| Meet The New Man
Behind Last Stand
by Nancy
Klingener
When it comes to the
future of the Florida Keys, whether it’s a question of
complicated growth rules or a controversial condo project, one
group can be relied on to weigh in: Last Stand.
The group, which was
started in opposition to noisy jets landing at Key West Airport,
has continued to battle and work with public officials and
private citizens, providing an alternative voice to the big
development pressures eternally pressing on the islands.
Recently, a new name
started popping up associated with Last Stand in letters to the
editor and City Commission meetings. The new name is Al
Sullivan, a relative newcomer compared to Last Stand’s recent
leaders.
The question then is does
a career battling cancer prepare you for leading a famously
cantankerous group of more than 300 people toward a common goal
of protecting quality of life in the Florida Keys?
(Full disclosure: During
my timeout from journalism from 2001-2004, I was a board member
of Last Stand.)
SH: Tell me a little about
your background.
AS: I’m from Massachusetts
originally, born in Boston — grew up there, went to public
schools, Jesuit college and medical school in Vermont and
Buffalo. Got into a medical research mode at the NIH and
specialized in hematology and oncology in teaching and research
for about 10 years at Boston University.
Then I was in private
practice, south of Boston, in hematology and oncology for about
22 years. We bought a place down here in ’89, this place, and
used to come down here two weeks out of the year and five years
ago retired and have been down here fulltime since then.
I’ve been a board member
of Last Stand for three years — I initially volunteered to help
with fundraising and was immediately made chairman of the
fundraising. And then when the treasurer left the board, I took
over that position for about a year, and then became president
this year.
I have no real background
in either government or environmental science, but have
developed an interest in both those things, and an expanding
knowledge. It’s really all new to me. And the board has been a
great source of insight into environmental issues. Also into
political issues, but the other great help into political issues
is being like a lamprey with Sheila Rowan and attending many,
but not all, of the meetings that she does, and she attends them
all — the City Commission, the Planning Board, HARC, affordable
housing and to a lesser extent the county boards. Which has been
a great help in figuring out things I had not even a vocabulary
for, like comprehensive plans and land development regulations,
which are quite important for Last Stand.
SH: Did you expect to be
this active in retirement?
AS: In my practice I had
60-hour work weeks. Anything less than that is a blessing.
Literally, you worked from 7 in the morning till 9 at night four
days a week and 7 to 5, my day off. ... It was very busy. So
this is truly retirement. I found out in the first year of my
retirement that sitting around wasn’t going to do it for me so I
got involved in a number of things and one of them was Last
Stand.
SH: You also work with
Hospice/Visiting Nurses Association, right?
AS: I volunteer as a
physician .... That’s a wonderful group — it keeps my hand in
medicine and it’s the part of medicine I love the most, which is
dealing with people, both the nurses, the aides, the people who
work there, they’re all wonderful people, but also the patients
— getting to visit them in their homes and deal with their
problems, which involve dying. Which is a very rewarding part of
medical practice. Physicians are there to help people and
there’s no time in life you need help more than when you’re
dying. It’s just contrary to what people normally think of
physicians of doing, which is curing people, helping them live
longer. This is helping them to die the best way they can.
Because it is part of life. And we all do it, although most of
us don’t think we will.
SH: Do you think Last
Stand is perceived as a negative group, always objecting to
things rather than proposing things?
AS: Last Stand is by
virtue of what it does largely a reactive, negative organization
to try to prevent overdevelopment, inappropriate development
that destroys the environment and the Keys. That’s its job, what
its job has become. If Last Stand didn’t do that, there’d be
nobody here, unless another group sprang up to do that. The only
other group that deals with local governments in that fashion is
Reef Relief and their agenda is toward one specific area of the
environment.
SH: How do you balance the
group’s efforts between big-picture issues like the county
growth rules and individual projects that spring up and get a
lot of attention?
