HomeMy WebLinkAboutCC 2026-04-23 AdvertisementCITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF CITY COMMISSION MEETING
A regularly scheduled meeting of the Miami City Commission will be held on Thursday, April 23,
2026, at 9:00 a.m. in the City Commission chambers located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan
American Drive, Miami, FL 33133.
The April 23, 2026 City Commission Meeting will be broadcast live for members of the public to
view on the City's website (www.miami.gov/tv), Facebook, X (formerly "Twitter"), YouTube,
Comcast Channel 77 (Comcast only for 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 on 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://www.miami.qov/meetinqinstructions 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://miamifl.igm2.com/Citizens/Default.aspx
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 April 28, 2026, 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 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
49472
114595
Legal Ad - IPL0329638
43932
2.0
142.OL
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@miamigov.com
Notice
CRY OF MLAMI. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
ANY PERSON WHO RECEIVES COMPENSATION, REMUNERATION OR
EXPENSES FOR CONDUCTING LOBBYING ACTNmES IS REQUIRED TO
REGISTER AS A LOBBYIST WITH THE CfTY CLERK PRIOR TO ENGAGING IN
LOBBYING ACTIVITIES BEFORE CITY STAFF BOARDS AND COMMRTEES OR
THE CRY COMMISSION. A COPY OF THE APPLIr..ARI F ORDNANCE IS
AVM ARI F IN THE OFFICE OF THE CRY CLERK (MIAMI CITY HALL), LOCATED
AT 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, MIAMI, FLORIDA, 33133.
AT THE SCHEDULED MEETING OF THE COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON APRIL 23, 2026, AT 990 AM., N ITS CHAMBERS AT
CITY HALL, 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION WILL
CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING ITEM RELATED TO THE REGULAR AGENDA:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENTS,
ACCEPTING THE PLAT ENTITLED "BNA NORTH", A REPLAT AND A
SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF MIAMI, SUBJECT TO ALL OF THE CONDITIONS
OF THE PLAT AND STREET COMMITTEE AND THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED
IN CITY CODE SECTION 55-8, AND ACCEPTING THE DEDICATIONS SHOWN
ON SAID PLAT, LOCATED AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF BISCAYNE
BOULEVARD AND NORTHEAST 32 STREET, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING
THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO EXECUTE SAID PLAT; AND
PROVIDING FOR THE RECORDATION OF SAID FLAT IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MIAMI DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Copies of the proposed Resolution are available for review at the Resilience
and Public Works Department, Survey Section of the Administration Division,
located at 444 SW 2nd Avenue, 7th Floor, during regular working hours. Phone
305-416-1232
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be heard
with respect to the proposed resolution. Should any person desire to appeal
any decision of the City Commission with respect to any matter to be
considered at this meeting, that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of
the proceedings Is made including all testimony and evidence upon which any
appeal may be based (ES. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City
Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held due to a lack of a quorum
or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically
scheduled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the
event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would
be held on April 28, 2026, at 9G0 am. In the City Commission chambers
located at Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133. At
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, 6 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 Io 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 fne
(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.
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Miami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/13/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
Russ Davis
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
SHERRY I CHASTEEH
ELECTRONIC NOTARY wauc
STATE Or TE.S
COMMISSION R 1z532.93
MT COMMISSION EXPIRES •/I6.13019
Apr 13, 2026, 10:32 AM ED
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGNiX'
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43932
Notice
CRY OF MIAMI FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
ANY PERSON WHO RECEIVES COMPENSATION, REMUNERATION OR
EXPENSES FOR CONDUCTING LOBBYING ACTIVITIES IS REQUIRED TO
REGISTER AS A LOBBYIST WMT I THE CITY CLERK PRIOR TO ENGAGING IN
LOBBYING ACTIVITIES BEFORE CITY STAFF, BOARDS AND COMMITTEES OR
THE CITY COMMISSION. A COPY OF THE APPLICABLE ORDINANCE IS
AVAILABLE IN THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK (MIAMI CITY HALL), LOCATED
AT 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, MIAMI, FLORIDA, 33133.
AT THE SCHEDULED MEETING OF THE COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, TO BE HELD ON APRIL 23, 2026, AT 9:00 A.M., IN ITS CHAMBERS AT
CITY HALL, 3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE, THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION WILL
CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING ITEM RELATED TO THE REGULAR AGENDA:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, WITH ATTACHMENTS,
ACCEPTING THE PLAT ENTITLED "BNA NORTH", A REPEAT AND A
SUBDIVISION IN THE CrTY OF MIAMI, SUBJECT TO ALL OF THE CONDITIONS
OF THE PLAT AND STREET COMMITTEE AND THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED
IN CITY CODE SECTION 55-8, AND ACCEPTING THE DEDICATIONS SHOWN
ON SAID PLAT, LOCATED AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF BISCAYNE
BOULEVARD AND NORTHEAST 32 STREET, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING
THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO EXECUTE SAID PLAT; AND
PROVIDING FOR THE RECORDATION OF SAID PLAT IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MLAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Copies of the proposed Resolution are available for review at the Resilience
and Public Works Department, Survey Section of the Administration Division,
located at 444 SW 2nd Avenue, 7th Floor, during regular working hours. Phone
305-416-1232
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be heard
with respect to the proposed resolution. Should any person desire to appeal
any decision of the City Commission with respect to any matter to be
considered at this meeting, that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of
the proceedings is made including all testimony and evidence upon which any
appeal may be based (F.S. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City
Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held due to a lack of a quorum
or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically
scheduled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the
event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would
be held on April 28, 2026, 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, 11 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. 43932
WinnAPI1 deb
I IS
FROM PAGE 6A
BLOCKADE
Mill. it had laid in the rare direct talks.
waterway. • Death toll The
•Israel end Lebanon: Human Rights Activists
Israel was not involved in News Agency said at least
the weekend negotiations 1,701 civilians, including
and Prime Minister Ben- 254 children, had been
jamin Netanyahu avoided killed in Iran as of
mentioning them in an Wednesday. Lebanon's
address on Saturday eve- Health Ministry on Sat-
ning as he faces criticism urday said that 2,020
at home over the cease- people had been killed in
fire with Iran. Israel has the latest fighting be.
kept up deadly attacks on tween Israel and Hez-
southem Lebanon, in- bollah, including 357 in a
eluding on Sunday mom- wave of Israeli strikes on
ing, according to Leba- Wednesday. In attacks
non's state media. Iran attributed to Iran, at least
had accused Israel of 32 people have been
breaking the ceasefire by killed in Gulf nations. At
continuing to attack in least 22 people had been
Lebanon, leading Trump killed in Israel as of Sun -
to ask Israel to rein in its day, as well as 12 Israeli
assault. The Israeli and soldiers fighting in Lebo -
Lebanese ambassador to non. The U.S. death toll
the United States are stands at 13 service mem-
expected to meet in ben.
Washington next week for
FROM PAGE 6A
TRUMP
people treat him like one
of the prizefighters when
he walks into the room.
After a week spent
largely out of sight but
lashing out at his enemies
on social media, Trump's
resurfacing at a match
seemed designed to pro-
vide him with a soothing
balm of male aggression,
musky sweat and cheer-
ing supporters - not un-
like one of his political
rallies, just with shirtless
fighters.
Round after round,
fight after fight, Trump
watched as pairs of com-
petitors sparred in a cage
covered in ads for Mon-
ster energy drinks, assort-
ed crypto and betting
sites, and Bud Light beer.
The floor was stained
with splotches of dried
blood from the first match
of the evening, when a
fighter took a had hit to
the forehead.
At one point, the "Mor-
tal Kombat" theme song
played as Rubio and the
president leaned in to
speak to each other. At
another, the arena crowd
watched an advertise-
ment fora UFC fight
scheduled at the White
House this summer. "His-
tory is made by revolu-
tionary ideas" was one
tagline from the commer-
cial, which featured sev-
eral exterior shots of the
White House.
Trump's eldest daugh-
ter, Ivanka, and younger
daughter, Tiffany, kept
close throughout the
evening, as did Donald
Trump Jr., the president's
eldest son, and his fian-
ce, Bettina Anderson.
The Trumps stood and
posed for photos with
supporters who ap-
proached them, waved
their fists, and at times
threw back their bads in
laughter. One family
member missing was
Ivanka Trump's husband,
Jared Kushner, who was
in Pakistan with Vance
and Trump's peace envoy,
Steve Witkoff.
At the moment Vance
began briefing the news
media in Pakistan, Trump
was standing still at the
side of the cage with his
hands at his sides as a
winning fighter cheered.
He and Rubio were look-
ing up toward a large
screen and watching a
video montage of the
fighter's greatest hits as
Vance said, "the bad
news is that we have not
reached an agreement"
In Pakistan, Vance did
not say if the Strait of
Hormuz would be open
for oil traffic to pass
through. White House
officials did not answer
questions about whether a
shaky ceasefire with Teh-
ran hold. They all
deferred to rump to de-
cide what was next
As the night grew late
Saturday and the war
once again seemed poised
to spin out of Trump's
control, the vice president
departed Pakistan without
an agreement. The presi
dent stayed seated in
Miami, his eyes trained
on the men punching and
kicking each other in a
bloodstained cage.
Commercial Door Repairs
TROPICAL GLASS
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
7933 NW 7TH AVE. MIAMI, FL 33150
www.tropicalglassmiami.com
(305)757-0651 (954)462-3711
OMNI REDEVELOPMENT
DISTRICT COMMUNnY
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
PLEASE ALL TA5E NOTICE Comm...oard a tam..oen .rang of Pe
w„nge riOr.vee,oe ComRte<a.en, Agee. na el
on Motley. Amr:pm. 26z6
Peres.. al Pe Mon Cm WII, bum. at 3600 Pam Amer.n Dos Mae.
Mon.•.
CM4425.0031. ahmner a K.... CPA
emergency ,. .nCMme. aairmsaW. -had b
m "veto. n ee ere. a ore
ol memos rows be held
co Arm NM 20266a. 9 SO a a. �n b
.1W es C. ,a, i50P A0.s. FL 1T, I3 An a the
.dear ay.. vrr Mat lee Mi..
ma,bnetaW t
W .. agea ,o CPA nee.p. The ce>a Pe
arm rr rosily to m�eaarm a�amamma Not• aranpaww
aaWp•ra.a+e .�cR4 ne"+mp at k en.mwac.v We all
ae..awn .amacratre ....Log a norm on Pe CM's.eo.e.
atalree. P.c. am an n a...RRer a genera p....P then
Re Rol need. on Ile m .o.., b.e.ep Tura. There s a. te v
sans rote b ceLm.-mon m u Teo Or any aril rleow.o aped. men.
Ms normpde vocal CPA memo
All merest peso. are mew o .b For mom .band sin. please
con.. Pe Cann raw axis a 13051679-6MS
People protest the arrest of Mohsen Mandaw,. a Columbia University student who
participated in pro -Palestinian campus protests. dunng a 'Stop The Deportations!' rally
last year in New York City.
FROM PAGE 6A
JUDGES
court to deport both stu-
dents.
Patel, an immigration
judge in Boston, ruled m
January that there Were
no grounds to deport
Ozturk. Froes came to a
similar conclusion in
Mandawi' s case. Patel and
Froes had been appointed
by the eiden adminis-
tration in 2024. Both were
approaching the end of an
initial two-yearprobation-
ary term before their fir-
ings.
In an interview, Froes
said she was unsure if
ruling against Mandawi
might have preserved her
job.
"1 don't know what's in
the minds of other peo-
ple," she said. "But I can't
imagine it was helpful."
The Justice Department
did not immediately re-
spond to a request for
comment Saturday.
A U.S. official who was
not authorized to speak
publicly confirmed that
six judges had been fired
Friday. The official said
four of them were proba-
tionary.
The nation's immigra-
tion courts are little-
known to the general
public but have tremen-
dous power. They are
often the final stop before
a person can be lawfully
removed from the United
States.
Before Trump returned
to office, it was rare for
immigration judges to be
fired. His administration
has so far dismissed more
than 100 of them. In addi-
tion to the firings, the
administration has hued
ore than 140 permanent
and temporary judges
seen as ore aligned with
Tmmp's immigration
enforcement campaign.
Patel and Froes fit the
profile of many judges
who have lost their jobs
during the second Trump
administration: They had
been appointed by a Dem-
ocrat and previously rep-
resented immigrants in
court.
