A few years back, I wrote a book.
“Adventures in Local Politics” was an attempt to chronicle my experiences as an elected official from 2000-2007.
It was also an attempt to write the book I was looking for and could never find—a primer on local government. I wanted to share some insights about the things that I saw that worked and I wanted to share what didn’t, because I’m a firm believer that mistakes are a great teacher.
During Covid, my old publisher went belly up and I learned that my book would no longer be available on Amazon or other outlets.
Since I still get a few stray requests for books, I decided to find another publisher and refresh my work. I spent about six months adding a new introduction and working with a new editor to tighten up the manuscript. I decided not to update the story because I felt I should preserve my original experience. In other words, I didn’t include current events. I figure that’s what this blog is for.
Still, the experience of revisiting the Delray I once knew was powerful and potentially instructive to a growing movement of people seeking to make our hometown better. There’s lessons in the book that I firmly believe resonate today.
Still, revisiting the Delray of the 80s, 90s and early 2000s was impactful.
So much has changed.
It’s as if the town that I knew— and fell in love with—has vanished.
Now I am not talking about the physical changes, which are many and certainly important. I’m talking about the atmosphere, the feeling in town, the sense of community and the general mood.
Truth be told, Delray is not alone. The world has changed and so has America.
Some of those changes have been good and some have been…well …not so good. I’m trying to be diplomatic.
I think the fundamental change is that there is a coarseness to our society.
There’s less kindness.
Less teamwork.
Less collaboration.
Less trust.
Sadly, there’s a lot more nastiness, individualism, and suspicion of each other.
As happy as I am— and I am blessed– and as happy and fortunate as many of my friends are, I can honestly say that an overwhelming majority feel that there is something fundamentally wrong these days. Things just don’t feel right.
Diving back into the galleys of my old book I was transported back to a different time and a very different place. I miss that place. I loved that place. I long for that place and so do many of my friends.
We were a community and a country brimming with possibilities and aspirations. Each year things seemed to get better. You could feel the optimism in the air. It was electric and our confidence in the future grew alongside our vision which was exciting and seemingly within reach.
The trust in each other grew as well. When we saw our collective dreams become reality, we believed that anything was possible.
Yes, I know it’s easy to glorify the past, easy to brush past the sins and the mistakes. And mind you, there were plenty of both.
There were lots of heartbreaks and disappointments, but we seemed to absorb them better as a society back then. Some of the setbacks actually made us closer.
I’ll give you an example.
I served in the wake of 9/11. Do you remember what a shock to the system that was? The horror? The sadness? The fear?
We discovered that many of the terrorists were living among us. They were at our library; the mastermind of the plot filled a prescription at Huber’s Drugs. Those monsters lived in The Hamlet, at Laver’s Racquet Club and worked out at a gym on Atlantic and Military Trail.
It was all so surreal, but we came together.
We gathered at Old School Square for a vigil, gathered again at the Community Center for a prayer service and beamed with pride when our police department created a volunteer Homefront Security force staffed by senior citizens wearing berets and sharp uniforms.
Those beautiful souls– many were World War II veterans and members of our Greatest Generation– patrolled our public buildings. They watched over us and were proud to give back once more to a country and a city that they loved.
And we loved them back.
I remember talking to Charlie Goldberg and Bob Banquer, two of the most dedicated volunteers you can imagine. They were concerned, but they weren’t worried. We beat the Nazis, they told us. We surely won’t allow the terrorists to destroy our way of life.
And we didn’t. We didn’t allow the terrorists to win.
But I do wonder, if our divisions will do what the Nazis, the Soviets and the terrorists couldn’t do. And I’m not alone in my worry.
Right here at home, there is so much paranoia and mistrust. So much division.
Who’s behind this group? Who’s behind that candidate?
MAGA people will save our nation. MAGA people will destroy America.
We speculate on social media. We make things up. We try and hurt each other. And often, we succeed. To what end?
There wasn’t so much of that back in the day. There was some of it, but for the most part we got most of what we aimed to do over the finish line. The theme of the commission I served on was “community unity.” It was a phrase coined by Commissioner Alberta McCarthy that we happily embraced and truly believed in.
Did we achieve that lofty ideal?
Do you ever?
Maybe the best aspirations are always just out of reach. Maybe they are designed to be big enough to never quite be achievable but exciting enough so that you never stop trying.
Of course, there was no social media back in those days but that’s not really the problem. It’s a tool. You can use a hammer to build something or you can hit someone over the head. It’s how we use the tool that matters.
I like Facebook. I get to wish my friends a happy birthday, share pictures of Gracie our new golden retriever and I have an opportunity to see what old and new friends are doing. Heck, the platform even helped my little bird Bailey get rescued last week. (It’s a long story and a good one, it will be in the next book or an upcoming blog).
Nope, there’s something else in the water.
As I read through my book, I remembered anonymous emails, mailings and rumors designed to divide us, frighten us, and misrepresent some of the work being done in town.
It was there. It could be vicious, but it was an aberration not a way of life.
And when our local government pushed back with the facts, those facts were embraced and believed. Local government was trusted by residents who knew the men and women who worked at City Hall. There was a base level of faith in institutions.
