Less than a day after an independent investigative report blistered Mayor Mike Norris for violating the city charter and for chronically unbecoming conduct at City Hall, Council member Charles Gambaro this morning called on the council to request that Gov. Ron DeSantis remove Norris from office for “malfeasance.” Norris was a no-show for a 9 a.m. workshop this morning.
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Daily Cartoon and Briefing

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, April 22, 2025
Flagler, Palm Coast & Other Local

Independent Investigation Sustains Accusations of Interference and Hostility By Mayor Norris, Suggesting Malfeasance
Raising the possibility of malfeasance, an independent investigation sustained allegations that Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris violated the charter by interfering with city management and calling for the resignation of City Manager Lauren Johnston and Chief of Staff Jason DeLorenzo. The findings go much further, drawing the portrait of a mayor at times unhinged with hostility, rudeness, foul language, misplaced humor and demeaning statements, revealing “a pattern of inappropriate conduct and unprofessional behavior” that undermines Palm Coast’s government “and creates a hostile work environment for city employees.”

Flagler County Prepares to Rebuild 5.5 Miles of Beach for $36 Million North of Pier Even as Long-Term Plan Is In Doubt
Flagler County government revealed a plan to rebuild–or renourish–between 5.5 and 7 miles of beach north and south of the area the Army Corps of Engineers rebuilt last year, for $36 to $40 million, starting as early as October. State and federal grants are in hand to pay for the project. But a majority of county commissioners are reluctant to ensure that the renourishing is not wasted–as it will be if it is not followed by subsequent renourishments. That majority appears unwilling to support a long-term financing plan for all 18 miles of beach.

46-Year-Old Woman Faces Arson Charge After Allegedly Torching Husband’s Girlfriend’s Car
Ebony Chevonne Williams, a 46-year-old resident of Central Landings apartments in Palm Coast’s Town Center, is facing a pair of felony charges, including second-degree arson, after allegedly torching a car when she got angry about her then-husband’s supposed acts of infidelity.
More Flagler, Palm Coast & Other Local

Modest Surplus Projection at Palm Harbor Golf May Temper Pressure on Palm Coast to Sell or Change Course
The Palm Coast Parks and Recreation Department is expecting to almost break even this year and to generate a $93,000 surplus next year at the city-owned Palm Harbor Golf Club. By the city’s estimate, the surplus would decline if the city were to take over course maintenance from a private contractor. Both findings, to be presented to the Palm Coast City Council Tuesday, relieve pressure on the city and the council to end general fund subsidies to the golf club, let alone sell it. At least for now.

Oops: Palm Coast Sends Out 13,000 Outdated Utility Bills
A vendor working for Palm Coast government inadvertently issued 13,000 erroneous utility bills to city customers last week, the result of a software update. The city is asking recipients–residents or businesses–to ignore the bills which carry no payable balance anyway.

If You Think Palm Coast’s City Manager Search Is a Shrill Show, You Should See Sarasota’s
What started as a routine city manager search unraveled into a public spectacle recently at Sarasota’s City Commission. The breakdown on April 11 played out over two separate meetings—a morning workshop and an afternoon special session—where commissioners openly admitted to confusion, mistrust, and having no clear path forward. Commissioners contradicted each other, the search firm hired to oversee the process struggled to provide basic materials and information, and the public was left in the dark—literally and figuratively—about how the process would move forward.

Flagler County Unemployment Dips Back to 4.1%, But Inventory of Single-Family Houses Rises to 13-Year High
Flagler County’s unemployment rate fell back to 4.1 percent, from 6.6 percent the previous month, according to figures released by the state Department of Commerce this morning. The rates are not seasonally adjusted. But the county’s housing inventory continues to rise, and is now at its highest level in 13 years, and rising.

Attorney Appeals Decision Rejecting Site Plan for 28-Unit Affordable Housing Complex in Bunnell, Citing Arbitrariness
Two weeks after the Bunnell planning board rejected the site plan for Phoenix Crossings, the 28-unit apartment complex for low-income tenants, the attorney representing the development filed an appeal to the City Commission. The appeal, filed by Dennis Bayer, the Flagler Beach attorney who specializes in land use and environmental law, argues that “there is a lack of competent substantial evidence to support the denial based upon concerns raised by third parties about the stormwater related to this project.” Put another way: the board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious.

Palm Coast YMCA With Olympic Swimming Pool Planned for Town Center
A long-awaited YMCA in Palm Coast’s Town Center will be an arrestingly built 44,000 square-foot, two-level facility with a wellness center, a spin room, a fitness room, a gym with three volleyball courts and an outdoor Olympic swimming pool, among other amenities. The swimming pool will have 18 to 21 lanes and a zero-entry section allowing for a sloped walk into the water, without stairs or ladders. The indoor facility will include a child care center. The plans are brimming, and the YMCA is “ready to get started right away.”

