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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCC 2025-05-22 AdvertisementOlivera, Rosemary From: Official City Bulletin Sent: Friday, May 16, 2025 8:49 AM To: All City employees list Subject: Public Notice - May 22, 2025 Regular City Commission Meeting Attachments: FINAL_May_22_2025_Regular_CC_Mtg.pdf CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA NOTICE OF CITY COMMISSION MEETING A regularly scheduled meeting of the Miami City Commission will be held on Thursday, May 22, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, FL 33133. The May 22, 2025 City Commission Meeting will be broadcast live for members of the public to view on the City's website (www.miami.govltv), Facebook, X (formerly "Twitter"), YouTube, Comcast Channel 77 (Comcast only far residents living in the City of Miami), and AT&T Channel 99 (AT&T only for residents living in the City of Miami). For your information, public comment an agenda items to be heard at this meeting can be submitted via an online comment form and will be distributed to the Elected Officials and City Administration and made part of the public record. The deadline to submit public comment via the online comment form will occur when the Chairperson closes public comment for the meeting. Public comment on agenda items to be heard at this meeting may also be provided live at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, subject to any and all rules and procedures as the City may implement or amend_ Public comment will begin at approximately 9:00 a.m. "`Please visit https:lfwww.miami.govlmeetinginstructions for detailed instructions on how to provide public comment using the online public comment form.** A copy of the agenda for the City Commission meeting will be available at: http:llm iamifl. igm2. com ICitize n sIDefa u l t. as px 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 May 27, 2025, 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) no later than three (3) business days prior to the proceeding_ TTY users may call via 711 (Florida Relay Service) no later than three (3) business days prior to the proceeding. Todd B. Hannon City Clerk McClatchy The Beaufort Gazette The Belleville News -Democrat Bellingham Herald Centre Daily Tunes Sun Herald Idaho Statesman Bradenton Herald The Charlotte Observer The State Ledger -Enquirer Durham I 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 Mianu Herald El Nuevo Herald AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION The Modesto Bee The Sun News - Myrtle Beach Raleigh News & Observer Rock Hill ( The Herald The Sacramento Bee San Luis Obispo Tribune Tacoma ) The News Tribune Tri-City Herald The Wichita Eagle The Olympian Account # Order Number Identification Order PO Cols Depth 33010 660954 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323090 - IPL0232309 43709 (1 File 17378) 05-2 2 7.73 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 Thurs- day, May 22, 2025. commencing at 9:0 AM., in the City Commission Cham- bers located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133: ORDINANCE AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER 36/ SECTION 36-4 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMEND- ED ("CITY CODE'), TITLED "NOISE/OPERATION OF RADIOS, PHONOGRAPHS. OR OTHER SOUND -MAKING DEVICES; BANDS, ORCHESTRAS, AND MUSI- CIANS -GENERALLY, EXEMPTION" AND CHAPTER 36/SECTION 36-5 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "NOISE/SAME - HOURS OF OPERATION OF JUKEBOXES. RADIOS. ETC.; EXEMPTION FOR EVENTS ON CITY -OWNED PROPERTY, RE- LAXATION," TO CREATE ALTERNATE HOURS FOR RESTRICTIVE TINES AND ALTERNATE DISTANCES FOR SOUND FOR THE MIAMI RIVERSIDE SPECIALTY DISTRICT CONTAINING A SEVERABILTTY CLAUSE; AND PROVIDING FOR AN 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 am. and 5 pm., or httpi/ miamRl.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 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 May 27, 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 canceled 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 stall 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 - 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 6. Hannon City Clerk Ad No. 43709 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: 05/12/25 Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes. M 04'y CGS `v -o Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 16..4 12�b�r� Notary Public in and for the state of South Carolina, esiding 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! Mara MAW I MDIWY W88100 FROM PAGE 3A ARTISTS "She's our coach," one participant chimed in wa rmly. The program is funded by philanthropist E.A. Michelson, and the Perez Museum is just one of over 25 institutions with similar programs. Since 2013, E.A. Michelson Philanthropy has invested over 615 million in these programs. Airas, a retired design- er, painted a face in a purple box. Aims said the figure in his painting is supposed to represent a survivor. "She is saying, 'You can punch and bruise me at you want, but I can overcome it.' " Marie Vickles, the mu- seum's director of education, the pro- gram tries to raise aware- ness about ageism and the importance of com- munity for older adults. "The demand for these programs is through the roof," she said. Participants have to submit applications an- swering questions about why they want to partici- pate and how they will benefit from the program. Nicole Combeau, the program coordinator, says she tries to pick a diverse group of participants — andwith art experie some without. Since the program began in 2023, it has served over 224 people from over 20 countries. She usually gets 40-70 applications and accepts only 15 students. This year's cohort in- cluded budding artists from all over the world — including Peru, Bosnia and the United Kingdom. Alumni of the program include federal judges, surgeons and Colombian immigrant mothers who spent thew working years in textile factories in New York. Combeau says the pro- gram aims to challenge the idea that life ends at retirement. "Thu is a way to make sure they're still active, that they don't fall into the stereotype of disintegrating," she said. Jacqui Love Thomell, 77, says that the most profound suggestion she received from Ferrer was to take her time while painting. "In slowing down, l saw HOAG PORK arbre"rwee.da Nicole Combeau, program coordinator at Perez Art Museum Miami. welcomes student artists and guests during the PAMM Creative Aging Series: Spring Painting Showcase things differently," she said. But it has not been without difficulty for Thomell, as she has trou- ble holding her hand steady and also struggles with her vision. But the group's encour- agement has made it ea"You just feel like you can do it because every- one is cheering you on," she said. Mirna De Los Santos, 82, a mother of three from the Dominican Re- public who worked for two decades as a social worker for government agencies, in tears as she spoke to her class- mates and teacher on the final working day before the exhibition. She said that after her first day of class, she wanted to leave because she had never painted in her life and was intimi- dated by the other artists who had more experi- ence. thought to myself, '1 don't belong,' " she said. But Farrar encouraged her, telling her that her painting was "amazing." De Los Santos said that motivated her to contin- ue. As she presented her final artwork to her class- mates, she said, "I know it's not the best in the world, but for me it's a masterpiece." Two women, Maja Guzina, 64, and Macar- ena Maiman, 59, applied and were accepted into the class together. Guzina survived thyroid cancer, and her friend Macarena survived breast cancer. "We fought and we are here," said Guzina. Children, grandchil- dren and friends all gath- ered with the students in the Perez Gallery on a Saturday aftemoon for the final exhibition, con- gratulating each other and celebrating their accomplishments. The organizers of the program were celebrating this cohort of artists, but were also celebrating the news that thew funding will be extended for an- other two years. At the exhibition, Fer- rer the stu- dents to keep making art. "Go home, ford a space in your house and keep going back to painting. Make a space for it in your life," she told the artists. Clara -S- ophia Daly: @clarasophiadaly FROM PAGE 1A RADIO MARTI ven retractors were called back to work. But the station's shortwave radio signal, which is less likely to be jammed by Cuban authorities, has not been restored. An attendant at the North Caroline -based Greenville Transmitting Station, which carries the station's signal, confirmed to the Miami Herald that transmitters used to broadcast Radio Marti's shortwave signal to the island are off. A source knowledgeable about the station's internal decisions who was not authorized to speak publicly said that the station's programming is available only online and through a secondary AM signal transmitted from Marathon in the Florida Keys. The AM signal is easier for Cuban authorities to jam. The person said that only one contractor had been called back to work to ensure the safety of the old technology used at the Greenville station. Last month 14ymedio, an independent news outlet based in Cuba, reported that no signal was detected in Havana or in Villa Clara, in central Cuba, on the shortwave frequency on which Radio Marti used to broadcast. Though full-time staff- ers weback to work at the station's office in Donal, Radio Marti has not been able to resume its full programming. In recent days, x - tractors previously fired have been called back to work, but some produce videos for social media or write for the news site and e not involved in radio - related work. The U.S. Agency for Global Media did not respond to a request for comment. Trump's order to reduce the U.S. Agency for Global Media's "performance of [its] statutory functions and associated personnel to the minimum presence and function required by law" has upended the work of Voice of America, Radio Marti and other stations that the agency faded. Several employees have sued the Trump administration over its plans. Central to their claims is how the agency's top lead- ership has interpreted the functions mandated by Congress. The 19831aw creating Radio Marti spe- cifically names the Mara- thon facility and states it can be used for radio broadcasting to Cuba. It also says the station can use frequencies other than AM, but it appears to tie their use to a requirement to broadcast Voice of America ntent. Voice of America is still off the air and is the subject of sever- al lawsuits. In recent years, the Office of Cuba Broad- casting has tried to mod- ernize the stations — redi- recting re es from controversial television programming that could not be watched on the island because of signal jamming — to produce videos for Marti Noticias and social media. While past U.S. adminis- trations and some mem- bers of Congress have questioned the spending on radio broadcasting, Cuban American mem- bers of Congress have supported Radio Marti as a vehicle for delivering news to an island where Internet access is expen- sive, power blackouts are common and the govern- ment shuts down the in- temet during protests. Nora G- rimes Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameerorres FROM PAGE 3A BIRDS eagle hatched and is being raised by its parents at the zoo's Amazon and Beyond exhibit. Harpy eagles are the most powerful birds of prey on Earth, with talons the size of grizzly bear claws. The new chick and its parents can be seen through a CCTV image projected in real time at their habitat. A pair of Abdim's storks also hatched in the zoo's Wings of Asia Aviary on April 27 and 28. Abdim's storks are among the smallest species of storks, reaching a height of only about 3 feet. The chicks can be seen in their nest from the public viewing areas in the aviary, where the parents are caring for them. Deman Cetoute: 305-376-2026, @devo n_ceeoure ern M MOIL FLORIDA NOTICE M PUBLIC MMOOG A p2lb Memos .yI ell held by the City Cosmos. ofNe C0 o1 Maori. Rec. on Dmradry, Nil 22, 2026, M9d0 AM. at GN Hall, . at 3500 Pan Amman On.. Mani, Sonde, 33133 M. see purposed grant. the SON, A RESOLUTION O THE NAM CIO COMASSION, WITH TTAOEEar131. AUTOS.. THE CITY MANAGER TO EEECI3IE ERE MOO 0 0, AGREEMENT, N r GI NINI.N THE ATTACHED F,vf WTM NAM-DADE COIN aCIXMT01, A POLITICK SLROVISON OF 71E STATE CFILOiCA. IER/GNCT.EMFM ma /GROWERS TNT WAS MEWED RTSWM TO RESOLUTION No. 07O272, ADOPTED MAY 102ro7,TO CONTNU TO ALLOW TIE Ott OF MAN Earn TO RECEIVE ITS ipmO+ OF MINOR. SHAPE RAGS ERODE CHARTER COUNTY TRASK' SOON SUNOS FOR TReNSPORNTON AND TRANSIT TO ALION THE USE O THE ONTO RJR ON DEWOC IRANSPORTATCh SERVICES, m SEFNE MRCSS. IESGENTS, ANO WORKERS BY RAAnOM. A CONVENIENT, EFFICIENT LOBO, OPTION Tut AREAS OF DOWNTOWN µO WITHIN -RE CLICON TGGROVESC Nil meeting and may b heard wtn respect to De amoosed resolution ..onto env wrsan mire b appeal any ...so el the CN Cisaon wN respect m amwproceed..mer b N cons.. at Om rob. wort, of Nilproceed..s made talw,r rg al s :mom are eaence upon whom any woe*** be based IFS. 236.01051. Pursuant to Nora Cm Code Seat 2-331o1. o0se"er a scheduled C.y Ommason nee00 is cancel. or is ro held cis to e btu 3 a p,w0m al 001 lsoesesoo mnsM 031 to aumnalKM mheduled o Hie Tues., mmmuxN blbwsq Ne cancel. meeting 'n the event of one of Me forernestm. orcurrostances...he Kcal mem. soule • m hey 27, 2025, at 9. a.mn the Lay Cortassa. chato.rs OC.ay Hail, 3500 Pan Amerman Doe . Men, Four 3313T. All ate:roMao bed agenda baneawn Nat came. mceDgman pawn5laN b steederf as m agenda Mena ire apecal C N Comumn mrtg. Tie Cb Cans slat welly the pubic d the ucat meeting Nan s m la. piece 4y pae.3 a rape d the apical CM C1tnsem mwr aV de Dater, d ON W, amx CNs at. adonis....,, Dec. a hoes, on Masher .onil apna..e.MTM WK.y m.ag on to mn.aerr bxoa,g rNmsy. mere slurs. no amemralanno. w0sxrnsm„ re0aery such sewn. meea ,mm seal a mom b the apeo.Il uN cwtnNlon seetg. In accordance wit) 11,4mercane .. asaances An d IOC, parsons contact Me OM. of Ste nO M Clerk at OKI 250-53611 Damsel no 4er Man five RI °Knees days par to the prrcm:fog rT0 sass trey use ea 711 Pod. Ref y.c.mel no Or Man Me RI Wane. days ore b to w0ce el g. 11. Kass De s A cinereous vulture hatched at Zoo Miami onApril 21. In the wild, it lives in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. CRY OF MUM, RreOA NOTICE OF /SOLO NEARING A public hearing will 0h,W 504,0CityC mold re CD d Mans. Floc da on Thursday, Mow 22, 2025. at 900 AM. al CM Nan, oda,e0 at 3500 Pan American Doe, Mea.FOW, 33133.Ne purposed 9ramn9 de blkMry- A IESOL TON OF TIE MAM CITY CO.MSSON. WITH ArTACIAENT151, AFTER A DUN NOTICED PUBLIC IEMNG, AUIrt-NE.0 DREer. TI NO E On TAKE MANAGER TO TAANY AND ALL ACTO3M) .NECESSARY m EJO®TOOlLY FOXIEST TE MVMMMCE COU+TvRRIMENT OF RUNSFORILTODA N D MCCMCCWORKS TURN, COVS,DOER THE PR POSED TIRO RAW 20 02 0TONS 840 WANE T0E REWIRED RESI0 DEER CONOI0 .0 NO W 0(70 TIE BALO0NG PROCESS W ORDER TO EXPEDITIOUSLY ROCS® WITH THE CESEav AND CONSTRJCION O TRAFFIC CASSO3 DEVICES AT T WENTY.TAO R21 LOCATORS IN THE RSBRni DISTRICT 1 SOO IORI00o3. AS MORE MmhXAA LY CE• SCREED N EX BT'A• ATTAp®AND NWROPPTED; °FELTIG THE CRY CLERK TO3IOOACERTIFIED DOPY OFTIETHS...TON TORE mFw °MOTOR. NI stemmed sera. are trwiled ho appear., the mem. aid wNMw wM reaped c see proposed reWbpn. Should any person demo ho appal eft rddwrespectbanyweerbecon.- neGMCN.mb neng. that enNil person .Moll sure a re..0N ofthe • ed.ps . made maema all testimony and ewpr worm Man W YN! may de bred aS Mb Otofi1 WeexbMMeot Cab Secbn 2131o1. Moser a sdmdad City Cony nommen meet, . canoe. or e no had duo to a IAA of a pool* or other m,epenet a meet CM Comn aeon 0mtg ,t ba aom,.oah axd- dbd br 0. Toomey .nv004.ey following the canoe*. roe en y. InMe event one of1 dos, ., owed acuerxaspec.ees, e spetme.. would held on Me0 27, 2025, a19O0 am. n to Cm Co misson U.n°aa located 'w ON Fol. 3500 Pan Mennen Cute, Mom. Floras 33133. MI d to ah.. aserma sem, Iron) Mat carrel. mean., Mon andna.aler ache.. as an agenda non at Me'penal CMy Gunn meetem The ONCwns tat m,N see pub. of Me spec. rreetg MN 0 to Ka olaca 05 Neerg a noes d re mecca CM Cammoo meeting ot Ma a oars d CoyHa15 a roam Krems. burdemalafiganoMe on the Citys w. . WOO, nee.6 or SINK.a Ikon tel. am specw meeting an Me cones.. INdeng Tandy.. mare shall Mta 00 pbmraw.s rabm spa r am cedued aVer.ern s a motemat spaaalcm Comma.n nrmg. Ne Ammons wm owbnnes AO d t990, persons need- agares s bpaKpate Na pmceedrg may contact de Mood,*CN Gerk at n051250.5361 Noce, noseer era, foe DI b usnw days0 the r.e.fig111,sere maycaw ac07t1 For... Servo. no b. n Doe taSI erns by. peter Mlle proceed, LORI REDOLLOPMENT DISTRICT COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY PLEASE ALL TAIE NOTICE Nate Boarder Carnnevn Meet n. Nm. eOr R.ercaR preCrum m CwnM Redevelopment Agency CF. a sched- uled 1M1..ay. May 22, 2025, at 9'.30 am. or Cernimr at Ne Marts C.N Hall, busted at 3500 Pan Amerwn Doe, Mama. Roma 3J hJJ arena.KerKed persons are ins. to For more nbrmanm, please con- tact do CMA CPA <OK at 13051679-6SO Ad No.um5 la . Jones, Exams. D.emr Cyr. Redeebpmm 0.smct Camaaxty Rede0eavrex A9a0Y CITY OF MIAMI FLORIDA NOTICE OF PROPOSED OROR1ANCE(SI Maces teem gion NI MCPy R.mialen d Ma City cl Men FHd. ¢Mpat. bbw.g 002' MM on Mmdi. 