Loading...
Ordinance 2019-4294 ORDINANCE NO. 2019-4294 AN ORDINANCE OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA, AMENDING PORTIONS OF THE CITY'S SIDEWALK CAFE ORDINANCE, AS CODIFIED IN SECTIONS 82-366 THROUGH 82-388 OF THE CITY CODE; SUCH AMENDMENTS PROVIDING, IN PART, FOR THE CREATION OF A NEW SECTION, 82- 389, ENTITLED "SIDEWALK CAFE CODE OF CONDUCT," WHICH SECTION CONTAINS CERTAIN TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COMPLIANCE WITH A SIDEWALK CAFÉ PERMIT THAT WOULD BE SUBJECT TO ENHANCED PENALTIES FOR VIOLATION, (WHICH PENALTIES ARE SET FORTH IN SECTION 82-371(b)); FURTHER AMENDING THE SIDEWALK CAFÉ PERMIT APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS BY REQUIRING PERMITTEES TO EXECUTE AN AFFIDAVIT EVIDENCING RECEIPT OF THE CODE OF CONDUCT, AND PERMITTEES' AGREEMENT TO BE BOUND BY SAME; AND PROVIDING FOR REPEALER, SEVERABILITY, CODIFICATION, AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE. WHEREAS, the City of Miami Beach permits the operation of sidewalk cafés on designated areas of its public property and right of ways, finding that such amenities provide a unique experience and environment for the City's residents and visitors to relax and enjoy the consumption of food and/or beverage(s) in the City's unique, vibrant, tropical atmosphere; and WHEREAS, however, in order to ensure that sidewalk cafés in the City are operated and maintained at the highest levels of quality and service, befitting an internationally renowned, world class resort destination like the City of Miami Beach, the permitting, operation, and maintenance of sidewalk cafes on public property are governed by the City's Sidewalk Café Ordinance, which is codified in Sections 82-366 through 82-389 of the City Code; and WHEREAS, the City's Sidewalk Café Ordinance is periodically reviewed and updated to ensure that the City's sidewalk cafés continue to operate at the highest possible standards (again, commensurate with those standards expected by residents and visitors to a world class destination like Miami Beach); and WHEREAS, the City Administration undergoes an annual review of applications for sidewalk café permits (including renewals thereof) and, in its sole discretion, determines whether such applications shall be approved for a sidewalk café permit to be issued; and WHEREAS, if approved, sidewalk café permits are issued annually for a one year period, from October 1st to September 30th; and WHEREAS, a sidewalk café permit is a privilege and not a right, and the approval, issuance and continued operation of a permitted sidewalk café is conditional at all times; and WHEREAS, because the City has found that aesthetically pleasing and properly operated and maintained sidewalk cafés can serve to enhance and complement residents and visitors' experience and enjoyment of the City's historic (and other recognized commercial and entertainment) districts/neighborhoods, the City's sidewalk café permit fees (that is, the fee charged to private business establishments/restaurants-for the privilege of operating and maintaining a sidewalk café on the City's public right of ways) have always been at a rate substantially less than fair market value for such space; and WHEREAS, the City Commission has also found that the highest possible standards, criteria, and conditions pertaining to the operation of sidewalk cafés are critical, not only toward maintaining excellent levels of quality and service, but (among other things) to: (i) preserve the aesthetic character of the City's right of ways by helping to diminish the proliferation of unsightly food displays, street furniture, signage and other visual and physical clutter; (ii) reduce potential nuisances including, without limitation, excessively loud music; hawking from restaurant/sidewalk café operators and their employees to passing pedestrians and overcrowding of the right of way; and (iii) aid in the prevention of deceptive, misleading, or bait and switch tactics by sidewalk café operators; WHEREAS, as part of its periodic, continous review of the Sidewalk Café Ordinance and, specifically, in continuing to find new and innovative ways to maintain the level of excellence that the City expects from sidewalk cafes on public property, the Mayor and City Commission desire to adopt and implement a Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, which shall govern various critical aspects of those permitted sidewalk café operations in the City, and, accordingly, provide enhanced penalties for violation of such provisions; and WHEREAS, every sidewalk café permit applicant will be legally required to execute and remit to the City a Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct Affidavit with its application, as a condition precedent to the City's undertaking the review and (if approved) the issuance of any sidewalk café permit. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA, AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. That those Sections of the City's Sidewalk Café Ordinance, as such Ordinance is codified in Sections 82-366 through 82-389 of the City Code, be amended as follows and as hereinafter set forth below: CHAPTER 82 PUBLIC PROPERTY * ARTICLE IV. USES IN PUBLIC RIGHTS-OF-WAY * * * • DIVISION 5. SIDEWALK CAFES * * * SUBDIVISION I. Generally 2 Sec. 82-366. Definitions. The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this division, shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where the context clearly indicates a different meaning: City manager means the city manager or the city manager's designee. Commercial handbill means any handbill intended proposin. a commercial transaction including to promotinq,e a advertisinae any food, beverage, product, or service sold or provided by a sidewalk café or a sidewalk café operator. Code compliance officer means the code compliance officers, fire inspectors, or any other authorized agent or employee of the city whose duty it is to assure code compliance. Expanded polystyrene means blown polystyrene and expanded and extruded foams that are thermoplastic petrochemical materials utilizing a styrene monomer and processed by any number of techniques including, but not limited to, fusion of polymer spheres (expandable bead foam), injection molding, foam molding, and extrusion-blown molding (extruded foam polystyrene). Expanded polystyrene food service articles means plates, bowls, cups, containers, lids, trays, coolers, ice chests, and all similar articles that consist of expanded polystyrene. Handbill means any menu, coupon, flyer, paper, document, dodger, circular, folder, booklet, letter, card, pamphlet, sheet, poster, sticker, banner, notice or other written, printed or painted matter or object provided by a sidewalk café or a sidewalk café operator. Menu board means a board allowing for the posting of a restaurant's complete menu, and fabricated in such a manner so as not to constitute a form of general advertising or establishment identification. The location, size, design, materials, and color of the menu board shall be approved by the city managerand shown on the sidewalk cafe site plan (as hereinafter defined in Section 82-382(b)(6) hereof). Menu boards shall be no larger than six square feet; may not be internally illuminated; and the top of the board shall not exceed five feet, six inches from grade. The menu board shall not be a sandwich board sign (as defined herein) or a specials board (as defined herein). Permittee means the recipient of a sidewalk cafe permit, which shall at all times be subject to and conditioned upon permittee's compliance and adherence to under the terms and provisions of this division. Polystyrene means a thermoplastic polymer or copolymer comprised of at least 80 percent styrene or paramethylstyrene by weight. Restaurant for purposes of this division only, means a food service establishment that is maintained and operated as a place where food and/or beverages are prepared and/or served and sold for consumption within the premises, or a business establishment which has, as an ancillary or secondary use, a part thereof where food and/or beverages are prepared and/or served and sold for consumption within the premises. No sidewalk cafe permit shall be issued to a restaurant whose occupational license or certificate of use is limited to take-out service and does not have inside seating. Right-of-way means land in which the sState, the stateFlorida dDepartment of tTransportation, the Miami-Dade sCounty, or the city owns the fee or has an easement devoted to or required for use as a transportation facility or street. 3 Sandwich board sign means a freestanding, A-frame structure located on a sidewalk OF street which may be affixed in position or is collapsible and which contains a sign (as defined in sSection 114-1 hereof). The sandwich board sign shall not be a menu board (as defined herein) or a specials board (as defined herein). Sidewalk means that portion of the right-of-way which is located between the curb line or the lateral line of a street and the adjacent property line, and which is intended for use by pedestrians; provided that on Lincoln Road Mall, a sidewalk shall mean a right-of-way as defined in this section, but shall only refer to that area between the property line and the centerline of the right-of-way, exclusive of landscaped areas and a 12-foot-wide clear path for emergency and maintenance vehicular access. Sidewalk cafe means a use, approved and permitted by the City pursuant to this division, which is further subject to and conditioned upon compliance and adherence to the terms and provisions of this division. Sidewalk cafes shall be located on a sidewalk or right-of-way; which ismust be associated with a restaurant and isare primarily characterized by tables and chairs; (which may be shaded by awnings, canopies or umbrellas4 andbut may also include such other sidewalk cafe furniture, (as hereinafter defined, and as permitted and/or approved pursuant to this divisionl. The sidewalk café area in which the sidewalk café is permitted to operate is at all times owned by the City in its proprietary capacity, and is permitted to the sidewalk café permittee for the purpose of advancing the City's legitimate governmental interest, as set forth in this division including, without limitation, Section 82-367 herein. The sidewalk café permit area shall not be considered a public right of way, a public forum, or a limited public forum, for purposes of First Amendment analysis. Sidewalk cafe furniture means those nonpermanent fixtures, furnishings and equipment associated with the operation of a sidewalk cafe and approved pursuant to this division including, without limitation, tables, chairs, umbrellas, planters, heaters, fans, rolling service stations, service carts, bussing stations, and menus, sandwich boards, and/or special:menu boards. Sidewalk café operator means any permittee including, but not limited to, any owner, manager, employee, contractor, agent, officer, director, representative, or any other individual or entity acting for, by, through or on behalf of any of the foregoing. Sidewalk cafe site map means a city-approved map detailing the location of the pedestrian pathway as it relates to a sidewalk cafe. Sign shall have the same meaning as provided for in sSection 114-1 hereof. Single-use carry out plastic bag means a bag provided by a sidewalk cafe permittee to a sidewalk cafe patron; for the purpose of transporting purchases or goods, including, but not limited to, food and beverages, which is made predominantly of plastic derived from petroleum or a biologically-based source. A single-use carry out plastic bag does not include a compostable carry out bag that: (1) Conforms to current ASTM D6400 standards; (2) Is certified and labeled as meeting ASTM D6400 standard specifications .by a recognized verification entity; and (3) mels capable of undergoing biological decomposition in a compost site such that the material breaks down into carbon dioxide, water, inorganic compounds, and biomass at a rate consistent with known compostable materials. 4 Solicit means any direct person-to-person verbal communication designed proposing a commercial transaction by inducing, suggesting, or persuading to induce a pedestrian on--tie - - . ^• - " e- - -- to stop and patronize the sidewalk café. Specials board means a board allowing for the posting of a restaurant's daily food and/or drink specials. Street means that portion of a right-of-way improved, designed or ordinarily used for vehicular traffic and/or parking. Sec. 82-367. Declaration of necessity and intent. It is hereby found and declared that: (1) -- - - ' __ ____ _ __ ___ __ - _ _ -•--- (sSidewalk cafes) in certain designated areas of the city to provide a unique environment, ambiance, and aesthetically pleasing experience for relaxation and food and/or beverage consumption. The operation and maintenance of sidewalk cafes on the City's property (where designated and allowed) enhance the residents and visitors' experience and enjoyment of the City's vibrant, tropical and diverse (historic and other recognized commercial and entertainment) districts/neighborhoods. (3) The City provides a unique benefit and advantage to private business establishments/restaurants by permitting the use of the City's property for sidewalk café operations, at a permit fee rate that has always been substantially below fair market value for the use of such space. traffic. It is imperative, however, that sidewalk cafes be operated and maintained in accordance with the highest levels of service and quality, befitting the status of a recognized world class, international resort destination like the City of Miami Beach. (5) The granting of a permit for the operation of a sidewalk café on public property is a privilege and not a right, and the approval, issuance and continued operation of a sidewalk café is conditional at all times. In order to maintain the highest standards of service and quality, There is a need for there exists a need for regulations and standards for the approval, permitting, existence and operation,of and maintenance of sidewalk cafes to-facilitate-and-ensure a safe environment in these ar as. al The establishment of permit conditions and--and, safety standards, fof criteria, and conditions for operation and maintenance of sidewalk cafes on the public right of way is also necessary to protect and promote the general health, safety and welfare of the residents and visitors of the eCity. Sec. 82-368. Removal and storage fees; disposition of property. If, pursuant to this division, the city removes, relocates, and/or stores any sidewalk cafe furniture, the permittee shall be responsible for the reasonable expenses incurred by the city for the removal, relocation, and/or storage of all such sidewalk cafe furniture. The city manager 5 shall promulgate and review, as needed, regulations regarding the storage and disposition of sidewalk cafe furniture under this division. The city, and including its officers and employees, shall not be responsible for any damage to, or loss of, any sidewalk cafe furniture; removed, relocated and/or stored pursuant to this division. Sec. 82-369. Appeals from the decision of the city manager. Appeals from decisions of the city manager made pursuant to this division shall be to the special master in accordance with the procedures set forth in &Sections 30-72 and 30-73 hereof. Appeals from the decisions of the special master shall be to a court of competent jurisdiction by petition for writ of certiorari. Sec. 82-370. Notice of violation. (a) Life safety violations and/or sidewalk cafe site plan violations shall be corrected immediately. Life safety violations are defined as those conditions which, in the reasonable determination and judgment of the city manager, involve serious danger and/or risk to the public health, safety or welfare (including, without limitation, blocking pedestrian pathways and violations of the &State accessibility code for building construction). Site plan violations are defined to include those instances where the permittee is operating outside of the permitted sidewalk cafe area (as approved pursuant to subsection 82-382(b)(6)), and Violations shall include, without limitation, a table or tables set up outside the approved boundaries of the sidewalk cafe site plan, and/or umbrellas, heaters, fans, bussing stations and other sidewalk cafe furniture found to be outside the approved site plan; but shall not be deemed to include instances where a chair or chairs are moved outside the approved boundaries of a site plan by a sidewalk cafe patron(s). (b) If a code compliance officer finds a violation of this division, such code compliance officer shall issue a notice of violation to the violator. The notice shall inform the violator of the nature of the violation, amount of fine for which the violation may be appealed by requesting • an administrative hearing before a special master within ten (10) days of the date printed on the notice of violation, and that the failure to appeal the violation within ten (10) days of the date printed on the notice of violation shall constitute an admission of the violation and a waiver of the right to a hearing. Sec. 82-371. Civil fines and penalties; denial of future permits to repeat violators; enhanced penalties. (a) Civil fines and penalties. The following civil fines and penalties shall be imposed for violations of this division: (1) First violation: $500.00. (2) Second violation within the preceding 12 months: $750.00. (3) Third violation within the preceding 12 months: Suspension of the sidewalk cafe permit for one weekend (Saturday and Sunday) and $1,000.00. (4) Fourth violation within the preceding 12 months: Revocation of the sidewalk cafe permit for the remaining portion of the permit year and $1,250.00. (5) Failure to apply for permit: Termination of sidewalk cafe operations until a permit is applied for and obtained. (6) Failure to renew permit: Suspension of sidewalk cafe operations until the permit is renewed. 