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33010
596310
Miami Herald
43585 -10 Day Ad - Modif
5153855
3
5.00 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
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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:
09/30/24
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 3rd day of
October in the year of 2024
yoz
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
,.... •.
.• F;. MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
f My Notary ID # 134916732
Expires May 24, 2028
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal document please do not destroy!
M
MIAMI HERALD I
I MO0OAY SEPTUM" 10 2071
Adams indictment alleges pattern of
deception to hide contributions, bribes
all GRAHAM eArMAN
New rare Daily Nan
11 was a moment of high
drama. Federal agents
stopped New York City
Mayor Eric Adams on the
street on Nov. 5 and took
his cellphones. As word of
the seizure emerged Nov,
10, Adams declared he
had "nothing to hide."
"1 would be shocked if
someone stated that our
campaign coordinated any
illegal behavior," Adams
said.
But, as Thursday's in-
dictment charging Adams
with a range of corruption
offenses linked to fund-
raising for his 2021 may-
oral campaign details, the
reds didn't get Adams'
personal phone. They
returned a day later with a
subpoena.
Adams complied and
told them he had recently
changed the password to
preserve the contents for
the investigation. Un-
fortunately, he said, he
had forgotten the pass-
word and couldn't help
them unlock it.
It was just one instance
in a years -long pattern
that federal prosecutors
are painting as a pattern of
deception on the part of
Adams and others in his
orbit to conceal criminal
conduct that includes fake
paper trails, encrypted
messaging apps and hid-
den fundraisers.
"The conduct alleged in
the indictment, the foreign
money, the corporate
money, the bribery, the
years of concealment is a
grave breach of the publi-
c's trust. Public office is a
privilege. We allege Mayor
Adams abused that privi-
lege and broke the law,
laws designed to ensure
that officials like him
serve the people, not the
highest bidder. These are
bright red lines, and we
allege the mayor crossed
them year after year," said
U.S. Attorney Damian
New York City Mayor Eric Adams. left, stands with his lawyer, Alex Spiro, who delivered
remarks to the media on Thursday in New York.
"The mayor had a duty
to disclose these gifts on
his annual disclosure
forms so that the public
could see who was giving
him what. Year after year
after year, he told the
public he received no gifts
even though he was se-
cretly being showered
with them."
Prose0Olors Say the
mayor has been abusing
his influence since he was
Brooklyn borough presi-
dent by accepting more
than $100,000 in perks
from at least one Turkish
government official and
wealthy businessmen, like
luxury trips to countries
including Turkey, China,
France, Hungary, Ghana
and India that were not
disclosed.
The reds say Adams's
benefactors further bought
his influence by secretly
funneling thousands of
dollars into his campaign
war chest via U.S.-based
straw donors, netting
pudic matching funds that
contributed to the total
S10 million raised by his
2021 mayoral campaign -
It's illegal for foreign
nationals to donate to U.S.
political candidates.
The mayor pleaded not
Williams. guilty Friday in Manhattan
federal court, and his
lawyer Alex Spiro charac-
terized the charges as
"upgrades on airlines for
open seats." "There are no
emails, text messages, or
any corroboration whatso-
ever that the mayor knew
about anything having to
do with These campaign
donations," Spiro said.
In fact, Spiro said, it was
the reds who were being
deceptive — claiming they
had evidence Adams was
unaware of any illegal
fundraising and providing
text messages to backup
that contention.
"The entire body of
evidence is one staffer,
one staffer that says there
was a conversation. What
you have not learned is
that that staffer has lied,
and the government is in
possession of that lie."
The staffer Spiro was
referring to was identified
as Rana Abbasova, who
worked for the mayor
when he was borough
president and followed
him to City Hag as a liais-
on with overseas entities.
Her lawyer declined com-
ment.
But the indictment
makes clear the feds will
be pressing the question of
how forthcoming Adams
has been during his years
In Brooklyn Borough Hall
and as mayor.
The indictment, which
appears to rely on more
evidence than just the
word of one person, alleg-
es Adams while Brooklyn
Borough president, took
seven trips from 2016
through 2021 to hal(a
dozen countries on the
arm of Turkish interests
with a value of S123,000
but did not disclose any of
them on the annual fi-
nancial disclosures he was
required to file.
"1 have had to fill out
that form every year and 1
go through every bit of it
to make sure it's correct,"
said Council Member Gale
Brewer, D-Upper West
Side, who has been in
elective office since 2002.
"We all know to do that.
We are mandated. !found
that upsetting."
"1 don't see where he
was checking. When his
lawyer said it's not a big
deal to be upgraded, yes, it
is. It's not legal. Period.
You are taking money."
Adams allegedly deleted
messages from the staffers
who acted as go-between
with the Turkish interests.
In March, 2019, his
staffer Abbasova remind-
ed him "Please delete all
n1"sages you send me."
Always do," Adams
replied, according to the
indictment.
In September 2023, two
months before his phones
were seized, Adams had
already been gearing up
for his 2025 reelection
campaign and allegedly
returned to a straw donor
scheme that aided him in
the 2021 race to illegally
raise campaign funds from
foreign donors. On Sept.
20, 2023, he appeared at a
55,000-a-plate dinner
prosecutors allege was a
fundraising event. But it
was baled instead as a
event focused on "in-
ternational sustainability"
and not disclosed on his
public schedule.
The indictment alleges
that Adams' efforts to
conceal the straw donor
scheme continued at least
to mid -June. After news
broke that the FBI had
contacted key alleged
conspirators, the reds
claim an Adams staffer
told one of the Turkish
businessmen he had met
with Adams at City Hall
and they had left thew
cellphones outside the
room so it would be "safe"
to talk.
The staffer then urged
the businessman to Be to
the reds and tell his em-
ployees who had made
Straw donations to lie aS
well, the reds allege.
In early November
2023, three days before
the reds first took Adams'
phones — they did again
early Thursday — they
raided the home of Brian-
na Suggs, a key Adams
fundraiser. Adams sud-
denly canceled meetings
in Washington, D.C., and
noshed back to the city.
Behind the scenes, the
indictment reveals, Suggs
called Adams five limes as
FBI agents knocked on her
door. Adams then tried to
call her as the agents were
leaving the home.
The same day, the in-
dictment says, an Adants
staffer was visited by
agents. She agreed to
cooperate, then ducked
into a bathroom and delet-
ed encrypted messaging
apps she used to text
Adams and other alleged
conspirators.
The reds, in their allega-
tions against the mayor,
focus heavily on interna-
tional travel. The indict-
ment alleges he directed a
scheme to create a "fake
paper trail" to make it
seems like his overseas
trips cost much less than
they actually did. Spiro
says that the upgrades
were standard practice
routinely offered to VIPs
and that there was nothing
untoward about them.
Adams allegedly direct-
ed staff to create fake
paper trails to either hide
the true cost of the flights
and hotels or indicate he
had paid for them when he
had not. In 2017, Adams
messaged his scheduler
saying, "1 left you the
money for the internation-
al airline in an envelope in
your top desk draw (sic).
Please send it to them."
In fact, the indictment
states, he never left any
cash in that drawer and
didn't pay for the tickets at
all.
InJune 2021, planning
another flight to Turkey,
Adams indicated he would
pay his own way. He and a
staffer agreed they would
collect invoices and make
small credit card pay-
ments to give the appear-
ance he had paid for the
tickers, the indictment
said.
On June 22, 2021— the
day Adams won the Dem-
ocratic primary — his
staffer went back and
forth with a Turkish airline
official, identified in press
reports as Cenk Ocal, over
determining a price that
seemed legitimate while
still a massive discount.
Ocal offered to charge
Adams just S50 a ticket.
The staffer replied:
"Quote a real price. We
don't want them to say he
is flying for free. His every
step is being watched."
In the end, Adams paid
$1,100 each for the tick-
ets. The true cost would
have been S15,000, the
indictment states.
Taliban accused of `gross' violations of women's rights
SY MARa15E SIMONs
MT Nett Se,mlre
Four countries on
Wednesday accused the
Taliban of "gross and
systematic" violations of
the U.N. treaty on wom-
en's rights in Afghanistan,
saying they would take the
group to the world's high-
est court because of its
harsh, widely criticized
restriction on Women.
The plan was described
by foreign ministers from
Germany, Australia, Cana-
da and the Netherlands M
the United Nations in New
York, where the General
Assembly was meeting
Wednesday. The ministers
said they intended to lake
the Taliban to the In-
temational Court of Jus-
tice, the top U.N. court.
The treaty, regarded as
an international bill of
rights for women, was
signed in 1979 and in-
cludes most of the world's
nations, including Af-
ghanistan, which joined in
2003. (The United States
is one of the few countries
that have not ratified it.)
Since returning to power
in 2021, the Taliban has
systematically rolled back
many of the rights that
women gained during the
20-year U.S. occupation.
Last month, the Taliban
released a 114-page mani-
(Oslo codifying its re-
strictions on women,
which include barring
them from secondary
schools or universities,
working for aid organiza-
tions and traveling any
significant distance with-
out a male relative. Hu-
n rights monitors say
Afghanistan is the most
restrictive country in the
world for women, and the
only country in the world
where girls are barred
from education beyond
the sixth grade.
Taliban authorities have
dismissed criticism of the
restrictions and defended
the policies, saying they
are grounded to the Islam-
ic teachings that govem
the country.
At the United Nations
on Wednesday, the four
foreign ministers con-
demned what they called
"the gross and systematic
human rights violations
and abuses in Afghan-
istan, particularly the
gender -based discrimi-
nation of women and
girls."
They said "we have
repeatedly urged Afghan-
istan and the Taliban" to
comply with international
law and to lift all restric-
tions on the rights of wo-
men and girls, including
on their right to education.
"However, the situation
has not improved; to the
contrary, it continues to
w Then ministers said that
Afghanistan must be held
accountable for its numer-
ous violations under the
treaty, the Convention on
the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination
against Women.
If the case is heard, it
would be the first time the
U.N.'s top court consid-
ered the alleged violation
i Public Notice
SECOND READING ITEM
CANCELLATION
NOTICE 15 GIVEN flit ape Second Beading dem listed below.
scheduled to be beard at the Miami-0ade County Board of
County Commissioner Meeting of Tuesday. October 1, 2024, at
9:30 am., m too Commission Chambers,lonaled on the secpq
Iksm el the Stephen P. Clark Government Center. 111 N.W. Fast
Street. Miami, Florida. 33128. has been CAHGEIOEO.
• ORDINANCE REGARDING DESIGNATION OF THE CHEF
CORRECTIONAL OFFICER FOR MIAMI-DADE COUNTY;
AMENDING SECTION 2-2450 OF THE CODE OF MIAMI-DADE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, DESIGNATING, IN ACCORDANCE WITH
SECTION 951 061, FLORIDA STATUTES. THAT IRE SHERIFF OF
MIAMI-DADE COUNTY SHALL BE THE CHIEF CORRECTIONAL
OFFICER FOR MIAMI-OADE COUNTY, PROVIDING FOR DELAYED
IMP(EMENTAIION. PROVIDING SEVERABI0TY INCLUSION N
AND EXCLUSION FROM THE CODE, AND AN EFFECTVE DAZE
Marti Dade County provides equal access and equal
apparturery in its programs, services and aclmlies and does not
discmmma a on the hems of disability- To request malanals In an
accessible lomat, a sign language interpreter. andiv any other
accnmmodalio, le participate in any County-spo,0orod program
or meeting, please contact (305) 375-2035, or send an e-mail to
aiL10,00pQrnjwij000.0421 in advance of the meeting 10 Initiate
your request. lTV users may
y also call 711 (Florida Relay Service).
JWw FERNANDEZ-BAAOIBN, CLERK OF THE COIN1 AMU COMPTROLLER
RASA PRI(H0. DEPUTY CLERK
For opal ads outrun. Pc to legatees.mlamldade,gov
of the treaty, which for-
bids all forms of discrimi-
nation against women.