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O7t6 Toad B... on Cm Perk M M aa7t2 Todd El Haman Coy Cork M Na a709 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 I 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 E1 Nuevo Herald AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION The Modesto Bee The Sun News - Myrtle Beach Raleigh News dr 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 Cols Depth 33010 660982 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323250 - IPL0232325 43710 3 5.00 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 The Miami City Commission will hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, May 22, 2025, at 9.00 AM, to consider the award of a contract to the Florida Not for Profit Corporation listed below through Anti -Poverty grant funds from the District 5's share of the City of Miami's Anti -Poverty Initiative Program. Martin Luther King Economic Development Corporation, a Florida Not for Profit Corporation, for their Incubator Cafe Refurbishment project, and to consider the City Manager's recommendations and finding that competitive negotiation methods are not practicable or advantageous regarding these issues: Martin Luther King Economic Development Corporation -incubator Cafe Refurbishment Inquiries regarding this notice may be addressed to Melissa T. Sutherland, Administratoe Assistant II, Office of Grants Administration, at (305) 416-1005. This action is being considered pursuant to Section 16-85 (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 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 City Commission meeting of May 22, 2025 at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida. 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 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 March 27, 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 man administrative building, placing a notice on the City's website, and, H 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.ln 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. TV' 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. 43710 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: 05/12/25 Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes. M aw y Ca-vt-ro Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 la ,her 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 dharge for last or duplicate affidavits. Legal doomed please do not destroy) MOIQM MIOO ME MAIM WALD I St FROM PAGE 3A BENEFITS That includes SNAP, which federal data shows helps an avenge of 42 million people afford food each month. It also advocates for ways to cut Medicaid, the federal - state program that con- nects 71 million people to subsidized health care, including efforts in Idaho and Montana this year. EGA's proposals often seek to limit who taps into that aid and the help they receive. Those back- ing the group's mission say the goal is to save tax dollars and help people lift themselves out of poverty. Critics argue that FGA's proposals are a backdoor way to cut off aid to people who need it and that improving the affordability of healthful food and health care is a better fix. Now, FGA sees more room for change under the Trump administration and the Kennedy -led health department, call- ing 2025 a "window of opportunity for major reform," according to its latest annual report. A VISION FOR LIMITING BENEFITS Tarren Bragdon, a former Maine legislator, founded FGA in 2011 to promote policies to "free millions from govem- ment dependency and open the doors for them to chase thew own Amer - an Dream," he said in a statement on FGA's web - site. The main founda- tion, based in Naples, started out as a staff of three with about 360,000 in the bank. As of 2023, it had a budget of more than 315 million and a team of roughly 64, according to the latest available tax documents, and that's not counting the lobbying aura. The foundation got early funding from a grant from the State Policy Network, which has long backed right - leaning think tanks with ties to conservative activ- ists, including the broth- ers Charles and David Koch (David Koch died in 2019). FGA declined several interview requests for this article. In recent years, the nonprofit helped draft a 2017 Mississippi law that intensified eligibility screening for public aid that made it more difficult for some appli- cants to qualify, the Jack- son Free Press found. The group successfully pushed a 2023 effort in Idaho to impose work requirements for food benefits that health care advocates said led some recipients to lose access. The same year, the group helped pass SNAP restrictions affecting eligibility in Iowa. Since those restrictions have taken effect, the Food Bank of Iowa has seen a record number of people show up at its pantries amid rising grocery prices and a scaling back of COVID-19 pandemic -era federal support, said An- nette Hacker, a vice pres- ident at the nonprofit. Part of the FGA's strat- egy is to pass legislation state by state, with the idea that the crush of new laws will increase pres- sure on the federal gov- ernment. For example, states can't limit what food is purchased through SNAP without federal approval through a waiver process. And in the past, some of FGA's efforts have stalled because states never got that ap- proval. Kennedy's agenda now echoes some of EGA's key messages, and he has said states can expect approval of their waivers. Meanwhile, congressional leaders are eyeing nation- wide Medicaid cuts and work requirements, which FGA considers among its major issues. The founda- tion also has a connection working inside the ad- ministration: Its former policy director, Sam Adolphsen, was tapped to advise President Donald Trump on domestic mat- ters. "We're excited to fight from Topeka to Washing- ton, D.C., as opposed to Washington, D.C., to Topeka," Roy Lenardson, FGA's state government affairs director, told Kan- sas lawmakers in Febru- ary when testifying in support of SNAP legisla- tion there. SHAPING STATE POLICIES In the states, FGA has become known as a con- servative "thought lead- rsaid Brian Colby, vice president of public policy for Missouri Budget Project, a liberal nonprofit that provides analysis of state policy issues. "Con rvatives used to try to chop away at the federal budget," Colby said. "These guys are doing it at the state lev- el." In its 14 years, FGA has created a playbook to shape state policy dis- cussions about pubkc benefits behind the sces. In Montana, re- tired Republican legisla- tor Cary Smith, who worked with FGA, said not all of the think tank's ideas split along party lines. "They offer a buffet of options," he said. "Their agenda is making govern- ment accountable; it's in the name." He said that besides drafting legislation, FGA pr ovides talking points and data to help pol- icymakers support their arguments. "They would go in and would say, 'This is what Medicaid fraud is prrY OF MIAMI FLORIDA NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING T. Man C., un.-.m..a w a we WV. on nu4. ear et ours. a9m wa b m.ere" wO a aware es dart. w.o,ra amen n dart team ten 0. Puvt ea wan a 9s b, a,a."M1 anwrnry SA. rnv+n x,.,m..un«x:yEnsans:o,newrteweaYr.n taufata PeaCaaneen..tweoane Gb fr.., 1. dowIdar muNw.n a,aowwaaansa... nea an*namrcnnaoia wrid Mann I.e... rxamc iawnowe Caoae., - taro. cad xws9snea a9ireS dee.. wreaa me ea.nes. Ss sTw.lenst ewne.. M.e.e a wad aewM bea.ta at r. ,avee., ,.do,vu.nb9...ro. tadsW atdtmawCryna.nsan eanara..0eu1.m9tM _ wauuybreaysas9nww.w.lawnbnq,oatl maaa,aM NC... INN.* ..wed dwa.M rear)CM Weaa...luatb g AM NW Oh slelt S. Manm....aa.e raw 11.14. r ..Cl.r.a.tenmm.mwCa,ean.am1.rma.o .w.eaaibear On cry Genneo..w mead toa..rbz wana9�..na'awwa�wmat eieae w a. un doodled a..ssto . m nano w e+uno.e.a r.e 0On aaaT ea' arwe,.y be eaa aS. ral ma, Pussontio sea,. 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Your office medical records will be maintained at 9100 SW 87th Ave, Miami, FI 33176. To obtain your office medical records Please Call 305-554-7679 costing us; " Smith said. "That would be the num- ber you'd want to use in your bill." In January, FGA re- leased a memo for states to "stop taxpayer -funded junk food." In February, Stateline reported that Wyoming Republican state Rep. Jacob Wasserburger said the group asked him to spon- sor a SNAP restriction bill. The state sponsor of similar legislation in Mis- souri has repeated at least one of FGA's talking points, as reported by the Missouri Independent. In Arizona, Republican Rep. Leo Biasiucci, who spon- sored the SNAP legisla- tion there, told KFF Health News that FGA was behind that bill as well. Opponents of such bills argue that the proposals are not as simple as they sound. Amid debate on a SNAP bill in Montana, Kier. Condon, with the Montana Food Bank Network, testified that the legislation would force grocery store work- ers to sort through what counts as soda or candy, "which could result in retailers not participating in SNAP at all." State lawmakers tabled the Montana bill in April. Montana legislators also easily passed a bill to extend the state's Med- icaid expansion program even after FGA began publishing papers as- serting that the program was "breaking" Monta- na's budget. FGA had presented data saying ost Montanans on the program did not work, which state data refutes. Ed Bolen, who leads food aid strategies at the left -leaning Center on Budget and Policy Pri- orities think tank, said FGA has a pattern of proposing technical changes to existing laws and "unworkable work requirements" that cause people to lose benefits. After working with policymakers in Kansas for a decade, FGA helped pass legislation that limit- addhed ow long people can cash assistance, ed work requirements to SNAP, and banned the state from spending fed- eral or state funds to promote public aid. Many of Nose changes came through 2015 legislation known as the "HOPE Act" drafted by FGA, The Washington Post reported. Analysis from Kansas Appleseed, an advocacy organization for low- income Kansans, found that the SNAP caseload sharply declined after the bill was enacted because of the new hurdles, drop- ping from 140,000 households in January 2014 to 90,000 as of January 2020. "It's death by a thou- sand cuts," said Karen Siebert, an adviser for Harvesters, a community food bank network in Kansas and Missouri. "Some of these FGA pro- posals are such complex policies, it's hard to argue against and to explain the ripple effects." In 2024, the foundation produced more than two dozen videos featuring state politicians from across the nation touting the organization's goals and dozens of research papers arguing that public benefits are wrecking state budgets. FGA also has its own polling team to produce data in the states it's working to influence. The organization re- leased a list of 14 states it labeled as "redder and better" places to exert more influence. The list included Idaho, where the group has four regis- tered lobbyists in the state Capitol. In 2023, FGA helped present and successfully lobby for legislation there to require people receiv- ing food aid to work at least 80 hours a month. The organization called the resulting law "land- mark welfare reform" years in the making. And this year, Idaho lawmakers passed more requirements for people enrolled in Medicaid who can work. FGA staffers worked with one of the co-sponsors of the legisla- tion on a similar bill last year that failed, then again this year. A com- promise bill passed with FGA', backing, marking another victory for the foundation. David Lehman, a lob- byist for the Idaho Association of Community Providers, which represents health organizations that have opposed FGA bills, said Idaho illustrates how FGA works with sympa- thetic lawmakers in con- servative states to gain more ground. "They're pushing an already rolling rock downhill," he said. KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journal- ism about health issues and is one of the core oper- ating programs at KFF — an independenr source of health policy research, polling and journalism. 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. CGCe048630 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF THE FISCAL YEAR 2025/2026 BUDGET; AND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER THE IMPOSITION OF MAINTENANCE AND OPERATION REGULAR ASSESSMENTS, ADOPTION OF AN ASSESSMENT ROLL AND THE LEW. COLLECTION, AND ENFORCEMENT OF THE SAME; AND NOTICE OF REGULAR BOARD OF SUPERVISORS' MEETING. m. F.. n DO.low.. fim cc enne w June,. ern is eac ar Fe, l,ao ariamO xv 'Flora Na.. tl. ofoul. hesseng • beng con.l. pares. us CT.. 190 ; lords Slab., T. nevi rot WM upon the Lands located ...el. Dann a cispotron 01.non ends ns 'neon Oen. asnuder I. Woo.", of an ••••pireeni may ard In ore.. I or . levy. cobn .3 n and eniorcement d .e assessmonLs Y. second .t. Neat, s sea, le, aama+ eung.aye..y a.en7men n h se..ea by meea. 9eee A wwo. board puesc meet. d re 0.nm*AI ...i9..em inn 9®n ma, con., aura « o.dn.e..rer nor.owM pre SebreI wqa. pa 1001 .n Former Maness Nun. 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Bo. wth rm... a nrean.Mal rson we need a "armedmooed or proceed.,Ihal • r 7113 . a a.etm...aes.u. +nen may OW ^r. to Fe to wrewr n, riny.e....men matter cons.. , IN "ten L �--t eera ,n • au of enS. ....a. lave. emanaere wn. new. of spa. al the oubsc son ay need lo "na na i Y• 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 I 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 Cols Depth 33010 660973 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323160 - IPL0232316 2 4.95 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 TO THE PUBLIC A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami, Flori- da on Thursday, May 22, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission Chambers at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, for the purpose of waiving the requirements of obtaining sealed bids for the provision of Martin Luther King Jr. BNd/Butterfy Gardens beautification services. Inquiries from other potential sources of such a package who feel that they might be able to satisfy the City's requirements for this item may contact Tahlia Gray, Procurement Analyst, at the City of Miami Procurement Department at (305) 416-1912. 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 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 May 27, 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, 1 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. 43711 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: 05/12/25 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-vy Ca s, -va Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 ta.e KaberN� 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 chargefor lost oi duplicate affidavits Legal document please do not destroy) MONDAY MB G 1025 I MR HERALD 7A FROM PAGE 6A NAMES outrage from Iranians at inclusive "East Sea." home and across the dias- Also in Asia, the Taiwan port, while finding favor Strait remains contested, among Arab states. For with China claiming that it many Iranians, the name is has "sovereignty, sove- • e of national pride reign rights, andluris- and a symbolic link to the diction" over the 110-mile- ountry's unique legacy of wide strait, a strategic the Persian Empire in a waterway that links the region surrounded by Arab East China Sea with the neighbors. The Arabian South China Sea. Taiwan Gulf, they say, could also rejects Beijing's claim, create confusion with the insisting the strait constitu- nearby Arabian Sea, the tes international waters. northern region of the Across the globe, Cerrito- lndian Ocean. rial disputes range from The sea bordered by local skirmishes to major North and South Korea, standoffs marked by Japan, and Russia is also dashed lines on maps and the subject of a naming deep-rooted claims of dispute -with Japan insist- sovereignty. Perhaps the ing it be caged the "Sea of most visible and widely Japan," while South Korea discua ed dispute over the advocates for the more past few years has been OM. ate Moroccan soldiers watch a motorbike pass the sand wall separating Morocco and Mauritania in the western Sahara on a leg of the 23rd Paris Dakar rally on Jan. 8.2001. between Israel and the of the disputed areas are Palestinian territories. marked by foreign rule, In contested spaces while others face mass around the world, rival displacement, sprawling governments, actors and refugee camps, or wide - movements continue to spread persecution and press thew claims, often discrimination - stoking unrest and re- The larger region of shaping geopolitics. Some Weston Sahara, which Morocco refers to as "Mo- roccan Sahara," was colo- nized by Spain in the 14th century. A string of border conflicts has shaped the region's modem history, including the 1963 Sand War between Algeria and Morocco and Morocco's 1975 "Green March," when thousands of civil- ians, backed by the Moroc- can military, advanced into the disputed territory of Westem Sahara. The March, and the Madrid Accords agreement between Spain, Morocco and Mauritania that fol- lowed, signified regime change and the forceful displacement of majority of Sahrawis, many of whom uow live in refugee camps n Algeria. Farther east, fresh clash- es between India and Pa- kistan have thrust Kashmir back into the spotlight. Kashmir, high in the Hima- layas, is home to some 13 million people - about 7 million in Indian -adminis- tered Kashmir and 6 mil- lion in the Pakistani -ad- ministered region- India and Pakistan both claim