Tuesday, August 7, 2012

EMPTY MIAMI FEDERAL COURTHOUSE SEEN AS EMBLEM OF U.S. FAILURE & COMPLICITY WITH FAILED COUNTIES, I.E. COOK & TERRORIST TRAFFICKING SANCTUARIES & ILLEGAL FLIGHT TRAINING COURT-YARD WITH FAILED STATES ATTORNEYS, I.E. ANITA ALVAREZ, WHO REFUSE TO ENFORCE U.S. LAWS & DEFEND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION


The David W. Dyer courthouse, a federal vacant building is shown in Miami, Monday, Aug. 6, 2012. The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee is conducting an ongoing investigation to stop the federal government from wasting billions of dollars of taxpayer’s money by sitting on its assets and mismanaging valuable federal-owned properties. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

Republicans used an empty courthouse in Miami to make a point about a long list of vacant or underused federal property. Shown are Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, Rep. John L. Mica and U.S. Circuit Judge Frank M. Hull (from left). (Associated Press)

EMPTY MIAMI FEDERAL COURTHOUSE SEEN AS EMBLEM OF U.S. FAILURE & COMPLICITY WITH FAILED COUNTIES, I.E. COOK & TERRORIST TRAFFICKING SANCTUARIES & ILLEGAL FLIGHT TRAINING COURT-YARD WITH FAILED STATES ATTORNEYS, I.E. ANITA ALVAREZ, WHO REFUSE TO ENFORCE U.S. LAWS & DEFEND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION

August 7, 2012

MIAMI — The historic but empty federal courthouse in downtown Miami is a costly symbol of the government’s sluggishness at selling or finding new purposes for some 14,000 vacant or underused properties nationwide, Republican lawmakers said at a House panel hearing Monday.

“Unfortunately, this will be a pattern from sea to shining sea,” said Rep. John L. Mica, Florida Republican, who chairs the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. “It’s very frustrating.”

Mr. Mica and fellow Republican Reps. Jeff Denham of California and Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida held the fourth in a series of subcommittee hearings into federal property management practices. The hearing was held inside the David W. Dyer Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse, which has been vacant four years since a new courthouse opened across the street.

The courthouse is owned by the General Services Administration, which said it has only about 124 excess properties on the government-wide list of 14,000 cited by Mr. Mica.

The property hearings, which continue Aug. 17 at the Los Angeles federal court complex, follow several previous GSA scandals that spotlighted costly staff conferences and payment of exorbitant bonuses to agency officials.

Opened in 1933, the 166,577-square-foot Dyer building is on the National Register of Historic Places. But it has been deteriorating for years and has an extensive mold problem in South Florida’s hot and humid climate. Still, maintaining the vacant structure costs taxpayers about $1.2 million a year, Mr. Mica said.

Among many other cases, the main courtroom where Monday’s hearing was held was the site of the 1992 drug and racketeering conviction of former Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega and the 1973-74 tax evasion trial of mobster Meyer Lansky, who was acquitted.

Last week, just as the hearing was announced, GSA said it filed a “Request for Information” asking Miami developers and the business community for suggestions on what to do with the Dyer building.

“It seems the GSA only takes action when we hold hearings,” Mr. Denham said.

John Smith, a regional commissioner for GSA’s Public Buildings Service, said the original plan was to move other federal offices into the Dyer building but an estimated $60 million renovation cost halted that plan. Under the new proposal, if new tenants moved in it would still likely cost at least $10 million to separate the Dyer building from other judicial offices in the downtown complex.

“We’re looking at any and all possibilities,” Mr. Smith told the panel.

Mr. Smith added that 34 GSA real estate assets in the Southeast region have been disposed of in the past 10 years, generating about $24 million. One of those was a federal courthouse in Jackson, Miss., that was sold last August for $1.4 million to be remade into an arts institute.