Blue Bamboo plans weekend opening

Blue Bamboo plans weekend opening

Blue Bamboo plans weekend opening

The nonprofit music venue recently secured a $1 million grant from Orange County and is counting down to its debut show in the old library

June 17, 2025

By Beth Kassab

Chris Cortez says the old Winter Park Library is buzzing with final construction and preparation this week before the space debuts this weekend as the city’s newest performing arts venue with two sold-out shows of the Orlando Jazz Orchestra on Sunday.

The opening of Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, more than a year in the making, comes on the heels of a $1 million construction grant awarded to the organization from Orange County.

“You’ve got to believe it’s possible or you can’t get anything moving at all,” Blue Bamboo founder Cortez said this week of the once long-shot odds of the venue taking over the old city building that was favored to go to Rollins College. “It’s contagious.”

The City Commission pivoted last year from a pitch that would have allowed Rollins to transform the building at the corner of New England and Aloma avenues into a new art museum and instead signed a lease with Blue Bamboo and rezoned the property to accommodate a venue space.

Cortez, a musician, and his wife Melody Cortez, a visual artist, started Blue Bamboo in 2016. They were on the hunt for a new space after the rent soared at their old location off Fairbanks Avenue at the same time city officials were still trying to figure out how to best use the 33,000-square-foot and three-story former library on New England Avenue.

Jeff Flowers, president of Blue Bamboo and a former Maitland City Council member who grew up in Winter Park, said the building has been transformed.

“This drab library was not very inviting and now it’s just … wow,” said Flowers, who noted the old oculus, the circular opening between the first and second floors that spanned 13 feet in diameter was once home to an indoor tree, is now closed.

The first floor features two performing spaces — a main stage with 182 seats and a smaller stage with a seating capacity of about 60.

Flowers said the nonprofit Performing Arts Matters, which he and his wife founded two decades ago to fund groups such as the Orlando Contemporary Chamber Orchestra, will have office space in the building.

Central Florida Vocal Arts also plans to take over space on the second floor once construction is done there, said Theresa Smith-Levin, founder and executive director. About $200,000 of the county grant is designated for the group to build out teaching, rehearsal and office space. Central Florida Vocal Arts may use the first floor stages for some of its opera productions.

Cortez said the money from Orange County, which divvys out a small portion of the Tourism Development Tax to local arts groups, will be crucial to completing changes to the building.

He credited contractor Walker & Company with working diligently to help Blue Bamboo secure a certificate of occupancy sometime this week and open by its Sunday deadline.

In addition to the shows planned for Sunday, events are also scheduled for next week and through July. 

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Winter Park Celebrates Pride, Juneteenth and its ‘Flip of the Switch’

Winter Park Celebrates Pride, Juneteenth and its ‘Flip of the Switch’

Winter Park Celebrates Pride, Juneteenth and its 'Flip of the Switch'

Despite local and national agitation against LGBTQ rights, Winter Park moved forward with a proclamation for Pride Month and looked back on its long battle for its own city electric utility

June 12, 2025

By Beth Kassab

Winter Park had a lot to celebrate Wednesday: Pride Month, upcoming Juneteenth events and the 20-year anniversary of the flip of the switch from the former Progress Energy to its own electric utility.

Mayor Sheila DeCiccio read a proclamation to honor Pride Month that noted the ninth anniversary today of the shooting at Pulse in Orlando, where 49 people died during a night of Latin dancing at the LGBTQ club, and the 59th anniversary on June 28 of the protests after police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York City.

She said the city is dedicated to fostering compassion, inclusion and safety.

“Let’s continue to build a welcoming Winter Park,” she said, as part of Winter Park’s first official proclamation for Pride Month, which comes two years after a battle over the rainbow peacock Pride flags they city flew during the month of June.

Thor Falk, founder of the Winter Park Pride Project, thanked the mayor for what he called a “bold” decision to recognize the LGBTQ community at a time when diversity and inclusion is being politicized across the nation. The Florida board that oversees the university system, for example, last week rejected the University of Florida’s pick as its new president because he previously showed too much willingness to embrace diversity and inclusion as president of the University of Michigan.