They also granted asy-
lum at higher rates than
other judges. Under
Trump, Patel granted
asylum in 41.5% of cases,
while Froes granted asy-
lum in 33% of cases, com-
pared with 18% for judges
overall, according to a
New York Times analysis
of immigration court data.
Froes, a judge at the
immigration court in
Chelmsford, Massachu-
setts, said she was con-
ducting an asylum heating
Friday afternoon when
she received an email
telling her she had been
dismissed. She told law-
yers for both sides that
she needed to halt the
case and signed out of the
hearing, which was being
held virtually.
"1 fully expected it," she
said of her firing, citing
the number of judges
dismissed by the Trump
administration.
Froes also said she had
no idea that Mandawi's
so high -profile
when • she heard it.
"You have so many
people coming before
you," she said. "You don't
go Google people's
names. That's not how it
works. You look at the
rec
ord."
Patel, like many im-
migration judges inter -
• wed by the New York
Times, said the Trump
administration had made
it clear that it wanted
immigrants ordered
more immigrants
"It was a pressure I at
least tried to actively re-
sist," she said in an in-
terview. "All people in the
United States are entitled
to due process, and every-
one deserves to have their
cases adjudicated fully
and fairly."
Many experts argue that
the immigration courts
should be granted more
independence from the
executive branch, like the
protections given to the
administrative courts that
hear tax disputes.
After her stint on the
bench, Patel said she
agreed.
"The judges there need
more judicial independ-
ence," she said.
FROM PAGE 6A priatety.
"These
INVESTIGATION allegations
of sexual
ault are
9373. Our specially Manhattan incident - and , Flat false.
trained prosecutors, in- calls from some within his They're
vesrigators and counselors own party for him to end Alvin E. absolutely
are well-equipped to help his campaign for Cali- Bragg Jr. false,"
you in a trauma -informed, fomia governor. Swalweli Swalweli
survivor -centered man- am
ong the leading said in a video posted
• a Manhattan DAspo- candidates to replace online late Friday. "They
kesperson said in a state- outgoing Gov. Gavin New- did not happen. They have
menu to the The News. sosom, who is term -limited. ever happened, and I will
The Manhattan investi- The other women ac- fight them with everything
gation comes amid Swal- cuse Swalweli of sending that 1 have."
well staunchly denying them unsolicited photos of The congressman ac-
sexual misconduct aeega- his private parts and oth- knowledged past mistakes
bons from four women - erwise explicit messages
including the one in the or touching them inappro-
WEST
NesENCY
PLEASE ALL TAKE 4TT00 r. corn, a Me
sot Orel,., P.WeaCCPYPPPOMcdptnonbn,0 MI. CSFOPW
some.
0. 02. roes a tab c W.,.p rneerp on m,n0sy. eo,123. 2026. a ,too
n M CW Cma.m cn1Mre awed r Mini
C. WY 3600 Ran Anetan bNa. Mara, RN. 03100.
The Boats 05 my Callon sus nonagon a nnnna b eMa Miami
anihorlad
fer..aaT. b Moerrm
cora a tee d"bws one errs to a cmanm ae Euianm
Ca. r b 00 b. Tnemn Corn, 12 ., Pe SEC.. CPA C
BedsYCMn. • al•a0 Mls.i 14.4 t.r4 a, at<Tosaw-
f1tON •••ae•lr 4WY4 ma MI iLL sb We. ■444 FY*
aataE
Is esh 9E0.C111320,e Pe0....0PW,16da6 lw„
a,E SW. liy, fora. sear, the BAN •e manes arena a sr. b
Om** n., a,oaa not base new 1a64. R.. 1•n..4
mar.. not... r r ot. ea•M w,.-N__E.a•,.
oreb ap.aveu.rN reams( p pe Pomp N..t
01.004.0. andurd pe amre+md planes D M....E Owed..
Y .Rom. Esc. Su . tb mOr, al amp MPNW. Mena.
o Id R1.44 Por ea. 1310o51679..00.
Tracgon stee. mne erect pureed. I Seas..,effi and IS.
of rR Cone or Pe Co of Man, note a, anon.. Motsrecommon.t000C1 T,e
to propose amobon am.. he am.. ae Pe tos sc... SEowy
CTA Boa. mare or atom themes n ne C. Coraravm W moers.
Tie map norm the
nos .as.sayb'gib:r any beo`rePeBeam
& Me Boma .11 mar.. Ss any matter coracle. at Pa neebro. Ow. person
MN enure Mal a se Met. record of tre 00$ mac. slchels.
lemma, and am. upon *oh Any woe. may o zoo IFS..6010511
ere*oh
Purse. le O1441.240071, Moro not. a .11414E SEORW CAA meet, •
o caw .rpmry, a
speoal SEORYOW".ebbwII aubns0al4a444r4bre Tuesday
sneel.4aaFgM once. rose. a teems oe tee
,aronesrces. de veal n,eeom0.art t men on Mel28.
thereat. . 1000 am. arr.. tereatn Pe C.mmarem G3Ampen
bfa r Nam Car MIK 8500 Pon Amercrr 0,4 Men.. FON.13.3 4I1
of re Wbd4sr rbme mrn goo ca,rnrv"eco9ma. most.,
▪ aaem.d r et somas tem al Pe uca SCORY CRS memng. The
Cierk a u. mrd..rnatty me mafiT a 14 Rt W .memo m• b ale
Puce WPons a more o, ne deadWO. au hems a, se menace
of c r w. Ocrp a nonce on de ,EOR3 aMe .coma. an.. ,
e.anad nam..xe, wa general cmcuuono"r More Roca
Ol
nee mmedl. A,ab..p Tuesday Ilene fur r o Mitoa. note to
...ban nose. bPLY Such Rneau ape.. ern rot • noedb the
Reis SEONI ON meting
mmoNara.r•,.e Mvrrans....ram M a ,pop, senora
n..d.p r.. 0 e
er4444 eons to.mn.tarn par... n arpp can.,
She Mee Me nay Cn a, l50.256ran r s'R1 No., not N. e 121
bra e. days pro ie.e pmceoe0. TIT users may oar r„ ibis Rees
Ss ., got Wen then ro121 e"anoss.m prrb Pe.ewRN.
and admitted he's not "a
saint," but maintained any
lapses in judgment of his
e not only in the past but
also private.
"1 have certainly made
mistakes in judgment in
my past," he said. "But
those mistakes are be-
tween me and my wife
and to her I apologize
deeply for putting her in
this position. I also apol-
ogize to you," he told
viewers, "if, in any way,
you have doubted your
support for me. But 1 think
you know who 1 am."
Mods.
MI2PIAAM.FTO VA
MY PEI6..0 MGM. WMFfNSATION, RElAf1BNT,N OP
FnEa pFs Foot mrax.TRO LOWING AmNmES 6 PROMO, TO
REGETm PS A LOPEMST WITH TIE UNCLE. PRIOR m ENG..N
LOBBYNB PURITIES BEFORE CITY STIFF. •Ym6 MO OOMNREES OR
ME CRY 0Oa0a631. ACOPY. IENxawel ONMANgE6
wNABIE NOE OFF. OF THEORY
HMW CITY LLm.10O0ED
AMMO PM ORNE. MMM. RORER. SR.
AT THE SCROLLED sEETec OF n1E 00.e116slb, OF nEC.Y OF AIM,
ON NFL 23, 2026,AT s oaAll, N 1r6OIIAOs WILL
mRwu,.l50o pus Os ERCAN OWE, TIE M.W OW CO.... WILL
CONS.. TIE FOL... REM RELATED m TE IEOl1M POEM
ATUJOSN MAWOTYWM.64i0N WON ARAOMENTO
ACCEPTOR. RATb oORRO NCROC. A REPLAY.. A
M SL S..TIE CITY. NNW SURECT TO ALL OF ME COMMONS
OF TIE RAT MO SWEET COMM" E MO TIE 61634602N15 CONT..
N OMS' CGOE SECT,. ova, Art AOHrttB TIE 060441.E SIONN
,N SAO PLAT.LOCATED. ME SO.M4ST CO FE1RO WORT.
BJLLLMIO A.D NCRTEASM 32 STREET, AMMKM NO MEC..
TIE CITY MOWER MOOT. OfTa( TO,RAnE SAO PIN'.AM
MORONS FOR TIE FECOPOTION O SAO RAT .TIE RJR. FECOMS
O 6nAa.0.,E COLN.. RMION
C0.es of se mop* R.esab, are «abe Ip, ,erw . Pe Romance
and M.c Roo t4p.b,b,s Survey barn of se A1„ 5* twos
ocatecivNap.e.e. rncor,mrrv,ab,+ala,alw.. Roe
3OSa,6432
n Me Free., r,ey t hew
mn eyed b F: ,nm.d5iegolubon Sln,b any arm appeal
any 0 er.1 Pecs. of ON1" ar55 mmlr0a
r ar... sM, pamn,hw o.,m so. am.n mmr of
rani nor la. FS. 286➢1r,1ail u end aylv,m,.Nnl, a.
Pun. n Mrra Car Code semen 2dTM..lm.meer • deeded..
Conramon „amp a...eP t and raw due 14 dam a a prom."
or doer er ey..y. a wee. Ov Osenremm..se.p,.a e<aaor.wN
Tm.wnee rely I..to ow., nee..
event e rws,Wevod,.manor, Nes. •pup
he heti tr r,map an r
WA. 26.26, 960 ele 0001.011 ante.
.son ae Mrs CM WI, 0500 Pan .encan bar,1•444Re41a11la0.iy
00awwa. Permae>=m0.rnPam rag.. shall eea lM
ser...1 rb as.. Oily ,gym name.
Tie cry CMA E.Nne b eve p.m .M.aoal manna MN a. ale now
W PM. a now of N. Mal CM. Co,ma.m means at Pe evapa of
Cey WI are M Ce/s m on Y5Mw.ltiy pop a nab. n /e
Ca/s •erar. ae.. rra•le. Omnsn tl n a 4•444444 of pre.
orcual•41 tabs to Rol "amps to nve.Waybbwq Tueay
R.. sham se no aweensi mode b nerae.m ne4rer or r M.
e0nu.b Nero bra N. ene.dbl N..Cb Corm.. owing.
• *accormos •W, se A„on.=•.r,or.Nl..M ol,ern. me.
nmonp vec. mmnnaon b paecp.eceeaapmN
GO ORAN t006125u0.6 005, 1 .put noW. M fine
nl.+a eas don aPOGO
left pmoa..p. TTYuscall re rl,.
Rs. 4nenA'. s
. sew. .151 Maur Wnn,a
. Pr. to pow. q.
raw Or. Sum;
Eno.. C.ecb
bun R.enebo,rm ore
wamvnW Rumens. Agee"
D woman ea..e. bran
Scahsseow,bWVPa.Yen
Com..ry Retleme. +ea Oar.
PO No. 43932
To. B. Hannon
P.cba
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
49472
Legal Ad - IPL0331445
43941
2.0
72.OL
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@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, April 23, 2026,
at the City of Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. A private attorney -client session will be conducted
under the parameters of §286.011(8), F.S. The person chairing
the City Commission meeting will announce the commencement
of an attorney -client session, closed to the public, for purposes
of discussing the pending litigation in the matter of Joe Carollo
v. City of Miami, et al., case no. 2006-014464-CA-01, pending in
the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit in and for
Miami -Dade County, Florida, to which the City is presently a
party. The subject of the meeting will be confined 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 Commissioners'
schedules permit) and conclude approximately one hour later.
The session will be attended by the members of the City
Commission, which include Chairwoman Christine King,
Commissioners Miguel Angel Gabela, Damian Pardo, Rolando
Escalona, and Ralph "Rafael" Rosado; City Manager James Reyes;
and Outside Counsel Fabian A. Ruiz. 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 litigation. 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
attorney -client session.
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43941
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Miami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/16/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
Av1 kahhr✓ws
Amy Robbins
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
STAYS Of 1IXAS
. SHERRY
aaYtia„c
Cp+M'S'ICT . t]Sa]a.9J
onntssio. txvtaes y16a0]9
Apr 16, 2026, 8:43 AM EDT
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGNiX'
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, April 23, 2026,
at the City of Miami City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami,
Florida 33133. A private attorney -client session will be conducted
under the parameters of §286.011(8), F.S. The person chairing
the City Commission meeting will announce the commencement
of an attorney -client session, closed to the public, for purposes
of discussing the pending litigation in the matter of Joe Carollo
v. City of Miami, et al., case no. 2006-014464-CA-01, pending in
the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit in and for
Miami -Dade County, Florida, to which the City is presently a
party. The subject of the meeting will be confined 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 Commissioners'
schedules permit) and conclude approximately one hour later.
