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33010
564158
43520 -10 Day Ad- Second Reading Ordinance 2 File 15994 a
43520 -10 Day Ad- Secon
$3,154.03
3
10.18 in
Attention: MariCarmen Lopez
CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
CITY OF MIAMI - CLERK'S OFFICE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com
Copy of ad content
is on the next page
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared:
Mary Castro, who on oath says that he/she is CUSTODIAN
OF RECORDS of The Miami Herald, a daily newspaper
published at Miami in Miami -Dade County, Florida; that
the attached copy of the advertisement that was
published was published in said newspaper in the issue
(s) of:
Publication: Miami Herald
1 insertion(s) published on:
06/17/24
Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald is a
newspaper published at Miami, in the said Miami -Dade
County, Florida and that the said newspaper has
heretofore been continuously published in said Dade
County, Florida each day and has been entered a second
class mail matter at the post office in Miami, in said
Miami -Dade County, Florida, for a period of one year
next preceding the first publication of the attached copy
of advertisement; and affiant further says that he/she
has neither paid or promised any person, firm or
corporation any discount, rebate, commission or refund
for the purpose of securing this advertisement for
publication in the said newspaper(s).The McClatchy
Company complies with all legal requirements for
publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 26th day of
June in the year of 2024
S 3 } e,r
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
STEPH J N€E HATCHER
My Notary IU # 133534406
Expires January 14, 2028
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal document please do not destroy!
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VoluoLI -Teal JO A.1.13
MONDAY AIRS I1 7024
MIAMI BRAID
I 9A
Public lands put stricter limits on foraging for food
sY RM Roger.
NYT.Yrw ae,wu
MISSOOU, MONT.
Beneath a row of fir
trees, River Shannon Aloia
walks along a remote dirt
road on national forest
land, scanning the ground
for morels.
"Find ih" she com-
mands her dog, jasper.
The search pays off for
Alois, an avid forager: She
spies a solitary honey -
colored morel and plucks
it.
"Foraging changes your
relationship with nature,"
she said. "You are out in
the woods using all of your
senses. And it's gratifying
when you can identify
something and take it
home and prepare it for
your family."
Spring in the Northern
Hemisphere is a favorite
time of year for foragers
such as Aloia. It is espe-
cially popular in the Amer-
ican West because of the
millions of acres of public-
ly owned lands that give
foragers the freedom to
num and harvest to their
liking.
Once the mow melts, a
variety of fungi begin
popping their heads above
ground — oyster mush-
rooms, king boletes and
several types of morels. A
profusion of flowers and
other edible and medici-
nal plants, including wild
onions and asparagus,
fiddleheads, nettles and
miner's lettuce, are also
highly sought.
Come summer, the
berry crop beckons in the
Rocky Mountain West:
chokecherries, wild straw-
berries and plump, purple
huckleberries. In late
Summer and fall, other
wild crops emerge, such as
pine nuts in the Southwest
and mushrooms including
chicken of the woods,
shaggy manes and the
prized matsutake.
Although most national
parks ban commercial
foraging, about three -
fourths allow people to
explore and collect their
favorite crops for personal
use. Individual parks set
limits each year; some,
like Death Valley in Cali-
fornia and Nevada, re-
strict the collection of
foods including nuts and
berries to 1 quart a day,
and only for personal
consumption. Foraging is
banned altogether in
about a quarter of all na-
tional parks.
But things are changing
in the woods, worrying
those who for years have
enjoyed the seasonal taste
River Shannon Aloia hunts for morel mushrooms with her dog. Jasper. on national
forest land near Missoula. Montana in May. Collecting wild mushrooms. berries and
other foods from public lands is so popular that state and federal agencies are
considering more restrictions.
of food growing in the
wild and foraging's con-
nection to centuries of
dependence on natural
habitats.
Foraging has grown so
popular since the pandem-
ic that state and federal
agencies weighing
whether to impose addi-
tional restrictions.
Some leading foragers,
for both personal and
commercial food, say
more public lands are
being declared off-limits,
especially in places where
wildfires have devastated
the forest lands.
Their concern is based
on the increasingly pop-
ular attraction to a stoking
ecological phenomenon:
Charred landscapes and
disturbed ground provide
ideal conditions for morels
to flourish in plentiful
numbers. That has attract-
ed bigger and bigger
crowds that swarm burned
lands in the spring follow-
ing a previous year's big
forest fire, and the forag-
ing numbers have grown
far too large to manage,
officials say. SEE FORAGING, I0A
"Here in Oregon, they
rarely closed bums before
the pandemic," said Trent
Blizzard, the president of
the North American Myc-
ological Association, who
with his wife, Kristen, runs
The Modem Forager web -
site. "But for the last three
or four years, they have
closed most of the fires,
including all of the big
ones.""e're concerned about
foraging access to all state
and federal land, not just
burns," he said.
Decisions on where and
when to close national
forest land are made at a
local level. David Law-
rence, the special products
program manager for the
national office of the U.S.
Forest Service, said that
administering the com-
mercial harvesting of any
product was often low on
the list of priorities. Some
foragers who sell their
foods are required to ob-
tain permits.
"The first step is to
ensure sustainable man-
agement," he said.
That might require his-
torical and environmental
analysis for commercial
mushroom picking, or the
deployment of law en-
forcement to manage
FROM PAGE 8A
BIDEN
"There is a difference
between motivating do-
nors and motivating vot-
ers," said Aubrey Mont-
gomery, the president of
Democratic consulting
F Rittenhouse Political
Partners. "Not all celebri-
ties like to be associated
with partisan politics."