“Having this proclamation today validates what I have believed all along,” said Falk, who runs a campaign each June to provide Pride flags to businesses and residents. “Thank you so much for making this bold decision. It means a lot and it means a little … it’s sometimes these gestures that can make a difference in someone’s day and in how they feel about themselves when they know they are welcome in a community.”

The city of St. Cloud decided last month to pause all proclamations — meaning its own planned recognition of Pride Month would no longer happen — after one council member said some proposed proclamations could be “controversial” and needed more time for review, the Orlando Sentinel reported. 

Three residents spoke against the proclamation in Winter Park on Wednesday, including one man who said “pride” is associated with a man’s “downfall or ruin.”

Gigi Papa, a resident who frequently speaks at public meetings, said she is against the Pride Month proclamation and referenced Winter Park’s decision in 2023 to stop flying Pride flags on city light poles during the month of June.

The decision was made after a resident requested during an earlier Pride Month to hang banners that read “Choose Life” and “Celebrate Family” with the image of a pregnant mom, a dad and two children holding hands.

Some members of the City Commission considered that message overtly political. The language proposed by the resident aligned with the language often used by the Christian anti-abortion movement.

The U.S. Supreme Court had just ruled the year before that the city of Boston was wrong to deny a group’s request to fly a “Christian flag” outside of City Hall because the flagpole had been used by other groups as a forum for private speech, which would include religious speech. The court explicitly noted that Boston could change its rules so that the flags are only a vehicle for city-endorsed speech.

As a result, Winter Park changed its rules for the light pole banners to only allow for banners to promote city-sponsored events or certain nonprofits who meet criteria for a longstanding presence in the city.

That meant the end of Pride banners as well as the rejection of the “choose life” banner.

Papa, who also stood up during the approval of a contract agreement for the Rollins softball field to ask if the college allows “trans sports,” said residents “should have some say” in proclamations.

But proclamations are already driven by resident requests and the city has clear guidelines, which say the topics can’t be political or ideological but can support arts and culture, recognize a national occasion and create public awareness among other criteria.

Winter Park has issued recent proclamations for Irish-American Heritage Month, Kwanzaa, Women in Construction, Arbor Day, Bleeding Disorders Awareness Month and Purple Week, which recognizes and promotes acceptance of people with disabilities.

Two residents stood up to speak in favor of the Pride Month proclamation as well as the proclamation to recognize Juneteenth, considered the day of emancipation for enslaved Black Americans. The city posted a schedule of Juneteenth events here. 

“I am very pleased as a person who was born here in Winter Park that we celebrate Juneteenth and Pride Month … keep up the good work,” said Lee Rambeau Kemp.

Falk, with the local Pride Project, said this weekend’s Peacocks & Divas Drag Brunch at Mead Gardens is sold out. The event will raise money for students in Winter Park seeking technical careers.

DeCiccio said after the meeting that she wasn’t surprised by the negative comments and the numerous negative emails she has received about the proclamation.

“Winter Park is strongest when everyone feels safe and valued,” she said after the meeting. “Exclusion runs counter to our nation’s values — and Winter Park prides itself on being an inclusive community.”

Power Switch

City leaders also celebrated the 20-year mark since they took over their own utility from then-Progress Energy — and what is now Duke Energy — by showing a 13-minute documentary that detailed how the hard-fought decision came about.

The battle between Winter Park and Progress turned bitter and divisive.

The city said it could offer more reliable electric service to its residents and pledged to underground wires and keep rates low. Those against the change warned that Winter Park wouldn’t be able to deliver on such promises and would falter after storms.

Residents overwhelmingly approved the purchase in a landslide vote and the documentary points out all the ways Progress’ ominous warnings of Winter Park’s failure never came to be.

Winter Park is considered one of the most reliable utilities in the state by industry associations and boasts the fourth lowest rates in Florida.

The short film even points out how, with a little time and reflection, some who were so against the public conversion of the electric grid softened their views and changed their minds — a 180-degree flip that seemed inconceivable two decades ago given the acidic dialogue in the community at the time.

