HomeMy WebLinkAboutPre-LegislationCity of Miami
CCTF Resolution
Enactment Number: CCTF-R-21-007
City Hall
3500 Pan American Drive
Miami, FL 33133
www.miamigov.com
File ID: 7321 Final Action Date: 7/13/2021
A RESOLUTION OF THE CODE COMPLIANCE TASK FORCE, WITH
ATTACHMENTS, COMMUNICATING TO THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION ITS
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS RELATED TO THE PROCESSING,
HANDLING, AND INVESTIGATING OF CODE COMPLIANCE VIOLATIONS,
ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED AS EXHIBIT "A"; FURTHER DIRECTING THE
BOARD LIAISON TO PROVIDE A COPY OF THIS RESOLUTION AND ALL
ATTACHMENTS TO THE CITY COMMISSION, OFFICE OF THE MAYOR, AND CITY
MANAGER.
WHEREAS, on March 14, 2019 the Miami City Commission adopted Resolution R-19-
0118 establishing the Code Compliance Task Force ("CCTF" or "Task Force") pursuant to
Section 14 of the Charter of the City of Miami, Florida, as amended, and Chapter 2, Article XI,
Division 2, Section 2-883 of the Code of the City of Miami, Florida, as amended; and
WHEREAS, the Task Force conducted duly noticed meetings, providing the public with
the ability to participate in -person, by phone, or in writing, in order for the Task Force to collect
information, gather feedback from residents and review comments for the ultimate goal of
providing recommendations related to code compliance issues to the City Commission and the
City Administration; and
WHEREAS, the Task Force was also able to speak to Inspectors with the Department of
Code Compliance and gain insight to their training, workdays, processes for enforcement and
suggestions for future improvements; and
WHEREAS, after deliberation among the three (3) member Task Force members, a
comprehension report listing recommendations for the City Commission for the future of the City
of Miami's Department of Code Compliance; and
WHEREAS, the Task Force, at its meeting on July 13, 2021 adopted this Resolution
CCTF-R-2021-07 by a vote of three to zero (3-0), approving that the "Code Compliance Task
Force Evaluation and Review Report," attached and incorporated as Exhibit "A", be provided to
the Miami City Commission.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CODE COMPLIANCE TASK FORCE
OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA:
1. The Code Compliance Task Force submits the "Code Compliance Task Force
Evaluation and Review Report," attached and incorporated as Exhibit "A", to the Miami
City Commission.
2. This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon its adoption.
07/16/2021
Alex Dominguez Date
Chairperson
City of Miami Page 2 of 2 File ID: 7321 (Revision:) Printed On: 7/15/2021
EXHIBIT A
TO: The Honorable Mayor and the Honorable City of Miami Commissioners
FROM: The City of Miami Code Compliance Task Force
RE: Code Compliance Task Force Evaluation and Review Report (Pursuant to Resolution 19-0118)
The Code Compliance Task Force ("CCTF" or "Task Force") respectfully submits this report after much
deliberation and interviews with code enforcement personnel. The Task Force provides the following
recommendations for the future of the City of Miami's Code Compliance Department. The Task Force
appreciates the opportunity to provide to you its evaluation and recommendation of these matters. We
remain available to discuss further should you have any questions with regards to our recommendations.
1. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends an upgrade to a software which is more user
friendly and more in tune with the needs of the Code Compliance Department. The present
software used by the Code Compliance Department is severely outdated and hampers their
ability to fully optimize their time out in the field. New software needs to have the ability to
update cases where the public residents can log on and follow a case and progress made up
until the resolution of the issue at hand while maintaining their anonymity if so desired. The
system should also allow to enter violations that are not tied specifically to a folio address but to
a more general address like an intersection or block.
2. By a majority vote, the Task Force recommends hiring an additional 25 Code Compliance
inspectors instead of the 14 presently planned for 2021. The Code Compliance Department is
severely understaffed. This will give approximately two (2) agents per area. Too many violations
are being ignored due to a lack of "boots on the ground" and it has started to become a major
problem for the City of Miami. More coverage is needed as the City continues to grow.
3. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends a re -allocation of Code Compliance inspectors
working the weekend and night shifts. As the City of Miami grows into a nighttime metropolis, a
large number of code enforcement violations such as noise, illegal dumping, and illegal pop-up
businesses occur in the evening and on weekend nights. Presently, only two (2) inspectors work
at night and only one (1) on the weekend nights. This is unacceptable for a city that is growing
exponentially with a vast amount of nighttime activity.
4. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends that more attention and strict enforcement
on illegal commercial signs and fagade violations in highly frequented corridors such as Flagler,
8th Street, Coral Way, NW 7 Street, 176, 22nd and 276 Avenue corridors running East-West and
South -North. We have many tourists and visitors who visit these areas on a daily basis, and it
does not give them an impression of Miami being a clean and organized city.
CCTF Report
Page 1 of 4
5. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends a revamped training program for new hires as
well as on -going training for experienced inspectors. Also, it recommends incentives be made
available to those inspectors working the night and evening shifts to attract the more
experienced agents working those hours.
6. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends an independent search firm be used in the
future to vet candidates for the next Director of Code Compliance and rank candidates before a
decision is made by the City Manager. A strong leader is needed with a desire to strictly enforce
The Code equally for all residents and businesses in the City of Miami, free of any political
pressure or influence.
7. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends implementation of a community education
program. The program should include the publishing and distribution of flyers at community
events and Homeowner Association ("HOA") meetings. The program should also disseminate
Public Service Announcements via TV and radio partners using the City of Miami's ("City") online
platforms. Supervisors or Code Compliance inspectors should participate in these community
events where they can discuss particular codes enforcement issues affecting the community.