"This is momentous; it
will give Afghan women a
w important platform
before world opinion and
make them protagonists in
their straggle," said gang-
ue de Silva de Alwis, a
professor at the University
of Pennsylvania and an
adviser to Afghan women
activists.
The coact, based in The
Hague, was established by
the founding charter of
the United Nations in
1945 to settle disputes
between member slates.
The court typically has a
panel of 15 judges, elected
by the U.N. General As-
sembly and Security
Council.
Its decisions are legally
binding with no possibility
of appeal, but the body
has few means of enforc-
ing them, and the Taliban
could ignore the process.
The formal complaint
against the Taliban cannot
be tiled immediately. The
court's rules require a
formal notification that
there is a dispute, fol-
lowed by a six-month
period in which the parties
are to try to settle their
dispute.
But Afghan women in
Europe and North Amer-
ica they were thrilled
the process had been set
in motion. Many have
joined a Coalition for
Justice, which includes
more than 100 expat Af-
ghan women who have
become activists for those
in Afghanistan.
"Today's action was a
great move and we are
very grateful to the coun-
tries who listened tothe
women," said Ghizal Ha-
ress, a lawyer who was the
official ombudsperson
dealing with government
corruption before she fled
Kabul, Afghanistan, in
2021. Haress was among
the women whose activ-
ism led the four govem-
menss to bring a case
against the Taliban.
The activists described
lobbying European law-
makers, organizing con-
ferences and holding dem-
oretrations-
CITY OF MIAML FI l0I0A
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEANING
A put* hearing as be lea byte City Canmicem at the fay 0 um,, Ronda on Thursl05 Ikbbar 10, 2024, a 910AM
at fay Rae lwaled.3500 Pan American Drive, MianaFhav 33133 for the purpose el gramq the roaming.
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENT(S) MODIFYING DIE GUIDELINES OF
THE INFILI FIRST TIME HOMEBUYER PROGRAM, AS DESCRIBED IN RESOLUTION N0. R24 0260 (`EXPANDED
PROGRAM-) BY REQUIRING APPLICANTS TO SECURE A RRST MORTGAGE IN AN AMOUNT THAT WOULD RESULT
IN A TOTAL PAYMENT. INCLUSIVE OE PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, TAXES, AND INSURANCE, UP TO THIRTY PERCENT
(30%) OF THE APPLICANTS TOTAL GROSS FAMILY INCOME AS IDENTIFIED IN EXHIBIT 'A,' ATTACHED ANO
INCORPORATED. EXCEPT FOR THE EXCEPTIONS STATED HEREIN: PROVIDING FUR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
All interested persons are netted to appear at Me meetng and may be heard with respect to the Iaix,osed resolution.
Should any person desne to appeal any decision or Me Goy Commission wlh respect to any nutter to be mns,5red
at Me meetma that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including all testimony
and eede,ce ueen were, aer appeal maybe based IFS. 286.0105).
Pusuant to Munk Cray C. Sectors 2 33(o), M,erava a scheduled City Commission rr5Nke a cance101 or es not
hdd dot le a 000 o, a ender') or olne,emergmry, a Venal Pity Commission meeenp unit be aulmWoay scheduled
Mr the Tuesday irrvwaateN loraw»g the cancelled meeting hew went clone el the alwemenuore0 veratarces,
the spent meetng would he held on October 15.20224. at 900 a m. In Me Cray CommSS4V.. cnambns rou:eo al Maim
Cloy Han, 3500 Pan 0. ran O9ve, Marta Ronda 33133. Al of the scheduled agenda items Item but cancelled
meeliq slue automatically be scheduled as an agenda Mem at t x spatial City Comm,ssm meeting
The Cay Clerk shall renfy Ina public of the specal meeting tem is to lake PMca by placing a mice of loos spenal0dy
Commesion meeting at the entrance of Cay Hall and the City's man administrative wane, plating a nonce en the
Cdy inebs.., and. d leavble. pacing an ad m a newspaper of general c reoatlon baton the speoal meeeng on the
immediately Iollowng Tuesday. Inn. shall be no addbmal notiu try pu0ica3on required Iw any sack scheduled
agenda item Mal es moved to the special City Oomrmsso, meeting
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. persons needing spec,l acc001m0dab0119 to
participate In Ina proceeding may contact the ollwe of the Cdy Clerk at (305) 250.5361 (Voice) no later than file
(5) buvress days pram to the proceeding TIT users may call ea 111 (Florida Relay Service) no later man liw (5)
buaness days prior to the p10ceedi00,
Todd B. Hannan
Gly Clerk
Ad No. 43585
McClatchy
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Account #
order Number
Identification
order Po
Amount
Cols
Depth
33010
596314
Miami Herald
43586 -10 Day Ad - API -AI
$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:
09/30/24
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 3rd day of
October in the year of 2024
coithtlam) laolu
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
My Notary ID # 134916732
n:
Expires May 24, 2028
-'.416.
Extra charge for last or duplicate affidavits.
Legal document please do not destroy,
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Marl City Qarmmtos on all hold a Pubic Hearing an Those*, Ocuba
10, 2024, at f200 AM, to coaider fie award at a contract to the company
Bated below through Anti -Poverty grit fund] from the flatrki 4'a Eharn of
the ply of Hlarnra A t1 Parerty intake Program S urahira far NI, Inc, a
Florida Not for Proft Corporefrn, wfi amide made to homebound senior
msidenta In ❑k3hld i, and tc coraida the Cty F.ia nager'a remmnerdakna
and finding Inn# compellte rnegaltian mattnda are act pacttoe,je er
adtuirhhgaaia regarding RI eao Tearer
• t#nahl ne far Al, Inc. - API Banker Maio Program
Inge,nlea regadng thin ndhoa may he addressed la Maim] T. authalard,
Mrririehulte Aeetellent II far Ina Inca d tram] Admfotok•athm, at
(305) 416-1005.
Thfa action le being ea nakiared poniard to Section 111-65 (A) aF the Cade d
the Cty d Marl, Florida ® amended (the `Cade" ) The recomrrerdatirnm
and fkndnge to ha comeidaad In this meta are sat forlr to he pmpaned
raehrlan ad In Cade Section 1ti-55 (A), which ae dawned to be
frnraparated by mfawnce herein aid MI wadable as will he regularly
actneduled Cty Cammkeion meeting d Odcba 1C, 2024, et Muni City Hal,
3500 Pal Amateur' trine, Mani, Florida 33133_
The Ward Ctty Qmmriaeirn requitals at kniartnted pats® he proem err
repesenkad atthe mooing aid meybe heard wth reaped la Eby proposition
before the Ctty Qmnieeion In which the Cty Camniedar may take actions_
Should ay paean dean] to Broad shy decision aF he Ctty Camniee,rn
wth rehpect tc any metier to he oonsldaad at hie mooing, hat pram
aril emirs lint a nabenlm record d the proceeding] ki male Including al
leeikmay mid evidence upon which any appeal may he l d (Fa 2116.0105).
Pursuant to Hem!! Cty Cade Section 2-33(a), whores a ac heduled City
Canmkiefan meeting k3 oxnceted Cr ka hat held due tc a kick d a moron
ar attar ernagency, a eponiel ply Qmarlealcn mailing at be aitomatically
ecuedtulad for he TIonday Imol * Flowing the canceled Treeing In
the event d ale d the ale rm me atio nod duo um ]tan a a, the special rooting
wamid to held m October 15, 2024, at 9110 AM In the City Corrnitalcn
dhanhera !coaled at Rani Cty Hail, 3500 Pan American Odra, Rend,
Florida 33131 NI of the scheduled agenda liana From hat canceled meeting
atoll Hutormdh®Iy be scheduled r an agenda Flom et thhe acacia City
Carmmtoelon meeting
The ply Clerk shell nalty the pubic d the special mooing that le to tole
plane by pkickg a notice aF the spade, City Cenmiselan meeting at the
eakahce d City Hal ad the Cty'n mein admkhtotralne hulloing, placing e
notice an the Cty'awrabete, aid, I FeadUe, placing an ad In a newEpepar d
gerhae, circulation before the special meeting an he Immediately blowing
TLeadny. There alai he no addIione, notice by pub/calm mgikad Far any
such scheduled agenda tern that ka mated to the epochal City Corm -talon
meat'g
In acoerdales wth he Amal2as ,Ih deaUltlm Mt aF 1990, person]
needing epochal urrammadelaa to participate In Eta prnaeedkng may
contact the Office aF he City Ciwk at (305) 250-5361 (Voice) no Ida tram the
(5) b+mlrreae deyeprier to the proceeding. TTY leas may cal tie 711 (fl rk i
Daley aertilm) rn later bah Fie (5) Putnam Jaya prier La the proreadrg_
Todd 13. Haman
Oly Ciak
M Na. 435216
MOIDAY lEFTEIDIN NI ION
I MAI HERALD
M
SpaceX and Boeing Starliner saga
continues with Crew-9 launch to ISS
BY RICHARD 1711ee13
Orlando Sentinel
NNEDY
arSPACE It's nota rescue mis-
sion, but the two astro-
nauts left behind by Boe-
ing's Starliner at the In-
ternational Space Station
will soon welcome their
new ride home with the
arrival of a SpaceX Crew
Dragon that made a his-
toric launch from Cape
Canaveral Space Force
Base on Saturday.
A Falcon 9 topped with
the Crew Dragon Freedom
launched from Canaver-
al's Space Launch Com-
plex 40 at 1:17 pm., mark-
ing the first human space-
flight from the pad, a feat
accomplished after
SpaceX spent nearly two
years building out a new
crew tower at the site. All
previous SpaceX Crew
Dragon launches have
been from KSC's Launch
Pad 39-A.
The pad's fist two
space travelers were
NASA astronaut and Space
Force Col. Nick Hague
flying with Roscosmos
cosmonaut Aleksandr
Garbunov.
"It was a sweet ride,"
Hague said after Dragon
made it into orbit. "1'm
pretty sure my youngest
son would say it was sig-
The mission flew with
just two instead of four so
that NASA astronauts
Butch Wilmore and Suni
Williams, who arrived at
the 155 aboard Starliner
back on June 6, could
have a ride back to Earth
when the Crew-9 mission
ends in February 2025.
NASA opted to send
Starliner home without
crew because of thruster
and helium -leak concerns
on that spacecraft's pro-
pulsion system during its
Bight up to the station.
That decision meant
two of Crew-9's original
members, who had been
training for 18 months for
the Bight, had to be left
behind. Zena Cardman,
who would have been
flying for the fast time,
had originally been tapped
as commander while
Hague trained as pilot.
Veteran NASA astronaut
Stephanie Wilson was
supposed to ray as mission
specialist.
With the need to drop
two crew members, NASA
opted to drop rookie Card -
man and give the com-
mand to Hague, a veteran
of two previous launches
and one long-term stay on
the ISS.
Cardman and Wilson,
though, joined NASA's
mission commentary
ahead of launch from
KSC.
"It's bittersweet, but it's
a really beautiful thing,"
Cardman said ahead of
liftoff. "1 think any launch
is a testament to the pow-
er of collaboration, and
this launch maybe even
more so than usual.)
think, from my perspec-
tive, it's a privilege and a
choice to take part in
something that's larger
than yourself, and that's a
choice that 1 make today
and the next day and the
ne
xt day."
Wilson, one of NASA's
oldest active astronauts,
who had flown three times
on the space shuttle,
echoed Cardman's emo-
tions.
"We're always excited
for our colleagues to have
an opportunity to launch
into space. Of course, we
wish we could be with
them. We have trained
with them, for this time.
We, of course, wanted to
be together. We have built
friendship and camarade-
rie, and learned for the
roles for the Crew Dragon
and for the International
Space Station. But I'm
very excited for them,
looking forward to hearing
their stories from space."