Resident Ray Renfo, who was interviewed for the documentary and recently saw his own wires undergrounded, said he’s changed his mind “100 percent.”

He said he’s confident entering this year’s storm season that he won’t be stranded in the dark and  feeling “better than we have in years.”

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Public golf courses swing for revenue as upgrades continue

Public golf courses swing for revenue as upgrades continue

Public golf courses swing for revenue as upgrades continue

The city has spent more than $750,000 on changes in recent years at Winter Park Pines and the Winter Park Nine

June 4, 2025

By Charles Maxwell

The nine-hole Winter Park Golf Course and the 18-hole Winter Park Pines Golf Club are undergoing upgrades this year, part of more than $750,000 Winter Park has spent in recent years on the city-owned courses. 

The goal, said Parks and Recreation Director Jason Seeley, is to keep the courses profitable, as other courses across the region have closed or fallen into disrepair. 

The Winter Park Nine saw an increase in rounds played last year to 52,000 as well as a jump in revenue from membership and greens fees, according to city records. But the Pines saw a decrease in rounds played in 2024 to 33,000 as well as a drop in greens fees, though membership revenue increased compared to 2023. 

Improving the Pines course, which the city purchased in 2022 for $8 million after the private owner pushed to redevelop the land or else allow the manicured fairways to grow wild, remains a top priority, said Jason Seely, director of parks and recreation. 

He said the city is exploring the idea of adding tracking technology to the driving range that could draw more people to the sport. Options like Trackman Range could turn the Pines into a Topgolf-like hang-out in Winter Park with virtual golf games and realistic course simulations. 

“It would bring a whole different vibe to the facility,” Seeley said. “It goes from being just a golf course, which is great for golfers, to also being a place where anybody in the community might use it.” 

Seeley recently traveled to Clermont National Golf Course to learn more about their inrange system, similar to Trackman. 

He said Clermont National’s driving range now “does better than the actual golf course… Not only does the range create its own revenue, it also completely changed the dynamics as far as their food and beverage. They’re no longer selling food and beverages a little bit in the morning and a little bit at lunch… they’re are selling all night long.” 

While the Pines has shown an operating profit since the city bought it, Winter Park has also invested heavily in upgrades. 

The city has spent about $600,000 on improvements so far, using money from the bonds issued to purchase the 18-hole course visible from Semoran Boulevard near Hanging Moss Road. 

Changes include lengthening the course and increasing the par from 69 to 72, renovations to the clubhouse and restrooms, an outdoor patio and beer garden, a new driving range surface and automated ball dispenser, planting new pine trees and other landscaping and replacing or repairing three bridges on the course. 

While the number of rounds played at the Pines dropped in 2024, which included two weeks of rain closures, the course still showed an operating profit. Revenue decreased by about $90,000 to $1.7 million from 2023 to 2024, according to city records, and operating expenses totaled about $1.6 million. 

A recent photo shows a patchy green at Winter Park Pines, the 18-hole golf course purchased by the city in 2022. (Photos by Charles Maxwell)

Although the course’s revenues have not covered the interest on the debt from the purchase, the city defends the decision to rescue the course. 

In a recent email to residents, Mayor Sheila DeCiccio said the Pines “is not just a golf course. It is permanently protected parkland.” 

Winter Park is not the only local government to buy a course after owners threatened to build more homes or condos over the green spaces. 

Oviedo bought the Twin Rivers Golf Club in 2017 for more than $5 million to prevent the land from being redeveloped. In 2021, Seminole County purchased Deer Run Golf Club in Casselberry and Wekiva Golf Club in Longwood for nearly $14 million. The county is turning Deer Run into a passive park, but Wekiva is still being operated as a course. 

The Winter Park Nine, which is nestled between the commercial district centered on Park Avenue and the neighborhood along the shores of Lake Osceola, is also showing a smaller profit despite nearly 52,000 rounds played last year compared to 42,000 in 2022.

Profit fell from about $205,000 to $106,000 over the same two-year period as improvements continued on the course that dates back to 1914. 

The city has operated the nine-hole Winter Park Golf Course for more than three decades.