Site Plan for 28-Unit Low-Income Apartment Complex With $7 Million in Funding Is Rejected in Bunnell
In a stunning setback for Sandra Shank, developer of a planned 28-unit affordable housing apartment complex in Bunnell the city conceptually approved in 2020, Bunnell’s planning board rejected the project last week, citing flooding concerns by neighbors. The 3-2 vote rejecting the site plan for Phoenix Crossings may be appealed to the Bunnell City Commission. But opponents, many of them from the Pine Forest mobile home community that would be adjacent to the development, will likely voice concerns again.

Palm Coast Bans Homeless From Sleeping on Public Grounds and Will Seek Potential Alternatives with County
The Palm Coast City Council on Tuesday approved an ordinance aligning the city with a state law that prohibits local governments from allowing the homeless to sleep or encamp on any public grounds, including parks, public buildings and rights of way. Flagler County enacted a similar ordinance last November. The bill, signed by the governor in March 2024, allows local governments to designate certain grounds as encampments. But that process is onerous and expensive. The city will look for alternatives with the county.

9-Month, $6.67 Million Reconstruction of Whiteview Parkway Will Add Turn Lanes and Alter Median
Whiteview Parkway is about to be a construction zone for the next nine months. It will also be unrecognizable along most of its 3.4 miles as crews begin the reconstruction and repaving of the road, adding numerous turn lanes, eliminating or changing the look of the median, and extending the foot path the entire length of the road, from Belle Terre Parkway to U.S. 1.

Cop’s Son Pleads to Hit-and-Run Death of Shaunta Cain and Could Face Little or No Prison
Jayden Jackson, 22, pleaded today to the hit-and-run death of Shaunta Cain, 51, in November 2022 on U.S. 1. When he is sentenced in May, he could also end up being sentenced as a youthful offender, and if the prosecution fails to prove that alcohol was involved in the crash, he could face less than four years in prison and possibly to no prison time at all, but a combination of house arrest and probation.

Michael Jennelle, 53, Is Sentenced to ‘Lifetime in Prison for the Lifetime of Memories He’s Left Us’
Michael Jennelle, the 53-year-old former resident of Palm Coast convicted in a March trial on seven counts of raping and molesting his granddaughter over several years, when she was between 7 and 9, was sentenced to life in prison today. One of his two victims described it as “his lifetime in prison for the lifetime of our memories that he’s left us.”
The Conversation

How Pope Francis Mattered
Francis had served as pope for 12 eventful years, after being elected on March 13, 2013 after the surprise resignation of Benedict XVI. Prior to becoming pope, he was Jorge Mario Bergoglio, archbishop of Buenos Aires, and was the first person from the Americas to be elected to the papacy. He was also the first pope to choose Francis as his name, thus honoring St. Francis of Assisi, a 13th-century mystic whose love for nature and the poor have inspired Catholics and non-Catholics alike.
Florida and Beyond

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, April 21, 2025
The county commission in a pair of meetings today discusses replacing County Attorney Al Hadeed, who retires this summer, and further discusses its teetering beach management plan, the East Flagler Mosquito Control District Board meets, manufacturing an America crisis.

The Law Behind National Monuments’ Creation–and Elimination
One of the new administration’s early orders was for the Department of Interior to review all national monuments for potential oil and gas drilling and mining. At least two national monuments that President Joe Biden created in California are among the new administration’s targets. The avenue for many of these changes is rooted in one century-old law, the Antiquities Act of 1906, signed into law by President Theodore Roosevelt.

New College Hides Russell Brand Sleaze Behind Free Speech
Florida attracts sleazeballs, creeps, and the criminally-inclined the way cookie crumbs attract roaches. It’s always been like this: Al Capone wintered in Miami Beach; Richard Nixon escaped to his Key Biscayne compound so he could hang out with his mob-affiliated pal Bebe Rebozo; Charles Ponzi made a name for himself for selling Florida swampland — impossible to build on— to unsuspecting Yankees. Russell Brand almost made it on the list.
Briefs and Releases
Palm Coast Invites Residents to Participate in City Manager Selection
Florida’s GOP Legislature All But Kills Financial Literacy Bill
Landing Strip Restaurant (Former Hijackers) Prepares to Re-Open May 1
(Located Safe) Public’s Help Sought Finding Autistic Child Missing in Palm Coast’s P Section
U.S. Supreme Court Will Hear Arguments on Ending Birthright Citizenship
More Florida and Beyond

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, April 20, 2025
J.S. Bach’s dark vision on Easter Sunday, the complete St. John Passion, Palm Coast Farmers’ Market at European Village, Richard Taruskin revisits the cantatas.

The Threat of Deep-Sea Mining
Deep-sea mining can pose a danger to what lives above it, in the midwater ecosystem. If future deep-sea mining operations release sediment plumes into the water column, as proposed, the debris could interfere with animals’ feeding, disrupt food webs and alter animals’ behaviors.