The rocket took off
through hazy, cloud -cov-
ered skies in a break from
dicey rainstorms that had
dumped torrents on the
pad just hours before lif-
toff. Hurricane Helene
had forced a delay of the
original planned launch
that had been targeting
Thursday.
The first -stage booster
made its second Bight and
returned for a landing at
Canaveral's Landing Zone
1, sending a sonic boom
across the Space Coast.
Upon reaching orbit,
Hague revealed the tradi-
tional zero-G indicator, a
mall stuffed baby falcon
named Aurora that had
actually flown with Hague
in 2019 on his last flight to
space.
The Crew Dragon now
has about a 28-hour ride
to rendezvous with the ISS
and join the nine people
already on the station.
Wilmore and Williams
have another five months
on board before they can
take their saved seats for
the ride back home.
Hague and Gorbunov
had donned their space-
suits by 9 a.m. before
leaving KSC's Neil A.
Armstrong Operations and
Checkout Building, where
they had been in quaran-
tine since arriving last
Saturday. The duo said
goodbye to family and
NASA officials including
Administrator Bill Nelson.
They then climbed into
the traditional ride provid-
ed for SpaceX launches,
this time a black Testa
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
JVOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINQ
ANY PERSON WHO RECEIVES COMPENSATION, REMUNERATION OR
EXPENSES FOR CONDUCTING LOBBYING ACTIVITIES IS REQUIRED TO
REGISTER AS A LOBBYIST WITH THE CITY CLERK PRIOR TO ENGAGING IN
LOBBYING ACTIVITIES BEFORE CITY STAFF, BOARDS AND COMMITTEES
OR THE CITY COMMISSION. A COPY OF THE APPLICABLE ORDINANCE
IS AVAILABLE IN THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK (MIAMI CITY HALL),
LOCATED AT 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, MIAMI, FLORIDA, 33133.
AT THE SCHEDULED MEETING OF THE COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
MIAMI, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2024, AT
9:00 A.M., IN ITS CHAMBERS AT CITY HALL, 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE,
THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION WILL CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING ITEM
RELATED TO THE REGULAR AGENDA:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENTS,
ACCEPTING THE PLAT ENTITLED "ALTO TOWER SUBDIVISION", A REPLAT
IN THE CITY OF MIAMI, SUBJECT TO ALL OF THE CONDITIONS OF THE
PLAT AND STREET COMMITTEE AND THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED IN CITY
CODE SECTION 55-8, AND ACCEPTING THE DEDICATIONS SHOWN ON SAID
PLAT, LOCATED ALONG THE NORTH SIDE OF NW 36 STREET, FROM NW
22 COURT AND NW 23 AVENUE, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING THE CITY
MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO EXECUTE SAID PLAT: AND PROVIDING FOR
THE RECORDATION OF SAID PLAT IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-
DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Copies of the proposed Resolution are available Inc review at the Resilience
end Public Works Department, Survey Section of the Administration Division,
located at 444 SW 2"d Avenue, 7• Floor, during regular working hours. Phone
305-416-1232.
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be
heard with respect to the proposed resolution. 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 record of
the proceedings Is made including all testimony and evidence upon which any
appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
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 Me Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the
vent of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would
be held on October 15, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. In the City Commission chambers
located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133. All
of the scheduled agenda Items from 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 at the entrance
of City Hall and the City's main administrative building, placing a notice on
the City's website, and, If feasible, placing an ad In a newspaper of general
circulation before the special 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 special City Commission meeting.
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, parsons
needing special accommodations to participate in this proceeding may
contact the Office of the City Clerk at (305) 250-5361 (Voice) no later than five
(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 Hannon
Ay Clerk
Ad Na. 43587
sporting the mission -spe-
cific custom license plate
that read "BEADY4IT."
The ride to the pad,
though, drove through
KSC but didn't stop at the
normal destination; in-
stead, the caravan of sup-
port vehicles continued
past Launch Complex
39-A and traveled over the
bridge to the nearby Cape
Canaveral.
They got to christen the
white room at the top of
the new launch tower,
becoming the first to write
their names on the wall
under a SpaceX logo.
KSC's white room, in
comparison, is getting
crowded, now with 54
signatures from the 14
previous Crew Dragon
missions flown with hu-
mans since May 2000.
With two empty seats,
Dragon flew up with mass
simulators to equal the
normal flight weight.
The Crew-9 patch for
the mission was adjusted
to remove the original
four names slated to fly.
"As we have modified
this mission to save two
seats for Butch Wilmore
and Suni Williams on the
downhill, we removed the
names from the patch,"
Cardman said. "This was
a gesture, too. It's not just
the people on the rocket
who area part of this
mission. It takes an entire
team, too, including my
crew mate, Stephanie
Wilson, myself, and all of
the people who have got-
ten Nick and Alexander
ready for this launch to-
day."
Wilson was supposed to
have been the ISS com-
mander, which would
have made her the first
Black woman to hold the
role.
Instead, command of
the ISS went to Williams,
who took on the duties
during a ceremony last
week that marked the end
of Expedition 71 and be-
ginning of Expedition 72
aboard the station that has
had continuous human
presence for nearly 24
years.
The Starliner flight
marked Williams' third
visit to the ISS for what
was supposed to be an
eight -day stay, but will
end up being more than
eight months
"We've got a ride home,
and you know, we're look-
ing forward to the next
couple months, and doing
a lot of stuff for the In-
ternational Space Station,"
she said in a recent in-
terview.
Crew-9's arrival will
grow the station's pop-
ulation to 11, but just for a
short time. The four mem-
bers of Crew-8, who have
been on board since
March, will remain on the
station during a handover
period of five to seven
days before They ride thew
Crew Dragon Endeavour
home fora splashdown
return off the coast of
Florida.
Cardman gave her
thoughts about being left
behind.
"It's complex, but so is
spaceflight," Cardman
said about the loss of her
ride to space, but she's
happy NASA made the call
to keep Starliner's astro-
nautssafe. "I personally
think it's a good decision
to always prioritize safety
of the crew members."
Hague earlier last week
praised his two crew
mates who will have to
wait for their next flight.
"This mission is bigger
than any one crew. It's
bigger than any one per-
son, and so we've got a
dynamic challenge ahead
of us," Hague said. "I've
never felt closer to my
crew mates You know
that bond that you've
built, you know that we
built for the better part of
a year and a half with
Zena and Stephmie is as
strong as ever, as they're
working side by side with
us, helping, getting us
ready."
The mission is slated to
work through more than
200 science, technology
and research experiments
during the remaining five
months before the flight
home.
Crew Dragon Freedom
made its fourth trip to
space, having flown first
on the Crew-4 mission in
2022, then the Axiom
Space Ax-2 and Ax-3 com-
mercial missions, all hav-
ing docked to the ISS.
SpaceX remains the
only certified provider of
ferry service to the In-
ternational Space Station
from the U.S. as Boeing's
Starliner has faced years
of hurdles to complete its
first crewed flight test.
This is only the second
time Dragon has flown
with just two crew. Hague
this week said breaking up
those responsibilities has
been a challenge.
"Some of that is how
you respond to emergen-
cies," he said. "A lot of
that we practice over and
over. How do 1 respond to
a potential fire? How
would 1 respond to a po-
tential depressurization
event?"
He said that the crew
has to respond reflexively
and that all already under-
stand thew roles and re-
sponsibilities.
"So we've in the past
three weeks had to adapt
that response and ingrain
that response so that we're
ready," he said. "If you
know something, un-
fortunately, like that
would happen, we're go-
ing to be able to keep
ourselves safe."
Hague said he's anxious
to introduce Williams and
Wilmore to their ride
home.
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Miami City Commission will hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, October
10, 2024, at 9:00 A.M., to consider the award of a contract to the company
listed below through Anti -Poverty grant funds from the District 4's share of
the City of Miami's AntiPoverty Initiative Program. Sunshine for All, Inc., a
Florida Not for Profit Corporation, will provide meals to homebound senior
residents In District 4, and to consider the City Manager's recommendations
and finding that competitive negotiation methods are not practicable or
advantageous regarding these issues:
• Sunshine for All, Inc. - API Senior Meals Program
Inquiries regarding this notice may be addressed to Melissa T. Sutherland,
Administrative Assistant II for the Office of Grants Administration, al
(305) 416-1005.
This action Is being considered pursuant to Section 18-85 (A) of the Code of
the City of Miami, Florida as amended (the 'Code"). The recommendations
and findings to be considered in this matter are eel forth in the proposed
resolution and in Code Section 18-85 (A), which are deemed to be
incorporated by reference herein and are available as with the regularly
scheduled City Commission meeting of October 10, 2024, at Miami City Hall,
3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133.
The Miami City Commission requests all interested parties be present or
represented at the meeting and may be heard with respect to any proposition
before the City Commission in which the City Commission may take action.
Should any person desire to appeal any decision of the City Commission
with respect to any matter to be considered et This meeting, that person
shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including all
testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 233(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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 A.M. in the City Commission
chambers located al Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from 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 at the
entrance of City Hall and the City's main administrative building, placing a
notice on the City's weballe, and, if feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of
general circulation before the special 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 special 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 five
(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. 43586
McClatchy
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Sun Herald
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Account #
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Cols
Depth
33010
596327
Miami Herald 43587 -10 Day Ad - Accept Final Plat - Alto To
43587 -10 Day Ad - Accep
$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@m iamigov.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:
09/30/24
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.
1\4 a— y o
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 3rd day of
October in the year of 2024
-gem and- k
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
:� r ►w' MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
My Notary ID # 134916732
Expires May 24, 2028
Elora charge for last or duplicate affidavits
Legal doomed please do not destroyl
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINQ
ANY PE1 QN WHO RECEIVES COMPE3d6Vb1VN, REMUNERATION OR
EXPENSES FOR QONDVCT1NB L3B8YING PDTYTT'ES 16 REQUIRED TIRED TO
REGISTER AS A LOBBYIST MATH THE CITY CLEF1C PRIOR TO EN N31/4G N
LQBBYINS ACTMTIE6 BEF0fE CITY BUFF, SOARDB AND COMMITTEES
OR THE CITY COMMISSION. A COPY OF THE AMICABLE ORDINANCE
i8 AVAILABLE N THE OFF7CE OF TFE CITY CLERK (MIMIC CITY HALL),
LOOMED IT 1800 PAN AHER1CAN DRIVE, MINA, FLOflOA, 1SM.
AT THE 90tEOIILED FWEETN(i CC THE C0r+1`e1381ON OF THE CITY OF
MIALA FLQFIIDA, TO BE HELD ON THURBWY, OCTOBER IQ, 2Q21, AT
SO0 A.M., IN ITS CHAMEIER8 AT CITY HALL. 3E00 PAN AMERICAN DITIE,
THE MANI CITY GOMMISBIDN WILL CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING MEtM
RELATED TO THE REGULAR AGENDA:
A FESOLL ION OF THE MlA11I CITY CO4AMISSic(5, WITH ATMCHNENTS.
ACCEPTING TFE PLAT ENTTTl. 'ALTO MYER SLEDNTSION', A ROUT
IN THE COY OF MAYA SUBJECT TO ALL OF THE COMMONS OF TFE
PLAT Ali? STREET COfIIelTTEE AIM THE PRORSIONS [MN -MIMEO IN CITY
CODE tlECT1ON S5-E, Aa1 AC,CEFFINO THE DEDICATIONS SHOWN ON SAID
PLAIT, LOCATED ALONG THE NORTH BL E OF NW 86 STREET, FROM NW
22 COURT AID MY 23 AVENUE. NJTHORI INO AND DFECTIN6 TI-E CITY
MANAGER AND CITY CLERK K TO DfEC1ITE SAD PLAT; AM) PR NDI NG FOR
TFE RECORDATION OF SAD PLAT IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-
WIDE COUNTY. 110RICA.
