During the public-comment portion of the meeting, several residents urged the council to protect parkland and respond to public-safety concerns.
Brianna Hackquist warned against converting Sugar Sand Park to ball fields, saying the park is gopher-tortoise habitat and estimating that moving roughly 3,000 trees could cost between $2 million and $15 million. "Please do not consider Sugar Sand for ball fields," she said.
Christina Broeker urged construction of a quad softball complex at Sugar Sand or North Park to keep local programs and tournaments in Boca Raton rather than sending families to Pembroke Pines, Plantation, Coral Springs and Boynton Beach. "We do not have a place to call home," Broeker said of local softball programs.
Resident Glenn Gromen said he observed vans dropping people at Wildflower Park and the boat ramp and expressed concern about police presence and safety in downtown areas. "There's no police presence. No one bothers us," he said, calling for city follow-up with NGOs and enforcement where appropriate.
Patty Jovishi reported near-misses with unlit electric bikes she estimated could reach 35 mph and recounted seeing a neighbor with what appeared to be a rifle (which she later reported to non-emergency police), urging city action to avoid injuries.
Council responses and staff follow-up: Mayor Thompson and City Manager Mr. Sohaney acknowledged the comments and indicated staff would follow up where appropriate (for example, on homeless-service partners and possible outreach) and noted law-enforcement activity and community coordination on these issues.
Why it matters: Decisions about park uses can affect endangered species, tree canopy and long-term recreation capacity; separate public-safety complaints about e-bikes and encampments raise enforcement and outreach issues for the city and county partners.
What’s next: Staff said they would follow up with commenters and bring additional information to council as needed.