the area in its entirety, while China is a third, albeit minor, party to the conflict over the resource - rich territory. The Kashmir conflict dates back to 1947, when British colonial vide in India ended and the sub- continent was partitioned into the sovereign states of India and Pakistan. Jammu and Kashmir, a region now administered by India and known as IRK, chose to accede to India after tribal militias backed by Pakistan moved in, leading to the first Kashmir war between the neighbors. FROM PAGE 6A LOST FUNDING federal funding for HIV prevention - about Sl billion annually. The Trump administration's May 2 budget proposal for fiscal 2026 takes aim at DEI initiatives, including m its explanation for cut- ting 53.59 billion from the CDC. Although the pro- posal doesn't mention HIV prevention specifical- ly, the administration's drafted plan for HHS, released mid -April, elim- inates all prevention fund- ing at the CDC, as well as funding for Trump's initia- tive to end the epidemic. Eliminating federal funds for HIV prevention would lead to more than 143,000 additional people in the U.S. becoming in- fected with HIV within five years, and about 127,000 additional people dying of AIDS -related causes, according to esti- matesfrom the Founda- tion for AIDS Research, a nonprofit known as am - (AR. Excess medical costs would exceed S60 billion, it said. Eldridge Dwayne Ellis, the coordinator of the mobile testing clinic at My Brother's Keeper, said that curbing the group's serv- ices goes beyond HIV. "People see us as their only outlet, not just for testing but for confidential conversations, for a shoul- der to cry on," he said. "I don't understand how someone, with the stroke of a pen, could just hap- hazardly write off the health of millions." Ellis came into his role in the mobile clinic hap- hazardly, when he worked as a construction worker. When he became sudden- ly diary and unwell on a job, a co-worker suggested that he visit the organiza- tion's brick -and -mortar clinic nearby. He later applied for a position with My Brother's Keeper, inspired by its efforts to give people help themselves. support to For example, Ellis de- scribed a young man who visited the mobile clinic recently who had been kicked out of his home and was sleeping on couches or on the street. Ellis thought of friends he'd known in similar situations that put them at risk of HIV by increasing the likelihood of trans- actional sex or drug use. E aerltlASY OV EITO W Ny W 1K .037 4301.14140171111.1.11.10.00. AGENCY PLEASE ALL TAKE NOTICE. Ocer0 Cmm,naersmw000rnSe. end Ovoml6AM. Community Pmmebm1n Agents (SEOPw OM a trace on Tw1Mar. 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MENEM The an. a Camlme en Tseard-1 a N Omen Redeebpn,nl OHbict Comm . Ra-...welt Ago.. CCM') vent ham a Rude Hear. an A MY d.0r • 2055, at H.am. or armxa Nof. n do CM Comma. Menem too at Math Cie.) 3500 Pan Mennen Dame, Aran, R 33133. The Boardtr mnaale N award a gran Ramabma 171h S.en LLC, LLC, a *gal emy aworpee b Mosact da.esam6r saxes n the Heb Of Rae, to waorwme a maim a the co. a....,n themead-ae 0 prdk t moa.m a Ipeere-re.Ced Mwa.low n the One au. N Board, 2010Wmma,n tPen 1-P.-1 and Fbr5Saoee163.the Board we co..... n ammoal a e. of S2600730 GO to urmewrne N.Deomuo am costa ammo. wM emedow0 as mom -use prat/ 50.1101 a bM income 0050 lousing sum oom. wMn Me Ram -9. met Asa d N Orem GRA a m NE 1 Tm Sven. NE 176 Sheet and 1.2 NE 1st Aseme,..i, Flags wen the ORM houn.r ea. Tha funding is mode NN e9bpmla won and blight TO prom. mKoc ho using the aMrdadlM n area. The CM Board reo ev all nteree1L. perm . present a femme. R N,mNg and may he Bard MI: respect m amy pmme lira Mare N CRA Bwd, n.ee N Rao rray.,e acme SMam my M1"m.sire meal. decenn al N Bawd wM ream. b try may cemdered at Ma ere.. N Rmrmsll ensure Mat a mibatem recall of Re pm¢.dwsis • a .on9 all mammy m evidence upon whoa any appeal may be bard IFS . 26 VOS). ham. regarding Mamute way be mama to A. Yea Jones, E.cl.. Deemer, a 1401 N. M'a. Ave- 2m Floor, Nam, Forma 33136. (3051 679- In accordance wai Me Arne. MNonalh2n a 1990, pew. name px.vb PKbehomrr., contact Me Office of N CM O0n5.I P06) 2606361 Obvs, not e. Ian Mo RI beams. eye pea to N emceed, IT e®n e. of 711 Fonda Holy Sr... MerM we 121 dolma de. prier b N emceed.. When a rapid test re- vealed HIV, the young man fell silent. "The quiet tears hurt worse - it's the dread of mortality," Ellis said. "l tried to be as strong as possible to let him know his life is not over, that this wasn't a death sentence." Ellis and his team en- rolled the man in HIV care that day and stayed in touch. Otherwise, Ellis said, he might not have had the means or fortitude to seek treatment on his own and adhere to daily HIV pills. Not only is that deadly for people with HIV, it's bad for public health. HIV experts use the phrase "treatment as prevention" because most new infections derive from people who aren't adhering to treatment well enough to be considered virally suppressed - which keeps the disease from spreading. Only a third of people living with HIV in Mis- sissippi were virally sup- pressed in 2022. National- ly, that number is about 65%. That's worse than in eastern and southern Africa, where 78% of peo- ple with HIV aren't spreading the virus be- cause they're on steady treatment. My Brother's Keeper is e of many groups im- proving such numbers by helping people to get test- ed and stay on medica- tion. But the funding cuts in Washington have cur- tailed their work. The lust loss was a $12 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, not even two years into a 10-year project. "fro - CITY Of MMYL FLORIDA NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Aout. hoeing ea de hen by On Cy Commas.a de DRY M.A. hai• m mailer, A.22.2026. at 900 a m. n De Cry Cern.. CNmare a CM .4 3500 Pen Mares Deena, Mom. Dor. 33133.Ite Me esooee of *Alp N r.wa.r.nna aan.g seam Oda for ...not Mum Lam., I0r20..18.1e N t.Uma boa.. .Or tart®. Ye.. Apre cnR moan. 00.vm of wan a maws who lead. bey m011 barn b ssaM.Cnn swsmwx. a via Jemmy con.i While C .. Rocas.. MM. Rae City of Were FNNavt Daum.. at 3.418-1912. R.sa,a b Lull City Code S00b1235IR. wherever • ele.. CM Conn imam in... burn. a0cal hem 0Mb alamaa wort. ort0wr ar.e(Y 1pr.a COY Caeohlbn nea01 Mr da a,m,ratc11 s.rae- afor te m.n.+wey fordwms lM modem mave.s In N earn to a 05 1, Teeny .nomad c:Rr„aar .sun mop, mt. . em Lay 27 .a1 N cry Curnanwo,.narowe loved 4.rn. Cr, mil. ]sro P. Amer." Dree atom 7a,m33133 NI a the edralb be scremraad a ith am. M.N. sewed CM C.o.s. meet. The C.D. mail nmyvie prole of me aped..ne.Yg ern smale paw W Mao.q a y...a M ran v.v. CM, Ccmnesen teems a me Anew. CM 14s ao N:Me mar a.miram. aeons. pot on Ma 012752 e.asameet. as eat n,rNN maaw,g Tuesday.re apectai the sday. the mat Deno me mf adoince ral micaleen renuem lit, any A.A. chest. acme Ram beds moved lemoo 4pee, CM Commas. nose.. la Asa.90,mpa need - . weal accommbsMa towS30l, n ma pee...000.M.the Ofee d eeCM CMk R 305126.3.6i IW.mel00 hoc Mae Nee b1 brt,ena nN w.b5. Slu2em rdew pole Nb . ITT mere may p W, NRelq Smtel no tiale Ten Todd R Hum Ca/C4. Ad No. 43311 CITY OP ANL FLONEM NOTICE OF POELK (MEMO A Attic trap will be Mid by Me City Cmmewon of N CM of M.RI, Rage m T 00r,s. May 37, 2026. a MA 900 A. Cry.1I, ballad at3503 Pn Alma, dun, Mani, Flory, 33133 bar N weed. of grant.. A MSOLLRON OF TIE AMM CITY 0.446.31 . WITH ATDCH.ENTIA. MYER A DULY NOTICED PUBLIC HEARING, sJTr 10AM DnH.TnO TWO. MARIG0 TO TNT MIT AND ALL IC110anl NECESSARY TO FOEDITI01h4Y REQUEST T. MwabDE COUNTY D@FmfENT CR TRANSPORTATCOIMO RICO ROMS 105,21 COMS0EA TIE PROPOSED TRAFFIC RAY 1400FTr TCINS AND MANE TIE RC0IMED FOMENT WNCLgBICE AND emsr 111E BM101N0 P CCESS iN ORDER TO SKPE0ROT13LY PROCEED warn THE DESIGN AND CONS1RF110N OF TRVAC CALMING DEVICES O TEN (10) LOCATIONS N THE RECOUNT, DOIRCT 5 NE10.601110006, A6 WEE PARDO .. DESCRIBED NDOMIT-A' ATTACHED AND NCORaMT®I DIECTO. THE CRY CLEW TO ND A CERTIFIED COW OF THE TH 0 RESOLLITON m DE 011. DIRECTOR AN nacres. Pre meet. and o y be heard withwreme t pennons mnmem xm4pm. Ow. any pave text b appeal any decemn a sew Cm Cm:meson wth raps. b any melee n bed cape. eel. wbe re spa el Me Rpmediniawt. de new.) au Mall w eminence pm won M appeal they he bard IFS 26601051 RANEE b Mae Oly Code Seem 233b1. Mwever. rRee0d CM C0r,2r n®e.e allaed or natal due to a as as ['ANTRA or ao emery., a spec. CM Comma. meetes tell te W 0r000 N re antreentely Ye cancelled d me... In the ew▪ e of me a N anemo.m circumstances. de Racal tree. would be new m May 23 2025. at 9.00 am n the Dy Co mrol chambers located al Mamr CM We ]too Pan Barium dame, earn: rbe 33123. All 014. ache.. agama ilea from M. cancelled meem9 elan outman, be ache.. r an amro item air N spec. CM r^r^am meet g. vie CM Clew ta0..N ea 12ll r 00 pace meet. M s b eke pea tun °Mi g a no. a the 'penal Cry Comer.. meets at N entrance a CN5 arm Me CM manmmnmbalwbardrg. peel. amutem N CM'a "mob and e, aaew an ad n a newspaper a gerent ercu.on before the special meeting on the a0N Mbwng Tuesday n.e shall be a aEait,rel .ice by 00.0n n rma.M Me any such ▪ eMat agaN.en t m moved 0 e de peeal CM Commmadn mots. In accordance ADM N Mnncaa wM drprlhs Ana 1990, perm. P.m.m meth theM lzso' nM.. emceed, rosy contact the Oeme or CSeek al PMPSOb361 Maul no e. Sr., ...ma dwa. pro Me proceeding. .2m wmN canna 711 F1eo.me Reba... no am, Nn five 161 ha,ees aye raw b N Cmcem.. grams based primarily on artificial and non -scien- tific categories, including amorphous equity no- jectives, are antithetical to the scientific inquiry," the NIH said in a letter re- viewed by KFF Health News. My Brother's Keeper then lost a CDC award to reduce health disparities - a grant channeled through the Mississippi state health department - that began with the group's work during the COVID pandemic but had broadened to screening and care for HIV, heart disease and diabetes. These are some of the maladies that account for why low-income Black people in the Deep South die sooner, on average, than those who are white. According to a recent study, the former's life expectancy was just 68 years in 2021, on par with the average in impover- ished nations like Rwanda and Myanmar. The group then lost CDC funding that covered the cot of laboratory work to detect HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis in patients' blood samples. Mississippi has the highest rate of sexually transmit- ted diseases among states, in past because people spread infections when they aren't tested and treated. ONM NEDEVELOFNOE INSTINCT CONK NNTY RlD[KLOMIENT AGENCY NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEARNO The Board a Comnma.erl raoard'R of he Omni Reteselopmern Redevelopment Agency rave, won Ina a Raba Mang m 0000 MM 22nd.2@5, a 930 am. a shone NralM n Me CM Cm.mladn awpers located Y Mimi City Mil, 3500 Pan Braman dun, Mao, R 33. The Board will consider Me award of grant Nos o EWB Hadrga, LLC, as a,Nreed m trans. be a mare.ea services n the sale a Rae, N a mom urmma aMrdmd Many pmwa .the mn.cna e,td In ea... wen the Board's 2019 nderenvne,t Fan Man, sb Flare bmn9 m we th 0 4g76 .00 to undemra MKcorrehsevendftres searco. . 002020won do Weest,taan 11 a pdk set Cat. aNlee ,Dwrn was It Cart, MAHNbounenemam,ass Namvu. 2RCunt.Munn. II LOSw n docM'a tea. TMM.3u its n.mp 2 iamb N Eabemeh Lawnm+e Menafor na.erace Sol AM.]sibeteen 5.8.M.Ib islets rw2suit- da.am80.1owe Nnl rand 1 um at ate maw N0ag o vrhsl m amremm9 won am myr whim eatacm9 a0000200 .IO g comma n ra corn. . consistent wd, me goats o..nm n CRAM Roe.-. • • wen Fan. The ward rpartpresentmtm ucsb ail mores. parties be prew .reat Me mee00 ts and my he hard with .suspect m any problem bebre me CPA Bobd.'n which sere Bum may.e action. Should asN Hereon oeme Ornmel sew Me Board won rase. 13 any maser com1arm at Me me<a�g. d.acler.7 tall ensure NI a Her.. road of N promm"eNn a teem, arts were. noon MOT am appeal may be based fS. 2966 01o51. ashes re9aaeg Me mute may te addressed WAY Y lam -Wee Emu. Dmecw. R 1401 N. Meter Me, 2m Flv. I.e. Foe 33138, 73051579-5868 Amen.. wDn0s lilea a pewee nmaing apex a. accommompons to 2 .. w 1.0, pewre.. in Ma proceedmay the omce of me w Clerk at pas, 260-6361 IWcel. ern e. Men Mp 121 Maness .ys ono. to N22 e cede..users may calf el R1aReny semceT not at tun N. 121 Menem days oriwb NpmpemN. M No. 43706 Todd B. Nanan c.ka Me Bord CET OF NtAN4 FLORIDA NOTICE OF PUY. HEARNE A NEE avna.a ba held Sy N City Com,800 of N CM of entree, m1l.emw, MN St, 20M, R ROI AM. al CM HAT me' a 3500 Pan Amm.an dwe,Mi07LPO a, 33133 lor N purpose of grants telabsn.: A BESO.TRCN of 11f NAAN CRY SOM40009. WIm ATNMMENT1S), AFTER A OILY 710113E0 NOLO HEARING. AL 1.017.NG AND DRECT- NO TIE CITY MEAGER TO TAKE ANY MO ALL AMINE} NECESSARY TO INPEOMQI0LY MOLEST TIE M022000 E C0.N1Y DEmRm5ECR 0P 1MMPOIRATION no PUBLIC w0RN5 DEEPEN CCNSORI TIE RO- POEM TRAFFIC RAY MODEICATONS AND WANE 110E REQUIEM FESI- DE O COEINENCE MO MART THE BALLOTING PROCESS N OPDm TO OOEDm0.5LY ROCS. WITH TIE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF TRAFFIC CAHND DEVICES AT TWENTY -EX RR TCCAF04 N 11E RES- DEIVTAL SLYER HIRE IEG HIRIIOW, AS ACRE MmCALARLY DE- SCRrBED w Eletel1 AMC., - AND NGEHVRMED: DRECING ME DIY CLERK TO SEND A CERTIFIED COR' of THE THE RESCIND -ChM O THE DTPA/ DIRECTOR NI Deem. emsona aro masa ea appear at N meemg are my be hate ssuMum n. Sany Ea per ry perdesire t ,a en win repo: a py.-,am, b t. ralYe. eft, al Ts nertang Int cerson shall snare Mel a Bead MN ed beano. ad.aa� pm whim low ...may be tear. FS. 28601.7 HrauvbM'Ipa CNA Coe Section 2.3301. Molar. sAaa e, City Cam mown meting *came. or'I not held ape ma s.t a e human Draw ena,gaey, a mei City Cmrmrion meets W I ba .,w,.uoly ac e4 • Na ...mentor. mve.amurat. bees. mrce meeting. In he* of one te spec. metre) would. held on May 27. 2025, at 900 am h N City Caaromn chambers deal. at Nana CM Halt 3500 Pm Amer.n Den Mani, Rams 33133. NI a Ire ec.duted am. fmn Mat lee ne.m9 Mau 50000 be hem m acheoudd as an seem. atN meal DM Comm. TM CM Cea Mall none N pudic ale ape. meet. tl. tebtab p.e M pacts a notch a N'Deco CM C9mno.n mevns at he enhance of Cry .1a.. DNS man atnrvp.se Wp., Raoeg a not. on he C.. web., ad, M leemble, axing an ad n a new.. of general mm- Anp,r bebre N special meets n Me hmmua0leen. Tread.. There .bar be no pdmwl,au by publeban repumx Me any such scheduled MIW. ban that a mowed surd sec. CM Cammmm meet.. . Diamnilo A. a IWO. persona need. .K• esel accommadona Or a the Dry DerA atpo511250.536Noce, no la. than fire Rldmeess wyepmr to the proem+.. m oven may ran a 711 rex. Keay Seance no a. Manfihrse Manes days warm Me woe... M No. 4.3707 Tom B. RWo Clerk a N Board Toga B. Ha.on DoM Ad No. 43713 T B. Hann AT No.43714 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 Cols Depth 33010 660976 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323180-IPL0232318 2 658 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, May 22, 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 ATTACHMENT(S), AFTER A DULY NOTICED PUBLIC HEARING, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECT- ING THE CITY MANAGER TO TAKE ANY AND ALL ACTION(S) NECESSARY TO EXPEDITIOUSLY REQUEST THE MIAMI-DADE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND PUBLIC WORKS ("DTFW") CONSIDER THE PRO- POSED TRAFFIC FLOW MODIFICATIONS AND WAIVE THE REQUIRED RESI- DENT CONCURRENCE AND EXEMPT THE BALLOTING PROCESS M ORDER TO EXPEDITIOUSLY PROCEED WITH THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF TRAFFIC CALMING DEVICES AT TWENTY-TWO (22) LOCATIONS IN THE RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT 1 NEIGHBORHOODS, AS MORE PARTICULARLY DE- SCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "A," ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO SEND A CERTIFIED COPY OF THE THIS RESOLUTION TO THE DTFW DIRECTOR. 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 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 May 27, 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, '1 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. 