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Legal Display Ad-IPL02244530 - IPL0224453
2
751 in
Attention: E-Tearsheet
CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
CITY OF MIAMI - CLERK'S OFFICE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami, Flor-
ida on Thursday, April 10, 2025, 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, WITH AITACHMENT(S),
BY A FOUR -FIFTHS AFFIRMATIVE VOTE, AFTER AN ADVERTISED PUBLIC
HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING, AND CONFIRMING THE CITY MANAGER'S
RECOMMENDATION AND FINDING, ATTACHED AND t4CORPORATED AS EX-
HIBIT "A," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION METHODS AND PROCEDURES
ARE NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS TO THE CTTY OF MIAMI ("CITY");
WANING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR SAID PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE
CITY MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE A REVOCABLE LICENSE
AGREEMENT ('LICENSE"), IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY ATTORNEY,
BETWEEN THE CITY AND MIAMI DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORI-
TY (DDA), ("LICENSEE") FOR THE LICENSEE'S USE OF 433 SQUARE FEET
OF CITY -OWNED PROPERTY LOCATED AT 174 E FI.AGLER STREET, MIAMI,
FLORIDA 33131 FOR THE FURPOSE OF PROVIDING OFFICE SPACE FOR THE
DDA TO PROMOTE THE ECONOMIC HEALTH OF DOWNTOWN MIAMI FOR A
MONTHLY USE FEE OF FIVE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY EIGHT DOLLARS AND
EIGHTY-NINE CENTS ($588.89) PLUS TAXES, WITH A GUARANTEE DEPOS-
IT OF NINE HUNDRED SEVENTY FOUR DOLLARS AND TWENTY SD( CENTS
($97426), FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND
EXECUTE ALL NECESSARY DOCUMENTS, INCLUDING AMENDMENTS AND
MODIFICATIONS TO SAID AGREEMENT, IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY
ATTORNEY, AS MAY BE NECESSARY.
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 consid-
ered 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 Miarni City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Com-
mission 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 sched-
uled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event
of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would be
held on April 15, 2025, 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 Ciy's main administrative building, placing a notice on the
City's website, and, it feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general circu-
lation 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 need-
ing 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. 43681
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:
03/31/25
Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website
or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for
publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes.
M a s0 L/ G-a-f --v-o
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 31st day of
March in the year of 2025
Ki2Lben
Notary Public in and for the state of South Carolina,
residing in Beaufort County
AMY L. ROBBINS
NOTARY PUBLIC
SOUTH CAROLINA
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES 11-03-32
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal doament please do not destroy)
MONDAY MATCH 3 3025
MIAMI HERALD
I 1A
FROM PAGE 6A
MEDICAID
include investments, bank
accounts, and other things
that could be easily con-
verted to cash, but not a
primary home, vehicle or
household furnishings.
"You have couples who
have been married for
decades who have to go
through what we call a
'Medicaid divorce,' just to
get access to these sup-
potts and services that
cannot be covered in any
other way," said Maria
Town, president of the
American Association of
People with Disabilities.
Town said that some
states, including Mas-
sachusetts, have removed
income caps for people
with disabilities who want
to join Medicaid. She said
the cost of adding such
people to the program is at
least partially offset by the
premiums they pay for
coverage and the increased
taxes they contribute be-
cause they are allowed to
work more hours. "1 don't
think it has to be expen-
d" for the state and
federal governments, she
said.
Congress has considered
a similar proposal to allow
people with disabilities to
work more hours without
losing their Social Security
disability benefits, but that
bill has not advanced.
Although most states
have Medicaid buy -in pro-
grams, enrollment is rela-
tively low, said Alice
Bums, a Medicaid analyst
at KFF, a health informa-
tion nonprofit that includes
KFF Health News.
Fewer than 200,000
people nationwide are
covered under the options,
Bums said. "Awareness of
these programs is really
limited," she said, and the
income limits and paper-
work can dissuade poten-
tial participants.
In states that charge
premiums for Medicaid
buy -in programs, monthly
fees can range from S10 to
10% of a person's income,
according to a KFF analysis
of 2022 data.
The lowa proposal to
remove income and asset
caps has drawn bipartisan
backing from legislators,
including a 20-0 vote of
approval from the House
Health and Human Serv-
ices Committee. "This
aligns with things both
parties are aiming to do,"
said state Rep. Carter
Nordin., a Republican
who chaired a subcommit-
tee meeting on the bill.
Nordman said he supports
the idea but wants to we
an official estimate of how
much it would cost the
state to let more people
with disabilities participate
in the Medicaid buy -in
program.
Mecham, the citizen
activist lobbying for the
Iowa bill, said he hopes it
allows him to expand his
online marketing and
graphic design business,
"Zach of All Trades."
On a recent moming,
health aide Cotutnie imler
visited Mecham's modest
house in Pleasantville, a
town of about 1,700 people
in an agricultural region of
central Iowa. Imler chatted
with Mecham while she
used a hoist to heft him out
of has wheelchair and onto
the toilet. Then she
cleaned him up, brushed
his hair, and helped him
put on jeans and a John
Deere T-shirt. She poured
him a cup of coffee and put
a straw in it so he could
drink it on his own, swept
the kitchen Boor, and
wiped the counters. After
about an hour, she said
goodbye.
After getting cleaned up
and dressed, Mecham
rolled has motorized wheel-
chair over to has plain
wooden desk, fired up his
computer, and began work-
ing on a social media video
fora client promoting a
book. He scrolled back and
forth through footage of an
interview she'd done, so he
could pick the best clip to
post online. He also shoots
video, takes photos and
writes advertising copy.
Mecham loves feeling
productive, and he figures
he could work at least
twice as many hours if not
for the risk of losing Med-
icaid coverage. He said
he's allowed to make a bit
more money than Iowa
Medicaid's standard limit
because he signed up for a
federal option under which
he eventually expects to
work has way off Social
Security disability pay-
ments.
There are several such
options for people with
disabilities, but they all
involve complicated paper-
work and frequent reports,
he said. "This is such a
convoluted system that 1
have to navigate to build
any kind of life for my-
self," he said. Many people
with disabilities are intimi-
dated by the odes, so they
don't apply, he said. "If
you get it wrong, you lose
the health care your life
depends on."
FROM PAGE 6A
GAZA
the mediators in Egypt and
Qatar," said Hamas chief,
Khalil al-Hayya. "We dealt
with it positively and ac-
ceptedit"
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's
office said in a statement
on Saturday that the coun-
try had submitted a "coun-
ter -proposal" to the cease-
fire mediators "in full coor-
dination" with the Trump
administration. The Associated Press
Reuters reported last
Monday that Egypt had put
forward a fresh proposal,
under which Hamas would
release five hostages each
week, citing anonymous
security sources.
After the first week,
Israel would implement a
second phase of the cease-
fire, according to the re-
port. The proposal also
reportedly included a time-
line for all of the hostages
to be released and for Is-
rael to fully withdraw its
military from Gaaa.
separately reported, citing
an Egyptian official, that
an American -Israeli citizen
would be among the hos-
tages released from Gaza
in exchange for lsrael's
allowing the resumption of
humanitarian aid into the
strip, a week-long pause in
fighting and the release of
hundreds of Palestinian
prisoners.
Israel cut off the Flow of
aid to Gaza at the start of
March, a move decried by
humanitarian aid agencies.
WHAT PEOPLE
ARE SAYING
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's
office said on Saturday that
"Israel conveyed to the
mediators a counter -pro-
posal in full coordination
with the U.S."
WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
It is unclear whether
both sides will agree to the
same ceasefire proposal,
and pressing questions
remain about whether
Hamas and Israel will re-
spect fresh agreements.
FROM PAGE 6A
TESLA
between the Tesla Take-
down protesters and the
pro -Musk counter -protest-
s.
erA much larger crowd
showed up to protest in the
Windy City.