Capita of Ps Fropoes i Retaluton we amiable lot mew tl the IisalYnoe
end Pn.btla Wile DepeM+ent, airway Motion of Ma Mminietttlir Dfrirtl4rt,
keeled at 444 tR 2 &wile, 7. Flom during ruDr4py wOrldfill 1tI6s0- Pl4,e
306416-1232_
At krteroelrd person we !rafted to weer et the =Mitri and Miff be
heard tetfi reaped to the proposed resaericn. 2401id err' pram dudrs to
appal any deoWon of tit. City Commission atfi reject to viy mow to be
considered al this mewing, tfie person abet aurae that s Nrbeen record of
ttr prooweIngs b nabs [Mud ngY teetilany end •adman upon stun any
epi»M trey ts3 blrprat (Eft 25. 105).
Prrsursrt 10 MIa11 City Code tTadion 2,13(o), whenever ■ echedaied Cty
Comrnleeion meet>rvp le canceled or te not held dua b lack of ■ Owrrm
ar *sr rsryenoy, ■ rand& CLy Comdeelai meting M bs rlhonratiaaly
aahsdubatar tie llssda+rImedit lyrtallarreigthe Dwelled nretktg.Inthe
event of are of the alersmarriceed r rnn sianosa, the speak! meeting yr i d
be bad on Ootoliv 16, 2021, at ikOd tn. In the C1tyr Carenisaian olirnbare
ladtea eel Nerd Ctty HeWI, S5CO Pan Amender Orbs, Mart, HMOs SSts,1 MI
4t the sd diifd eoerxu Mena tram "Mt ca+aleed tr6elinD Irutometk41y
be scheduled as an tanrda lam at tlw modal City Carenladon =wino.
The Oily Clerk rand natty Cm pubic elfin special mooing that le to Lake place
trr Ombra a nodes d the special COI Caeriieeian meting at the wit i nos
d City Taal end the Ctyr's mein eddriuwM butdkg, piecing a nolos an
the Cty'a imbibe. and, r tadhls, placebo an sd It a notepaper of general
droulation before tits rpeolal maim on tine Irenedately1 Io.ing TUaedry.
TNere anon be no erne farvel netkb by pubeenfori required id any well
schsciuk i wart* ten that le weed tc the aaln4 ClyCoorrietesn meettq.
In accordance wet the Amerlca:m Wfn Dissisiltkle Ad of 1690, pommy
nadirs email eooamnoddane to wildcats In file praceecig raw
oaisat Eta Offos of the Clor Clerk d ISM) 25D-6381 Nobs) no Idol fan Pre
(6) business days prler to the proceeding. TTY cave rtgr cell via 711 (Florid'
Rely fir foe) no biter thin fire (5) bulimia dsys prior tote proaeedkg.
, Todd B. Herron
City Chair
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 30 1024
MIAMI NIRAI0
SpaceX and Boeing Starliner saga
continues with Crew-9 launch to ISS
BY RICHARD TRIBOU
Orisnas Enamel
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER
It's not a rescue mis-
sion, but the two astro-
nauts left behind by Boe-
ing's Starliner at the In-
ternational Space Station
will soon welcome their
new ride home with the
arrival of a SpaceX Crew
Dragon that made a his-
toric launch from Cape
Canaveral Space Force
Base on Saturday.
A Falcon 9 topped with
the Crew Dragon Freedom
launched from Canaver-
a1's Space Launch Com-
plex 40 at 1:17 p.m., mark-
ing the first human space-
flight from the pad, a feat
accomplished after
SpaceX spent nearly two
years building out a new
crew tower at the site. All
previous SpaceX Crew
Dragon launches have
been from KSC's Launch
Pad 39-A.
The pad's first two
space travelers were
NASA astronaut and Space
Force Col. Nick Hague
flying with ROscosmos
cosmonaut Aleksandr
Gorbunov.
"It was a sweet ride,"
Hague said after Dragon
made it into orbit. "I'm
pretty sure my youngest
son would say it was sig-
The mission flew with
just two instead of four so
that NASA astronauts
Butch Wilmore and Suni
Williams, who arrived at
the ISS aboard Starliner
back on )une 6, could
have a ride back to Earth
when the Crew-9 mission
ends in February 2025.
NASA opted to end
Starliner home without
crew because of thruster
and helium -leak concerns
on that spacecraft's pro-
pulsion system during its
Flight up to the station.
That decision meant
two of Crew-9's original
members, who had been
training for 18 months for
the Right, had to be left
behind. Zena Cardman,
who would have been
flying for the first time,
had originally been tapped
as commander while
Hague trained as pilot.
Veteran NASA astronaut
Stephanie Wilson was
supposed to fly as mission
specialist.
With the need to drop
two crew members, NASA
opted to drop rookie Card -
man and give the com-
mand to Hague, a veteran
of two previous launches
and one long-term stay on
the ISS.
Cardman and Wilson,
though, joined NASA's
mission commentary
ahead of launch from
KSC.
"It's bittersweet, but it's
really beautiful thing,"
Cardman said ahead of
liftoff. "1 think any launch
is a testament to She pow-
er of collaboration, and
this launch maybe even
more so than usual. 1
think, from my perspec-
tive, it's a privilege and a
choice to take part in
something that's larger
than yourself, and that's a
choice that 1 make today
and the next day and the
ne
xt day."
Wilson, one of NASA's
oldest active astronauts,
who had flown three times
on the space shuttle,
echoed Cardman's emo-
tions.
"We're always excited
for our colleagues to have
n opportunity to launch
into space. Of course, we
wish we could be with
them. We have trained
with them, for this time.
We, of course, wanted to
be together. We have built
friendship and camarade-
rie, and learned for the
roles for the Crew Dragon
and for the International
Space Station. But I'm
very excited for them,
looking fosward to hearing
their stories from space."
The rocket took off
through hazy, cloud -cov-
ered skies in a break from
dicey rainstorms that had
dumped torrents on the
pad 'lust hours before lif-
toff. Hurricane Helene
had forced a delay of the
original planned launch
that had been targeting
Thursday.
The first -stage booster
made its second flight and
returned for a landing at
Canaveral's Landing Zone
1, sending a sonic boom
ac
ross the Space Coast.
Upon reaching orbit,
Hague revealed the tradi-
tional ero-G indicator, a
small stuffed baby falcon
named Aurora that had
actually flown with Hague
in 2019 on his last Bight to
space.
The Crew Dragon now
has about a 28-hour ride
to rendezvous with the ISS
and join the nine people
already on the station.
Wihnore and Williams
have another five months
on board before they can
take their saved eats for
the ride back home.
Hague and Gorbunov
had donned their space-
suits by 9 a.m. before
leaving KSC's Neil A.
Armstrong Operations and
Checkout Building, where
they had been in quaran-
tine since arriving last
Saturday. The duo said
goodbye to family and
NASA officials including
Administrator Bill Nelson.
They then climbed into
the traditional ride provid-
ed for SpaceX launches,
this time a black Testa
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
ANY PERSON WHO RECEIVES COMPENSATION. REMUNERATION OR
EXPENSES FOR CONDUCTING LOBBYING ACTIVITIES IS REQUIRED TO
REGISTER AS A LOBBYIST WITH THE CITY CLERK PRIOR TO ENGAGING IN
LOBBYING ACTIVITIES BEFORE CITY STAFF, BOARDS AND COMMITTEES
OR THE CITY COMMISSION. A COPY OF THE APPLICABLE ORDINANCE
IS AVAILABLE IN THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK (MIAMI CITY HALL),
LOCATED AT 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, MIAMI, FLORIDA, 33133.
AT THE SCHEDULED MEETING OF THE COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
MIAMI, FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2024, AT
9:00 A.M., IN ITS CHAMBERS AT CITY HALL, 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE,
THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION WILL CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING ITEM
RELATED TO THE REGULAR AGENDA:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENTS,
ACCEPTING THE PLAT ENTITLED "ALTO TOWER SUBDIVISION", A REPLAT
IN THE CITY OF MIAMI, SUBJECT TO ALL OF THE CONDITIONS OF THE
PLAT AND STREET COMMITTEE AND THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED IN CITY
CODE SECTION 55-8, AND ACCEPTING THE DEDICATIONS SHOWN ON SAID
PLAT, LOCATED ALONG THE NORTH SIDE OF NW 36 STREET, FROM NW
22 COURT AND NW 23 AVENUE, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING THE CITY
MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO EXECUTE SAID PLAT; AND PROVIDING FOR
THE RECORDATION OF SAID PLAT IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-
DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Copies of the proposed Resolution are available for review at the Resilience
and Public Works Department, Survey Section of the Administration Division,
located at 444 SW 2n° Avenue, 7" Floor, during regular working hours. Phone
305-416-1232.
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be
heard with respect to the proposed resolution. 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 record of
the proceedings is made including all testimony and evidence upon which any
appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City
Commission meeting Is cancelled or 19 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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission chambers
located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133. All
of the scheduled agenda Items from 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 Commisalon meeting at the entrance
of City Hall and the City'a main administrative building, placing a notice on
the City's website, and, if feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general
circulation before the special 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 special 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 five
(5) business days prior to the proceeding. TTY oilers 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. 43587
sporting the mission -spe-
cific custom license plate
that read "READY4IT."
The ride to the pad,
though, drove through
KSC but didn't stop at the
anal destination; in-
stead, the caravan of sup-
port vehicles continued
past Launch Complex
39-A and traveled over the
bridge to the nearby Cape
Canaveral.
They got to christen the
white room at the top of
the new launch tower,
becoming the first to write
their names on the wall
under a SpaceX logo.
KSC's white room, in
comparison, is getting
crowded, now with 54
signatures from the 14
previous Crew Dragon
missions Flown with hu-
mans since May 2000.
With two empty seats,
Dragon flew up with mass
simulators to equal the
normal Bight weight
The Crew-9 patch for
the minion was adjusted
to remove the original
four names slated to fly.
"As we have modified
this mission to save two
seats for Butch Wilmore
and 5uni Williams on the
downhill, we removed the
names from the patch,"
Cardman said. "This was
a gesture, too. It's not just
the people on the rocket
who area part of this
mission. It takes an entire
tom, too, including my
crew mate, Stephanie
Wilson, myself, and all of
the people who have got-
ten Nick and Alexander
ready for this launch to-
day."
Wilson was supposed to
have been the ISS com-
mander, which would
have made her the first
Black woman to hold the
role.
Instead, command of
the ISS went to Williams,
who took on the duties
during a ceremony last
week that marked the end
of Expedition 71 and be-
ginning of Expedition 72
aboard the station that has
had continuous human
presence for nearly 24
years.
The Starliner Right
marked Williams' third
visit to the ISS for what
was supposed to be an
eight -day stay, but will
end up being more than
eight months.
"We've got a ride home,
and you know, we're look-
ing forward to the next
couple months, and doing
a lot of stuff for the In-
ternational Space Station,"
she said in a recent in-
terview.
Crew-9's arrival will
grow the station's pop-
ulation to 11, but just for a
short time. The fora mem-
bers of Crew-8, who have
been on board since
March, will remain on the
station during a handover
period of five to seven
days before they ride their
Crew Dragon Endeavour
home for a splashdown
return off the coast of
Florida.
Cardman gave her
thoughts about being left
behind.
"It's complex, but so is
spaceflight," Cardman
said about the loss of her
ride to space, but she's
happy NASA made the call
to keep Statliner's astro-
nauts safe. "1 personally
think it's a good decision
to always prioritize safety
of the crew members."
Hague earlier last week
praised his two crew
mates who will have to
wait for their next flight.
"This minion is bigger
than any one crew. It's
bigger than any one per-
son, and so we've got a
dynamic challenge ahead
of " Hague said. "Inc'
never felt closer to my
crew mates. You know
that bond that you've
built, you know that we
built for the better part of
a year and a half with
Zeno and Stephanie is as
strong as ever, as they're
working side by side with
us, helping, getting us
ready."
