more work, maybe one more meeting. Mhm. Okay. So, I'll motion to to table this until uh next meeting and staff has an opportunity to take the feedback and um shape the final. Would you like to have another first reading at the next meeting and then if it if you think on your then it could come for adoption in January. The the only concern I have Mr. Zimmerman um that pushes it well into the new year and I know that we currently have um an agreement that we've been authorized to negotiate in the sale of a property on MLK Boulevard in W 2. Do you have any concern with the timeline that we are now proposing today to prevent the sale of that property as we're currently negotiating or selling? We are the old substation. Yeah. 920 MLK Boulevard, the old police substation. Okay. There there is what? There's a long due diligence period. Uh the uh buyer uh desires to relocate a bale bondsman um business to the site and um she would actually be moving hers I believe if I understand it correctly. Um I I don't I can't remember if it and I bet Miss Mcwain will tell us here in just a minute, but I believe it was 90 days maybe 120 days due diligence. So, it's possible uh that January would work, but uh we'll find out here momentarily. And the uh one of the unique factors here is that this bells
bonds is currently operating like 200 ft 300 ft from where she wants to move from. So, it's not an additional uh bells bonds. It's just that the uh the place she's chosen is on the gateway. You happen to see that, Miss McWay? Yeah. Okay. The the what the pause is is to determine if we could have the first reading today and then see where we are at in December. That was the path we were on. Um if if we don't have the first reading today and delay it until December, which is fine. It may or may not uh Miss Blue Brown would may need to ask for an extension of time. That's all. Or it might not meet her plans. Are we the seller? Yes. Extension of time. I believe we would. I hope we would if that solves the issue. Yes, sir. I just haven't. Yes, sir. The additional um concern is that the uh buyer has a timeline before she has to start a new lease and that's the first of the year and um she initially uh requested last July like 2024 and it took us uh almost a year to get to this point and we've approved a contract. So, we're putting this buyer in a parish position. But did we approve it subject to this this changing? No. This being updated? No. But that was that um we knew we were going through the process and that drove the length of time for the due diligence. Um apparently we're not going to find out exactly what what that time period is.
Ouch. How about Oh, February due diligence. Did you say February or January? Okay. So, if this were adopted, the first meeting in January, it would still be within the due diligence time period. February. Needs a little background music. 120 days with the effect of October. Okay. I believe it would still be in the due diligence period if we were to have another first reading in December and with adoption the first meeting in January. It's within 120 days. Okay. Cuz I feel like there's going to be enough this that's changed that it's not going to be it would be too much to have stay on the first reading. Yep. Potentially. Yes. We're good. If it's 120, I thought it was 90 days, which would give me concern. If it's 120, we're I concur. We're good. All right. So, we have a first and a second, correct? To we have a we have a motion to table. I don't think we got a second. Do I need to change? We need change. Any discussion? Just declare. So, we'll bring it back December 16th for the revised first reading and then the first meeting in January would be the second reading. Okay. Please. Assuming it's correct in the 16th. We'll get it right, sir. I promise. Please call the RO. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 50. Item 6G is consideration to conduct a first reading and public hearing on ordinance 3297 that adopts the Panama City Community Redevelopment Agency plan amendments and comprehensive updates. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation through the city manager's office is that the commission conduct a first reading and public hearing on ordinance 3297 that adopts the Panama City Community Redevelopment Plan,
amendments, and comprehensive updates. Mr. Mayor, this is a public hearing. If you wish to speak about item 6G, please come to the podium. Oh, okay. Thank you. Anyone on 6G? Closing public comments. Read it. Will there be any testimony? No, no, no. Read the uh first reading for six uh G's. Thank you. Ordinance number 3297, first reading. An ordinance of City of Panama City, Florida adopting the amended and updated Panama City Community Redevelopment Plan. Providing for expansion of boundaries of redevelopment areas, providing for a community redevelopment plan amendments, providing for extension of the termination date. Providing for severability, providing for codification, and providing for an effective date. Mr. Mayor, commissioners, moving into quasi judicial hearings. As a reminder, during quasi judicial proceedings, the commission will hear evidence and render a decision regarding the matter presented based upon the evidence received. The parties before the commission and the public are entitled to present evidence, documents, witnesses, etc., and cross-examine any witnesses. All parties and witnesses will be under oath and the entire proceedings recorded. The commission is not bound by the strict rules of evidence and may consider any evidence which it deems relevant and trustworthy. Any member of the commission may ask questions of the parties or the witnesses. Since quasi judicial proceedings are legal in nature, everyone is expected to adhere to proper courtroom decorum and etiquette. Any comments or objections should be directed to the mayor. The burden of proof in a quasi judicial proceeding rest with the applicant. Therefore, the applicant has the opportunity to address the commission last after all public participation and before the commission deliberates. Okay. For this uh at this time for items 7 A, B, C, D, and E, F, and G. Um, I would like to uh swear in staff who will remain under oath during the entire
proceedings. And also, if you intend to speak, if you would stand also and be sworn at this time, if for some reason later on you want to speak, even though you didn't stand and be sworn, that is perfectly fine. You come on up and we could swear you at that time. So staff and anybody else that you intends to speak, if you could stand. Um there we go. Okay. Please uh stand and raise your right hand. Do you swear and affirm that the testimony you're about to give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth? Thank you. I'll ask the commission uh to disclose any expart communications that before the vote is taken, which is communications that's received outside of this public hearing uh that you intend to rely on in making your decision. Uh this is information that hasn't been repeated in the uh staff report or been repeated in any of the oral comments. Um and you and what is disclosed is not the substance but just the fact that the uh exparte communications uh happened. Item 7A is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3291.1, an ordinance amending the future land use map of the city to reflect the land use designation of mixed use for a property located at 1817 Beck Avenue with partial ID 2885-0-0. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendations of the director of development services that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, yes. If you want to speak about item 7A, please come forward. Anyone on 7A? Seeing none, closing public comments. First reading. First reading. First reading. Ordinance 3291.1. An ordinance amending the comprehensive plan future land use map of the city to reflect
a land use designation of mixed use for a parcel of land located at 1817 Beck Avenue, Panama City, Florida, providing for repealer, severability, and effective date. Item 7B is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3291.2, an ordinance amending the zoning map of the city to reflect a zoning designation of mixuse 3 MU3 for a property located at 1817 Beck Avenue, partial ID 2885-0. This is the same address as the prior ordinance. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation to the director of development services is that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, yes. If you wish to speak about item 7B, please come forward. Anyone on 7B? Seeing none, closing public comments. Commission is uh first reading of ordinance 3291.2 and ordinance zoning a parcel of land located at 1817 Beck Avenue, Panama City, Florida, having approximately 0.045 acres, mixed use 3 providing for severability and effective date. Item 7 C is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3293.1, an ordinance on the voluntary annexation of approximately 0.516 acres of property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle with partial ID 26927-0-0. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation through the director of development services is that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, if you wish to speak about item 7 C, please come forward. Anyone on 7C? Seeing none, closing public comments. First reading ordinance 30. We're not supposed I I talked to their builder. Oh, and just wanted to slow and I've done that a couple times. Okay. Processing. Thank you.