The London protest
began at 11 a.m. local time
outside the Park Royal
Tesla dealership in West
London.
Protesters there accused
Musk of trying to "destroy
democracy" and "shred
public services." They
carried placards saying,
"Don't buy Nazi can" and
"Don't fund fascists," The
Standard reported.
SCENE IN CHICAGO About 50 protests were
A "few hundred" scheduled in California,
protesters gathered in including in Santa Clara,
downtown Chicago mostly where an out-of-state vis-
to oppose Musk's actions itor told KTVU she knows
as the DOGE director, people who will be affect-
WLS-TV reported. ed by DOGE actions.
"Elon is not an elected "We are in the biggest
person, and he has no lie any of us have ever
authority to dismantle our been in," Cory Haynes told
government and programs KTVU. "I have friends and
that help us American family that are going to be
people,"protester and Chi- impacted if any of these
cago resident Tina Smoth- things that they are trying
ers told WLS. to do get enacted."
Vicky Weidenkeller, also
of Chicago, wondered how 'DOMESTIC TERRORISM'
Musk can be so influential The "global day of ac-
in the Trump adminis- tion" protests against Tesla
[ration. and Musk came after many
"He's not an elected people have been arrested
official," she told WLS. and charged with vandal -
"What business does he ism, arson, firearms of -
have taking over our gov- Tenses and other serious
e end?"
In the United Kingdom, crimes. Attorney General Pam
protests were held in Lon- Bondi an March 20 called
don, Bristol, Edinburgh such actions "domestic
and Glasgow, The Stan- terrorism" and announced
dard reported. federal charges against
EMERGENCY GLASS REPAIRS
TROPICAL GLASS
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
7933 NW 7TH AVE.MIAMI, FL 33150
www.tropicalglassmiami.com
(305)757-0651 (954)462-3711
BRUCE ROSENSTEIN, PRES. CGCF048630
SOUTHEAST OVERTOWN/
PARK WEST
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT
AGENCY
PLEASE ALL THE NOTICE, the Board of Corms.. needy a me PoseSouN-
ennpamn m,rnPose GEO. CRP
• lo Pe place on Thursday,
y, 030,Apll lop, 3035, 0 10aM ar aware, u A
oval COL Hall 3500 Pat Amer. 0.1.a, rw.i
Plexi. 1313.
Pursuant b CRAW-24.0021, ...never a s.eanse SEOPN CRA PIM, is
a I. of a Quorum or other error..
al SEOP.Y ON needy x llabe auseratnal1 adpa4Ma favor the Tues. m
- r,1ab.n9 hegael.3 mena9. 1n. P. a an a se *-
toe. cacermances. Me ;Mel meeeng pub . he.
al'000 amn dpe CNCr.u.wn.ambe0 bubo at Mans CM Han, 3500
Pan .er.Drree, Map R 31133. NI at Pea..
Pat . dam lion
mono awmu tlN be.ls.wao n an pray" tern at
Pe Rea SM. CAA reeer0. The COS of sae Boa. Mal moo oe pudic
dine Seca ,wino mat. to aye pare by pan° a ,ace a de mmai
SEC. CPA nervy at de entrance a CM Hsu m dot CM's non adnnv-
d.sm. PA'aMffi..act, nbad
0.02 aon.ammm.05 a yeneralumMaoon beam. ammo mee.
med.eN Anb..y Tun. . There .au to rap adanal rean M
pub.. wooed Or any re,m W.a ma r ahea,. aa4n ta.
racial SECFW CPA mop
Pend For more Mon., prom run
so to SEpw CRA gnu r p0515r9a503
three people.
One is accused of
carrying a suppressed
AR-15 rifle and throw-
ing about eight Molo-
tov cocktails at a Testa
dealership near Salem,
Ore.
Another is accused
to trying to set several
Tesla vehicles on fire
with Molotov cocktails
in Loveland, Colorado,
and the third is ac-
cused of vandalism
and setting Tesla
charging stations on
fire in Charleston,
South Carolina.
PENALTIES
Each faces federal
felony charges, each of
which carry minimum
penalties of between
five and 20 years im-
prisonment, but each
is presumed innocent
unless found guilty.
"The days of com-
mitting crimes without
consequence have
ended," Bondi said."It
you join this wave of
domestic terrorism
against Tesla proper-
ties, the Department
of justice will put you
behind bars."
FROM PAGE 6A
FUNDS
and her provost, Angela
Olinto, confused some
people when they seemed
to downplay the effects of
the university's agreement
with the government. A
transcript of the meeting
had been leaked to the
news media, as well as to
the Trump administration,
according to two people
familiar with the situation.
Shipman, a journalist with
two degrees from Colum-
bia, is taking charge of one
of the nation's preeminent
universities at an extraordi-
narily charged moment in
American higher education.
The federal govemment
is threatening to end the
Bow of billions of dollars to
universities across the
country, many of which are
facing inquiries from agen-
cies including the Justice
Department and the De-
partment of Health and
Human Services.
But the Trump adminis-
tration's punitive approach
to universities is playing out
most acutely at Columbia.
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Ledger -Enquirer
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Legal Display Ad-IPL02244720 - IPL0224472
43682
2
7.75 in
Attention: E-Tearsheet
CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
CITY OF MIAMI - CLERK'S OFFICE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami, Flor-
ida on Thursday, April 10, 2025, 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, WMTH ATTACHMENT(S),
BY A FOUR -FIFTHS AFFIRMATIVE VOTE, AFTER AN ADVERTISED PUBLC
HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING, AND CONFIRMING THE CITY MANAGER'S
RECOMMENDATION AND FINDING, ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED AS EX-
HIBIT 'A," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION METHODS AND PROCEDURES
ARE NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS TO THE CITY OF MIAMI ("CITY");
WANING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR SAID PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE
CITY MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE A REVOCABLE LICENSE
AGREEMENT ("LICENSE"), IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY ATTORNEY,
BETWEEN THE CRY AND SENIOR VETERAN FOUNDATION, INC, ("LICENSEE")
FOR THE LICENSEE'S USE OF PORT)ON OF CITY -OWNED PROPERTY LOCAT-
ED AT 970 SOUTHWEST 1ST STREET, MIAMI, FLORIDA FOR THE PURPOSE
OF OPERATING AN ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE TO PROVIDE HOUSING ASSIS-
TANCE SERVICES TO ACTIVE -DUTY MILITARY, AND VETERANS WHO RESIDE
IN MIAMI DADE COUNTY FOR A MONTHLY USE FEE OF ONE THOUSAND NINE
HUNDRED AND FIFTY SIX DOLLARS AND NU lETY SEVEN CENTS (51,956.97)
PLUS APPLICABLE TAXES, WITH A GUARANTEE DEPOSIT OF THREE THOU-
SAND, NNE HUNDRED AND THIRTEEN DOLLARS AND NINETY FOUR CENTS
($3,913.94), FOR AN INITIAL TERM OF ONE-YEAR. WITH A THREE PERCENT
(355) INCREASE IN BOTH THE MONTHLY USE FEE AND GUARANTEE DEPOSIT,
IF APPLICABLE WITH TERMS AND CONDITIONS AS MORE SPECIFICALLY SET
FORTH IN SAID LICENSE AGREEMENT: FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ALL NECESSARY DOCUMENTS,
INCLUDING AMENDMENTS AND MODIFCATIONS TO SAD AGREEMENT, IN
A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO THE CRY ATTORNEY, AS MAY BE NECESSARY.
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 consid-
ered 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 Corn -
mission 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 sched-
uled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event
of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would be
held on April 15, 2025, 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 automaticaly 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 circu-
lation 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 need-
ing 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
clays 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. 43682
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 Mlami 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:
03/31/25
Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website
or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for
publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes.