The minion is slated to
work through more than
200 science, technology
and research experiments
during the remaining five
months before the fight
home.
Crew Dragon Freedom
made its fourth trip to
space, having flown first
On the Crew-4 mission in
2022, then the Axiom
Space Ail-2 and Ax-3 com-
mercial missions, all hav-
ing docked to the ISS.
SpaceX remains the
only certified provider of
ferry service to the In-
ternational Space Station
from the U.S. as Boeing's
Starliner has faced years
of hurdles to complete its
first crewed flight test.
This is only the second
time Dragon has Flown
with just two crew. Hague
this week said breaking up
thou responsibilities has
been a challenge.
"Some of that is how
you respond to emergen-
cies," he said. "A lot of
that we practice over and
over. How do 1 respond to
a potential fire? How
would 1 respond to a po-
tential depressurization
event?"
He said that the crew
has to respond reflexively
and that all already under-
stand their roles and re-
sponsibilities.
"So we've in the past
three weeks had to adapt
that response and ingrain
that response so that we're
ready," he said. "If you
know something, un-
fortunately, like that
would happen, we're go-
ing to be able to keep
ourselves safe."
Hague said he's anxious
to introduce Williams and
Wilmore to their ride
home.
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING,.
The Miami City Commission will hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, October
10, 2024, at 9:00 A.M., to consider the award of a contract to the company
listed below through Anti -Poverty grant funds from the District 4's share of
the City o1 Miami's Anti -Poverty Initiative Program. Sunshine for All, Inc., a
Florida Not for Profit Corporation, will provide meals to homebound senior
residents in District 4, and to consider the City Manager's recommendations
and finding that competitive negotiation methods are not practicable or
advantageous regarding these issues:
• Sunshine for All, Inc. - API Senior Meals Program
Inquiries regarding this notice may be addressed to Melissa T. Sutherland,
Administrative Assistant II for the Office of Grants Administration, at
(305) 416-1005.
This action is being considered pursuant to Section 18-85 (A) o1 the Code of
the Cily of Miami, Florida as amended (the •Code"). The recommendations
and findings to be considered in this matter are set forth in the proposed
resolution and In Code Section 18-85 (A), which are deemed to be
Incorporated by reference herein and are available as with the regularly
scheduled Cily Commission meeting of October 10, 2024, at Miami City Hall,
3500 Pan American Drive, Miaml, Florida 33133.
The Miami City Commission requests all Interested parties be present Or
represented at the meeting and may be heard with respect to any proposition
before the City Commission in which the City Commission may take action.
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 record of the proceedings le made Including all
testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 A.M. In the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. Ail of the scheduled agenda items from 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 lake
place by placing a notice of the special Cily Commission meeting at the
entrance of City Hall and the City's main administrative building, placing a
notice on the City's website, and, B feasible, placing an ad Ina newspaper of
general circulation before the special nesting on the immediately fallowing
Tuesday. There shall be no additional notice by publication required for any
such scheduled agenda item that is moved to the special City Commission
meeting.
In accordance with the Americana 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 five
(5) business days prior to the proceeding. TTT 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. 43586
McClatchy
The Beaufort Gazette
The Belleville News -Democrat
Bellingham Herald
Centre Daily Times
Sun Herald
Idaho Statesman
Bradenton Herald
The Charlotte Observer
The State
Ledger -Enquirer
Durham 1 The Herald -Sun
Fort Worth Star -Telegram
The Fresno Bee
The Island Packet
The Kansas City Star
Lexington Herald -Leader
The Telegraph - Macon
Merced Sun -Star
Miami Herald
El Nuevo Herald
AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION
The Modesto Bee
The Sun News - Myrtle Beach
Raleigh News & Observer
Rock Hill I The Herald
The Sacramento Bee
San Luis Obispo Tribune
Tacoma I The News Tribune
Tri-City Herald
The Wichita Eagle
The Olympian
Account #
order Number
Identification
Order PO
Amount
Cols
Depth
33010
597170
Miami Herald 43588.10 Day Ad - Second Reading 0rdinanc
43588 -10 Day Ad - Secon
S3,154.03
3
10.18 in
Attention: MariCarmen Lopez
CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
CITY OF MIAMI - CLERKS OFFICE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com
Copy of ad content
is on the next page
lam.
tit is .
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:
09/30/24
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.
M ci-r--y o
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 3rd day of
October in the year of 2024
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
' MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
My Notary ID # 134916732
Expires May 24, 2028
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal downed please do not destroy)
CRY OF YIAML R..ORIDA
itlancaglingeneD—CIEMAMFM
Notice is hereby glen that the Ctty Cormdasicn of the Colo of Rare.
F1 061. al consider the blowing orclrerae(a) on Second aril fl11s1
reading on Thl.rsdajr, October 10, 2024, caminendrg at *DO A-M, In the
City Commission Chamtwrs Ioosbd et 3600 Pen American Drink Miami,
Flcrida 33133
ORDINANCE
AN ORDNANCE OFTHEMIAMICITECOMMIS910NAMENDINGCHAPTER
2/ARTICLE XI8E071ON 2-517 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF ItMII,
FICFCDA, A8 MADDED ("C(TY [?ODE'}, TIRED 'ADMINISTRATION/
CCCE ENFORCEMENT/ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS, FINES; LENS" TID
AMEND EEC11ON 2-817 OF THE CITY CODE IN ORDER TO8TREA&IJNE
THE Mma 11ON PROCESS AND PROVIDE A CLAAFYING CHART FOR
THOSE WHO SEEK 14170A11OFC COMM tea A 0EYERAEILJTY 01_0113mE;
PR 1DINO FOR AN NIMEDIKE EFFECTIVE DATE
Said imposed ordrrtar(a) my he Impeded by to pupae tine Moe
d the Cay Clerk 3t100 Pan Am.rk= Drive, Muni Plaice 33131. Hominy
U*aigh Frog, h 1g hdfdhae, between to hors d 8 um. and 5 p.m., or
Itlizf tlertltiliteaCt 11 he fiy3 lisilkre tt o deb 01 tie GY1r1t7YSMDA 16301110.
AI irlen*ted phone one bated to 114:90 ar et the ne tall end r,w, be
hsand with ram porno the proposed ordinano.(s). Shedd any prison desire
ho appeal emir ded.bn of the Cty Commll.bn with respect b sky matter
b be considered at tics meeting, the pernon shill arsine that a yerbdm
=Ord of the proceeinte la Mode inc. is/ ell 1e.11nlarty and eviderlCe
upon uteri tiny appeal r y be beabd (F.S. 266.D104
Ptrauant to Mimi Cty Cada Seaton 2-33(0}, orhrniver a scheduled City
Cann I.rah m.d rip la orhode ad or le not held due in . look of a warm or
other wnurgency, ■ specie City Cornmies1on riveting el be automatically
.rdleriuled for the Tliterlror Immedt.ishr folOwing the crnceled meet00. h
the event of one of the atoreinendaned ci>aur+etanaea, the medal meeting
would ha Mid on October IS, 2024, et / D0 am In the Cty Canarrr.don
olumb.ri faceted of Gay Hsi, 3600 Pei American Drive, LU.rt>a,
FL 3313a. Al d the scheduled amok liens iron that renowned naming
shall .utunakcrhr Lae srrttaddod w an monde Ibm at too- special City
CammiseKn meeNtlg, The Coy CNertt ehail lox the public of the SOCCial
mating tor is 1a talai piece by planing a noticed the .Facial Gty
Commission nesting .d the entrance of Coy Hal and the Ctty'a mart
administrative binding. piecing a notice on the Citya waked% arid, I
reaabi0. Cede; an eat in a newspaper of galore circulator blare the
medal meetk),2 o1 tine' Im>tedltietr btowit4 Tueed.y. There elfeii W no
eddltionei nctIce by pidbileation required for any er„rch scheduled agenda
horn that le moved to tta apsoki City Cormdasion met*.
In acoordanw with the Amudare lrth Dtaahltlss Pat of 1080, persons
flooding specie ucsamnoci.ilon a to participate In this proceeding may
canthict the Oftce of mo Coy Clerk at {30M1 2 1 (Voice) no Inter teen
tive (b) budesee doss Vier 10 to paceadM+g• TTV ware may call via 711
(Florida belay Service} ro Iaaar than lies (E) Dunham cloys prior to the
per.
Todd S. Hannan
City Clerk
Ad No, 4.3588
IA
MAN NEMl0 I
MONDAY SEPTUM! 102024
FROM PAGE 3A
DORAL
and County Commission
60 days later. Cobiela
said the dispute would
help to work out a com-
promise with the county,
which in his view has
been acting in "bad
faith."
Natalia Jaramillo, the
communications director
for Miami -Dade Mayor
Danielle Levine Cava,
declined to comment on
the matter, saying the
county hadn't received
any formal information
regarding the dispute as
of Friday afternoon.
Cobieea told el Nuevo
Herald that on Friday
night, the legal and ad-
ministrative teams from
both the city of Donal and
Miami -Dade County met
to explore options for
renegotiating the reloca-
tion of the incinerator,
which has been in Donal
since the 1980s.
Frage said the county
cannot force the city into
an agreement, especially
with three Doral council
seats up for election on
Nov. 5 before the county
revisits the topic.
The county postponed
any decision until the
Nov. 6 commission meet-
ing, where four options
will be considered, in-
cluding keeping the incin-
erator where it is. The
county is also considering
a location in Medley and
another at the site of the
defunct Opa-locks Airport
West, which has been
recommended by Levine
Cava.
A fourth option, sup-
ported by former Doral
mayor and current Coun-
ty Commissioner Juan
Carlos Bermudez, in-
volves a piece of land
being offered by devel-
oper David Martin in a
rural area outside of Hia-
leah Gardens on the west-
em edge of the county.
If mediation fails, Doral
could sue the county,
Frage said.
Hundreds of Miami -Dade firefighters battled a blaze at Covanta Energy in Doral on
Feb.12, 2021
A special Doral City children were born and
Council meeting is sched- raised. Now, he is consid-
Wed for Monday at 5 p.m. ering moving if the coun-
to present the proposal. ty decides to build the
Approval requires three new plant at the site.
out of five votes from a The possibility of keep -
council that's been re- ing the waste plant in
Gently deadlocked. On the Donal brought back me -
same day, a rescheduled mories for Acurero of the
second budget hearing fear he and his wife expe-
w ll take place after the nenced when the facility
previous meeting ended burned for days in
without an agreement. February 2023. "We had
Councilwoman Mau- to leave fora week with
reen Porras, who is the our children; my son was
swing vote, told el Nuevo just turning 1 at the time.
Herald that although she We measured the gases,
hasn't seen a written copy and they were toxic. We
of the dispute proposal, developed respiratory
"any proposal that bene- issues, and my son had
fits the city and helps to asthma," he recalled.
remove the incinerator Acurero criticized Mia-
will have my support" mi-Dade's focus on fi-
nances the health
RESIDENTS OF DORAL concerns of Donal resi-
FEAR THE REBUILDING dents, saying, "They're
OF WASTE PLANT only interested in how
Two of the residents much Donal can contrib-
attending the town hall, ute, but they don't care
who live about a mile about the impact on our
from the waste plant, health if the city can't
were seeking answers meet their expectations."
about potential health Josep Correia, 39, has
risks to thew families also lived near the waste
posed by the trash incin- facility for over 10 years.
erator. The day the fire started,
Ran Chive Acurero, a he said, he was riding
38-year-old of Venexue- bikes with his wife,
Ian origin, has lived a breathing the toxic air
mile from the waste tacit- without knowing the
ity in Doral for 10 years in impact it might have for
a home where his two their health.
