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#1264 Mayor Dermer's legacy: 'Quality of Life' November 5, 2007_ __ _ __ - v The Hollywood agency has Dean struck the island have 90 children in Jamaica ~ 'provided most of its surgeries made the situation unbear- suffer from ventricular se 1 MIAMI BEACH ~~ -~ _ ~ ~, ~ ~ • ac : u l~ r ermer s e ao Mayor David Dermer is stepping down after six years as mayor of Miami Beach. a--> BY TANIA VALDEMORO tvaldemoro@MiamiHerald.com Seven years ago, Miami Beach Commissioners David Dermer and Nancy Liebman were bickering over the ambi- ence of Lincoln Road. She hated the expansive sidewalk cafes, the out-of-control nightlife and the tabletop dis- plays of fake food. As a joke, Dermer gave he'r a rubber chicken. "We were playing around. The issue was, should you allow rubber :;food for food displays oh Lin- coin Road?" he said. ~~ But Liebman soon gave the ':rubber chicken back to Dermer, when he became mayor in 2001. The toy came with a warning: "Keep up the r quality of life!" °~ ~ Dermer, 44, says he's done ~~~~just that. Aslow-growth activist and populist who ~~ rode an anti-development wave into office in 199?, Dermer steps down this month with a solid "good gov- ernm.ent" record and an envi- able popularity rating that reflect his broadened agenda and sharpened .political smarts. `MOST EFFECTIVE' "I would say he's the most effective mayor we've had ,since I've been watching city politics for 50 years. He han- dles his office with great skill and has great support from the people," said former Mayor Seymour Felber. Dermer, the son of a for- mer Miami Beach mayor, made his own mark on .the city by sponsoring a series of leading-edge initiatives. They included: the state's first law requiring sexual offenders and predators to stay 2,500 feet away from schools, parks and day care centers; the first local laws forcing a city to divest its pension funds of links to Iranian and Sudanese regimes; and the county's first `.`Cultural Arts Neighbor- hood" that encourages afford- able housing for artists and cultural workers. Dermer emerged on the .e ~r3~---~ political scene in 1996 as chairman of the Save ~''~ r Miami tip; Beach move- ti ~~,~~.. ment. Its v ~ ` ~~ `~ goal: to stop h Sv overdevel- DERMER opment in South Beach. Activists gathered enough signatures for a ballot initia- tive -whether to change the city charter so that increases in zoning density along the waterfront would require a public vote. Despite being outspent $1.5 million to $20,000 by developer Thomas Kramer, who opposed the measure, the charter amendment passed in 1997. Months later, Dermer won his commission seat. "I was an activist outsider fighting a hostile govern- ment," Dermer, an indepen- dently wealthy lawyer who no longer practices, has said. While he now brushes off requests to discuss his legacy or future, Dermer clearly wants his work fostering fis- cal restraint, ethics and open government to endure. In September, he opposed a $95 million bond referen- dum proposed by Commis- sioner Simon Cruz, who is running to replace him. By raising taxes, the bond would have paid Mount Sinai Medi- ca1Center for its Miami Heart Institute campus and con- verted the site in a city park. The commis ion backed off that plan after Dermer said the bond lacked a required economic impact analysis and residents. com- plained about the costs. "My hope is that future office holders will have the political will to rebuff a con- federation of special interests coiled and lurking, ready to strike and plunder the city's treasury by tightening the noose of debt around the neck of every taxpayer," Dermer said in his recent farewell speech. Dermer has been intent on reducing the influence of spe- cial interests. He sponsored ethics laws that force lobby- ists to register and bar them from appearing before boards on which their colleagues sit, and other laws prohibiting vendors, developers and firms seeking city contracts from making campaign con- tributions. HIS LATE FATHER His strong anti-corruption stance comes from his late father, Jay, a reformer who beat President Franklin Roo- sevelt's son, Elliott, .and served as mayor from 1967 to 1971. Jay Dermer fought the hotel industry to open the beach to the public. He also opposed commissioners who granted insider deals to rezone land along the beach, because that led to the cre- ation of the "condo canyon" inMid-Beach, said Kent Har- rison Robbins, a David Dermer ally. "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree," he said. Former Commissioner .~ Martin Shapiro said the youn- ger Dermer set a new tone after he succeeded Mayor Neisen Kasdin, who had been Dermer's political nemesis. ~thepoor.org, or by phon~;~"'~`°'°""' ~, Dermer "held the State of the City [address] at City Hall, where the people .are, note hotel luncheons sponsored ~~~ ,~ the chamber of commerc~~,w Shapiro said. '~" ~' Kasdin said Friday th~t~` Dermer has been graciousac~ .~~ ~t him. He called him an effec= tive politician "who has a keen sense of what the public wants and how to communi- cate that." Still, Dermer has alienated some people with a few of his stands. He opposed Bay Link, a proposed light-rail train connecting Miami Beach to downtown Miami. He threat- ened to have Miami Beach secede from the greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau because of how it spent the city's resort taxes. And in 2004 he stumped fo~~ President Bush, whose pro=rs= rael stance he admires,`' despite being a Democrat. He later supported the Vise h itors Bureau after the city worked out a new contract with the, group, but said he has no regrets on the other two issues. Though Dermer fought with City Manager Jorge Gon- zalez over Bay Link, he put those differences aside later to work with him on the new sex offender rules and the cultural arts district. "He's always quick with a one-line zinger that is intended to elicit a chuckle," Gonzalez said. Dermer, a divorced father of three sons, gently deflected queries about his future, ` answering with a smile: "If there's something of a public r nature, I'll let you know." As for leadership at City Hall, soon to see not only a new mayor but three nevi commissioners, he says: "The time has come to get new blood in there!" MiamiHerald.com ITHE MIAMI HERALD ~____~. , MONDAY NOVEMBER5 2007 I _~B: SOUTH FLORIDA EXTRA ~.,.~ .; r- ~- - -F _