Nl any G-c -v-o
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 31st day of
March in the year of 2025
Kaben
Notary Public in and for the state of South Carolina,
residing in Beaufort County
AMY L. ROBBINS
NOTARY PUBLIC
SOUTH CAROLINA
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES 11-03-32
Extra charge for lost or duplicate affidavits.
Legal dmc /tient please do not destroy!
MONDAY MAKH 312025
I MIAMI HERALD
I 1'A
FROM PAGE 3A
PROFESSOR
whether or not this law [is[
ultimately found to be
unconstitutional."
The law was met with
outrage across state public
universities as students
• faculty denounced the
legislation as discrimi-
natory.
The University of Flor-
ida Student Senate passed
a resolution in February
2024 condemning the
measure for its impact on
international graduate
students who typically
work as research or teach-
ing assistants while pursu-
ing doctoral degrees. The
resolution called these
students "integral to aca-
demic and scientific ad-
✓ ment"
A month later, the
American Civil Liberties
Union of Florida and Chi-
ese American Legal De-
fense Alliance filed a law-
suit on behalf of a Uni-
versity of Florida professor
and two Chinese students
at Florida International
University, arguing that SB
846 violates the 14th
Amendment's equal pro-
tection clause and contra-
dicts federal employment
and immigration laws.
Plaintiffs in the suit
compared Florida's law to
the 1882 Chinese Exclu-
sion Act, which banned
Chinese laborers from
immigrating to the U.S.
during a period of wide-
spread anti -Chinese rac-
ism. It is unclear how many
other academics have
been fired sett the pas -
age of SB 846, or how the
law, which limits the pool
of applicants for research
positions in the Florida
school system, has affect-
ed academic bran drain
from the state.
Zhengfei Guan, an agri-
cultural economist and a
plaintiff in the lawsuit,
argued that the law's pas-
sage has made it harder
for him to recruit and hire
high -quality researchers
and postdoctoral fellows.
Ina statement, Gisela
Kusakawa, the executive
director of Asian American
Scholar Forms, wrote that
the law creates an hostile
atmosphere that prospec-
tive students and faculty
will want to avoid.
1n February, a federal
magistrate judge recom-
mended that U.S. District
Judge Jose Martinez issue
an injunction to tempo -
rarity suspend the law's
enforcement Martinez
has not yet acted on this.
A ROUTINE EMAIL.A
SUDDEN DISMISSAL
Early on the morning of
March 10, before New
Colleges bayfront campus
stirred to life with the bus-
tle of students, Wang sent
what seemed like a routine
administrative email.
He had not been receiv-
ing paychecks at all this
semester, he wrote to his
department chair. And he
wondered when the sit-
uation would be resolved
or if there was anything he
could do to facilitate. He
ended the email with a
customary "thank you"
and "have a nice week,"
and hoped fora quick fir.
But Wang's message set
off a chain of internal cor-
respondence that would
end, just two days later,
with his firing— and with
no opportunity to say good-
bye to his students, accord-
ing to an interview
with Wang and a trovofemails
Suncoast Searchlight ob-
tained through a public
records request to the
school.
"Oh, heavens! We will
get this fired," replied
Manibeth Clark, the chair
of the Humanities Divi-
sion, about an hour and a
half later.
Clark, apparently realiz-
ing what happened, sent an
email to the provost, David
Rohrbacher, apologizing
for having forgotten to
submit an employment
agreement form for Wang
at the start of the semester
in January.
"We tried something
different this year with an
offer letter for adjuncts
that covered the whole
year," she wrote. "Then, in
January, we realized that
we needed no create EAFs
for each semester. We just
missed this one."
Just before noon, Wang
received an email from
Erin Fisher, associate vice
president for human re -
andes, digital learning
dual enrollment.
"In going through our
records, a question came
upon your file," Fisher
wrote. "Do you have docu-
mentation of lawful penna
nent resident status? If so,
please provide to us by
close of business today."
Wang replied that after-
noon that he had already
submitted documentation
of his work authorization.
"When 1 applied for this
position, l only required
valid work authorization in
the U.S. My immigration
status is currently being
processed, but 1 am un-
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S oars prior brae Pw oMg Raley TTYoeon may call sot Ft,. Ramicel
ro raw than p.. 15) Woos" Ow ono. a tie l"aaaso
certain when it will be
completed," he wrote. "1
assure you that 1 am in the
U.S. legally at this time."
Rohrbacher weighed in
at noon the next day.
"I think this explains
what happened," Rohr-
bacher replied, writing that
Wang "was hired legally
but when countries of
concm was passed no one
went back and checked
again."
Anotherprofessor of
Chinese language and
culture who was made
aware of the situation
reached out to Rohrbacher
via mail the same day to
express her concerns that
Wang might be fired.
"We all know how dis-
mptive it would be if he
had to stop teaching in the
middle of the semester. We
should try our best to pre-
vent that from happening,
for the sake of the stu-
dents' teaming and well
being," wrote ling Zhang,
who also is New College's
director of international
studies.
Rohrbacher responded
the next morning.
"Everyone wants Kevin
to stay," he wrote. "The
lawyers are trying to deter-
mine whether his reap-
pointment violates the
BOG 'countries of concern'
rule and we'll have to see
what they come up with."
Hours later, the college
informed Wang his con-
tract had been canceled,
effective immediately.
"Almost at the same
time, they closed my NCF
account," Wang told Sun -
coast Searchlight. "l can-
not get into my email and
cannot even say goodbye
to my students." Instead,
he toned his students and
sent them an email from
his personal account noti-
fying them that he had
been dismissed.
New College has scram-
bled to fill the teaching
gap left by Wang's dis-
missal.
But students in the
Humanities Division were
blindsided by his firing,
according to emails ob-
ained through the public
records request and texts
from Wang's students
that Suncoast Searchlight
wed.
re In an email to Rohr-
bacher requesting a meet-
ing between Wang's stu-
dents and New College
administrators, Clark, the
chair of the humanities
department, wrote that
the students had ex-
pressed a "high level of
anger" about Wang's
removal.
Wang, meanwhile, said
he is preparing to leave
Florida but that he will
remain in the United
States while pursuing his
bid for asylum. Although
he's upset about what
happened, he said, he
must now focus on what
ext
comes "As an adjunct, I do not
have much time or energy
to delve deeply into this
matter," he wrote in his
letter to Suncoast Sear-
chlight, "but 1 truly hope
that such interference
undermining academic
freedom will not otter
again in a place that
claims to be a'beacon of
democracy.' "
This story was produced
by Surmoasr Searchlight, a
nonprofit newsroom of the
Community News Collab-
orative serving Sarasota,
Manatee and 0eSoto coun-
ties Learn more at
auecoasrsearchlightorg.
UCF provost Trump
tapped for NASA
CFO is keen on
Mars, wary of China
Orlando, Autry discussed
MT MsmnOMUTM UGU his 2024 book, "Red
Orberb seeuol Moon Rising: How Amer-
ica Will Beat China on the
A University of Central Final Frontier," which he
Florida faculty member wrote with Peter Navarro,
President Trump nomi- current Trump senior
nated for NASA chief adviser for trade and man -
financial officer sees the ufacturing.
moon as
a stepping stone "China is moving for-
m Mars but warns that ward rapidly, and we, for
the U.S. needs to fir its some reason, can't even
space game if it's going get people on the moon in
to outplay China. eight years," he said. "We
Trump tapped Greg assumed that that could
Autry on Monday for the be done faster than John
post. He joined the uni- F. Kennedy was able to do
versify in 2024 as associ- it back when we didn't
ate provost for space know what we're doing.
commercialization and But it turns out it can't.
strategy. "So we've got to be
"1 have been honored honest about the fact that
to help move UCF's not executing on
incredible space en- time and on a program the
terprise forward, and I way that the Chinese are."
hope to return after my China has plans to land
service at NASA," Autry astronauts on the moon by
said in a news release. 2030.
"Our space agency has a He said that from a
long history of excel- science and engineering
lence in financial man- perspective, he's glad
agement, and 1 am look- China is a competiton it
ing forward to joining the gives Americans some -
credible team at thing to hold themselves
NASA." up to.