Now, he is fighting
against a possible recon-
struction within city lim-
its. Correia was at the
County Commission
meeting on Sept. 17 with
other Doral residents and
said Miami-Dade's de-
mand felt like "a slap in
the face."
"1 saw how they be-
trayed Doral's residents.
How can they ask us to
pay $400 million? That's
four times our budget!"
Correia said.
Correia said he views
filing a dispute against
Miami -Dade as a last
resort, but "we have no
other option."
"Whether they build a
transfer station here or
rebuild the incinerator,
Doral's residents will be
the ones most affected,"
he said.
It is not the first time
the city has invoked a
government dispute. In
2006, Doral filed one
against Medley when the
neighbor city decided on
an expansion of the land-
fill owned and operated
by Waste Management of
Florida. The two cities
came to an agreement
more than 14 years later.
Veronica Egui Brion
305-376-2664, VeroEgui
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCEIS1
Notice is hereby given that the City Commission of the City of Miami,
Florida, will consider the following ordinance(e) on second and final
reading on Thursday, October 10, 2024, commencing at 9:00 A.M., in the
City Commission Chambers located at 3500 Pan American Drive. Miami,
Florida 33133:
ORDINANCE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER
2/ARTICLE X/SECTION 2-817 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, AS AMENDED ("CITY CODE"), TITLED "ADMINISTRATION/
CODE ENFORCEMENT/ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS, FINES; LIENS; TO
AMEND SECTION 2-817 OF THE CITY CODE IN ORDER TO STREAMLINE
THE MITIGATION PROCESS AND PROVIDE A CLARIFYING CHART FOR
THOSE WHO SEEK MITIGATION; CONTAINING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE;
PROVIDING FOR AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE DATE.
Sald proposed ordlnance(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office
of the City Clerk, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, Monday
through Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
htt://miamtll.igm2.com live days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
All interested persons 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
record of the proceedings is made including all testimony and evidence
upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 233(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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
FL 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from 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 at the entrance of City Hall and the City's main
administrative building, placing a notice on the City's website, and, if
feasible. placing an ad In a newspaper of general circulation before the
special 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 special 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) n0 later than
five (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. 43588
FROM PAGE 3A
TRAIL
Dade launched its Better
Bus route redesign, a
re-
working of bus service
that brought widespread
complaints from riders
and multiple attempts to
Fix things by Transporta-
tion and Public Works.
In 2022, he helped Le-
vine Cava craft the strate-
gy that killed the county's
plan to build a privately
nth monorail connecting
Miami with Miami Beach
and instead pursue ex -tending Metromover
tracks on the MacArthur
Causeway.
He's been part of the
team that secured more
than $400 million in
funding in President Joe
Biden's 2024 budget pro-
posal for the county's plan
to launch a commuter -
train service on tracks that
Brightline owns.
Cleckley was suspended
without pay for two weeks
ahead of the redesign
launch last fall Over a
free -fare promotion that
Levine Cava said she
hadn't approved.
Ina Statement, Daly
called Cleckley a national
leader in transportation
whose mission will be to
secure the dollars needed
to build and operate the
Underline. She said Cleck-
ley's "overarching goal
will be to achieve or ex-
ceed our annual fundrais-
ing gals."
The Underline reties on
a mix of government and
private dollars for con-
struction and operations,
including about $2 million
a year needed to maintain
and service the half -mile
stretch that opened in the
Mickel' area in 2021,
according to Underline
figures shared earlier this
year with the Miami Her-
ald.
At the time, Daly said
the annual budget of the
project once the Underline
is fully built will be based
on a calculation expecting
each mile to cost between
4750,000 and $1 million.
That would have Cleckley
overseeing expenses be-
tween 57.5 million and
$10 million a year.
Cleckley currently over-
sees one of Miami -Dada's
largest departments, with
4,300 employees and a
budget of $1 billion.
Levine Cava's memo
said that the adminis-
tration is searching for a
new director and that
Cleckley would be leaving
his post "later this year."
Douglas Hanks:
305-376-3605,
@daughanks
FROM PAGE 3A
FIRED
August 2022, and the
sheriff's office arrested
her a month later on felo-
ny grand -theft and fraud
charges.
Thompson, whose an-
al salary was
$151,127.87, was hired in
July 2001.
Her attorney, Sean Pa-
rys, released a statement
to the Miami Herald on
Friday saying his client is
innocent.
"The decision to termi-
nate Andrea Thompson's
employment was made
solely based on her arrest
and indictment, without
consideration of the actual
evidence in the case,"
Parys said. "As she has
throughout her career,
Thompson acted with
professionalism and integ-
rity during this incident,
and all decisions were
made by or with her col-
leagues and superiors.
When the actual evidence
is tested in court, it will
show Andrea Thompson is
innocent."
David Goodhue:
305-923-9728,
@DavidGoodhru
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami,
Florida on Thursday, October 10, 2024, at 9:00 A.M. at City Hall, located at
3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, 33133 for the purpose of granting
the following:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, AUTHORIZING AND
DIRECTING THE MANAGER TO TAKE ANY AND ALL ACTIONS NECESSARY
FOR THE ACCEPTANCE OF A ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE
COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING ("EDICPF") GRANT FROM THE UNITED
STATES CONGRESS AND ADMINISTERED BY THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT ("HUD"),
FOR THE 2024 FISCAL YEAR, IN THE AMOUNT OF THREE MIWON,
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ($3,500,000.00), TO FUND THE
FLAGLER AFFORDABLE SENIOR HOUSING PROJECT ("PROJECT"),
MANAGED BY THE CITY OF MIAMI DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ANY AND ALL NECESSARY
DOCUMENTS INCLUDING AMENDMENTS, RENEWALS, EXTENSIONS,
AND MODIFICATIONS, ALL IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY
ATTORNEY, AS MAY BE NECESSARY FOR SAID PURPOSE, SUBJECT TO
ALL FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL LAWS THAT REGULATE THE USE OF
SUCH FUNDS.
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be
heard with respect to the proposed resolution. 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
record of the proceedings Is made Including all testimony and evidence
upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. In the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from 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 at the entrance
of City Hall and the City's main administrative building, placing a notice on
the City's website, and, if feasible, placing an ad In a newspaper of general
circulation before the special 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 special 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 five (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.
s•,.� Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43589
McClatchy
The Beaufort Gazette
The Belleville News -Democrat
Bellingham Herald
Centre Daily Times
Sun Herald
Idaho Statesman
Bradenton Herald
The Charlotte Observer
The State
Ledger -Enquirer
Durham 1 The Herald -Sun
Fort Worth Star -Telegram
The Fresno Bee
The Island Packet
The Kansas City Star
Lexington Herald -Leader
The Telegraph - Macon
Merced Sun -Star
Miami Herald
El Nuevo Herald
AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION
The Modesto Bee
The Sun News - Myrtle Beach
Raleigh News & Observer
Rock Hill I The Herald
The Sacramento Bee
San Luis Obispo Tribune
Tacoma I The News Tribune
Tri-City Herald
The Wichita Eagle
The Ot vtpian
Account #
Order Number
Identification
Order PO
Amount
Cols
Depth
33010
596869
Miami Local
43589 -10 Day Ad - Direct
$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 The Miami Herald, a newspaper
published in Miami Dade County, Florida, that the
attached was published on the publicly accessible
website of The Miami Herald or by print in the issues
and dates listed below.
1 insertion(s) published on:
09/30/24
Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website
.or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for
publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 25th day of
October in the year of 2024
mak k 1tLu
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
My Notary ID # 134916732
Expire; May 24, 2028
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal doament please do not destmyl
CRY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A pubic heerlg ill be held IN the Ctpr COmmbelon of the Cyr al Want,
Florida on Thursday, October 10, 2024, at R96 A.M. N My Hal, bowled at
3000 Pan Pma Icon Drive, Miami, Rankle, 88133 for the airman of granting
the blowing
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CRY COINISSION, AUTHORIZING AND
DI R ECTTIG TH E MANAGER TO TAI¢ AN1' AND ALL ACTIONS NECESSARY
FOR THE ACCEPTANCE OF A ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE
COML4MTY PROJECT FUNDING ('E)1CPP) GRANT FROM THE UNITED
STATES CONGRESS AND ADMINR3TERED BY TIE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF Ii0Af91M0 AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT ('PLUG').
FOR THE 2024 FISCAL YEN, N THE AMOUNT OF THREE MIt1J0Fd,
FIVE HUNDRED THOUBAJCII DOLLARS ($3.600,000.00), TO FUND THE
FLAGLER AFFORDABLE SENIOR HOUSING PROJECT ("PROJECT],
MANAGED BY THE CffY QF MIAMI DEPARTMENT QF HOUSING AND
COMI&NTY DEVELOPMENT; FURTHER AUTHORIZING Tif CITY
MANAGER TO FEGOTYITE AND EXECUTE ANY AM) ALL NECESSARY
DOCUMENTS 14CLUDINQ AMENDMENTS, RENEWALS, EXTENSIONS,
AND MODIFICATIONS, ALL IN A FOFftt ACCEPTABLE TO THE CRY
ATTOFVIEY, A8 MAY BE NECESSARY FOR SAD PURPOSE. SUBJECT TO
ALL FEDERAL, STATE, AND LQCAL LAWS THAT REGULATE THE 118E OF
SUCH RMS.
Al Wrested pareorm an InvfYd io appear at the masonry and may be
heard Int respect to the proposed reeclu tor. 8tloUd er>yr person deelro
to appeal e y daaUlan al the City Corrralasian with respect to eery ma tar
to be aonskirsd at this meethp, that wean steal snare that a verbdim
record 01 the oroaee4npa le made Indiana a1 teeimorm and evidence
upon which any apped may be based (FS. 288A106).
Fiasuerrt to Merril City Cads Seaton 2-33(o) ',harmer a scheduled Ctty
Con tra-01 rt meal oast le cancel led et M not head due to a ISek O1 t Quetta 1 or
other er+ergeatoy, a model City CorarnIMbn meeting MI be audio tbelb
scheduled for the Them* hrnsdlai•tyblbruhg the cancelled mewing. h
the avant al one d the goremonlened Uranrahareae, tiro- apecbl meeting
mull be held oati October 16, 2024, et 940 aim In the pay Ganmbelon
chambers located at Marto Cly Hell, 8500 Pan Anurloan Mire, Mannar
Florida 33133. AI d the scheduled agaTh loons tom thee Garrcaged
meetn0 Omit automedicaly be scheduled ae an Wade bra ed Pe special
City Canrrthalan meeting.
The Cly Clerk stet nalry the pubic of the apeolel meeting that bs to Lela pica
Et piaclig a notice o1'the spade! Cly Comstaalon rnoolftg eS the entrance
d City Hal anal the Cty's mein a i nideretiva buildhp, ptsaing a nodoe an
the CH a sabot* and IF familia, piecing en and Ina newspaper of general
clrculaiat bo(we the special meeting on the Iml eAttebr 1010win0 Tuesday.
There afial be no addllone! mice by puHlnrelon required for racy watt
arfieduled agenda ran that Is stored la the swig Clip Catrribion naming.
In ar.aordance with the Amurtetrre will DItebiltl ra Act of 1BMO, tomes
needing "mai eaciemm deice» to pia drab in th a weasel hp nay content
Its O. of the Cly Choi; at (305) 260.6381 (Yobs} no bier then nos (6)
boldness albs prior b the procsecIt . TfY users nor al via 711 (Florida
1:16eY Seneca) no beer than nee (b) helixes doe pair to the proceeding.
=r-tr. Todd B, Natation
City Clerk
Ad Na. 43568
rA 1
MIAMI HERALD
MONDAY SEREtaa is MN
FROM PAGE 3A
DORAL
and County Commission
60 days later. Cobietla
said the dispute would
help to work out a com-
promise with the county,
which in his view has
been acting in "bad
faith."