6 (b) Enhanced penalties. The following enhanced penalties must be imposed by the city manager: (1) A permittee who has been issued more than four violations pursuant to this division within a permit year shall be prohibited from applying for and obtaining a sidewalk cafe permit for a period of two permit years; following the permit year in which the applisarifipermittee incurred the aforestated violations. (2) For life safety violations of this division and; site plan violations, subsection 82 385(v), (w), or (x), the city manager shall be authorized to issue an immediate order suspending the sidewalk cafe permit and operation, and the sidewalk cafe operator must cease operations for at least 24 hours, and until the city manager finds that the violation(s) have been corrected and withdraws the suspension order. The issuance of a notice of violation or an order suspending the sidewalk cafe permit shall raise a rebuttable presumption that a life safety violation; or site plan violation, OF violation of subsection 82 385(v), (w), or (x), has occurred. (3) For life safety violations of this division, and violations of subscction 82 385(v), (w), or (x), the city manager shall be authorized to commence proceedings, pursuant to sSection 102-381 or 102-383 of this Code hereof, to suspend or revoke the sidewalk cafe operator's business tax receipt. The issuance of a notice of violation pursuant to this paragraph shall raise a rebuttable presumption that a life safety violation; OF violation of subsections 82-389 5(v), (w), or (x), has occurred. (4) For violations of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as set forth in Section 82-389, the city manager shall be authorized to issue an immediate order suspending the sidewalk café permit and operation, and the sidewalk cafe operator must cease operations for at least 24 hours, and until the city manager finds that the violation(s) have been corrected and withdraws the suspension order. The city manager shall also be authorized to commence proceedings, pursuant to Section 102-381 or 102-383 hereof, to suspend or revoke the sidewalk café operator's business tax receipt. The issuance of a notice of violation pursuant to this paragraph, or an order suspending the sidewalk café permit, shall raise a rebuttable presumption that a violation of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct has occurred. Reporting requirement. The city manager, or the city manager's designee, shall, on a quarterly basis, present the city commission with a written report detailing the city's enforcement activities relating to life safety violations of this division, site plan violations, and violations of cubsSections 82 385(v), (w), and (x) 82-389. The report shall include statistics relating to the number of enforcement actions taken against each sidewalk cafe operator, and the outcome of each enforcement action. Sec. 82-372. Rights; payment of fine; right to appeal; failure to pay civil fine or to appeal. (a) A violator who has been served with a notice of violation shall elect either to: (1) Pay the civil fine (as set forth in subsSection 82-371(a)) in the manner indicated on the notice; or (2) Request an administrative hearing before a special master; to appeal the decision of the code compliance officer which resulted in the issuance of the notice of violation, which hearing must be requested within ten (10) days of the date printed on the notice of violation. 7 (b) The procedures for appeal shall be as set forth in sSections 30-72 and 30-73 hereof. Applications for hearings must be accompanied by a fee jas approved by a resolution of the city commission).which shall be refunded if the violator prevails in the appeal. (c) Failure of the named violator to pay the civil fine, or to timely request an administrative hearing before a special master, shall constitute a waiver of the violator's right to administrative hearing before the special master, and shall be treated as an admission of the violation, for which fines and penalties shall be assessed accordingly. (d) The special master shall be prohibited from hearing the merits of the notice of violation or considering the timeliness of a request for an administrative hearing if the violator has failed to request an administrative hearing within ten (10) days of the date printed on the notice of violation. The special master shall not have discretion to alter the penalties prescribed in this article. fpj Any party aggrieved by the decision of a special master may appeal that decision to a court of competent jurisdiction by petition for writ of certiorari. Sec. 82-373. Recovery of unpaid fines; unpaid fines to constitute a lien; foreclosure. (a) The city may institute proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction to compel payment of civil fines. (b) A certified copy of an order imposing a civil fine may be recorded in the public records and thereafter shall constitute a lien upon any other real or personal property owned by the violator, and it may be enforced in the same manner as a court judgment by the sheriffs of this state, including levy against the violator's real or personal property, but shall not be deemed to be a court judgment except for enforcement purposes. After two months from the filing of any such lien which remains unpaid, the city may foreclose or otherwise execute on the lien for the amount of the lien plus accrued interest. Secs. 82-374-82-380. Reserved. SUBDIVISION II. Permit Sec. 82-381. Permitted areas; conditional permit; city manager's right to remove sidewalk cafes; requirement disclosures on menus, bills, and receipts. (a) Sidewalk cafes shall only be located where permitted by the city's zoning ordinance and land development regulations, as same may be amended from time to time. (b) The operation of a sidewalk cafe is considered to be a privilege, and not a right, and the issuance of a sidewalk cafe permit neither establishes nor creates any legal rights for the permittee. The approval, issuance and continued operation of a sidewalk cafe permit is subject to the city manager's discretion, which is deemed conditional at all times. (c) It shall be unlawful for any'person to operate a sidewalk cafe without a valid permit as required by this division. (d) The city manager shall have the right to immediately remove, after 24-hours written and/or verbal notice to the permittee, any sidewalk cafe furniture used in connection with a sidewalk café which is operating without a valid permit. 8 (e) The city manager may cause the immediate termination, suspension, closure, removal, relocation and/or storage of all or part of a sidewalk cafe operation and/or sidewalk cafe furniture in those circumstances where the city manager determines it reasonably necessary for the protection of the public health, safety, or welfare. In those instances where the city manager determines that termination, suspension, closure, removal, relocation, and/or storage of all or part of a sidewalk cafe is necessary, pursuant to this subsection, the city manager shall provide prompt, written notice to the Mayor and City Commission setting forth the sidewalk cafe location, the action(s) taken pursuant to this subsection and the reason(s) therefor, and the duration of time for such action. X1)1=High Impact Periods. The city manager may, upon declaration of a high impact period, as provided in Section 82-443 of the City Code, order the immediate suspension and closure of all or part of sidewalk cafe operation(s) (including, without limitation, the removal of all or any sidewalk cafe furniture) within a High Impact Zone, as such area is defined in Section 82-443 of the City Code; provided however, that the manager shall first comply with the noticing requirements set forth in Section 82-443(c) of the City Code, and such measures shall only be instituted by the manager for a maximum period of 72 consecutive hours without the further approval of the City Commission to extend such periods. (f) The city manager may require the temporary removal and/or relocation of all or part of a sidewalk cafe when street, sidewalk, or utility repairs, or other public construction, necessitates such action. If such temporary removal exceeds 15 days, the city manager shall pro-rate the remaining permit fee for each additional day the sidewalk cafe (or portion thereof) is removed and apply a credit toward the following year's permit fee or, upon written request by the permittee, refund the remaining fee to the permittee. (g) Upon written and/or verbal notification by the city manager of a hurricane or other major weather event, or the issuance of a hurricane warning by Miami-Dade County, whichever occurs first, the permittee shall, within no more than four hours of notice same, remove and place indoors all tables, chairs,.and any other sidewalk cafe furniture located on the right-of- way. The notification by the city manager of a hurricane or other major weather event, or the issuance of a hurricane warning, shall constitute an clic emergency situation as referenced in subsection (e) hereof this-division. The city manager may remove, relocate, and/or store any sidewalk cafe furniture found on the right-of-way that has otherwise not been removed by the permittee pursuant to this subsection. Any and all costs incurred by the city for removal, relocation and/or storage of sidewalk cafe furniture shall be the responsibility of the permittee. Sidewalk cafes will not re-open for business following a hurricane or other major weather event until notified by the city manager. Violation of this subsection (g) shall result in the issuance of an immediate $1,000.00 fine, and/or suspension, for up to 30 days, of the sidewalk cafe permit. -- --- -- - - --- -- - - -- - -- --- -- - - --- -- - - 9 charge a price that is greater than the price displayed or disclosed for any food or drink sidewalk cafe must-disclose, to the patron, the price of the unique or specially requested - - -- - --- -- - - - - -- - and state the actual amount of this charge on the face of the customer's bill and receipt, such taxes accurately. Sec. 82-382. Application. (a) A sidewalk cafe permit shall be effective for one year, from October 1 until September 30 of the following year. (b) An Application for a permit to operate a sidewalk cafe shall include, but not be limited to, the following infer-mation: (1) The name, address and telephone number of the applicant/permittee. (2) The name and address of the business establishment/restaurant seeking a permit to operate the sidewalk cafe (including the name and address of the restaurant). (3) A copy of a valid city occupational license to operate the restaurant in front of which the proposed sidewalk cafe will be operating. The total count of chairs to be utilized for the restaurant must include the number of chairs used in conjunction with the sidewalk cafe and the number of chairs inside the restaurant, as authorized by the license. (4) A copy of a valid certificate of use for the restaurant in front of which the proposed sidewalk cafe will be operating. 10 (5) Copies of current certificates of insurance in the amounts and categories required by sSection 82-386 hereof. (6) A site plan signed and sealed by a duly licensed architect or engineer which accurately depicts the layout and dimensions of the existing sidewalk area and adjacent private property; proposed location, size and number of tables, chairs, umbrellas, and any other sidewalk cafe furniture; and location of doorways, steps, trees and/or landscaped areas, fountains, parking meters, fire hydrants, bus shelters, directory/kiosks, public benches, trash receptacles, and any other existing public fixtures, furnishings and/or other obstruction(s); within the proposed sidewalk cafe area. The sidewalk cafe site plan shall be approved by the city manager prior to the issuance of a sidewalk cafe permit, and the permit shall be specifically limited to the subject area shown on the approved site plan. (i) Notwithstanding the site plan requirement in subsection (b)(6), and only as applicable to the operation of sidewalk cafes located in the area north of 63rd Street and south of the city limits on 87th Terrace, through and including September 30, 2020, a sidewalk cafe; having no more than two tables and eight chairs, may satisfy the requirement of subsection (b)(6) by applying for and obtaining a site plan designed by the public works department for a fee of$250.00. A sidewalk cafe permit applicant may only be eligible to apply for a site plan pursuant to this subsection (b)(6)(i) if the operation of the proposed sidewalk cafe will result in no net increase to the applicant's total number of restaurant seats. The provisions of this subsection 82-382(b)(6)(i) shall stand automatically repealed on September 30, 2020. (7) Photographs, drawings or manufacturer's brochures fully describing the appearance and dimensions of all proposed tables, chairs, umbrellas, and any other sidewalk cafe furniture related to the operation of the sidewalk cafe. Tables, chairs, umbrellas, and any and all other sidewalk cafe furniture shall be approved by the city manager prior to the issuance of a sidewalk cafe permit. (8) A copy of the approved sidewalk cafe site plan, shall be maintained on the perfaittee4 premises of the business establishment/restaurant with the sidewalk café permit, and shall be available for inspection by city personnel at all times. (9) The annual application