43712 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: 05/12/25 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-4L/ O Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May 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 dlarge for lost or dupllobe affidavits. Legal doaarlent please do not destroy! u l MINN HERALD I MONDAY MAY 02025 FROM PAGE 3A ARTISTS "She's our coach," one participant chimed in warmly. The program is funded by philanthropist E.A. Michelson, and the Perez Museum is just one of over 25 institutions with similar programs. Since 2013, E.A. Michelson Philanthropy has invested over S15 million in these programs. Alias, a retired design- er, painted a face in a purple box. Alias said the figure in his painting is supposed to represent a survivor. "She is saying, 'You can punch and bruise me all you want, but I can overcome it.' " Marie Vickles, the mu - or director of education, Tsays the pro- gram Wes to raise aware- ness about ageism and the importance of com- munity for older adults. "The demand for these programs is through the roof," she said. Participants have to submit applications an - ring questions about why they want to partici- pate and how they will benefit from the program. Nicole Combeau, the program coordinator, says she tries to pick a diverse group of participants — and swith an experience ome without. Since the program began in 2023, it has served over 224 people from over 20 countries. She usually gets 40-70 applications and accepts only 15 students. This year's cohort in- cluded budding artists from all over the world — including Peru, Bosnia and the United Kingdom. Alumni of the program include federal judges, surgeons and Colombian immigrant mothers who spent thew working years in textile factories in New York. Combeau says the pro- gram aims to challenge the idea that life ends at retirement. "This is a way to make sure they're still active, that they don't fall into the stereotype of disintegrating," she said. jacqui Love Thomell, 77, says that the most profound suggestion she received from Ferraz was to take her time while painting. "In slowing down, 1 saw Nicole Combeau, program c artists and guests during the things differently," she said. But it has not been without difficulty for Thomell, as she has trou- ble holding her hand steady and also struggles with her vision. But the group's encour- agement has made it ea"You just feel like you can do it because every- one is cheering you on," she said. oordinalor at Perez Art Museum Miami. welcomes student PAMM Creative Aging Series: Sprang Painting Showcase. Mena De Los Santos, 82, a mother of three from the Dominican Re- public who worked for two decades as a social worker for government agencies, in tears as she spoke to her class- mates and teacher on the final working day before the exhibition. She said that after her lust day of class, she wanted to leave because she had never painted in her life and was intimi- dated by the other artists who had more experi- ence. "1 thought to myself, '1 don't belong,' " she said. But Feraz encouraged her, telling her that her painting was "amazing." De Los Santos said that motivated her to contin- ue. As she presented her final artwork to her class- mates, she said, "1 know it's not the best in the world, but for me it's a masterpiece." Two women, Maja Guzina, 64, and Macao na Maiman, 59, applied and were accepted into the class together. Guzina survived thyroid cancer, and her friend Macarena survived breast cancer. "We fought and we are here," said Guzina. Children, grandchil- dren and friends all gath- ered with the students in the Perez Gallery on a Saturday afternoon for the final exhibition, con- gratulating each other and celebrating their accomplishments. The organizers of the program were celebrating this cohort of artists, but were also celebrating the news that thew funding will be extended for an- other two years. At the exhibition, Per- raz encouraged the stu- dents to keep making art. "Go home, find a space in your house and keep going back to painting. Make a space for it in your life," she told the artists. Clara -S- ophia Daly: @clorasophiadaly FROM PAGE to RADIO MARTI ven contactors were called back to work. But the station's shortwave radio signal, which is less likely to be jammed by Cuban authorities, has not been restored. An attendant at the North Caroline -baud Greenville Transmitting Station, which carries the station's signal, confirmed to the Miami Herald that transmitters used to broadcast Radio Marti's shortwave signal to the island are off. A source knowledgeable about the station's internal decisions who was not authorized to speak publicly said that the station's programming is available only online and through a secondary AM signal transmitted from Marathon in the Florida Keys. The AM signal is easier for Cuban authorities to jam. The person said that only one contactor had been called back to work to ensure the safety of the old technology used at the Greenville station. Last month 14ymedio, an independent news outlet based in Cuba, reported that no signal was detected in Havana or in Villa Clara, in central Cuba, on the shortwave frequency on which Radio Marti used to broadcast. Though full-time staff- ers were called back to work at the station's office in Dmal, Radio Marti has not been able to resume its full programming. In recent days, seven con- tactors previously fired have been called back to work, but some produce videos for social media or write for the news site and are not involved in radio - related work. The U.S. Agency for Global Media did not respond to a request for comment. Tr unp's order to reduce the U.S. Agency for Global Media's "performance of [its] statutory functions and associated personnel to the minimum presence and function required by law" has upended the work of Voice of America, Radio Marti and other stations that the agency funded. Several employees have sued the Trump administration over its plans. Central to their claims is how the agency's top lead- ership has interpreted the functions mandated by Congress. The 1983 law creating Radio Marti spe- cifically names the Mara- thon facility and states it cu be used for radio broadcasting to Cuba. 1t also says the station can use frequencies other than AM, but it appears to tie their use to a requirement to broadcast Voice of America content. Voice of America is still off the air and is the subject of sever- al lawsuits. In recent years, the Office of Cuba Broad- casting his vied to mod- ernize the stations — redi- recting resources from controversial television programming that could not be watched on the island because of signal jamming — to produce videos for Mud Noticias and social media. While past U.S. adminis- trations and some mem- bers of Congress have questioned the spending n radio broadcasting, Cuban American mem- bers of Congress have supported Radio Mart as vehicle for delivering news to an island where intemet access is expen- sive, power blackouts are common and the govern- ment shuts down the in- temet during protests. Nora G- dwez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorres FROM PAGE 3A BIRDS eagle hatched and is being raised by its parents at the zoo's Amazon and Beyond exhibit Harpy eagles are the most powerful birds of prey on Earth, with talons the size of grizzly bear claws The new chick and its parents can be seen through a CCTV image projected in real time at thew habitat. A pair of Abdim's storks also hatched in the zoo's Wings of Asia Aviary on April 27 and 28. Abdim's storks are among the smallest species of storks, reaching a height of only about 3 feet. The chicks can be seen in their nest from the public viewing areas in the aviary, where the parents are caring for them. Demon Cetaure: 305-376-2026, @devo n_ceroure CITY OF MMI,%LaaoA MOTOR OF PUBLIC WARM A pW le h5am5 NI. WO Cy the GM Cm.. of Me ONO Mam, Doi. on ., May 22, 2025, at.. AM awN M. mow at ASW Pan Nre,un Owe, Maori, Hosea, 33133 for to pupa of granting M5OA.np: A MCC.. a THE MAN PTV COFMISSON, MTN ATACNNIPOT 1. Mc55 01u TIE gitV swMGER TO OEcu1r TIE IN5ERA:0L AO EB.Em. M 9O5WNM[Lv THE ATTACHED 1054 WRH MAAKaADE COLD. PCO Non,APOLOCY steONC1ON OF THE STATE OF NOROA. FERACAG TIE POMC-AL AGREEMENT THAT WAS DOCLRED PURSUANT TO PE00111I0e1 NO, or02n,.CPTED MAY lo.2031 TO CONTmET°'LONNIE CITY OF MAN rpn"1 TO GEODE ns PRTEN OF otnmL SHARE FUNDS FROATIEowDFR COUR. TRWsn SYSTEM SURTAX FOR TRMISPoRATaN AND MiNSIT F OECTS AND m ALLAY THE USE OF TIE SURTAX FOR ON-OFMND WENSORATON SERVICES, m SERVE VISITORS, IERO., AND WOOERS eYFOWL. A CONVENIENT, EFFICIENT MORLTV OPTICS TO MOAN. TMOGaOR DFSMMTED AREAS a CONYTAVN AND WTRHN THE COM.. GROVE BO. Ali merest. perm are so. to appear at re mea, as nor ba Sew tue cmntion Moue am, , ,N rem.aN memo. Name appeal any mom. of theM Common corm.. at INS m. vat person WWI ensure tan a ye.. reran of Me proceed. ,s made anSelmanwen eman e,0 Me. Man . w aappeal may based (FS. 28801051. R.em.a Mans CM Code Seceo n 2s3w..Hma.r. alem0d C. Menem keeet. 'a rarcelled o a rah lsM do to a rack or a panto or mar areaway. a semi CM Camp meet, .,II 5 automate. lofoe Tumday ,mnolMery Mew, re melon mere. In Me event or pad m multta de sµcal Ming MP Se nee o�MM27,202 9:CO am.n hec.cam..man chambers ecated at .s City H.IL 3500 Pan Amerman owe, Nam, Fbma 33133. Au or ale a9eaa .Are from rat oncered rose . Y,ailaNatar.al5 to dtdam a an Fonda item at N. MN DM CO3.i„en meemm. Tle CM Can sna no.. pubic or do apeman meet, fat s e am pare w paceti a nonce 0 ire 'vocal Cry Commas.. mm1ng a Nor entrance or CM Hail am Ne CMa men admaaoal w IA.anp. Mac, a notice on lie CN's wet.,, am of general meet, on a oared., a'ann. Tund.. maul m ro a'dit�;lerot. w adman, .eon, m aM eat scleak] Ne. item Oat a coed a Ian Faecal CM Carmamn neew.. Ming oaea, may Ne Dane 0, Nye a5C�Nc aaatt 1.2osw1 Nome, m Fes Man raw bl contact MimeNes prior M Ore proceed,. TTY , 01 may rim n 711 Fblad My Sam. mUser tan five 51 Mean are prom o etyma , on mama ma Warn A dnereous vulture hatched at Zoo Miami on April 21 In the wild. it lives in Europe. Asia and the Middle East. CIO OF MArt, FLORIDA NOTICE OF NECK WARM A 0095 Leanma ma be .1 by rM City Cpnnaem d Nor Cm of Ma+.i, Fbr- am an lbu ad.. A« 22. 2025, at 900 AM. at CM Hall. bra at 3500 Pan Merino o,ne, Mari. PPM, 3013] Jar De purpose d 9ranm9 me Mte..r9'. A fESAll1Or1 OF TIE AMA CM Cp4.9E61ON, 0RH ATTAOY-ENTEI, AFTER A CULT NOTICED PENC MEAN., ATHORIVNG .0 DFECT- NG THE CITY W.f. TO TARE ANY AND All ACT N . NECESSAPP m ssED..LY AND TIElu rE COUNTY DEMRR-ENT OF MN TPORTATON D POLO WORN MKT) 0ON6OE3 THE PRO- POSED TRAFFIC RDA MCOFICATON6 AO MANE THE REWIRED RESI- WST CWCUR6VCE AHO NONE TIE MOOTING RULE. w ORDER m EXPEOTIO SLY PROCEED W. TIE DESAND CONSTRICTION W Of TRAWL C a DUCES AT M@1TMT O (22) LOCATIONS IN THE P6IBNTDmlm 1 FEOIMownoce, AS ACE R. ET DE - SCREED S1 N OM6UT ATTACHED AO NOORON,TEO: MECT0t1M THE CITY CON m SEND A. -TOWED COPY OF. THE RESOLUDON TO THE DM INFECTOR. etereslud a sot nemg .o may be morn .N, 55505o fire Crs cin re.we . stoma aro Demon agog ..meal any damson a Me Coy Com m s. VIM respect to any muter b b cpea at s mem Mk pond. sell ensure tan a w.trn reca to MaA, Maeda. an Mad, a med, all ...nos am mane eh.. upon anal May ale p®ee FS. manual rews,0 a Maw Cry Co. Section 24384. N,eneye, a MOM c. Corm mammon meeem mannered 0 is ant loot OM le a van as quorum pace. emapea . a sperm CN Comp.. maim «r be subm stir. aleb am b 95 Tuospzy.mredalsry mm.m the car..knew.. nine pT one of to e0m„enlarea circurMa,na re mI (me.. woad te held on May 27, 2025, et 900 am in the City Minamon Miters lamb. s f t.rn CM Hwt 3500 Pon Amencan Dane, Nam, FRpne 03130. AI or Me de0A0 open. name .01 Nat cancel. medr. sun .0016.1111y ba aleMeE as n&pen.ibn at Me sp.al CM Comraaon meeting. The C.CM sou no*. p40 or to specal neeuq td 5 to pn,Ke by pam a race of Me snnua Cry Co mmae ewe. ape entrance el ON Hatasaore mos awn Mambatwdabs.. No, a notes ontle CMs.wna, and, i table. bidet en M n a re.M.w a 9eerel omo- ie. Mu Me spsaimmmeew. on ... dimity M., Tuesday. Mere IRA 00ntn erda an y n wand s.edm ag5N xn ow a moedp se maiCN Comma. Deans. acconlence Me M.ricalaaN Cdpititas A. a INN amns need - alp soam accormodstens mnebt.a snp2ae.a,l9M. a a Oxn Me CM Cat atnm126.5361 ryxel m Iaem ben lm Are 51 business M1118pmrn the pm end p.ITV users nW Mom 711 rhea Rosy Se,vml aer emnlog51 p.m days promo Me pm. e.rruMry REDEVELOPMENT AGEENCY RFASE ALL TARE NOTICE Nola Board W Cannmaren Aeetn9 or Me am. wwwwwinn, Oalrm Comm, .eveloaa, Age. (cut a rin0. Alp a Me pwe u, TM1,Mry, May 22, Zo28, a 9:30 am. or Mere.. at the Man Gay sus, arms aasm Pan American D,.e, Ma.,, Roma 23133. 11F10.1.0.1101 .oe a. M. rum. 01 nere namamn, pose eon- M.OMecluaficeaOM57.888. MN*. 43705 am Jams, Neat. ono. Om Rde.lopwm osbal Cokmnasy nsaa..uanent Awn. CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDI.NANCEISI MMo.Fac, yen tmteCry c ,nsmm,a nor urau'mn,rls:r ,.rYcmea ,tN 4Mming Wanda on.cam.1 Mel md, on TM aa'A M.12. 2025comm. se 800 AM, n fe C. r0 sera.. Oran tea kn. M 3500 Pat Ammrem Orma. Moan Fdea 2RH33 ORDNANCE AN OIONYHILE OF THE NON OTTace0ARSION MEMO CHAPTE.R]6r SECTION 3640E DE c' Of TIE CRY Of&o' WOOS, SAMEM- Eo141YCOOES, mRR,WOCE00aw.ICN OF WOOS, :5S 05 P18 OR OTHER BaW WANB CEM.; B COOS. CROHESIOAS. ANC MU. CIY6f tY. NOM. AND CHAPTER 385ECTGN SFS OP THE CITY 000E TITLED TOISEASAME- FORS OF OPERATION OP PLO-13E9, MOOS, ETC.: NEWTON FOR EVENTS ON CRYASTY'. '. IRE. WOO.. TO CREATE ALTERNTE YORE RE PFSTROTVE MASS AO A OETAYETHE Mamma S RN SONO RCP TFOVERM ESECATY EEER0T:151, CONtAMIG A SDANAMS 1Y CLAUSE: Ace PROVING FOR AN EHTEOTNE PATE NM pcaad aW..m may Os Mos.txalep 1 Ic Mto OM of De 04, Geis.300 Pen Aver®, 0 ., Nam. Fan;. 33111 M.e.y tnerp, Fana• saclalg moos. Mean me rears or 8 am and 5 am a tlo// e anaaamn Ee daq tpore me Uak mf 9e Comm. alms. a Newm perm sae nmml rn eyes at Me roseif9 anal n5Y be new .an repo o ale laams.a mmans...snam any neon am o v m a Na ale cm Cxm nimen areraa .a micro .. aMs mat ropron.ml.ar ennoweg terse esanorya�nea.neaoupasS an ngm may n tan ed ffs.28801051. Mon me Mnisac 9wn2-33190540,waa.Ae0101.Or 5. Iran. scotrarebee0aIal1N0Nor.arantMsvonmopw u,erw.-."ast:.oe Cwmowers.uY5.Nne Teel. F'sc0ahl01 Ire Today .txaneM Avamq M voted meew. n OM 01 May 025 st 0va omanarM Comm.. dmarrow w.,ee nor,t M- ans a.Mn sex NecMs331sa+medewtedalan..2500a,.M,mn_a>3ro +14 d as 5, . Gem at be special me., saw' mom000cni oa ear]wMati s▪ ot roily ymn t. of to morel saeV mat M mega. 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Harm coy Nam A0 .13700 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 I 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 Otvnrpian Account # Order Number Identification Order PO Cols Depth 33010 660977 Legal Display Ad-IP102323200 - IPL0232320 43713 2 6.46 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, Florida on Thursday, May 22, 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 ATTACHMENT(S), AFTER A DULY NOTICED PUBLIC HEARING, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING THE CITY MANAGER TO TAKE ANY AND ALL ACTION(S) NECESSARY TO EXPEDITIOUSLY REQUEST THE MIAMI-DADE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND PUBLIC WORKS ("DTPRV") CONSIDER THE PROPOSED TRAFFIC FLOW MODIFICATIONS AND WAIVE THE REQUIRED RESIDENT CONCURRENCE AND EXEMPT THE BALLOTING PROCESS IN ORDER TO EXPEDITIOUSLY PROCEED WITH THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF TRAFFIC CALMING DEVICES AT TEN (10) LOCATIONS IN THE RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT 5 NEIGHBORHOODS, AS MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "A," ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO SEND A CERTIFIED COPY OF THE THIS RESOLUTION TO THE DTPN DIRECTOR. 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 May 27, 2025, at 9700 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. Todd B. Hannon City Clerk Ad No. 43713 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: 05/12/25 Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes. M ta-ry o Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 164 ben 3 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 duplimte affidavits Legal document please do not destroyl MONDAY EN Q188 I MIAMI HERALO I IA FROM PAGE 6A NAMES outrage from Iranians at home and across the dias- pora, while finding favor among Arab states. For many Iranians, the name is • e of national pride and a symbolic link to the country's unique legacy of the Persian Empire in a region surrounded by Arab neighbors. The Arabian Gulf, they say, could also create confusion with the nearby Arabian Sea, the northern region of the Indian Ocean. The sea bordered by North and South Korea, japan, and Russia is also the subject of a naming dispute - with japan insist- ing it be called the "Sea of Japan," while South Korea advocates for the more inclusive "East Sea." Mso in Asia, the Taiwan Strait remains contested, with China claiming that it has "sovereignty, sove- reign rights, and juris- diction" over the 110-etile- wide strait, a strategic waterway that links the East China Sea with the ealliace Me South China Sea. Taiwan Moroccan soldiers watch a motorbike pass the sand wall rejects Beijing's claim, separating Morocco and Mauritania in the western Sahara insisting the strait constitu- on a leg of the 23rd Paris Dakar ally on Jan. 8, 2001. tes international waters. Across the globe, territo- rial disputes range from local skirmishes to major standoffs marked by dashed lines on maps and deep-rooted claims of sovereignty. Perhaps the most visible and widely discussed dispute over the past few years has been between Israel and the Palestinian territories. In contested spaces around the world, rival governments, actors and movements continue to press their claims, often stoking unrest and re- shaping geopolitics. Some of the disputed areas are marked by foreign rule, while others face mass displacement, sprawling refugee camps, or wide- spread persecution and discrimination. The larger region of Western Sahara, which Morocco refers to as "Mo- roccan Sahara," was colo- nized by Spain in the 14th century. A string of border conflicts has shaped the region's modem history, including the 1963 Sand War between Algeria and Morocco and Morocco's 1975 "Green March," when thousands of civil. jam, backed by the Moroc- can military, advanced into the disputed territory of Westem Sahara. The March, and the Madrid Accords agreement between Spain, Morocco and Mauritania that fol- lowed, signified regime change and the forceful displacement of majority of Sahrawis, many of whom now live in refugee camps in Algeria. Farther east, fresh clash- es between India and Pa- kistan have thrust Kashmir back into the spotlight. Kashmir, high in the Hima- layas, is home to some 13 million people - about 7 million in Indian -adminis- tered Kashmir and 6 mil- lion in the Pakistani -ad- ministered region. India