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3 letters: on Lakeview development and Janet McDonald s COVID comments

Lakeview development may enhance the area Dear Editor: I m not sure why you picked Diana Minotti and me as particular respondents in your article about the Lakeview Estates? It seems strange when so many others were far more opinionated and threatening.  I noticed that you quoted me, but you left off a little bit more of my comment at the lectern that was said that evening. The part that was left out was that the project needed another way to be approved. That way was the recommendations of both the planning board and city staff. The proposal of the developer was too big and hard to comprehend. It could have been a better presentation had they brought the drone presentation to the planning board. The drone presentation was unique and professionally done. 

Gardens Development Agreement to Pay $719,000 to Offset School Overcrowding Raises Worrisome Questions of Accuracy

Old Kings Elementary, one of three schools zoned for The Gardens development, is already well beyond capacity, as is Flagler Palm Coast High School. (© FlaglerLive) Flagler County School Board members said today they are not ready to sign off on an agreement with the planned 335-home Gardens development on John Anderson Highway that would offset projected overcrowding costs in the district’s schools. The Gardens project is expected to add 90 students in three schools, two of which are currently beyond capacity. School Board member Collen Conklin found the agreement “worrisome” for being based on what she deems to be faulty or outdated data, and fellow-Board member Janet McDonald called the agreement “nebulous” and to the district’s disadvantage. If in fact the data is faulty, it was inexplicable–and try as she did, Conklin was unable to get an explanation–as to why or how the agreement ended up before the board in its present form. It was prepared and presented by

Flagler Commissioners Strongly Repudiate Mullins Letter On County Letterhead Disputing Biden Election

Joe Mullins, left, next to the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office’s Mike Lutz, who spoke to a group of local residents heading to Washington to protest Congress’ certifying the election of Joe Biden. Mullins, who had someone in the group take a video of him and Lutz, was sponsoring the trip. Florida law is clear: an elected official at any level may not “Use his or her official authority or influence for the purpose of interfering with an election or a nomination of office or coercing or influencing another person’s vote or affecting the result thereof.” On Monday, Flagler County Commissioner Joe Mullins used official commission letterhead to address Florida’s congressional delegation, urging its members to reject the electoral vote counts “of certain states” in President-Elect Joe Biden’s favor. The letter repeats baseless, false, misleading, conspiratorial and widely discredited claims that Biden’s election was fraudulent. 

Flagler Schools to maintain remote-learning, iFlagler and in-person options for spring semester

3 months ago Share Also: Parents who receive a letter saying their remote-learning child must return to in-person classes can sign a waiver to keep their child in remote-learning. Parents whose remote-learning children are at risk of failing a required class are getting letters from the school district stating that their children must return to in-person classes. But that must is misleading: Parents with an outstanding reason for keeping their children in remote learning can sign a waiver and continue to do so.  The letters from the district use language mirroring that in a state mandate that says students must transition to another learning modality if they fail to make adequate progress, district staff members explained in a Dec. 15 Flagler County School Board workshop. 

Virtual memorial to be held for Flagler Palm Coast principal who died of COVID-19

Virtual memorial to be held for Flagler Palm Coast principal who died of COVID-19 By FOX 35 News Staff Published  article FLAGLER COUNTY, Fla. - A virtual memorial is being held on Friday for a Central Florida high school principal who passed away due to complications from COVID-19, according to Flagler Schools Superintendent Cathy Mittelstadt. Flagler Palm Coast High School announced that Principal Tom Russell tested positive for the coronavirus on Monday, November 16, and had been in quarantine since November 9. So far this is a mild case of COVID-19 if there is such a thing. Allow me to be blunt this is nothing like the flu! Covid wrecks the body in so many ways and never the same way twice, Russell wrote in a Facebook post. These are the symptoms that I have experienced: fever, chills, painful cramps, loss of breath, extreme fatigue, sore throat, excessive coughing, headaches, a loss of focus, problems communicating when speaking. I never had a flu act in this way.

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