Exit. Ordinance number 3293.1, an ordinance of the city approving the voluntary annexation of 0.516 acres of unincorporated property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle into the city as further defined, amending the wards and boundaries to include said land and providing for an effective date. Item 7D is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3293.2, Two, an ordinance amending the future land use map of the city to reflect a land use designation of residential for a property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle partial ID 26927-0. This is the same address as the prior item. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation through the director of development services is that the commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, if you wish to speak about item 7D, please come forward. Anyone on 7D? Seeing none, closing public comments. First reading, Ordinance 3293.2 and ordinance amending comprehensive plan future land use map of the city to reflect a land use designation of residential for a parcel of property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle, Panama City, providing for repealer providing for severability and effective date. Item 7E is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3293.3, an ordinance amending the zoning map of the city to reflect a zoning designation of residential 1R-1 for property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle, partial ID 26927-0. This is the same address as the prior item. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation to the director of development services is that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, if you wish to speak about item 7E, please come forward. Anyone on 7E closing public comments? Uh, first reading,
ordinance 3293.3 and ordinance zoning a parcel of property located at 3719 Shoreline Circle, Panama City, Florida, having approximately 516 acres R1 providing for severability and providing for an effective date. Item 7F is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3295.1, an ordinance a sub amending the future land use map of the city to reflect a land use designation of recreation for property located at 1310 Lincoln Drive with parcel ID 17494-0-0. Uh relevant information is enclosed in your packet. Uh this is an item that is requested by city staff from development services department uh parks, culture and recreation department as well as the city manager's office. Staff recommendation through the director of development services is that the city commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, if you'd like to speak about item 7F, please come forward. Anyone on 7F? Seeing none, closing public comments. First reading. Ordinance 3295.1, an ordinance amending the comprehensive plan future land use map of the city to reflect a land use designation of recreation for a parcel of land located at 1310 F10 Lincoln Drive Panama City, Florida providing for repealer severability and effective date. Item 7G is the first of two public hearings on ordinance 3295.2 2, an ordinance amending the zoning map of the city to reflect a zoning designation of recreation RECC for a property located at 1310 Lincoln Drive. Partial ID 17494-0. Uh, this is the same address as the prior item. Relevant background information is enclosed in your packet. Staff recommendation to the director of development services that the commission conduct the first public hearing. Mr. Mayor, if you'd like to speak about item 7G, please come forward. Anyone on 7G? Seeing none, closing public comments. First reading,
ordinance 3295.2, an ordinance zoning a parcel of land located at 1310 Lincoln Drive, Panama City, having approximately.126 acres recreation providing for severability and effective date. Audience participation, uh, you have three minutes to come forward and speak. We only speak about the items related to the agenda. There's a lot of new faces in the audience. So, we're not discussing Marina stuff or Trudell Park stuff or uh you know um Robert Kane and Mary uh Kane Park. We're not discussing that tonight. But anything related to the upcoming agenda items we are discussing. So, if you wish to discuss those items, please come forward. Yes, sir. We have a lot of more meetings related to those topics. kind of you want to talk? Three minutes for three minutes for everybody. Yes, sir. For especially for you, you don't have to share your three minutes. I walk PN 614 Maple Avenue. Uh I keep hearing everybody saying uh sometime we pass the bullet. Uh this thing was done uh years ago and I think these folks now wish that they had went on and got into the city. We probably would not have this what we're having now today. U city never forced anybody. I know I worked for him for 31 years. Never forced anybody to get on city sewer. Never. Which we lay sewer. Which item were we speaking about today? Yes. You go a the first one. Yes,
very 6A, I believe. Gotcha. Oh, 6A. All right. Thank you. You got me? Yes, sir. All right. Uh, it's a whole lot cheaper then. Folk could get on SW for $30. Really? They could get on it free. When we first put it in, they got it on it free. After that, they did $30. I don't know how the building department did how they did they added it to the sewer where on the water with the water bill but now I the water bill I don't know why we want to have so make these prices so high. I don't know. Y'all ought to know how many folks in this city that is not on city water and sewer. Baba, most of those folks. Jinx Avenue, most of those folks had option not to get on s. The state came in, the state did this to you. The state did this. You know, you putting it on nobody else. You putting on the health department. Health department is part of the state. They're doing their job. What they been told to do. Anybody that had a separate tank, they were going to have to get on sit the sewer. That's not no push on. So, and I hope we're not being reddish from the from the plant that a plant is showing more water
sewer usage on water than what we're paying paying them that some of that water could be coming from from the ground usage. And I hope that ain't what y'all y'all planning this on. Y'all changing outlines. Y'all getting rid of some of that problem. Most of you got rid of it yet, but I hope we're not being measured by the plants that by what they what the usage is on this sewer. Thank you. Anyone else related to the upcoming agenda items? Yes, ma'am. Good evening. Good evening. How's everyone today? Very well. I'm glad to hear that. Brenda Lewis Williams, 2748 Oak Hammock Drive, 32401. Um, I have a question in reference to item 10A and it's just I read the letter but to what end and you promised me we get answers mayor. Okay. The to our questions. So I just want to know to what end is is this because the rescue mission is being not going to be used or we're supplementing or adding to? And then the other one it's not it's uh 12H and I made a little tool about that today. Uh I'm sure some of you saw it. If you didn't you'll see it later. But it's not my issue. But what I'm concerned with is that I don't believe that Mr. Clubs, he's here. He can speak for himself. But I don't believe that he's getting
a fair shake with what he asked. He sent in a letter, rescended his offer because you all wanted him to jump through some hoops, which I thought was not equitable at all. Considering that the gentleman who wanted the parcel to uh enhance his liquor store came back and I've been informed that he was able to purchase that parcel. So, Mr. Club should get the same. He doesn't even know I'm saying this stuff. So he should get the same consideration. Right is right, wrong is wrong. Do the right thing. Yes, ma'am. Thank you. Anyone else? Closing public comments. On to the consent agenda. Do I have a motion to accept the consent agenda? Second. Any discussion? Please call the RO. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Commissioner Hughes. Yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0 [Applause] tonight. So, good afternoon everybody. The um rescue mission um which is doing great work in our community uh is seeking uh our support in a letter form of a project they have to um build a emergency shelter uh for men on the men's campus on Allen Avenue and for women on the women's campus um off off of 11th Street. And so that has come uh before uh the commission and uh Mr. Ross Clemens is here this evening, the executive director of the
um rescue mission and I'd like to ask him to come forward and speak on behalf of his request. Good evening. Thank you, Mrs. Lucas. Thank you, commissioners. Ross Clemens, executive director of Panama City Rescue Mission. I have a additional architectural designs here if anybody needs to see them. [Applause] As most of you know, I have a business downtown. Um, in the course of my time downtown, we've had homeless I've had homeless come up and relieve themselves in my foyer. And I've had homeless a homeless gentleman by the name of Robert pass away behind my back door. So I I have a choice to make. I can be outraged by what some of the homeless are doing downtown and how it might impact my business. or I can look at what I would deem an avoidable death and choose to get involved and try to help. So, I chose the latter, started leaning into the rescue mission, and I've discovered that helping the homeless works. We can succeed at helping them, and we have. We can succeed at helping them break the cycle of addiction. We can succeed at helping them reenter the workforce. We can succeed at helping them process trauma that hasn't been addressed. Then we can share the love of Jesus with them and plug them into church communities in a way that is supportive to them re-entering
our community. Over the last three years, we have helped 258 people get clean, get employed, and get into sustainable housing. Congratulations. Thank you. Honestly, it's a communitywide effort. Uh we've discovered that when we collectively engage in it, we can make a difference. This is only accomplished through broad support. I'm just going to rattle off some of it because I do think it's relevant. Uh we've got St. Andrews Baptist that provides free medical care. Uh when it's something that can't be dealt with by them, band care leans in. Uh I've got First Baptist that teaches in multiple locations uh addiction recovery. Life Management provides mental health screening for the folks and when they identify an issue, they queue them up for long-term help. Uh, Northstar Church provides hot meals. Emerald Coast Fellowship, four grocery stores donate the food that feeds our folks. 54 churches and 3,500 folks in Panama City support us financially and then they come down and volunteer. They teach my classes. They help us pass out food. They help us feed folks. When we as a community lean in, it works. When that whole health care, mental health care, church, food, when that whole community leans in, it works. Uh I didn't know that 3 years ago. I had no clue. Uh it's been a privilege to see the folks in our community that are dedicated to to helping and doing something about it. And it's been a great privilege to see folks get saved, rescued, and reenter the workforce. The only thing that limits us is infrastructure.
