Public participation is a right, not an option
To the editor:
“Leadership grounded in civility” sounds great in a newspaper quote. But civility without accountability is just polished avoidance.
Residents are not upset because people are “emotional.” Residents are upset because many feel ignored while being handed rising costs, controversial UEP assessments, restricted public input, and decisions made with little meaningful engagement from the very taxpayers funding this city.
Florida law is very clear on this issue. Public participation is not a favor elected officials grant when convenient. It is protected under Florida’s Government in the Sunshine Law, Chapter 286, Florida Statutes, which exists to ensure government transparency and meaningful public access. Courts have repeatedly held that public bodies cannot use procedure or decorum as a shield to suppress criticism or discourage participation.
The First Amendment also protects speech that is uncomfortable, passionate, or critical of government officials. The U.S. Supreme Court made that clear in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, stating that debate on public issues should be “uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.” Government criticism is not disorder simply because elected officials dislike the tone.
What residents witnessed at a recent Cape Coral City Council meeting was not merely “maintaining order.” Many saw selective enforcement, dismissive treatment of citizens, and growing hostility toward dissenting voices. There is a difference between keeping a meeting safe and creating an atmosphere where residents feel intimidated from speaking at all.
And calling criticism “political attacks” is an easy way to avoid addressing the substance of the criticism itself.
Residents are asking legitimate questions:
• Why were citizens threatened with reduced input?
• Why are residents struggling with affordability while being told to simply absorb infrastructure costs?
• Why do taxpayers feel increasingly unheard at meetings meant to represent them?
• Why does transparency seem strongest during campaign season and weakest during controversy?
Leadership is not measured by how well officials praise professionalism in commentaries. It is measured by how they respond when residents strongly disagree with them.
No one expects government to be easy. But the public also does not owe elected officials silence, applause, or comfort. Citizens have every legal and constitutional right to challenge decisions they believe are harmful to their community.
Cape Coral residents are not “dividing neighbors for political gain.” They are demanding accountability from people elected to serve them and there is nothing uncivil about that.”
Kathie Thompson
Cape Coral