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Sunny Isles

Meeting

Thursday, February 19, 2026

What happened

Statura summary

The only item here that changes the city’s balance sheet in a serious way is the paired development rights package for an approved site plan application: one resolution to purchase and assign 120,972.18 square feet of floor area and 48 dwelling units from the City’s public TDR bank, and a second to approve a $26,649,849.59 promissory note covering approved bonuses and those TDRs. That is not routine paper shuffling. It is the city monetizing its development rights inventory and letting a project finance a very large land use entitlement obligation over time through a note, which helps the applicant’s cash flow and locks in a major city receivable tied to a specific approved project. After that, the agenda is mostly operations, but a few items matter. The budget amendment is the formal reset point for the 2025 to 2026 operating and capital plan, so anyone selling into city work should read that before assuming prior appropriations still tell the story. The code item amending administrative site plan review procedures is the quiet process change to watch because procedural edits often decide how much gets handled administratively versus in a public hearing. The settlement procedures ordinance on reducing fines, liens, and penalties also matters more than it looks, because it changes leverage in code enforcement negotiations. The rest is standard fleet, IT, parks, police, and public works spending, plus a county noise support resolution and several ceremonial or symbolic items that do not change local operating rules by themselves.

Statura-generated summary of the official agenda and minutes. Verbatim per-item votes and dollar figures are in the Agenda & votes tab.

Key decisions

  1. Promissory note for approved bonuses and Transferable Development Rights for an approved site plan application
    Pending

    Would approve a $26,649,849.59 promissory note tied to approved bonuses and TDRs, turning a large development entitlement payment into a financed obligation rather than an immediate cash payment.

  2. Purchase and assignment of Transfer of Development Rights from the City’s public TDR bank
    Pending

    Would assign 120,972.18 square feet of floor area and 48 dwelling units from the public TDR bank, converting city held development capacity into a private project entitlement.

  3. Budget Amendment No. BA2526-01 to the 2025 to 2026 operating and capital budget
    Pending

    Would amend the current fiscal year budget, which is the city’s formal mechanism for shifting spending authority and capital priorities after the original budget adoption.

  4. Amendments to Chapter 265 procedures of general applicability and administrative site plan review
    Pending

    Would revise development review procedures, a process change that matters because it can shift what gets handled administratively versus through more visible public review.

  5. First amendment to the Support Agreement with CentralSquare Technologies for maintenance and subscription services
    Pending

    Would extend or revise a core city technology support arrangement, signaling continued reliance on a major municipal software platform rather than a near term system change.

  6. First amendment to the agreement with Waypoint Contracting, Inc. for annex building renovation services at 18050 Collins Avenue
    Pending

    Would add to or revise the annex renovation contract, which usually means the city is carrying a live construction project forward rather than closing it out at the original scope.

  7. Agreement with Comtech Engineering, Inc. for the Golden Shores pump station rehabilitation project
    Pending

    Would move a pump station rehabilitation project into contract execution, a basic infrastructure item with direct implications for resilience and neighborhood service reliability.

  8. Amendment to settlement procedures for reduction of fines, liens, and penalties
    Pending

    Would clarify how fines, liens, and penalties can be reduced, which changes the negotiating framework for property owners and code enforcement cases.