So that's why I have made or initiated a uh appropriation request to the state legislature. Uh state legislator, those are smart folks. You guys know what it's like to try to push something through there. It's it's not going to happen unless they believe you support it. Therefore, I'm asking you for your for your support. Specifically, it's for homeless shelters at the two locations Mrs. Lucas mentioned. We're going to quickly make a distinction. What we're doing right now is program. I don't take people in unless they're clean and they're willing to commit to the process. That means I turn away 95% of the folks. There's two reasons for doing homeless shelters in my mind. One is just the love of Jesus on some folks that are hurting, but honestly, there's a tactical reason. 258 folks in 3 years isn't enough. I believe, oh, I know we can do more. It's just a limitation of infrastructure. And if we can have a shelter, if I can have a place where I can get these people out of the woods, get them out of the survival defensive huddle that they're living in, get them into shelter for a bit, where they can see what's happening in the program, where I can gain their trust, I'm confident that we can increase the number of homeless that enter the program and they get clean and they can get back into your workforce. I ask your support. Thank you for your time. Thank you. Thank you. And thank you for the uh good work that you've done in the past three years. Um I support this because of the work that I do in community as well and know that in many instances we can't volunteer our way out of the crisis. We need uh paid staff. We need the infrastructure that
you're talking about. This helps us to help uh the citizens in our community, our downtown uh and other business corridors. And so um I would ask my colleagues on the desk as well to support um the letter going forth so that we can build an emergency shelter. Programming means that they have to meet criteria. as he said, emergency shelter is just getting someone shelter, getting them out of the elements, off the streets, and as a first step and a and a very needed step. Um, no matter where we travel in the city on a given day, I see three to five people that I can identify as homeless throughout our community and this is a concerted way to uh to help them. So, I'd ask my colleagues on the desk to support this effort. Smith Ross, can you explain to us the the um reason for ending our support on the grant because what it's not with uh the the program in terms of religion versus not. Thank you. Uh I do think that's an important distinction. Um what I'm currently doing as I rattled off the list of our supporters is primarily from churches uh and from uh church members and we are pursuing a faith-based program. Our addiction recovery program is a faith-based program. The shelter doesn't need to be. Uh I'm conscious of the issues of going to the state and trying to ask them to do something that would be faith-based. So, I'm not doing that. The shelter is purely an emergency shelter. We will not be attempting any Bible study classes at the shelter. We are providing shelter and food and honestly trying to break the cycle of the lifestyle that they're in. that there is a there will be a distinction between the two programs. The and we will we're talking to doorways uh doorways can
can provide us with state and federal funds to staff it because that shelter will not be faith-based. The program that I'm currently running will remain faith-based. Thank you. Anyone else? So So Ross, and I I apologize. I thought that this these questions got sent to you, but I I don't guess in the in the delay they did. So, I I have fielded a couple questions and so um I know you can probably easily answer. So, there has been obviously concern expressed by neighboring businesses, residents. So, um I felt like your explanation was very helpful into kind of giving the context of what you're exactly proposing. Um but couple things that you and I talked about. Are you guys have you guys looked at other locations? Are you willing to look at other locations? And do you guys could you explain to us what it would take to actually have a different location? Because I know you have infrastructure that's already built where you're at. Sure. And and I get it. I get the concerns. Yep. Um obviously our our preference would be to do it on our current site because if I move it somewhere else, I currently got two sites. If I move somewhere else, I've got three sites. So, I'm covering down on more locations. Um, part of the reasoning behind putting it on the existing sites is so that our existing buildings can support them. I have commercial kitchens at both of the existing locations. I have laundry at both of the existing locations. There's a very high laundry need for a shelter. That's 43 beds that you're doing the linens on every night. Uh, so I was planning on being able to support them with the additional laundry of the existing buildings if I move somewhere else. How much value is like put into those infrastructure? I'm just curious on a number of like how much infrastructure you guys have on your campus currently and if you don't know the answer. Well,
so I mean I had a broad idea of what was going to happen tonight. Um, so the insured value of the existing building at Allen Avenue is 1.5 million. Uh, the insured value of the building on 11th Street is $495,000. So there's roughly 2 million in the two existing structures. Um the value, it was tough to sling together the value on the plats that currently aren't being used, but just somewhere between probably $100,000 $200,000 worth of plats around the Allen Avenue location, not counting the one that my building sits on. Um so those are the unused properties. It is possible to put it somewhere else. Uh we just have to there's a number of considerations. There's the additional ex expense of the commercial kitchen. No, I don't know what that is uh yet. And the additional expense of additional laundry. Uh as I've explained to several of you, we need to be on a trolley line. Our goal is to get people back into employment. Uh so we need to be at a place where they can readily access transportation. And I did some checking uh of our folks right now, particularly the men on Allen Avenue. We got about 13 guys right now. Five of them work downtown in the immediate area. So I do I want you to understand I do have folks that walk from my building to work. Mhm. Uh and and in that sense 609 Avenue is a great place. um where I've got good access to healthcare and I've got access to the kind of jobs that my kind of folks are, you know, got a shot at. Uh the retail and the restaurants in the downtown area.
Um that's what makes 609 Allen good. Can we do it somewhere else? It's possible. It just has its additional staffing for me. That's a challenge. That's a big challenge. I I I barely pull off what I pull off. Staffing wise, uh, if I got to run, you know, I got cooks at both locations. If I got a third location, that's a third cook. There will be additional increases in staff. So, hear me. I'm not saying no. Um, but it does cause me concern. And the additional concern really would be one of timing. we've gotten this thing in this state of Florida congressional budget cycle. It would really be one big question for me was would be how quickly we could come up with whatever you're proposing because I wouldn't want it to slide a budget cycle. Yeah. And and I don't have anything alternatively to propose. Uh Ross really really two things that that you know I I feel like I feel like what you've proposed is definitely very defined. Um so there's one aspect that yeah we could ask all the time. I mean, I'm sure you guys have gotten asked, why can't we go some why can't we move someplace else? Why can't we do those things? And I wanted you to have an opportunity to explain the infrastructure that exists where you are. Uh, but the second piece is is maybe there's a way for us to do, hey, this is what you're proposing, how it will operate that we mutually agree that that's how it would operate. So, your leadership has been fantastic in what you guys have done um with the program. Your board has been incredibly active. have taken tours of the facility. Um, so I understand what you guys are doing and the care that you put into that. Um, I think a lot of the angst that exists in the community is because maybe previous things that have happened. And so I think what you're proposing, as long as we're
committed to operating within those parameters, I think that is that is a key component to keeping trust with the people that we work with as well. So So I don't know if that makes sense. What I'm saying, Ross, is like it's like, hey, you know, there's one aspect of yes, it would be a huge investment to try to find a campus that maybe is larger than what you have, someplace that, hey, you can build the infrastructure that you need for a long-term multi-step process that gives you room to expand. There's another aspect that's like, hey, what is being agreed to? How does it operate? And does it stay within those operational parameters? So, so anyway, that was it. I've not had any feedback on the women's shelter, too. So, so like, so as far as that's concerned, I like I haven't expressed, no one has expressed any concern um in regards to to that operation or anything else like that. And like I said, I think we're all victims. I mean, it happens in city government, too. We're all we're all, you know, you we're we're not only measured by our leadership today, but previous as well. And so, I commend you guys for what you've done um in reestablishing your programs and trying to help the way that you do. Thank you, sir. Uh, it does bring up one more point I would like to add. Um, I have wanted to stay tied at the tip with the city on this. So, when we reopened, we went and met with chief of police, with Chief Smith, and we have invited them to attend every board meeting. So, and they're and they're doing it. So, we have police presence at every board meeting. We take their input. Uh, they listen to us. They can relay it to the chief. uh and they've been they played a helpful productive role and we will of course continue to do that and I think that's a key component to creating successful relationship because um you know I mean we all know where things could go wrong um but and often times we forget where they go right and so and I think that's a good example of that. Ross, how many