Arguably the two big-
gest U.S. musicians —
Beyonce,avocal supporter
of Obama, and Taylor
Swift — have yet to en-
dorse Biden this year.
Swift has a massive follow-
ing with younger voters
that has grown as she
toured at sold -out stadi-
ums ver the past year and
began a relationship with
Kansas City Chiefs star
Travis Kelce.
Still, Biden's Hollywood
support has helped him
rack up a cash advantage
against Trump — albeit
one that Trump has start-
ed to close. DreamWorks
co-founder Jeffrey Kat-
zenberg is Biden's cam-
paign co-chair and has
leveraged his relationships
into financial support. The
director Steven Spielberg
is helping with messaging
efforts for the Democratic
National Convention in
August.
"The enthusiasm and
commitment for Biden/
Hams couldn't be stron-
ger," Katzenberg said in a
statement ahead of the
fundraiser.
Trump has also made
inroads with celebrities,
posting his first video to
TlkTok this month along-
side Ultimate Fighting
Championship CEO Dana
White. Tnunp has
amassed more followers
and likes than Biden's
campaign account, which
debuted in February.
Trump in May held a rally
in the Bronx and invited
the rappers Sheff G and
Sleepy Hallow in an at-
tempt to connect with
Black voters.
"The only people in
America who support foe
Biden's failing campaign
are elitist Hollywood ce-
lebrities," Trump spokes -
an Kaoline Leavitt
said in a statement.
Biden's Democratic
predecessors navigated
the celebrity universe with
greater eau. Obama rou-
tinely hosted birthday
parties attended by the
biggest stars in music,
movies and sports. Bill
Clinton's signature mo-
ment in the 1992 cam-
paign came when he
played saxophone on "The
Arsenio Hall Show."
Both men have lent
their help to Biden. Biden
in March raised R25 mil-
lion at New York's Radio
City Music Hall in a one -
day bonanza with the two
former presidents and
performances by Broad-
way stars. That event was
interrupted by protesters
angry with Biden's hand-
ling of the Middle East
conflict. Demonstrators
gathered outside Sat-
urday's venue as well.
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE(S)
Notice Is hereby given that the City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida, will
nstder the following ordinance(s) on second and final reading on Thursday, June 27,
2024, commencing at 900 A.M., ithe City Commission Chambers located at
3500 Pan American Drive, Miami. Florida 33133:
ORDINANCE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER 2/ARTICLE
O OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMENDED "CITY CODE"),
TITLED "ADMINISTRATION/CODE ENFORCEMENT," MORE PARTICULARLY BY
REINSTATING SECTION 2-830 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "ALTERNATE CODE
ENFORCEMENT SYSTEM. PROVIDING FOR AN ALTERNATE CODE ENFORCEMENT
SYSTEM THAT GIVES SPECIAL MAGISTRATES THE SAME AUTHORITY AS THE
CODE ENFORCEMENT BOARD TO HOLD HEARINGS AND IMPOSE FINES, COST,
LIENS, AND OTHER NON -CRIMINAL PENALTIES AGAINST VIOLATORS OF THE
CITY CODE; PROVIDING FOR THE QUALIFICATIONS, APPOINTMENT. POWERS,
COMPENSATION, AND RETENTION OF SPECIAL MAGISTRATES: AND TO AMEND
SECTION 2-81700(3) OF THE CITY CODE PERTAINING TO IRREPARABLE OR
IRREVERSIBLE VIOLATION FINES; CONTAINING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE AND
PROVIDING FOR AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE DATE.
ORDINANCE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER 37/
SECTION 2 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA. AS AMENDED, TILED
"OFFENSES - MISCELLANEOUS/MALICIOUS DEFACEMENT, MARKING, ETC..
OF REAL PROPERTY." TO PROVIDE FOR AUTHORITY OF CODE COMPLIANCE
DEPARTMENT TO MANAGE THE GRAFFII MITIGATION PROGRAM AND ADD OTHER
REQUIREMENTS FOR PARTICIPATION; CONTAINING A SEVERABILNV CLAUSE ANO
PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
Saki proposed ordinance(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office o/ the
Coy Clerk, 3500 Pan Amenun Drive, Miami. Florlda 33133, Monday through Friday,
excluding holidays, between the hours of 6 e.m. and 5 p.m., or httpl/mismifl igm2 corn
five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
All interested parsons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be heard with
respect to the proposed ordinance(s). Should any person desire to appeal any decision
of the City Commission with respect to any matter to be considered at this meeting,
that person shall ensure That a verbatim retard o1 the proceedings is made Including
all testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 236.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Commission
meeting Is cancelled or is not held due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency,
a special City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled for the Tuesday
Immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event of one of the aforementioned
circumstances, the special meeting would be held on July 2, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. In
the Clty Commission chambers located al Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive,
Miami, FL 33133. All of the scheduled agenda Items Iron that cancelled meeting
shall automatically be scheduled as an agenda Item at the special City Commission
meeting. The City Clerk shall notify the public of the special meeting that is to take
place by placing a notice of the special City Commission meeting al the entrance of
City Hell and the City's main administrative building, placing a notice on the Clty's
websile. and, if feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general circulation before
the spacial meeting on the immediately following Tuesday. There shall be no additional
notice by publication required for any such scheduled agenda item that is moved to
the spacial City Commission meeting.
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. persons needing
special accommodations to participate in this proceeding may contact the Office of
the City Clerk at (305) 250-5361 (Voice) no later than live (5) business days prior to
the proceeding. TTY users may call via 711 (Florida Relay Service) no later than five
(5) business days prior to the proceeding.
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43520