shall be accompanied by a non-refundable base application fee as set forth in appendix A hereof. However tThe non-refundable base application fee shall not be required for sidewalk cafe permit applications submitted to the city in conjunction with the Washington Avenue Pilot Parklet Program, which program shall terminate on March 31, 2019. fiq Additionally, the non-refundable base application fee shall not be required for sidewalk cafe permit applications submitted to the city for businesses on Washington Avenue from 6th Street to Lincoln Road, for the period ending on September 30, 2019. (10)Applications shall be reviewed for compliance with applicable city, state and federal laws, and must be reviewed and approved by the city's public works department; fire department; office of risk management; finance department; planning and zoning department; and building department. (11)Prior to issuance of a sidewalk cafe permit, the city's chief financial officer shall certify that there are no outstanding fines, monies, fees, taxes or other charges owed to the 11 city by the applicant/permittee and/or the business establishment/restaurant. A sidewalk cafe permit will not be issued until all outstanding debts to the city are paid in full. (12)No sidewalk cafe permit shall be issued to a restaurant whose occupational license or certificate of use is limited to take-out service and does not have inside seating. (13)A sidewalk cafe permit may not be transferred and/or otherwise assigned. A new owner and/or operator of a restaurant and/or business establishment business establishment/restaurant with a sidewalk cafe permit will be required to apply for and obtain a new permit. (14)The permit covers only the public right-of-way. Tables and chairs on private property will be governed by other applicable regulations. No outdoor seating authorized pursuant to this division shall be used for calculating seating requirements pertaining to location of, applications for, or issuance of, a liquor license; nor shall the outdoor seating be used as the basis for computing required seating for restaurants, or as grounds for claiming exemption from such requirements under the provisions of any applicable city, sCounty, and/or sState law. (15)Sidewalk cafes shall comply with all applicable accessibility codes including, without limitation, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and sState code provisions addressing accessibility for building construction, as same may be amended from time to time. (16)A sample menu that will be used by the sidewalk cafe to display or disclose actual prices for food and drink menu item(s), or display or disclose actual prices and accurate terms and conditions for any food and drink menu special(s). The sample menu must display or disclose the actual price for food or drink menu item(s) or food and drink menu special(s) (and, 4if applicable, the accurate terms and conditions for any food and drink menu special(s)) in a size (font) and typeface that is at least as large as the name of the menu or food item, and such price (and, if applicable, terms and conditions) must be displayed adjacent to the name, description, photograph, and/or image of each menu item or menu special, except as may be expressly authorized pursuant to the sidewalk cafe menu design guidelines adopted by the city commission pursuant to section 82 381(h). All menu prices must be displayed in numeric format. The name of the sidewalk—safe—operator restaurant must be prominently displayed on the menu. Each sidewalk cafe operator shall submit a sample menu to the city each year, which must be expressly approved by the city manager prior to each renewal of the operator's sidewalk cafe permit. (17)An affidavit by the sidewalk café applicant that the inclusion of an automatic gratuity or service charge, either in the price of the meal or drink or separately imposed for all items ordered, will be disclosed on the menu and the face of the customer's bill and receipt, and that the total combined percentage and amount of the city, sCounty, and sState taxes will also be stated on the face of the customer's bill and receipt. The affidavit must state that the notification to the customer of an automatic gratuity or service charge and the statement of the total combined percentage and amount of city, sCounty, and sState taxes are being included consistent with, and pursuant to, those requirement(s) set forth in sub:Sections 82-3�a cl-(j) 82-389(b) and (c). - - --- - e- 0 - - -- • Those applicants for a sidewalk café permit 12 (or renewal of a sidewalk café permit) on Ocean Drive, between 5th Street and 15th Street, must submit an affidavit '• _ _ •- _ __ e . -_ _ . -- - __ - certifying that: (i) Every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area has successfully completed a hospitality training program that has been previously approved by resolution of the mayor and city commission; (ii) Within one year of completing such program and each year thereafter, every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area shall complete an abbreviated version of the same hospitality training program; and (iii) Any newly hired manager or employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area must successfully complete such a hospitality training program. (19)A fully executed, original Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct Affidavit, which shall be signed (and duly notarized under oath by a licensed Florida notary) by an individual who is legally authorized and empowered to contractually bind the sidewalk café permittee and the business establishment/restaurant operating the sidewalk café. Such Affidavit will acknowledge that the sidewalk café permittee has agreed to be bound by the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as set forth in Section 82-389, including the enhanced penalties for violation of same, as set forth in Section 82-371(b) herein. (c) Renewals. As provided in cubsSection 82-371(b), a permittee who has been issued more than four violations pursuant to this division within a permit year, shall be prohibited from applying for and obtaining a sidewalk cafe permit for the following two consecutive permit years. Sec. 82-383. Permit fee; penalties for late payment; review of fee; exception. (a) The annual permit fee for operation of a sidewalk cafe shall be as set forth in appendix A hereof, and shall be based on a per square foot calculation of permitted sidewalk area (including the area between the tables and chairs). (1) - - - - - • - -- e.. - - - - - - - - - - - - -, iNo square footage fee as required by this section shall be required for the operation of sidewalk cafes north of 63rd Street, through and including September 30, 2019. The abatement of sidewalk cafe square footage fees for businesses north of 63rd Street shall be the subject of a budget analysis and review by the city administration by September 30, 2019. However, a permit must be obtained and the annual base application fee required by subsection 82-382(b)(9) shall be paid for the operation of sidewalk cafes north of 63rd Street. (2) No square footage fee as required by this section shall be required for the operation of sidewalk cafes in conjunction with the Washington Avenue Pilot Parklet Program, which program shall terminate on March 31, 2019. Additionally, no square footage fee as required by this section shall be required for the operation of sidewalk cafes on Washington Avenue, from 5th Street to Lincoln Road, for the period ending on September 30, 2019. (3) No square footage fee as required by this section shall be required for the operation of Ssidewalk cafes that contain up to 30 seats within the Collins Park Arts District Overlay, as defined in sSection 142-584 hereof - - - -• - - . -- - -- - -- - - fee identified herein. 13 (b) The city manager, in his reasonable discretion and judgment, may suspend or prorate the annual permit fee in cases of public construction or public emergency situations. (c) The permit fee shall be paid on or before October 1, and shall cover the time period from October 1 through September 30 of the following calendar year (permit year). No permit shall be issued for any portion of a year, but any person/entity operating a sidewalk cafe for a period beginning after the commencement date of the full permit year (October 1) may obtain a permit for the remaining portion of that permit year upon payment of a pro-rated portion of the permit fee calculated from the first day of the month of issuance of the permit to the end of the permit year. Except as expressly provided in this division, no refund of the permit fee shall be granted. (d) Late payments for permit fees shall accrue at the rate of ten percent per annum for the first 30 days. If the permit fee is not paid within 60 days after it is due, the permit shall terminate automatically. Any continued operation of a sidewalk cafe after termination of a permit shall be construed as operating a sidewalk cafe without a valid permit, and the city manager shall have the right to remove, upon 24 hours' written and/or verbal notice to the permittee, any and all sidewalk cafe furniture used in connection with the sidewalk cafe. (e) The City Commission may A review of the annual permit fee .all be required whenever the change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), between the latest CPI and the date of the CPI used for the last fee adjustment, is one and one-half percent or greater. Sec. 82-384. Permitted sidewalk cafe frontage; requests for expansions. (a) Sidewalk cafes are restricted to the sidewalk frontage of the restaurant to which the permit is issued or, if the restaurant is an ancillary and/or secondary use to another type of business establishment, the sidewalk cafe shall be restricted to the sidewalk frontage of the building (or portion thereof) of the "primary" business establishment (within which the restaurant is located). Only a restaurant whose premises are on a ground floor adjacent to and fronting the sidewalk may be issued a sidewalk cafe permit. Sidewalks cafes-may be extended into a loading zone fronting a restaurant as provided in subsection (d) below. (b) An applicant for a sidewalk cafe permit may be permitted, upon prior written request by the permittee to the city manager, to extend by a maximum total of 50 feet in the right-of-way on one side and/or the other side of the restaurant to which the permit is issued (of the business establishment where the restaurant is located); the permittee shall make written application to the city manager setting forth the reason(s) for the proposed expansion and provide a site plan showing the proposed expansion. All requests for expansions pursuant to this subsection (b) shall be reviewed by the city manager on a case by case basis. In reviewing such requests, the city manager, in making his determination to approve or deny, shall consider the following: (1) Pedestrian access. (2) Visibility of the front of the adjacent owner's business. (3) Obstructions. (4) Accessibility to the adjacent owner's business by patrons. (5) The city manager, shall solicit input from businesses and property owners on the same block including, without limitation, the immediately adjacent (i.e., next door) business and property owners. (6) The city manager shall provide written notice to the adjacent business establishment (tenant) and property owner on to whose frontage the sidewalk cafe proposes to 14 expand. The notification shall include the following information: the name and address of the permittee/business establishment requesting the expansion; the approximate location and size of the area requested; and the name and address of the city official and/or employee to forward comments to, and the time period within which to forward said comments (which time period shall be no less than 14 days). Said notice shall be sent, as to the adjacent business establishment (tenant), to the name and address on file with the city for the establishment's occupational license and, for the property owner, to the name and address identified in the records of the Miami-Dade County Property Tax Appraiser's Officer. Any objections not submitted and received by the city within the date provided in the notice shall be deemed waived. (7) The city manager may also consider any history of violations and/or warnings pursuant to sSection 82-371. In the event of approval by the city manager to expand a sidewalk cafe pursuant to this subsection (b), the additional square footage will be computed into the new permit fee. Notwithstanding the city manager's approval of a sidewalk cafe expansion pursuant to this subsection (b), in the event that the adjacent business establishment and/or property owner (on to which a sidewalk cafe has expanded) subsequently elects to apply for a sidewalk cafe permit to operate a cafe in front of its premises, that new applicant/permittee shall provide the city manager with notice of such intent stating the applicant's name; the property address; the name of the business establishment and/or the restaurant (of which the cafe is a part of); and the anticipated opening date. The city will provide the business establishment (tenant) and property owner which is currently expanding into the proposed new applicant/permittee's frontage with a courtesy copy of the notice. Following receipt of said written notice by the city, and provided that the new applicant/permittee obtains a sidewalk cafe permit, as well as any other required permits and/or licenses for operation of the business establishment and/or restaurant associated with the proposed new sidewalk cafe, ,then the city manager's prior consent for expansion shall terminate, and the city shall provide written notice to the adjacent sidewalk cafe permittee advising it of such termination, and providing a termination date therefore. The city's notice shall provide the adjacent property owner with at least seven calendar days',notice prior to the effective date of termination of the expansion. Upon the termination date of the city's consent to expansion, the sidewalk cafe permit and the permit fee will be adjusted accordingly. (c) In the case of sidewalk cafes on Lincoln Road, an expansion of a sidewalk cafe across the centerline of Lincoln Road Mall may also be permitted. The permittee shall make written application to the city manager setting forth the reason for the proposed expansion and provide a site plan showing the proposed expansion. Requests for expansions pursuant to this subsection (c) shall be reviewed by the city manager on a case by case basis. In reviewing such requests, the city manager shall consider the following: (1) The applicant/permittee would otherwise be significantly deprived of the use of the right-of-way for which the sidewalk cafe permit is sought; (2) There are special circumstances and conditions that exist, which were not self-created by the applicant/permittee, and are peculiar to that portion of the right-of-way, and are not generally applicable to other rights-of-way in the immediate area; (3) The granting of the expansion is the minimum that will allow the applicant/permittee's reasonable use of the area for its sidewalk cafe operations; and 15 (4) The granting of the expansion will not significantly impair the ability of pedestrians on that particular portion of Lincoln Road Mall to walk comfortably from one side of the mall to the other. In the event of approval by the city manager to expand a sidewalk cafe pursuant to this subsection (c), the additional square footage will be computed into the new permit fee. (d) Loading zones in front of a ground floor restaurant use with sidewalk frontage and a sidewalk cafe permit may be used as part of an