Autry worked with the While Autry has been at
first Trump adminis- UCF for a year only, the
nation as part of the school has dubbed him its
White House transition "space czar" as he works
team for NASA. In 2016, within the College of Busi-
he helped lay out NASA's mess to help establish
plans to return to the executive and MBA pro-
oon through its Arte- grams. It's a position he
mis program. would have to give up if
In January during confirmed for the NASA
SpaceCom, the commer- post.
dal space conference in
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AMENDING SECTION 24-424; REVGNG DEFNII016, MITERS AND REQUIREMENTS R0ATNG TO PRETREATMENT, SAW AID SEWER DISCHARGE
1.11,,GN3. WASTEWATER AND VINO SEWERS AMENDING SECTO24-M; UPDATING RE HRENCES TO STARE REGIAATIOrb %UPNG'0STATE
PROGRAM CONTAMINATED SITE MM... CRITERIA AMENDING SECTION 24.44.2, INCORPORATING BY NEFEOEhCE PRETREATMENT REGULATIONS
AND REVISING PROVIIONS. INCLUDING PROV00115 RELATED TO COMPLIANCE TESTS. SAMPLING POINTS, AND METHODS) AMENDING SECTION 24-
I6. REVISING PROVISIONS RELATING To 0002 WASTE TRANSPORTERS, MOANS IRONICAL CHANGES. PROVIDING SEVEAABERY INCLUSION IN THE
CODE. AND AN EFFECTM DATE
Ak0MtL9mamLLAWdedl 5AnwAre.AMMa11i75-15MRMAJA
• ORDNANCE RELATING TO AIRPORT
ZONING REGLUTIOS IN THE INNRPO1QEDM10S605 RATED AREAS AMENDING SECTION 33333 OF THE
OF MAIM COOS -DY'. ROFO MAIM -DAME COUNTY. ROOM PROMOTED USES IN THE pi0CALNO00ICH ZONE (CAS) FOR MMAMFDAXE COW-Y NRPORTS
TO ALLOWGIR'AN EMERGENCY CAE WdJTESTO BE ESTABLISHEDWITIMTH CA2; REVISING COMMONS: PROVIDING SEVERABIL1TY INCLLSION
N THE CODE. AND AN EFFECTNE DATE
• ORDINANCE RELATED TORE WEST PERME CDAMALP0TY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY AAGBCYO AMENDING SECTION 2-2460 OF nsECODE 00MAMF
DADE COON. 2ORDA A0100211G110 AFENCT TO EMPLOY AGENCY STAFF, A(E1RS.MD OTHER EMPLOYEES ASTHE AGENCY WY IED0FE,AND
LEGAL CO0NSEL AND LEGAL STAR NACCOOANCE WM1H SECTION 163366, PUMA STATUTES PROA0ND SEPT...LIT ( INf,YV00N IN THE COOF.
AND AN EFFECTIVE DIVE
• ORDINANCE FELATED TO OVAL IIOEP0008 AAMCW, AUDITS MID OVERSIGHT 0 CO.N'Y BOARDS AND TIE OFFICES THAT PROMS
ADIA 81RAIME SUPPORT 10 SUCH B0MEt5: CIEATMG SECTION 2-11.39.4 O THE C00 O MMMF°PLE COW 1Y, HOMOA 01EGMMG TO THE
CHAMFERS°.OP THE BOARD AND THE COUNTY MAYOR 0R COUNTY MAYOR'S 03451EE THE NIMIORITY 10 BEOWTE AN MUL IN0EAElDENTPMANdY
ADDS OF SUCH COUNTY BOARDS AND OFFICES OE5E0D0NG TO THE COUNTY MOO OR COUNTY MAYOR'S DESIGNEE PIE AN IIWAI Y TO PACE
CERTAIN °FACES ON MNACEMENTWATCK REOAMN6 REPORTS. PROVROa10 SfARABLITO MCLOV W N THE CDDEAD AN f7FEOTNE DATE
M NSremd path may appear and beton] at Pe erne had pee WOW.
A person AO, Oradea b appeal any deco. ode ty eery DOA nemy, 0005305 n •rNl reap. M any matter consdaa at S meebf 0 neet5,
rrA nod a record at bre pmcaonnos Sion manors may and to ensue Mat aorta.), rta) word at Ite Iaoaeat gs Is made. booting 5e n Manny and
totem oat.. Me appeal sto20 red
Mon Dade County mantles maul arsess and ell W aroma,' a :n pmgarosemen ate actrntlee and does letdowneare 0 the San d Nab.
To ragte. matena45 m an accessible lomat a sips towage'nbmrater. and. a Neer sxn.n.m'0m b partapare,n ore/ County -spoons. program
04l355 , obesecon3ct PIN) 375.203S.0 send an a -mall to nlertecysl0amlpage.asmaeon., 01T3.meelmg to Pate our recast T'r;u,
our,. far 711:Flmh Oro Sweet.
AWN FERNANGEZ-BARMAN. CLERK MINE COURT MD canErFO.LER
RASA PBWA DEPUTY REM
Too 0. macron
co ceder
ober
For legal ads online, go to legalads.miamidade.gov
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Legal Display Ad-IPL02246160 - IPL0224616
43683
3
10.18 in
Attention: E-Tearsheet
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:
03/31/25
Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website
or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for
publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes.
May
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 31st day of
March in the year of 2025
IZAbbera
Notary Public in and for the state of South Carolina,
residing in Beaufort County
AMY L. ROBBINS
NOTARY PUBLIC
SOUTH CAROLINA
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES 11-03-32
Extra charge for lost ordupNcateaffidavits.
Legal document please do not datroyl
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR THE ACCEPTANCE AND
APPROVAL OF THE FINDING OF NECESSITY FOR
THE CREATION OF THE ALLAPATTAH
DISTRICT COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
In accordance with Section 163346 Florida Statutes, as amended, the Miami City Commission purposes to
accept and approve the following by resolution:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENT(S), ACCEPTING AND APPROVING
THE FINDING OF NECESSITY ("FON') PREPARED BY BUSINESSFLARE, LLC, ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED
HEREIN AS EXHIBIT "A, DECLARING, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTIONS 163.335 AND 163.355, FLORIDA
STATUTES, AND AFTER A PUBLIC HEARING, A CERTAIN GEOGRAPHIC AREA LOCATED INTHE CITY OF MIAMI
("CITY") KNOWN AS ALLAPATTAH, GENERALLY BOUNDED ON THE NORTH BY STATE ROAD 112/AIRPORT
EXPRESSWAY ON THE EAST BY INTERSTATE-95 AND NORTH WEST 7th AVENUE ON THE SOUTH BY THE
MIAMI RIVER, AND ON THE WEST BY NORTH WEST 19th AVENUE, AS MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED IN
EXHIBITS -ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED (-AREA"), TO BE A SLUM OR BLIGHTED AREA; DECLARING THE
REHABILITATION,
CONSERVATION AND REDEVELOPMENT OF
THE AREA ARE NECESSARY AND IN THE BEST
INTEREST OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH, SAFETY
AND WELFARE OF THE RESIDENTS OF THE
CITY, MIAMI-DADE COUNTY ('COUNTY"),
AND THE RESIDENTS LMNG WITHIN THE
PROPOSED AREA AND DECLARING THE
NEED TO ESTABLISH THE ALLAPATTAH
REDEVELOPMENT DISTRICT COMMUNITY
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY ("ALLAPATTAH
CRA') WITH GEOGRAPHIC BOUNDARIES
AS SET FORTH IN EXHIBIT "B" ATTACHED
AND INCORPORATED; AND AUTHORIZING
A COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT PLAN
FOR THE AREA BE PREPARED; FURTHER,
PURSUANT TO SECTION 163.356(1), FLORIDA a,
STATUES, DECLARING THAT THERE IS A NEED Allopattah CRA Boundary Map
FOR THE ALLAPATTAH CRA AND DECLARING
THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION TO BE THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE ALLAPATTAH CRA WHICH WILL BE
ASEPARATE, DISTINCT, AND INDEPENDENT ENTITY FROM THE CITYCOMMISSION WITH ALL THE RIGHTS,
POWERS, PRIVILEGES, DUTIES, AND IMMUNITIES OF A COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY AS
PROVIDED FOR IN SECTION 163357, FLORIDA STATUTES; FURTHER DIRECTING THE CITY MANAGER
TO TRANSMIT A COPY OF THIS LEGISLATION TO THE COUNTY FOR FURTHER LEGISLATIVE ACTION AND
PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
A public hearing on the resolution will be held on Thursday, April 10, 2025, at 9:00 A.M. or soon thereafter
at Miami City Hall, located at 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. Comments and questions with respect to the proposed resolution approving the Finding
of Necessity should be addressed to Keith Carswell (Director of Department of Economic Innovation &
Development), at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133 during regular working hours, 9:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. 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 (FS. 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 April 15, 2025, 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.