More community engagement is needed.
8. By a majority vote the Task Force recommends the transition all the existing Code
Compliance Department functions into other City departments so these departments will do
their own code enforcement functions from identification through resolution, therefore
eliminating the existing Code Compliance Department in its present structure.
9. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends a person should be hired or assigned for
the position of Code Compliance Standards/Coordinator/Trainer ("CCSCT"). This person will
not be a director or department head type of position, but more of a code compliance system
and standards expert who will set the stage for each department code compliance group to
be successful.
Initially this person will manage the transition for a defined period by doing and supporting the
other departments respective staff members. Long term this person ensures that Code
Compliance integrity and efficiency is institutionalized by all departments providing the
fundamental system and resources (standards and practices, but not people) to achieve the
desired results by all City departments involved in Code Compliance. Other City departments
determine their own Code Compliance Group management and personnel, including how they
will staff their expanded group or newly established group. A detailed Transition Plan should be
developed by CCSCT working with the respective staff member from the other departments to
achieve the transition in an orderly manner to minimize any negative effects while the transition
is taking place.
10. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends a Training Program should be developed and
administered by the aforementioned CCSCT to ensure that Code Compliance inspectors and
staff are properly trained based on a set of standards and proven practices to achieve the
desired results. The training program must include re -qualifications for existing staff members
and qualifications for newly hired staffing.
CCTF Report
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11. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends all current Code Compliance
Department staffing should be re -qualified if one of the other City Compliance decides
to hire them depending on passing a set of basic qualifications.
12. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends the CCSCT should provide standards for
and monitor the Code Violation Identification/Tracking System to ensure that violations,
once identified, are properly labeled, assigned for working (What, Who (Department). The
responsibility for executing the What (If needed to be redefined), Who (Individual), When
(Date) and How (Methods & Resources) falls under the respective department and not
the CCSCT.
13. By a unanimous vote, the Task Force recommends that once a new program is functioning,
the CCSCT should lead the Mayor and City Commissioners through a long term review of
City Existing Codes to ensure that "the codes in the books" are the correct ones to be
enforced, including modifying or deleting some if it is justified.
Conclusions/Observations
Below are some observations and conclusions gathered as a task force that lead us to make the
aforementioned recommendations.
The process to gather complaints and work the complaint to resolution seems to lack front-end
coordination as to who is doing what and by when, and on -going performance review and tracking to
ensure follow-ups are being done on a consistent and timely manner.
➢ Seems like the existing Code Compliance Department and the Code Compliance Groups
within other departments is confusing and lack coordination to avoid "letting things fall
through a crack" and avoid duplicity of work.
➢ Why is it necessary to have this approach when it increases the probability for
confusion, poorer employee performance due to frustrations, duplicity of work and
inconsistencies of resolution?
➢ The entry of Code Violations into the system needs standards for how to label the
information on each violation and its code assignment.
The Code Compliance enforcement actions are more dependent on an individual employee's
motivation and desire to do what is right (in other words, since the overall performance depends
more on the individual, the results will vary according to the employee working to achieve it).
➢ Lacks a fundamental and sound training qualification and on -going performance
review process to achieve consistent and pro -active results.
➢ Staffing of inspectors, like day versus nights and weekends seems to be done to satisfy
employee desires, instead of management determining what, when and how many
(Comments were made that staffing was lower than needed and also that scheduling
follows typical practices of other groups or industries (like medical).
)=- How do supervisors track and performance of the inspectors, and
how is feedback provided and improvement plans developed and executed?
CCTF Report
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➢When a new Commissioner is elected, one can could see frequent
vigilance of inspectors and violations identified and most taken care of, but
as time went on, it seems that it was back to normal; the improvements
were not institutionalized.
Code violations corrective action should not be up to the personal judgment of the inspector
since the Approved/Lawful Code must be applied (if the law should not be applied for a
justifiable reason, then the respective city officials should take it off the records, but until
then it must be enforced)
➢ Based on a review by inspector, supervisor and other resources with legal advice, then
judgment could be applied as to how to deal with the corrective action.
Code violations corrective actions leading to final resolution is lacking for the few examples that
were provided. The task force understands that the database is limited, but it is a fact that Code
Compliance has failed to bring a final resolution and avoid of a repeat of the same violation in many
cases throughout the City. Then, it leads the task force to believe that Code Compliance Department
is a deficient or ineffective organization on meeting its mission based on observations over time on
the following typical violations such as these below:
➢ Once a complaint was filed about someone painting commercial trucks in an adjacent
yard. Code Compliance Inspector came and shut down the operation, wrote a Violation
Citation and left. There was not any followed up as to how the site needed to be cleaned
up of paint and solvents. Another complaint had to be filed about the paint and solvents
still improperly stored in the open. This code violation was a serious one and yet the
inspector did not work it through the correct resolution.
➢ Ramp next to the sidewalk curve, which was part of a police investigation into a parking
related fight, and it took close to two years after many complaints for Code Compliance to
force the owner to remove the illegal ramp.
➢ Commercial trucks park at night and during weekends on a particular street ,especially
one that has been doing so for close to two years; and even after discussing with the
inspector a month ago, it is still taking place.
➢Trash dumping at two properties at the entrance (right next to the sidewalk) of a city
abandoned alley (the alley was given to the owners years ago) that was there for weeks
and maybe months with even the stench of dead animals.
➢ Even after being cited by the code enforcement agent a local car dealership in Little
Havana continues to park their overflow of cars in adjacent empty residential lots.
CCTF Report
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