Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!

Residents urge action on infrastructure and safety as commissioners debate traffic and staffing

November 11, 2025 | West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Residents urge action on infrastructure and safety as commissioners debate traffic and staffing
Multiple residents and organization leaders used the public comment period at the Nov. 10 City Commission meeting to press the city on infrastructure, traffic and public safety.

Erica Daley, a long‑time resident of the historic Northwood Harbor District, told commissioners the neighborhood's roads are "almost a 100 years old" and said temporary patches leave recurring sinkholes; she asked why the city would approve another 259 units when current infrastructure is failing. Linda Gross, also a Northwood Harbor resident, urged the commission to redesign traffic routing to take school buses and heavy flows off North Flagler Drive and to plan pickup/drop‑off alternatives.

Tawana Teal described repeated local shootings and insufficient patrols in the historic Northwest, saying she is "an angry, tired, sad mom" and that she must escort her children because she does not trust current patrol levels. The commission responded with commitments to follow up: President Lambert and other commissioners acknowledged the seriousness of the concerns and said they would press the police chief and administration for more information and accountability.

Adam Myers, president of the West Palm Beach Fraternal Order of Police, urged the commission to address allegations involving police captains placed on administrative leave. Myers said state and sheriff's office investigations found no criminal wrongdoing yet captains remain sidelined and asserted that an earlier city audit and a memo justifying actions had not been shared with criminal investigators. He asked the commission to examine why the memo was withheld and whether the captains can be returned to duty.

Commissioners said they heard the concerns and requested follow‑up briefings and workshops. Commissioner Fox called for additional public safety investments and possible relocation or consolidation of public safety facilities to improve working conditions for officers and service to neighborhoods; staff later said remediation and facility work is underway where required. Mayor and staff members responded that some issues (for example, storm drain cleaning or repaving schedules) require coordination with county partners and that the city has programs and repaving plans that will include work in these neighborhoods over the next 3–5 years.

No formal votes followed these public comments, but commissioners signaled a desire for further briefings and for staff to return with concrete actions to address infrastructure and public safety issues raised during public comment.

View full meeting

This article is based on a recent meeting—watch the full video and explore the complete transcript for deeper insights into the discussion.

View full meeting

Sponsors

Proudly supported by sponsors who keep Florida articles free in 2025

Republi.us
Republi.us
Family Scribe
Family Scribe