They knew their local government wasn’t perfect. They knew that mistakes would be made but they also assumed –correctly— that the people working at City Hall were trying their best. You may have been angry that Mayor Schmidt (one heck of a mayor by the way) favored moving Atlantic High School, but most people didn’t think he meant to do the city harm.
In fact, I think one of the reasons the more vehement opponents of that move failed to defeat those who favored the new school was because they assumed a corrupt rationale for the policy. There was none.
Like the idea or not, most citizens understood that the policymakers serving the city loved Delray Beach. We just had a different vision for the future.
I’m not sure if that’s true today. I’m not sure elected officials or government employees get the benefit of the doubt anymore. Check that, I’m sure that they don’t.
That’s a fundamental shift. And that’s sad.
Yes, many of the aforementioned have earned the distrust of their constituents. But what about the good ones? And what about our system?
Do we trust it, does it still serve us. Why aren’t we attracting better leaders to do the important work of building community?
So, yes, I miss the old days of trust, aspiration, partnership and yes love.
We were a place where you could feel embraced because you were. And that meant everything.
I didn’t write about Old School Square’s demise in the new/old book. But I did write about its importance as an idea and as an object of civic pride. The restoration and revitalization of those historic buildings were important to the evolution of our town and our civic culture. It was not only important it was elemental. And we just flushed it away.
Hundreds of donors and volunteers—likely thousands— feel an attachment to that campus and the non-profit that created and breathed new life into those old and once decrepit buildings.
The Delray I knew and wrote about wouldn’t have handled the issue the way it was dealt with recently.
If audits were late, there would have been an inquiry and a sit down. If performance lagged there would have been a series of meetings and a pledge to work together to fix what was wrong.
The efforts of volunteers and donors would have been acknowledged and more importantly respected. There would have been love (tough if need be) and room for thanks as well.
We are devoid of those fundamental building blocks of community today both here and across our great land. Nobody but the corrupt fears accountability. But respect, gratitude and yes love are the table stakes behind anything of value or it won’t last.
I took a visit back to that world I wrote about. And I didn’t want to leave it. I live in the same exact place but somehow, I feel very far from home.
If you want to take a peek back at that Delray here’s a link: https://www.amazon.com/Adventures-Local-Politics-Jeff-Perlman/dp/1736105167/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1RNPO1P6WQWTY&keywords=adventures+in+local+politics+jeff+perlman&qid=1655317745&sprefix=%2Caps%2C53&sr=8-1
Congratulations
Delray Beach Police Detective Paul Pitti retired last week after 25 years of distinguished service to our community.
I met Paul at the beginning of his career, and it was clear to all those who worked with him that he was going places in the department.
I happened to talk last week with one of Paul’s former supervisors and he said Detective Pitti was one the “best men I ever had a chance to supervise.” High praise indeed because we have been fortunate to have a bunch of great men and women serve and protect us.
Blessed with a great personality, a wonderful sense of humor and a ton of skill, Paul was a valuable contributor everywhere he was assigned.
Fortunately, he won’t be going too far. Paul will become a Highland Beach Police Officer going to work for Chief Craig Hartmann, also a former Delray officer.
We wish Paul the best. Highland Beach is getting a good one.
On a sad note, we learned last week that retired Delray Police Officer Mike Kosick has passed away.
Mike was one of the early downtown police officers assigned to keep an eye on things when Atlantic Avenue began to pop. He also distinguished himself during several undercover assignments.
We mourn his loss.
Speaking of our Police Department, my company CDS International Holdings was proud to be one of many sponsors of the annual Delray Citizens for Delray Police Awards Dinner recently.
Thanks to the herculean efforts of Perry Don Francisco and Chuck Halberg, the banquet has become a favorite event bringing together current officers and retirees to celebrate the best of the PD.
This year, Sgt. Andrew Arena, Capt. John-Crane Baker, Lt. Scott McGuire and Detective Pitti were honored for their long service to the department.
Administrative Assistant Stacy Tarantino was recognized at the 2021 “Patricia Taylor Employee of the Year” and Detective Anthony Sala was named 2021 Officer of the Year.
Service Award recipients were Sgt. Paul Weber, Executive Administrative Assistant Beatrice Screciu and Administrative Assistant Patricia Swain.
We are blessed to have such a wonderful police department. Our Fire Rescue department is also top-notch. It’s so important that we recognize these special people.
Jeff – Thanks as always for your insight.
Haven’t you noticed that recent events and the Pandemic have made people’s true colors show? It seems that kind people have become kinder and nasty scoundrels have become nastier…. In the end, Karma always wins – hope we can all hang on until then. Just keep believing!
Wise words Christina. My motto has always been “Don’t Stop Believing.”
Christina, you are certainly one of the kind ones. Delray is lucky to have you and Jeff!
I believe the loss of trust, not just in Delray Beach, but in the country as a whole, began in the 80’s when corporations stopped valuing their employees, mergers and acquisitions were the trend, and to finance them, and to build profit, staffs were cut, production was outsourced to third world countries and people began to understand that there was no such thing as job security. Add in a decline in trust in religious institutions with clergy abuse of children, and the decline in funding of public school systems and then came the internet to help poison the well. And here we are.
And here we are….how do we right the ship? And can we do it?
Right back at you, my Friend! You and your family and integral in this Wonderful City…