expanded sidewalk cafe permit area when the street on which the loading zone is located is closed to traffic, provided that the loading zone is within a street area that is regularly closed to traffic during certain days or hours, a minimum of five days each week. All platforms, tables and chairs in the loading zone shall be removed at the close of business each night. A permit modification will be required before use of a loading zone may commence, subject to suspension or revocation at the discretion of the public works director. The fee for the temporary expanded sidewalk cafe permit area shall be as provided in sSection 82-383 hereof,of the-G Cede. Sec. 82-385. Minimum standards, criteria, and conditions for operation of sidewalk cafes. (a) The permittee shall take any and all actions to assure that its use of the public right-of-way in no way interferes with e- - - -- -- ••- -- - , e pedestrians utilizing the right- of-way and in no way limits their free, unobstructed passage thereto. (b) Sidewalk cafes shall be located in such a manner that a distance of not less than five feet is maintained at all times as a clear and unobstructed five-foot pedestrian path around public amenities and areas such as, by way of example, fountains, landscaped areas (excluding city planters), and seating/shade structures. A five-foot pedestrian path shall also be required and established where the city manager, in his reasonable judgment and discretion, determines that the operation of a sidewalk cafe inhibits pedestrian access to an adjacent business establishment or adversely affects the visibility of an adjacent storefront. Notwithstanding the preceding, the city manager, in his reasonable judgment and discretion, and on a case-by-case basis, may approve and allow for a pedestrian path of less than five feet where an applicant/permittee's sidewalk cafe operation would be significantly impacted. In considering such cases, and in determining whether an applicant/permittee is "significantly impacted," the city manager may apply the criteria set forth in eubsSections 82-384(c)(1)—(4) herein. k - - - ---- - -- - - - - -- required and established where the city manager, in his reasonable judgment and (c) No tables, chairs, umbrellas, or other sidewalk cafe furniture shall be permitted within ten feet of a bus bench and/or bus shelter. A distance of five feet shall be maintained from taxi stands, fire hydrants, bike racks, directory signage/kiosks, and/or other similar public street furniture and/or fixtures. (d) No tables, chairs, umbrellas or other sidewalk cafe furniture shall be permitted within five feet of an alley, pedestrian crosswalk, or corner curb cut. (e) The pedestrian path for Lincoln Road shall be a 12-foot clear path for emergency and maintenance vehicles. The exact location of the path on each block shall be determined by the city manager, in his reasonable judgment and discretion, and shall be incorporated into the sidewalk cafe site map of Lincoln Road. (f) No object shall be permitted around the perimeter of an area occupied by tables and chairs which would have the effect of forming a physical or visual barrier discouraging the free use 16. of the tables and chairs by the public; or, (in the case of Lincoln Road),which would have the effect of obstructing the pedestrian path or public access between the north and south sides of Lincoln Road. (g) The area covered by a sidewalk cafe permit, and the sidewalk and street immediately adjacent to it, shall be maintained in a clean, neat and orderly appearance at all times by the permittee. The area of the sidewalk, curb and gutter immediately adjacent to the sidewalk cafe shall be cleared of all debris during hours of operation, and again at the close of each business day, or as may otherwise be determined by the city manager. The permittee shall be responsible for pressure cleaning the floor surface on which the sidewalk cafe is located at the close of each business day. The city shall pressure wash the right-of- way from time to time in accordance with such schedule as shall be established in the reasonable judgment and discretion of the city manager. In establishing said schedule, the city manager shall use reasonable efforts to assure that the city's pressure cleaning of the public right-of-way occurs at such times as will cause the least disruption to sidewalk cafe operations. (h) Tables, chairs, umbrellas, and any other sidewalk cafe furniture shall be maintained in a clean, attractive, and orderly appearance, and shall be maintained and kept in good repair at all times. (i) All sidewalk cafe furniture shall be of high quality, design, materials, and workmanship so as to ensure the safety,comfort, and convenience of the public. (j) Only the sidewalk cafe furniture specifically shown on the approved sidewalk cafe site plan shall be allowed in the permit area. (k) (1-) All tables, chairs, umbrellas, and any other sidewalk cafe furniture shall be readily removable, and shall not be physically attached, chained, or in any other manner affixed to any public structure, street furniture, signage, and/or other public fixture, or to a curb and/or public right-of-way. (1) )Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (k)(1-)above, on the west sidewalk on Ocean Drive, between 5th Street and 15th Street, umbrellas may be affixed to the sidewalk with an in-ground mount system that is flush with the sidewalk or with a bolted metal plate not to exceed nine inches by nine inches in size. A detailed engineering design, and a structural analysis of either the mount system or metal plate, shall be submitted to the department of public works for review and approval. If permitted, such mount system or metal plate must be easily removable (as determined by the city) to provide a smooth ADA-compatible surface when the mount system or metal plate is removed. In the event that a oaf sidewalk cafe is no longer a permitted use, the umbrellas and entire mount system or metal plates shall be removed and a standard concrete sidewalk shall be re-installed, subject to the review and approval of the department of public works. (I) The stacking or piling up of chairs shall be prohibited on the right-of-way. Notwithstandinq subsection (I), Oon Lincoln Road Mall, tables, chairs and closed-up umbrellas may only remain on the right-of-way (within the permit area) as long as they are placed in an orderly manner. Notwithstanding the foregoing eOn Lincoln Road Mall tables, chairs and closed-up umbrellas may remain on the right-of-way as long as 80 percent of the restaurants on Lincoln Road Mall are open for lunch beginning at 11:00 a.m. The city will make this determination on two separate times during each permit year. The first determination shall be made on October 1, with the second determination being made on April 1 of each year. The phrase "open for lunch" shall 17 be defined by the serving of meals to patrons during the lunch hour. If the city determines that less than 80 percent of the restaurants on Lincoln Road Mall are open for lunch on either October 1 or April 1 of a permit year, then the following regulation shall apply to all restaurants on Lincoln Road Mall. fElAny and all other sidewalk cafe furniture including,without limitation, rolling service stations, service carts, and bussing stations, may only be maintained in the permit area during hours of operation, provided however, that planters that cannot be readily removed may remain within the permit area subject to the provisions of subsection (s) hereof. On Lincoln Road Mall, rolling service stations, service carts, and bussing stations shall not be permitted to be placed within five feet of the walls, columns, or posts of the Lapidus structures, city planters, or in front of other storefronts and/or business establishments. Notwithstanding anything contained in this subsection (I), the city manager may require a permittee to store its tables, chairs and/or umbrellas off of the right-of-way if, in his reasonable judgment and discretion, the city manager determines that the sidewalk café permit area and immediately adjacent public right-of-way are not being adequately maintained in accordance with this division. (m) No storage of dishes, silverware, or other similar sidewalk cafe equipment shall be allowed in the permit area, or in any other portion of the public right-of-way, or outside the structural • confines of the building in which the restaurant is located, during non-business hours. permitted as a special event issued by the city's specified pedal-events office. Conditions events officc, and these may vary during the year. (en)One menu board shall be permitted, per sidewalk cafe, for every 50 feet of frontage. No food or drink special(s) may be displayed, disclosed, or posted on any menu board or sandwich board sign. Specials board(s) are prohibited in all sidewalk café permit areas and any other portion of the public rights-of-way. (1) Exception. As applicable only to those sidewalk cafés located north of 631d Street, the provision in subsection (en) that pertains to the prohibition on Specials board(s) in sidewalk café permit areas and public rights-of-way shall not take effect until July 27, 2020. (p) No food preparation, food storage, expanded polystyrene food service articles, single-use plastic beverage straws, single-use plastic stirrers, refrigeration apparatus or equipment, or fire apparatus or equipment, shall be allowed on the right of way. In addition, expanded stirrers shall not be provided to sidewalk cafe patrons. (1)ffiException. The provisions in subsection (p) that pertain to single use plastic beverage single use plastic stirrer. (q(2) - --- - - - - e- e- •- • -- - -- -- - •- •- - - . No advertising signs or other commercial signage shall be permitted on the public right-of- 18 way except that the restaurant name and/or its logo may be permitted on umbrellas but such logos and/or lettering may not exceed six inches in height. (fp) {}Umbrellas shall be fire-retardant, pressure-treated or manufactured of fire-resistant material. No portion of an umbrella shall be less than six feet eight inches above the right- of-way. Two or more umbrellas may not be clipped, zipped or otherwise fastened together in order to form a tent-like structure. Clear plastics or other materials may not be fastened, rolled or otherwise be attached to umbrella edges in order to create an enclosure. { Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (r)(1)1p), and subject to planning department review and approval, the following provisions shall apply to sidewalk cafes located on the west sidewalk on Ocean Drive,. between 5th Street and 15th Street: a. A maximum of three umbrellas may be zipped together; b. Rain gutters may be installed between zipped umbrellas; and c. Colorless and transparent roll-down tarps may be permitted to be attached to umbrellas, provided that the tarps are only utilized during periods of strong wind or rainfall. Within one hour of the cessation of such wind and/or rainfall, the roll-down tarp shall be removed from the umbrella/awning system and stored on private property. (eg) The city manager may permit the use of planters manufactured of terra-cotta or polymer materials, with the number and size to be reviewed at time of application. Placement of planters within sidewalk cafe areas shall be five feet apart or greater. It shall be the permittee's responsibility to immediately remove planters, upon written and/or verbal notice from the city manager, in case of emergency or other circumstances., as provided in this division. Maximum size of planters shall not exceed the following: (1) Rectangular planters: 30 inches long, by 15 inches wide by 20 inches high. (2) Round planters: 24 inches diameter by 24 inches high. (3) Planters 20 inches or higher shall be on rollers or on rolling bases. (4) The combination of planters and plant height should not exceed a table height of 34 inches. Plants shall be properly maintained. Distressed plants shall be promptly replaced. Plant fertilizers which contain material that can stain the sidewalks shall not be allowed. Water drainage from any plants onto the sidewalk shall not be allowed. Potted plants shall have saucers or other suitable systems to retain seepage. (tr) Permittees may make written request to the city manager to use city electricity for powering floor fans during the summer months. Summer months are defined as the period beginning on May 1, and ending on September 30. The city manager will make electrical outlets operable upon payment of a flat fee, which fee shall be determined, and may be adjusted from time to time, in the reasonable judgment and discretion of the city manager, for each of the calendar days during the summer months. City electrical outlets will be restricted to powering floor fans only. Using the electrical outlets for powering lights, menu board lighting, and any other electrical device is strictly prohibited. Permittees violating this restriction will have the electrical boxes deactivated and forfeit any monies paid for electrical use. Fans must be UL approved for outdoor use. Extension cords are not allowed. (us) No permit shall be granted on Lincoln Road in an area designated in the sidewalk cafe site map as restricted for special and cultural events; provided however, that the city manager 19 may approve temporary use of such area(s), on a case by case basis, and only for a defined, limited period of time. (v) A sidewalk cafe shall be prehilaited-fremsentinuing—its operation until such time that it menu special{s), consistent with those requirements set forth in section 82 381(h) and 82 - - -- - --- -- - - - - -- - corkage fee, set up fee, sharing fee or charge, or other similar charge, either in the price of city's property. The notification must be consistent with those requirements set forth in sections 82 381(i) and 82 382(b)(17). {1) Gratuities or tips; {2) Service charges, minimum charges, corkage fees, set up fees, sharing fees or charges, or similar charges; or of the customer's bill and receipt; those requirements set forth in subsections 82381(i) and 82 382(b)(17). (y) As applicable to sSidewalk cafe permittees on Ocean Drive between 5th Street and 15th such program and each year thereafter, every manager and every employee assigned to 82 382(b)(18). Sec. 82-386. Indemnification and insurance. (a) The permittee agrees to indemnify, defend, save and hold harmless the city, its officers and employees,from any and all claims; liability, lawsuits, damages and causes of action which may arise out of the permit or the permittee's activity on the public right-of-way. 20 (b) The permittee agrees to meet and maintain for the entire permit period, at its own expense, the following requirements: (1) Commercial general liability insurance, in the amount of $1,000,000.00 per occurrence for bodily injury and property damage. The sity City of Miami Beach, Florida, must be named as an additional insured on this policy, and an endorsement must be issued as part of the policy reflecting compliance with this requirement. (2) For sidewalk cafes which serve alcoholic beverages, liquor liability insurance, in the amount of $1,000,000.00 per occurrence for bodily injury and property damage. The sity City of Miami Beach, Florida, must be named as an additional insured on this policy, and an endorsement must be issued as part of the policy reflecting compliance with this requirement. (3) Workers' compensation and employers' liability as required by the sState of Florida. (c) All policies must be issued by companies authorized to do business in the state and rated B+:VI or better per Best's Key Rating Guide, latest edition. (d) The city must receive 30 days' written notice prior to any