The city purchased the course in the mid-1990s after operating it for years. In 2016 it underwent a major renovation. 

Since then, the city has spent about $150,000 on recent additional upgrades such as the patio space outside the clubhouse and expansion of the first tee box, along with a new rain shelter near hole four and an updated Thor Guard lightning prediction system.

Players at the nine-hole course will begin to notice this fall a new maintenance facility, along with new bunker liners to keep the sandtraps structurally sound during storm season and minimize future maintenance costs. 

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Charles Maxwell graduated from Winter Park High School and Florida Atlantic University with a BA in Multimedia Studies. His work has appeared in the South Florida Sun Sentinel and The Boca Raton Tribune, and he is a contributing writer for Keeping it Heel on the FanSided network. 

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Beef over Today Show visit, no more flouride and what to do over private pickleball noise

Beef over Today Show visit, no more flouride and what to do over private pickleball noise

Beef over Today Show visit, no more flouride and what to do over private pickleball noise

The City Commission also approved a new lease for the Benefit Shop at its most recent meeting

May 29, 2025

By Beth Kassab

Winter Park has had it up to the top of the Knowles Chapel steeple with giving away free publicity to the neighboring city of Orlando.

Earlier this month the Today Show filmed its third hour from Central Park as small crowd gathered to watch.

The city waived the park rental fee for Visit Orlando, the tourism marketing agency that coordinated the Today Show’s visit and that receives more than $100 million in taxpayer dollars intended to benefit the region.

Mayor Sheila DeCiccio said she was surprised that the show never thanked or even mentioned Winter Park on air. She said Visit Orlando representatives told the city the reason is because the show was an Orlando event intended to promote Orlando.

“I propose on a go forward basis that visit Orlando gets nothing from Winter Park for free unless credit is given to Winter Park or they can pay fees like anyone else renting the park,” DeCiccio said.

“They didn’t say at all they were in Winter Park?” asked Commissioner Craig Russell.

“Not one word,” DeCiccio responded.

“Oh, no you can’t … no …,” Russell said back.

“And they stayed at the Alfond Inn, too,” DeCiccio said, referring to the luxury hotel owned by Rollins College just off Park Avenue.

The segment featured an interview with Michael James Scott, the Broadway actor known for playing the Genie in Disney’s musical version of Aladdin who grew up in Central Florida and attended Dr. Phillips High School in Orlando, as well as chefs from three Orlando restaurants.

The Today Show snub comes on the heels of the New York Times’ “36 Hours in Orlando,” which recommended readers actually spend many of those hours in Winter Park and featured a large photo of Winter Park’s Scenic Boat Tour.

Fluoride to leave city water

City Manager Randy Knight told commissioners that the city would stop adding fluoride to its water system by July 1 in order to comply with a recently passed state ban.

He said it’s possible fluoride will be out of the water system before July because the city’s supply may run out before then and the utility did not order more because of the new state law.

At a Utilities Advisory Board meeting earlier this week, Water Utility Director David Zusi said the concentration of fluoride in Winter Park’s water was low and the additive does not affect the taste or water softness or hardness. As a result, residents won’t be able to detect the change, he said.

Alison Yurko, a member of the advisory board, said she wanted to make sure customers know that the change is a result of state law rather than local policy.

“I think this is going to have a very unfortunate effect on kids at the lower income level who don’t go to the dentist,” she said.

The  American Dental Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics support using fluoride to help prevent cavities in children, especially in underserved communities. They also cite a lack of evidence for health harms when fluoride is at the current low levels used in most community water systems in the U.S.

The Florida Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis backed the state ban in the wake of renewed scrutiny over the additive driven by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., national secretary of Health and Human Services, who has called fluoride an “industrial waste,” citing its potential health risks.

Public health studies conclude that risks related to fluoride exposure are generally associated with receiving either too much or too little and do not apply to the low concentrations found in most public water systems.

Private pickleball? Commissioners worry over noise

There’s been a change of plans for a prominent corner near Park Avenue that may lead to new city regulations for private pickleball courts.

