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Article Courtesy of
The Tampa Bay Times
By Susannah Bryan
Published October 22, 2025
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When the sun goes down, darkness blankets Melrose Park, a predominantly Black
neighborhood in central Fort Lauderdale that’s been without streetlights for
decades.
Commissioner Pamela Beasley-Pittman says she wants to lift the neighborhood out
of the shadows by installing more than 500 lights throughout Melrose Park at a
cost approaching $1.3 million in the first year alone.
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There’s just one
problem: Some residents don’t want the lights — including
Donna Guthrie, president of the Melrose Park Civic
Association.
Fort Lauderdale is ready to spend $866,000 to have 555 LED
lights installed throughout Melrose Park. City taxpayers
also will pay another $431,300 a year to Florida Power &
Light for monthly maintenance and other costs.
Guthrie argues there is no reason for Fort Lauderdale to
spend so much money on lights the neighborhood does not
want.
Guthrie spoke up at a City Hall meeting Oct. 7, telling
commissioners the lights are not needed or wanted in what
she called a quiet and peaceful neighborhood.
Residents who want the lights argued they will make the
streets safer for children walking to the bus stop in the
early morning darkness and drivers trying to find their way
at night.
For now, the plan is on hold because the flood-prone
neighborhood is so sharply divided. |
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A woman waits to cross the street in the Melrose
Park neighborhood in Fort Lauderdale on Friday. The city of Fort
Lauderdale plans to install nearly $1 million in LED light fixtures
throughout the predominantly Black neighborhood. Not everyone wants
them.
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Commissioners plan to take up the matter again at their next meeting on Oct.
23.
Melrose Park, home to 10,000 residents, is bounded by State Road 7 on the
west and Southwest 31 Avenue on the east, by Davie Boulevard on the south
and Broward Boulevard on the north.
“Those lights are going to cost nearly $500,000 a year in bills to Florida Power
& Light,” Guthrie told the South Florida Sun Sentinel on Thursday. “That’s in
perpetuity. And it’s going to go up every year.”
When it comes time for the commission to vote, Guthrie said she worries the
lights will be forced on the neighborhood.
“Where the hell are we going to put 555 lights?” she said. “We don’t need 555
lights. People do not want it in front of their houses. Once the lights come,
the street traffic is going to be horrific. They don’t come through now because
it’s so dark.”
Political rivals at odds
Guthrie, a community activist who hails from Jamaica, lost a four-way race to
Beasley-Pittman in November 2022. The two have been rivals ever since.
The animosity came through loud and clear during the Oct. 7 public meeting.
Guthrie and Beasley-Pittman, the District 3 commissioner, openly clashed,
arguing over who was to blame for the fact that the two had not met to discuss
the pricey new lights despite the passage of three years.
The commissioner told Guthrie she had called her.
“No, you did not,” Guthrie replied.
“I knew you were going to say that,” the commissioner said. “You always say
that. I am not a liar.”
Guthrie, her voice rising, retorted: “You did not call me.”
The back-and-forth squabbling prompted one observer to refer to the public scene
as worthy of a new Bravo show, “The Real Housewives of District 3.”
The verbal sparring nudged Mayor Dean Trantalis into the role of TV host,
mediating from the dais.
Vice Mayor John Herbst sided with Beasley-Pittman, arguing the commission should
approve the new lights and follow the lead of the district commissioner.
Commissioners Steve Glassman and Ben Sorensen argued more time was needed to get
input from the entire neighborhood, including Guthrie, who claimed she and the
neighborhood association had been left out of the process.
The commission could have voted on the lighting program without public comment,
but Beasley-Pittman said she pulled the item to give residents a chance to
express their thoughts because so many people had mixed feelings about the plan.
‘We just don’t want it’
Guthrie was the first to speak.
“This is the fourth time this lighting issue is on the agenda,” she said. “It
was voted down twice before. And it was pulled by a previous commissioner.”
Guthrie argued the city had not done a recent survey of the neighborhood to
determine whether the lights were warranted.
Instead, she said Beasley-Pittman held three meetings but chose to hold them at
a community center in nearby Melrose Manors, not Melrose Park.
Guthrie also complained that neither Beasley-Pittman nor the city manager’s
office had reached out to let her know the commission would be voting on the
light program on Oct. 7.
As the president of the neighborhood association, Guthrie said she should have
been given notice but was not — “which I think is rude,” she added.