how many extra women do you have at Bethl to in the need of there? You said 15 guys. Yeah. uh 23 at that. Yes. Wow. That's right. We have a little more the men's side open more recently. It took us longer to rebuild that building. So, uh we already had the women's fully staffed. That's a function of staff, not bedrooms. Uh and I have three staff for the women's side. Uh if I can get to three on the men's side, I'll bring the men's numbers up. So, Russ, amazing job what you've done with the with the rescue mission. And uh as I told you the other day that that I I believe that uh these types of actions are best done by nonprofits. And so I think you're a shining example of that. Um so I I'm supportive of this. Um it shocks a lot of people I think uh to find out that Panama City, Bay County in in our surrounding counties do not have an emergency shelter. And when people find themselves in a situation where they are homeless, they it's, you know, 8:00 PM at night on a Friday, doorways. I mean, they'll try to help, but there's really nowhere for you to go. Uh, which is a very very rough night. And I know that that's that's not exactly the always the situation that happens. Um, but the fact that we don't have an emergency shelter um is concerning to me. So, um, people people have there there was somebody in my life that that that would have wound up homeless had they not had the support from their family. And um, if they would have been dropped down here from, you know, Dothan or or Alabama or Georgia or some northern state and uh, then abandoned, um, they would have had nowhere to go that evening. So, uh, that that kind of opened
my eyes up to the fact that there's nothing. So, I'm I am supportive of this. Yeah. Thank you, sir. Yeah. Just kind of echoing what Josh said. As long as we're not regressing back to that rescue mission of the 80s and you that that was also the scapegoat of downtown for decades. Yeah. It was that's all the rescue mission sp which I don't believe it truly was. you know, and I expressed in email what I experienced growing up at the car wash next door was all the problems that sort of was was coming through that area. Um, and so not regressing, but you've done a marvelous job. I've been to the board meeting. It's it's fantastic stuff. We've supported the 5K, that sort of thing. So, I'm supportive. So, zero motion. Uh, with all that being said, uh, I'd just like to say there, but by God's grace go. And so, with that, I move that we uh support the rescue mission. uh and the excellent work that Mr. Clemens has done and his staff. I'll second that. Any discussion? I just want to add Ross, I would just whatever we you ask in the legislative just keep your options as broad as you can. Um so as we continue the conversation, there's a flexibility um to tackle any options that may come available. I understand. I can do that. Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. Commissioners, thank you. [Applause] Uh, item 11 A is a notice of vacancy on the Panama City Planning Board. Panama City Planning Board has one position for the mayor's appointee available as a result of the changes associated with ordinance number 3284. Terms for members appointed because of the change will begin on January 1st, 2026. Do you have a nominee? Not yet. I'm getting closer to Christmas. It won't be Santa, but it will be someone else's. One more. I got I got to check with two more people. You're going to respond with
the There's no more more qualified. You're going to respond with there's no one more qualified than myself. You're appoint yourself. Yeah. Do you want to recess? Let's do a 10-minute recess. Thank you. Let's get started again. 64 on item 12A. Item 12A is consideration to approve the fiscal year 2025 budget amendment resolution 20251118.1. background information. This amendment is to account for any significant revenue and correlating expenses received during the fiscal year that were not previously amended in the budget. Staff recommendation through the city manager's office of the commission approved this request. Mr. Mayor, yes. I'll entertain a motion. So move second. Any discussion? Yes. I just want to point out that uh this is a much much smaller amount than in previous years. Thank you very much. That's it. All right. Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. That is in uh deep appreciation to Miss Waldin, Miss Perman, and all of our directors for all their good work on that. So, thank you. Title to resolution 20251118.1, a resolution providing for the final amendment of the approved fiscal year 2425 budget. Item 12B is consideration to approve budget resolution 2025118.2 to carry forward fiscal year 2025 funds into fiscal year 2026. As background information, this resolution is to account for funds that have been encumbered by purchase orders and have been
carried forward by the soft closed general ledger entries to fiscal year 2026 or were not encumbered by purchase order in 2025 but will be expended in fiscal year 2026 utilizing funds budgeted in fiscal year 2025. staff recommendation to the city manager's office that the commission approved this request. Mr. Mayor, I will entertain a motion. A motion to approve. I do have a question. Second. Good discussion. Go ahead. Um I So, so I just want to make sure are these all of our cuz they're not labeled by projects. So, are these SRF um you know, HRP? Um I see all these soft closed numbers. This looks different than what I'm used to seeing. So, these are not SRF or HRP. Those are those are capital budgets that would not need to be come to you for carry forward. Those automatically will get carried forward when they were they were already approved when we initially adopted the the capital budgets. These are annual carry forwards. and the journal report that you see are all purchase orders that were encumbered in 20 fth year or 2025. They're being carried over into 26 for operational or grant type. So So then that's going to lead me to my question on the on so on the soft ledger report it says $100 million. What like are you saying that we're carrying forward that? That's why I thought it was like a projects or something. That's what it says. Tom here. Come up. Can you come up here, Samantha? Because it does look like there are projects. I hope that there's projects. That's I understand. It's not not on the detailed the the one that we just approved before. There's So, you do need to introduce myself. I'm Samantha Pierman, budget manager. Hi. This is the first
time y'all have made me talk up here. Um, you're doing great. The carry forwards for the purchase orders do include any capital project purchases because that is an automatic entry into New World that we do have to get approved that way. However, the carry forwards that are presented in the detail do not include the capital amounts. Those are just for fiscal funds that we budget such as the general fund, the CRAAS, housing and community services, utilities, environmental services, etc. So, so on your journal report, on the journal entries, it will have capital entries because those are encumbered purchase orders, but on the carry forward amounts that we have, those are not the capital carry for. So, in the general report, there could be expenses on here that have already been incurred from the previous year or the not expenses, but incumbrances. Okay. So, when you're saying incumbrances, are you talking about SRF? Um yes, there will be encumbrances for SRF, HHRP, all of those acronyms. MLK rec center, you name it. So, yes, those purchase orders have been carried forward. If there are any funds not encumbered on a purchase order, those don't show up on here because those are capital projects and those funding that funding has already been approved. So, this funding has been approved, but it hasn't been expended yet. Correct. Okay. It's a little different than we've done it previously and I we don't mean for confusion but it helps prevent any kind of um issues in the capital project accounts so that they can be tred up and in the fiscal year accounts those are funds that we statutoily have to have approved and have to have done and within a certain time frame from the closing of the budget year. Yes. Okay. So then I'm going to pivot to you Jaden. So, so there's a there's $100 million worth of in this journal entries categories. Anything that we should be drawing attention to in this or is this just
this is what we're using the revolving credit line for? The only thing that I have uh made a note of is that there you're you're increasing your general fund budget by another $620,550. And that was on the previous action though, correct? No, the previous budget amendment was balanced. So, you did not increase or decrease the general fund budget. Okay. This this uh carry forward is car car carrying forward expenses that were encumbered in 2025. They were approved in 2025, but now we're moving them into 2026, but there is no corresponding revenue to offset these expenses. So, now with that question, then back over to the budget office. So, so how are we that revenue was already received in 25? Um, is this the property sale? Is this having to do with that? Is this not with that? The carry fords that we have in the general fund for 2025 into 2026 deal with our restricted revenues such as the fire protection services and the building permits. That's being carried forward because we have to. Um the 325,000 was a donation from the CRA that was received into the general fund but not expended and could could I think so the reality is we don't really have a choice whether we approve this or not without going into default we don't have so so like what no the budget's balanced always every day every single day could approve in fiscal year 25 but what Jan what Jan's communicating is relevant as in we don't have any new revenue. I what I don't want to see is our gap get bigger than what it already was. And so if you guys could just after this I don't need this right now. Show me where this additional $600,000 is going to of of increase in the budget where we are getting that revenue from.
