Thank you very much,” Marlow said from the floor. “But now being called the crook I don’t think you should even be in this room right now.”
I don’t see it,” Branquinho told Marlow later in the segment, explaining that he had not contacted Marlow or others at the Green Lion because he’d been advised to leave negotiations in city staff’s hands. “I personally don’t see any deliberate effort to throw you out of there.
That, and Marlow twice pointing at Jason DeLorenzo, the city’s development director and lead negotiator on the lease, didn’t sit well with Council member Eddie Branquinho. “You’re putting 30 people out of work,” Marlow said, waving off the mayor, before accusing the city of being “a bunch of crooks.” We’ve slugged out guts out for five years.” Alfin tried to cut him off. When the timer beeped, signaling the end of Marlow’s three minutes, and Alfin thanked him for his comment, Marlow shot back: “Thank me? Thank me, indeed. What you have given is fake news to the public. I’ve been accused of being a robber, of backstreet dealing. Why you want to get rid of us, I have no idea. I don’t know what we’ve ever done to you people. “For some reason you want us out of there. “I feel that this is a deliberate effort between Palm Coast staff to undermine my business,” Tony Marlow told the council. In sum, relations between the city and the Green Lion reached their lowest ebb in 15 months of negotiations this morning. If it leaves it, the city will terminate the existing arrangement with the Green Lion and issue a request for proposals, inviting other companies to make a pitch for the space. And the Green Lion now has 10 days either to take it or leave it. It preserved other items in the lease that the restaurant raised questions about. The city added another roughly $1,000 a month to the restaurant’s obligations, increasing those to $3,000 a month. His son Chris Marlow, who runs the restaurant, was almost thrown out of the room. Green Lion owner Tony Marlow on two occasions called city officials “a bunch of crooks” before walking out. He has been working at The AnyLogic Company for more than ten years and has a deep and extensive knowledge of simulation and AnyLogic.In reality, it was one of the more rancid segments of a Palm Coast City Council meeting in a while, in a room that’s seen its share of rancid moments over the past two years. Ilya Grigoryev has been a simulation consultant to several organizations. He has given numerous public training sessions in the U.S., Europe, Africa, and Asia. He is the author of AnyLogic documentation and AnyLogic training courses. Ilya Grigoryev is Head of Training Services at The AnyLogic Company. You can consider this textbook as your first guide for studying AnyLogic and simulation. This book also gives some simulation theory and illustrates different modeling methods.