cancellation, non-renewal or material change in the coverage provided. (e) The permittee must provide and have approved by the city an original certificate of insurance as evidence that the requirements set forth in this section have been met prior to commencing operations. (f) Failure to comply with these requirements at any time shall be deemed to be operating shall cause an immediate suspension or revocation of the permit. Sec. 82-387. Prohibited "no table" zones. (a) There shall be no sidewalk cafes permitted and/or placed within a section of the 1100 block of Lincoln Road. Mall, between Lenox Avenue and Alton Road; said section as more specifically defined by the following description: Land description: A portion of Lincoln Road lying between Alton Road and Lenox Avenue, as shown on "Commercial Subdivision," according to the plat thereof, as recorded in Plat Book 6, at Page 5 of the Public Records of Miami-Dade County, Florida, being more particularly described as follows: Commence at the southwest corner of Lot 6, Block 39 of said "Commercial Subdivision;" thence south 89'08;deg;55" west along the south line of Block 39 of said "Commercial Subdivision," a distance of 11.20 feet; thence south 00'51;deg;05" east, a distance of 25.00 feet to the point of beginning; thence continue south 00'51;deg;05" east, a distance of 50.00 feet; thence south 89'08;deg;55" west along a line 25.00 feet north and parallel with the south right- of-way line of said Lincoln Road, a distance of 190.08 feet; thence north 00'S1;deg;05 west, a distance of 50.00 feet; thence north 89'08;deg;55" east along a line 25.00 feet south and parallel with the north right-of-way line of said Lincoln Road, a distance of 190.08 feet to the point of beginning. Said land situate, lying and being in the City of Miami Beach, Miami/Dade County, Florida; containing 9,504 square feet; more or less. 21 (b) There shall be no personalty {property} or equipment relating to the operation of a restaurant, including, without limitation, sidewalk cafe furniture, garbage receptacles, storage containers, back-of-house operation, equipment or supplies, or any other similar item permitted and/or placed within the improved section of Euclid Avenue, between Lincoln Road and Lincoln Lane South, which section is more particularly described as follows: Land description: A portion of Euclid Avenue right-of-way as shown on the plat of "Second Commercial Subdivision of the Alton Beach Realty Company", according to the plat thereof, as recorded in Book 6, at Page 33, and the plat of "Lincoln Subdivision" according to the plat thereof, as recorded in Plat Book 9, at Page 69, both recorded in Public Records of Miami-Dade County, Florida; bounded on the north by the extension of the south right- of-way line of Lincoln Road; bounded on the south by the extension of the north right- of-way line of Lincoln Lane South; bounded on the east by the east right-of-way line of Euclid Avenue and bounded on the west by the west right-of-way line of Euclid Avenue, less the northerly 30 feet. Said land situate, lying and being the City of Miami Beach, Miami-Dade County, Florida; containing 8,400 square feet, more or less. Sec. 82-388. Hours of sale of alcoholic beverages; exceptions; enforcement. (a) Alcoholic beverages shall not be offered for sale or consumption at sidewalk cafes between the hours of 1:30 a.m. and 8:00 a.m., and shall not be consumed at sidewalk cafes between the hours of 2:00 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. Compliance with this section shall be a condition of maintaining a sidewalk cafe permit. (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a), alcoholic beverages may be offered for sale or consumption and may be consumed at sidewalk cafes located on Ocean Drive, between 5th Street and 15th Street, at such additional times as provided in &Section 6-3 of this Code. (c) A violation of this section shall be enforced and penalties shall be imposed in accordance with &Section 6-3(8) of this Code. Secs. 82-389. Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct Sidewalk café permittees must comply with those requirements set forth below in the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, which is supplemental to, and in addition to, all other standards, criteria and conditions herein regulating sidewalk cafes, and is not intended to amend, repeal or replace any other provision of Chapter 82, Article IV, Division 5. A sidewalk café operator that fails to comply with any provision(s) of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as set forth herein, may be prohibited from operating pursuant to those enhanced penalties identified within subsection 82-371(b). La A sidewalk cafe must display or disclose, in writing, actual prices for food and drink menu item(s), and display or disclose, in writing, actual prices and accurate terms and conditions for any food and drink menu special(s). The displayed price for the food or drink menu item(s) or food and drink menu special(s) (and, if applicable, the terms and 22 conditions for any food and drink menu special(s)) must be in a size (font) and typeface, which is at least as large as the name of the menu item. Such prices (and, if applicable, terms and conditions) must be displayed adjacent to the name, description, photograph, and/or image of each menu item or menu special, except as may be expressly authorized pursuant to the sidewalk cafe menu design guidelines. All menu prices must be displayed in numeric format. A sidewalk cafe may not charge a price that is greater than the price displayed or disclosed for any food or drink menu item(s) or food or drink menu special(s). In the event that a sidewalk cafe patron makes a unique or special request for a food or drink menu item not listed on the menu, the sidewalk cafe must disclose, to the patron, the price of the unique or specially requested food or drink menu item, prior to agreeing to prepare the food or drink menu item. A menu that prominently displays the name of the sidewalk cafe operator; actual prices for food and drink menu item(s) and for food and drink menu special(s); and, if applicable, accurate terms and conditions for any food and drink menu special(s) must be provided to each sidewalk cafe patron. 021 A sidewalk cafe that automatically includes a gratuity, service charge, minimum charge, corkage fee, set up fee, sharing fee or charge, or other similar charge, either in the price of the meal or drink or separately imposed for all items ordered, must display the actual amount of each such gratuity, charge, and fee on the menu and on the face of the customer's bill. This disclosure serves to provide the customer notification that an automatic gratuity, charge, and/or fee is being included by the sidewalk cafe operator. The disclosure of each gratuity, charge, and fee within the menu must not be smaller than 14-point font, and the disclosure within the bill must not be smaller than 12-point font. Lgl A sidewalk cafe that includes a gratuity or tip as a charge must separately itemize and state the actual amount of this charge on the face of the customer's bill and receipt,and such gratuity or tip must only be calculated based on the pre-tax sale amount of the food or drinks. A sidewalk cafe operator that includes a service charge, minimum charge, corkage fee, set up fee, sharing fee or charge, or any other similar charge, must itemize and separately state the actual amount of such charges on the face of the customer's bill and receipt. Service charges, minimum charges, corkage fees, set up fees, sharing fees or charges, or other similar charges imposed by a sidewalk dafe operator as part of the charges for furnishing, serving, or preparing food products must be subject to sales tax and surtax. A sidewalk cafe operator must state the total combined percentage and amount of City, County, and State taxes on the face of the customer's bill and receipt, and must label such taxes accurately. d There shall be no live entertainment or speakers placed in the sidewalk café permit area unless expressly permitted as a special event issued by the city's events office. ke No food preparation, food storage, expanded polystyrene food service articles, single- use plastic beverage straws, single-use plastic stirrers, refrigeration apparatus or equipment, or fire apparatus or equipment, shall be allowed on the right-of-way. In addition, expanded polystyrene food service articles, single-use plastic beverage straws, and single-use plastic stirrers shall not be provided to sidewalk cafe patrons. 23 (1) #Exception. The provisions in this subsection shall not restrict a sidewalk cafe operator from providing a beverage with, or offering the use of, a single-use plastic beverage straw or single-use plastic stirrer to an individual with a disability or medical condition that impairs the consumption of beverages without a single-use plastic beverage straw or single-use plastic stirrer. kf Single-use carry out plastic bags shall not be allowed in the right-of-way and shall not be provided to sidewalk café patrons. L No food display(s) shall be permitted on the public right-of-way, nor shall any food and/or beverage display(s) be maintained within the restaurant/business establishment's premises in such a way that the placement of such display(s) is/are clearly visible from the sidewalk café permit area and/or the public right-of-way. 211 Except as provided in Subsection 82-385(n)(1), specials board(s) shall be prohibited in all sidewalk café permit areas and any other portion of the public right-of-way, and no food or drink special(s) may be displayed. disclosed. or posted on any menu board or sandwich board sign. pursuant to Section 82-385(n). Nor shall any food or drink specials) be displayed. disclosed or posted within the restaurant/business establishment's premises in such a way that the placement of such display. disclosure. or posting is clearly visible from the sidewalk café permit area and/or the public right-of- way. As applicable-to sSidewalk café permittees on Ocean Drive, between 5th Street and 15th Street, including every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area, must successfully complete a hospitality training program that has been previously approved by resolution of the mayor and city commission. Within one year of completing such program, and each year thereafter, every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area shall complete an abbreviated version of the same hospitality training program. Sidewalk cafe permittees shall: in Maintain records on premises evidencing compliance with this subsection ge, and 21 Submit to the city manager, on an annual basis, the affidavit specified in suboSection 82-382(b)(18). ki4Sidewalk café operators located on Ocean Drive, between 5th Street and 15th Street, shall not: 01 Solicit any pedestrian(s) located on the sidewalk abutting the sidewalk café permit area, or on the right of way within twenty (20) feet of the outer perimeter of the sidewalk café permit area, for the purpose of inducing such pedestrian to patronize any business establishment or sidewalk café, or purchase any food, beverage, o€ product, or service, unless the pedestrian first affirmatively communicates a desire to receive information about the sidewalk cafe's food, beverages, products, or services; 24 ,(21 Distribute any commercial handbill(s) to any pedestrian(s) located on the sidewalk abutting the sidewalk café permit area, or on the right of way within twenty (20) feet of the outer perimeter of the sidewalk café permit area, unless the pedestrian first affirmatively communicates a desire to receive information about the sidewalk café's food, beverages, products, or services; and/or al Hold or display any commercial handbill(s) in such a way that impedes, hinders, delays, or obstructs any pedestrian's(e) gait or path of travel. Secs. 82-390—82-410. Reserved. SECTION 2. REPEALER. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith be and the same are hereby repealed. SECTION 3. SEVERABILITY. If any section, subsection, clause or provision of this Ordinance is held invalid, the remainder shall not be affected by such invalidity. SECTION 4. CODIFICATION. It is the intention of the Mayor and City Commission of the City of Miami Beach, and it is hereby ordained that the provisions of this ordinance shall become and be made part of the Miami Beach City Code. The sections of this ordinance may be renumbered or relettered to accomplish such intention, and the word "ordinance" may be changed to "section," "article," or other appropriate word. SECTION 5. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Ordinance shall take effect on the o11 day of SPPr-m 6 "( , 2019. PASSED AND ADOPTED this /1 day of Sei Pvnb 2019. ,/,,,1"1° Ft', ATTEST. Rif Dan Gelber, Mayor 14 119 Rafael E. Granado, ity Clerk J Underline denotes additions Str-ikeflafetigla.denotes deletions Double underline denotes additions after First Reading denotes deletions after First Reading ,,,:,;\r,----,-..,,,--::>,. APPROVED AS TO (Sponsored by Mayor Dan Gelber) v.1` - FORM & LANGUAGE c V:,•..• • � ,\ & 0 XE UTION , ...' V .• 0 \ tL((CI r . City Attorney Date :INCORP ORATED: 25 s 4 �� ••.........•••ACJ . 'hi 26 . Ordinances- R5 D MIAMI BEACH COMMISSION MEMORANDUM TO: Honorable Mayor and Members of the City Commission FROM: Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager DATE: September 11, 2019 10:20 a.m. Second Reading Public Hearing SUBJECT:AN ORDINANCE OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA, AMENDING PORTIONS OF THE CITY'S SIDEWALK CAFE ORDINANCE, AS CODIFIED IN SECTIONS 82-366 THROUGH 82-388 OF THE CITY CODE; SUCH AMENDMENTS PROVIDING, IN PART, FOR THE CREATION OF A NEW SECTION, 82-389, ENTITLED "SIDEWALK CAFÉ CODE OF CONDUCT," WHICH SECTION CONTAINS CERTAIN TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COMPLIANCE WITH A SIDEWALK CAFE PERMIT THAT WOULD BE SUBJECT TO ENHANCED PENALTIES FOR VIOLATION, (WHICH PENALTIES ARE SET FORTH IN SECTION 82-371(B)); FURTHER AMENDING THE SIDEWALK CAFE PERMIT APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS BY REQUIRING PERMITTEES TO EXECUTE AN AFFIDAVIT EVIDENCING RECEIPT OF THE CODE OF CONDUCT, AND PERMITTEES' AGREEMENT TO BE BOUND BY SAME; AND PROVIDING FOR REPEALER, SEVERABILITY, CODIFICATION,AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE. CONCLUSION The Administration recommends, upon second reading and public hearing, the adoption of the ordinance by the City Commission. Legislative Tracking Office of the City Manager Sponsor Mayor Dan Gelber ATTACHMENTS: Description ❑ 2nd Reading Memo ❑ 2nd Reading Reso ❑ Code Of Conduct Affidavit ❑ Below Market Declaration • Page 534 of 2228 D 7.23.19 Commission Meeting Page 535 of 2228 . . . _ , 4 MIAMI BEACH City of Miami Beach, '700 Convention Center Drive, Miami Beach,Florida 33'39,www,m'omibeochiigov COMMISSION MEMORANDUM TO: Mayor Dan Gelber Members of the City Commission Second Reading Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager FROM: Raul J. Aguila, City Attorney pig,t( Cg , DATE: September 11, 2019 SUBJECT: AN ORDINANCE OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA, AMENDING PORTIONS OF THE CITY'S SIDEWALK CAFE ORDINANCE, AS CODIFIED IN SECTIONS 82-366 THROUGH 82-388 OF THE CITY CODE; SUCH AMENDMENTS PROVIDING, IN PART, FOR THE CREATION OF A NEW SECTION, 82- 389, ENTITLED "SIDEWALK CAFE CODE OF CONDUCT," WHICH SECTION CONTAINS CERTAIN TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COMPLIANCE WITH A SIDEWALK CAFE PERMIT THAT WOULD BE SUBJECT TO ENHANCED PENALTIES FOR VIOLATION, (WHICH PENALTIES ARE SET FORTH IN SECTION 82-371(b)); FURTHER AMENDING THE SIDEWALK CAFE PERMIT APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS BY REQUIRING PERMITTEES TO EXECUTE AN AFFIDAVIT EVIDENCING RECEIPT OF THE CODE OF CONDUCT, AND PERMITTEES' AGREEMENT TO BE BOUND BY SAME; AND PROVIDING FOR REPEALER, SEVERABILITY, CODIFICATION, AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE. On July 17, 2019, the City Commission adopted the above-referenced Ordinance (the "Ordinance"), which is sponsored by Mayor Dan Gelber, at first reading. The Ordinance, which proposes certain amendments to the City's sidewalk café ordinance, as codified in Sections 82-366 through 82-388 of the City Code, includes the creation of a Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct(as set forth in Section 82-389)which shall govern those sidewalk cafés operating within the City and ensure that the purposes of the City's sidewalk café program are advanced, and not diminished, by each sidewalk café operator. Additionally, the Ordinance mandates that all applicants for a sidewalk café permit shall be required to execute an affidavit acknowledging receipt of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, and agreement to be bound by same, with any violation(s) of the Code of Page 536 of 2228 Conduct subject to those enhanced penalties set forth in Section 82-371(b) of the City Code. Since first reading, the only significant modification to the Ordinance has been the inclusion of the prohibition on specials boards, as provided in subsection 82-385(n), to the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as delineated in subsection 82-389(h). Moreover, in conjunction with its adoption at first reading, the Ordinance was concomitantly referred to the Neighborhoods and Community Affairs Committee, with direction that the Committee review the Ordinance and the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct between first and second readings. The Neighborhoods and Community Affairs Committee (the "NCAC.") heard the item at its July 23, 2019 meeting and, at that time, were provided an abundance of objective evidence supporting the enactment of the Ordinance. The evidentiary record provided to the NCAC included, among other record evidence, the following data and information: (i) Sworn testimony from five (5) Ocean Drive stakeholders; (ii) Written declarations from various sidewalk cafe stakeholders; (iii) Investigative reports regarding a "secret shopper" program conducted in July 2019; (iv) Surveys completed and remitted to the City by Ocean Drive sidewalk café operators; and (v) A plethora of online reviews concerning diners' experience(s) after patronizing various sidewalk cafés in the City. Upon conclusion of the presentation of the evidentiary record, the NCAC identified the compelling need to address the fraudulent behavior, solicitation and deceptive business practices which have plagued sidewalk cafés in the City, in order to restore the unique dining experience which allows the City's residents and visitors to relax and enjoy the consumption of food and/or beverage(s) at sidewalk cafés amongst the City's vibrant, tropical scenery. The NCAC also determined that such unacceptable and substandard conduct by sidewalk café operators must be strictly regulated, as set forth and specified within the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, to curtail the negative impact that such behavior has had upon the City, its reputation, and its residents and visitors, and to keep the City's sidewalks free of visual and physical clutter, and open to, and for the use of, the public. As such, the Neighborhoods and Community Affairs Committee unanimously determined that the Ordinance should proceed forward with a favorable recommendation for review and approval by the Mayor and City Commission. Accordingly, the Ordinance has been placed on the September 11, 2019 City Commission meeting agenda, and is accompanied by this Commission Memorandum, a transcript of the evidentiary record as presented at the July 23, 2019 NCAC meeting, and the Declaration of John Woodruff, Chief Financial Officer for the City, which establishes that the City provides the valuable subsidy of a rate substantially below market value to those sidewalk cafés operating on Page 537 of 2228 City property pursuant to the City's sidewalk café program. Therefore, upon consideration at second reading/public hearing, the City Administration and I recommend that the Mayor and City Commission adopt the Ordinance on second and final reading. Page 538 of 2228 • SIDEWALK CAFÉ CODE OF CONDUCT AFFIDAVIT—OCEAN DRIVE State of FLORIDA County of Before me this day personally appeared who, being duly affiant sworn, does hereby state under oath and under penalty of perjury that the following facts are true: 1. The applicant acknowledges receipt of, and agrees to be bound by, the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as set forth in Section 82-389 of the City of Miami Beach Code of Laws and Ordinances. The applicant also acknowledges and agrees that any violation(s) of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct shall be subject to those enhanced penalties for any violation(s)of same, as specified in Section 82-371(b)of the City Code. 2. The applicant hereby certifies as follows: (i) Every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area has successfully completed a hospitality training program that has been previously approved by Resolution of the Mayor and City Commission; and (ii) Within one (1) year of completing such program and each year thereafter, every manager and every employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area shall complete an abbreviated version of the same hospitality training program; and (iii) Any newly hired manager or employee assigned to work in the sidewalk cafe permit area must successfully complete such a hospitality training program. The applicant shall maintain records on premises evidencing compliance with this paragraph(2), and shall submit a newly executed copy of this Affidavit to the City Manager, or his designee, on an annual basis. signature of affiant Sworn to (or affirmed) and subscribed before me this day of , 20 , by who ❑ is personally known to me or C produced a as identification. notary public signature notary public printed name Page 564 of 2228 • SIDEWALK CAFÉ CODE OF CONDUCT AFFIDAVIT State of FLORIDA County of Before me this day personally appeared who, being duly affiant sworn, does hereby state under oath and under penalty of perjury that the following facts are true: 1. The applicant acknowledges receipt of, and agrees to be bound by, the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct, as set forth in Section 82-389 of the City of Miami Beach Code of Laws and Ordinances. The applicant also acknowledges and agrees that any violation(s) of the Sidewalk Café Code of Conduct shall be subject to those enhanced penalties for any violation(s) of same, as specified in Section 82-371(b) of the City Code. 2. The applicant hereby certifies that the applicant shall submit a newly executed copy of this Affidavit to the City Manager, or his designee, on an annual basis. signature of affiant Sworn to (or affirmed) and subscribed before me this day of , 20 , by who is personally known to me or : produced a as identification. notary public signature notary public printed name Page 565 of 2228 DECLARATION OF JOHN WOODRUFF 1. My name is John Woodruff. I am the Chief Financial Officer for the City of Miami Beach. 2. The City has established a sidewalk café program in which the City subsidizes the cost of operating a sidewalk café on City property by offering participants in the sidewalk café program space at a substantially reduced rate under the current market rate for space. The City's sidewalk café program permit rate for space on the City's property is S25 per square foot. 3. The market rate for storefront space on Ocean Drive is currently$120 per square foot. This calculation is based on past closings and the price for the only retail space currently for lease on Ocean Drive between 5th and 15th streets. The price per square foot of the currently listed property is $120 per square foot. 3. Market rate for space on the City's property outside of a brick and mortar building would be similar to the rate for the adjacent indoor storefront space 4. The City of Miami Beach provides a subsidy of a below-market rate for sidewalk cafes who participate in the City's sidewalk café program. The City enacted the sidewalk café program in order to provide a unique experience and environment for the City's residents and visitors to relax and enjoy the consumption of food and/or beverage(s)in the City's unique, vibrant, tropical atmosphere. In exchange for accepting this subsidy and participate in the sidewalk café program, sidewalk cafe operators must agree to a Sidewalk Cafe Code of Conduct that ensures that the purposes of the program are advanced by each sidewalk café operator and that no sidewalk café operator actually diminishes the positive impact of the City's subsidy by using it in such a fashion as to diminish the aesthetic appearance of the City and the pleasant experience for residents and tourists that the program seeks to advance. Page 566 of 2228 5. The City Commission has also found that the highest possible standards, criteria, and conditions pertaining to the operation of sidewalk cafes participating in the sidewalk cafe program are critical to the achievement of the City's interests in subsidizing the sidewalk cafe program to: (i) preserve the aesthetic character of the City's right of ways by helping to diminish the proliferation of unsightly food displays, street furniture, signage and other visual and physical clutter; (ii) reduce potential nuisances including, without limitation, excessively loud music; hawking from restaurant/sidewalk cafe operators and their employees to passing pedestrians and overcrowding of the right of way; and(iii) aid in the prevention of deceptive, misleading, or bait and switch tactics by sidewalk cafe operators. I verify under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct. Executed on August 6, 2019. .1 h oodru Page 567 of 2228 Page 1 NEIGHBORHOOD/COMMUNITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE MEETING Transcript of Meeting held before the Miami Beach Commissioners at City Hall, \Commission Chambers, 3rd Floor, 1700 Convention Center Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, at or about 10:15 a.m. , on July 23, 2019, reported by MARIA ISABEL SALUM, Registered Professional Reporter and Notary Public in and for the State of Florida. PRESENT: COMMISSIONER MICKY STEINBERG COMMISSIONER MICHAEL GONGORA COMMISSIONER JOY MALAKOFF COMMISSIONER ERIC CARPENTER COMMISSIONER MARK SAMUELIAN COMMISSIONER ALEKSANDR BOSKNER ROBERT F. ROSENWALD, JR. , ESQ CITY OF MIAMI BEACH LEGAL DEPARTMENT National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 568 of 2228 Page 2 1 MR. ROSENWALD: Good afternoon, 2 Commissioners, Robert Rosenwald, first 3 assistant city attorney with the City of 4 Miami Beach City Attorney' s Office. 5 This is a fact finding hearing to 6 consider whether objective evidence 7 towards the enactment of the proposed 8 sidewalk cafe code of conduct, including 9 restrictions that sidewalk cafes not 10 solicit pedestrians from 15th Street on 11 Ocean Drive. 12 The city manager has entered an 13 extensive written evidentiary record into 14 the agenda for today and he expressly 15 incorporates that record into the 16 legislative record for these items . 17 The written record includes 18 declarations from multiple stakeholders, 19 sworn under oath, a plethora of owner use 20 for Ocean Drive sidewalk cafes 21 specifically relevant to soliciting • 22 pedestrians and the various scams and bad 23 service that follow at establishments 24 that solicit in this manner, reports of a 25 secret software investigation that was National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 569 of 2228 Page 3 1 conducted this month by the city 2 manager' s office demonstrating the 3 negative impact of sidewalk cafes 4 solicitors on Ocean Drive, and the 5 results of a survey of Ocean Drive 6 sidewalk cafes demonstrating that 7 sidewalk cafe operators feel that they 8 all must solicit pedestrians because if 9 anyone does it, they all must do it in 10 order to remain competitive. 11 Many said that if their neighbors 12 were restricted from soliciting, they 13 would not need to do it either. It' s 14 either all or nothing for them. 15 And you will hear the testimony of 16 five Ocean Drive stakeholders today. 17 Commissioners shall be free to ask them 18 questions or to ask me questions, and 19 after the witnesses have testified, each 20 commissioner will have the opportunity to 21 speak and ask questions on this item. 22 I want to introduce you to our court 23 reporter who' s here today. She will be 24 taking a transcription of all of the 25 testimony. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 570 of 2228 Page 4 1 So, witnesses, before you speak, 2 please state your name, state your 3 address and spell your name for her, and 4 she may stop you and ask you if you're 5 speaking too fast to slow down, so do 6 that for her if she asks . 7 Now, the court reporter will be 8 swearing in the witnesses who will be 9 testifying here today. So our five 10 witnesses, can you please stand up and 11 the court reporter will swear you in. 12 THE REPORTER: Do you solemnly swear 13 or affirm that the testimony you're about 14 to give will be the truth, the whole 15 truth and nothing but the truth? 16 (All witnesses answered in the 17 affirmative. ) 18 THE REPORTER: Thank you. 19 MR. ROSENWALD: Your first witness 20 on this item will be John Deutzman. 21 MR. DEUTZMAN: Good morning, 22 everybody. My name is John Deutzman. 23 I 'm a member of the Mayor' s Panel on 24 Ocean Drive Safety, Security and 25 Infrastructure. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 571 of 2228 Page 5 1 Essentially what's been going on for 2 years on Ocean Drive is a bait and switch 3 scam. Two parts . One is the bait. The 4 bait is luring people into their 5 establishments with signs advertising 6 bargains that may or may not be bargains, 7 usually not bargains, and verbal hawking 8 or barking to lure them in. That's the 9 bait. We cut the bait by eliminating the 10 signs. 11 The other thing we need to cut is 12 the verbal inducements into the business, 13 which are generally false and lead to 14 fraud. 15 Personally I have observed people 16 being physically chased down the sidewalk 17 and solicited. I have seen crowds of 18 people around menus, blocking, 19 obstructing the sidewalk as they're being 20 made all these various outstanding 21 offers, verbally. I have heard them 22 saying, "Free drinks, free shots" to me. 23 I have heard one guy -- the super star I 24 heard was, "Hey, if you don' t like the 25 food or the service, it' s on me, it' s all National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 572 of 2228 Page 6 1 ' free. Come on in here. If you don' t 2 like it, I ' ll pay for it. " That was one 3 of the better ones . 4 So I have observed this personally. 5 I would never, in my time here, ever 6 advise that anybody, any resident or 7 friend or person that I care about go to 8 Ocean Drive to eat randomly because of 9 this bait and switch scam that is 10 prevalent. It' s a business model. They 11 know what they're doing. 12 I 'm the bad guy for bringing this up 13 and so is everybody else, and they think 14 it' s outrageous that we would be 15 concerned about their fraud scheme. So 16 that' s one thing. 17 The other thing I want to bring up 18 is that I have observed our police 19 department is called frequently to bill 20 skips and bill disputes and they wind up 21 being many times that the customers 22 aren' t the bad guys . The businesses are 23 the bad guys. And one I remember 24 distinctly recently was a couple who was 25 disputing the bill and cops had to come. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 573 of 2228 Page 7 1 It was a heated dispute. Basically they 2 paid the bill and afterwards, I talked to 3 these people, and they are credible 4 people, and they said, well, "I ordered 5 the two for one special, " and they were 6 charged full price. Why were they 7 charged full price? Because one of them, 8 one of the couple, ordered a drink 9 without alcohol, so they were charged 10 more because she ordered a drink without 11 alcohol, which actually cost the business 12 more. 13 So these types of confusing schemes 14 repeat over and over and over again in 15 different forms. 16 One other thing, which we did put on 17 our website a year and a half ago, on the 18 Crime Prevention Group, I should say, a 19 gentleman came, a tourist, in an 20 establishment for these $9. 95 specials 21 and he wound up with a $320 bill . And he 22 was furious, ranting and raving, cursing, 23 going crazy. The manager, "I'm going to 24 call the police, " and him, "Blah, blah, 25 blah, blah. " And creating a huge scene, National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 574 of 2228 Page 8 1 bad impression for our tourists`. The 2 stuff is outrageous. The city cannot be 3 in bed with fraudsters, with tricksters 4 and with a carnival circus out there. It 5 has to stop. It has to stop at all 6 costs. Whether we have to arrest 7 everybody on Ocean Drive to do it, 8 whether we have to sue everybody on Ocean 9 Drive to do it, it has to end and it has 10 to end now. 11 Thank you. 12 THE REPORTER: Can you spell your 13 name, please? 14 MR. DEUTZMAN: Yes, I 'm sorry. 15 John Deutzman, D-E-U-T-Z-M-A-N. 16 THE REPORTER: Thank you. 17 COMMISSIONER GONGORA: Thank you. 18 That was riveting. 19 MR. DEUTZMAN: Thank you, sir. 20 MR. ROSENWALD: Our next witness 21 will be Jo Manning. • 22 MS. MANNING: Jo Manning, 1460 Ocean 23 Drive. 24 I can't top John. That' s 25 impossible. I am in complete agreement National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 575 of 2228 Page 9 1 with everything he says. 2 What I am so upset about is that I 3 really can't walk down my street. I live 4 on Ocean Drive and yet, I hesitate to 5 walk down my street on the west side, 6 which is where I live, because we are 7 attacked. We' re attacked by hawkers . 8 You're attacked by these signs . You are 9 pushed and shoved and, you know, I feel 10 for the young people who are out there 11 hawking, nobody has talked about this, 12 and I want to say something -- I have 13 heard and I have some pretty good sources 14 on the street -- that these kids will be 15 fired if they don' t do this . It' s hard 16 for young kids to get jobs and they do 17 this. It's too bad, but that is 18 something to consider. 19 People who lease these restaurants 20 are really bad actors. They are bad to 21 the street. They are bad for the city. 22 They are bad for residents. 23 And John says he was going to be the 24 bad guy, so I'm going to be the bad girl, 25 even though I said I would be the good National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 576 of 2228 Page 10 1 girl, but something has got to be done 2 and the subcommittee I'm on with John, 3 the Ocean Drive Subcommittee has made 4 substantive moves in this direction to 5 stop this. 6 As it is in branding, commissioners, 7 mayor, legal department, consider the 8 kind of brand you're setting out to the 9 world. This is not a good brand. This 10 is crooked. It' s wrong and it demeans us 11 all. It brings down the street. It 12 brings down the city. 13 And one anecdote. Years ago, I was 14 at Starbucks across the street from where 15 I live and I started talking to a young 16 man behind me, and he started telling me 17 this was the first time he had been on 18 Ocean Drive. He was here with his 19 girlfriend and they were staying in a 20 hotel in the drive. And he said, "I will 21 never come here again. " And I said 22 "why?" He said, "because I'm getting 23 fleeced every night. " Turned out, he was 24 a minor executive at Facebook and he made 25 sure that everybody at Facebook knew • National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 577 of 2228 Page 11 1 about this . 2 Thank you. 3 THE REPORTER: Can you spell your 4 name, please? 5 MS. MANNING: First name is J-O, and 6 the last name is M-A-N-N-I-N-G. 7 THE REPORTER: Thank you. 8 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: When you 9 come up, state your name and spell it for 10 her in the beginning. 11 Thank you. 12 MR. ROSENWALD: Our next witness is 13 Mike Palma. 14 MR. PALMA: Good morning. It is 15 Michael Palma, and the last name is 16 P-A-L-M-A. 17 I 'm at 1020 Ocean Drive with Jesta 18 Hotel Group. I 'm executive vice 19 president. We own the Clevelander and 20 the Stiles Hotel and the Essex Hotel. 21 I think I' ll talk about when we have 22 good girl and bad guy, I'm going to talk 23 from the business perspective. This is 24 not a new situation for Ocean Drive. 25 We've been battling this for years. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 578 of 2228 Page 12 1 In 2010, when we came out of our 2 construction, I personally created a code 3 of conduct within the association to try 4 to get voluntary membership. We got 5 some -- we made some headway, but 6 unfortunately there were always certain 7 operators that pushed the envelope and 8 did anything to survive and we lost 9 control . 10 Once the solicitation was taken off 11 the table due to the injunction, it has 12 become an absolute disaster to call it 13 something nice. 14 Bottom line, we have hotel guests 15 weekly, daily, they complain, both at the 16 Essex and Clevelander, that they can't 17 walk the street for reasons that you have 18 already heard. It has become a street 19 that it' s impossible to do regular 20 business. Our cafe is down about 35 21 percent, because I don' t allow us to hawk 22 and I don' t allow us to treat people that 23 way. We don' t do the free stuff, the two 24 for one, the discounted programming. 25 So it' s also hurting the regular National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 579 of 2228 Page 13 1 businesses that are trying to survive. 2 And, in essence, it' s created a consumer 3 who is coming to the drive with one thing 4 in mind, "What can you do for me?" In 5 fact, yesterday, we had a consumer again, 6 as always, go to the host and say, "Hey, 7 what can you do for us today? What are 8 you going to give us for free?" So they 9 are basically being taught that Ocean 10 Drive is a discounted area to come and it 11 brings that demographics that most is 12 discounted, and everybody else is 13 suffering as a result. 14 And. as Jo and John say, the brand is 15 ultimately the one that suffers the most. 16 And with a huge investment that we have, 17 multi-millions on the property that we 18 own, it' s just not sustainable. We need 19 to turn this around. I 'm so ecstatic 20 that the commission is finally figuring 21 out a way with the help of the mayor and 22 pushing all you guys to get aggressive on 23 this behavior and what' s happening, 24 because it is truly devastating in Ocean 25 Drive. Okay? National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 580 of 2228 Page 14 1 And I speak on behalf of many good 2 operators as well. Many members on board 3 who both are in favor of this, and we are 4 not going to sit here and be held 5 hostage. 6 I'm going to end by a quick note. ' 7 Mario Courtney, who was on the chair 8 before I took over, we sent him out to 9 all the members about the shopper program 10 and to get them ready and engaged and he 11 wrote back -- and I won't name the 12 cafe -- he said, "Hey, two weeks ago a 13 friend, a couple from New Delhi stayed at 14 one of our hotels, decided to walk at 15 Ocean Drive and stopped at a certain cafe 16 for two cocktails and an appetizer. They 17 were shocked to receive a bill for $350 , 18 which they paid, but said they would 19 never return to Ocean Drive. " 20 This is an example of people who get 21 abused but do not complain to staff or 22 management. They simply pay and never 23 return, and then tell all their friends . 24 So that is enough right there. 25 That happens every day. We don' t National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 581 of 2228 Page 15 1 hear about it, we don' t know about it, we 2 only see it on the decline of the street, 3 on the sales, on the people that are 4 coming. Okay? 5 Thank you so much for what you guys 6 are doing. I appreciate it and on behalf 7 of the association, we support it 100 8 percent. 9 MR. ROSENWALD: Our next witness is 10 Amy Mehu, Ocean Drive manager. 11 MS. MEHU: Amy Mehu, City Manager' s 12 Office, City of Miami Beach. It' s A-M-Y, 13 M-E-H-U. 14 For the past four years, I have been 15 working with the city administration with 16 Ocean Drive businesses as the Ocean Drive 17 manager. 18 In the past four years, we have gone 19 through several iterations of the Ocean • 20 Drive' s panel or task force and I have 21 heard personally the many complaints that 22 come through from the residents and from 23 our tourists telling us how bad their 24 experience on Ocean Drive was, walking 25 along Ocean Drive, feeling like they're National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 582 of 2228 Page 16 1 accosted by the managers or the staff 2 alongside the sidewalk cafe area. 3 We even received e-mails . I 4 personally receive e-mails, phone calls, 5 requests, letting us know, not for any 6 action, but just as a heads-up that they 7 have been harassed by somebody, bait and 8 switch, into coming into the cafe and 9 told they are being offered one thing and 10 being sold another thing. And we're 11 constantly having to battle the 12 perception that Ocean Drive businesses 13 are up to no good. 14 I have personally gone out to Ocean 15 Drive in my role here in the city and I 16 have seen where the staff will stop 17 hawking when I 'm walking through. And 18 then when I go out there for my personal 19 time, they will continue to hawk. So 20 they are aware of their behavior and they 21 are choosing to stop it when they see 22 staff or when they see code compliance, 23 and not because there is a particular 24 rule, they are just aware that their 25 behavior is obnoxious and it' s not National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 583 of 2228 Page 17 1 becoming of our area. 2 And that' s pretty much all of that. 3 MR. ROSENWALD: Can you talk just 4 for a second about how relatively narrow 5 the sidewalks on Ocean Drive are which 6 negatively multiply the effects of 7 hawking? 8 MS. MENU: So right now we have a 9 five foot pedestrian path that needs to 10 be maintained by the sideway cafe areas. 11 Because of the size of the sidewalk 12 cafes, we are only down to five feet of 13 pedestrian path. It' s not even five 14 plus. And what happens is, it's a single 15 file line comfortably or two people 16 walking side by side and the only way 17 they have is along that sidewalk and with 18 people standing outside the cafe 19 footprint, hawking and being intrusive to 20 your personal space, it becomes a bit 21 uncomfortable, very uncomfortable for 22 people walking along the sidewalk, and 23 they are having to detour going into 24 either the parked cars or into traffic to 25 get around people who are hawking them in National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 584 of 2228 Page 18 1 the sidewalk cafe area. 2 And frequently, I'm getting 3 complaints for meetings that have nothing 4 to do with Ocean Drive businesses being 5 told, "I can' t even walk down Ocean 6 Drive. " They are going through the park 7 just to avoid walking down Ocean Drive 8 and being accosted by the service. 9 MR. ROSENWALD: And your final 10 witness today is Manny Villar from the 11 code compliance office. 12 MR. VILLAR: Good morning. Manny 13 Villar with the code compliance 14 department. I 'm here to speak about 15 several factors that affect the code 16 compliance department in regards to this 17 issue. The code compliance department 18 has witnessed an increase in the amount 19 of solicitation by these -- by the 20 various business establishments ever 21 since the injunction was implemented back 22 in 2015. We have seen a significant 23 increase in this type of activity on 24 Ocean Drive and other areas of our city, 25 key areas. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 585 of 2228 Page 19 1 I want to talk a little bit about ' 2 the resources it takes to enforce this 3 type of activity, because it' s very 4 difficult, obviously. When they see the 5 code officers approaching the area, they 6 stop the activity, they behave and they 7 wait until either we move on or -- you 8 know, so it's very challenging and I 've 9 had to implement several other methods of 10 enforcement, such as undercover 11 operations and other tactics to deal with 12 this type of activity, which has been an 13 increase of use and resources for our 14 department. 15 I want to talk about the fact that 16 if we separate the aggressive hawking or 17 solicitation from another type of 18 solicitation, it becomes very difficult 19 and challenging because it makes us 20 subjective and, obviously, when officers 21 are trying to enforce or investigate 22 these type of activities, once they are 23 aware that code enforcement is onto them 24 or inspecting the business operation, 25 they are going to change their tactics National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 586 of 2228 Page 20 1 and make it very difficult for us to 2 enforce this type of activity. 3 We've also noticed that it kind -- 4 this activity becomes a competition 5 between businesses. If you have -- and 6 they also work in teams. So in the past, 7 when we have been working on these type 8 of issues and there are several members 9 of a sidewalk cafe conducting this type 10 of activity, aggressive solicitations or 11 hawking, it triggers other cafes to feel 12 that they need to compete with them to 13 attract the business and that -- you 14 know, usually there' s a chain of events 15 and it kind of moves down the street and 16 before you know it, it' s much more 17 prevalent and they are hawking or 18 soliciting much more aggressively. 19 I also want to mention that several 20 of our key stakeholders have mentioned 21 that hawking has a detrimental and 22 adverse effect on the visitor experience, 23 which obviously we're very concerned 24 about and for that issue, we need to be 25 very careful on how we proceed on this National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 587 of 2228 Page 21 1 matter. 2 MR. ROSENWALD: Thank you. 3 THE REPORTER: How do you spell your 4 last name? 5 MR. VILLAR: My last name is 6 V-I-L-L-A-R -- 7 THE REPORTER: Thank you. 8 MR. VILLAR: -- from the code 9 compliance department. 10 MR. ROSENWALD: Commissioners, 11 before I open it up for your own comments 12 and questions, there' s just a couple of 13 more points. 14 We considered as part of this code 15 of conduct the option of having a limited 16 number of permits or a lottery for a 17 limited number of permits in order to cut 18 down on the number of restaurants that 19 were soliciting pedestrians as they went 20 by, in an attempt to lessen the problem 21 and thereby meet our interests, and we 22 elected not to go in that -- down that 23 road for a number of reasons. The first 24 was that we conducted a survey of all of 25 the Ocean Drive sidewalk cafes and every National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 588 of 2228 Page 22 1 one of the sidewalk cafes that answered 2 the survey when they were asked the 3 question, "If there was a permit, would 4 you want it, " they all said, "Yes, we 5 would all need to have it, because in 6 order to remain competitive, if one 7 person is allowed to do it, we all have 8 to be able to do it. And, in fact, if 9 our neighbor has one person outside, we 10 need to have two people outside and if 11 the neighbor has two people, we need to 12 have three. " And we got responses to as 13 many as four to five solicitors ,at any , 14 one time will be soliciting if we would 15 issue a permit or a lottery. 