Natalia )aramillo, the
communications director
for Miami -Dade Mayor
Danielle Levine Cava,
declined to comment on
the matter, saying the
county hadn't received
any formal information
regarding the dispute as
of Friday afternoon.
Cobiella told el Nuevo
Herald that on Friday
night, the legal and ad-
ministrative teams from
both the city of Dotal and
Miami -Dade County met
to explore options for
renegotiating the reloca-
tion of the incinerator,
which has been in Dotal
since the 1980s.
Frage said the county
cannot force the city into
an agreement, especially
with three Dotal council
seats up for election on
Nov. 5 before the county
revisits the topic.
The county postponed
any decision until the
Nov. 6 commission meet-
ing, where four options
will be considered, in-
cluding keeping the incin-
erator where it is. The
county is also considering
a location in Medley and
another at the site of the
defunct Opa-locks Airport
West, which has been
recommended by Levine
Cava.
A fourth option, sup-
ported by former Dotal
mayor and current Coun-
ty Commissioner Man
Carlos Bermudez, in-
volves a piece of land
being offered by devel-
oper David Martin in a
rural area outside of Hia-
leah Gardens on the west-
em edge of the county.
If mediation fails, Doral
could sue the county,
Fags said.
Ma eitisteavaivalaava
Hundreds of Miami -Dade firelighters battled a blaze at Covanta Energy in Dotal on
Feb. T2.2023.
A special Doral City children were bom and
Council meeting is Schad- raised. Now, he is consid-
uled for Monday at 5 p.m. ering moving B the coun-
to present the proposal. ty decides to build the
Approval requires three new plant at the site.
out of five votes from a The possibility of keep -
council that's been re- ing the waste plant in
cently deadlocked. On the Dotal brought back me -
same day, a rescheduled mories for Acurero of the
second budget hearing fear he and his wife expe-
will take place after the rienced when the facility
previous meeting ended burned for days in
without an agreement. February 2023. "We had
Councilwoman Mau- to leave for a week with
en Porras, who is the our children; my son was
swing vote, told el Nuevo just taming 1 at the time.
Herald that although she We measured the gases,
hasn't seen a written copy and they were toxic. We
of the dispute proposal, developed respiratory
"any proposal that bene- issues, and my son had
fits the city and helps to asthma," he recalled.
remove the incinerator Acurero criticized Mia-
wig have my support." mi-Dade's focus on fi-
nances the health
RESIDENTS OF DORAL concerns of Dotal resi-
FEAR THE REBUILDING dents, saying,"They're
OF WASTE PLANT only interested in how
Two of the residents much Doral can contrib-
attending the town hall, ute, but they don't care
who live about a mile about the impact on our
from the waste plant, health if the city can't
were seeking answers meet their expectations."
about potential health )osep Correia, 39, has
risks to their families also lived near the waste
posed by the trash incin- facility for over 10 years.
erator. The day the fire parted,
Ran Ghive Acurero, a he said, he was riding
38-year-old of Veneaue- bikes with his wife,
lan origin, has lived a breathing the toxic air
mile from the waste facil- without knowing the
ity in Dural for 10 years in impact it might have for
a home where his two their health.
Now, he is fighting
against a possible recon-
struction within city lim-
its. Correia was at the
County Commiion
meeting on Sept. 17 with
other Doral residents and
said Miami-Dade's de-
mand felt like "a slap in
the face."
"1 saw how they be-
trayed Doral's residents.
How can they ask us to
pay 8400 million? That's
four times our budget!"
Correia said.
Correia said he views
filing a dispute against
Miami -Dade as a last
resort, but "we have no
other option."
"Whether they build a
transfer station here or
rebuild the incinerator,
Doral's residents will be
the ones most affected,"
he said.
It is not the first time
the city has invoked a
government dispute. In
2006, Dotal fried one
against Medley when the
neighbor city decided on
an expansion of the land-
fill owned and operated
by Waste Management of
Florida. The two cities
came to an agreement
more than 14 years later.
Veronica Egui Brio:
305-376-2664, VeroEgui
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE(Sl
Notice is hereby given that the City Commission of the City of Miami,
Florida, will consider the following ordinance(s) on second and final
reading on Thursday, October 10, 2024, commencing at 9:00 A.M., In the
City Commission Chambers located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133:
ORDINANCE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER
2/ARTICLE X/SECTION 2-817 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, AS AMENDED ("CRY CODE ), TITLED "ADMINISTRATION/
CODE ENFORCEMENT/ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS, FINES; LIENS, TO
AMEND SECTION 2-817 OF THE CITY CODE IN ORDER TO STREAMLINE
THE MITIGATION PROCESS AND PROVIDE A CLARIFYING CHART FOR
THOSE WHO SEEK MITIGATION; CONTAINING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE;
PROVIDING FOR AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE DATE.
Said proposed ordlnance(s) may be Inspected by the public at the Office
of the City Clerk 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, Monday
through Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours Of a.m. and 5 p.m., or
httpl/miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be
heard with respect to the proposed ordinence(s). Should any person desire
to appeal any decision of the City Commission with respect to any matter
to be considered et this meeting, that person shell ensure that a verbatim
record of me proceedings is made including all testimony and evidence
upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami Clty 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 October 15. 2024, at 9:00 a.m. In the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
FL 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from 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 at the entrance of City Hall end the City's main
administrative building, placing a notice on the City's website, and, 8
feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general circulation before the
special meeting on the immediately following Tuesday. There shall be no
additional notice by publication required for any such scheduled agenda
Item that is moved 10 the special 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 a1(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. 43588
FROM PAGE 3A
TRAIL
Dade launched its Better
Bus route redesign, a re-
working of bus service
that brought widespread
complaints from riders
and multiple attempts to
fir things by Transporta-
tion and Public Works.
In 2022, he helped Le-
vine Cave craft the strate-
gy that killed the county's
plan to build a privately
no, monorail connecting
Miami with Miami Beach
and instead pursue ex-
tending Metromover
tracks on the MacArthur
Causeway.
He's been part of the
ream that secured more
than S400 million in
funding in President toe
Biden's 2024 budget pro-
posal for the county's plan
to launch a commuter -
train service on tracks that
Brightline owns.
Cleckley was suspended
without pay for two weeks
ahead of the redesign
launch lart fall over a
free -fare promotion that
Levine Cava said she
hadn't approved.
Ina statement, Daly
called Cleckley a national
leader in transportation
whose mission will be to
secure the dollars needed
to build and operate the
Underline. She said Cleck-
ley's "overarching goal
will be to achieve or ex-
ceed ow annual fundrais-
ing goals."
The Underline relies on
a mix of government and
private dollars for con-
struction and operations,
including about S2 million
a year needed to maintain
and service the half -mile
stretch that opened in the
Bricke8 area in 2021,
according to Underline
figures shared earlier this
year with the Miami Her-
ald.
At the time, Daly said
the annual budget of the
project once the Underline
is fully built will be based
on a calculation expecting
each mile to cost between
S750,000 and S1 million.
That would have Cleckley
overseeing expenses be-
tween S7.5 million and
S10 million a year.
Cleckley currently over-
sees one of Miami-Dade's
largest departments, with
4,300 employees and a
budget of S1 billion.
Levine Cava's memo
said that the adminis-
tration is searching for a
new director and that
Cleckley would be leaving
his post "later this year."
Douglas Hanks:
305-376-3605,
@doughanks
FROM PAGE 3A
FIRED
August 2022, and the
sheriffs office arrested
her a month later on felo-
ny grand -theft and fraud
charges.
Thompson, whose an-
nual salary was
S151,127.87, was hived in
luly 2001.
Her attorney, Sean Pa-
rys, released a statement
to the Miami Herald on
Friday saying his client is
innocent.
ant.
"The decision to termi-
nate Andrea Thompson's
employment was made
solely based on her arrest
and indictment, without
consideration of the actual
evidence in the case,"
Parys said. "As she has
throughout her career,
Thompson acted with
professionalism and integ-
rity during this incident,
and all decisions were
made by or with her col-
leagues and superiors.
When the actual evidence
is tested in coon, it will
show Andrea Thompson is
innocent."
David Goodhue:
305-923-9728,
@DavidGendhrrr
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami,
Florida on Thursday, October 10, 2024, at 9:00 A.M. at City Hall, located at
3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, 33133 for the purpose of granting
the following:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, AUTHORIZING AND
DIRECTING THE MANAGER TO TAKE ANY AND ALL ACTIONS NECESSARY
FOR THE ACCEPTANCE OF A ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE
COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING ("EDICPF") GRANT FROM THE UNITED
STATES CONGRESS AND ADMINISTERED BY THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT ("HUD"),
FOR THE 2024 FISCAL YEAR, IN THE AMOUNT OF THREE MIWON,
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS (S3,500,000.00), TO FUND THE
FLAGLER AFFORDABLE SENIOR HOUSING PROJECT ("PROJECT"),
MANAGED BY THE CITY OF MIAMI DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ANY AND ALL NECESSARY
DOCUMENTS INCLUDING AMENDMENTS, RENEWALS, EXTENSIONS,
AND MODIFICATIONS, ALL IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY
ATTORNEY, AS MAY BE NECESSARY FOR SAID PURPOSE, SUBJECT TO
ALL FEDERAL STATE, AND LOCAL LAWS THAT REGULATE THE USE OF
SUCH FUNDS.
All interested persona are invited to appear at the meeting and may be
heard with respect to the proposed resolution. 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
record of the proceedings Is made including all testimony and evidence
Upon which eny appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
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 Clty 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 October 15, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from that cancelled
meeting shall automatically be scheduled es 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 at the entrance
of City Hall and the City's main administrative building, placing a notice on
the CIN's website, and, if feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general
circulation before the special 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 special 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 five (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. 43589
McClatchy
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33010
596876
Miami Legal Ad
43590
$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
4,
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:
09/30/24
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 S0, Florida Statutes.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 3rd day of
October in the year of 2024
ynahha d 1thI
Notary Public in and for the state of Texas, residing in
Dallas County
''!1F•: MARGARET KATHLEEN WILSON
My Notary ID # 134916732
Expires May 24.2028
Extra charge for lost ordup& ateaftldavRs
Legal doament please do not destroy)
CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
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Florida Panthers forward Patrick Giles (36) skates with the puck as Nashville Predators defememan Jake Livingstone
(23) defends in the first period of their NHL preseason game at the Amerant Bank Arena on Sept. 25, 2023.
An under -the -radar player is making his
case to make the Florida Panthers' roster
R pun.. MCPH6RaoN
/mct80*0eodmtamiarrvld.rum
The opportunity is there
for Patrick Giles to make
the Florida Panthers'
Opening Night roster.
And with a little more
than a week left in the
preseason before things
begin for real on Oct.8
when Florida hosts the
Boston Bruins, Giles is
doing everything right to
make his case.
The 24-year-old forward,
who lust two years ago
turned a tryout opportunity
with the AHL Charlotte
Checkers after going un-
drafted out of Boston Col-
lege into an entry-level
contract, has Bashed his
combination of size (6-4,
217 pounds), speed and
hands throughout practice
onin games. Couple that
with an injury to Tomas
Nosek, who was slated to
be Florida's fourth -line
enter but is week -to -week
with an upper —body injury,
and Giles has worked his
way into consideration for
making the Panthers' ros-
ter and, with that, his even-
tual NHL debut.
"1'm just trying to play
my best hockey," Gies
said. "I think, for me,
that's just being hard on
the puck, skating fast,
being good on the fore -
check"
Through four preseason
games, Giles has six
points (two goals, four
assists). This is coming
after a reams with the
Checkers in which he
groduced 23
oals, 10 assis s) over366
games.
Panthers coach Paul
Maurice likes what he has
seen from Giles, who
would most likely be cen-
tering All Greer and Jonah
Gadjovich on the fourth
line should he break camp
with the team.
