APOPKA, Fla. – The runoff election for Apopka mayor is Tuesday, April 14 and early voting is underway.
Apopka City Commissioner Nick Nesta is facing Orange County Commissioner Christine Moore in the runoff.
Moore and Nesta were the top two vote-getters in the three-way election last month. Nesta got 41.6% of the vote, and Moore got 31.85%. Current mayor Bryan Nelson came in third place with 26.55%.
You can find details on polling places for early voting and on Election Day HERE.
News 6’s Matt Austin joined the Orlando Sentinel to interview the mayoral candidates last month. He talked to the candidates about growth and development in the city, the future of the downtown area, and what happens if voters were to eliminate property taxes in Florida.
We’ve compiled Moore’s and Nesta’s answers. You can watch and read them below.
Christine Moore
MATT AUSTIN: “I get to ask you about growth. This is one of the biggest issues across really every community, not just in Central Florida, but in all of Florida. Many cities are struggling with the infrastructure to keep up, yet more big developments continue to come in. What is your general philosophy on growth as Apopka continues to see more people come in?
CHRISTINE MOORE: “Yes, growth is absolutely the number one issue to our folks and I have felt for years watching them from the county side, so they could have been requiring more land to be left passive or in conservation. The county, we also have bought conservation land, 1,200 acres up in the Apopka area, while I’ve been on the board, so that is the one way certainly to slow it to slow down. And as far as roads, it’s difficult. Impact fees never pay the whole thing. The community has not been supportive of the county’s initiatives to try to get funding, additional funding, and their board doesn’t fund enough into infrastructure. Now, I struggle with this at the county. I’m always the first one to say, put more money into public works. So it is a challenge, yes, but there are lots of little tweaks that I believe could have been done to slow the growth in a pocket and make it a more family-friendly environment."
AUSTIN: “OK, let’s talk about Apopka’s downtown. It has recently undergone a pretty big, vivid transformation, but we have certainly seen some businesses are struggling. We’ve seen restaurants and at least one bar shut down. And there are still some problems with traffic there and other issues. So tell me, tell the voters, really, what is your idea? What is your vision for downtown Apopka?”
MOORE: “So I moved downtown and I love being there, but it’s challenging. I can’t even get my bike across the street to the main park because of that four-lane highway. We are in the middle of a safety study before we resurface Park Avenue to look at some raised intersections, taking some medians out for trees to slow people down a little bit, looking at some crosswalks and strategic places. As far as the business side of things, do really similarly to what Winter Garden did. Where you bring in all kinds of festivals, and you start incubating small businesses that can eventually come up and have their own site. And I look forward to the day we get a movie with ecotourism in a cute downtown. That would be my goal.”
AUSTIN: “Our next question addresses something that’s really out of your hands at the moment, but it certainly could land in your backyard when it comes in November. So the Florida House has approved a property tax reduction that could really impact homeowners in a pop cut. The governor and the Senate leader have talked about trying to work together on a comprehensive plan that would wind up in that November ballot.
“If something like this is approved in November, it would sharply reduce Apopka’s annual revenue. It could really impact things like parks and conservation measures. Now, of course, it’s hard to know what exactly is going to end up on the ballot, let alone what would pass. But how would the city need to respond if it did have that significant loss of revenue after the November election?”
MOORE: “Whichever of us are elected, that could end up being the most challenging part of the job on top of all these other utility issues and infrastructure, things have to be solved. And so, you’re right, you asked us a question, we don’t know what we’re really looking at. But certainly, there’s been talks about consolidating services, really educating people on what things cost so that they could help make those decisions. And you know, over it was about 60% of this budget is in public safety. And most people do not wanna do without that.
“But I would tell you, people don’t understand what things cost. I often say they think of the money for government just rains down from heaven and it doesn’t, you know, it comes from them, gas tax, sales taxes, property taxes, and of course, your enterprises. And so I think a lot of it will require talking about the actual cost. What the priorities are and combining forces sometimes. Maybe there’s some things between the county and the city that we could work together on. Maybe working together with other cities and it’ll be challenging.
“It’ll be very challenging. I guess you could have me on the front line during that whole period of time talking about the legislature of, you know, Seminole County, when they got, investigated by DOGE said a lot of the costs that they had that went up were because of the legislature passing things on to them. Here at the county, when we review all the constitutional officer’s budgets, they come and say I need nine more percent because the state cut their budget and ended up on the locals. So it’ll be a fight. I don’t think it’s a foregone conclusion that they’ll win."