Last year a founder of Full Sail University sought approval to develop a three-story building at the corner of Morse Boulevard and Knowles Avenue to be anchored by Storyville Coffee, a concept he started on the west coast.

But Jon Phelps’ idea for the property has changed said City Planning & Zoning Director Allison McGillis. Plans now call for a one-story building that still includes a Storyville Coffee, but also a swimming pool and pickleball court to go along with the private residence portion of the building.

Commissioner Warren Lindsey raised concerns about potential noise from the courts so close to other businesses.

“I think we need to proactively address private pickleball courts,” he said.

McGillis said the city’s codes include regulations related to tennis courts, but not pickleball courts, and said noise complaints related to pickleball are common.

Commissioners asked her to come back to the group with recommendations for how to revise the city’s rules to address noise and any other concerns.

 New lease for Benefit Shop

At the previous City Commission, members voted to pursue a 3-year lease with the Benefit Shop, a thrift store that once operated out of City Hall and raises money for local charities by re-selling household goods and clothes.

But on Wednesday the Commission voted 3-2 to change the term to five years with Commissioners Marty Sullivan, Kris Cruzada and Craig Russell in favor.

The shop, a longtime fixture in Winter Park, wanted a 35-year lease to move to the Lake Island Park building in MLK Park. But commissioners felt that was too long and limited future commissions who might need to consider additional uses for the building at some point.

Debbie Glaser, a co-manager of the shop, said it plans to re-open on Fridays and Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the new location beginning this week. She said the shop now has more than 20 volunteers and hopes to add additional hours in the future.

Information from Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy was used in this report related to the impacts of fluoride.  

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Commission approves historic preservation changes

Commission approves historic preservation changes

Commission approves historic preservation changes

Winter Park city officials also said they were attempting to help Austin’s Coffee relocate and will try to negotiate a new lease with the Benefit Shop

May 15, 2025

By Beth Kassab

The City Commission approved changes to the historic preservation ordinance that are designed to discourage unapproved demolitions with clear potential consequences and to ensure homeowners don’t deviate from plans approved by the Historic Preservation Board.

Commissioners voted 4-1 to pass “Version 1” of the changes that say owners who knock down or dramatically alter historic structures without permission after going through the certificate of review process can be required to build the structure back exactly as it was, including using authentic exterior materials. In addition, they could lose any variances the historic board granted that allowed the project to move forward.

Commissioner Marty Sullivan was the only dissenting vote because, he said, he wanted “Version 2” of the proposed changes, which included the option of a financial penalty for such unauthorized demolitions capped at 30% of the building’s county assessed value — though Sullivan suggested the cap increase to 60%.

“I think 30% is way too little,” Sullivan said.

The debate over the ordinance, which had been delayed from earlier this year, centered on whether or not to include the monetary penalty, which drew fierce opposition from some in the city’s historic districts who viewed it as far too punitive.

But the version approved by the commission is potentially even more punitive when you consider the cost of losing variances on setbacks or other building rules.

Variances, or exceptions to the usual building code, are viewed as a clear benefit for historic owners to encourage them to preserve the outside architecture of buildings. For example, if the typical required buffer between a home addition and the property lot line is 20 feet, historic owners might be allowed to build to 10 feet.

As a result, losing those variances, as the ordinance says could happen in the case of an unauthorized demolition, is a “huge deal,” said John Skolfield, a builder who was elected earlier on Wednesday to serve as chairman of the Historic Preservation Board.

“If you think about the house in question that started all of this … we approved a beautiful design that brought it to 7,200 square feet,” he told the commission. “You have to build back without the variances, that’s a $500,000 to $800,000 ding.”

He was referring to the house at 965 Lakeview Drive that went before the Historic Preservation Board for a major renovation and addition. The board authorized the plans, but only approved the demolition of a detached garage in the back.

Last year, however, all but a small portion of the first floor and the chimney was torn down. The contractor agreed to pay $100,000 to make amends for the mistake and the project was allowed to go forward.

The episode set off a major debate and led to the ordinance changes.

Winter Park has about 400 historic structures including the College Quarter and Virginia Heights districts and individually designated homes and commercial buildings.