So that would have been received in 2025. The um building services restricted revenue carry forward was received through building permits for 127,000. The 325,000 again was a donation from the or contribution from the CRA. Um so that's about 450. The insurance reimbursement for the SurfPro invoices for the 100,000 was received from the insurance company. So is this changing reserve numbers when we're talking about Okay. So that's so so the reality is it's coming from the research that you just did in the correct financial report. So that that's that's what I was looking for. or I was trying to figure out where the money is coming from. Right. It'll in the general fund, but it will come technically from the reserve line in 26 because it was received previously. Money's coming in on that load of reserve because it's it's already been account the books are closed for 2025. So all the all the revenues and expenses go away start back over at zero in 2026. So this we have the money. So, it's I'm not it's not going to hurt us in our reserves cuz the money's we have the money to pay for pulling it out. Reserves are still not healthy. I get it. I I know we are, but we're not we're not going to jump off. But we're taking this out. To Jan's point, like like I this is me personally how I'm tracking things. I'm trying to figure out what our gap is cuz we're going to walk into next year with a gap. I want to know so we can get to a realistic picture before we get into budget season. I don't want to be sitting with, you know, 2 months to go before you got to statutoily approve a budget and then we're trying to figure out how are we balancing a budget. So, what I since this this was a change, so that's why I was a little bit confused with my questions. Um, I do understand now. Um, but if we could maybe have a recap like in the next week or two just to kind of get on the same page and so I can get a new gap number. What's the gap? Well,
you get a monthly you're giving a monthly report now that has a gap number in it every you get it every month, but I I can't remember off the top of my head what the reserve number was last month. So, I'm like I'm You have one You have one in this package today. Oh, okay. Great. Is it reflected in that in that report? No. This change? No. So, whatever we see this is in November. This is October's report. Thank you. I'm always I'm always behind cuz I I deal in real numbers, not budget month numbers. Okay. So, so whatever number we see in reserve, we should be able to take into account $640,000 and that should come off of what we're about to see. Thank you. You'll see it next month. So, is this because of the service delivery model budget that we're going to get next year, right? Yeah. Right. Oh, you created this problem. Remember when we voted when we voted to have the service delivery? But you're you're right side by side. It's much It's a much smaller number than it has been in the past. Much much smaller. Oh, yeah. I mean, the first one I got was like like way more than this. Not because of that, because of the service delivery. I'm just pointing that out. I'm just going to blame it on you. Yeah, I'm used to it. So, all right. Sorry for the confusing questions, but I was confused. So, if I confused anyone else, I apologize. We do this report is different than what we've gotten previously. So, that's why I had some additional questions. So will this look different under a service delivery model? I would imagine so. Uh the budget delivery that we have now is broken down into line items and accounts that don't necessarily take into service program models. So under a program delivery budget, it would look slightly different and be possibly a little easier to understand instead of just a lot easier. In in summary though, this this is reflective of our our current work program of work that's being executed around the facil the city. And so what it is representative of is there's $und00
million worth of infrastructure work that's going on across the city and there's a lot of projects that are being managed um uh to to move our city forward. So absolutely. So appreciate everybody and your work. Um I'll be I'll be having further conversations on our reserve members. Sure. We got a motion. Thank you. We have a motion in a second about the service delivery model budget that we're supposed to get. Didn't have anything to do with that. They did not. It was a door that was open. So, did I already motion to approve? I'll approve. Let's call the role. Thank you. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5. Commission has approved not 12 C 12 B 12 B excuse me uh and it is resolution 20251118.2 a resolution providing for the amendment of the approved fiscal year 2526 budget to budget for carry forward amounts from fiscal year 25 to 26. Item 12 C is consideration to approve resolution 2025118.3 authorizing the city of Panama City to accept state funded grant for school safety in the project in the amount of $456,323 and approve the accompanying budget amendment resolution 2025118.4 Four background information engineering division is requesting approval of resolution 2251118.3 authorizing the city to accept state funded grant managed by the FDOT for planning of the Panama City Schools uh school safety zone project. This project is for the design, rightway acquisition, construction and CI Panama City School Zone Safety Project related to Bay High School. This project will consist of constructing the roadway, extension of 12th Street from Caldwell Drive to Hamilton Avenue, um connecting Harrison Avenue with uh MLK Boulevard, and the closure of East 13th Street
from Magnolia Avenue to Wilson Street, rightway acquisition will be required. Staff recommendation to the director of public works is that the commission approved this request. Mr. Mayor, I'll entertain a motion. So moved. Second. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. Commission has approved resolution number 20251118.3, a resolution of the city commission of the city of Panama City authorizing the city to accept the state funded grant for Panama City School Zone Safety Project and enter into the agreement. Item 12D is consideration to approve budget amendment resolution 2025118.5 for the purchase of a small street sweeper in the amount of 218,340. As background information, this unit will be a multihog CV 350 sweeper stage 5 from Jetback Equipment Company through Sourcewell contract listed here. City currently does not have a street sweeper uh to clean the new Harrison Avenue streetscapes without causing damage to the pavers. The sweeper will give us the ability to not only sweep the pavers, but also has attachments to clean the pavers, sidewalks, and multi-use paths around the city. Staff recommendation to the director of public works is that the commission approved this request. And I'll just add there was an additional memo circulated answering some questions by one of the commissioners uh earlier this afternoon. Mr. Mayor, yes. I will entertain a motion. I'll make a motion. Anyone can have discussion. Second. Okay. Any discussion? Yes. Um, along with the $214,000 investment is going to come maintenance and gas and insurance and care. And if there's a if there's an adaption adapter that can go in this room, I bet there's an adapter that go one that I that we have in the one in the department that has one
person. We do not need this. We can farm it out. And if there's a if there's a a way to u I think what we ought to do um is go out and see and do some comparisons. Not tell me that that the um that somebody in another department is going to take care of the maintenance, but this is not a $215,000 investment. It's a quarter of a million dollars minimum and it it's it's one of those it's one of those gifts it's going to keep on giving. and I want to take care of Harrison Avenue and I bet you if we go investigate our street sweeper that we have that I've never seen. Um that I bet there's an adapt adapter we can put on that maybe do the same thing or have we investigated that? I I also brought up concerns of uh should this be privatized? Um cuz I mean it was last Christmas I came out to after the parade there was just candy trash blows the next morning blowing everywhere and I called John like why isn't the street sweet ruin as it gets broken and so like to me there I I do also show the concern of like adding more equipment to something that we should be discussing privatization potentially uh and we haven't had those conversations so I did bring it up as well. Is there a private company that does street food? We did receive an email from someone who was interested in expenses that we currently have. Yeah. So, I'll I'll I'll support going out and um and research. I will tell you just from cuz I got managed parking lots. So, um it is very difficult to find someone that can operate on the schedule that you needed to. Um, but you know, I mean, I say that as in city hasn't gone out to look at privatized street sweeping since I don't know, it's been a couple years since we bought the first one. So, I I think it's prudent to look at all options. And so, if we want to table this until that point and getting those quotes just so that we can see a comparison, I would be prepared that this is a specialized piece of equipment. That was part of the discussion. And even whether we did the
pavers, should we have done asphalt? Like that was a big part of it at the very beginning because there is a different kind of maintenance that has to be done on Harrison Avenue than a normal asphalt street. So and there again is my reason for having the savings account when we're going to manage something. That vote was made and there was no there was nothing in the backside to take care of. So, well, and even for the fairness of of downtown, it's it's maybe the DIB should be participating in part of this. If they if they say, you know, Harrison Avenue is not kept up to the cleanliness that we want, maybe they should be discussing purchasing this. If this is the only use of this equipment is it's Harrison Avenue. I mean, they're already paying for downtown landscape doing landscaping. So, I think I think the first step is go let's go get get a quote so that we can see some comparison in cost. Um, I think realistically it it probably privatization is not going to be cheaper than this, but I like your idea of like maybe we look at how this gets shared so that it can be maintained in that area in that district. So, well, what to me it's everything we do has to have three bids. Why not this? We didn't even try and we just weren't going to drop $215,000. It doesn't make sense to me. And it's specialized so it can be used on one road and that that one road is going to continue. That's That's a different way than I was looking at it before. When we when we did the original street sweeper, that was actually through an EPA penalty. So FD was penalizing us for sewer spills at that point in time and they let us, hey, storm water is a big component. And so they allowed us to do street sweeping as part of that process. And we get paid by FDOT to do street sweepings. I don't know if everybody knows that, but they they pay us to do street sweeping in in house. So there is money involved in it. But this particular type of equipment doesn't really from what I've read I don't know that it it truly affects us. So I think it's good. We can go look at a look at price and then bring it back to us next month.