and Pakistan both claim the area in its entirety, while China is a third, albeit minor, party to the conflict over the resource - rich territory. The Kashmir conflict dates back to 1947, when British colonial ode in India ended and the sub- continent was partitioned into the sovereign states of India and Pakistan- Jammu and Kashmir, a region now administered by India and known as J&K, chose to accede to India after tribal militias backed by Pakistan roved in, leading to the first Kashmir war between the neighbors. l ?AGE 5A LOST FUNDING federal funding for HIV prevention - about 51 billion annually. The Trump administration's May 2 budget proposal for fiscal 2026 takes aim at DEI initiatives, including in its explanation for cut- ting 53.59 billion from the CDC. Although the pro- posal doesn't mention HIV prevention specifical- ly, the administration's drafted plan for NHS, released mid -April, elim- inates all prevention fWd- ing at the CDC, as well as funding for Tr unp's initia- tive to end the epidemic. Eliminating federal funds for HIV prevention would lead to more than 143,000 additional people in the U.S. becoming in- fected with HIV within five years, and about 127,000 additional people dying of AIDS -related uses, according to esti- mates from the Founda- tion for AIDS Research, a nonprofit known as am - GAR. Excess medical costs would exceed 560 billion, it said. Eldridge Dwayne Ellis, the coordinator of the mobile testing clinic at My Brother's Keeper, said that curbing the group's serv- ices goes beyond HIV. "People see us as their only outlet, not just for testing but for confidential cversations, for a shoul- der to cry on," he said. "1 don't understand how someone, with the stroke of a pen, could just hap- harardly write off the health of millions." Ellis came into his role in the mobile clinic hap- hazardly, when he worked as a construction worker. When he became sudden- ly dizzy and unwell on a job, a co-worker suggested that he visit the organiza- tion's brick -and -mortar clinic nearby. He later applied for a position with My Brother's Keeper, inspired by its efforts to give people support to help themselves. For example, Ellis de- scribed a young man who visited the mobile clinic recently who had been kicked out of his home and was sleeping on couches or on the street. Ellis thought of friends he'd known in similar situations that put them at risk of HIV by increasing the likelihood of trans- actional sex or drug use. SOUTHEAST OsrnrOWN,PaRN Etc 00MINUMM REDEvnDPMDR AGENCY nse00ALLTAFa1O7GE,'.no Bu.4C _sm.ems ar0200. at.uba*P. We. Commons 0....w.nrx v scoa0Cwam on Owe.. Now 22. DOM, at 10 MO AM or thereat., es Mug CXy HMHI 3600 Pa, Asertun PM*, 111Am1, PA>w b Gala 2.3.31we GEDPN C. meet. . SEOPNCRA rratA .30 me W maa-elN ll ts.,,00 a mergency. a spaStec . eta rotwag eaoeal rt.. In me mem ean the Maw Rt. 2025. 0003 mCM F"nse coon rtembeers make c a tar CMrhu 1500 Pen33.on pore Mhtm Me 33113 M of Me,aneamage terns horn moteelhei nee.. Mall soma.. tou mnemom as en Mt... apecol The clerk a de eo°0 -ol0 0-.ity,0 won: ot Me sum.arm data WM place ty mks. a nm.aa tee spec. SFLMA' CDA rreeng al Me mtmnce ot CM Mul am tie CO s cox organs - P alm 00330- PaMUM, May a mote on Me SCORN wens.. am. A fn.,, Ma. an bl.vgen. ee.t.a 'h M nmmAs1Ag edeleM ba'l15tg ,0 00 Terre team 000s00 N nett try p,bcaph rmamforwry arch ecMmEO agars"me thM amg .001SECµv09.• roe.. AA ar. maims ma meg b attend. For aw pane. veMmgon. cal ect M SEOFW CM o61oa ROM 879T00. M No. aRtS Janes 0. MCQmen. Emmy Dane M.., Recta...err 39.. Re¢ raPMr ENT =TROY CUMwRI nmevnwm MMNsr AONICY •Don M MI KC MAME 0001E TThe Bum a C9m Masan s (Soare) el w prat Re020 )lwmt Disblct Cwms0M Ramceloennt Agency rao.r w!! Poo a RMc Hoeing en Mel, 22nd, 2025. at 930 am. or mime eornM b Nil CNN Corson chanters I.. Mori CM Feu, 3500 Pm AnMm' eran Dm, o, 1,33133 Thu Born we mnea me aware N gra. Trots le Unt •le Some LI., LLC, mpN author.. b soma Meshmrager swS®m d1. Beta of F orm, m omen.. a portion IN the Hats asso em0 met the mwduM wows cons. g d,rcpre-remcme npuarq w. n We prat CRA. In accordance met the 6.0, 2010 node elopme,t Ran 01111 .. Funda Stems 163, we Bumconsoler bmm er9 an 5sal amount ofs2sma 0D.o00 mmemnm me oappmm,res add 5 gs Mcoowame with d0000 nMa rmmw0.; -e ojea conesnhula. h ouse, teals bubo glut Nil Redevelopment Area M Te Pont CPA at 20 NE N Sop 90 NE 1 Mir Street add 1.2 ND rg P.o e.Morn, For. we. We IXies...area. Nos rumu; 3 cntoal m fe ...rent of 6a Pmiecr worm Se °mooned to reduce slum and Mqe am Pm. anon+weEm mum afbrdabety n 6e area The CM Board requests all mbreNed pare. be Armen w represented at the mile. and row be beam with respect b ma mppmtnn before M CRA Bee., n e . the Board may lake moo. Moue am perm, desire b appeal any Moon of the meet.. Met ut;n gallvrure Nat a m record o1 me orwcudme at • Ilekalep...et and nce upon worn a ir ape. may . b.1F5. 265.0105) hour. mm..9 ma robs, maybe addressed b M. Wm Jones. 57 e d, a Mimi Broo1. N. Mi M., 3rh0 Flom, MaE S01 n FM. 3313re) DP. In acwWra enT the Arrerae wan Malogs And 1990, persona e CM Ck at 005) 25051st 361 Navel. weft. • the am (2) tie pweeovg. Tusers may t Mama. tame,Senrel, r. otteears rMw roll MtrMhen am m Wneees.me taw m de emoeeeg. When a rapid test re- vealed HIV, the young tan fell silent. "The quiet ears hurt worse - it's the dread of mortality," Ellis said. "l tried to be as strong as possible to let him know his life is not over, that this wasn't a death sentence." Ellis and his team en- rolled the man in HIV care that day and stayed in touch. Otherwise, Ellis said, he might not have had the means or fortitude to welt treatment on his own and adhere to daily HIV pills. Nat only is that deadly for people with HIV, it's bad for public health. HIV experts use the phrase "treatment as prevention" because most new infections derive from people who aren't adhering to treatment well enough to be considered virally suppressed - which keeps the disease from spreading. Only a third of people living with HIV in Mis- sissippi were virally sup- pressed in 2022. National- ly, that number is about 65%. That's worse than in eastern and southem Africa, where 78% of peo- ple with HIV aren't spreading the virus be- au they're on steady treatment. My Brother's Keeper is e of many groups im- proving such numbers by helping people to get test- ed and stay on medica- tion. But the funding cuts in Washington have cur- tailed thew work. The first loss was a 512 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, not even two years into a 10-year project. "Pro- CCY roe MMMNN MAMMA Apuoho RIME Mint. try the OW Cbnanearn of roc. Cry ne Morn. ON, am tla.pay. May 222025. at 900anu To Cry Coowso, Cnmb.s el Cw WI,1500 Men Ammo 0,,. Mom. Grillo 33'33. la the pumcm ofwweg de epuaer16116,xcab» sealed 0asbarea 000000 of Man LAW Mall x 130NBDeny GardensTouNITmon xnce3. seWm hnen m..promo.w,w.ean soon a 0c301a who Mel thus Tea might to am b lisle, nil CMs lnlore anu tw Pm ran may coact lsn a Gray. Irouvmh0 Are.. 010e Coy d Mon Fm:.utunem Department at r 4101912 BMWS MM. CM Go. SeEon2-33w,Menem amasonCMCam- moNvonmeting arr0pre M1tlOilb a lark . aoapn or mire morel C24w Commission ,500 M oil uaanebaw 0001 a. follpaag n cameo mere. 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Memo CM CNa M NO 43711 CRY M ■MMA !LOOM NOTICE M PIIKIC MARNO AM. hem, N be Neil 0y the OW Cammw, el Me CM>Mm, {bids on Ilan os, May 22, 2(.5. a 900 AM. Cw KA brood at350E Pan Amman Ammo DailM lino Rorer. 33133b the purpose G Debating to A IESdrr1T]11 OF THE 1M D CITY 0002SS ON, WITH ATTMANEMI5). 0000e000 NOTICED PUBLIC10t02p, THORC DAro OPEC.. TIE CRY MANY3m m THE ANY AND ALL ACTONSI NECESSARY TO EGMDMOURYRECEEST THETMA4COUNTYDICECOUNTY10020 OEPARHAENT OF TMNSPORTAN NAND RA3LC WOWS MIME) CONSER THEPM/POSED TRAFFIC FLOW MODNGTONB AND WANE THE REOUI ED RESOENT CONCU RBaOS AND SCOOT THE MOOTING PROCESS IN ORDER TO D3EDIIOISLY ROES, WITH THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF TRAFFIC CALMING DEVICES AT TEN ROI LOCATIONS N THE RESIDENT. DISTRICT 5 NEIGHBONICODS, AS NOSE WrCUARY DEBCRRED w EWE. -A' ATTACFED AND INWR[RATE B mECHIa01HE CITY CLERK TO SEND A GEMMED CCR' OF THE THIS PESM1RCN TO THE DOW DNCCTM. pers. ere mmnPo appear at nw Me et. and may... teed enT reepKt b me proposed res.., Bgub se, porn deem b appeal any Mem of the CM Comtism wsm Map. b mrampb W 0.n a 5 memo. Matt person NMI ensure Mat a mambo moat 0 m made de the 0Waco)F52.. airep tuNnprM' we mace mooMesh Ra 005 b Mm CMOs. Seedon 2330050n,e,a a glued City Common we., is or ea nol heed doe Wake.poem of a o or carm eagb , a space! CM, Cmnsmm mile. a n1 W a00Maay weeduledbs.Tess. nnaaa0N Inpwrg Te canullee meewg. b 6e evert of .e d 6e ab0snmlanmcimvawcea, the swat nowfing0000, were ....MT 2, 20E,.900 amtn tie Cary Commson cWN.n located at ant CM Nall.. Pan Merced ptW. Men,. Florae... All of Te bd a.. -terns need mat omen. rreeag sheu;tpretiolly be sc... m an agenda rem a Nil spec. CTC aurora meerg. The CA Cep net non, pre T. W me excel mile. Tat at b lakep.e 1N a.. a nonce of the sowal CM Corn.. meedg at do entrance O Gh Hoa t wnil C,N m s man Mmabatho buildup Moog a mole on the mime, and, it be0e, Mary an en mwmummerofn geet 0000 meetag on au ernmialeh Memo Tuesday. Mere Mali bem ,WlMet Mae by by psalm reausedfor aN such ra M. gaga lam thet.nag b tie spec. CM Cmmmuon meeag_ wvmre wOh the Memos with Doges. Acts 1.30, uncle needepthe MaOf TO GM o 05000emabommoa ncos paced, may contact Cie. at P06115.5361 Nom)m WM than fa El Moss dos Pala to 6s premeds, Try wen raw Fall ea rat Ebma Rory Mosel no lac Dun foe S) saes days pre to Pe proceedng. grams based primarily on artificial and non -scien- tific categories, including amorphous equity ob- jectives, are antithetical to the scientific inquiry," the NtH said in a letter re- viewed by KFF Health News. My Brother's Keeper then lost a CDC award to reduce health disparities - a grant channeled through the Mississippi state health department - that began with the group's work during the COVID pandemic but had broadened to screening and care for HIV, heart disease and diabetes. These are some of the maladies that account for why low-income Black people in the Deep South die sooner, enge, than thou who are white. According to a recent study, the former's life expectancy was just 68 years in 2021, on par with the average in impover- ished nations like Rwanda and Myanmar. The group then lost CDC funding that covered the cost of laboratory work to detect HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis in patients' blood samples. Mississippi has the highest rate of sexually transmit- ted diseases among states, in pan because people spread infections when they aren't tested and treated. rat REDEVELOPMENT EMMET COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HeAANG THe roam w Um, .sooners I-Boarce) a Te ann, n.005) n list.: C ney Dew- npment Age., ICR0'l ell no0 awe,0•c Hnm,9 on ropy 21m, 2015, at 930 amar ar0e.e merolr et the ACwmm Cpmon shamters Ma. at Manx CM Mil, 3660 Pan meran Moil, Maori, FL 331. The roam w+ll consume Pe award of grant rugs b EWB Holdings, LLC, as Me Bate a Monde me mWaee pnn a ▪ cooed .cone alnmaee noun. project n Me omm Esc In accordance wrth the Board's M 2019 Hcwbprem Nor )'Aa sir} il Fbba r Statues 163 the Boa. ell cmrler lumag an amount M 6257679e00 ns ▪ be apabm,res and costs assecaan whin me de e10 .am 01. 11 .onpwrg protect beat. at Id... Wee le C Mamtcre .n- . Fb n am 1u5 Norm Wen 1st Court Mom. For., etnn Nil CM's Epabenes.T a project wits neludc 2 unto Mr ammo, o, Le.bcena tenants at 3 unts for tomb.. tenann. AM.2units .br Cowen NM -I era AM and 11m at rem.rate�ln� add dont Mote en anmg anwdanle nunt pnnsent we nee. rammed al the era; Pecler<ap+en mmcM he Ran. ORA Board more. ail altercated panes . present or represented e P. person rn03 Memel. war metier cwene3 a Me mmeg°.P• Mwperm Mil ensure mat a verbam, Negro a the p eedomo made, ncLong r egadd mWxe tepu wMA any appeal nosy te Wpm ➢ FS.2 1mph 0M Imumes repay,, me mole may W Welcomed to Ms Tea Toile, Esesmate Deem. a 1D1 N. Men Am, 2. Ram, Mims, Fonda 33136, PON 629-6568. arcoo.nce we esAct of 1990. persons deadn950a panm.ml ebawet xbee mran pmeedeg may colts. tee Oxus of lie CM Cana (0512E0-5361 (Wire), not lab man raw bums OI Mus ran w p tab he ecemalp. ITVea. trey.1 211 E1ma Dean Semcel. not hater ram boo RI Wyss days prwb the pmme0.q. M No. 42706 Clark a Nil Bum CITY M MANN FLORIDA NOTICE OF MEDIC REAMER A pubic Mang won be tab by Me CM Common ,f Nil Cu el Mani. For- rde m Thursday, May 22, 2025, a19U0 AM. at CM Han.... at 3500 Pen Amman pa, Mom, Fbw...1331er the pretax d gran. Ins blbwm. A RESOLUTION OF THE MIA. CITY CAXAN SON, wITH ATTACHMENTS). TIE 102 1 M P1 A MIL' NOTICED SL. WARNS, 41 AND D 0iECT- MG THE CM AYO. TOTE MN N2 D ALL /0 MM NECESSARY m EP EDROSLY REOIE0T THE MVMMIDE COIN, OERVITMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND POMO WORKS rurrvi COMMIS THE PRO. POSED TWEE 0.1HI MOOFlGTDFS AND WANE THE REOUFED RES, CENT CANCE) E AND EMP0 TIE MEETING PROCESSN MEP TO E1EUOI00001CUSLY RIGGER)WITH TIE CESIUM CONSTRICTION OF 'ME MO C CAIAWY 0 DMACES AT MENTY3r Q811DC20t AMS N TIE A.- m.. OMER BLUFF NE1GH90R1000, AS WEE PAR A.. DE - SCREED M ESHE R OA' ATTACHED AND NWMBPATEO, DIMI NG THE CM' CLEW m SEND A C RUFIED CONY a THE THS RESOIIRON TO THE mRV DnECTOR. 311 mavens are rm. tO appear al Me neeag sa mere be Team rath nb ere premed resolution. Should any person dme b appeal ma me OW Common erg respect to any marerD be eons. red at �meteg, ma person fall ensure Mar a 004 mord of theno pmcEOAgs a de ecoM all .fin ism and emmce toile we.. appeal may be ram F5.28601051. ILrasn b Alias CM Cade Section 2.331o1. wheµer a 5Mmued CM Com- mence mee0g a came. or am Wb due 0a bck v a 0non0n or other eSN Comsabn nee.. be 5wrusow ram • aodeteh means go ranched need;. n Te a mit held on May 27 2025, at 900 am n the Cr, Cormnsa0n msrons located at m CM Hal, 3500 Pan Nman Dme, Meu, Rpm 331.. All of Me Morteled apv,u Scam from NM caceod meeting vale auarvbolM be Medved as an gene nm at tha aped. pN Carn era mee.g. Toe CMCem 0Wl nobly Te tack of Nil ;coal raesg mat u 0 rake pace W 01sug a nob.O Nil w0Cal CM Comm.. rremg et Te entrance of CM H0) a.. Ow Tarn a...re. Wmag, pees; a nonce . he Ceres wnm0. ails Mese.. placing an ad n a news... ot general tmmada0M 0lloxsg Tue.. p1W0 shall be no re pen ...tre.. MMan arannl. u spa,tenN s ,ten eltrmesbNil spec. CM Common meting. rah 0.11n Act a 1.0. persons..- Offi▪ ce or the C.N Cleo 0 0)01250- 36 Noce, no.r Teo ore 11 brans day, pra. a to procedrg. TIN user, Sat sou we 711 rbma Rew Sere. m hater than five Ntares days Imo bNilfa.Ong ail No. 63707 Tockl B. Harem Clete Nil Board T B. Hannon Cily Clerk Ad No. NOM EMI B. Harlin AdNo 4,371.1 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 I 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 dr 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 Cols Depth 33010 661007 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323550 - IPL0232355 2 658 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, May 22, 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, WRH ATTACHMENT(S), AFTER A DULY NOTICED PUBLIC HEARING, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECT- ING THE CITY MANAGER TO TAKE ANY AND ALL ACTION(S) NECESSARY TO EXPEDITIOUSLY REQUEST THE MIAMI-DADE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND PUBLIC WORKS ("DTPW") CONSIDER THE PRO- POSED TRAFFIC FLOW MODIFICATIONS AND WAIVE THE REQUIRED RESI- DENT CONCURRENCE AND EXEMPT THE BALLOTING PROCESS IN ORDER TO EXPEDITIOUSLY PROCEED WITH THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF TRAFFIC CALMING DEVICES AT TWENTY-SIX (26) LOCATIONS IN THE RES- IDENTIAL SILVER BLUFF NEIGHBORHOOD, AS MORE PARTICULARLY DE- SCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "A," ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO SEND A CERTIFIED COPY OF THE THIS RESOLUTION TO THE DTPW DIRECTOR. 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 (FS. 