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, April 19, 2025
The North East Florida Jazz Association (NEFJA) Jazz Appreciation Concert, “Henry Flagler: Florida Visionary,” a Palm Coast Historical Society talk, ‘Sense and Sensibility’ at St. Augustine’s Limelight Theatre, Ayşegül Savaş’s “Marseille.”

Studying Hooters’ Servers
Declining sales, rising costs and a large debt burden of approximately US$300 million have threatened Hooters’ long-term outlook. A researcher looked into breastaurants and the toll they take on servers. Here are her findings.

Florida GOP Lawmaker to Randy Fine: “Proud To Have Voted Against Your Moronic Campus Carry Bill”
Miami Republican state Sen. Illeana Garcia, who joined with three Senate Democrats in a committee vote last month rejecting a proposal sponsored by then-GOP Sen. Randy Fine (SB 814) to allow concealed weapons on college and university campuses, says she has zero regrets for that vote. But few fellow-Republicans are willing to voice similar assurances even after the FSO shooting.

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, April 18, 2025
‘Sense and Sensibility’ at St. Augustine’s Limelight Theatre, marking Flagler Beach’s centennial on Free For All, Robert Reich on the tax cut scam, Richard Powers on age.

How ‘Doge’ Is Eliminating Government Accountability
Mass layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services are continuing as the agency makes good on its intention, announced on March 27, 2025, to shrink its workforce by 20,000 people. Among workers dismissed in early April were several teams responsible for fulfilling requests for access to previously unreleased government data, information and records under a federal law known as the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA.

20-Year-Old Student Kills 2, Injures 6 in Shooting at Florida State University
Two people were killed and six others were injured Thursday after a shooter, the son of a Leon County sheriff’s deputy, opened fire around lunchtime at Florida State University. The shooter, 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, also was shot after confronting police officers, authorities said during a late-afternoon news conference. News reports identified Ikner as an FSU student. Ikner is accused of using a handgun that was an old service weapon of his mother, a school-resource officer.

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, April 17, 2025
Harvard’s message to the shah of maralago, Town of Marineland Commission Meeting, ‘Sense and Sensibility’ at St. Augustine’s Limelight Theatre, John Updike’s sexism.

Florida to Immigrants: Get Lost
DeSantis has savaged lawmakers for not doing enough to support President Donald Trump’s campaign promise to detain and deport as many as 20 million undocumented immigrants. He has worked assiduously to engineer Florida’s reactionary version of “how many ways can we screw over immigrants?”

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, April 16, 2025
Flagler Tiger Bay Club welcomes Brian London on tourism, a suburban conjunction featuring Palm Coast’s Epic Theatre, Walker Percy on hs own “Moviegoer,” the Palm Coast Planning Board meets.

Secular Americans Are Changing the Political Landscape
After climbing for decades, the percentage of Americans with no religion has leveled off. For the past few years, the share of adults who identify as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular” has stood at about 29%, according to a major study the Pew Research Center released Feb. 26, 2025. But this hardly means that the “nones,” or their impact on American life, are going away. In fact, their sheer size makes it likely that they will increase in political prominence.

Florida Senate Proposes Tax Cuts Nearing $2 Billion Instead of House’s $5 Billion Sales Tax Cut
The Senate on Monday released a ratcheted-up package of proposed tax cuts, as it prepares for negotiations with the House, which has pitched a $5.43 billion measure that includes reducing the state’s sales-tax rate. The Senate Finance and Tax Committee is scheduled Tuesday to take up the Senate bill (SPB 7034), which would reduce revenue by $1.83 billion next fiscal year.
Commentary

Mario Vargas Llosa the Great
The death of Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa (Arequipa, 1936 – Lima, 2025) marks the end of a Golden Age of Latin American literature. Just as there will not be another generation in Spain like that of Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Calderón de la Barca, Tirso de Molina, Góngora and Quevedo, in America there will not be another like that of Vargas Llosa, Gabriel García Márquez, Julio Cortázar, César Vallejo, Pablo Neruda, Jorge Luis Borges, Alejo Carpentier and Carlos Fuentes.

How Could FIFA Award Saudi Arabia 2034 World Cup?
FIFA officially awarded Saudi Arabia the 2034 World Cup. The Gulf Kingdom was the sole bidder. Human rights groups, though, have widely condemned FIFA’s decision – Human Rights Watch warned that there is “a near certainty the 2034 World Cup […] will be stained with pervasive rights violations.”

Supreme Court’s Order to Return Wrongly Deported Man: Rule of Law Matters
The Supreme Court has now said the order to facilitate Abrego García’s return is proper. But the high court also said the district court judge should further clarify its order, being mindful of the president’s authority when it comes to conducting foreign relations. The Salvadoran government seems to be imprisoning Abrego García at the request of the U.S. government.