The session will be attended by the members of the City
Commission, which include Chairwoman Christine King,
Commissioners Miguel Angel Gabela, Damian Pardo, Rolando
Escalona, and Ralph "Rafael" Rosado; City Manager James Reyes;
and Outside Counsel Fabian A. Ruiz. 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 litigation. 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
attorney -client session.
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43941
WAR HERALD
THIHSDET kltll R I026
Funding, false promises fuel slaying
of Haiti President Jovenel Moise
av JACQUELINE CHARLES
AND My WEAVER
lcaar4rcadm anahraddat
msyrehreamihrWa,nm
Haitian businessman
Rodolphe "Dodof"Jaar
provided more than
5150,000 in cash and
material support — in-
cluding housing and semi-
automatic weapons — to
back the plot that ulti-
mately led to the assassi-
nation of his country's
president, Jovenel Moise,
he told a Miami federal
jury this week.
That support included
$110,000 in bribes paid to
members of the presi-
dential security team
—S80,000 to the General
Security Unit of the Na-
tional Palace and S30,000
to the Counter Assault
Team — who were respon-
sible for protecting Mot.
on the night a squad of
Colombian commandos
stormed his residence in
the hills above Port-au-
Prince.
Jaar also testified that
he contributed additional
resources to the plot, in-
cluding firearms valued at
about S20,000, as much
as $2,000 in medical
supplies and another
S16,000 to purchase
weapons. Though the
defense panted him as a
privileged member of one
of Haiti's "richest fam-
ilies," Jaa reputation in
the volatile country was
that of a struggling busi-
ean, which has long
ised questions about
where he acquired money
for the plot.
The full sums had not
been previously disclosed.
They emerged this week
as Jeer, a convicted co-
caine ne trafficker who has
pleaded guilty in the con-
spiracy to kill and kidnap
Moise more than four
years ago, testified about
how he became involved
in the scheme that ulti-
mately ended with the
53-year-old head of state
shot multiple times in his
bedroom and his wife
wo
unded.
Four South Florida men
accused of conspiring to
hire Colombian former
sokliers to assassinate
Moise me on trial in feder-
al cart in Miami.
"When they contacted
me, they never told me
that they were going to kill
him," Jaar testified about
the defendants.
Instead, he said, he was
led to believe that his
support would grant him
access to the United States
a new Haitian govern-
ment expected to take
power upon Moise's re-
moval. He also believed it
would offer him protec-
tion from Haitian gangs
for his import-export busi-
53.
neJeer testified that he
supplied at least four guns
to the group of 20 former
Colombian soldiers, who
gathered at his mother's
house in Labor ole on the
night of July 6, 2021,
hours before the middle -
of -the -night July 7 attack.
The sprawling mountain-
top house was a 10-min-
ute drive from the presi-
dent's residence, he said.
The weapons he provid-
ed included an AR-lS and
a rifle he had purchased in
the United States about 30
years earlier.
According to another
government witness, Ma-
rio Antonio "Flora" Pala -
dos Palacios, the AR-15
was given to members of a
"Delta team" tasked with
entering Moise's bedroom
and killing him. A retired
Colombian special forces
soldier, Palacio. was a
member of the five -man
team that was trained in
going after high -value
targets.
He was also the first of
Three suspects extradited
to the United States after
he escaped from Haiti
with the help of former
Haitian Sen. Joseph Joel
John.
ASSASSINATION PLOT
Both Palacios, 47, and
Jaar, 54, testified that they
learned at the last minute
of the mission to kill
Moise. Each of them iden-
tified lames Solages, a
Haitian -American handy-
man and one of the defen-
dants in the Miami case,
as a leader of the group in
Haiti. Palacios described
him as "the boss" who
gave the command to go
to the president's house.
"Initially, the job was
going to be done by an
armed group in Haiti,"
Palacios said. "But they
were not answering their
phones, so they [Solages
and his group] gave us the
order. We had to do the
job they were going to be
doing."
Asked to clarify, Pala-
tes said through a trans-
lator: "The job was to
assassinate the president
of Haiti."
Palacios and fear are
among II people charged
by the U.S. Department of
Justice in the assassination
plot. Palacios, Jaar and
three others have pleaded
guilty to the man conspir-
acy charge and face life
sentences. A sixth defen-
dant pleaded guilty to a
lesser charge of smuggling
ballistic vests to the Col-
ombian commandos hired
by Doral-bud Counter
Terrorist Unit Security,
CTU, to execute the hit lob,
according to caul records.
Three of the four men
now on trial, including
Solages, worked for CTU;
the fourth, a Weston mort-
gage broker, is accused of
financing the plot through
a line of credit.
The defendants include
Solages, who served as
CTU's representative in
Port-au-Prince and
brought onboard a Haiti.
born doctor and pastor
who hoped to replace
Moise as president Ar-
cingel Pretel Ortiz, a
Colanbian national and
former FBI informant
Antonio "Tony" Intriago,
the Venezuelan -American
owner of CTU along with
Pretel, who ran CTU Fed-
eral Academy; and Walter
Veintemilla, an Ecuador-
an American accused of
helping f ante the plan.
The doctor, Christian
Emmanuel Sanon, is also
changed in the Miami case
but due to health reasons
he will be tried separately.
By the time fear joined
the plot, Sanon had al-
ready been replaced by
the group as Moise's pro-
spective successor. The
role had shifted to Win-
delle Coq Thelon, a Hai-
tian Superior Cosset judge
and close asmciate of
Joseph Felix Badio, a
former Haitian govern-
ment official who has not
been charged in the U.S.
case but continues to
emerge as a central figure
in testimony.
$300.000 FOR
THE PLOT
The testimony by Pala-
cios, who spent months
hiding out in Jamaica, and
Jeer in week sus of the trial
has helped prosecutors
trace for the jury how the
plot evolved from a plan
to kidnap Morse into a
mission to kill him, with
me participants saying
they were misled about
their roles.
"They told me they
were going to arrest the
president," Jaar testified.
He said he was first ap-
proached in late May or
early June 2021 by Badio,
who portrayed himself as
someone able to solve his
U.S. immigration troubles
stemming from his 51-
month U.S. prison sen-
tence fora 2013 cocaine
tracking conviction. trafficking
"He requested about
$300,000," Jaar said.
When he said he did not
have that amount, Badio
asked for $10,000, Jaar
tested. The money was
to help cover a S20,000
ammunition purchase
from the Dominican Re-
• during Friedman s ques-
tioning that he had dis-
cussed with Solages a
number of high -profile
Haitians, including former
President Michel Martelly,
being involved in drug
trafficking and money
laundering. "No, never,"
Jaar said.
LIES, TEARS AND
AN APOLOGY
Testimony from mul-
tiple witnesses suggested
that many of those in-
volved were misled — and,
at times, misled one an-
other.
For example, Jaar ac-
knowledged that anin-
terview he gave to the
New York Times while in
hiding in Haiti was ar-
ranged by someone
named "Austin" who he
thought was an FBI agent.
It turned out, he later
learned, that the man was
not a federal agent.
Palacios, meanwhile,
"'' described being offered
Colombian men who are suspects and accused of involvement in the assassination of security job Sn a Central
former Haitian President Jovenel Moire sit in handcuffs during a hearing at the Court of American country that
Appeals n Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on tan. 27, 2025.
Jovenel Morse, president of Haiti. speaking at the United
Natiau General Assembly General Debate at the United
Natiau in New York City on Sept. 27. 2018
public, he said under
mmation.
c aAfter agreeing to get
involved, Jaar said he was
introduced to the "Amer's," who he was told
had come to support the
coup against Moise and
were ready to invest "bil-
lons of dollars" in pro-
jects in Haiti.
It was then that he met
Solages, who Jaar said was
"introduced as a repre-
sentative of the American
government." He also met
Joseph Vincent, who was
introduced as a repre-
sentative of the State De-
partment. Vincent, a Hai-
tian American, has plead-
ed guilty to the man con-
spiracy charge.
Prosecutors have said
that neither man, nor any
of the others involved,
worked for the U.S. gov-
e ent.
Jaar acknowledged
during his two days on the
witness stand that he was
deceived, particularly by
Solages and Badio, who
boasted about connections
to seem Haitian officials,
including the police chief
and Ariel Henry. Moise
had quietly tapped Henry
as his next prime minister
about a month before his
death. Henry, like former
Haitian police chief Leon
Charles, has denied any
involvement in the plot.
Under questioning by
one of Solages's defense
lawyers, faar acknowl-
dged Badio's claims of
high-level connections.
"You would agree he's
pretty connected with the
government in Haiti?"
attorney Jonathan Fried-
man about Badio,
who claimed he had a
mole inside the presi-
dent's residence to inform
him on his whereabouts
and a deal with the head
of his presidential security
guards, Dimitn Henrd.
"He knows a lot of peo-
ple; he knew Supreme
Court Justice Coq, correct?
He had connections with
the Haitian national po-
lice, correct? He had con-
nections with the presi-
dent's private security
force and his personal
residence, and connec-
tions with Jovenel Morse's
personal drivers," Fried-
man continued. "He obvi-
ously didn't like Jovenel
Moise very much."
Jaar responded, "1 don't
know.
'NEVER IN AGREEMENT'
Defense lawyers have
argued that Moire was
already dead by the time
the CTU-rerntited Col-
ombian commandos left
Jaar's house, and that he
had been killed by mem-
bers of his own Haitian
security detail.
Jaan testified that after
the killing, he was asked
by Pretel and a Colombian
squad leader, retired army
officer Genie Alejandro
Rivera Garcia, to contact
the international media
and say "they had nothing
to do with the president's
assassination and when
theyarived, he was al-
ready dead."
"1 was never in agree
Nonce TO THE MIRK
cry of Road FLORIDA
PLEASE ALL TAKE NOTICE THAT • mating of ,he City .f Mane
y. bard aa,z mm Yl • City or aTI c
City .1, aaoo Pan Am ... Deno, Mom,
• attotney-cftent •••••10.1.1 will be conducted
under r 52ee.011,3. RTchain, in. anon
CFa.Ny Cw.,ns.a. data" will manor....
of en attornery-clwel paean. cload to the pub., be pepaos
,City oh NI.,n en el. r as no. 2000-0,aa4A-Can1. ands"E,
Man HI* u. Cb a.s...sey•
pa, rM subset ta .4ma.. . a be .aMNmd r ..dent
".wh•u..,., or aretegy ••••10.16 reload b Iftbetion
-.w. e.P•..• meta meetbad
a moon.loft
be on thereafter Pe Caren es
a.d,O and conclude .teh one Seta.
The wawa reill be r by the pan.. or Oa Grey
lM Conetemeion•re el ..I Angel Damen Per., Rolando
end Ralph
-.tar Roma., city M..,.•a,w..,as R.y..,
mad Counwal
on
reperler will be a..antlto ensurewthat Rd ...an • rulh
Iraftecneb wand Po row-ct teal 0, made wit. upon use
Pe q.u.n. A, m•
conclumon of u. attoneywien .a•lon •,a Malo. Cth
theuy Comp..on meeting wlxlm.�.,uw eam�natlano m•
•ettornay-clfted abaft
ddC D4«
ment with that, nor did 1
ever want to do that," Jaar
said, when questioned by
Assistant U.S. Anomey
Altanese Phenelus. "Be-
cause it wasn't the truth."
As the seven -car convoy
left his mother's house,
Jaar testified, he stayed
behind along with John,
the former lawmaker, who
wrapped up his testimony
on behalf of the govern-
ment on Monday.
1n the haws after the
killing, Jaar said Badio
stopped answering his
phone. This left him as an
intermediary between
CTU and Bade, who re-
fused requests to bring
Justice Coq Thelon to the
presidential palace to be
sworn Asked whether he be-
lieved the U.S. would need
his financial support for
such an operation, Jaar
replied: "1 didn't think
that the American govern-
ment needed money."
But, he said, he was told
the South Florida security
group led by CTU would
gain access to weapons
and other resources only
after Justice Coq Thelon
assumed power.
That, he said, would be
one of several Iles he was
told.