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 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 May 27, 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 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.43714 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: 05/12/25 Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes. lei y Cia-s- -a Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 lag IZabbt 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 ME 02025 I MAW HERALD I 1* FROM PALE 6A NAMES outrage from Iranians at home and across the dias- pora, while Finding favor among Arab states. For many Iranians, the name is a source of national pride and a symbolic link to the country's unique legacy of the Persian Empire in a region surrounded by Arab neighbors. The Arabian Gulf, they say, could also create confusion with the nearby Arabian Sea, the northern region of the Indian Ocean. The sea bordered by North and South Korea, Japan, and Russia is also the subject of a naming dispute -with Japan insist- ing it be called the "Sea of Japan," while South Korea advocates for the more inclusive "East Sea." Also in Asia, the Taiwan Strait remains contested, with China claiming that it has "sovereignty, sove- reign rights, and juris- diction" over the 110-mile- wide strait, a strategic waterway that links the East China Sea with the South China Sea. Taiwan rejects Beijing's claim, insisting the strait constitu- tes international waters. Across the globe, territo- rial disputes range from local skirmishes to major standoffs marked by dashed lines on maps and deep-rooted claims of sovereignty. Perhaps the most visible and widely discussed dispute over the past few years has been Moroccan soldiers watch a motorbike pass the sand wall separating Morocco and Mauritania in the western Sahara on a leg of the 23rd Paris Dakar rally on Ian. 8.2001. between Israel and the of the disputed areas are Palestinian territories. marked by foreign ode, In contested spaces while others face mass around the world, rival displacement, sprawling governments, actors and refugee camps, or wide - movements continue to spread persecution and press their claims, often discrimination. stoking unrest and re- The larger region of shaping geopolitics. Some Western Sahara, which Morocco refers to as "Mo- roccan Sahara," was colo- nized by Spain in the 14th century. A string of border conflicts has shaped the region's modem history, including the 1963 Sand War between Algeria and Morocco and Morocco's 1975 "Green March," when thousands of civil- ians, backed by the Moroc- can military, advanced into the disputed territory of Western Sahara. The March, and the Madrid Accords agreement between Spain, Morocco and Mauritania that fol- lowed, signified regime change and the forceful displacement of majority of Sahrawis, many of whom now Eve in refugee camps in Algeria. Farther east, fresh clash- es between India and Pa- kistan have thrust Kashmir back into the spotlight. Kashmir, high in the Hima- layas, is home to some 13 million people - about 7 million in Indian -adminis- tered Kashmir and 6 mil- lion in the Pakistani -ad- ministered region. India and Pakistan both claim the area in its entirety, while China is a third, albeit minor, party to the conflict over the resource - rich territory. The Kashmir confect dates back to 1947, when British colonial ode in India ended and the sub- continent was partitioned into the sovereign states of India and Pakistan. Jammu and Kashmir, a region now administered by India and known as J&K, chose to accede to India after tribal militias backed by Pakistan moved in, leading to the first Kashmir war between the neighbors. FROM LOST FUNDING federal funding for HIV prevention - about S/ billion annually. The Trump administrations May 2 budget proposal for fiscal 2026 takes aim at DEI initiatives, including m its explanation for cut - ring S3.59 billion from the CDC. Although the pro- posal doesn't mention HIV prevention specifical- ly, the administration's drafted plan for HHS, released mid -April, elim- inates all prevention fund- ing at the CDC, as well as funding for Trump's initia- tive to end the epidemic. Eliminating federal funds for HIV prevention would lead to more than 143,000 additional people in the U.S. becoming in- fected with HIV within five years, and about 127,000 additional people dying of AIDS -related matesaccording to esti- from the Founda- tion for AIDS Research, a nonprofit known as am- fAR- Excess medical costs would exceed $60 billion, it said. Eldridge Dwayne Ellis, the coordinator of the mobile testing clinic at My Bother's Keeper, said that bing the group's serv- ices goes beyond HIV. "People see us as their only outlet, not just for testing but for confidential conversations, fora shoul- der to cry on," he said. "I don't understand how someone, with the stroke of a pen, could just hap- hazardly write off the health of millions." Ellis came into his role in the mobile clinic hap- hazardly, when he worked as a construction worker. When he became sudden- ly diary and unwell on a job, a co-worker suggested that he visit the organiza- tion's brick -and -mortar clinic nearby. He later applied fora position with My Brother's Keeper, inspired by its efforts to give people support to help themselves. For example, Ellis de- scribed a young man who visited the mobile clinic recently who had been kicked out of his home and was sleeping on couches or on the street. Ellis thought of friends he'd known in similar situations that put them at risk of HIV by increasing the likelihood of trans- actional sex or drug use. fOYTIMMIT OVORTOWN/PARK WEFT COEYOMNI REOENELOPYIXr AGENCY R0ASE Au. TAKE son0E Nis Baud aco5000003s riming MIN sob. and.erwsu0500 Went Conmm,Pedeetaaa20*5nry iSEC..21AI is mttroluted on TNUMaa Way0*20IIa,W 0., AYw thereafter. w Y.ml Cw NW 3500 M Aaaeun o.k., 111.1. PurSLIIIIIt to -R 2a-A71, whemeost a miNoluled MOPS CRS me., is e to Not DIw a a.n or Mar entente y, apM m ecat MORN CM will he anrnrcalh anted led Mr Ma Randy roNleumacs, YentMwent done othe apn- aImeemg.due 000 ns0r227.1025, al soma ew ty m - rx era Cry Ne. TWO Pan,Ameres+ Q'ne Mmint 0. a1SS Apex Me ,UmAN yew Ferns hum Om cancel., ,aa n ed m Soar, lop cot,conode sum. me., rat MNntake Orme No pkUo a olio ride special a Cry Hell a. lie CMS maw aswbs. me SCORN ORS 5 rmbu..era. A D.A.. PMc.ate"as,4e4na ong duo There deism Ns special mueeg akh bluely Tis... There Marine y aMraal noMe rmanrmr, any sm. scheduled apse Man prat..a.l p tbe R,eeal SECPv cis mesdr. all men.. dersans aro cop tie SEEN G. <u SON 0..00 rue vMnWm. Mersa don- or., .,Ard Ns 0215 Arms D.Mkgeen.E .., OMw-dr SdMVQamnuWnk Wag CUNsaa,b Redoestamem Ms. OEM REDEVEL.A1.1 DISTRICT COMLI NNY R®IYELowrENT AGENCY ROOM OF naLIC 1.0.1110 TM BUN . Commissioners 1'60aret . Yen Per Rede-ebunat Datnet CumanM Radeampnlml*gamey PCRA1wed told a P.m Hear. m MY 22e,2025, at 9:20 am or aytimme mereaMr a Ne CM Comm.. Manatee as at WWII City Halt 3500 Pan Amerman Orm e.. ., The Board wed consider theaward of grant Winesa00. Steel LLG,LLC. oM Mm0 a leeWh ahed a transact buss e.wecarde, servo. in the Sits*. Porn, to ureawW a portion of me costs assocs.,wed, the m mod.. Volsci corm.,. aurae -re... h.wy con n M am. GlM. In a.oraance wOh Me m10012mw00 ue,Ran 7PmnT and re,1a. rim Board wed carver Warnm an amawl arwm of S2.MO C0000 to omen° rim eyerdmres an, costs aaaa*d 0N, to [most:mem or a use pole. mmWeq or her norm minded nun Rm.etrcrmW M.. the amCAN am and 16a2 NE 1N Memo, Marne Ronda wean CRA Ito development. Pe Pork 4 whim ben tssNi amo.:a reduce sam M blight and provide much -needed hoar afbrdablM n me ama. The CPA Boa. requests all dm M heard reseed to an orrowtm before Me CPA Boamese. panes , proart or more.. at n nM,mm the BoaN may mks aeon.. aM person dame to VP, env eleceson of Ne Bard w,N respect b an tram cUSMre3 al the reee g, mat amaw tap mare Na a verbetm rem. of m PrcceNuga Is mods noon, atl reams, and evidence upon ern., dry anew ray be based KS MI6 1. recs., Ms not, be M. Irma Jonesse comer Execaaa N stay Floor, FM, 1.1136.00 679- Ede. M accordance reth ...as wNm Da... Ad. 199B persona my contact Ne ch Cent at 13t5i 25oba61 W0ei sae than l.n 12) Druness errs m.. TTY users my cop 71, Ira m Reby Scheel. not later eNnm the 12i N*.ma conga eta a to pmcead.q. When a rapid test re- vealed HIV, the young man fell silent. "The quiet tears hurt worse - it's the dread of mortality," Ellis said. "I tried to be as strong as possible to let him know his life is not deer, that this wasn't a ath sentence." Ellis and his team en- rolled the man in HIV care that day and stayed in touch. Otherwise, Ellis said, he might not have had the means or fortitude to seek treatment on his own and adhere to daily HIV pills. Not only is that deadly for people with HIV, it's bad for public health. HIV experts use the phrase "treatment as prevention" because most new infections derive from people who aren't dhering to treatment well enough to be considered virally suppressed - which keeps the disease from spreading. Only a third of people living with HIV in Mis- sissippi were virally sup- pressed in 2022. National- ly, that number is about 65%. That's worse than in eastern and southern Africa, where 78% of peo- ple with HIV aren't spreading the virus be - use they're on steady treatment. My Brother's Keeper is one of many groups im- proving such numbers by helping people to get test- ed and stay on medica- tion. But the funding cuts in Washington have cur- tailed their work. The first loss was a $12 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, not en two years into a 10-year project. "Pro - ern Or rum, ILOROA YOTIDE TO NWM Ara. hew. Ma be hell by the Gay kw... Foal Mon T)enday. Shy 22.2025. n Mans in is Cry Corm.. Clmmben N Coy lI.t MOO Pan American Omer Mom FTow a,33. o kV purpose West. are mwaemema a.rnxmag seared xis a me pptmal wed L a. Ens le llotRw10h Gerans heauteratern:wr.was Intuit. horn 0+z potent. uacea a sum a pa<Aa9a wro 0410Iw ext mmn4m Mabee 0 aaltsty the CD" rewaaa. b and sort mar ednael Tarle Fbgavnmt k el. at to CLy of Mora Procurer. De,arenep at Rru. Ms. Gdy riAers..24T0..snewt. KO.. Oh Com- .. Mlna e.eant0mi or IS mot hold due b.OM al a prom or Maw eteme c% a sec. CH Canons* meeting WI be mMxtiaar aivb vied M as Tuesday n0miM0h WNW, the Urceeed rose, In V. suss O one W M Maemmmxm. nrcemelancpa re apeos mwA10 wow be h. m a0ay 27. 202E. as 9.0C am. m Om GN 00.l isva, enamaan loco. N Ma. Gty Wain 2500 Pan Amen con D.ove. nn,s. Fbree 52123. AI of Os saw.. agenda Ann Iron Mat cacao. omen. 400 emtrr0tin0 be aGwlltOa an aPw ien n1,90,11310, Corr./won meal. TM City Clark scan rady;he pude MM0 mat. mom, mats mere pace he pang a npke.IneapurN1Ch 7 07410n rne0ye1 me mrraoxa CM War end the :Ay s man alrn0.RIN as0100 Peons a nouc. on the Cass 04000, an, n.avad, pa0y an ad 0 a newspaper of genteel ,cu. .m Isere. oral meting on me vnnadlakh blow, bussdpr Thane MoS m Metaal mi. be 004Gasm reao. Tor any each rrmnukn Mende.1 del 5 nano] to Ito ace. Oh Gomm. netting of:0a2*e p.reed- .apacmt andrmwO) cant.* I this ...id neywOcd the Oka of the Cay genet 13051250.61 No. M no Mennen hen 0l einee dap a lvoltpwaarto musers 44.00 .20 r116at8 N*y Sebgel m Oar M 11 Men. Gldays pox N Imonrank Todd Beim. Ad No • PEG CITE OF LORIDA NOME OF EM NEM A pub, mWad by Iea9 be hed IN Lih Gornmeson of re CM. Wam, Fonda U TM.,. May 22, 2025, at 9G0 AM. at CM Nall, bowled N 3500 Pan hnerean Doe. Mom, For.A eta for rim purpose. Bran. to A fE50,U1Uw OF THE MAW CITY COMMB8ON, WIM ATELCSMENTISI, AFTER A DLL, NDT EED PUBLIC NEARING. AraIDIIe0G AND MEG,. THE Cr. MAMOER TO MMI E ANY MPS,. I aArva 1EfE5B0Rr 10 EXPEDITIOUSLY RENEW EW TIE 1MMEADE COUNTY DFFIR10BCa 10000 1IICNAND PALE WORMS (05001 COWL. T1E PROPOSE, 1RN110 .0.PV MxiYATIONS AND YAM: OE REOJIED IESOENT COMMENCE AND EIIB.P5 THE 11w10111x3 PROCESS N ORDER TO EB8IOOISLY PROCEED WTI TIE 0RON AND WNSRl.C1CN OF TRAPPC MAME GEYEESAT TEN 11011CCA ON6N TIE PESOEM'AL DISTRICT 5 NEOIpOP0005, AS MORE PA ROAAdEY CROWED:. W-61'A- ATTACHED NO 'CORPORAL.: MEC,. IHE OW CLERK TO SEE ACERTF.00R OF TIE 1HBRESOLIMCH TONE DIPS DEED OR. the nesbls and maybe Mom Wan respect 0 nho arum. reapw,l Mo a any person mare t appeal Mr decrson of fie CM Con .eon whrrems.b aw maMrebe amadrecord o theat argtre,4osaol all rem ll ,are valance upon whir ...et may be based KS.2e6o10N Pursuant o Msn CM Cade Section 23T01. Meaner a.lochs CM Comnnsron meeting a geaNktl Ott s cot helddue !awm, a b.. of a or specialor other mere., a CM 0une,Wss meat. Wallbe al,,54 ty *WM lds to ad TuWely ankbh snow. tin e roaem etngd Me ems of pm dita alammanaee cnemman.0, de some rry e mawould on May 27, 2025, at 9m am. inNe CM Comma, cambers Iccated at war CM WII 15 W Pan American Dryer Mwm, Farm eta. All at lea ape.. *ma Morn that 02 meaag we alnrmetiUM iraphMm a e ,s a the Ma seemlieM Carmasan mcemg. TheGM Gen Mall noth or pudic. Me special nat. eel table pmca N2 pmCmg a robe.. special City Commas= meeting at Me entrance OICM has a. depth era edge sir Che wetem.p.m an ad n a newspaper of genet oroestron be. the special Ng on Ne nerredeleh followng TuesdayThere Mail r0 addrborel narceby pub.. any such scheduMmerea Mtn. rroyed to to scar. C. Cpmm sae meet.. In accordance son Ne Nnremrw T Psab coed. asul a contactthe CM 0/4eeFb5125 m.mWm akr Nanarse P14S,04acneper to bltiPenned.m pritarrapire711harm Raw s,.almmea Wanrpe 0l Nis.. daft pamNis posed.. grams based primarily on artificial and non- cien- tifi categories, including amorphous equity ob- jectives, are antithetical to the scientific inquiry," the NIH said in a letter re- viewed by KFF Health News. My Brother's Keeper then lost a CDC award to reduce health disparities - a grant channeled through the Mississippi state health department - that began with the group's work during the COVID pandemic but had broadened to screening and care for HIV, heart disease and diabetes. These are some of the maladies that account for why low-income Black people in the Deep South die sooner, average, than those who are white. According to a recent study, the former's life expectancy was just 68 years in 2021, on par with the average in impover- ished nations like Rwanda and Myanmar. The group then lost CDC funding that covered the cost of laboratory work to detect HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis in patients' blood samples. Mississippi has the highest rate of sexually transmit- ted diseases among states, in part because people spread infections when they aren't tested and treated. OM R PEOVIOLOPEE T DISTROT CorWNRY IEDMLOPEER AGENCY NOTICE OF NM. BEARD. TM Board . Canniamna radard'1 of Ne Omni wameiOp"ant Dater C.V...I00'X9t.ant Age., O,n.1 wen Me a P t,c Horny U sty 22ed, 2025, a 90U am. a aytmeeII,ot r n Sae CMComnssun Members untie a Warn City .11, ism Pan Mennen disc, Mhni, P afar. The Board we mmoder the award ul Kent,. ao EWB Hoaags see. ea author... trareact nro/m,der serves n me Sere. M,Wa, m underwrite a oonon a, the aevemnent a a cooed nmre amNaee nbw+a Purled a lie am. GRA. 2019 Redevelopment Pun Men. and ga 0 Fbr SOO. 1a�de BoaBoar. sill Gander W.A. an want d 12375,194L0 mdowne to epesmrea and cos. assoc.. with the M.emrent Man II ran y Pmk0 bam0 at 1420 NO M West Is Court, m, FM. are '435 Wm, West 1N Coal Mom. Ronde Mho. CMS 04,442arn. The protect .11 mb0e 2 un0 tor Emem.M Low-Inome e aA, 3 one for Lao r-UrrN m tortnte kN SO. 2 corm stdeaat Vas men* between figs EMAIL 3 mab Mode.a- Income nsebetween11.-100.AMI, andIt, at reveal risk.Taos fundm crecal M.., Mtn and 0wetcarp 00 the m houaok opened n the common,. cone.. with rim mats pndoo in to The GRA Beard nosiest,. Imaesed genes be present a mare.. at the ment. and nay be haard with apram., befoe rile CPA Boa.. o whoth the Boa. eaM may e action. Moue m Moue aM rumen deuce O V. tle Boarde0N reaped* any ire cowdaN red at s mew., per.,.nensure that a wets. regent of the pm... is weer ecru. a les.. and a.ence soon W. any appeal may be lamed 6S. 25601051. Mom regard..m recce maybe addressed le M tm ewes &sc ai-m Ore., at 1401 N. Miam Ae. 2M Fboe Mam,, Fbrela MIRE 006167805586. sonr0ace w.N the ., en., wi0* OM61Mks ll N 1g90, perm. mm peed. aa. a.nmwma t0 gem.Ink m Nis proceed. may em. rim of.For City pal0512m-Sa(Me. coo maw m t eNho Nnenes days Owe at weir IS are proceed..90 users hey all Ttt 6horM free Serval. cot con M lid GI business days pror m the proems.. M No. 4 Todd B. Haven Oenafine Beam CITY OE MAY, FLD0Oa NOTICE OF PUBLIC 110.1010 A or. bear.g wit be tee w de Cr, 0oornis m.0S City of Meni, F.- en Thurs. May 22. 2025, at 900 AM. at CM Hap, burn a 3500 Pen M,mta, oho, Mom. m, Few, a133 br Nis sucrose. genes Nis eatbwiy: A RESOLUTE, OF TIE MWa CRY COMAISSION.'NfM ATTAOeENTE), AFTER A DULY NOTCH) PUBLIC HEARING, AUTHOR D OREGr- ND TIE OTI P AWL ED TO TAKE PM' MO ALL ILT4a51 NECESSARY 10 El0®IIOUSLY ROUE. THE WORKS 70E COON, 0EPARINIRO OF TMNSFgRATON AND ROE 10SI0 00). CONSCER TIE PRO- POSED MOTE ROW' MOFONTONS AND WANE THE MIMED RE64 DENT CCNO-FIFIBEE NO DE E O THE BALLOTING POLES9 N ORDER TO 3HOx11r5LY PRIXEED MTN THE DESIGN NO CONSTTLEOGN OF TRAFFIC CALLOW SEAM AT TWENTY,. QN LOCECNS N TIE PE. OQJIIAL Strai K FF NEIGHBO 2010 5 AS s1065 MRIOLLNEY GE- 9CRBED N DNbR -A- ATTACHED AND NC-OPAMATmp MECO. TIE OTT OBE TO SENO A CERTIFIED COPY OF THE THIS RESOLUTION TO THE GREW DIRECTOR All vine. [more are n.0elm Opear at den meang and maybe Mad war raped b . pros. reseeroon. Should am parson desire b apeal NM den. of the Ch Comae on with .sped b wry meter t be cmnp- - des ma* N. m at person ensure amho. mode Proceed. m node Mmemo,ed. W memo,and aWace man M. as coalmay be based 65. 2.101061. Pursuant to Learn Cray Code scion 2Sib1.5Ne suer a rlyduled City Corn mama rmaM is cancelled or is . hold e Me... a Mosel Onm Comsam neew ,. wit be aumeM sdm- dm Tuesday immediately W.. tie canoe. neea,g, n. t aa.m . to afonme Men ...noes. the .spec. ramp would be held m Mart 21. 