The historic board only has a say when it comes to major exterior alterations of buildings, not minor changes or repairs or interior projects. Window and door replacements or roof replacements, for example, are not required to come before the board so long as they stay consistent with the architectural style and must only follow the typical building permit process.

The new ordinance also requires additional checks on construction plans to make sure what the contractor does matches approvals given by the board. And it requires additional due diligence to make sure owners and contractors are aware earlier in the process if there is a part of the structure they won’t be able to save.

The future of Austin’s Coffee

More than 20 people lined up to once again lambast the City Commission for refusing to renew the lease for Austin’s Coffee, which will expire in October.

The city purchased the property rented by Austin’s and other businesses last year and the coffee shop has known for at least a year that the lease will end so that the city can use the property to add a turn lane on Fairbanks Avenue and make drainage improvements.

City Manager Randy Knight said the city has hired a broker to help Austin’s find a new location, will allow the owners to take anything from the property that they wish to take and will also return the security deposit.

But for Austin’s loyal supporters, that isn’t enough.

Speaker after speaker bashed the city for taking away a place that they said is considered a “sanctuary” by many in the arts community.

Mayor Sheila DeCiccio said she was frustrated by the misinformation she heard.

“We are not evicting Austin’s … they have had over a year to find a new space,” she said. “… We are paying a Realtor to help them.”

She explained that the intersection at Fairbanks and Denning is busy and accident prone and residents deserve a solution. They also deserve a fix, she said, to the drainage and flooding problems that occur in the area.

“Please take that into consideration when you criticize this commission,” she said.

Benefit Shop lease uncertain

The city is attempting to negotiate a new lease with the Benefit Shop, a thrift store that raises money for local charities by selling used household goods and clothes.

The group operated in City Hall for years but the space is now needed by city staff. The Benefit Shop is interested in moving to a small building at MLK Park where the city just spent $10,000 to fix the air-conditioning system.

But the Benefit Shop wants a lease that extends to 35 years with the city covering all major costs such as maintenance and insurance.

DeCiccio and other commissioners said that term was too long and could prohibit future commissions from additional uses of the building. The commission voted to attempt to negotiate a three-year lease for $1 each year at the Lake Island Park building. The Benefit Shop would be responsible for the insurance beginning in its second year.

A final deal, if reached, will come back to the commission for approval.

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An unapproved demo, a $100k penalty and hours of debate

An unapproved demo, a $100k penalty and hours of debate

An unapproved demo, a $100k penalty and hours of debate

How a demolition in College Quarter led to proposed changes to Winter Park’s Historic Preservation rules, which will be up for a vote Wednesday by the City Commission

May 13, 2025

By Beth Kassab

A year ago, custom builder Charlie Clayton stood before the Historic Preservation Board and apologized, offering to make amends for the unauthorized demolition of a large portion of 965 Lakeview Drive, a 1936 home overlooking Lake Virginia in the College Quarter Historic District.

“I can’t take back what happened,” Clayton told the board on May 8, 2024. “… My interest is not to decimate the resources of the city … I’m not a guy who goes in and tries to destroy the town. I don’t get in trouble like this, but I’m in trouble now.”

Clayton said he even went door to door in College Quarter, one of the largest collections of near-century-old homes in the region, to explain how the second floor of the house was torn down, leaving just the chimney and a small portion of the first floor standing.

The board had only approved the demolition of a garage behind the house and the city ordered work to stop on the project when it learned of the demolition.

Clayton blamed miscommunication with his crew on the site and told the Historic Preservation Board he was prepared to pay $25,000 toward the city’s Historic Preservation Fund and complete the project in a way that would deliver the same end result — a new face on the front of the house that adds additional second-story windows and removes historically inaccurate columns added before the current historic preservation rules were in place.

A photo from the Orange County Property Appraiser shows how the home at 965 Lakeview Drive looked in 2023. The above image shows what the home looked like last year after demolition.

Ultimately, the historic preservation board and staff negotiated the payment to $100,000 and allowed the project to continue. Clayton paid the money the next day.