Another came on the
night of July 6, when Sol -
ages told the assembled
Colombians there had
been "a change in the
operation" and that it was
now a CIA operation.
"1 was shocked, and 1
asked him, 'What does
that mean?' " Jeer said.
"He replied,' We will go
in, kill the president, then
we would leave."
Friedman, Solages'
attorney, questioned his
recollection because it was
not the same information
that John, the former sen-
ator, testified to.
"Isn't it true 1f Mr. Sol -
ages said anything, '1t was
one entrance, one exit?'
That's what he said,"
Friedman said, to which
Jaar responded, "1 do not
recall that."
Jaar also pushed back
turned out to be Haiti. He
also spoke of waiting
weeks for weapons that
never arrived and being
promised a S2,500
monthly salary and a
S300,000 bonus that
were never paid. He said
the men were initially told
they would guard Sanon,
and were given only two
shotguns to do so. They
were not told they would
be carrying out an attack.
"They told us that a
gang from Haiti was going
to go to the president's
house, and then we would
arrive at the house to
nmarch for videos and
mputers," he testified.
c "Supposedly the presi-
dent would rape children
in that house and he sold
organs. They needed that
evidence," Palacios said
about what he said was
relayed by another squad
leader, Dubemey Capa-
dor, one of three Col-
ombians who died after
the attack.
The men had also said
that Moise was no longer
legally president as of Feb.
7, 2021, but had wanted to
stay in power.
"We had no other way
out," said Palados, who
was born in Venezuela to
Colombian parents. "We
accepted, we agreed to go
on that mission, some-
thing that we did not go
over there for, and per-
haps we failed. We failed
maybe because of ambi-
tion, because we were told
that there ... we were go-
ing to be given S300,000
each one of us."
At the start of his testi-
mony Palacios broke
down in tears as he ac-
knowledged that he
agreed to cooperate in
hopes of getting a reduced
sentence.
"I did not travel to that
country to do anything
wrong," Palacios said.
"While 1 was there, 1
agreed to participate in
this. What happened there
does not represent me as a
person, for that reason I
have agreed to tell the
truth because 1 am not a
criminal and 1 am very
sorry for what happened
over there."
PU5DC a0TICF OF PROPOSED nRlusANI-F
NOTICE H HERESY GIVEN that on Tub. , Mee 5. arzs. M M
Aventuns CM Commission Regular Meet,. to M Ma et a00 P.m.
Centeral Me Aventura 11Bm0 w Country Clue Dna.
Aventure"cy Comm..,w asap,.
or me Palo ray ordinance on second amen° a�nhaid
AN ORDINANCE DE THE CI, COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
AVENNRA, FLORIDA
AMENDING ORDINANCE NO 202St2
WHICH atDINANCEADOPTED A BUDGET FOR THE 2025.2023
YEAR BYREVISING ME 20FISCAL023 FISCAL YEAR
OPE
RATING ANDIN CAP,T. BUDGET AS OUTLINED ERHOT
ATTACHED HERETO. AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO
MALL THNGS NECESSARY TO CARRY OUT THE Ar5 OF THIS
ORDINANCE: AND PROVIOING FOR AN EFFECT VE OATS
TM ewn..0 ordnance wI be arable wine atorp...M.. a„
bWorn
. My 1 0w5 deny ems.,•w0.a avwal re City Me City Corneftben �uHas
▪ w pwdsMe 1 or y...a. p ..mum on, IN.I...e
cooar.
D+ A"u'
WOW. wn.w Any personn WN"af.. a medal
Canandson r a rot M m. 000, nee, may n so Aar err
Myor opens. p0MN neon"
In accorsterwe pM Americanab.r. Ana 1a00.
who Ml
ma need ss . ooanmoaao. *
s E e ury Can, 0051 A
c,ryaa"Smuts cons na irr ,Ann two ew,n.a aye pew M U.
PriSCeedings
co0messsOn "iOmh reewu 10 ans em.0 conYeeda n... mat" w
pr. "
,d of pforou, r such
may enn a 1minmraedng pa
.la verbatim won, of sou pooeeeng
is male. wfttn record a..1m ray and nee u
leech Me appeal,, lo be eased
Elsa L Horvath. MMC. Cy CNM
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
49472
114622
Legal Ad - IPL0329683
43933
2.0
148.0L
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@miamigov.com
Notice
CRY 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, April 23, 2026, 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, W TTH ATTACHMENT(S), BY
A FOUR -FIFTHS (4/5THS) AFFIRMATIVE VOTE, AFTER AN ADVERTISED
PUBLIC HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING, AND CONFIRMING THE CITY
MANAGER'S FINDING, ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED, AS ATTACHMENT
"B," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTWTION METHODS AND PROCEDURES ARE
NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS FOR THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA ("CRY") PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 18-85(A) OF THE CODE OF THE
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMENDED; WANING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR
SAD PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE ALLOCATION OF FUNDS IN THE
AMOUNT OF $45,000.00 TO SUNSHINE FOR ALL, INC., A NOT FOR
PROFIT ORGANIZATION FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF CITY OF MIAMI'S
SENIOR RENTAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM ("PROGRAM"), FOR ONE YEAR OF
SERVICES, WITH AN OPTION TO ENTER INTO A SECOND YEAR OF SERVICES
FOR AN ADDITIONAL $45,000.00 AT THE SOLE DISCRETION OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENTS DIRECTOR
OR DESIGNEE, AS SPECIFIED IN ATTACHMENT "A", SUBJECT TO THE
AVAILABILITY OF FUNDING; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER
TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ALL NECESSARY DOCUMENTS, INCLUDING
AMENDMENTS, EXTENSIONS, AND MODIFICATIONS, ALL IN A FORMS
ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY ATTORNEY, SUBJECT TO ALL FEDERAL, STATE
AND LOCAL LAWS THAT REGULATE THE USE OF SUCH FUNDS, FOR SAID
PURPOSE.
Said proposed resolution(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office of the
City Clerk 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, Monday through
Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
httpl/miamrfl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 (ES. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City
Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held due to a lack of a quorum
or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically
scheduled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the
event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would
be held on April 28, 2026, at 9:00 am. 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 pace
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, pacing 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 t0 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 toter than five (5)
business days prior to the proceeding. Tr( 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. 43933
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Miami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/13/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
Dam
Russ Davis
S4e/iv Y C'tee
DIGITALLY;(
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
alAReiccomcnmY KM.STATE OF TEXAS
COMMISSION t 1:513F93
Mr COMMISSION MANES V I6/2039
Apr 13, 2026, 10:32 AM ED
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGNiX
Notice
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, April 23, 2026, 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), BY
A FOUR -FIFTHS (4/STHS) AFFIRMATIVE VOTE, AFTER AN ADVERTISED
PUBLIC HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING, AND CONFIRMING THE CITY
MANAGER'S FINDING, ATTACHED AND INCORPORATED, AS ATTACHMENT
"B," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION METHODS AND PROCEDURES ARE
NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS FOR THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA ("CITY") PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 18-85(A) OF THE CODE OF THE
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMENDED; WAIVING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR
SAID PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE ALLOCATION OF FUNDS IN THE
AMOUNT OF $45,000.00 TO SUNSHINE FOR ALL, INC., A NOT FOR
PROFIT ORGANIZATION FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF CITY OF MIAMI'S
SENIOR RENTAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM ("PROGRAM"), FOR ONE YEAR OF
SERVICES, WITH AN OPTION TO ENTER INTO A SECOND YEAR OF SERVICES
FOR AN ADDITIONAL $45,000.00 AT THE SOLE DISCRETION OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT'S DIRECTOR
OR DESIGNEE, AS SPECIFIED IN ATTACHMENT "A", SUBJECT TO THE
AVAILABILITY OF FUNDING; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER
TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ALL NECESSARY DOCUMENTS, INCLUDING
AMENDMENTS, EXTENSIONS, AND MODIFICATIONS, ALL IN A FORMS
ACCEPTABLE TO THE CRY ATTORNEY, SUBJECT TO ALL FEDERAL, STATE
AND LOCAL LAWS THAT REGULATE THE USE OF SUCH FUNDS, FOR SAID
PURPOSE.
Said proposed resolution(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office of the
City Clerk, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, Monday through
Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
http'l/miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 (ES. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City
Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held due to a lack of a quorum
or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically
scheduled for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the
event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the special meeting would
be held on April 28, 2026, 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 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. 43933
MA
WWI HERAM I
Motwr ARILB 2026
City Manager lames Reyes reacts during a meeting at City
Hall on Thursday.
FROM PAGE 3A
TRUST FUND
more than five years in
office, she hadn't previ-
ously known about the
fund.
"This was created in
2009," King said. "I be -
are elected in 2021. No
one sat me down and said,
'These are your options
for funding.' Staff doesn't
give you that informa-
tion."
On Thursday, the com-
mission set to vote on
twomore requests from
the Public Benefit Trust
Fund:
• Commissioner Damian
Pardo requested $15
million for affordable
housing and parks in his
district. That included
$5 million for housing in
Little Bahamas and the
West Grove, and $10
million for parks
throughout District 2,
mainly for repairs and
maintenance.
• Commissioner Ralph
Roaado requested $4.8
million to build
workforce housing and
build out a portion of the
Ludlam Trail on land
owned by Miami -Dade
County Public Schools.
But with a little over $19
million currently in the
fund, King said she was
concerned that approving
Pardo and Rosado's re-
quests would leave noth-
ing left for the time being.
King also said it wouldn't
be fah for Pardo to get the
lion's share of money,
reiterating that her district
- which includes Little
Haiti, Liberty City and
Wynwood/Edgewater -
and Commissioner Miguel
Angel Gabela's District 1
- which includes Flagami
and Allapattah - were the
most in need.
"My district, Commis-
sioner Gabela's district -
Christine King
PE POP. poor
Miami Commission Chair Christine King and
Commissioner Rolando Escalate at Thursday's meeting.
we are the ones hurling
for affordable housing,"
King said. "We are the
ones - not building
luxury housing. We need
affordable housing more
than anyone. And true
affordable housing."
But Pardo emphasized
that his district, which
includes downtown, Brick -
ell and Edgewater, faces
major issues that need to
be addressed urgently.
"Our infrastructure is
horrible. Ow flooding is
horrible," Pardo said. "We
can't just look at it as, oh,
these are luxurious con-
dos. Those luxurious con-
dos are paying for all of us
to be able to get things
done ur district."
With much of the city's
development being con-
centrated in areas like
downtown and BrickeB
over the last few decades,
developers building pro-
jects in District 2 have
contributed the largest
share of funds to the pot.
Former District 3 Com-
missioner Joe Carollo had
previously secured more
than $12 million from the
fund for projects in his
district. According to the
city, the five districts have
contributed and spent the
following amounts out of
the Public Benefits Trust
Fund since its inception:
• District 1 (Flagami,
Allapanah): $1.3 million
contributed to the fund,
S0 allocated from the
fund
• District 2 (Coconut
Grove, downtown,
BrickeB, Edgewater):
$21.1 million
contributed, $1.1 million
allocated
• District 3 (Little
Havana, East
Shenandoah, Silver
Bluff, The Roads): $12.9
million contributed,
$12.7 million allocated
• District 4 (Coral Gate,
Shenandoah, West
Flagler, Silver Bluff): $0
contributed, $0
allocated
• District 5 (Overtown,
Little Haiti, Liberty City,
Upper East Side,
Wynwood/Edgewater):
Commissioner Ralph 'Rafael' Roando listens as a resident
speaks during a commission meeting on Thursday.
32.9 million contributed, commission approved
$5.3 million allocated more than $5 million from
the fund for her district.
Pardo said the public "Madam Chair, 1 just
benefits were intended to think it's very cone
ni
ent," people who were lent," Pardo said.
"basically hurt by the Rosado said the city has
quality of life diminishing already raised $10 million
in those areas where that in public benefits dollars
development happens." so far in 2026, which he
King countered that it described as a "record"
wouldn't be possible for compared to the last five
hers or Gabela's district to years, suggesting that
contribute as much to the more funding could be on
fund, given the dispropor- the way in the near future.
donate level of devel- Still, the commissioners
opment in areas like were unable to reach an
downtown and BrickeB. agreement, instead punt -
She also said the fund ing the proposals to a
should be distributed future meeting.
equitably and based on The commission also
need, criticizing the first- directed the adminis-
come, first -serve system. teation to cane up with a
"There should've been a new system to divide the
more equitable way that funds.
this money was divvied "1 think we all agree
up, and we should not unanimously, I would say,
have had to figure it out that this first -come, fut-
on our own.... It's not fair, serve basis, and the way
because every single dis- the legislation was writ -
Met in the city of Miami ten, leaves a lot of unin-
has need," King said. tended consequences,"
Pardo pointed out that Reyes said.