Yes. And I would draw I would draw our attention to the caveats here in the background that this specialized sweeper is needed because our current sweeper is too big and too powerful for what we need for the pavers. And so if we're going to go out to bid or at least get uh some uh some quotes, if not a formal bid, we need to make sure that the street sweeper that's proposing can particularly meet the needs that we have of our specialized. I would ask the DIB, why don't you guys pay to have the Harrison Avenue blown off with with blowers? It probably cost 500 bucks and they could pressure or pressure wash it. Papers cannot be pressure washers. I'm talking sidewalk sidewalk. They're already doing that. And so that's my point. If if the DIIB and the downtown owners want to have a higher level of cleanliness, the DIB is the mechanism to bring that to them in my opinion. So I agree. Wow. Respectfully, Mr. Mayor, I mean, the the streets are our responsibility. We're not going to use this on FDOT. If I may, Mr. Murphy, they've been doing this research for a year. They have answers to all your questions right now. I thought we addressed them in our 101 ons, but we've already done all of this. We've been working on this for quite a while. Jonathan, why don't we why don't we go out and get another bid so we can see what's going I I I this was done with a state contract which was already done. So, the pre-bid for this is already done on the front end. That's how you're using the state contract. I I don't have an issue with the purchase way that you guys are doing the purchase contract. So, the the Sorthwell, I'm familiar with Sorthwell, great solution on purchasing equipment. I think what the question I heard was is there a private company that will do the entire thing and is there somebody that realistically and I I commit this to you guys or that it's going to there may be this equipment may be so specialized it either has to be manually done like Allan just suggested or um maybe there is somebody that has a specialized piece of equipment. Yeah, for me if they said the real use of this is the five blocks of Harrison
Avenue or the four blocks to me that have them blow it off once a week and the payback of that's decades from now to get to $215,000 or 18. Yeah, I we're we're not just talking about blowing it off. That has to be scrubbed in a certain way and and we're also using this on sidewalks and tighter areas so it can be used all around the whole city uh not just on the pavers and I just want to clarify that. though. Yes. So, we did do a lot of research on this. Our current name and title for the public. Yes. Clint Murphy, your director of public works. Uh, we did do a lot of research on this. Our current street sweeper is way too big and powerful. The, uh, wire brushes that are used on that piece of equipment. It's too abrasive for paper applications. There is not a We did research and there's not an apparatus to retrofit onto that uh, piece of equipment. So this this is our best plan moving forward. I'm not familiar with any contractor locally that has the type of equipment we need for this. That doesn't mean they can go out and purchase it, but we're getting it taxfree through the source well contract. And what we see with Wastro, for instance, they pay their drivers, you know, they're paying their drivers 30 bucks an hour, paying 18. So I fail to see how a private contractor is going to compete with uh with the pricing we've got here. So it is our and again as per Jonathan we we will be using this on our multi-use paths which are going to be uh increasing hopefully in the near future. So there are other applications besides just downtown. So Clint, when you're when you're doing your analysis, $30 an hour in 18 that's not all that's all that's not all that's in there. Are you are you including the maintenance and the and the expense, the insurance, the gas, all that that goes with it into your analysis? Because all
we're doing is paying $30 an hour under your under your example to another company. Jump to if your example is $30 an hour versus 18. If I put all the all the pieces and parts into what it's going to take to operate this and own it, we're going to be $30 an hour as well. So, we're equal then, right? Well, I was just comparing labor. So, a private contractor would still have maintenance, fuel, upkeep as as well, right? So, I think it's worth giving it a shot. Okay. It's not just one shot, one buy is is a forever is a forever decision. And if we can save money, let's look at doing that, right? Yeah. I mean, I I'd love to know how many miles of multi-use trail we going to have and and how much we do have that will be used and then have the DIB weigh in to see if they want to participate and if they want to provide the service to downtown themselves. I I do agree that the streets are our opinion, but if there's a there's a clear reason that our traditional street sweeper won't work on the our fancy nice street and so to me the DIIB should have the alternative of saying, "Okay, well, we'll we'll hire someone to blow it off or sweep it with a push button." But I I think they should be weighing in on whatever we're about to spend money on. So, they have an opinion as well. And Clint, I I think we may we may end up right back at the same spot. I think somebody said that there's somebody that sent something that says, "Hey, we could do this like that." So maybe that could be something you guys look at whoever that vendor was and then let us know um from that point of is there anyone that could do it and what it would cost. So I do understand it's very specialized. I'm thinking through like the prominade around the marina. I'm thinking about several other things that maybe there is a larger thing and maybe we just need to get a better picture of what that looks like. But um you know well maybe we budget for it. I it's hard for me to just say hey I'm not going to go price check with somebody. I mean like that's just that's really what you're getting from me is like hey you know if there's somebody that's
saying that I'd like to maybe go one more time and check before we you know bite it off. But source well pricing all those things. No issue. What is source? What is that? It's a purchasing co-op uh that that it's a state contract. Okay. It means we've bought it off a previous other municipality bid. So, it's already been bid out and that's how we're buying it. That's why purchasing policy. So, it's gone through a bidding process and these companies compete so that they can sell 15 of these and so it typically drives price down. Yeah. Does our waiting affect the price? For instance, I don't know how long the quote's good for. I mean, we won't be back in time. This is p this will push it into January because we'll have to go out and competitively post a request for proposal and that won't be done in time for the December meeting. So then we'll end up into January. Is that what you guys are asking? I just don't know that it'll do a try to do a price check with whoever the spender was. What would you guys No, I think I think we can do that on our own. Man, do what on our own? It's over $100,000. We'll have to competitively go out and request it. Yeah, because we're if we go with the if we go with the the pre- bid with this, we don't because it's through a state contract, we don't have to go out for a competitive bid. But if we want to do a request for proposals, we'll have to run that through the purchasing division. If it's under $100,000 from to have a private company do it, we have to put it out for RFP. It's not like if if staff believes that it's going to be over $100,000, we have to go out for competitive bid. I know this is and I believe it it will be because it's it's only six blocks we're asking for and I don't know the frequency at which uh Mr. Murphy is suggesting. Uh but I would say we would probably have more success bidding out our everyday larger street sweeping operation um that that only has one employee associated with
it than we would with this. Prior to Hurricane Michael, we had a contract with a vendor. They swept every city street. We had a a spreadsheet of how many times they swept it. They used two street sweepers. They had a lead in a trail vehicle on on state highways and it was a big operation. Um, as as a result of Hurricane Michael, obviously our streets were impassible for for years for street sweeping at least. And so DP said, "Hey, look, as part of your MS4 uh permit that allows you to operate a storm water system, they said we're not going to require you to sweep your streets until you guys get whole." So that that period has come and gone. We went out uh after once that that waiver expired and went out and bid did did this competitive bid process and and and we did it several times without success. That's our larger street sweeping the big Elgen truck that we have. Typically street sweeping operations have two because they do break down. They're ingesting nails, debris, like the stuff you wouldn't imagine goes into those hoppers. Um, this is we don't we don't envision this as being that type of of vehicle. This would in our mind be something that we could push button with with Clint and Clint could say, "Hey, drop what you're doing." Get in a little, you know, street sweeper and go and, you know, address this mess. This would also allow us to mount the sidewalk and brush and clean and sweep the sidewalks in addition to go back and seal it. So, it's a little bit more um we get a lot more bang for the buck, if you will, from a a maintenance. It's $36,000 a block. That's what I want to point out, y'all. $36,000 a block is you just said six blocks we're trying to take care of. That's that's a lot of money. Talking specific to Harrison Avenue. That does not include all multi-use paths. You could we could use this in St. Andrews. We could use it in Millville on our downtown areas. There there are a lot of applications for this particular Let's go get a price. Yes. Quit
trying to sell me. Yeah. interest in leasing if that's an option too. I mean I just Yeah. Yeah. If it's going to be used mostly on Harrison Avenue, leasing it four times a year makes sense if that's available. So do we need a motion or what do we need? We have a motion and a second to discuss which is approval. So we need to amend our motion table. We table it and um you know RFP Brian, are you okay? Oh, who made the motion? You did. Yeah, that's what I thought. I'll I'll I'll amend my motion that make that we What is it amended to? I'm going to amend it to what? To that we table this and then and put out an RFP for anybody that wants to uh give us and the scope of work and come back when the January meeting with that and we can make a decision from there. And and realistically, I acknowledge what you guys are saying. We may end up right back here. So, you want an RFP for the service? Yeah. The service provider? Yes, ma'am. Okay. I'm just going to back out of this one. I I was fine buying it cuz I I see a utility of it. Y'all can voting. I mean, I'm on a 41 vote on this one. I have no problem. You're withdrawing your second? Yes. I'd like just a couple. I'd like the DIIB if it's mostly the DI mostly Harrison Avenue. That's the focus. I'd like the DIB to Wayne. I agree. I agree. Yeah. Yeah, I'd rather the funding come from them. I just know that they don't have a ton. Yeah. I mean, I I would like them to say, "Oh my gosh, yes, there's such a need that Harrison Avenue needs to have this much level of care and focus right now, and we need to spend this money right now." That's what I want to hear from them. That motion, is that direction for staff? Yeah. Who do you want to hear that from, Mr. Mayor? I'd love uh I'd love I'd love the I'd love for us to present this idea to the DIIB at their next meeting and
have them weigh in on what do they do they want to help pledge some money to us. Do they think the city should be spending this kind of money just on Harrison Avenue or they would like to handle maintenance of that road? Not not resetting pavers although I've offered that previously but uh sweeping of it, blowing of it, that sort of thing. Yeah, just Harrison Avenue. That's the Yeah, I mean piece that I see. But I mean that's what was presented here is this is a Harrison Avenue piece. We will go out for a proposal. But like in in my mind as the manager of this city, if they tell me they don't want to clean it, like I I don't care that. I don't care what they say because I have engineers that are in charge of this telling me it needs to be done. We have to maintain this $16 million investment that the city made. That's all I'm saying. So, so we'll have to go off for the RFP, but like if the DIB says, "Yeah, we don't worry about it. Don't do that." I'm like, "Oh my gosh." Like that makes me really nervous. So, I just want to point out the change and what what the problem is with the pavers right now with the street sweep people will do cuz I don't to me it's just a no different than blowing it off. That's why you got like Well, for example, because we have special events, you get grease. Yeah. Alcoholic beverages. We do. We handle that. We handle mopets and soap. I've done it before. Look, man. One of the only ways the only way we're going to change the culture of things just showing up and surprising us is we we're going to this surprised me. Didn't know it's happened. That's and it's a $200,000 here. It's $400,000. We can slow our spending down. And this is one way. Let's question things and let's I mean, we can spend a million dollars just like that. Let's try to let's try to slow our role. There's we may end up here. We may we all may vote 5, but we didn't give it a shot to try to save some money. And that's my problem is that we didn't even try and show up here and tell me here's here's a here's somebody that we gave a rep a quote from and here's our number cuz right now I don't know what our number is other than $213,000. What's it really going to cost me?