"He has had a good
camp and he his statistics
are not as important as
the improvement he has
had year -over -ear,"
Maurice said.' The guy
comes in, and he is
con-
siderably faster than he
was last year. He has good
hands around the net for
a big guy. He is making a
case for himself."
Added Gees: "The
lints are nice, but 1 think
ust doing the little things
goes a long away, espe-
cially in camp," Giles
said. "Kind of showing
what you can do to help
the team all over the ice."
MORE PANTHERS
ROSTER NOTABLES
• With Mackie Samos-
kevich and Justin Somdif
both injured — Samoskev-
ich dealing with an upper -
body injury that has kept
him from being a fall
participant in camp and
Soundif week -to -week
with an upper -body injury
after crashmg hard into
the boards during practice
on Tuesday — )esper
Boqvist is looking like the
frontrunner to play on the
right wing of Florida's
third line with left wing
Edo Luostarinen and
center Anton Lundell.
•Four mainstays from
the Panthers' defenseman
group last season return
Gustav Forsling, Aaron
Ekblad, Niko Mikkola and
Umitry Kulikov. It would
appear that Adam Boqvist
and Nate Schmidt have
the inside tack for the
final two lineup spots
because they can con the
power play. That leaves
Uvis Balinskis, Tobias
Bjomfot and (to an ex-
tent) Jaycob Megna and
Matt Kiersted competing
for either one or two ros-
ter spots.
•As for goaltenders,
Sergei Bobrovsky is the
starter. The backup spot is
going to either Spencer
Knight or Chris Driedger,
and the early returns
would suggest Knight has
the inside tack.
Jordon McPherson:
305-376-2129,
46J_McPherson1126
Southeast Overtown/Park West Community
Redevelopment Agency
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Board of Commissioners ("Board") of the Southeast Overtowd
Park West Community Redevelopment Aaencv ("SEOPW CRA") will
hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, October 10m, 2024, at 10:00 a.m.
or anytime thereafter in the City Commission chambers located at
Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, FL33133.
The Board will consider the allocation of additional grant funds to
Harlem Square LLC, a Florida limited liability company, to underwrite
costs associated with promoting and enhancing the original model for
the construction of "Harlem Square," a full -service supper club/lounge
located at 173 N.W. 11. Street, Miami, Florida 33136.
In accordance with the SEOPW CRA2018 Redevelopment Plan Update
("Plan") and Section 163 Florida Statutes, the Board will consider the
allocation of grant funds in an amount not to exceed Two Million Dollars
and Zero Cents ($2,000,000.00). This funding will aid in contributing
to the cultural enrichment and overall wellbeing of residents within the
redevelopment area and is consistent with the Plan.
All comments and questions with respect to the meeting and public
participation should be addressed to James D. McQueen, Executive
Director, or Vincent T. Brown, Esq., Staff Counsel/Deputy Director, at
819 N.W. 2ne Avenue, 3r° Floor, Miami, Florida 33136 or (305) 679-6800.
This action is being considered pursuant to Sections 18-85 and 18-86
of the Code of the City of Miami, Florida as amended ("City Code").
The recommendation and findings to be considered in this matter are
set forth in the proposed resolution and will be available as with the
scheduled SEOPW CRA Board meeting or anytime thereafter in the
City Commission chambers.
The SEOPW CRA Board requests all interested parties be present
or represented at the meeting and may be heard with respect to
any proposition before the SEOPW CRA Board, In which the Board
may take action. Should any person desire to appeal any decision
of the Board with respect to any matter considered at this meeting,
that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is
made, including all testimony and evidence upon which any appeal
may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
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),
not later than two (2) business days prior to the proceeding. TTY users
may call 711 (Florida Relay Service), not later than two (2) business
days prior to the proceeding.
Pegula, Gauff
advance in third
round at China Open
neld Lmel Med.
Jessica Pegula expected
a tough match, and the
second -seeded American
got one in defeating Vero-
nika Kudermetova 6-7
(9-11), 6-1, 6-2 in the third
round of the China Open in
Beijing on Sunday.
It was Pegula's first ca-
reer
in three attempts
against Kudermetova, the
32nd seed, who beat the
American in the Tokyo
final in 2023.
"Every time I've played
her, it's always been really
tough," said Pegula, ranked
No. 3 in the world. "After I
came back from 2-5 in the
first set,I kind of knew
what to do. I just had to
execute in the next couple
sets. I'm happy 1 was able
to kind of figure that out
and finally help my head -
to -head against her."
Pegula won 70 percent
(42 of 60) of her first -serve
points, converted seven of
nine break points and
saved four of seven break-
point opportunities in win-
ning the match in two
hours, 39 minutes.
Pegula has won 38 of 50
matches this year, the most
victories in her first 50
matches in one season. Her
career best was 37-13 in
2023.
She has won 17 of her
past 19 matches, all on
hard courts, with the only
losses coming against Aey-
na Sabalenka.
Fourth -seeded Coco
Cae f solved Great Bri-
tain's Katie Boulter after
same early difficulty, as the
American won 7-5, 6-2 to
advance to the fourth
round.
Geoff wasted a 5-2 lead
in the first set before re-
sponding by breaking the
26th-seeded Boulter on her
Third set point in the 12th
game. The World No. 6,
Guff son eight of the last
10 games.
"1 felt lice 1 gave up two
points in that game, so 1
was just trying to put it in
the past," Gauff said of the
12th game. "Breaking for
the set, I think is just one of
those things where you
don't have the pressure, 1
think serving for it you do,
so I just tried to play each
point."
Sunday's other matches
at the outside courts were
postponed by rain until
Monday.
ALCARAZ WINS IN
BEIJING TO CAPTURE
200TH TOUR VICTORY
Carlos Alcarax defeated
Talon Criekapoor of the
Netherlands 6-1, 6-2 at the
China Open to capture his
200th career lour victory.
Alcaraz, 21, Wined Jan -
elk Sinner and Felix Au-
ger-Aliassime as players
born in the 2000s to
achieve that feat. The Spa-
niard won 100 percent of
points on his first -serve
points (23 of 23) and need-
ed just 57 minutes to defeat
Griekspoor, who had two
winners to go with 24 un-
forced errors
In the quartet als, the
second -seeded Alcaraz
will meet Russian Karen
Khachanov, who was
pushed by Francisco
Cerundolo of Argentina
in the 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (11-9)
battle.
MEN'S JAPAN OPEN
Sixth -seeded Holger
Rune of Denmark knocked
out home -country favorite
Kel Nlshikorl 3-6, 6.2, 7-5
in the quarterfinals in To-
kyo.
Also advancing to the
semifinals were Czech
Tomas Machac and
France's Arthur Fta and
Ugo Humbert.
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NQTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami. Florida on Thursday.
October 10. 2024, al 9:00 A.M. al City Hall. located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida, 33133 for the purpose of granting the following:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION. WITH AITACHMENT(S), PURSUANT
TO SECTION 18-85(A) OF THE CODE OF THE OITY OF MMMI, FLORIDA AS AMENDED. BY
A FOUR -FIFTHS (4/STHS) AFFIRMATIVE VOTE, AFTER AN ADVERTISED PUBLIC HEARING,
RATIFYING, APPROVING, AND CONFIRMING THE CITY MANAGER'S FINDING(S). ATTACHED
AND INCORPORATED AS EXHIBIT 'B-, THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION METHODS AND
PROCEDURES ARE NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS FOR THE CITY OF MIAMI
CCITT.) AND WAIVING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR SAID PROCEDURES; ALLOCATING
FUNDING IN FORM OF A DEFERRED LOAN IN AN AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED ONE MILLION
AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($1,000,000.00) FROM THE DISTRICT 1 SHARE OF THE CRY OF
MUMPS MIAMI FOR EVERYONE 1'MFE') PROGRAM (-GRANT-). TO THE ALLAPATTAH
COLLABORATIVE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, A FLORIDA NOT FOR
PROFIT CORPORATION ("DEVELOPER"), FOR THE DEVELOPER TO ACQUIRE ONE 11) ONE
PARCEL AS DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "C', ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED (-PROPERTY"),
ON WHICH THE DEVELOPER WILL CAUSE TO REHABILITATE THE EXISTING COMMERCIAL
STRUCTURE CURRENTLY HOUSING TEN (10) SMALL BUSINESSES CENTRAL TO THE
LITTLE SANTO DOMINGO HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOOD, AND TO FURTHER DEVELOP
THE PROPERTY FOR A MIXED USE PURPOSE TO BE KNOWN AS 1700 NW 36 STREET
MIXED USE PROJECT ('PROJECT") THAT WILL CONTAIN NO LESS THAN FOURTEEN
(14) CRY -ASSISTED RESIDENTIAL RENTAL UNITS ON THE SECOND FLOOR OF THE
EXISTING STRUCTURE FOR EUGIBLE RESIDENTS AND REQUIRE A MIXED COMPOSmON
OF ANNUAL MEDIAN INCOME ('AMR-) BETWEEN FIFTY PERCENT (50%) AM! AND ONE
HUNDRED TWENTY PERCENT (120%) AMI MAI AS PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AS DESCRIBED IN
EXHIBIT 'A'. SUBJECT TO THE RECEIPT BY THE CITY MANAGER OF THE APPROVAL
OF THE PROJECT BY THE CRY'S HOUSING AND COMMERCIAL LOAN COMMITTEE
(-HCLC APPROVAL-) AND SUBJECT TO THE TERMS. CONDITIONS. AND RESTRICTIONS
CONTAINED HEREIN AND IN THE HCLC APPROVAL; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ANY AND ALL NECESSARY DOCUMENTS.
INCLUDING AMENDMENTS, EXTENSIONS, AND MODIFICATIONS. ALL IN FORMS
ACCEPTABLE TO THE CRY ATTORNEY, SUBJECT TO COMPLIANCE WITH ALL APPLICABLE
FEDERAL STATE OF FLORIDA LOCAL. AND CITY LAWS, RULES, AND REGULATIONS FOR
AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROJECTS AND MFE FUNDS AND SUBJECT TO THE DEVELOPER
FULFILLING ALL OF THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS SET FORTH IN THE HCLC APPROVAL
IN ORDER TO ALLOCATE THE CITY'S MFE FUNDING TO THE PROJECT IN THE FORM OF
A DEFERRED LOAN: PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
All Mterested persons are InWled to appear at the meeting and may be hard with respect
to the proposed resolution. Should any person desire to appeal any decision of the City
Commission with respect to any metier to be considered al this meeting, that person shell
ensure Nat a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including sit testimony and
evidence upon which any appeal may be based (F.S. 286.01051
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o). whenever a scheduled City Commission
meeting le cancelled or ie not held due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency, a special
City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled to the Tuesday immediately
following the cancelled meeting. In the event of one of the aforementioned circumstances,
the special meeting would be hem on October 15. 2024. at 9:00 a.m. In the City Commission
chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American DrWe, Miami, Florida 33133, AP of
the scheduled agenda items from that cancelled meeting shall automatically be scheduled as
n agenda item at the special City Commission meeting.
The city clerk shall notify the public of the special meeting Nat is to take place by placing a
notice of the special City Commission meeting at the entrance of City Hall and the City's main
adminlatratse building. placing a notice on the City's websile, and. II feasible. placing an ad
in a newspaper of general circulation before the special meeting on Me immediately following
Tuesday. There shall be no additional notice by publication required for any such scheduled
agenda item that is moved to the special DM Commission meeting.
In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act 0l 1990, persons needing epeeist
accommodations to participate in this proceeding may contact the Office of the city Clerk
at (305) 250-6361 (Volta) no later than Me (5) business days prior to the proceeding. TTY
users may call via 711 (Florida Relay Service) no paler than Me (5) business days Poor to
the proceeding.
Todd B. Hannon
Clerk of the Board
Ad No. 43592
Todd B Hannon
City clerk
Ad No. 43590