Tbdd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43683
u 1
IRAW HMO I
MONDAY WMR 31707S
Another non -citizen voter is arrested in South Florida
RIM'WEAVER
pearersbnianaM1erresom
Federal officials have
uncovered another fake
South Florida voter who
pretended to be a U.S.
citizen.
His real name is Ashley
0. Rivers.
But the Margate man
created the fictitious
came of Ashley Rad Hill-
iard and lied about being a
U.S. citizen when he ap-
plied for an American pass-
port in 2016, according to
an indictment. He then
used that document to
register for voting in Bro-
ward County, casting bal-
lots in two presidential
elections.
Rivers, 64, appeared
Wednesday in federal
also charged
with provid-
ing false
Ashley R. information
Rivers when he
voted in the
2020 and 2024 general
elections in Broward Coun-
ty.
The indictment does not
disclose Rivers' actual
citizenship, his native
country or his party affil-
iation as a registered voter.
Rivers, who is being held
at the Broward Sheriff's
Office jail, has a detention
hearing and arraignment
court in Fort Lauderdale on on Wednesday. His assist -
charges of making a false ant federal defender could
statement in applying for a not be reached for com-
passport and ment.
a false claim Rivers is the latest pho-
of citizen- ny voter in South Florida
ship in order to be nabbed by federal
to vote. He's agents with the State De-
partment Diplomatic Se-
curity Service.
STOLE IDENTITY OF
PUERTO RICAN MAN
Carlos lose Abreu is also
not a U.S. citizen.
Yet the Dominican Re-
public native voted twice in
federal elections in Ego -
ward.
Abreu, 36, pleaded guilty
this month to federal
charges that he falsely
registered as a voter under
the stolen name of a man
born in Puerto Rico with
U.S. citizenship. Abreu
Carlos lose
Abreu
admitted
voting un-
der that
assumed
identity in
the 2016
and 2022
federal
elections,
according to
prosecutors.
But it's not clear from
court records whether he
registered as a Democrat,
Republican or with No
Party Affiliation.
Abreu, who lived in Sun-
rise, faces a mandatory
minimum sentence of two
years for stealing the iden-
tity of the Puerto Rican. He
also faces additional years
in prison for passport and
voting violations, along
with possessing a gun as an
undocumented immigrant.
His hearing is set for
June 11 before U.S. District
David Leibowitz in Fort
Lauderdale federal court.
Since his arrest last year,
Abreu has been held at the
Broward Sheriff's Office
aV.
According to a factual
statement filed with his
guilty plea, Abreu is a cid-
n of the Dominican Re-
public who entered the
United States and assumed
the identity of the Puerto
Rican, identified as
"C.R-V.," in 2007.
From that point until his
arrest in August 2024,
Abreu used that stolen
in his dealings with
local,e state and federal
agencies. The Puerto Rican
unawareman was of the
identity theft.
Abreu registered to vote
under C.R.V.'s name in
Broward County and cast
a ballot in the 2016 presi-
dential election, the state-
ment said. He renewed his
registration in 2020 to
vote in the 2022 midterm
election, according to the
statement signed by him,
his defense lawyer, Wes-
ley Wallace, and prose-
cutor Brianna Coakley.
Abreu, formerly of New
jersey, admitted that he
"knew that the personal
identifying information
did not belong to him."
"Those statements on
the applications were
false," the court document
said. "The defendant
knew those statements
were false."
Jay Wearer: 305-376-3446,
@Joyhweaver
FROM PAGE 3A
TRIAL
coined comment.
10-YEAR-OLD SLAIN
Even as Monday's open-
ing statements near, it is a
killing that Ragan is accused
of committing three weeks
after Perez was killed that
galvanized a community
and had detectives scram-
bling.
Around 730 p.m. on Nov.
22, 2013, a Friday, Ragan
and another man stormed
into the Hong Kong Nails
Salon at 14832 NW Seventh
Ave., aimed their handguns
at workers and customers
and demanded money and
valuables, witnesses told
police. The men collected
S300 in cash and property.
But Ragan wasn't fin-
ished, police said
Before leaving, he turned
back and fired at least two
shots inside the salon, wit-
nesses told police. One
bullet struck a man named
Hai Nam Vu in the shout.
der. He survived. But the
other ballet took the life of
Vu's fifth -grade son, Aaron
Vu, piercing the femoral
artery in a thigh. The Vu
family owned the nail salon.
Witnesses said Ragan and
the other man ran out of the
store and jumped into a
Dodge 1500 pickup truck
and sped off. Police found
Ragan a month later at his
sister's Miami home. Wit-
nesses identified him
through photographs, police
said.
Not long after Ragan's
alleged run of violent crime,
then -North Miami Police
Maj. Neal Cuevas called
him ruthless, "with no re-
gard for human life." Be-
sides the Perez and Vu
killings, Ragan was also
accused of store robberies
and attempted murders.
Now retired, Cuevas said
he stands by his comments.
The blatant shootings
outraged the community.
Memorials were held for the
slain Vietnamese boy. Fliers
were posted Hundreds of
people attended Aaron's
memorial service at St.
Mark's Roman Catholic
Church in Southwest
Ranches. His father showed
up in a wheelchair.
After the service, the
young boy who loved to play
the recorder was buried in
Hollywood. Friends said
Aaron liked to dance and
entertain and was just gen-
erally a joy to be around.
Police said that when
Ragan was captured, he put
up a fight. When the Vu
family was told the man
accused of killing Aaron was
wanted for another slaying,
one family member asked,
"How many families has he
hurt?"
More than a decade after
the shootings, the Vu's
family business in a strip
mall on the west side of
Northwest Seventh Avenue
is now a tuxedo rental shop.
For Aaron's death, Ragan
is facing charges of felony
first -degree murder and
first -degree attempted mur-
der. He also faces a host of
robbery and aggravated -
assault charges. The state is
expected to seek the death
penalty, although no trial
date has yet been set in
Aaron's case.
COMPLICATED PAST
Ragan began a life of
crime that escalated in
violence long before he was
accused of the month -long
murderous campaign of
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR THE ACCEPTANCE AND
APPROVAL OF THE FINDING OF NECESSITY FOR
THE CREATION OF THE ALLAPATTAH
DISTRICT COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
In accordance with Section 1613MFlwga Stat.... as amended lM Mam c te000mpn purposes to
mce0,anda0PrdwM efdl0ralgby 1eWuton.
A RESOL1R10N OF THE MOM Cm COMMISSION. PATH ATTKHMNTIR, KCEP1MG N0 KPRONNG
ME FINDING OF NECESSITY (WOW PREPARED RV BUSINESSFLUITE EEC ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED
KANN AS EXHIBIT Mt DECLARING, M KCORDANCE NT. SECTIONS 161335 AND 163355, FLORIDA
STATUTES, AND AFTER A PUBLICs1EV113G,ACERruN GEOGRAPHIC AREA LOCATED. ME CITY/0 KAM
GENERAL, KNOWN AS ALUPATTAN, GENEBOUNDED ON MAD E NORTH BY STATE RO1IZMIR. r
EXPRESSWAY ON INE EAST BY INTERSTATENS AND NORTH WEST 7N AVENUE ON THE SOUTH BY THE
MUM RIVER, AND ON THE WEST BY NCR. WEST 1. AVENUE, N MORE MATIC )AR, DESCRIBED IN
EXHIBn'B-ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED I'NFA'I. TO RE A SLUM OR OUGHT.. AREA DECLARING THE
DIE AREA
AND REDEVELOPMENT AND IN
OF
DIE REST ORE NECESSARY AND M THE BEST •
INTEREST OF THE THE R HEALTH. SUET'
AND WELFARE OF THE RESIDENTS OF THE
CITY. MAMWADE COUNTY . MM.,..THE
MID THE RESIDENTS A D DE K.ARING THE
NEEDPROPOSEDO AREA AND DECLARING 'ME
REED TO ESTABLISH ME ALLAPATTAH
REDEVELOPMENT d1YRIR COWUMTV
REDEVELOPMENT G AGENCY (BO,N 0011
ASS WO c
N S. FORTH W F. MO 'B�A-KHFO
AND COMMUNITY
NO AUNT PING
L.
FOR A CTHE AREA E PREPARED.
F PUN
N PREPARED..E '-ER
PURSUANT m SECTION 163 356EIF_5bbO
FORME DEaWTTAH CRT AND ISANEm ,._-......._.. _....., ..
AgapdrtW CAABdundmy AbD
DECLARINC
THEW M CITYCOMMISSIONm s THE GOVERN,. BODY OF THE AL MATTAH CRA WHICH WILL BE
ASEPAUTE, DISDNCr, AND INDEPENDENT ENT. FROM THE OTYCOMMISLCN WmH KL'NE RIriTS,
POWERS. PRIVILEGES, DUDES, AND 1...KDES OF A COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY N
PNDWOED FOR IN SECTION 1E3357. FLORIDA STATUTES. FURTHER DIRECT.. THE CITY MANAGER
TO TRANS?? A COPY OF THIS LEGISLATION TO mE COUNTY FOR FURTHER IEGISLAT4 ACTION AND
PRpwdNG FOR AN EFFECT? DATE
App. heaRng on We re+dunm yell be held on Tudor, Alai lD, 3035. at900 AM co sown mash.
?Mum City HAM. M at 3Se Pan Amenean Dme.Mum, Fonda, 33133.
TM Ms. CINCommls.nr.w.rNa iner..dwmm be present or,0Pre+enleen m. end
may. INad ex. respect to any prpoaoon Mw ad CityCommission in w1,1m MeOily Commixes
may taw wton. Comments
,d 2WM.e +d e mwt reseed aeprwsngm. F,ndrg
of Necessity s.ub be addresed a anti d C0.w(Director
03of Department of Ecmomu Wmwuon •
Demlopmena, art 35a0 Ian Mmewan Dane Mamt. Road 33133 during regular wwaeg Bees, 900
Monday mrough Fr1dry. Should a s person awe so appal try hodiu9n Pr MB ON
d tor05 curd
Cwn nat Msm t., as mar en
Wnu mgnr de it soar ail Testimony and pm HWY. my...
maybe howl lFs.3e60105).
Wesuant mi City C.e Swnv 3-33.. where. a xhMJedLaryComma+en meeting ...We.
or it a pedal C ty 000w,s 0 men', yell
oaxey ut held u "duke far the Tunday mmedatNy blowing thecancome... g 1P mea a-t ?one
f We a.emenuoned nrcummnc.. the so.? meeting would..Men Apo IS, 2035, at 900 am. n
We OW Commi++en 5hambwnoaaed at Mam0r wa, analPan AmFNw encen Dore. Warne r33133.
.e of the mheduled agenda awns from mat canceed meeeW shall automadey be wedlei as an
agenda rem at We special City Commaeon -eetmg
TM Clty Ck0A stall very )v.e,0. of We petal meeM0 tat In ro b.0awey padi.g a "aef of the
pe M CM Commission m.nng at ['reentrance of ON Hal and We City, main admnatanve I.ula,p,
DINew a monde or We Ca.... and if/ramble Riming an ad in a newspaper of general <eu05on
Before T. special mewing on 0r mm*Aatsy following Tuesday Mem shall Be no addioonal noes. By
1001raeon rpured ldr any PUN scheduled me. ism Wet a moved to Na pw? City Comm.,
me...cans with Diuhll000! of 1 MD....needrg sop? exosnenodatm,.
ta,. party.. in We proceeding mar co.? We ae.&m.CWekrk? DOS, 293-s361 rvww) oe mar
D.E. (ST bum.Jan Nun to :he eloc,N.F'T7 t unmwn0d 711 tr.yda Icon serval too War
Than Se (S) Mamma a days Per to the Nowalu;
rune just shy of his 19th
birthday, court records
show.
By the end of November
2013— when police say
Ragan took two lives and
tried to take two others —
his father was already serv-
ing life in prison on a mur-
der charge, and his mother
was behind bars for de-
frauding the federal govern-
ment.
State records of Ragan's
lengthy criminal history
show his interactions with
law enforcement began
even before he was a teen.
Many of the charges were
dropped.
He was charged with
grand theft for trying to
steal more than $100,000
worth of property four days
shy of his lath birthday,
Miami -Dade Sheriffs Office
records show. A month
later, he was arrested by
Miami -Dade Schools Police,
accused of simple assault
and disorderly conduct.
What followed were sep-
arate strong-arm robbery
and car -jacking charges by
Miramar police and a
charge of carrying a gum on
school property in Miami
Gardens.
Moss, the defense at-
tomey, also served briefly as
Anthawn Ragan Sr.'s at-
torney before the elder
Ragan chose to represent
himself. It backfired.
Ragan's father had been
an aspiring boxer whose
cut short when a
career rshot him in an arm
after an argument. He was
convicted of shooting and
killing that man. At the
same time, Ragan's mother
was in prison for Social
Security fraud
SPATE OF CRIME
The deadly spate of crime
that would lead to Ragan's
capture began on the first
day of November 2013, the
day police said Ragan killed
Perez at the Motel Seven.
His cohort, a man named
Terry Nealy, testified on the
state's behalf during an
unrelated trial that Ragan
fired first at Perez.
Neely admitted to stand-
ing over Perez as he lay on
the ground and shooting
him again. Neely identified
Ragan in surveillance video
obtained by the state.
Neely would later work
out a plea deal with the state
and agree to be deposed
under oath, according to his
attomey at the time. Ra-
gan's cohort received a
20-year sentence and pro-
bation in the Perez case. It
is not clear whether he will
testify this week.
1n the Perez killing, own-
ers told police he saw the
two men who shot Perez
runup the stairs, one of
them calling Perename.
Perez's gielfriedstl
police that two weeks be-
fore the shooting, Perez
called her and was almost
crying. She said he told her
he had gotten into some
type of trouble. Although
she wasn't sure, she told
police she assumed it had
mething to do with his
drug supplier.
Three weeks after Perei s
killing — on Nov. 22—
came the fatal shooting of
10-year-old Aaron Vu and
what police say is the at-
tempted murder of his
father. Between the two
killings, police say, Ragan
held up a convenience
store, a hamburger joint
and a dollar store.
Charter Rabin:
305-376-3672, @checkrabin
SOUTHEAST OVERTOWN/PARK WEST
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT
AGENCY NOTICE OF
PUBLIC MEETING
The Baerll Of C'esfdrlers rEbeir') Of tie Sour,as O,enwTVPark Wes ComxnM RSOesalepnem
Rger-Y f5ECN'3 GPM') hereby ekes mice awl a will mrdu0 a public meet, b consider issuance el
Me BEONV CRea Tic Increment Revenue ROO . Sense 2026, M cne or more Mies 01e'Sanas 2025
Bonds". i1 W amour nil to exceed en eggregete prod,* mum. at One Fend. Swaayfire Millbn
Ochre and Zero Cone 1E175000.030.001. The DWI. meeting will occur on Thursday. Apra I0111, 2025.
a 1000 am or anytime 0,0500er. n caw Coy Comma , °embers Melded at Misne City .1. 3500
Pan American Drive, Mem, Fonda 33133. Interested 0enm may appear al ...Wig and be nee.
with reenact to ewsc5 of the Sense 2025 floods . At Me conclusion of the meaeg. P1e SEOPN CNA will
insider adOpti0) d a resolution allnloeg Mew.. of tie Sett. 2025 BOHM. Ccpa0 Of the .060.d
resmaNm are averlene for puble inspection in be olf of James D. McQueen, Exam,.e O,150br. at 819
NW 2nd Avenue, 3rd Fknr, Mem(Fbrlda 33136.
SOOD311 163.346. FMide SMWIes requires approval d Be CO Commission One -CAy Canm0gn1 d
ne Oily d Memt Pre before before to SEOPW CAA can .we caw Sera 2025 Bonds. n accordance
therewith, 0w City Canniumn will consider approving issuance of 0e Serbs 2025 Bards at es regularly
eOOtlued meeting mmmencrtg at 900 ere. Or srylme thereafter. On Thursday. Apnl 10111, 2025, in the
City Ca -meson Clambers booed at Miami Cey Hsu, 3500 Pan Amerman Dam. Vern, Ronda 33133.
U1Dn approval try be Gay Gomm salon. 0a SECF W CRA ws1 ss a the Sams 2025 Bends s,nty ihereal-
M neresed par6ee may appear at 01e CMe COmmmpn meet., and be heard wen respect to issuance
of be Sores 2025 Bads.
The Seals 2025 Bonds are Deng Issued to finance vane. communM redevelopment Protects w+em
0e Southeast O,ertce vP*M West CommunM Redewbpment Area established by an 0lerlome Coop -
*canon Agreement deed Mani 31, 1903. between the City. Maw -ode County IV1e'Cooly), end the
SEORN CPA. n acmrdarce wM and er furtherance of 0a 2018 Updated Southeast Penmen/Oa. West
Redesebpment Pan IV1e -Pan-1 The Sense 2025 Boras will be secured by a ten on and ,edge of ex
increment re1nr. Ian in. 0e Sdume®s QenmwJPad Yhs) Community Redevelopment Trust Fund
60lsned fry Ordnance No. 82-115. ended by me Board of County Commeso1ers of Men -Cede
Canty. Fonda on December 21. 1982. Ordnance No 9590. maned by 0W CM/ 000,n, sonars Of the
CM of Mem, Fonda on April 6, 1983 and Ordnance N0 10018 enacted by tre City Commissar*le of
0a CM of Mem, Ronda on July 18. 1985.
Pursuant m Fbode Seme 5 2660105, anyone wishrg to appeal any deem made by tie Beard of 0a
SE0PW CAA eel respect b any matter consdered at such 1,1500, will rasa a record of tie proceed -
no. and for such wr0OM, may need m e,aure Mal a verbatim record of na wocaedwo at we. whim
remrd rlckdas 0e teM.. and aaneme upon Amid, Pre appeal Is m be based.
Pursuant to GRA-R-24-0071, when.) a a]adued SEORN CAA meeeg a onoled or awl held
due to a tact of a quorum of otha, eme9ercy a spec.. SEOPN CPA meeting eat ns eaprWrry
scheduled for the Tuesday immediately bllwr,s 0e Cancelled mwlig. b the event t 01 we of tie abm-
me urea cuv,JI00 ee. 0e space! meet, would be hem on bra 156, 2025. el 1000 am. n tie City
Conn.. Manor. located at Miami CM Flail. 3500 Pon America) Dive, Memi, FL 33133. N Oi 0e
sphedded agenda alnellpm that ran Wbd meelrg s.aambmelralty be scheduled as an agenda ism
al Me amnia+ SEOPN CAA meeting. The CAM* of the Board shall nobly 0e pubic al the spoor! meelrg
that is b tare pace by peer, a notice of BM space! SEONV CAA meeting at 0a entranced CM Her,
pomp a motels m 0W SEOPN CPA'a webeile. and, if easibb, peeing a1 ad in a newspaper of general
circulation bade Me special meebg of tie mmedeely Moue, Tuesday There sall be no adddval
noose by pblra0on recuired for any arch s hedued agenda 1em 0e1 a moved to be space! SEOPN
CRe maero.
In eocodnme ern the emerinm arm OLaebaem Add ,990 perma needing specs& sugmmo0e0Om
b perliccee n the proceeding may contact 0e Office of the City Clerk at (305) 250-5361 Nome). not
War than Nm (2) Maness days ,fort in 01e oroceed8u TN users may cal 711 (FMnde Reify Sen+ce).
nil later Van Pro QI Ouvmedaye Inor b 0w prbeeedn9.
AO No. 4.10110
Udd B leave
Day Clerk
Ad tiae.
Todd B. Herren
Clerk of Be Board
McClatchy
The Beaufort Gazette
The Belleville News -Democrat
Bellingham Herald
Centre Daily Times
Sun Herald
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Ledger -Enquirer
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AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION
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Account #
Order Number
Identification
Order PO
Cols
Depth
33010
648336
Legal Display Ad-IPL02246280 - IPL0224628
2
7.05 in
Attention: E-Tearsheet
CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
CITY OF MIAMI - CLERK'S OFFICE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE(S)
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,
April 10, 2025, 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 XI/DNISION 2 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA,
AS AMENDED, TITLED "ADMINISTRATION/BOARDS, COMMITTEES, COM-
MISSIONS/STANDARDS FOR CREATION AND REVIEW OF BOARDS GENER-
ALLY," TO ESTABLISH SECTION 2-896, TO BE TITLED "APPOINTMENT OF
MEMBERS," TO PROVIDE THAT THE APPOINTMENT OF BOARD MEMBERS
SHALL OCCUR ON A QUARTERLY BASIS, UNLESS THERE IS A TIME -SENSI-
TIVE APPOINTMENT NECESSARY, AT WHICH TIME AN APPOINTMENT WILL BE
PLACED ON THE NEXT AVAILABLE CRY COMMISSION AGENDA; CONTAINING
A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE AND PROVIDING FOR AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Said proposed ordinance(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 httpJ/
miamffLigm2.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 ordinance(s). Should any person desire to ap-
peal 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 Com-
mission 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 April 15, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission chambers located at Mi-
ami 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 no-
tice 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 need-
ing 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. 43684
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 Mlami 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:
03/31 /25
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 31st day of
March in the year of 2025
laft IGbbCYN
Notary Public in and for the state of South Carolina,
residing in Beaufort County
AMY L. ROBBINS
NOTARY PUBLIC
SOUTH CAROLINA
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES 11-03-32
Extra charge for last or duplicate affidavits.
Legal doarner,t please do not destroy!
MOMS M5 11f 705
I MINN HERALD
I 7A
FROM PAGE 6A
MEDICAID
include investments, bank
accounts, and other things
that could be easily con-
verted to cash, but not a
primary home, vehicle or
household furnishings.
"You have couples who
have been married for
decades who have to go
through what we all a
'Medicaid divorce, just to
get access to these sup-
ports and services that
cannot be covered in any
other way," said Maria
Town, president of the
American Association of
People with Disabilities.
Town said that some
sates, including Mas-
sachusetts, have removed
me caps for people
with disabilities who want
to join Medicaid. She said
the cost of adding such
people to the program is at
least partially offset by the
premiums they pay for
coverage and the increased
taxes they contribute be-
cause they are allowed to
work more hours. "[ don't
think it has to be expen-
sive" for the state and
federal governments, she
said.
Congress has considered
a similar proposal to allow
people with disabilities to
work more hours without
losing their Social Security
disability benefits, but that
bill has not advanced.
Although most states
have Medicaid buy -in pro-
grams, enrollment is rela-
tively low, said Alice
Bums, a Medicaid analyst
at 10-F, a health informa-
tion nonprofit that includes
KFF Health News.
Fewer than 200,000
people nationwide are
covered under the options,
Bums said. "Awareness of
these programs is really
limited," she said, and the
income limits and paper-
work an dissuade poten-
tial participants.
In states that charge
premiums for Medicaid
buy -in programs, monthly
fees an range from Sl0 to
10% of a person's income,
according to a KFF analysis
of 2022 data.
The Iowa proposal to
remove income and asset
caps has dawn bipartisan
backing from legislators,
including a 20-0 vote of
approval from the House
Health and Human Serv-
es Committee. "This
Serv-
ices • with things both
parties are aiming to do,"
said state Rep. Carter
Nordnun, a Republican
who chaired a subcommit-
tee meeting on the bib-
Nordnan said he supports
the idea but wants to see
an official estimate of how
much it would cost the
state to let more people
with disabilities participate
in the Medicaid buy -in
program
Mecham, the citizen
activist lobbying for the
Iowa bill, said he hopes it
allows him to expand his
online marketing and
graphic design business,
"Zach of All Trades."
On a recent morning,
health aide Courtnie tinier
visited Mecham's modest
house in Pleasantville, a
taws of about 1,700 people
in an agricultural region of
central Iowa. [mler chatted
with Mecham while she
used a hoist to lift him out
of his wheelchair and ono
the toilet Then she
cleaned him up, brushed
his hair, and helped him
put on jeans and a John
Deere T-shirt She poured
him a cup of coffee and put
a straw in it so he could
drink it on his own, swept
the kitchen floor, and
wiped the counters. After
about an hour, she said
goodbye.
After getting cleaned up
and dressed, Mecham
rolled his motorized wheel-
chair over to his plain
wooden desk, fuel up his
computer, and began work-
ing on a social media video
fora client promoting a
book. He scrolled back and
forth through footage of an
interview she'd done, so he
could pick the best clip to
post online. He also shoots
video, takes photos and
writes advertising copy.
Mecham loves feeling
productive, and he figures
he could work at least
twice as many hours if not
for the risk of losing Med-
icaid coverage. He said
he's allowed o make a bit
more money than Iowa
Medicaid's standard limit
because he signed up for a
federal option under which
he eventually expects to
work his way off Social
Security disability pay-
ments.
There are several such
options for people with
disabilities, but they all
involve complicated paper-
work and frequent reports,
he said "Thu is such a
convoluted system that I
have to navigate to build
any kind of life for my-
self," he said. Many people
with disabilities are intimi-
dated by the rules, so they
don't apply, he said. "If
you get it wrong, you lose
the health care your life
depends on."
FROM PAGE 6A
GAZA
the mediators in Egypt and
Qatar," said Hayas chief,
Khalil al-Hayya. "We dealt
with it positively and ac-
ceptedit."
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Neanyahu's
office said in a statement
on Saturday that the coun-
try had submitted a "coun-
ter -proposal" to the cease-
fire mediators "in full coor-
dination" with the Trump
administration. The Associated Press
Reuters reported last
Monday that Egypt had put
forward a fresh proposal,
under which Mamas would
release five hostages each
week Mang anonymous
security sources.
After the first week,
Israel would implement a
second phase of the cease-
fire, according to the re-
port The proposal also
w.Krm.dty acluded a time-
line for all of the hostages
to be released and for Is-
rael to fully withdraw its
military from Gaza.
separately reported, citing
an Egyptian official, that
an American -Israeli citizen
would be among the Dos-
ages released from Gaza
a exchange for Israelis
allowing the resumption of
humanitarian aid into the
strip, a week-long pause in
fighting and the release of
hundreds of Palestinian
prisoners.
Israel cot off the flow of
aid to Gaza at the salt of
March, a move decried by
humanitarian aid agencies.
WHAT PEOPLE
ARE SAYING
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Neanyahu's
office said on Saturday that
"Israel conveyed to the
mediators a counter -pro-
posal in full coordination
with the US."
WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
It is unclear whether
both sides will agree to the
same ceasefire proposal,
and pressing questions
remain about whether
Hamas and Israel will re-
spect fresh agreements.
FROM PAGE 6A
TESLA
between the Testa Take-
down protesters and the
pro -Musk counter -protest-
ers.
A much larger crowd
showed up to protest in the
Windy City.
SCENE IN CHICAGO
A "few hundred"
protesters gathered in
downtown Chicago mosey
to oppose Musk's actions
as the DOGE director,
WLSTV reported
"Elon is not an elected
person, and he has no
authority to dismantle our
government and programs
that help us American
people,"protester and Chi-
cago resident Tina Smoth-
en told WIS.
Vicky Weidenkeller, also
of Chicago, wondered how
Musk can be so influential
in the Trump adminis-
tration.
"He's not an elected
official," she told WIS.
"What business does he
have taking over our gov-
er
nment?"
In the United Kingdom,
protests were held in Lon-
don, Bristol, Edinburgh
and Glasgow, The Stan-
dard reported.
The London protest
began at 11 a.m. local time
outside the Park Royal
Testa dealership in Wen
London.
Protesters there accused
Musk of trying to "destroy
democracy" and "shred
public s." They
carried placards saying,
"Don't buy Nazi cars" and
"Don't fund fascists," The
Standard reported.
About 50 protests were
scheduled in California,
including in Santa Clara,
where an out -of -sate vis-
itor old KTVU she knows
people who will be affect-
ed by DOGE actions.
"We are in the biggest
lie any of us have ever
been in," Cory Haynes old
KTVU. "I have friends and
family that are going to be
impacted if any of these
things that they are trying
to do get enacted."
'DOMESTIC TERRORISM'
The "global day of ac-
tion" protests against Testa
and Musk came after many
people have been arrested
and charged with vandal-
ism, arson, firearms of-
fenses and other serious
ones.
"Attorney General Pam
Bondi on March 20 called
such actions "domestic
terrorism" and announced
federal charges against
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three people.
One is accused of
carrying a suppressed
mg-15 rifle and throw -
about eight Molo-
tov coattails at a Testa
dealership near Salem,
Ore.
Mother is accused
to Wing to set several
Testa vehicles on fire
with Molotov cocktails
in Loveland, Colorado,
and the third is ac-
cused of vandalism
and setting Testa
charging stations on
fire in Charleston,
South Carotins.
PENALTIES
Each faces federal
felony charges, each of
which tarty minimum
penalties of between
five and 20 years im-
prisonment, but each
is presumed innocent
unless found guilty.
"TT* days of com-
mitting crimes without
consequence have
ended," Bondi said. "It
you join this wave of
domestic terrorism
against Tesla proper-
ties, the Department
of Justice will put you
behind bars"
FROM PAGE 6A
FUNDS
and her provost, Angela
olno, confused some
people when they seemed
to downplay the effects of
the university's agreement
with the government. A
transcript of the meeting
had been leaked to the
news media, as well as to
the Trump administration,
according to two people
familiar with the situation.
Shipman, a journalist with
two degrees from Colum-
bia, is taking charge of one
of the nation's preeminent
universities at an extraordi-
narily charged moment in
American higher education.
The federal government
is threatening to end the
flow of billions of dollars to
universities across the
country, many Of which are
facing inquiries from agen-
cies the Justice
Department and the De-
partment of Health and
Human Services.
But the Trump adminis-
tration's punitive approach
to universities is playing out
most acutely at Columbia.
cent to RAM,. stoma
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