HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016587.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
Code Enforcement Board Meeting Minutes 07/17/08
Mr. Maxey said an approximate 24 inch piece of aluminum is hanging from the
light on Nightingale Trail and it seemed highly unusual that a shield of that nature
would only be necessary on that light when the recommendations given by Fish &
Wildlife are recommendations with broad reaching impact for the entire island. He
noted that the street lights in Palm Beach do not go off during turtle nesting
season. He said a field permit for trimming of the sea grapes at the Nightingale
Beach Club Association was not recommended during the nesting season. He said
the indifference to materials he had brought forth more than a year ago that had
now been brought forth officially by the DEP were offensive to him and that is one
of the reasons he had continued to “hammer” this. He said he believed the Board
should recommend to the Town Council that they remove that section of the
Code, given the current environmental regime, especially when one considers the
public relations downside of fighting him on this issue and spending $2,000,000 to
fight Lake Worth on the other side. Mr. Maxey said this was probably not a win-
win situation and that NOAA had not even been brought into the fold yet.
Mr. Ochstein wanted to know if the Board was precluded from enforcing the
ordinance now. Mr. Walton said it should not be enforced now, that in speaking
with Mr. Wettstein from DEP and Ms. Higgins from FWC, an agreement had been
reached to wait until the end of turtle season to require the trimming. The Town
recommends granting the Nightingale Beach Club until November 7, 2008 to come
into compliance. The permit is good until that date. In response to Mr. Hoffman’s
question, Mr. Walton said the permit was issued on June 16, 2008. Mr. Maxey
said he applied on March 19, 2008. Mr. Balletine inquired as to whether seven (7)
days was sufficient for compliance after the end of turtle season and Mr. Walton
said it was not a large area and he believed it was. Mr. Maxey said he did not
believe it was sufficient, that it would be an economic hardship if he had to replace
every tree that is over 3 inches in diameter in order to get it below 6 feet and he
brought up other issues involved with the trimming. Mr. Balletine told Mr. Maxey
he just wanted to know whether he could comply in a 7 day period without going
into a lot of detail. Mr. Maxey said that before he could remove any native plant,
he had to first remove every single non-native one from the property and he had
some questions whether or not he could comply within the time period. He also
said he had some real questions about whether the law, both at the State and the
local level had been equally applied within the Town. Mr. Maxey said he is in
consultation with an attorney to find out what measures he can take. The Town
did not apply for a permit to cut its own sea grapes and judging from the
guidelines he has in his permit, the Town would be in violation of almost everyone
of those guidelines. The DEP counsel’s office asked him to provide photographs
of the Town’s illegal cutting back in February.
Mr. Vanneck said there should be more research as to what should and should not
be cut. He believes the Town code may have gone too far.
Mr. Hoffman said the Board did not have the authority to modify the Code and
could only enforce the Codes as they had been written.
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016587
Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016587.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,423 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:28:36.958266 |