That's that's the stuff I'd like to know cuz it's not it's it's more than a $213,000 investment. And we got to figure out a way to start slowing start stop spending money like this. And this is the way just and there's just little little every every little piece here and there. That's it. $1 here, $1 there. So, nobody's done anything wrong. It's just I'd like to know that information. So, do we need to have a motion to how we move this forward? Mr. I have a motion to table and put the um put the item out for RFP for a service provider. I do not have a second for that motion. And I also have um information to direct staff to con contact DIIB to gauge interest in the purchase of the equipment or services. Who gave that motion? The mayor asked for us to contact gave staff direction to contact DIIB. You made a motion. I just kind of put some extra language in it to make sense. So when we do the minutes, we know what we're talking about. We do have a motion. So this multihog um is not just a street sweeper, is it? It's it's the uh Well, we're doing we're asking for the city back, aren't we? Is this a device that we could also add other attachments implementation? There's other options we get at too. Yeah, I see that there's multiple things that can be added to it. I mean, I don't know if any of them would have any utility here. I don't know. I haven't dove into it that far, but when would this arrive if we were to move forward? I think the lead time is 3 months. There's a mower on it. Okay. So, it wouldn't be here before the Christmas parade. It's still clean. It's still clean. So, I'd like to just have this conversation later when we have some more details. So,
we have a motion. Do we have a second? I do. I have to pass the actual gavl. Do you have a second? No, you can second without passing the g. Well, I can't. Yeah, you can't. Wait a minute. Don't tell him that. Okay. Well, then I'll second that motion. You didn't know that. I'll second. I will second the motion then. The mayor seconds the motion. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. Item 12E is consideration to approve budget budget amendment resolution number 2025118.6 six for the purchase of three 16yard dump trucks in the amount of $429,7990 from fourstar Freightlininer through Sourcewell contract number 032828- D AI. Spagron information is units will be 2027 M2106 Freightlininer chassis with 16 cubic yard dump bodies. The city is also getting a $65,000 trade-in allowance for four older dump trucks. The dump trucks that are trading in are in between 17 and 26 years old and are unable to obtain parts for them. We are unable to obtain parts for them should they break down. In addition to hauling other materials, these trucks will be used uh as well to support our in-house paving program once that crew is in operation in in addition to uh streets and drainage daily operations. Staff recommendation through the director of public works is that the commission approve this request. Mr. Mayor, yes, I will enter a motion. I'll motion to approve. Second. Any discussion? So, this will be the four This will be four dump trucks we bought today. Mhm. You need 40 dump trucks.
Yes. Yes. Okay. We can rent them for $8 $800 a day. That's a lot of That's a lot of $500,000. Are we Are we currently leasing dump trucks? No. Need to buy them. So these are 17 between 17 and 26 years old. Yes. So So I mean from our replace I I'm kind of curious as why these were already on our replacement schedule. I mean that's I don't have the answer to that particular question but I do know I mean these are used I mean they're 17 to 26 years. I mean they have holes in them that have to be patched period. Clint Murphy director of public works. We really, I mean, after Hurricane Michael, we kind of got got away with our program. So, we're just kind of trying to recover from that. So, the trucks that we currently have, I mean, we can't even get replacement parts for them. So, these are desperately needed. So, you're saying that we have dump trucks that are 16 years old and older? 17. Get it right. Yeah. 17 years. So, we get the lifespan here. Let's just conservative. ly 10 years for $429,799. Your price, even if we did it, you know, 260 days out of the year, that's 28,000 a year just to rent or lease based on what you were what you were suggesting. And I think the lifespan of these trucks warrants the uh the price that we have here. So, I I think Robbie, you're asking like what's the difference between this and the other one? I mean, dump trucks are a utility. I mean, there's there's multiple things that'll be used for a dump truck. We need dump trucks. Yeah. I'm not worried about that. Just again, are we looking other ways before we start spending? Yes. It's got a lot of cool attachments. And I had a question. What is the environmental services reserve fund?
What is that? Trash. Solid waste. Solid waste. Now, I do want to caution cuz I do see multiple things on our agenda that are using that specific fund. Yeah. Um, I don't like I think you know, hey guys, we just made a made a change to your overall budget and those things. So, I don't know if there's further capital projects you guys are trying to pull out of that fund. If you could give us in advance what you're thinking about. So, before we get to an actual acquisition, that would be good. So, we can do that. But I think this is really it. These I mean, because we run these things six, seven days a week and across our division. Yes, that's correct. And I'm in favor of giving our staff what they need to do the best job that they can do. And hampered by outdated, you know, it may work today, it may not work tomorrow is frustrating. Uh so if we're expecting the best from our staff, we need to give them what they need. So I support it. Thank you. One of the other advantages, as y'all deliberate, to you know, to controlling more of our destiny is, you know, we get messages from all of y'all in the public, you know, 24/7. And when we control more of it, you know, myself and Mr. Murphy can say, "Hey, stop what you're doing right now and go take care of this problem that's happened." If we're relying at times on outside folks, they might not be able to get to us. And that that's always a challenge. And and when they do, it'll cost us more. Sorry. What, ma'am? And when they do get to us, it'll cost us more. Yes, ma'am. Especially at nights and on the weekends. All right. We have a motion and a second. Please call the role. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street? Yes. Commissioner Hughes? Yes. Commissioner Lucas. Yes. Mayor Branch. Yes. Motion passes 5-0. Uh Mr. Mayor, I'd like to backtrack just a second. Okay. Uh we had adopted a resolution concerning the school zone safety grant. We adopted two resolutions and I forgot
to read one of them and I'd like to read that title and it's resolution number 2025118.4. a resolution providing for the amendment of the approved fiscal year budget to accept and expend funding from FDOT and provide the local match for the planning of Panama City School Zone Safety Project. So, we approved the grant and now we amended our budget. Thank you. You need to read this one, too. And the one that I'd like to read now is uh budget resolution 2025118.5 or res. That's what I u that's what I meant to say is 6 and that resolution title is a resolution providing for the amendment of the approved fiscal year 2526 budget to utilize environmental service reserve funds for the purchase of three dump trucks. Item 12F is consideration to approve the task order from Dubberry Engineers team with half Associates and Magnum Engineering to provide engineering design services for the post arbitration approved 351 FEMA road segments and to approve budget amendment resolution 2025118.7 in the amount of 256,500. As background information, at the October 28th city commission meeting, the commission approved evaluation panel's recommendation of the above specified engineering firms to provide engineering design services for the FEMA roads projects, authorizing city staff to enter to negotiations on a task order for their professional services. Of the 351 post arbitration approved FEMA road segments, 64 have already either been repaired or currently being repaired or about to be repaired as part of the city's multiple other infrastructure projects. This leaves 287 road segments that will be addressed under this task order. 285 which will be milled and overlaid with the remaining two segments being fully reconstructed. The services to be provided under this task order include geotechnical borings at each of the roadway segments,
limited survey data as needed at the two full reconstruction segments and initial engineering analysis of the results of the geotechnical borings, the roadway conditions and the survey data. After the initial engineering analysis is complete, additional task order will be provided at that time to provide final designs as well as construction and bid documents. The fees for all of the firms involved in this project are included in this task order. Staff recommendation to the director of public works uh is that the commission approve this request and I'll just note that this is all 100% FEMA reimburseable. Mr. Mayor, yes, I will entertain a motion. So move. Second. Any discussion? Call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. Resolution 20251118.7, a resolution providing for the budgeting of capital funds. Item 12G is related and is consideration to approve a task order from Dubberry Engineers teamed with half Associates in Magum Engineering to provide engineering design services for the 274 hurricane recovery road segments in the amount of $277,500. At the October 28th uh 2025 city commission meeting, the commission approved the evaluation panel's recommendation of the above specified engineering firms to provide engineering design services for the FEMA roads project and authorized city staff to enter into negotiations on a task order for their professional services. The city's original request to FEMA was to repair roads that experienced a PCI loss of seven points or greater between the 2018 prehurricane Michael transmap report and the 2020 post Hurricane Michael transmap report. A total of 675 road segments. Following the arbitration process, only road segments that had a PCI score of 56 and above before the hurricane and that experienced a