King brought up her con-
cerns the month after the
FROM PAGE 3A
BROWNSVILLE
and an industrial area.
Hialeah eventually backed
off of the effort.
That attempted incursion
by Hialeah into Brownsville
mobilized the Brownsville
Civic Association and three
other communittes to reig-
nite incorporation efforts
by petitioning the county
on to reinstate the
advisory committee, which
they did in January 2025.
Since then, the Little River
Fauns and North Shore
communities, which were
within the boundaries of
the proposed area, have
joined in the effort The
advisory committee has
held several meetings to
explore the incorporation
process and what 10 means
for residents.
IT GIVES YOU YOUR
OWN VOICE'
During a meeting of the
advisory committee on
Wednesday, more than two
dozen residents wbe at-
tended were in support of
adding Brownsville in its
entirety to the boundary
map.
Some, like Samuel Wil-
Maw
OMM RSD0YfOPMLIR M•D[KT
MIIIIMNICLIMOLVELOPIIDELASISSI
tffELSILSILISLIUSALASISSI
The noes of f. muren Mann of the Qm Mn4etpm0OSn0
Cann, lba bomb ApeneV MAIM OW) warim a P.C..
on TtuMay, Ape 23. 2026, at 930 am or aMnre tem. at the CM
Conon.. chambers ON.] at Maori CMHall, Moo Pan American DNB,
Mars, R.1.
Me OMNI CPA's 20190.0...W,... tPan Man') am
Gamerrtt Sl, norE. salutes WeBoshstill cons., ., an amours not
to exceed P.. Neon and 00n00 Dolan 64.000003 001 b E... Locket.,
an sevens ana owner of the OMm.en tea to ao number
01-312,048-11.1 boozed at ndti a expend..,Fr.
tla
unceence the expend.. as c.. weat Mt wren s,� mn..S. as
PoomNopment MN.", protect mil ate d
rue eAHI CPA's
protect i nnm a ,raamerelglMs
Inn mual � Base Caunn0M0 p e,sod Man 303. ofrea by the
Sates Department of Housing a. ',khan Deteropment 101. too
2 "m
than DOM ASP at Mare, -Dade Cour, as fe. shed 0, MUM amsix (61
macramoncorra Noble Cam,. as 311. Dam a month. AMINN Iwo coo moalwace of aporm stater Noce
ass. sMm am
n :tie mommuniN.
The Beard TCSUCItS all mopart. to moms..
mme mot. anO may he heard .res. am nommen o emar,
a etch Me .e slaN person cto manyes. oue, N
aec son of r�m.b.an ramue m>a..N matter pensaerea at this meeting.
Me re.awmmm mom a ...clogs Ns
Me mace.
oceans mall me ensure
mi.. Into wen, ars appeal may be boa
OS 42e6.01.1.
RYaMA un No. C-260mOLMI 1, *war a eche..
meeting• som
empelld a n m stela dezee as a apemen or der
smear OMNI CPA mce,r. MI b•apsetMl5 02hml,ad for
runway mama. Mewing Me canoe. emit., n ad Fe event done
wwb Pe held Mrnb28 r 2026. at 9. a>m0on
w zmNme Peres.,. Me CM Comoas.n
N Cr, faII.MCU Pan Aeaan Dme. Mum. Frde
ko ag,ma hems horn Pet mailed moving full
an aoe.. nun at Me cecai OMNI CM
meet. Pa Cos. te m>may shall re Dot.. to l meet.
1,at Oa take are by pacmgamlre Ot M. sox. OMNI GRA tor..
at Me entrance d CM Malt oac,ng a nonce n to PANCMS wet.,
at ad in a
of
ahon
me memo • mlmeet, porn the men.at w iw0.r0:,awv. Theree .11. m
• notice W pblmm rmunr for aN 0In monk. Mends Rm
these nosed. Me waif 01MI CRA nano.
mei... speedos N. moo may teaddressed b M. Cart I. Sum.
ExecutivP0616re Ovect ma 1401 N. Nem Poe., and Fb, Man, Ronde 1,
o M.Mrmcae wM000n AN0d m,.
r1990, per
"dnp amamrr to anMNmep21*400 20.O. e prom....le
confect the Office of a e,Ctn at 10oleMoo..1e1 Moo.mar Men
is., d..m Menprer fo Mo vmoroOe. TTy sere nee call rn FN.
Reny Serial. ism Mar run Nor RI drMx-a days once b tie pmce.s.
liams, expressed frustration
with the idea of still being
vulnerable to annexation
because the map doesn't
include all of the historic
Black neighborhood.
"1'm concerned we'll
have a situation like Over -
town or Little Haiti, where
ow culture, or a little of the
history that helped shape
Brownsville, will get wiped
away, unacknowledged or
misused by municipalities
that may not have our best
interest," said Brownsville
resident Samuel Williams.
Yvette McLeod, a
Brownsville resident who
lives in the area that was
nearly annexed and has
been a staunch advocate
for incorporating, said her
concern is if the ar
unincorporated, their
tax dollars will continue to
go toward things that bene-
fit other neighborhoods.
McLeod also emphasized
the urgency of incorporat-
ing and said that many
people get the wrong mes-
sage about what becoming
a city means.
"You have to educate
yourself on what incorpora-
tion is about," McLeod
said. "It gives you your own
voice. It gives you your
voice within your city, that
you can grow and expand
your city. But when you
don't have a voice, you
don't have nothing."
"We have a lot of se-
niors.... We want to make
CITY Of MANS FLOROA
MOM. OF PUBLIC N.M.
A melt. harm W De hat by Ne GM OMnmi>n, d e CNN OI Mani,
Fr.s on Thurs. ....23.2026, at 900 AM. a, UN ea , roomed at
a600 Pen Merlon 0rne. M•n,, Son., .1... the purpose of grinds
sa 0Nwa0'
A REsoWMN 00 nE MATH cm MMMr6ON, MIN Are cePAEH 00,
PURSUANT TO SECTOR 1ae50) OF 1HE COPE OF TEC OF MAR,
RDIM, AS AMENDED, m A ROM -RAM H MA6) ARRMRVE VOTE.
AMER AN AD.ER19ED PUBLIC HEMtt%, RATFYW,APxOAO,
AID CIMP1001011.401TY MANMOEAS FFUFOIB). ATTACHED AND
NWRPC.TED AS MOT 8•TWITCOMPEmM1E sEUmMTON
MOM NO flOLEDUES AM NOT PMC0PUHE ORADVANTAGEOUS00
FM THE CITY Cf MIJA ITEM AND WASHES THE MOLMB.ENIB FOR
SAONg0EDUIES 50401LRIMv0 THEM...ON OF FU03 FROM THE
O 6 MEGRIM 3 SHARE MMM FOP EM O`S 0.11410ESMM,
tMA1.SASS, A TOTAL MOUNT NOT TO MEM TWO
HUNDRED0 n.ETR INI010.10 MD AM 0Nm 01. , DOLLARS 00001D MUMS,
TO ACE TWAIN FOLMAIICN, INC., A FLCmOA NOT-FOR-PREM
cawuwnw cr. POUNOMMO, COP THE PURPOSE OF
A01001&B1RTFO THEHSTO,c 2005 TER LOCATED
T MENUS r1AOECTI, Mi., UPON wpAkTION,
WEL ROME THE COMA NRY WM, A VENUE FOR DIMS AM
P]iA&0*001 A CULTURAL P0000101PG SPME, N A1OF0EORCE
M.B. SUSPECT TO AL APLF/6UE FECERAL. STATE, AND THE
LAWS
rE HE LATH TM.. OF SU. FUNDS, FURTHER AUITICPZt00 NG THE Cm
MANAGER TO SEGO.. AD EIECUTE ANY AM AlLOOCUMNIS
NECESSAN, N FORMS ACCEPT.LE TO THE CITY AMM §FOR SRO
PURPOSES
...nosed rm....) may he omen.E bins pipc aMOLfm of le
CM Clefts 3600 van anenran Dove, Man, Fiona 33133, Mons. through
Neat. exc.. mmay>. bee"een Me burs .8 am. a. 6 urn, or
H0A/man0 om2 Nen fM Ian before tie date of me Cunmaa0 Meet..
TN Man CM Comm.. mauex>.n nterealea moat. be pre.or
wr respect apreal at. rneetim poMe
IteNreP▪ OCN ce m,9n1 wit n the C.Et N Cq„mauon may Ike sae.
Shoed any person dare b appeal Any dove., d the5, CM Commas.wall
respect to any saver e consmenta at sus mia meet,., person shell emre
Mk a Hasson ono. of the poccedims a ten my am
setle. upon whet) any appeal may te hated 5. 22866.co oq
P rime n...City Code sedan 2a0b1.,Pnever a mesa. CM
CO mmelm nee.g a cancelled ore rut hers P. to a ant of a quorum
Or othm mnn9rw. s vocal Dry Cunmto4on matl..�u n areanatealh
sainedallefl tor I. Tem.. a.NvMo h cannel vl meet. In e
sem of one of the
he specal meet. mutt
Ite held n Agent a 900 am. a Me CM Gammas. Nonce,
locatel at m CM a 'an 3600 Gan Arne,. Dr er Marv. R atl.. NI of
404944a rum from met canc.. reef, furs a,bma,ralN be
tleited as an age.a Item at the WM., CM Calame.rk McErmg.
Tie CM Cae full lolly 0he pudic d Pe spec,* metro bus Na N.M.
10 pia arum Cry Caareeon me. a the entrance
of PM Hall am tie CMS se. e0rm5be0Ae W,.e, pcag a more on
the CMS wi0N0, a., O Irelr, pong an ad in a ...paper of general
Pei. Mammal al means adon Me rma.aen fdawr. Smiley ▪ abed be no adartmel
pweamWnaonan, mama its am such
ache.. egena hen Mat . need MIN weal CMy C*0n,,w n neerg.
.madecewait the Mernm> wen IN Into A. d la. pesos
nemm macal ammeomtom b panel. in mis pmemos may
comma Me Ogre of Me Cm Cork et 0161260-i16, Noce, no Nor ter fire
OI Wen. neva prior b d. penmen.. ITS users may eaN ra r11 Fos.
Relay Samosino Wier urnfur(5) been an woo. Me ormuig•
sure that they get the best
services that they have paid
for," Brownsville resident
Al McCullough said at the
meeting. "We pay a lot of
taxes and we don't always
get the best services."
Despite her frustration
that residents have to com-
plete a petition, McCul-
lough said it doesn't deter
her from pursuing city -
hood. "It gives you a boost
and a push to fight for what
you know is right, and we
just have to always fight for
ourselves," she said.
M online petition has
been launched with the
hopes it will get traction.
"We're still planning for
the actual ground game to
see if we can get something
established and moving,"
Kilpatrick said.
But getting a petition
signed will be tough, said
Kilpatrick
"We've been pushing
back and saying, [a pet-
ition] costs money, that's
expensive, and we're
con
tamed about folks n
wanting to answer the door
because of the environ-
ment," Kilpatrick said
"There's ICE and all this
kind of stuff. What happens
if they don't answer? But
for us, the most important
aspect of it is we can't
afford it"
Meuse
Om'.53 MA61.BG13IIa
WaCESEKBLGBFABEKI
A ptic hear.. sate. W be CM Commis. of fetes of Mini,
notra on tn,reaw. Apo., 2026, at 900A6 at cot Hue, Maul at WOO
Pm Amen. 0. Mini, Nora. all. for Me pone aarways.
fosel.khF
AtESpNON 0 TIE NM CRY COAMSSW, WITH AS.aMa r(S).