The board, though, could have issued what some preservationists argue would have been a harsher penalty: Require the homeowner and contractor to reconstruct the home exactly as it was and take back the building variances granted to the project that allowed the homeowner to add square footage to the home.

That choice — a financial penalty or a requirement to build back what was lost and lose valuable variances — will be at the center of the debate expected Wednesday when the City Commission considers proposed changes to the Historic Preservation ordinance touched off by what happened at the Lakeview house.

Commissioners will decide if they want the ordinance to explicitly offer the option of a payment (capped at 30% of the structure’s assessed value) in the event of an unauthorized demolition. Or if they will lean more heavily on the threat of removing variances and requiring reconstruction of an improperly demolished building.

The proposals follow a year of intense debate over the demolition and the historic preservation board’s response.

Ryan Phillips, who owns the home, recorded a conversation with a board member on the sidewalk in front of his house without the board member’s permission and used that to allege he was threatened and treated unfairly.

He spoke at multiple public meetings to allege impropriety over the city’s request that Clayton pay the penalty and lodged state ethics complaints against members of the historic preservation board, a city attorney and former Planning Director Jeff Briggs.

The Florida Commission on Ethics dismissed all eight of those complaints on April 30 because of a “lack of legal sufficiency.”

Phillips and Clayton did not respond to messages seeking comment for this story.

The variances Phillips was allowed to keep for his new construction after the demolition allowed for the home to grow from its original size.

Such variances are key perks for homeowners in historic districts, which enforce architectural standards for the exterior of homes.

Members of Winter Park’s Historic Preservation Board, along with city staff, say they have a job to do: maintain the historic character and authenticity of some 400 properties in the city’s resident-approved historic districts and individually-designated sites.

Their job is not, as retired Planning Director Jeff Briggs once put it, to be the “Historic Replica Board” — or one expected to sign off on every requested demolition or ignore violations of the city’s code. That would render the group a toothless overseer of new construction.

“Basically, it opens the door for everyone to ask for forgiveness and not permission,” Briggs said of violations that harm or destroy historic structures without the board’s approval.

And while the Lakeview house is a recent example of an unauthorized demolition. It’s not the only one.

At the historic preservation meeting last month member Lee Rambeau said changes to the ordinances are needed and she was in favor of adding explicit language about fines.

“I’ve seen a number of properties come before us and the final outcome did not look like what we approved,” she said.

Proposed changes to the ordinance also include stricter application requirements and add a “pre-application” review by the board so that property owners can receive early design feedback before spending a lot of money on detailed renderings. The changes also would require property owners to give more detailed information about the materials they will use and architectural elements.

The change also attempts to cut down on unexpected requests for demolitions after a project starts by requiring applicants to submit a “due diligence assessment” identifying all proposed demolitions or alterations in advance.

A number of historic property owners, including Clayton, spoke out at a community meeting earlier this year against including fines as part of the proposed changes.

At the Historic Preservation meeting in April the board ultimately voted to recommend the version of the ordinance without the fines.

Aimee Spencer, who recently rotated off the board, said that version is potentially harsher on homeowners.

In the case of the Lakeview house, she said, the board attempted to “exercise empathy and kindness” and not penalize the homeowner for work done by the contractor without his knowledge. The project was allowed to proceed as planned rather than have its variances revoked.

But the case became one of what she saw as a “sore winner,” she said.

Wade Miller, who until last month served as board chairman, also said he saw the rebuild requirement and loss of variances as a harsher penalty.

But members of the public and board members spoke against including the fines in the ordinance.

“If that is what I am hearing from the community and members of the board, then so be it,” he said. “… we will see how that plays out … and I think it ultimately will become a much more severe outcome in the future for homeowners of historic properties.”

Betsy Owens, executive director of Casa Feliz, one of Winter Park’s most prominent preservation stories, said a fine could be viewed by some property owners as a cost of doing business rather than a preservation incentive. A requirement to rebuild a demolished structure is considered a best practice in other cities that also value historic preservation such as Coral Gables or Charleston, she said.

“I think the best way to make things right is to have you rebuild what you knocked down,” she said. “Losing variances is a stronger disincentive than a fine.”

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