Nick Nesta
MATT AUSTIN: “I get to ask you about growth. This is one of the biggest issues across really every community, not just in Central Florida, but in all of Florida. Many cities are struggling with the infrastructure to keep up, yet more big developments continue to come in. What is your general philosophy on growth as Apopka continues to see more people come in?
NICK NESTA: “This has obviously been an ongoing one, especially for our city, because there’s other municipalities that are already built out. We’re kind of that final frontier, so to speak, in Orange County, to where a lot of developers are now looking at a pop-up because at one time, it was very affordable to buy land and develop. So with that in mind, we are having that issue with the state legislator putting in SB 180 that limits our ability to stop development, slow development, put anything that is problematic to the developers.
“So it’s really -- developer focus versus resident focus, which is one of our biggest problems. I will say prior to SB 180 coming into play, I presented on and discussed a moratorium coming into place here locally to have our staff here locally be able to catch up with all that has been approved, as well as really see where our infrastructure is to make sure that we are able to take on all this new development. And at that time, again, it was before SB 180 came into play. The current council had no interest in moving forward with that.
“What we have to do moving forward now is prioritizing smart growth, one that prioritizes its resident-focused growth, one that doesn’t sacrifice our current residents just for the new ones. We need to look at our infrastructure and create a true plan of what that looks like, not an afterthought, but look at all of our infrastructure and say, what’s our highest needs right now? What’s gonna be next year, five years from now, 10 years from now? And we should be able to tell you, hey, the street up front of your house, it’s gonna need to be fixed in seven years. It’s gonna be fixed in 13 years because it’s newer. So, there’s a lot more options that we can do to get ahead of this as long as we plan and budget correctly.”
AUSTIN: “OK, let’s talk about Apopka’s downtown. It has recently undergone a pretty big, vivid transformation, but we have certainly seen some businesses are struggling. We’ve seen restaurants and at least one bar shut down. And there are still some problems with traffic there and other issues. So tell me, tell the voters, really, what is your idea? What is your vision for downtown Apopka?”
NESTA: “Thank you. Yeah, the downtown Apopka area, having grown up here and really seeing it go through transformation and changes and business come, business go. And the problem is that we don’t have a cohesive or comprehensive plan. How do we create synergy between the downtown area, the business owners there? There’s a substantial amount of churches down there. Once elected, I’m going to make sure that we reintroduce what the city is to be to our residents, how we enjoy the city again. We haven’t shown our residents how to truly enjoy our downtown area. One big thing is, I got pushed hard for the economic development director and department that the current administration really pushed against. So it’s just actually utilizing that department to its fullest potential, incentivizing businesses not only to come to downtown, but to stay downtown.”
AUSTIN: “Our next question addresses something that’s really out of your hands at the moment, but it certainly could land in your backyard when it comes in November. So the Florida House has approved a property tax reduction that could really impact homeowners in a pop cut. The governor and the Senate leader have talked about trying to work together on a comprehensive plan that would wind up in that November ballot.
“If something like this is approved in November, it would sharply reduce Apopka’s annual revenue. It could really impact things like parks and conservation measures. Now, of course, it’s hard to know what exactly is going to end up on the ballot, let alone what would pass. But how would the city need to respond if it did have that significant loss of revenue after the November election?”
NESTA: “The impact is gonna be very tangible. Our residents are gonna feel it, our city’s gonna see it. And residents think that, OK, we’re just getting rid of taxes. Roads and fire and police are all gonna get paid for still, but we just get to save on our taxes. And unfortunately, that’s not gonna be the case. There will be a savings on their taxes, but there’s gonna be increases they’re gonna see in other areas that is unfortunate.
“So one of the things that I’ll be doing, I’ve put this in my roadmap on nickforapopka.com is create a new budgeting process. Again, I’ve been saying this and I’m very consistent with this is that we can’t use tired ways of dealing with new issues. We have to come up with new and creative ways to do this. So I want to create a resident-led advisory board that tells us what they want to see in the budget. They’re advisors, they’re not making final decisions but they get to tell us each year, year by year, what they wanna see. And we have to prioritize the city-only services. So that’s our water, sewer, streets, sidewalks, things of that nature. And then you bifurcate it and create a separate budgeting process basically for the extra amenities, so our parks, our events, things of that nature. What do residents wanna spend that money on then as well? Because again, we have to pivot quickly when this comes to play.
“So it’s gonna impact on various levels. We’re gonna see it very firsthand and it’s all about pivoting quickly to these very dynamic changes, how our city and our residents are gonna be able to come out of it on the upside.”