Discover opportunities months before the RFP drops
Learn more →City Attorney
Work Email
Direct Phone
Employing Organization
Board meetings and strategic plans from Aleksandr Boksner's organization
The meeting commenced with the pledge of allegiance and invocation. A key procedural discussion involved modifying the agenda to move resolution 41-26 from the consent agenda to new business to allow the applicant time to address the council due to a recent corporate structure change affecting the involved company. Another resolution, 42-26, was also pulled for discussion regarding the purchase of soil/fill dirt for median curbing projects, which raised concerns about discrepancies in bidding units of measurement and calculations, leading to a decision to continue that item for later review with modifications to the procurement process. The council also formally launched the City of Cape Coral Student of the Month recognition program in partnership with the Lee County School District, honoring two initial students for their exceptional achievements in academics, marksmanship, and leadership. The majority of the consent agenda items, excluding those pulled for discussion, were approved.
The meeting commenced with the Pledge of Allegiance and roll call, noting several members present and excused. Key discussions focused on two main areas. First, the council discussed organizing a Special Meeting in April as a mental health panel, involving representatives from Lee Health, the collaboratory, and the school district, to address adolescent and pediatric mental health concerns. Tentative dates of April 7th or April 24th at 4:00 PM were proposed and approved for this Special Meeting. Second, a councilwoman offered council members assistance with professional attire and makeup from a boutique for upcoming events like the DC trip. Furthermore, updates were given on the road paving program, which is funded at $6 to $7 million annually, and discussions occurred regarding the private funding for the planned 250-foot World's Tallest Flag installation at Bernie Braden Park, scheduled for completion by July 4th. The council also reviewed and adopted the agenda and meeting notes from the previous session. Preparations for the final Quarterly Report in April were also underway, with requests for member photos and updates for inclusion in the report.
The joint workshop between the City Council and Youth Council focused primarily on the topic of mental health. The Youth Council presented findings from a survey administered to 214 students at Oasis High School concerning their mental health experiences, support needs, and perceptions of school resources. Key findings highlighted that while some students appreciate guidance counselors, there is a significant concern regarding the lack of specialized staff, perceived dismissal of issues by adults, and a strong desire for increased mental health awareness initiatives within the school. Discussions also covered existing mandated programs like Youth Mental Health First Aid training for employees and Social Emotional Learning hours. Council members expressed interest in extending the survey to other county schools to compare data and follow up on compliance issues noted by the school board.
The meeting addressed two primary ordinances. Ordinance 8-26 proposes repealing the land development code section on special events and creating a new special events article in the parks and recreation code to redefine, permit, regulate, and enforce events, including changes to submission deadlines, definitions, fee imposition, safety plans, and a tiered fine structure for civil violations. Ordinance 10-26 proposes several amendments to the land development code concerning building height, aiming to resolve inconsistencies in measurement, clarify how non-building structures are measured, provide administrative deviation relief for height standards (up to 10% based on necessity and public welfare), and exempt city properties from height requirements when providing necessary services.
The meeting focused on discussions related to item 4A, specifically the term sheet for the JC Park concessionaire agreement with the Karns Restaurant Group. This followed an RFP process where only one proposal was received. Key points of the term sheet discussed included the proposer forming a new LLC, a 20-year term with a 10-year renewal option, the concessionaire being responsible for building out the shell building and operations, and terms for repairs and maintenance. Significant discussion centered on the concession fees, the proposed initial payment structure (spread over 240 monthly installments), the minimum guarantee, and a proposed financial partnership where the Karns group commits up to $1.3 million for boat slip construction, which would then be credited against the minimum guarantee. Council members expressed concerns regarding the economic fairness of the terms, particularly the long 30-year potential term, the structure of the initial payment being amortized, and the boat slip contribution being credited against the minimum guarantee rather than being a true upfront contribution. The City Attorney legally recommended rejecting the proposal based on unfavorable material terms. Other council members expressed differing opinions on rejection versus renegotiation, suggesting modifications to the term length and the initial payment structure.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
Decision makers at City of Cape Coral
Enrich your entire CRM with verified emails, phone numbers, and buyer intelligence for every account in your TAM.
Keep data fresh automatically
What makes us different
Matthew Arsenault
IT Security Manager
Key decision makers in the same organization