2025, at 900 am. 0 the CM 2maeeon Mantes, 1Uted al Wm MCMWIL MOO Pan American Dne,wWml.Ferno142.N 1 tip .Muled agenda len* trant that CanCel. meet, shall sMedu.l a, agenda Um at the specml101y Gvnnmmmems. h [e The CM c1e5 matt mth the pudic of to yet. meeting that is b tw pine by O.., a rooee. ten ape,. CM Commrmum new., at the mince. tin 02, aanneirente bum. aeons a notice on rim city peatog newspaper o general ow, - Mon bean sac macro n or ed for 'h yen scheThere du d 1 wort ,aa apaW PM* cowed lore teaselM Cpnrnrnaorm radg. acconiatce twill the Mler41115 with .spec. omrmoal oa prreding pers. OMgea the Cy Cereal 00512550-5261 No. nthe o leer than SheYel Nmm1a droso lode proceed.. m users may call re 21161009fats Sen./ Mer M. 01 Dueness dam pr. n Ne prone¢ M M..702 Todd B. HW,on C.of to maid TOM B. Haven Da clerk Ad No. OM Toe. B Hayed O Glen M. OEM McClatchy The Beaufort Gazette The Belleville News -Democrat Bellingham Herald Centre Daily Tunes Sun Herald Idaho Statesman Bradenton Herald The Charlotte Observer The State Ledger -Enquirer Durham I 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 1 The News Tribune Tri-City Herald The Wichita Eagle The Olympian Account # Order Number Identification Order PO Cols Depth 33010 661003 Legal Display Ad-IPL02323520 - IPL0232352 43716 2 658 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 NEARING A public hearing will be held by the City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida on Thursday, May 22, 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 ATTACHMENT(S), AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE THE INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT, IN SUBSTANTIALLY THE ATTACHED FORM, WITH MIAMI-DADE COUNTY ("COUNTY"), A POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, REPLACING THE INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT THAT WAS EXECUTED PURSUANT TO RESOLUTION NO. 07-0272, ADOPTED MAY 10, 2007, TO CONTINUE TO ALLOW THE CITY OF MIAMI ("CITY") TO RECEIVE ITS PORTION OF MUNICIPAL SHARE FUNDS FROM THE CHARTER COUNTY TRANSIT SYSTEM SURTAX FOR TRANSPORTATION AND TRANSIT PROJECTS AND TO ALLOW THE USE OF THE SURTAX FOR ON -DEMAND TRANSPORTATION SERVICES, TO SERVE VISITORS, RESIDENTS, AND WORKERS BY PROVIDING A CONVENIENT, EFFICIENT MOBILITY OPTION TO CIRCULATE THROUGHOUT DESIGNATED AREAS OF DOWNTOWN AND WITHIN THE COCONUT GROVE BID. 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 May 27, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Fbrida 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. Todd B. Hannon City Clerk Ad No. 43716 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: 05/12/25 Affiant further says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50, Florida Statutes. o Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of May in the year of 2025 Kabey‘a 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 tflargefor lost orduplicate affidavits. Legal doament please do not desh'oyl MIAMI HERALD SODAS MAT 12 2075 FROM PAGE 3A ARTISTS "She's our coach," one participant chimed in warmly. The program is funded by philanthropist E.A. Michelson, and the Perez Museum is just one of over 25 institutions with similar programs. Since 2013, E.A. Michelson Philanthropy has invested over 015 million in these programs. Airas, a retired design- er, painted a face in a purple box. Airas said the figure in his painting is supposed to represent a survivor. "She is saying, 'You can punch and bruise me all you want, but I can overcome it.' " Marie Vickles, the mu- seum's senior director of education, says the pro- gram tries to raise aware- ness about ageism and the importance of com- munity for older adults. "The demand for these programs is through the roof," she said. Participants have to submit applications an- swering questions about why they want to partici- pate and how they will benefit from the program. Nicole Combeau, the program coordinator, says she tries to pick a diverse group of participants — some with art experience and some without. Since the program began in 2023, it has served over 224 people from over 20 countries. She usually gets 40-70 applications and accepts only 15 students. This year's cohort in- cluded budding artists from all over the world — including Pent, Bosnia and the United Kingdom. Alumni of the program include federal judges, surgeons and Colombian immigrant mothers who spent their working years in textile factories in New York. Combeau says the pro- gram aims to challenge the idea that life ends at retirement. "This is a way to make sure they're still active, that they don't fall into the stereotype of disintegrating," she said. Jacqui Love Thomell, 77, says that the most profound suggestion she received from Ferraz was to take her time while painting. "In slowing down, I saw Nicole Combeau. program coordinator at Perez Art Muse artists and guests during the PAMM Creative Aging Seri55 things differently," she said. But it has not been without diffindty for Thomell, as she has trou- ble holding her hand steady and also struggles with her vision. But the group's encour- agement has made it easier. "You just feel like you can do it because every- one is cheering you on," she said. Mirna De Los Santos, 82, a mother of three from the Dominican Re- public who worked for two decades as a social worker for government agencies, was in tears as she spoke to her class- mates and teacher on the final working day before the exhibition. She said that after her first day of class, she wanted to leave because How PORTAL sosnapre.bandasom UM Miami. welcomes student :Spring Painting Showc.o. she had never painted in her life and was intimi- dated by the other artists who had more expert - "I thought to myself, 'I don't belong,' " she said. But Fen.az encouraged her, telling her that her painting was "amazing." De Los Santos said that motivated her to contin- ue. As she presented her final artwork to her class- mates, she said, "I know it's not the best in the world, but for me it's a masterpiece." Two women, Maja Gurina, 64, and Macar- ena Maiman, 59, applied and were accepted into the class together. Guzina survived thyroid cancer, and her friend Macarena survived breast cancer. "We fought and we are here," said Grnina. Children, grandchil- dren and friends all gath- ered With the students in the Perez Gallery on a Saturday afternoon for the final exhibition, con- gratulating each other and celebrating their accomplishments. The organizers of the program were celebrating this cohort of artists, but were also celebrating the news that their funding will be extended for an- other two years. At the exhibition, Fer- raz encouraged the stu- dents to keep making art. "Go home, find a space in your house and keep going back to painting. Make a space for Iran your life," she told the artists. Clara -Sophia Daly: @clarasophiadaly FROM PAGE lA RADIO MARTi ven contractors were called back to work. But the station's shortwave radio signal, which is less likely to be jammed by Cuban authorities, has not been restored. An attendant at the North Caroline -based Greenville Transmitting Station, which carries the station's signal, confirmed to the Miami Herald that transmitters used to broadcast Radio Marti's shortwave signal to the island are off. A source knowledgeable about the station's internal decisions who was not authorized to speak publicly said that the station's programming is available only online and through a secondary AM signal transmitted from Marathon in the Florida Keys. The AM signal is easier for Cuban authorities to jam. The person said that only one contractor had been called back to work to ensure the safety of the old technology used at the Greenville station. Last month 14ymedio, an independent news outlet based in Cuba, reported MIRE 110 Signal was detected in Havana or in Villa Clara, in central Cuba, on the shortwave frequency on which Radio Marti used to broadcast. Though full-time staff- ers were called back to work at the station's office in Daral, Radio Marti has not been able to resume its full programming. In recent days, seven con- tractors previously fired have been called back to work, but some produce videos for social media or write for the news site ard are not involved in radio - related work. The U.S. Agency for Global Media did not respond to a request for comment. Trump's order to reduce the U.S. Agency for Global Media's "performance of fits) statutory functions and associated personnel to the minimum presence and function required by to broadcast Voice of law" has upended the America content. Voice of work of Voice of America, America is still off the air Radio Marti and other and is the subject of sever - stations that the agency al lawsuits. funded. Several employees In recent years, the have sued the Trump Office of Cuba Broad - administration over its casting has tried to mod - plans. ernirn the stations — redi- Central to their clairns is recting resources from how the agency's top lead- controversial television ership hax interpreted the programming that could functions mandated by not be watched on the Congress. The 1983 law island because of signal creating Radio Marti spe- cifically names the Mara- thon facility and states it can be used for radio broadcasting to Cuba. It also says the station car use frequencies other than AM, but it appears to tie their use to a requirement jamming — to produce videos for Marti Noticias and social media. While past U.S. adminis- trations and some mem- bers of Congress have questioned the spending on radio broadcasting, Cuban American mem- bers of Congress have supported Radio Marti as a vehicle for delivering news to an island where Internet access is expen- sive, power blackouts are common and die govern- ment shuts down the in- ternet during protests. Nora Gem. Torres: 305476-2169, 6Ongamerrorres FROM PAGE IA BIRDS eagle hatched and is being raised by its parents at the zoo's Amazon and Beyond exhibit. Harpy eagles are the most powerful birds of prey on Earth, with talons the size of grizzly bear claws. The new chick and its parents can be seen through a CCTV image projected in real time at their habitat. A pair of Abdirn' s storks also hatched in the 700'S Wings of Asia Aviary on April 27 and 28. Abdim's storks are among the smallest species of storks, reaching a height of only about 3 feet. The chicks can be seen in their nest from the public viewing areas in the aviary, where the parents are caring for them. Devour. Caviar: 305-376-2026, OOdevoun_crroute 0166 OF NUNES FLORIDA NOTICE Of MMLIC HEAPING A cams Wade ot. beto by the ot c, of NOM Flo,. on Thuraday May 22. 2025. al 9:00 1.1 at ON Baia 0000205 3500 Pan Amerman Dove, 50011, Porde, 33133 lor the puree. ca toMmet A RESOLUTION CF THE MAN CRY COMASSION. WITH ATTICMISOft(S), AUTHONIENG DECRY MANASER TO DEMOTE TOE INTEN_CCAL AOIREEPENT, M SUBSTANTALLY 11E ATTACHED FORK 64111 MAISIAMDE OWN, MOUND,. A POLIOCAL SUBOMSION OF IRE STAM OF FLORIDA. 003Ct01t4 INTERDOCAL AOPMENT THAT WAS SECURED REISUANT TO FESOLLIDCNNO. 07-0272. ADOPTED MAY ID 2037,TO OCOMPLE TO ALLOW 'ware Cf NAM IMMO TO FEMME RS 13344104 OF MUNICEN_ SHANE FONDS FROM THE 00(0I05 COUNTS SENNST SYSTEM SLIME FOR TRANSPORIATION AN° ITMEMT PFMECTS AND TO KLOW TIE USE Cf TIE SLIRME FOP ON-DEWMO IRMISPORTATON SERVICES, TO SERVE VISITORS. FESOENTS, ANC WORN. BY PROMOING A CONVENIENT. EFFICEN,40FRJTY OM, TO CMCLRATETIMOUGHOUT DESIGNATED MESS OF DOWNTONN ANONITHIS SHE 061130,1T GK. BO otoromod wrens are ,nsted aPpear at Me roe.. and may be Omni we reap. to Me proposed on000n Snoue a, poem des, to appose any damson of Cay Coirnma..norrh respects, arra mem m armee. at Ma memo°, Mat person shall ensure tot a ... woe of Me proceeanga made .orlog all tem., ate ewerce upon oh. am app. rrov be base ES. 286 MEE Pursuant to Mom City Code Sefton 2-330). whenever a scheduled ON Comm.. mete t eanceded or is not ben due to a Prok ei a quorum 0764 .10130,. specel City Ccarvesson meeng sol be automat., 000.101 Mt the TuesJay .remodotely nmb.o0 Me cancer. meetog. In . event of one of .e aaarornenoonea nrcarnatances. tte specal mem. Arm held on Ws 27, 2025, at 300 o Crty Co... chambers located at eon Oty Hall. 3500 Pan AinenClin One, Samna Emma 33133 All Of Ile ache.. agenda An. fern Mat cap.. metre Mail adomauca, be scheduled as an agenda item at Me spec, Gay Connomon meebno. ISOCOsCO,00WI not,. p.m of the spa 000(3 Mat a m Mae p.e Or P0.3 a Peace of Ye "meat°, Comma. rneetse . entrance of Cly Has aro the CA. nen adnerustrame p.c. a nosce on Crt, ars., arcl. /east.. peco3 os ad n a ...nape, al general Grambon before Me .0.1 nmstasy fas Antredasely Moore Mos., There .11 be no acertonse notice by palo.ten mut. Many.. 00*&0105'0.t1I0x,s Am. to the specat Gay C2l01000505S5. o accordance wah the Arlen,. voth res.loes Acr 1961). perm, neeong Noe *.(Wflt(sn 00101555 Procuedse nob cont.. Office of the Crly Clerk al 13051260-530' Noce). umer than Irea (SI dooms .os poor to the proceed.. TTY users roe .1 vo 711 flora R.y .0.1 co mar Pun f 6) berme days pod 0oc00o6 L. to A cinereous vulture hatched at Zoo Miami on April 21. In the wild it lives in Europe. Asia and the Middle East. CRY OF MIAMI, FLOMMA 1.011fAl Of PUMLIC HEAPING A pi. ham.. be held tsc Ma Cornom. of the Co (000111000 ▪ on Thunday. Isey BE 2566. at 903 A AA at Cay Hex, ocated at 3500 Pan Amok. Orr, Mem Herds 33133 for Me purpose of reoung folesoi) A FESOLIREN OF THE IA. CRY COSOSMION. M1TH ATTKAMENTE), MIER A CULY 10100 PUBLIC HEAFING, 001000843 [EEGS- N O THE CMS PAW. TO ME ANY MO ALL ACTON% RECESS.' TO IDOEIMMUSLY RFOLEST TFE NON11-6613E COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF IIMHSPORTATON MD PUBLIC MORNS COVIO) CONSIDER TFE PRO- FUSE° 155FFIC FLOW 163611HCATCHS AND MANE THE WOOFED REM- MERS CONCUFFENCF MO ERMA. THE NALLOTME3 PRCEESS El ORDER M IDEEDITIOUS, PPL3CFED TFE LESION MO CCOMMUCTICH OF TFPF°C CMJAND LENSES AT TMENDI-TWO 06 LOCATIONS IN .E RFSDENTAL OSTRCT NElGHBORHOODS, INOFE FISFRICIJUNLY SORBED N Enaled -A,' ATTACHED AM ISCOPEOPASED: °MGM° DiE MIN CLERY TO SEND A C£RTIFED OSAY OPINE THIS RESOLLMON TOTE- OMR DIRECTOR nterestea perfons are cwt. to appear at Te ana may be Ware ont reopen, prOLOSed ,poton Shouo a, person Poore m appeal asbe deacon d C.N Comm,sa, kr. reapect to any metier m be coretd- wed at Iss thal cerson .11 ensure .t a verbose record of Me Premedoos s ma. nclucl, all norm, ans one.. upon *tea anY amen may be town FS 286 0106). 13) rem, bee, Gay Code Sect. 2-33.1, whenever a scheOulte Grey Corn- et...et, a cancel. or a not held due m a la, of a cud. or other emerge,. a sPee. Commas. .emst vAll be a.mateatly u.forlse moodotely foliowse caoceibe ...mg beer001 of one ot we. toned ors...noes Me seems mem. *00100 00on FM 27. 2025, at 0(0011 01005400105500,010100500001 at eon Gay Hai) 3500 Pan Arnencan Coe. Mons Flor. 331M. MI of Me sledued agenda ems flom Oat can.. noose .11 autonabca, be ...so as an agenda 005,75 apecol CO Corrsomon mew. The Csy Clerk Nam nobly the p.m of Me seem, maebno .t atm tdm Pt P.m) a nos. d the spec, City .fornesen reeebre at Ma entrance of Hall a. te CP, man a.m.., boadog. paong a name on be GIs, *ease, and, A fem.*. p.ing an ad o a newspaper 0 general ear. Noon Pei. the spool moire of the .1e0000153021.00 TueSday Riere stail be roe acetone; nob, hy publ.ton raw. fer any such scholui. age. MT the el rota.1 ID the specalOry ...mason freed", M accesdaree me WIth Dia.,. Aid of 1060. perlarkariseb . 0 Mee, accommodat.e PfleCipale prteessling Rey 030110 the Offica of Me Crty COrk at 0051250-5361 Noce) no leer than We 15) tueoessa dam., ea the procerone. T. users may c.v. 711 Mo.. Rehm See. .er Man fee 61 wane:tease per to the ofoceeeno. OMNI REDEVELOPMENT DiSTRICT COMMONII, REEMNIELOPIMDIT AGENCY FlEASE AMINE NOTICE Mate Board of Convessoners Meebre of the Oron, N edeselopmee Denct Comenly floioyeepnent Agency Elle ra sched- ule:1 lb Me pica 0, Dersday, .y 22, 2025. at 0.30 am Cf thereafter at the IA. City Hall. koMed at 3500 Pan Aoser.n Dove, Mar, Flonda 33/33. MI rammed pawns aro noted to altend. For sore nermalson, peaee om- tem the COMP ORA office at 0051570-6868. Ad No 43705 Plea Jones, E... °vector Orr. Rederelopuent Dabst Commorty flememdsmod Agen, CITY OF MIAMI. FLORIDA NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE(S) Nolice a bonen soon ere Ile fey Cont.* of Sleety ol Muni Rot. reatounser the PPP. octflref.161 on word and INS mane an tbs.- ., HeY EOM emomMull 4 903 MS O CM Com.. Perm bars knead at 3503 Pan Amp.. Oranf Seam Rorke 33133: ORDNUINCS AN CPCIANCE OF TIE PPM CRY CONIARSION AMENDING 650E0036/ SECTION 364OF DE COCE OP SSE OF HAM. RD.& AS MEMO - SO ea, CCOel, MUM TOSEMPERASION OE MOOS PHONCOIMPHS, OS OTHER )163.110444A1413 DEVICES) BANDS. COCIESTPOS. MSS CIANSPOENERALLY. 00341.01f MC CHAPTER MYSECTION 36-5 OF DE CITYCCOE, T11111,4366.6414E -FOURS Cf OMISSION OP ANEBOXES. RADICE ETC: EXBET1314 Fag EVENTS ON CITYONNED PROPER,. 01- 245507014: OSEATE AstritInte 4301131,211111ESIAILTVe nheit .4.1eFeartE0197.3ES RJR SCAMS. 714E fAINAI FINERSCESFECIN_TY OSTRICE COMMAND A SEVERAMUTY CLAUSE; MO F196.060 FOR AN EfFECTMOVE Saki proposal ortlawneaise =vb. Inacecaad by ea pf/alc Iv Ofarof otesa Ciert 3600 Pon Aram.n 101, Marne Flores 33133. 