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coach clutches profound existential despair from Belmont Hotel owner and developer Monte Anderson .Anderson, as we've noted previously, has emerged as a staunch opponent of Sylvan Thirty's proposed rezoning and told the council today that he's been called a lot of names lately: "Zealot, selfish, greedy, idealistic, uneducated, untrained, incompetent and much worse." He talked at length about the developments he's helped to oversee in the city the restoration of the Texas Theater and Belmont and Smoke among them and the "countless hours" he's spent working on Fort Worth Avenue. He said that he even represented Brent Jackson, Sylvan Thirty's developer, in acquiring the land Sylvan Thirty will sit on. In return, Anderson said, Jackson has "completely ignored" the Special Purpose District 714 rules that are supposed to govern development in that part of town."Please sir, let me finish my talk," Anderson replied, adding that it was "unfair" that he didn't have enough more than three minutes before the council. "I'm a major stakeholder who invested $20 million across the street," he told Rawlings. "This is wrong. I have a right to speak about this."Ultimately, Anderson said, the project represented an unacceptable departure from the PD that was adopted by the city. "Why do we keep going away from these plans?" he said plaintively, pausing several times to collect himself. "What's the point? Why do we go through this process? What's the point?"David Lyles, president of the Fort Worth Avenue Development Group, also spoke in opposition to the project. He asked the council to "help us enforce quality development