Bf AFOM-F S(MIMS) AMMO. VOTE, AFTOIM' AOkERTISED
PULCIEM.IG, FMEMS, MM.., AND CIXEINMG TIECTI
MANMERS A.fle, ATTACHED AHD NCOR OMMTED, AS ATTAC MT
▪ THAT
COMPETITIVE swimsNEGOTIATOR METHODS., WLC814RES ARE
NOTP OTIC/BEOLR ADAwre0EO'6RJR THE env CfCr0t FLImM
ram PRESSYSrTO SECTIONS 00100 OF THE CODE OFTHE GRY
S0MMI,R l0 A9 ASEDED:1MMM THE fl1)4 ENT R1R
PPOCEOLMS:MM.1130D TIE 0a..M OF RMS, NTHE
AMOUNT OFM IMI. TO SWSHIE FORM, M. A R➢m.Nm FOR
PROM OROM0000FORME ADANBTMx0 TCf Cm•Gf HAMS SENIOR .L AMMR RE AN. PROOF. tMOGREM). ten OW SEAR OF
SEMMES, WITH AN OPTION TO EM1ai MO S€COM M. OF
SERVICES FORAI..MN 1 M6pm00 AT THE SOLE OMMTION OF
THE DEPAAAMENO OF NOUS.srAM MrD NA 00.9A Of:Yaw¢RS
PRESSOR LTOR DEMME. AS SFEC.-SAM'A• UA12MD
THE PADS GENERATED AO BUDGETED EACH YEAR ROM,. HISTORIC
PESHMTON SCHEDULES Gf FEES, SUBJECT m THE 66.6191.116.
Of FUMFO: FURTHERwaslo OTIE Cm'IMNAGER N90MTE
AO EPSOM ALLM0Ei3AM ogx.ENT.Nn10MD M eaERTS
005500 ▪ N6,00MO0FGT0NS ALL N A Rxw6 MEPTNE-E TO THE
CRY TmhE ,SIBIECT MALLF .P.. STATE ADLAM UAYS
MAT FEOIATE 11E USE Cif SUCH EU... FORS=PROSE
proposed reamer., rawbe meat. aseraspas.Deus
0.06 Clerk rnMae. n, vanA ermnu.,,RxW WM,1 0
through Foray. east.rg hot gays, bewrm, the burs a s&w. •d s w5,er
hOu
Norn.com Eve
re Me
The AasmsM CNCommas.uestall Mresm calhe pre.rt 2,
represent... emend mme tit 1 respect DrODO
before the CM mmm Cordete,ch the CNOCommam mM take actors
Shoe. any Der on dwre to woes, am Common d tle CM C.rnmmon wM
respect to am natter te the meet,.
perm Plan
ewe that a N.M. resent of the mace.ags ,s mademom
and
upon
h any
r may
bass. PS
Pursuant AIR, CMCsCoae Sermon231teke1 o1s poor a ache.. CM
Commas. met..g a nrce..d or > not teto sue to a ON of a quorum
or other emergeney. al CM Commas. met. Val be atrornatteNt
dhe roam mnma0N blbwmg Me.ncerm1 man.. U.
evera done V Ise spec.Itemwoo.
e 8
c. s
• m Ap.22026 t 990s. n toSty Come.. earrMen
Ann Mermen Doe. Man, 0.31113. AN of
M▪ e Ito agenda I.na from tatca,cellm "Iam9 urn ammao-llN
W om,A. r an span. Ann lathe Kenai CM reffes n retry.
Tb.CM can sail nosy Me pisic of the weal mate Pa orb take
pace by 00mg a rimed the spacer CM C0sm.em meet. at de
entrance of CM WI a. s.Gya Ira a...aMe Ea ss. mama
notice on Me CM's *We, ... M te0O0, pacm an c in a newspaper of
general cucuam, bale a r0M rafting on Me „n50steN 010000
Tuesday . There O1.11 0 no Madam not. try p41000n moored r any
saM.fe0Ae] moo. itan Mat. rm. l Me me. CM Comm..
Moca.. 1 snails And 1990, Delon.
...mac* nlW par.*riot Dormerg may
mcctt Me OI�m el Me uN Clerk PD5126O6J61 (.burl no ar Fan No
IN brae rue pod.b the pgredry. Ile inept. may ca. ea 711 Pon.
R5M SY.iml re ar Man Meat bwae.ax pwbat. pormms.
• ce M Br.
Ad No .938
e C.6 C. d
Hannon
Pet No 63435
Lay Clerk
TWO B. Homo,
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
49472
Legal Ad - IPL0329908
43934
3.0
201.0L
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@miamigov.com
Notice
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, April 23, 2026, at 9:00
A.M. at City Hall, located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, 33133 for the purpose of granting the following:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE TWO
AMENDMENTS: (I) A THIRD AMENDMENT ('THIRD AMENDMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C"), TO THE GRANT OF EASEMENT,
RECORDED ON DECEMBER 12, 2007, BOOK 26102 PAGE 2955 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MLAMI-DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN FIRST AMENDMENT RECORDED ON DECEMBER 12, 2007, BOOK 26102 PAGE
3110 AND AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN SECOND AMENDMENT RECORDED ON NOVEMBER 24, 2008, BOOK 26662
PAGE 355 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, (THE FIRST AND SECOND AMENDMENT
TOGETHER WITH THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, THE "ORIGINAL EASEMENT AGREEMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C"),
CONTAINING A COMBINED TOTAL SIZE OF APPROXIMATELY 9.78 ACRES ON A PORTION OF CITY OF MIAMI ("CITY")
OWNED PROPERTY LOCATED AT 888 MACARTHUR CAUSEWAY, WATSON ISLAND, MIAMI, FLORIDA ("PROPERTY"), AS
LEGAL I Y DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "A" ("PARCELS A, B, AND C"); AND, (II) A SECOND AMENDMENT ("SECOND
AMENDMENT PARCEL G"), TO THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, RECORDED ON OCTOBER 6, 2008, BOOK 26598 PAGE
1473 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN FIRST AMENDMENT
RECORDED ON OCTOBER 6, 2008, BOOK 26598 PAGE 1498 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA (THE FIRST AMENDMENT TOGETHER WITH THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, THE "ORIGINAL EASEMENT
AGREEMENT PARCEL G"), CONTAINING A TOTAL SIZE OF APPROXIMATELY EIGHT THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED
NINETY (8,790) SQUARE FEET ON A PORTION OF CITY -OWNED PROPERTY LOCATED AT PROPERTY, AS LEGALLY
DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "B" ("PARCEL G"); (THE THIRD AMENDMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C AND THE SECOND
AMENDMENT PARCEL G, HEREINAFTER JOINTLY REFERRED TO AS, THE "AMENDED EASEMENT AGREEMENTS"),
BETWEEN THE CITY AND BH3 IG DEVELOPER LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("BH3"), ISLAND
GARDENS DEEP HARBOUR LLC, A DELAWARE LMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("MARINA TENANT"), IG LUXURY LLC, A
DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("LUXURY TEWWT"), IG RESIDENCES LLC, A DELAWARE LMITED
LIABILITY COMPANY ("RESIDENCES TENANT"), IG LIFESTYLE LLC, A DELAWARE LMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
("LIFESTYLE TENANT"), IG RETAIL LLC, A DELAWARE LMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("RETAIL TENANT"), AND IG
PARKING LLC, A DELAWARE LMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("PARKING TENANT"), COLLECTIVELY, THE ("TENANTS"),
(THE CITY AND THE TENANTS ARE HEREINAFTER JOINTLY REFERRED TO AS THE "PARTIES"), WITH TEAMS AND
CONDITIONS MORE PARTICULARLY SET FORTH IN THE AMENDED EASEMENT AGREEMENTS.
Said proposed resolution(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office of the City Clerk, 3500 Pan American Drive,
Miami, Florida 33133, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
httpy/miamitl.Tgm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 (FS. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held
due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled for
the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the
special meeting would be held on April 28, 2026, 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 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.
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Miami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/13/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
6t/S'5' Davis
Russ Davis
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
ELECTRICSTATE Of 11JUS aJt
COMMISSION a 12s1.2w93
COMMISSION EsnnES 416,029
Apr 13, 2026, 10:32 AM ED
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGN,X
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43934
Notice
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, April 23, 2026, at 9:00
A.M. at City Hall, located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, 33133 for the purpose of granting the following:
A RESOLUTION OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION, AUTHORIZING THE CfTY MANAGER TO EXECUTE TWO
AMENDMENTS: (I) A THIRD AMENDMENT ("THIRD AMENDMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C"), TO THE GRANT OF EASEMENT,
RECORDED ON DECEMBER 12, 2007, BOOK 26102 PAGE 2955 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN FIRST AMENDMENT RECORDED ON DECEMBER 12, 2007, BOOK 26102 PAGE
3110 AND AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN SECOND AMENDMENT RECORDED ON NOVEMBER 24, 2008, BOOK 26662
PAGE 355 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, (THE FIRST AND SECOND AMENDMENT
TOGETHER WITH THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, THE "ORIGINAL EASEMENT AGREEMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C"),
CONTAINING A COMBINED TOTAL SIZE OF APPROXIMATELY 9.78 ACRES ON A PORTION OF CITY OF MIAMI ("CITY")
OWNED PROPERTY LOCATED AT 888 MACARTHUR CAUSEWAY, WATSON ISLAND, MIAMI, FLORIDA ("PROPERTY"), AS
LEGALLY DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "A" ("PARCELS A, B, AND C"); AND, (II) A SECOND AMENDMENT ("SECOND
AMENDMENT PARCEL G"), TO THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, RECORDED ON OCTOBER 6, 2008, BOOK 26598 PAGE
1473 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMENDED BY THAT CERTAIN FIRST AMENDMENT
RECORDED ON OCTOBER 6, 2008, BOOK 26598 PAGE 1498 IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA (THE FIRST AMENDMENT TOGETHER WITH THE GRANT OF EASEMENT, THE "ORIGINAL EASEMENT
AGREEMENT PARCEL G"), CONTAINING A TOTAL SIZE OF APPROXIMATELY EIGHT THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED
NINETY (8,790) SQUARE FEET ON A PORTION OF CITY -OWNED PROPERTY LOCATED AT PROPERTY, AS LEGALLY
DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT "B" (PARCEL G"); (THE THIRD AMENDMENT PARCELS A, B, AND C AND THE SECOND
AMENDMENT PARCEL G, HEREINAFTER JOINTLY REFERRED TO AS, THE "AMENDED EASEMENT AGREEMENTS"),
BETWEEN THE CRY AND BH3 IG DEVELOPER LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("BH3"), ISLAND
GARDENS DEEP HARBOUR LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("MARINA TENANT"), IG LUXURY LLC, A
DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("LUXURY TENANT"), IG RESIDENCES LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED
LIABILITY COMPANY ("RESIDENCES TENANT"), IG LIFESTYLE LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
("LIFESTYLE TENANT"), IG RETAIL LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("RETAIL TENANT"), AND IG
PARKING LLC, A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("PARKING TENANT"), COLLECTIVELY, THE ("TENANTS"),
(THE CITY AND THE TENANTS ARE HEREINAFTER JOINTLY REFERRED TO AS THE "PARTIES"), WITH TERMS AND
CONDITIONS MORE PARTICULARLY SET FORTH IN THE AMENDED EASEMENT AGREEMENTS.
Said proposed resolution(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office of the City Clerk, 3500 Pan American Drive,
Miami, Florida 33133, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
http://miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 (ES. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Commission meeting is cancelled or is not held
due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled for
the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event of one of the aforementioned circumstances, the
special meeting would be held on April 28, 2026, 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, 4 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. 43934
MOIDAY *Kll B 2026
I MUMI HERALD
Fontainebleau Hotel's rules could cause
`economic disaster,' condo owners say
BY LARRY sC W ARD
CBS No. Alma
The Fontainebleau
Hotel is facing a lawsuit
from condo owners who
claim new rules governing
unit rentals have the po-
tential to financially min
them.
"The clack is ticking,"
said David Haber, the
attorney representing six
condo owners in the Fon-
tainebleau Hotel's Tresor
and Sorrento towers. "Our
clients are facing the
potential of economic
disaster."
The dispute centers on
who rent
out suites
and junior
suites for
prat. Al-
though the -
hotel man-
ages
serv-
ices like
check -in,
housekeeping and park-
ing, it also runs an in-
ternal rental program.
That program requires
participating owners to
hare 55% of gross reve-
re, plus $180 a day and
taxes, according to the
lawsuit.
While the hotel allows
unit owners to opt out of
the rental program, a
2012 agreement reported-
ly permits those owners to
do so "without interfer-
rcstriction, limita-
tion, fee or cost imposed
by the hotel," the lawsuit
states.