16 Also, that scheme wasn' t something 17 that we recommended because it was not 18 consistent with the direction of your 19 image for Ocean Drive that while we 20 allowed lotteries and permits for 21 things -- fully protected first amendment 22 speech like sidewalk -- I 'm sorry, like 23 street performers and artist vendors, 24 where we want to encourage community 25 involvement and where visitors like to National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 589 of 2228 Page 23 1 see some of that, the hawking by the 2 sidewalk cafes is not enjoyed by anyone. 3 It's inconsistent with the direction that 4 we have gotten and it is not fully 5 protected first amendment speech. It is 6 less protected commercial speech. 7 We also conducted a sidewalk cafe 8 secret shopper program over the course of 9 July. We hired investigators to go in 10 and measure the amount of the effect of 11 soliciting on Ocean Drive and to connect 12 whether there was a connection to the 13 scams in the bait and switch that we have 14 heard talked about. And even with 15 advance warning that we were coming, as 16 you heard today, the results of the 17 secret shopper program were pretty 18 conclusive. The hawking was extensive. 19 It was pervasive. It was annoying. Our 20 investigators observed pedestrians trying 21 to steer around the people who were 22 soliciting them, trying to run away from 23 them and having the solicitors follow 24 them down the street, in some cases 25 yelling things at them. We observed -- National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 590 of 2228 Page 24 1 our investigators observed some 2 restaurants with up to five solicitors at 3 any one time lined up along the sidewalk, 4 which you heard is very narrow, so you 5 really can't avoid them in that case. 6 And as a result, our investigators also 7 suffered various scams. One of the scams 8 was that the tip was added onto the bill, 9 but it wasn't -- when the part to sign 10 came, that wasn' t noted and an additional 11 tip was asked for. 12 Another one of our investigators 13 ' found that he was offered a 30 percent 14 discount to go into the store, but when 15 they got into the sidewalk cafe, when 16 they got that bill, the 30 percent 17 discount did not appear anywhere on the 18 bill . 19 Those incidents that I'm talking 20 about in summary are fully documented in 21 the evidentiary record and the reports 22 show that have been loaded into the 23 agenda on Lotus, for which you all have 24 reviewed for today. 25 At this point, I will just open it National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 591 of 2228 Page 25 1 up to give your own thoughts and 2 observations about this problem. You can 3 ask me any questions if you want. You 4 can ask any of the witnesses any 5 questions that you want. 6 I ' ll just turn it over to 7 Commissioner Steinberg to take over. 8 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Thank you. 9 Commissioners, who would like to go 10 first? 11 COMMISSIONER GONGORA: Thank you, 12 first of all, for that very thorough 13 presentation, thank you and to the many 14 witnesses that came here today to provide 15 your testimony as to this very serious 16 problem. 17 One of the things that I liked was , 18 aside from the testimony, was that the 19 city really went the extra mile here to 20 actually engage an investigator that 21 corroborated independently what we all 22 know and provided this excellent report 23 to us, which was very helpful. 24 I can tell you personally this has 25 been one of my big issues over the years. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 592 of 2228 Page 26 1 I understand, you know, as an attorney, 2 people's rights of free speech and all of 3 that, but there' s a point when that right 4 impedes on my ability to peacefully enjoy 5 the sidewalk and more importantly on the 6 mind of our residents and visitors' 7 ability to enjoy a peaceful experience. 8 If you look at other cities with 9 upscale kind of classy sidewalk cafes, 10 there' s no people screaming or grabbing 11 you on the street and trying to solicit 12 you for two for one specials. 13 I notice that there were many 14 witnesses who provided affidavits and 15 testimony live today, that similarly have 16 been physically touched. As I've walked 17 by, I have menus shoved in my face. I 18 have people call me over. And it really 19 is an unpleasant experience, and it needs 20 to stop. 21 So I 'm glad to see that this is here 22 today and I 'm going to be fully 23 supporting it. 24 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Very well 25 said, Commissioner Gongora. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 593 of 2228 Page 27 1 Commissioner Samuelian? 2 COMNIISSIONER SAMUELIAN: Thank you, 3 Madam Chair. 4 I want to thank all those who have 5 testified. I want to particularly give a 6 shout to Jo Manning on the day before her 7 birthday to come with us to do this, so 8 thanks for doing that. 9 I just briefly want to touch on my 10 personal experience with this issue, the 11 impact that it' s having on the city and 12 the range of policy and other approaches 13 that we have taken. 14 When I was elected in November 2017, 15 my first official meeting with the city 16 manager and city attorney, I broached 17 this topic, because I viewed this as one 18 of the most critical issues that the city 19 had to address, these deceptive practices 20 on public property. 21 I personally have experienced this 22 kind of bad behavior. For example -- 23 and, in fact, my declaration is included. 24 I was told that I would be receiving a 25 25 percent discount at this operator at National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 594 of 2228 Page 28 1 Ocean Drive, but then at the end of the 2 meal, while the discount was provided, I 3 was added a 20 percent service charge 4 that I was not aware of. So I really was 5 not receiving the discount that was put 6 to me. 7 I hear from our community members, I 8 hear them say, we don't want to go there, 9 because of the aesthetics, they can' t 10 walk and enjoy the environment. I hear 11 it online in preparation for a recent 12 ordinance. I just spent a little time on 13 TripAdvisor and Yelp and I saw the 14 horrible things people were saying and it 15 really has a detrimental impact. 16 I think a lot of people have 17 testified about that impact. I would 18 just touch on a couple. One, people are 19 not coming back. Residents can' t enjoy 20 their streets. we have a situation where 21 good business operators are challenged. 22 And the image of the city is both a 23 negative image and financial, because 24 it' s impacting our bottom line to the 25 tunes of millions of dollars . National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 595 of 2228 Page 29 1 We have tried so much. We have 2 passed ordinances related to menus. We 3 have passed statements of policy. We are 4 trying so many different things. We are 5 now looking at funding mystery shoppers 6 to address this. We are looking at 7 electronic means so when the poor 8 customer doesn't have the ability to 9 complain that they can communicate via 10 electronic means . We are trying 11 everything, but that still is not enough. 12 We need,this code of conduct for the good 13 of our residents, visitors and good 14 businesses. 15 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Thank you, 16 Commissioner. Very well said. 17 Ms . Malakoff? 18 COMMISSIONER NALAKOFF: This item, 19 the code of conduct, and what's happening 20 on Ocean Drive is critical to the City of 21 Miami Beach. The reason it' s so critical 22 is that it's not part of the City of 23 Miami Beach' s brand. It' s not the image. 24 It is not the image we want to tell the 25 world, because we are not that type of a National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 596 of 2228 Page 30 1 city with a honky-tonk beautiful street. 2 The street is beautiful . The Art Deco 3 District is beautiful. It' s known 4 internationally. 5 And yet, when I walk down Ocean 6 Drive,. I am solicited. I find hawking. 7 I find my path is so blocked, even though 8 there' s supposed to be a five foot, you 9 know, available pathway, that the mostly 10 ladies that are out there with their 11 menus and so forth, block part of that 12 path. 13 In fact, the last couple of times 14 I 've gone to Ocean Drive, I 've walked on 15 the other side of the street to avoid 16 that. It's just terrible. 17 I can' t tell you of any really 18 specific people who -- of my friends who 19 have been there and have seen the bait 20 and switch happen to them, because my 21 friends who live -- residents who live in 22 Miami Beach, long time residents, who 23 used to go to the cafe restaurants, they 24 used to be on Ocean Drive, a lovely place 25 to go for a quiet dinner, et cetera, National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 597 of 2228 Page 31 1 those kind of restaurants, they hardly 2 exist anymore on Ocean Drive . My friends 3 no longer go to Ocean Drive restaurants. 4 They go to Lincoln Road. They go to 5 Sunset Harbor. They go to other parts of 6 the beach, but because of the hawking, 7 because of the solicitation, they find 8 that they are completely uncomfortable, 9 as I do. I do not feel comfortable going 10 there. 11 I am very concerned, particularly 12 about the reviews on social media, the 13 comments on social media and how they 14 affect all of our tourists , all of our 15 visitors, including those from France, 16 from Japan, from India, from China. I 17 mean, social media is everywhere. It' s 18 not just the United States . It' s not 19 just the folks coming in from the 20 northeast. 21 And I think that we need to be very, 22 very strict on this code of conduct. We 23 need to stop the bait and switch. We 24 need to stop the specials . We need to 25 stop the unusual tips that are being National Reporting Service • (305) 373-7295 Page 598 of 2228 Page 32 1 added to the checks. And I think that we 2 need Ocean Drive so residents can again 3 enjoy the ambiance and enjoy the art deco 4 architecture, and not be bothered by 5 hawkers and solicitation. 6 As far as issuing permits, to me 7 that' s just out of the question, because 8 everybody will want a.permit. It' s very 9 competitive. If one restaurant or cafe 10 has somebody soliciting with menus 11 saying, "We have two for one specials," 12 the restaurants on both sides will want 13 to do the same. 14 Permits will not work because every 15 sidewalk cafe will want it. It just 16 shouldn't be. The sidewalk should be 17 open to the public, period. 18 COMMISSIONER MALAKOFF: Thank you. 19 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Yeah, I 20 think you get the sense from the dais, I 21 think we are all at our wit' s end. We 22 know that there is absolutely a negative 23 experience and it's impacting everybody 24 on Ocean Drive. We know that there are 25 issues with bait and switch. We know National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 599 of 2228 Page 33 1 that there are issues with fraudulent 2 tips and we know that the aggressive 3 hawking has caused serious issues . 4 I personally witnessed a family 5 walking with little children and the 6 aggressive hawking actually scared the 7 child. So I mean, this is unacceptable. 8 I think you have a sentiment up here that 9 we need to move forward and with that, 10 anybody else have anything they would 11 like to add, because I think we are going 12 to move this forward to a favorable 13 recommendation. 14 MR. ROSENWALD: Just a few more 15 points. Very quickly. That 16 aggressive -- aggressive solicitation was 17 also considered and the fact of the 18 matter is that the code of compliance has 19 a very difficult, if not impossible, time 20 enforcing that. It' s hard to tell when 21 they are being aggressive, unless they 22 stand right there. They have actually 23 had to do undercover operations in order 24 to try and bust these places doing 25 aggressive solicitation, and that means National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 600 of 2228 Page 34 pulling people from other districts of 2 code compliance officers who have other 3 things to do in order to try and enforce 4 this. And they found, even with that 5 extra effort, that it was ineffective, 6 and so we also did not recommend just 7 prohibiting aggressive solicitation. 8 COMMISSIONER MALAKOFF: Any 9 solicitation. 10 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: I will tell 11 you, I find all hawking is aggressive. 12 COMMISSIONER GONGORA: Just to make 13 a thorough motion rather than moving it. 14 Based upon the evidence presented through 15 the live testimony, the affidavits 16 attached, the investigator's report, the 17 experiences of the commissioners on this 18 spot and the legal argument presented, we 19 find there's a compelling need in our 20 city to stop this aggressive hawking, 21 that a lottery system would not work, it 22 would be impossible to enforce and, 23 therefore, our city needs this code of 24 conduct to move forward. 25 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Do I hear a National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 601 of 2228 Page 35 1 second to this motion? 2 COMMISSIONER MALAKOFF: Second. 3 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Seconded 4 it. All in favor? 5 (All members answered "aye" . ) 6 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Counsel, 7 you have a favorable recommendation from 8 the Commission. 9 MR. ROSENWALD: Thank you so much 10 for your time. 11 I would be remiss if I didn' t thank 12 our intern, Bethany Blakeman, who is with 13 us here today who did a lot of work on 14 this project. She' s a UM law student, 15 going into, I believe, her second year of 16 law school, and she did a great job and I 17 want to thank her. 18 MR. DEUTZMAN: What the 19 investigators uncovered there, one 20 example, the 30 percent they added, 21 that' s fraud, you go to jail for that. 22 Somebody has to go to jail. 23 COMMISSIONER STEINBERG: Thank you 24 all for coming in and for testifying. We 25 appreciate it. National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 602 of 2228 Page 36 1 With that, meeting adjourned. 2 (Thereupon, the meeting was 3 concluded at 10: 50 a.m. ) 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 National Reporting Service (305) 373-7295 Page 603 of 2228 BZZno t'09 a6ed S6ZL-£L£ (so£) aatnaa5 butgaodag TeuOTgeN SZ tZ £Z ZZ TZ OZ 61 81 warms =EMI iy*/ LI / 91 / .: /11/1!!!!11' St •6T0Z 'ATnr 3o Aep fa t6Z stag 'ape0-Tmei 3o Aguno3 'tmetyz 30 Agt3 aqg ut TeeS Tet0t330 Pue Pueq Am SS3N.LIM £T •uorgoe eqq ut pagseaequT Zt ATTeToueuTg aou 'satgaed eqq 3o Atte og pegeTaa aou 'setgaed aqq 3o ATM 3o Tasunoo so Aauzogge TT ue qou me I gegq AgTgaeo aag4zn3 I OT -paooea goazaoo pue anaq e agngtgsuoo 'eATenTout 6 'LE og T moi peaagmnu 'sabed butobeao3 eqq gegg :ggzo3 gas se aoeTd pue amig alp we 8 'saauotsstmmo0 alp asogsq esneo peTAgs-enoge aqq ut sbutpaaooid am; pueggaogs uT pagaodes i L gegq A3T4aao Agazaq op 'aegaodag Teuotssa;oad PaaagstbeN 'Wflws msysI KII 'I 9 S Raw-mum 30 xmm ioz 6 SS vanio'I3 30 anus £ - Z Zi3s1103211 30 SIVOMIS2i'3'J T L£ abed THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK