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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNoticing February 13, 2025 CC MtgMcClatchy 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 The Herald -Sur. Fort Worth Star -Telegram The Fresno Bee The Island Packet The Kansas City Star Lexington Herald -Leader The Telegraph - Macon Merced Sim -Star Miami Herald El Nuevo Herald AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION The Modesto Bee The Sim News - Myrtle Beach Raleigh News & Observer Rock Hill I The Herald The Sacramento Bee San Luis Obispo Tribune Tacoma The News Tribtme Tri-City Herald The Wichita Eagle The Olympian Account I Order Number Identification Order PO Amount Cols Depth 13985 627898 Legal DisplayAd-IPL02123970 - IPL0212397 HB25-027 $3,157.49 3 10.18 in Attention: Erica Lee CITY OF MIAMI - HEARING BOARDS 444 SW 2ND AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR MIAMI, FL 331301910 OZamora@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 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: 01/27/25 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 27th day of Januar in the year of 2025 I bLbtra 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 document please do not destroy! MONDAY IANUARY 272025 I MIAMI HERALD I SA FROM PAGE 1A ANNUAL RIDE motorcycle dubs "Emmaus Bikers, Catholic and Proud" read one jacket, named after the Catholic spiritual retreat. "Knights on Bikes" is a Catholic motorcycle group with members from the Knights of Columbus. John Clavijo, who has been to several of the biker mass events, waited with friends near his take before the ride began. He said the annual group ride is a great way to merge his love for motorcycles with his Catho- lic faith. "t guess I'm like a rebom guy," said ©avijo. "Match- ing the bike riding with my spirituality.... It's fin.." Clavijo said it was the "Walk to Emmaus Retreat" that brought him back to his faith. "I was going through some really bad tunes.... I was in a really depressed state," he said. "This brought me back to life." All proceeds and dona- tions from the ride will go toward St Luke's Center, an alcohol and drug recovery facility that offers addiction treatment services and residential programs for adults The center is oper- ated by the Catholic Char- ities of the Archdiocese of Miami. "I've had people in church come up to me and tell me that St. Luke's helped their son or their brother. So it's a very wor- thy ministry for helping people to conquer drug addiction and addiction to alcohol," Wensld said. As the pre -ride mass Caere to a dose, W slit brought local police and safety officers onstage to review some safety precau- tions for the tide. Later, he joked that there were fewer police officers than expected m Diana, at left in the parked Jeep, and Santiago watch the Annual Archbishop Motorcycle Ride on Sunday in Donal. because of President Don- ald Tramp's arrival over the weekend. "We don't have as many as we've had in past years because the president ar- rived last night in Donal. I think he came to do some golfing or something," Wenski said. Wenski said he had an interestin motorcycles as a child. But it wasn't wmtil the age of 50 that he began riding as a hobby. He said he remembers seeing abig group of bikers on Interstate 95in Broward one day as he was coming home from a Haitian mass "I said, Boy, that looks like fin,' " Wenski recalled. His first lake — sold to him by alawyer friend who lives in Ocala —was a Hon- da Shadow. Weeventss- ally sold it to buy a Harley Davidson and never looked back. He really some of his favorite moments riding around sunny South Florida, including 10 years ago when the Port of Miami Tunnel was opening He says he was the fast motorcycle rider to go through it. "Right nexttome was Commissioner Pepe Dien, but I was a little bit ahead of him," Wenski said, laugh- ing. 'Ibis month, he rode over 300 miles on the west coast of Florida to Tampa for a retreat of Florida Catholic Bishops. The highlight of that trip, he says, was riding over the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa "R dears the cobwebs," he said. "You're concentrat- ing on riding So you don't have to concentrate on those things that bug you and worry we and all that time." Elizabeth Fox traveled from Delray Beach to join her boyfriend, RobertAr- mand, for the ride. Though Armand has participated in the ride in the past, it was Fox's fast time. But, she didn't appear nervous at all. "I'm very excited; it's very funListening to the arch- bishop in there give mass was fabulous," she said. With her shirt still wet with droplets of holy water from the archbishop's bless- ing Fax, who said she has been a Catholic all her life, was feeling grateful to be a part of the ride. "It's a beautiful day, they blessed us It's fora good cause. !hope that it all goes smoothly" she said. This story -was produced with financial support from Trish and Dan Bell and from donors comprising the South Florida Jewish and Muslim Communities, in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners. The Miami Herald maintains full editorial con- trol ofthis sork. Lauren Costantino: @misscostantino FROM PAGE IA INCINERATOR decision also comes at a time of mounting pressure on our County's overall budget" Miami -Dade has already spent millions of dollars on waste -management con- sultants to help navigate those obstacles, which have been part of the in- cinerator calculation from the start Environmental groups have urged Levine Cava to abandon the incin- erator plan in favor of waste reduction, but the mayor had previously said other options endangered the county trash system's ability to keep up with planned growth. There appeared to be the votes on the Miami - Dade Commission to build a modem replacement of the incinerator on the same location in Doral, until Eric Trump, who runs the president's hospitality business, came out against the plan days after his father won the 2024 elec- tion. The incinerator site sits about 3 miles from the Trump National Doral, a golf resort owned by the president. In a brief interview with the Miami Herald on Jan 15, Eric Trump predicted that the Doral incinerator push was all but dead. "We will fight it," he said after waning zoning approval for a resort expansion before the Doral City Council. "I'm not even sure we will have to. ... I think a lot of the sup- port to rebuild it, frankly, has been lost." Levine Cava last recom- mended rebuilding the incinerator in Dual on Nov. 22, writing that she "fmnly believes" the loca- tion was the best forMia- mi-Dade. She backed off that recommendation at the same time that Eric Trump became involved, telling him in a phone call on Nov. 25 that she would ask for a delay on a planned commission vote on that recommendation in order to consider other altema- tivm —including landfill options that some envi- ronmental groups were urging her to pursue. Her latest memo out- lines a new recommended solution: using tracks and trains to haul garbage out of the county for burial in landfills. That includes the existing network of private landfills Miami -Dade pays to use and the possibility of a new one the county hopes to build somewhere in Central Florida In her memo, Levine Cava said county staff have identified about 150 acres to build a $556 mil- lion landfill within 10 Notice of Early Public Review Of a Proposal to Support Activity in the 100-year Floodplain Flood Plain Executive Order 11988 On Flood Plain Management January 27, 2025 City of Miami Department of Housing & Community Development 444 SW 2nd Ave, 9th Floor Miami, Florida 33130 (305) 416-2080 This is to give notice that the City of Miami's Department of Housing & Community Development will be submitting an application to HUD for the following project which is located within the 100-year flood plain area. The City of Miami Department of Resilience and Public Works created a Low -Impact Design project that will assist with stormwaler management and extreme heat miN- gation in a concentrated pedestrian section of the city. The location is from SW 3rd Street to 4th Avenue and 5th Avenue Miami, FL 33130. The project will consist of: Tree planting in the Right of Way • Removal of compacted soil to create deep planting holes. Removal of asphalt may also be necessary • Addition of structural planting soil to planting hole. Depth should be at least 4'. • Plant a variety of native/indigenous trees. Size dependent on proxinity to utility lines. Sidewalk and roadway improvements • Restore surface with pervious concrete, asphalt, and/or pavers to accommodate parking and allow water infiltration for flood control and tree health. • Parking spaces on the street will be re -spaced to allow for tree placement with- out losing much needed parking. • Pedestrian area expansion (wider and improved sidewalks). This notice is required by Section 29(a)(4) of Executive Order 11988 for Fbodplain Management and is implemented by HUD Regulations found at CFR5520(b) for the HUD action that is within and/or affects a floodplain. a) Proposed rehabilitation will not displace or redirect flood waters in such away that would seriously impact other areas. b) All proposed activities will meet planning, permitting and zoning requirements of the city and county Additional program information may be obtained by contacting the City of Miami Department of Housing and Community Development at (305) 416-2080 between the hours of 8:00 are and 5:00 pm.Written comments pertaining to this Fbod plain Notice must be received by the Department of Housing and Community Development, 444 SW 2nd Avenue, 3rd Floor Miami, Fbrida, 33130, Attention: Gesette Guerra, Con- tracts Manager on or before February 11, 2025. AD NO. 18977 years. That's far less than the $1.5 billion the county planned to spend on the incinerator. Butoper- ating costs are higher. The Levine Cava memo states that operating costs for the landfill will run about $163 million a year, compared to the $15 mil- lion yearly for a modem Doral incinerator identi- fied in a 2023 county con- sultant's report. The memo outlines three options for the com- mission to explore as the board prepares for a spe- cial meeting on the incin- erator issue on Tuesday. The options she offered: continue using tracks and trains to ship county trash to landfills outside Miami - Dade; build a new county landfill in Central Florida; and build a new inciner- ator somewhere in Miami - Dade. Her memo leads off with a recommendation that only involves hauling trash o landfills: "I am recom- mending that we continue to tonghaut waste via truck and rail using our contract- ed capacity, while we con- tinue exploring options to build a landfill outside of Miami -Dade County." Ken Russell, a former city of Miami commission- er who now is a lobbyist for the local Sierra Club, said the environmental advocacy group "is very excited about the mayor's recommendation." He recently returned from a visit to Austin, Texas, where a landfill uses ad- vance technology to re- duce odors and environ- mental impact "We would really like to help the county recognize there is a new version of tandfilling that is different from what we've seen in the past," Russell said. MKanil-Dade Commis- sioner Raquel Regalado said Saturday that she thought the incinerator plan had become too ex- pensive based on current ft ancials. She pointed out that the county has been shipping most of its trash on tracks and trains to landfills across Florida since the incinerator fire two years ago. The option of Miami -Dude's owning its own out -of -county landfill would help with costs. "Right now, it makes f anciat sense," she said. "This is a solution for This is Levine Cava's third recommendation on what to do after the Febru- ary 2023 incinerator fue, which dosed a facility that had been operating since the 1980s. In August 2023, she recommended build- ing a replacement at an abandoned county airfield near the Broward County line, which drew a threat of a lawsuit from nearby Miramar. Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @dog hanks PUBLIC NOTICE A Well AO Y SCHEDULED NEEING OF THE MIAMI CITY COMfiSSION WLLla HAD ON February13, 2025 AT AM NM -ECM' CONY MISSION CF WATERS LOCA., AT MLMAI CITY HALL 3503PAN AMERCAN ORME, MWMI, FLORIDA 33133. TE NY£TNG WILL F0. T£ BEPaa4 tt ST LNE FOR MEMBERS OFTF-IS VON ON GAYS WEDDRE (WwAAL MAMMOVDOMMI MORMON X, YOURBE AND CRAMS_ 77 pot, CAST ONY FOR RESIDENTS W NG N TF£ cnv OF MIRAN RBLC COMMENT CAN AGENDA ADDS TOHEARD AT THIS METING CAN cnvA TH1VWN. ANOFECOM- RSm FORM FIND WLL BE DISTRIBUTED TO ® THE ELECTOFHCIALS AND THEE CPI POMNISTRATDN AND MADE PARTOFTERECYDTE❑ENO NEM SBMR RAMC COMMENT. THE ONNECONNBNTFOPMWLLOCCR MBN TE CHAIRPERSON CLOSES RBUC CONA NT FORT£ MATtlJG. "PEASE NSF FmPW WWWMWMMON.. CONK EETNGNSRd1LTIONS FOR DETAILED NSIRICTIONS ON HOW TO PROVIDE RgC CCNWENT UBNGTE ORME RAMC CONNENT FORA, RBLC CO.NBNTC NAMT. RAAS TO BEFEAD AT THIS reTNG MAYALSO BE PRO/RED KPERSON ON TF£ DAY OF T HE rEETNG AT CITY F W LL, 35w wPN ANERICAN molt MNMI, RBRD, SUBJECT-M ANX AND ALL RULES AND PRXEDUPES AS THE CRY MAY NGLENENT OR PNEND. PUBLIC CONNEM WLL BEGN AT APPROXMATAY gGO AM. A COPY OFT£ AGENDA FORTHE CRY COMMISSLNMEOWS WLL BE SALABLE AT 0TTPJMILMMFLDA2DGMw CRIZENS/DEFAULTASPX AT RS NEE NG ON FEFFMA1M 13, 20. AT 0110 AM, T E MOM CRY COMMON WLL CONSIDER TE FOLLOWING F AMM AND ZONNG REM: FILED 1591111 - A RESOLUTION OF TE MWMI CITY COyM6SION MANTIC / DEMING T E AREAL FLED BY THE CRY OF MANS MINING D6KR NEAT REVERSNG / AFRITANG TE PLANING ZONNG AND APPEALS EDAM'S DEGSDN ASSET FORM N RESOLUTION NO. PIA13R-23-117 REVERSNGTEZONNGADMNIS RATORS 1EKICATCN OF A CERTIFICATE USE PURSUANT TO SECTION 2-211 OFT£ CODE OF TE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, (' A, AS AMENDED CITY CODED/WO SECTION 712.1 OF OFD NANCE NO.13114, T HEZONNG ORDNANCE OF THE CRY OF MAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMENDED (AIAMI21 CODED, FOR T EPROPERTY LOCATED ATARsOAWN- SMARMS 5a30 NOPENVEST 12 MENE, MWMI, FLORIDA GPROPERT S, P D REVERSNG / UPHOLDING THEZONNG iEMOCATsN OF THE0EiTECATE OF USE NO.140OR£ 5 FTPROPERTY; MAKNG FNDNGS; A� CONFANNG A S6WBLITY CLAUSE, AND MOATS). FORAN EnwcllFFECITVE DATE FILE 15117028- AN ORDNANCECPTE NNW CRY COMMON, PIRENDNG ORDNANCE NO. 13114, TFE XCAN- NO ORDNANCE OF T E CRY OF MGM) FLORIDA, AS MOOED NMI COOP), SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDNG APNEAS, P- WYNWOOD NORTE NEIGHBORHOOD fEWTALPATCN DISTRICT 2 (xl0.21, BY MOONS SECTION 2 TIPPED "PURPOSE MO NEW, TO AMEND T E Ni0.2 DEMOLITION BOLD PRDOESS, BY AMMONS SECTION 3, TRIED "GENERAL TO ZONES: TO CARE/ METHODOLOGY FOR PNENG CALDLATIONS, BY A.ENDNG SECTION 6, TRUED "STANDARDS AND TABLES; 10l, 011 Ni0.2 STANDARDS RELATED TO LOT CO VERAGE, , BALCONY ANCROACFNBJTS, PAMNG AND LOADING, MNMM BJLDNG WIGH, PAWNS REQUIREMENTS FOR SUM I STRUCTURES, AND CROSS-BLDIX PASSAGES, FOR vt1CL,vu TICN AND ooNSISTENCY WITH MIAMI 21 STAN- dJOS; MN(NG FFDNGS;CCMANNGA SEVERN:11 1 CLAUSE; AND MOVONG FORM D7ECITIE DATE FILE D 17073-A RESOLUTION OFTFEWWI CRY OTWMOSICN,WRHATTADIbtNT0),ARFO/NGANEkCEP- TON WITH CONDITIONS TO ALLOW UPI. A CNE ttNDTED PERCENT (1 WM1 FARCES f®UCTICN N TE TOTAL NUMBER OF REQUITED PASSES SAS FORA STRUCTURE WITH A FUROR AEA OF TAN THOUSAND (10,(1001 PP FEET OR LESS LOOTED WITHAL ATReNSn CORRIDOR AREA PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 4, TARE 4 (T61 AND ARTrIE7, SECTION 7.126, OF ORDIWNGE NO.13114, THE ZONING ORDNANCE OFT£ CRY OF MIAMI, RDRDA AS AMENDED, FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION GEM:ALLY LOCATE AT 1445 NOR HAIEST 16AVENE, MWMI, PERON AS MILE PAGMO APPLY DESxiIDED N EXHOT T "A" ATTACHED AND NCORPOPRI®: WRNS FFDNCS; COMAN- NGASEAERABLTE 4114,F; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE Any person who receives compensatlon, remuneatw or expanses far conducting lobbying acVutliea is required to register as a lobbyist m the City Cie. prior to engaging in lobbying act mire before city staff, Inards, oorrmON8 or the Gib commies.. SDcob mg, pensce desire to appeal arm dec8b, of tie CM Canmissim wet, respect to mg, matter b be considered N this meeting, that person shell ensure Mat a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including all testimony and widen. upon wbbh any appeal may be based (F/S 283,0105). Pursuantt0 M0mi City Crude Section 2-31(0l, wherever a deduled Gib Cmmirelon meeting is cancelled or Is not bell due to lack of a quorum or otter emergency, a special City C aslonneethg will be autmetically scheduled forthe Tuesday rtrredateytdlavng Me cancelled meeting. In De event of one of the aforementioned circumstanc- es the tmec1al meatlrg would be held on February 18, 2025 at eru0 am. In Ore Ally Commlealon calibers loc.. at Miami City Mall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, FL 33133. AI of he dmduled agenda iems hum Mat cancelled meeting shall aubmaticaly be dmduled as an agenda Wm at the special CM Com- mission rteHmg.The Ctiy Clerk shall rattly he public of the special meeting that Is to take place by placing a notbe of the pedal City Commission meeting al he entrance of City Hall and the C.y's rain administraltve building, placing a notice on to City's websae, and, 1 feasible, placng an ad in anewspaper of general circulation before the specLe meeting on the inmsr00y following Tuesday. There stall be no a.itiounl notice by gbliration required for any su0 dmduled agenda itemhffi Is moved to the special CMCommission meeting. h accordance 0Mthe Americarevnmoiaabllniea Pete, 1990, 111 persons who require specialaosmmdatlons h orderb participate lnihismegingsboumcontacttF oftheciyclexal(3D5)25)d361 Mocelnolalerthan a. 0lbu,essdays prisbea iheproceedegrNuanaycaliv07lIa711 ffbddaleelayServicelnohterthantwo121 busressdaysphortottepmcesiing. Hearing Boa. Ad No FB-25-027