AS: It’s important for us
to deal with specific projects, and decide whether we like them
or not. But it’s also important to try to change the overall
regulations, if we can, or to have a say in those when they do
change. The problem with the county of course is now, as
everybody knows, the county is quite pro-development, at least
three of the commissioners are and it’s hard to get a word in.
... Last Stand will try to have a say in changing the overall
regulations in a way we see that benefits the people who live
here and the overall environment.
We’re having a number of
groups come to us, looking for our blessing, our
noninterference, wanting us to cosponsor some sort of
development that they’re planning. We’ve already met with Cay
Clubs, and the assisted living facility is coming to make a
presentation at our board meeting, and then the Botanical
Garden, which wants to do big things on College Road, wants to
speak to us. Last Stand, for whatever reason, is seen as a
player in the community. And maybe it’s just because nobody
wants us to stand up and say no we don’t like this project.
...Our basic answer has been that we’re not in the business of
endorsing development plans.
SH: Do you think it’s more
important for Last Stand to be right, or to be effective?
AS: I think it’s more
important to be effective. I truly believe that. There have to
be some compromise, obviously, sometimes. Most Last Stand
members are about compromise. The board, obviously varies from
this end to that end. Last Stand is very interesting that way,
because it varies from true environmentalists like Joan Borel
and Dennis [Henize] and Mick [Putney] to people, who although
interested in the environment, have no particular skills or
previous history dealing with it. It’s a board that has people
who are still extremely confrontational to those who are much
more conservative in approach. Maybe all boards are like that.
But it’s an interesting mix of people and they are all bright
and all well-intentioned and they have different ways to reach
their goals. And the job as president is to try to make them
work together successfully and not kill each other. That’s the
only skill I see that I particularly have as president. I’m
neither an environmentalist nor a politician. But I deal with
people reasonably well so sometimes I can work in front of the
camera or behind the scenes to make them work well together.
SH: And just showing up at
the commission meeting isn’t always effective.
AS: It’s particularly
important to try to get to people and try to modify their plans
if you can before they even get to the politicians. Which is why
the proposals from Cay Clubs and the assisted living and the
Botanical Garden — if we can change something a little bit, I
think that’s important. One of the issues, for example, that
many Last Stand members think we shouldn’t be involved in is
affordable housing because it’s hard to be a growth limiting
organization in some respects and not be labeled as
anti-affordable housing. Which we’re not — we’re for it, but
we’re for preservation and infill. It would be foolish for
anybody to say that we would fight every new development for
affordable housing. I think they’re going to be built and I
don’t think Last Stand’s position needs to be that. … I think
it’s important, especially in Key West, to find a mechanism to
try to protect the affordable housing that’s here … although the
emphasis by everybody has been to think of ways to build new
structures, I think there has to be perhaps even more
importantly protection of affordable housing that exists. The
protection of that is Last Stand’s position.
SH: And of course you’re
dealing with a place experiencing major economic and demographic
change.
AS: Last Stand really
needs to stay true to its mission of being reactive and saying
no but it also has to look for ways to be a positive
pro-environmental group. Two things have happened recently, one
of them very small, the other a little bit bigger. One of them
is a grant we proposed with the environmental sciences teachers
at the high school, a grant that was awarded to us by [the
Community Foundation of the Florida Keys] for $5,000 — Last
Stand working with the high school science department … It has
to do with hydroponic gardening as a hands-on laboratory
experience but also lectures and talks by Last Stand members
about areas of their expertise — Dennis with solar and wind
power and a field trip to Mick Putney’s house, which is totally
energy and environmentally friendly and a talk by George
Halloran about the enormous lens of freshwater that Key West
sits atop and water conservation. That’s a major positive
program that Last Stand is becoming involved with.
We’re all very proud of
that because we know that our image, as I said at the CFFK
awards event, is that we’re the horsefly on the butt of the city
and county commission. Often that’s what we’re seen as. This is
a different view. ... We’re trying to be positive
pro-environmentalists as well as naysayers.
nklingener@keysnews.com |