1639-26 Politics SUN JAN 13 1985 ED: FINAL
SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 12 LENGTH: 37 .43" LONG
ILLUST: photo: Cover color: Man holding MIAMI BEACH maps bw:
Stuart Newman, Zeke George, Fred Mooke, Al Wolfe
SOURCE: DORY OWENS Herald Staff Writer
DATELINE: A young starlet
MEMO: COVER STORY
HAVE THEY
GOT A CITY
FOR YOU. . .
clad in a bikini, ear muffs and wool mittens -- rubs her hands over the
flames of a campfire on a white sand beach.
She smiles. Shutters snap the winter scene. The shot is published in
newspapers across the country with the caption, "It ' s cold on Miami Beach,
down to 60 degrees. "
In an unprecedented coup, city publicist Hank Meyer brings the Arthur
Godfrey Show to the Kenilworth Hotel in 1952 , an event so charged with
excitement that more than 60 police officers are dispatched to control the
crowd.
The telecast marked the beginning of a parade of television and radio
shows broadcast from Miami Beach, each with its own stars and attendant
celebrities, that lasted for two decades.
Today. Tonight. Don McNeal ' s Breakfast Club. Ted Mack' s Amateur Hour.
Dave Garroway. Steve Allen. Jack Paar, Perry Como. Kate Smith. Red Skelton.
Dinah Shore. Miss USA. Miss Universe. Ed Sullivan. The Beatles. Jackie
Gleason.
How sweet it was.
Miami Beach, which has packaged and promoted itself since the mid-
Twenties when publicity meant little more than the distribution of cheesecake
photographs, has faded from the spotlight since the mid-Seventies. But there
is now a revival of interest in publicity at City Hall.
This year the city, the Miami Beach Redevelopment Agency and the Miami
Beach Visitor and Convention Authority will spend some $450, 000 on publicity.
Local officials aren't interested in resurrecting Meyer' s "Sun and Fun
Capital of the World" image. City Manager Rob Parkins sees publicity as a
means of shaping the destiny of a fading resort town in transition.
"When business is bad you advertise, " he said.
The Miami Beach Redevelopment Agency has hired Stuart Newman and
Associates to develop a program to attract investors and developers to South
Beach. The one-year contract will run $58, 000 .
Newman will create an 8 1/2-minute film to show to developers,
investors, bankers and insurance company representatives interested in South
Beach. The film, whose working title is South Pointe, a New Renaissance in
Miami Beach, is due Feb. 5 .
The publicist will also develop an investors kit that will include
aerial photographs and information on South Beach, and tips on tax advantages
and federal grants.
The city has hired Scott Ross and Associates, at a cost of $45,500 for
three months, to find ways to entice young professionals to move here. Ross
has commissioned a St. Petersburg firm to conduct a study of those
professional ' s attitudes toward the Beach for $27 , 000.
The city recently decided to split its public information office into
two departments, public affairs and protocol. The additional cost of the two
departments is $164 , 702 .
Protocol, budgeted at $73, 385, will take over the ribbon cuttings and
presentation of proclamations that have saddled the public information office
in the past. Former Public Information Officer Zeke George will head the
department with a $42, 000 salary. The new public affairs office is
budgeted for $257 , 784 . Fred Mooke, a broadcast journalist for 28 years, most
recently with WTVG-TV in Miami, will earn $49, 000 .
Mooke ' s chief responsibility is to generate positive stories about Miami
Beach. He said last week he will concentrate on promoting South Beach and
attempt to induce new business and construction. He will also push Miami Beach
as a residential community and a convention location, he said.
The Visitor and Convention Authority will pay public relations
consultant Al Wolfe $76, 000 to generate stories aimed at rekindling
vacationers ' interest in the Beach.
Parkins said he believes the money is well spent.
He points to the 25 to 30 percent vacancy rate of local apartment
buildings, a tax base that declined by 1 .2 percent last year instead of the
traditional increase of nearly 5 percent and the city' s goal of stimulating
economic development this year.
Parkins has the support of most of the City Commission but the $450,000
tab for publicity has prompted two commissioners to complain.
On Dec. 19, Commissioners Sidney Weisburd and Alex Daoud voted against
creating the public affairs director position.
"I was totally in support of getting the message out to the business
world that this was the best of times for investors, " Weisburd said. "I wasn 't
sure we couldn't do it with what we had. "
Daoud argued that Miami Beach is spending too much on publicity, in view
of a 26 percent increase in property taxes this year and cuts in services.
"I think it ' s a terrible waste of taxpayers ' money. It ' s a duplication
of services that could best be handled by one department, " Daoud said.
"How can we spend this money when we 're closing down a public library
and wanted to cut back on lifeguards? Cleaning the streets and closing down
deserted buildings and making it safer for people in their homes will make it
easier to market Miami Beach, " Daoud said.
All the public relations functions should be combined and conducted by
one firm or city department, said Daoud, whose campaign manager, Gerald
Schwartz, has previously bid unsuccessfully for the contracts awarded to Ross
and Wolfe.
Assistant City Manager Dick Fosmoen said the city' s public affairs
department doesn 't have the time or expertise to handle special projects such
as the promotion of South Beach or studies on how to attract young
professionals.
"If the department tries to do too many things, it can't do any of it
very well, " he said.
Other commissioners tend to agree with Fosmoen.
"You don' t go to a foot doctor for brain surgery and you don' t go to a
probate attorney for criminal representation, " Commissioner Bruce Singer said.
"No one firm could handle all this work. "
The consultants agree.
"People who say 'Lets have one staff doing all ' don' t understand the
nature of public relations, " Wolfe said. "Certain people have certain areas of
expertise. It ' s like a boutique versus a department store. "
The effects of public relations work are difficult to measure, making it
easy to criticize and hard to justify.
Nevertheless, several city officials were displeased with the work of
the public information office under George ' s direction, they said.
"I didn't think it worked the way it should, " Parkins said. "Press
releases, photographs, the timeliness of material. "
Parkins said George spent 75 to 80 percent of his time on protocol
functions.
"He was saddled with a lot of protocol work and, in all fairness to him,
he wasn't trained for public relations, " Parkins said.
He denied that the September incident in which Mayor Malcolm Fromberg
unknowingly presented a city medallion to a former sergeant in the German SS
caused the restructuring of the departments. He said, however, the
reorganization should help avoid similar mistakes in the future.
Parkins has asked George to prepare a manual of operating procedures
calling for background investigations on people presented to the mayor who are
unknown. "There ' s accountablity now, " Parkins said.
George, a former code enforcement officer, has been ill and absent from
work since before Christmas but is expected to return Monday. He refused to
return repeated phone calls from The Herald.
Commissioner Singer said that once the protocol department is in place,
he expects the new public affairs office to take on more of the work now
contracted to consultants.
"Once the department is formed, it will be able to handle more in-house
work. I would like to see us develop a more professional capability so we can
do more in-house, " Singer said.
Mooke, the city ' s new public affairs director, agrees that his
department will be able to handle more of the work now sent to public
relations consultants.
While his department may still have to contract for specialized tasks
such as the study on how to entice young professionals to move to Miami Beach
or film presentations on South Beach, Mooke said, he wants to "cut out the
middleman, " public relations consultants hired to oversee the projects.
"That won't be necessary in the future, " Mooke said. "This is the last
of it. "
ADDED TERMS: MB public relation
END OF DOCUMENT.