Trantalis had a question for Guthrie.
When Fort Lauderdale proposed lighting for the neighborhood a decade ago, the
city was ready to spend $11 million on more than twice as many lights, he noted.
He added: “The neighborhood was pushing back and saying, ‘We don’t want all this
lighting here. We don’t want to feel like we’re a crime zone. We’re a quiet safe
neighborhood.’”
Trantalis asked Guthrie if she was saying the neighborhood wanted no lighting at
all.
“No lighting,” she answered. “You have to get the permission of the community.
That wasn’t done. We don’t want you to pay this. We just don’t want it.”
Guthrie argued the lights would actually make the neighborhood less safe by
attracting crime.
At that point, Beasley-Pittman interjected, arguing that the odd layout of the
streets is what makes the neighborhood safe, not the lack of lighting.
“It makes it hard to for people to get in and out day or night,” she said.
“That’s what’s helping keep the crime down because people won’t go over there.”
Carmen Palmer, a 31-year resident of Melrose Park, was among more than 20 people
who signed up to speak.
“I have no crime on my street,” she told the commission. “Lights will harbor
people hanging out in the streets. And in (a nearby neighborhood) where they
have streetlights, there’s a lot of crime. So I vote no lights.”
Mary Lockhart, a longtime resident of the neighborhood, told commissioners she
used to walk her kids to the bus stop early in the morning with a flashlight to
make sure they arrived safely.
“We’ve been in Melrose Park for 40 years and we need to come to 2025,” Lockhart
said. “It’s time for us to have the lights. Our families can’t come in and
(visit) us because it’s too dark and they can’t find their way.”
‘Too much dissension’
After hearing from both sides, Glassman argued more time was needed to vet the
lighting program with the community. The mayor and Sorensen agreed.
“I kept score,” Glassman said. “This is a very split room in terms of yes and
no. We have work to do still. This is not ready for prime time yet. There’s just
too much dissension.”
Glassman added: “I will tell you that if I ever had an agenda item that was
affecting one of my neighborhoods and my neighborhood president was unaware of
that agenda item, I would be run out of town. It’s as simple as that. We have to
communicate better.”
Beasley-Pittman bristled at the feedback, arguing that Guthrie had been
difficult to reach.
“This is what the community wants,” she said of the new lights.
The mayor intervened.
“There seems to be conflict on this,” he said. “I think ultimately we will see
some sort of lighting system there. The question is how it’s going to be
designed and where it’s going to be allocated. We have to come to some
conclusion here, not necessarily tonight, to allow this project to go forward. I
do think we should show deference to the neighborhood association to identify
where the lighting system should be located.”
Beasley-Pittman stood her ground.
“This is what the people want,” she said, prompting Glassman to shake his head.
“You can shake your head,” she told Glassman. “What I’m asking for us to do is
vote for these lights for this community. We’ve been talking about this for how
long? Since 2015.”
Glassman’s reply: “I’m concerned that we heard a very split community this
evening. I just believe the entire neighborhood has to be a part of this
discussion. All I’m saying is we need more time. The process needs to be
better.”
Sorensen intervened, trying his best to get Guthrie and Beasley-Pittman to meet
with one another before the matter comes up again in two weeks.
Beasley-Pittman objected to him stepping in.
“Ben, I appreciate what you’re doing … but I have a problem with this approach,”
she said. “I am a full commissioner. I am a full adult. And I am looking at a
woman who looks just like me. And we should not have this divide.”
Beasley-Pittman addressed Guthrie directly.
“I didn’t do anything to you,” she said. “The only thing I did was I won this
seat. Miss Donna, if there’s anything I did that offended you, I apologize to
you. But what I want to do is move in a direction where Melrose Park can unify.
Whatever it is, I’m sorry.
“Look at us, Miss Donna,” said Beasley-Pittman, the lone Black woman on the
five-member board. “Black women in a culture where we are being erased. And you
are sitting here playing into that role.”
Beasley-Pittman urged the mayor to “take a stand” and vote for the lights that
night without further delay.
Trantalis told Pittman he was bothered by the fact that the head of the
homeowners association had not yet met with the district commissioner to review
details of where the lights would be placed.
“I don’t think there’s any fault on anyone’s side,” the mayor said. “It’s just
that it didn’t happen. I would just like to see it happen before we make a
decision.”
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