However, updated rules
set to go into effect on May
15 require owners who opt
out to pay S1,000 for each
night of a guest's stay,
according to the lawsuit.
This charge leaves owners
who opt out with little to
no profit, Haber said, not-
ing that a one -bedroom
ocean view unit on the
hotel's website rents for
between 5875 and S1,902 a
David
Haber
[e
PEDRO PORT. pparrappedercer. corn 'Feb 2 NM
Rules set to go into effect on May 15 require owners who opt out of the Fontainebleau Hotel's rental program to pay
S3000 for each night of a guest's stay. according to the lawsuit. This charge leaves owners who opt out with little to
no profit, their lawyer said
A ONE -BEDROOM OCEAN VIEW UNIT intended to "force the how either association
d.
ON THE HOTEL'S WEBSITE RENTS FOR owners
tal) program, plans This report was produced
BETWEEN $875 AND $1,902 A NIGHT IN which is exactly the oppo- by Miami Herald news
sition of what the settle- partner CBS News Miami.
MAY. agreement that they
mmetered Into said."
The lawsuit also names
night in May. (guests) in rather than the the condo associations for
The new rules also hotel front desk checking both the Tresor and Sot -
force opt -out owners to them in, which was the rento towers and de -
pay extra for sheets and way of doing business mands they join the cm -
towels and hire their own prior to these proposed plaint.
housekeepers, who are roles," Haber said. Fontainebleau Devel-
not allowed to work on Haber is asking for an opments declined to com-
weekends. immediate injunction, ment on pending litiga-
"They're going to force hoping a Miami -Dade Lion. CBS News Miami
the owners to have a rep- County judge will penna- reached out to the associ-
sentative sitting at the nentty block the changes. ration leaders and their
front desk to check He argues the changes are lawyer, but it is not clear
FROM PAGE 3A were in finance and insur-
ance. There was no
change reported in jobs
tied to real estate.
Among the decline in
than a year earlier. down. leisure and hospitality
The January report fol- The healthcare sector is jobs, 17,000 were tied to
lows the annual "bench- adding the most jobs, hotels and food service
marking" process at the gaining 38,000 over the jobs. Jobs involving arts,
state and federal level that last 12 months. entertainment and rem -
includes a revision of Manufacturing, up by ation were up 12,900 over
historical data. 4,300 over the month, the year.
Even with the revisions, had an increase of 800 The state also reported
the U.S. Department of positions over the past that while local govern -
Labor noted that Florida year. ants added 3,000 work -
was the only state with In the area of trade, ers in the past year, state
any unemployment rate transportation, and util- government jobs declined
change in January. ities, the number of jobs by 2,100 and positions
The national rate cur- was down 6,200 for the with the federal govem-
rently stands at 4.3%, year. But while retail lost ment were down 12,500.
reflecting mid -March 14,700 positions, whole- For the metropolitan
conditions. A year earlier, sale trade jobs were up regions across the state,
the U.S. rate was at 4%. 2,700 for the year and the Miami -Fort Lauder -
Florida's rate was at transportation, ware- dale -West Palm Beach
3.7% in July and has now housing, and utilities jobs area maintains the lowest
grown in five consecutive were up 5,800. unemployment rate at
reports. There was no Also, under financial 3.9%.
October report due to a activities, all 9,200 Moil- Next lowest was the
federal government shut- Lions lost in the past year Orlando region at 4.9%,
UNEMPLOYMENT
JL,HCA Florida
ii Kendall Urology
Effective April 28th, 2026
HCA Florida Kendall Urology will no longer
be affiliated with HCA Florida Healtchare,
located at 11880 SW 40th Street, Suite
101 Miami, FI 33175.
Our Kendall practice is open
for your patient needs. Your office medical
records will be maintained at 11760 SW
40th Street, Suite 722 Miami, FI 33175.
To obtain your office medical records
Please Call 305-226-2020
followed by Naples, Talla-
hassee and the Tampa -St.
Petersburg -Clearwater
regions each at 5.1%.
The region that includes
Wildwood and The Villag-
es had the state high of
9%, with Homosassa
Springs at 7.5% and Sebr-
ing at 7%.
Woman stabs her
boyfriend after
fight over
Valentine's Day
gift, deputies say
SOLENA %MAVEN
mmaluwodon•maAeraY.wn
A woman neatly stabbed
her boyfriend to death
after an argument over a
Valentine's Day gift, ac-
cording to the Miami -Dade
Sheriffs Office. She's
locked up on no bond.
The couple got into a
Valentine's Day fight,
which escalated when
Bentoria King, 36, armed
herself with a "saver
homemade knife" and
attacked her boyfriend,
detectives wrote in her
nest affidavit. Parts of the
attack at Northwest 51st
Street and 21st Avenue
were corded on CCTV
and cellphone footage.
The man had puncture
wounds to his neck, back,
top of his head and behind
an ear, deputies say. He
was taken to Ryder Trau-
ma Center by Miami Fire
Rescue.
Deputies say King took
off on a bicycle.
Nearly two months after
the stabbing, King was
found at Stay America
Premier Suites in Doral
and taken into custody.
She admitted to being in
an "Iteration" with her
boyfriend but denied stab-
bing him She was charged
with attempted murder.
On Friday, a judge is-
sued her no bond, and she
remains locked up at Turn-
er Guilford Knight Correc-
tional as of Saturday. She
is being represented by a
public defender.
Notice
SOUTHEAST OVEmwmrwt. WEST
cwAINm ROEVELOR.ENT AGENCY
PLEASE ALL ME NOTICECa5055 0,0 rBoan'l meet.
of the swsew oedownPada uoa of
Bdaammmt Aam..y
1'SEpw CAA1 a scrod.. to We cum m Tlr.saww, es . ail, zees,
fal 00 AM or lMrNr, w Ala City 11s11. asp Pan Aa,wb,
once. MICA rancho
Manual MA b C-aaoone. wheer • scheduled SEOMW Ube ".xmne
eeore. omega. a
.metal 5801. CPA meet, we be autouluiN sce644 be De Tue..
nonielallo w-, be m00 5, �nv ed<Dare elms a the
meet, ern. be need . Kepi
a28. em026. at o the N Corms. w03. 0l5* a Mann,
Cm ea 625000M.1 Ar ercan Ceoe, Nam. Dodos Or.. M r Pe ecAewed
ago... meema,.�.u,twuerb. wecedm
anagenda don. do goof St, m
ECnw CAATom op 1M oak a to Boma
w Nolefr to5(55 rose spec al 0nOes rsw ON e oraw.oad.or06
m a roo. soya. scow.cat Tone, an se mono. Ce the Bond Pe
Cq a Mnn1 man lode..: -aria tndnp, p1md+, • noon. se sNnY
CMI wenne. am. r hastepeons n ad n. newnpr of *Toro
cm... Peeve spec a. meet. on be coned eeY old.., NOM.,
bed, sha be no
aM,u agemaceedc tarec. s Necoei C.Bore,.
AO Wares. persons ad noloe sde. For mote cone.. .0. C. estt DOSI 679cm0 n.daadan.,twee
Jar.D Maw. Eev aw O.or
Orercoau
West
co-tn.mnredmn0e"0111 Aar+..
No No 40.9
IxTY I Not.
i ra_obrw
5O11L£OF 0xLD NENr*
A pre Manna .a be Iwo tone ear Lannmon el the cm a Man. Ford. an Guam*. Apr. tot, 2026. ar 900
AM. al ON HO, Ye203t*INn Heenan Po%Mom Fe0A 33133 lot de,arced grans Teebnp:
A AE90,7onN OF TIE MAMaw COMIASSION, AUTHTINGENETnE COY TAWNIER TO EJrfLIE TWO
ME!#N1S. R A TNTOAAeoe4rlml0O ME2D6Ei4T RUMS &GANG TO THE GRANT 6 EASEMENT.
RCCOTID ON DECABER12, 2007, BOOZE 26102 PAGE 2965 M THE REIM RECORDS OF IAAMAADE cOl11Y,
ROIOA MEYLEO BY THAT LEIGN MST METOBNr RWIOED ON DECB,EEA 12, 2007, BOOK 26102 PAGE
2110 AND M.O. BY TINT COMM 6E0040 NBOBR RWIOm ON NO+F.Om 24. 2006 BOOK 26662
PM. 365 N THE RBLG Ri%YOS Of MIAMHDADE COUNTY. FLORIDA Ties EST AND SECOD AAEMOEN T
TCOETHER WIN THE ONN1 OF EASEMENT. THE CO.. EASEMENT Mfl 0SEN7 PARCELS A IA
CCOTATNOID A COW.. TOTAL SETE OF ARNO04•1EIr 976 /CMS ON A POm[%+C0 CT OF WM 75051
COINED PROPERTY HATED AT Sea MMJI CAUISEAY.WATSON %AND. MANI. NOMAEPRO ER1Y-L AS
LEGALLY IESOSBEO M MISR'A' CPAN ELS AAA AND CI. MO, V ASEOOD AHENAENT moo.
MENOEN0 PARCEL OD. TO THE GIANT CE EASEMENT. REMINDED ON OCTOBER 6, 2006 BOON 26598 RAGE
1a73 N THE POLO PELOOS OF MNMIDAOE COODY, ELMO\MBDED BY MAT CEMNN MST AMENDMENT
AMOK. ON OCIOBER 6, 2036. BOOK 26506 WOE TOM N TIE M8C RECORDS I 1.1AM-0ADE COUNTY,
RO OA mE EST AAENC EM TOGETHER WON THE GRANT OF EASE.en, THE piGNAl FASE.EM
AGRETENT MOTEL 01. CONTANNG A TERM SOF aF APPROO AATELY EIGHT IHO)WD SEVEN H.NOED
HWY 16190I SIXWE FEET CM A PORTION OF LM.e0a 1MEOWo*,S LOCATED ATINOnfOY AS LEGALLY
DESCRIBED N MINT 4 MARCEL OIL FIRE THAD McIb o0, APACE. A B, MO MD THE SECOND
.ENOENT REIGEL G. E0EMETEi JONTLY TO AS, TIE Usaov MOMENT AOEDh5TS'1,
DUNE. GE Iry AM GO O DEVELOPER L1C,A DELANO%LIMED LABILITY COWL N! MEC%GLJrD
NOENS MEP HOIA L, 200551E LIMIEDLNBLRY COMM.. MARINA WHOM, LlTLC,A
DRAYp5E LAVED WOLIN COAPNHYtalallIV IENAtf ORESOE ES LLD, A OR/YYJE MIMED
ILABILE, CCAIONY AIE 1��� TENANT), O LIFESTYLE LAC, ArELNWRE LOOM LIMLI,Y �uon0
1owArr, a RTAL LLC,A ORAMR LAVED LN910 COMfNY METAL TENANT,. M0 G
PM(N0 LLC. A DELWWE LOT ) W.LIIY O enity EMOTING TEWM-l. OOIILC5T6Y, 0E r1EN0TTS1),
(THE Los AND THE TENANTS ARE sEm nTEF JOWLY REFEREED TO AS HE'MRIESS, WON GEMS Ave
=NOTON6 MOW RMRGaNEY SET POOH N 111F MENDED EASEME fit Xa1EEM311s.
Sad wow* moNO.6WMp 6.IWO:9W by Ea WAN Me Office of Ile ON CYO. 3600 Pan Mew, Orme,
Mom Feld. 33100, Mindy Oomph F,Cry, a0 alebya, boom 9e Our of 6 am. and 6 pm-p
hW-rmm,gra Ded.w6Mas50ble MOa,s,�,Nse.p.
