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Article Courtesy of Channel
5 WPTV
By
Jon Shainman
Published March 4, 2026
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WATCH VIDEO |
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PALM BEACH GARDEN — A Palm Beach Gardens homeowner spent more than a year trying
to get a rusted culvert in his neighborhood lake repaired — and while the answer
to who is responsible remains unclear, progress is finally being made.
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Bruce Honig first raised concerns about
the deteriorating culvert in the Shady Lakes neighborhood,
warning that someone could get seriously hurt."If you put
your foot on it, or if a kid puts his foot in the wrong
spot, he could get really hurt," Honig said.
Honig said his frustration grew as no one would claim
responsibility for the structure.
"Frustrated? Yes, very frustrated," Honig said.
WPTV met with Honig in January. He drove us around the
neighborhood and showed us that the rusted culvert is
sitting in one of the community's lakes. He has since
appeared before the Northern Palm Beach County Improvement
District board three times, pleading for help.
"Looks pretty black and white to me, I'm just a homeowner
though," Honig said at a recent board meeting.
Honig shared documents dating back four
decades to when the development was built. Letters show the
agency's predecessor, the Northern Palm Beach County Water
Control District, accepted control of the lakes within the
subdivision. However, another permit — stamped as a "draft"
— points to the Homeowners Association as the responsible
party.
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A Palm Beach Gardens homeowner spent more than a year
trying to get a rusted culvert in his neighborhood lake repaired —
and while the answer to who is responsible remains unclear, progress
is finally being made.
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One current board member acknowledged that while the board is responsible for
the lakes, the ownership of the culvert itself remains unresolved.
"Looking at the documents, we're to the point where it doesn't appear to fall on
anybody's shoulders," board member Brian LaMotte said.
Despite the uncertainty, the board approved a $6,800 expense for cleaning and an
inspection of the culvert — a step Honig called an encouraging start.
"It's a starting point. They've recognized that there's a problem. They've
hopefully recognized it's a dangerous problem, and they want to rectify it,"
Honig said.
Honig said he remains committed to keeping the issue in front of decision-makers
until it is fully resolved.
"Everything's a process. We just have to keep this in front of them, so they
don't forget the process and move on to other things," Honig said.
The board said it may pursue a cost-sharing agreement between itself, the
Homeowners Association, and either the City of Palm Beach Gardens or the
original developer for any future repair work.
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