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EL Henson CM CA, 43760 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 I 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 if order Number Identification Order PO Cols Depth 33010 662279 Legal Display Ad-IPL02332090 - IPL0233209 43720 - Attorney Client S 2 7.93 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 NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA PLEASE ALL TAKE NOTICE THAT a meeting of the City of Miami Commission has been scheduled for Thursday, May 22, 2025, at the City of Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133. A private attomey-client session will be conducted under the parameters of §286.011(8), F.S. The person chairing the City Commission meeting will an- nounce the commencement of an attomey-client session, closed to the public, for purposes of discussing the pending litigation in the matter of William O. Fuller, Martin Pinilla, 11, The Barlington Group, LLC, Calle Ocho Marketplace, LLC, Yo Amo Calle Siete, LLC, Little Havana Arts Building, LLC, Lit- tle Havana Arts Building Too, LLC, Tower Hotel, LLC, Brickell Station, LLC, Piedra Villas, LLC, Futurama, LLC, El Shopping, LLC, Beatstik, LLC, Viernes Culturales/Cultural Fridays, Inc., Little Havana Bungalows, LLC, and LHAB Trest, LLC v. City of Miami, Joe Carollo, in his individual capacity, Arthur Noriega, in his individual capacity, Victoria Mendez, in her individu- al capacity, Rachel Dooley, in her individual capacity, Asael Marrero, in his individual capacity, Daniel S. Goldberg, in his individual capacity, William Ortiz, in his individual capacity, Luis Torres, in his individual capacity, Adrian Plasencia, in his individual capacity, Rene Diaz, in his individual capacity, Ivonne Bayona, in her individual capacity, John Does 1-20, Case No. 23-CV-24251-RAR, pending in the United States District Court, Southem District of Florida, to which the City is presently a party. The subject of the meeting will be con- fined to settlement negotiations or strategy sessions related to litigation expenditures. This private meeting will begin at approximately 10:00 a.m. (or as soon thereafter as the Com- missioners' schedules permit) and conclude approximately one hour later. The session will be attended by the members of the City Commission, which include Chairwoman Chris- tine King, Commissioners Miguel Angel Gabela and Damian Pardo; the Chief Financial Officer, Larry M. Spring, Jr.; City Attorney George K. Wysong 111, Chief Deputy City Attorney John A. Greco; Deputy City Attorney Kevin R. Jones; Assistant City Attomey Supervisor Eric J. Eves; Assistant City Attomey Marguerite Snyder; and Outside Counsel Raquel A. Rodri- guez Esq., Angel Cortinas, Esq., and Jonathan Kaskel, Esq. A certified court reporter will be present to ensure that the session is fully transcribed, and the transcript will be made public upon the conclusion of the above -cited, ongoing liti- gation. At the conclusion of the attorney -client session, the regular City Commission meeting will be reopened and the person chairing the City Commission meeting will announce the termination of the attomey-client session. Todd B. Hannon City Clerk Ad No. 43720 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: 05/15/25 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-r y o Sworn to and subscribed before me this 15th day of May in the year of 2025 0/W06. KbJ,bt 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 destmyl 0010! Reign I TNIR50tr WO B 2025 FROM PAGE IA FREE LUNCH lunch each year. Broward County Public Schools Superintendent Howard Hepbam ex- plained that during the past few years the district "utilized the strategy of feeding all students to deplete [the fund balance[ back to the levels that are appropriate based on the federal government." Not only will universal free lunch end for the next school year, the price of lunch will also increase by S1. School Board members voted to increase the price during Tuesday's meeting. Each meal will be 53 in elementary schools, $3.35 in middle schools and 83.50 in high schools. According to a school district memo, lunch prices have not increased in 12 years. Food and Nutrition Services urns a self-operating budget within the school district and does not receive money from the district's general fund. The cost of food, equipment, supplies and labor has increased, Mulder said. Parents will be able to fill out paperwork to apply for free or reduced -price lunch starting July 14 at www.myschoolapps.com. Breakfast will remain free for all students. "It's so vitally important that we have these robust conversations now so there's no confusion as far as parents that need to fill out the paperwork," said COL PATE oyeseeeke The Browerd County School Board holds a meeting on Tuesday in Fort Lauderdale. One member encouraged the board to discuss maintaining free universal lunch. Other members said they would discuss the idea in a workshop. School Board member Lori Alhadeff. School Board member Rebecca Thompson showed interest in main- taining free universal lunch and encouraged the board to discuss it further. School Board members said they would discuss the idea in a future work- shop. "The economic sit- uation of our state is not going to get any better and if there is a way that we can explore this and help families then we should do that,"Thomp- son said. FROM PAGE PA BSO put on administrative investigative leave with pay, according to BSO. Also placed on leave were Civil Division Deputy Joseph Sasso and Dania Beach Deputy Daniel Mu- noz.Lt. Micheal Paparella, who was previously placed on leave, returned to full duty on April 28. Days after the tragedy, Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony slammed deputies for failures in Mary's case. They included not con- fiscating Nathan's weap- ons not seeking a judge's order to seize the weapons. BSO could have done so under Florida's red -Bag law, enacted after the 2018 Marjory Stonemans Dou- glas High mass shooting in Parkland. it WHEN WE RECTIFY THIS SITUATION, I'M GOING TO SEND THE FEAR OF GOD AMONGST THIS ENTIRE AGENCY. BrorRard Sheriff Gregory Tony soon after the Riling" "When we rectify this situation, I'm going to send the fear of God amongst this entire agen- cy," Tony said at a press conference. rc onfeFrom February 2024 to January 2025, Mary called the sheriffs office 14 times about her husband's in- creasingly erratic behavior, a BSO call log reviewed by the Herald shows, In October, Mary discov- ered a tracker on her car, as well as a receipt show- ing that Nathan had pur- chased an item from the tracker's company, accord- ing to court documents. King was assigned to in- vestigate the tracker. MMar's divorce attorney ended she check her car for a tracking de- vice, according to an un- redacted BSO incident report obtained by the Herald. Mary told an oper- ator she thought the track- er be an "easy caBut a criminal probe, Mary detailed, didn't come until December, when she spoke at length with King. Despite Mary's calls to law enforcement, she was killed along with two others at the hands of her husband weeks later, po- lice say. FROM PAGE RA HAPPINESS Fortner U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has described the U.S. mental - health crisis, which is affecting people of all ages, as being largely fueled by loneliness. "It's those moments of happiness that may serve as that bridge between a good day and a not good day," said Siegel, who was co-chair of the conference and served as the confer- ence's moderator. THE CAREGIVER EFFECT People need to take care of themselves before car- ing for others, similar to how you would secure your own oxygen mask before helping others in a flight emergency, said Dr. fames Galvin, director of the Comprehensive Cen- ter for Brain Health at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. A few years ago, Galvin's team developed a tool that can provide a snapshot of how healthy a patient's brain is and how much risk the patient has of developing Alzheimer's and related disorders "Caregiving is a bio- medical challenge. The actual practice of caregiv- ing raises inflammatory markers, increases head- aches, increases GI com- plaints, decreases re- sponse to vaccines," Gal- vin said. But it also has positive effects. "Caregiving gives peo- ple a sense oaccomplish- ment," he said. "They can feel the joy they're provid- ing, the love, the care to their loved one, giving back. It makes many peo- ple feel good, has high life satisfaction." 'LAUGHTER YOGA' AND OTHER TIPS TO REDUCE BURNOUT AND STRESS Here are some tips that Galvin; Muller, wellness advocate Lauren "L2" Howard; Dr. Thomas Felke, director of the Shady Rest Institute for Positive Aging at Florida Gulf Coast University; and Amid Rodriguez, a certi- fied "laughter yoga"in- structor in Miami, gave to help reduce stress and encourage socialization to promote healthier aging: • Laugh, even U noth- ing funny has hap- pened. Laughter has both positive and long-term effects, including reducing stress and tension, improv- ing your mood, and can even help reduce pain, bolster your immune sys- tem, and make it easier to cope with difficult sit- uations, according to the Mayo Clinic. But the funny thing about laughter is that"the body does not know the difference between forced laughter and actual laugh- ter," said Rodriguez, the "laughter yoga" instructor. Laughter Yoga was vented in 1995 by Dr. Madan Kataria in Mumbai, India, and relies on a mix of breathing and laughing techniques meant to help improve mood and reduce stress. Some studies sug- gest that laughing yoga, or simulated laughter, "may be as effective as aerobic exercise at reducing self - reported stress," although some experts say there's not enough large-scale research yet to determine how beneficial laughing is, according to Healthline. Here's how it works: Breathe deeply through the nose, "engage our entire torso, and then we're gonna let it out with a smile and a 'ha' sound," Rodriguez told people at the Miami aging confer- ee. After you do this breathing exercise a few times, breathe in again and when you're ready to exhale, do so with a "good hearty laugh." • Find activities you enjoy and engage the brain- Take a class, join a book club, volunteer with a school or nonprofit, join an rase group, f d activities that interest you and give an opportunity to socialize with others. Keeping your body and brain active is also known to help reduce the risk of Alzheimer's and other dementia. Walking, for example, can help improve your physical and mental health. "There's no magic for- mula so for each person — the things that make them happy is going to be differ- ent," said Galvin, the UM doctor. "And so you really need to think about what makes you happy and what makes you sad and try to choose those things that make you happy." Online communities can be a form of support, too, acconling to Howard, who is also founder and CEO of mental -health company LBee Health. "Everybody has a differ- ent set of circumstances and abilities and desires to go out and engage and so when you start treating any place where you can get fulfillment andfriend- ship and camaraderie as community, it opens up a whole lot of opportunities for you to find different pockets that make you feel happy, that you feel wel- come, that make you feel included," Howard said. • Learn new things. "Once you find that thing you like to do, do some- thing different because the brain likes novel things," Galvin said. "So if you exercise and you walk on a treadmill, great. Now, do meeing different. Swim. Use a resistance TP41 PUBLIC HEARING The Govcmeng Board of the T,anspotution Planning (hgarwaion fr101, in is rate as Le Perap,litan Plumt0l0gameann I MPII far the Matt, ()Yanad:un will hold a Piddle Hearing on Thursday. May 20. 2020 at 200 p.m. In the T PO Cutani,g Board Chambers. Mmeum Traver Bulling, 150 West Fl0les Suer, Sums Iv_a, Mani. Florida fur cite m.o., orwnsdenng tre fallowing: 1. Fecal Venn 2026-2020 Transportation Imprmemeut Program (Tin The TIP details ma sinakdmunentdl.uAxe nanskwl,,n ,osonoements ,n the m 5wc4flan area scheduled for de nod Esc yea, Fo,.ling tit tM transporlaaon improvements include feMal, state. and local transportation sources proposed in the TIP lor!he upcoming live -year cycle. 2. Fiscal years E025-I029 TIP ,6mendmnt: Update Project Cam for Stale Road I SR) 886rPort koukoard from ersmyue Boulevard ro Pantlesmr Dos pupa is focused on inputting army. mod lin. and aceessbihty akng de cotndor. Plood impmtentems include revised Tate configurations. mtiamsx,ute tpgndes, and roadway re,wlic,ng. lbe aroma cat increased from 54.26 millim to 56 52 million due to Pe additional wont needed m coreco tapered eel no men. for igd barmen woWm In projrm ana Poles on,000 m is e, to begin in Segorobr 2025. J. 2050 long Rouge Tramper**. Rae METE) Amendment: Addition el Nn Greater sett ksprt ere Agemy Pr** • GMxx 112110011, SR I Il IAbpmt Eapresswoyh Ceerkbr ModeretraWe Add Protect Deselopm. and Ent nonmetal 1PDa0l study to addressovdaniuoan of to beldam sing SR 112larpF p on essuayl as well as =pronto safety and operational ellimntcies at,heSN W 231d and NW 27di Avenue airy car nectiom. GADO n601a1al, SR xM IDop bin Expressway) Eastbound and Westboud Widening from Nomestead Extension Florida's rurapka WEFT} to 97s5 Avenue Add finding for tie Promo Devclimaxnr FnW Ides,, and Cmstruawn pluses fin SR 836. This prim c. m dditutal lane on SR 826 maths from DEFT to PI" .Avenue m bob Mrecuons m lamartiee with the eusnng tare w liguraim and tie into Mc newly mnpleud SR 836 new ratty cmmcmm* to the NETT. The additional capacity along Wis segnem 5Jl mp,we mobility and safety along cite expe:mvay GAM/ 82610go9. Widening etSW 10tb Avnue from SW 0th Street m SW gbh Street Advance the Foul Dasip, aid Comm.* pluses for die widening or this condor from a four lane mtigmauon to a via lane ...amnion to o wec, an °pontoon deficiency and can* *cm congmoon for tragic entering or cuing de SR 826 Extension a d SW 1JTth .Avenue nemPois. GNxa OdSalw, SR R161oaplde EWrmway) Improvemems from West of SR 826le East ea 923/dune Reed Add mac stdy pilau to me LRTP to address possible widening and interchange mpmtnrcros to SR 826 t Dolphin Enpnsswayl from Wen of SR 826 to Eon of SR 922dslame Rd to alienate existing congestion in both diremme. All mtmestd parties arc united to attend For copies of the TIP, LRTP. a0Jlor frather 6donnatton, please contact tie TPO a 0051 275.0507 - f ow- ndtpo rg- also - muvudadepo.mg. Public paracipkm is solicited without regard to ace calm, nnonal origin. all, sex, teapot, disability, or loony cams. Torsos who reaube special accommodations ,sr the Americana with D,mbiliin Am or perms who manure mnslauon services Ifree of Marael s1nWd enema We 2To a INN) 375'4507 at leas, band. Take a yoga class, a Tai Chi class. If you read a book join a book club. If you listen to music, go to a concert. The idea is to challenge yourself each day and so the high activ- ity is the one that's going to give you the most satis- faction and open new doors fur you," he said, noting that Florida resi- dents 60 and older can take college courses for free at Florida public uni- versities, and don't have to worry about homework. • Use tangible rewards as Incentives to kickoff healthy lifestyle changes- Howard, the wellness advocate, said she loses interest in things quickly so she's had to find creative ways to get en- gaged. She switched out her desk for a standing desk to help motivate her to move. She suggests finding ways to "gamily" your own activity as completion incentive. Some fitness trackers, for example, give digital med- als when you hit certain walking or other fitness goals. • Find people who have the same goals as you. "Be around people that want to do what you ant to do," to encourage and keep you accountable, Muller said. •Train yourself to think positive, even when things get tough. "Positive psychology doesn't suggest that there are o challenges, doesn't suggest that there are no difficulties," Muller said. "It suggests that we can choose to locus on what works on the bigger pic- ture." TO FIND RESOURCES Visit atianceforaging.org Michelle Marchantr- 305-376-2708, @Tweerb icheieM NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA p1 FaSF ALL TAKE NOTICE THAT a meeting of the City of Miami Commission has been scheduled lion Thursday. May 22, 2025. at the City of Mane Cry Hall 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133. A ornate attorney Diem session will be conduc eel under the parameters of 6286.011(8), ES. The person Charing the City Commission meeting will an- nource the commencement of an attorney -Giant session, closed to the public, IN purposes of diswsang the pending litigation in one matter of William 0, Fuller, Martin Pines. II, The Barrington Group, LLC, Calle Oda Marketpace, LLC, Yo Ana Cale Sete. LLC. Lk* Havana Arts Bufkrig, LLC. LI[- fie Havana Arts Waling Too, LLC, Tomer Fbi01, LLC, Brick. Station, LLC, Piedra Villas, LLC, Femme, LLC, El Shoppng, U.L. Beale*. LLC. Vemes Cufurales/Cokural Fridays, Inc.. Lime Havana Bungalows, LLC, and LHNB Trest, LLC v. City or Mk0ml, Joe Caroko, lit he idN8,ml capacity, Mawr Nonage, In his indlvidu01 cmwciN. Vlcbna Mendez. In her etdMxl- el capacity. Recbel Dooley, in far ba ladual Capacity, Aspen Mefero, n Ns irotyclual c04OcM. Daniel S. Goldberg, In he Individual capacty, W,Oiam Otto, in he Fried.' capacity, Luis Torres, n his nduaual capacity, Adrian Pleaencia in he inoseunl capacity, Rene Dial in he individual cepecry. None Bavone. in het ranaWal CapO0N, Joln Does 1-20, Case No. 23-CV-24251-PAN, pe,tdrg in the Unked Stales District Court Southern District of Florida, to which hue City Is presently a party. The staked of the meeting MI be con- fined to .. mem negotiations or strategy sessr s related o Iegann axpendtures. This private meeting war begkl at approxmat , 1000 am, (or as soon thereater as the Com- missioners' scYedules permit) and c0o:hde apxo0anak!ly one hour later. The session will be Mend9tl Q' the members of the City Conwu1ion, Meth kCharwoman Chris- tine King. Commissary's Miguel Angel 0ebela anti Onion Pardo. the Chef Francial Officer, Larry M. Spay, Attorney George K Wys rag HI, Chief Defxdy C. Atorrey John A. Gram Dep. City Attorney Kew, R. Jones, Assistant CM Attorney Supervisor Err: J. Eves: Assistant C. Attorney Marguerite Snyder, and Outside Counsel Raquel A. RnWi- fluez EMT. Angel Canines Esq., and Jonathan Basket, Esq. A certified court repone, will be present 10 ensure that the session is hel transcribed, and the tosiso ct will be Cede public upon the conclusion of the above c8ed, cation.); liti- gation. A the conclusion of the attorney -client season, the °Near CM Commission meeting writ te reopened and tie pers. charring the Cty Commission meeting we announce the termination oI the attorney -client session. Todd B Hannon Cry Clerk Ad No. 40720