PCI loss of 10 or greater were eligible for FEMA PA funding. The design for the roadway segment repairs under this task order would be for the road segments not captured by the FEMA roads project. Of the 675 original road segments, 351 were deemed eligible for repair following the arbitration process, leaving 324 damaged road segments remaining. Of those 324 remaining segments, approximately 50 segments will have already been repaired or are currently being repaired or about to be repaired as part of the city's multiple other infrastructure projects. This leaves 274 road segments that will be addressed under this task order. 271 which will be mil and overlaid with the remaining three segments being fully reconstructed. Services to be provided under this task order include geotechnical borings at each of the roadway segments, limited survey data needed at the three full redep reconstruction segments and initial engineering analysis of the results of the geotechnical borings, the roadway conditions and the survey data. After the initial engineering analysis is completed, an additional task order will be provided at that time to provide final designs, construction documents, and bid documents. The fees for all the firms involved in the project are included within this task order. Staff recommendation through the director of public works uh is that the commission approve this request knowing that the funding will come from the infrastructure tax funds. Mr. Mayor, I will entertain a motion to accept. Motion to approve. Second. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5-0. All right. Item number 12 is discussion of the uh public private partnership uh plan process and other options moving forward with city-owned property at 1300 1306 Beck Avenue uh which totals just over 1 acre total uh at the end of 2024. No, wait. Early part of 2024, I was
uh provided a memo to the commission to uh sell a number of properties as part of a long-term uh strategy in St. Andrews to enhance and increase parking and selling of these uh two parcels was part of that. Uh at a recent commission meeting um y'all voted to reject uh all offers for this and to uh withdraw the authorization that I had to sell this property and expressed an interest from the dis about uh potentially moving forward with a more of a P3 approach and strategy which had previously been um uh executed and attempted. So, I just would like direction tonight uh from the commission on how y'all would like to move forward so staff can start making preparations for this and hopefully hit the ground running at the beginning of 2026. Mr. Mayor, yeah, I I this is such a important piece of property in in Sir Andrews in my opinion and and we have uh amazing visioning documents by Dover Cole. I'd love to see us create the best uh P3 documents that bring clarity and excitement uh to anyone who's interested. I'd love to see us work with uh neighborhood revolution or evolution. I can't remember which one it is. Very affordable group that can look at our plans, give us multiple different concepts within a couple days. uh that can that that will keep us from having the sort of debates of people look to buy the property. Uh they'll understand what the city would love to see. Uh we can talk about incentives to get us there. Um I would add I I fully agree. I would add that the one missing component on the um the lot layout that could make this u much more developable than what it is is the the remaining piece. I think we've got the ability to exercise through a continuing services contract that we just approved. Will height? Yep. Will height and approach them uh seeing what that purchase price would be to square up bottom right corner. None of you want to be in the deal though. I don't know. That's what I keep hearing. I don't know. It'
be a great opportunity to use our continuing services contracts for real estate agents to to turn them loose and see if we can get it squared up. Sure. Yeah. I' I' I'd like to add that the idea of hiring someone isn't to give someone a design. It's to get a better product and of a building that aligns with our plans. And they should be excited because we basically are like, "Here's what we want. We can get you these entitlements quickly. It's already ready to go." Uh and align these the visioning documents that Denver call came up with. Yeah. I think as we go through these and we look at these lots just from a longer term perspective, you know, I was thinking when we talked about the dump truck just a little bit ago, you know, um because we have access to equipment because we have access to these things, we could help incentivize certain things moving forward by just participating. Maybe maybe we go and pick up the dirt that's on a low-lying lot that we need to kind of get it graded so that it's ready to build. um in this scenario maybe we're the ones that take on the complexity working with to to assemble the the thing which I think has been been one of yours is cities can be very strategic in incentivizing the right kind of development and I do agree this is this is Beck um Avenue it's right on the frontage um you know I really probably not like to see a parking lot as the as the main frontage on Beck Avenue I think we got enough parking lots along the the Beck Avenue frontage. Um some kind of liner building, but working with Neighborhood Evolution, I think is a great idea. Um I got introduced to those guys just a little bit ago and um they're very creative and they're doing this around the country and um so if their price is affordable, that would be a good solution. They're an offshoot of Neighbor Mountain Development Alliance. What's
the name again? Uh Neighborhood Evolution. Evolution. Neighborhood Evolution. Yeah, there's actually a viral video of one of the founders uh going through Instagram. He's got millions of views where he took a old Kmart and divided it up and made it into incubator. And I saw that took Yeah, that's it's been sent to me like 500 times by people. Our old Kmart is a storage. Mhm. Mhm. But nice. It's the fastest garage door I've ever seen. So, do we need to have a mot a motion to move forward? I guess we do. Yeah. I mean I this is a wonderful conversation but I would like some direction. I I do want to just add for for the public's benefit and for the elected officials because there was some comments made about you know prior purchasing. So after we went out you know for purchasing these both Commissioner Street and I got I would say rushed by a large group of people in St. Andrews that expressed grave concern with not allowing to happen in St. Andrews, what has happened in downtown Panama City where people purchase property and just sit on it for years on end without any improvements. And there was, I believe, legitimate concern that that could happen in St. Andrews. Uh, and then when we had folks expressed an interest in purchasing it, they wanted to do a parking lot. And again, we were surprised at that because, you know, this is prime commercial real estate right on Beck Avenue and a parking lot is not necessarily the highest and best use. So, the question was the zoning would allow it. Um, but you know, okay, if y'all do that, then please make it look nice because if we're just going to keep it vacant with grass and gravel, then I could have just kept that as a city and had our guys mow it, you know, uh, you know, once a month. And so, a reasonable expectation was put forth that if you do want to do a parking lot, then it needs to follow the example that the city set with the three parking
lots on the uh the west side of Beck Avenue. So, just a little bit of history on that um you know uh to where we are today. But no, I I would um you know, I would like some some direction if you'd like us to go and and create some ideas. I guess you know, if you're getting something specific from I mean, if are we are we going to sell it and say we'll only sell it to you if you're going to do AB and C or something like ABC? Uh I don't know if that's what you guys want. Yeah. I mean, I think the neighborhood evolution had creating somebody that it that has done like this kind of element um could create a framework rather than us just trying to take a stab in the dark, which is what happened on the previous P3. I mean, it was like, hey, here's property. Tell us what you want to do with it. That kind of thing. And um ultimately there were two very good ideas that were presented inside of those two proposals, but there was no financing and no ability to finance in either one of those proposals. And that's another one developed for the chair. So that's why that's why that one fell apart. But I think I think you know giving you guys some tools and somebody to work alongside to kind of create those parameters that would help us and I think help the staff too. I I think reaching out to the group and asking them to even help us write better P3s in general, not just with this one, but someone who's teaching us best practices of P3s. Um, and so I would ask the staff to go out and get a bid of what does it cost that group for us to to to write better P3s because we're not getting them done. We put out P3s and no one responds, right? So, we want what the goal is to have P3s and then a ton of people who are qualified are super excited, beating our doors down to do it. And so, I'd like to see this group improve our P3s, not just in this one, teach us some P3 best practices, and then what the cost would be to whatever they think visually would be needed to make this a great P3. So,
I just would like to see this cost and come back to us. So, I'll make a motion to um enlist uh um bring a spec cost on um neighborhood evolution um for creating P3 processes and helping us um create better end products. But I would also add um enlisting an agent to try and engage on that smaller piece of the parcel so that we can square this one up and hopefully get this thing across the finish line and see something really good happen with it. Second. Any discussion? Please call the role. Commissioner Granger, yes. Commissioner Street, yes. Commissioner Hughes, yes. Commissioner Lucas, yes. Mayor Branch, yes. Motion passes 5. Motion to second. Hugh. Commissioner Granger. Yes. Commissioner Street. Yes. Commissioner Hughes. Yes. Commissioner Lucas. Yes. Mayor Branch. Motion. Motion passes. 5 Z. I'm going say no one.
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.