The Mona Laytamamo„go. M rowed pm. be paver spes.md M the meet, and racy be he.
w0, respect worn WW1 De CAy Comm r, Mum, ee LM Lu+anrmTrey nee adm. Sown ant
Ommat Owe a mpesany dear. o ieLarca,n.�, re, mood d RMOW
ondnmsdaee aPM oa.u,g,
I. person WWI wee ihal • e pm pednw n rm. apmd., ad e..and ,p em ere.00n
d, Moor. . 080 may to bred 656D Bola the
Pers..... C. Cade Ddm231W,.M,rer. MAW CM Cwmsv, nerere, o unreel or e nor Mel
A2 be a0d' •rs a. m� 0 Mer.r.w.Y.. spec. Le �wm ems �w a wined.
u . Tu .]. nrrl.d..rr ONwe, the canceled nectar, 5 9...r of to a me aar.-ommneo omn..8a. ue
space, mew,.n. be held an Apr 26. 2024 el 990 are n Ise CAN Cpmewr deltas peed a Mule ON
Ha. 3, PoTMnerun Dram, M.\RaIM.M M es nrm,el .panes erns ran d,o trrelea Preen, till
.uo+relN n rAn„ed r W Wnd. morel Pe* ON Como, meet,
The ON coda she may t. coec O to WTIrna,a Oafs Sae penpMau, a mace el De Weer CM
Conon.. medergg an son entrance of Cm NCI and tk Cm'a man W0naearee Oudnc cam rp. mete. Pe CNN
pet.,nW fn a roffesoapefor genera cd,rao, Odom I%unc. %el. to to
noneddieN .Then tier rotwwNos.be roammp,ae.pun ano twanNrod,s .Ned
Ned. Ne two e'p,.nosdnme sec. cm 000409... been.
npdmrw.1 Am.ar ers wMw OaActro eeAof 1990, tenonsedry Wocam.nn .pMNOMe
Ne .. priced.* my contact Boo Office of de ON CON a 0os1250. 61 Mini, re bier Pa, the 01 Wades dos
peer pare Doomed. T1Y users row roll w 711 nor. Peer P.c.) no ater ten the I51 tones elm por
tie preceed.
o. S Macron
LM Der
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
49472
Legal Ad - IPL0329927
43935
2.0
146.OL
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@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, April 23, 2026, at 9D0 AM. 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 ATrACHMENT(S),
PURSUANT TO SECTION 18-85(A) OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, AS AMENDED, BY A FOUR -FIFTHS (4/5THS) AFFIRMATIVE VOTE,
AFTER AN ADVERTISED PUBLIC HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING,
AND CONFIRMING THE CITY MANAGER'S FINDING(S), ATTACHED AND
INCORPORATED AS EXHIBIT "B," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION
METHODS AND PROCEDURES ARE NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS
FOR THE CITY OF MIAMI ("CRY") AND WANING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR
SAID PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE ALLOCATION OF FUNDS FROM THE
DISTRICT 2 SHARE OF THE CITY'S MIAMI FOR EVERYONE ("MFE") PROGRAM,
ON A REIMBURSEMENT BASIS, IN A TOTAL AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED TWO
HUNDRED THOUSAND AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($200,000.00) ("FUNDS")
TO ACE THEATER FOUNDATION, INC., A FLORIDA NOT -FOR -PROFIT
CORPORATION ("ACE FOUNDATION"), FOR THE PURPOSE OF
RESTORING AND REHABILITATING THE HISTORIC ACE THEATER LOCATED
AT 3664 GRAND AVENUE ("PROJECT'), WHICH, UPON COMPLETION,
WILL PROVIDE THE COMMUNITY W(TH A VENUE FOR EVENTS AND
PERFORMANCES, A CULTURAL PROGRAMMING SPACE, AND A WORKFORCE
HUB, SUBJECT TO ALL APPLICABLE FEDERAL STATE, AND LOCAL LAWS
REGULATING THE USE OF SUCH FUNDS; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ANY AND ALL DOCUMENTS
NECESSARY, IN FORMS ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY ATTORNEY, FOR SAID
PURPOSES.
Said proposed resolution(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
httpy/miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 woukl
be held on April 28, 2026, at 990 am. in the City Commission chambers
located at Miarni 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 CAys main administrative building, placing a notice on
the Citys website, and, if feasible, placing an ad in a newspaper of general
circulation before the special meeting on the bvnediately 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.
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Miami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/13/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
Da.ris
Russ Davis
s
y
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
SMEARY CHASTEEN
STATE or TEXAS
COMMISSION Izv,eam
MY COMMISSION EXPIRES 4/ID/3019
Apr 13, 2026, 10:32 AM ED
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGNiX
Todd B. Hannon
City Clerk
Ad No. 43935
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, April 23, 2026, 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),
PURSUANT TO SECTION 18-85(A) OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF MIAMI,
FLORIDA, AS AMENDED, BY A FOUR -FIFTHS (4/5THS) AFFIRMATIVE VOTE,
AFTER AN ADVERTISED PUBLIC HEARING, RATIFYING, APPROVING,
AND CONFIRMING THE CITY MANAGER'S FINDING(S), ATTACHED AND
INCORPORATED AS EXHIBIT "B," THAT COMPETITIVE NEGOTIATION
METHODS AND PROCEDURES ARE NOT PRACTICABLE OR ADVANTAGEOUS
FOR THE CITY OF MIAMI ("CITY") AND WANING THE REQUIREMENTS FOR
SAID PROCEDURES; AUTHORIZING THE ALLOCATION OF FUNDS FROM THE
DISTRICT 2 SHARE OF THE CITY'S MIAMI FOR EVERYONE ("MFE") PROGRAM,
ON A REIMBURSEMENT BASIS, IN A TOTAL AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED TWO
HUNDRED THOUSAND AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($200,000.00) ("FUNDS")
TO ACE THEATER FOUNDATION, INC., A FLORIDA NOT -FOR -PROFIT
CORPORATION ("ACE FOUNDATION"), FOR THE PURPOSE OF
RESTORING AND REHABILITATING THE HISTORIC ACE THEATER LOCATED
AT 3664 GRAND AVENUE ("PROJECT"), WHICH, UPON COMPLETION,
WILL PROVIDE THE COMMUNITY WITH A VENUE FOR EVENTS AND
PERFORMANCES, A CULTURAL PROGRAMMING SPACE, AND A WORKFORCE
HUB, SUBJECT TO ALL APPLICABLE FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL LAWS
REGULATING THE USE OF SUCH FUNDS; FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO NEGOTIATE AND EXECUTE ANY AND ALL DOCUMENTS
NECESSARY, IN FORMS ACCEPTABLE TO THE CITY ATTORNEY, FOR SAID
PURPOSES.
Said proposed resolution(s) may be inspected by the public at the Office of the
City Clerk, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133, Monday through
Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
httpi/miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
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 April 28, 2026, 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 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. 43935
U
KUM HERALD
VCNDAI APRII 13 20)e
City Manager James Reyes reacts during a meeting at City Miami Commission Chair Christine King and
Hall on Thursday. Commissioner Rolando Escalona al Thursday's meeting.
FROM PAGE 3A
TRUST FUND
more than five years in
office, she hadn't previ-
ously known about the
fund.
"This was created in
2009," King said. "1 be-
came elected in 2021. No
one sat me down and said,
'These are your options
for funding.' Staff doesn't
give you that informa-
tion."
On Thursday, the com-
mission
set to vote on
two more requests from
the Public Benefit Trust
Fund:
• Commissioner Damian
Pardo requested $15
million for affordable
housing and parks in his
district. That included
$5 million for housing in
Little Bahamas and the
West Grove, and $10
million for parks
throughout District 2,
mainly for repairs and
maintenance.
• Commissioner Ralph
Rosado requested $4.8
million to build
workforce housing and
build out a portion of the
Ludlam Trail on land
owned by Miami -Dade
County Public Schools.
But with a little over $19
million currently in the
fund, King said she was
Paerred that approving
ro and Rosado's re-
quests would leave noth-
ing left for the time being.
King also said it wouldn't
be fair for Pardo to get the
lion's share of money,
reiterating that her district
- which includes Little
Haiti, Liberty City and
Wynwood/Edgewater -
and Commissioner Miguel
Angel Gabela's District 1
- which includes Flagami
and Allapattah - were the
most in need.
"My district, Commis-
sioner Gabela's district -
we are the ones hurting
for affordable housing,"
King said. "We are the
ones - re not building
luxury housing. We need
affordable housing more
than anyone. And true
affordable housing."
But Pardo emphasized
that his district, which
includes downtown, Brick -
ell and Edgewater, faces
major issues that need to
be addressed urgently.
"Our infrastmcnue is
horrible. Our Flooding is
horrible," Pardo said. "We
can't just look at it as, oh,
these are luxurious con-
dos. Those luxurious con-
dos are paying for all of us
to be able to get things
done in our district."
With much of the city's
development being con-
centrated in areas like
downtown and Brickelh
over the last few decades,
developers building pro-
jects in District 2 have
contributed the largest
share of funds to the pot.
Former District 3 Com.
missioner Joe Carollo had
previously secured more
than 012 million from the
fund for projects in his
district. According to the
city, the five districts have
contributed and spent the
following amounts out of
the Public Benefits Trust
Fund since its inception:
• District 1 (flagami,
Allapattah): S1.3 million
contributed to the fund,
30 allocated from the
fund
• District 2 (Coconut
Grove, downtown,
Brickel, Edgewater):
$21.1 million
contributed, 31.1 million
allocated
• District 3 (Little
Havana, East
Shenandoah, Silver
Bluff, The Roads): $12.9
million contributed,
$12.7 million allocated
• District 4 (Coral Gate,
Shenandoah, West
Hagler, Silver Bluff): S0
contributed, SO
allocated
• District 5 (Overtosvn,
Little Haiti, Liberty City,
Upper East Side,
Wynwood/Edgewater):
Commissioner Ralph 'Rafael'
speaks during a commission
$2.9 million contributed,
$5.3 million allocated
Pardo said the public
benefits were intended to
help people who were
"basically hurt by the
quality of life diminishing
in those areas where that
development happens."
King countered that it
wouldn't be possible for
hen or Gabela's district to
contribute as much to the
fund, given the dispropor-
tionate level of devel-
opment in areas like
downtown and Brickell.
She also said the fund
should be distributed
equitably and based on
need, criticizing the first -
come, first -serve system.
"There should've been a
more equitable way that
this money was divvied
up, and we should not
have had to figure it out
on our own.._ it's not fair,
because every single dis-
trict in the city of Miami
has need," King said.
Pardo pointed out that
King brought up her con-
cerns the month after the
Rosario listens as a resident
meeting on Thursday.
commission approved
more than $5 million from
the fund for her district.
"Madam Chair, 'just
think it's very conve-
nient," Pardo said.
Rosado said the city has
already raised $10 million
in public benefits dollars
so far in 2026, which he
described as a "record"
compared to the last five
years, suggesting that
more funding coald be on
the way in the near future.
Still, the commissioners
were unable to reach an
agreement, instead punt-
ing the proposals to a
future meeting.
The commission also
directed the adminis-
tration to cane up with a
new system to divide the
funds.
"1 think we all agree
unanimously, 1 would say,
that this first -come, inst.
serve basis, and the way
the legislation was writ-
ten, leaves a la of unin-
tended consequences,"
Reyes said.
FROM PAGE 3A
BROWNSVILLE
and an industrial area.
Hialeah eventually backed
off of the effort
That attempted incursion
by Hialeah into Brownsville
mobilized the Brownsville
Civic Association and three
other communities to reig-
nite incorporation efforts
by petitioning the county
commission to reinstate the
advisory committee, which
they did in january 2025.
Since then, the Little River
Fames and North Shore
communities, which were
within the boundaries of
the proposed area, have
joined in the effort The
advisory committee has
held several meetings to
explore the incorporation
process and what it means
for residents.
YT GIVES YOU YOUR
OWN VOICE'
During a meeting of the
advisory committee on
Wednesday, more than two
dozen residents who at-
tended were in support of
adding Brownsville in its
entirety to the boundary
map.
Some, like Samuel Wil-
WON RWEY6OPNWtf DISTRICT
NOTICE OF N•LIC HIMNO
Tea row de0mnmaeR 0Ba03 of lye Omni aedpeba ant Drat
r-mmr.sM RwMnmam ogmc6 IVMN CM-1 oNI100 a Rdt Houma
on Shuns., Sol 23, 2026, a19J0 am oaMrne thereafter e err GIN'
Corninist. Wnroen 0cated al bears CN Hall, 3500 Pan Mmlra, &6.
Mans, 0. 33133.
n accordance nN the O NI CAA'.2019 ••r"nl PlanrPlan, and
Chapin 153,Ref. Statutes. the Boardro11 wllnsEmn amount
erh.guntrut
lo ad Far tell. and 00/100 Do.oa 130,006003.031 m Faris Leckl,
an normuat and wmer of the progeny, daMmo by lap nw„ar
01J125U46 1 brat. at 152 bor... 17N Scent Mama. Fonda m
undeor
and
0 tt Ol u,na eawtwsr9 costa01 iniocomeprsect wNn0,00°MIC00
Bed ant Area., project wu neMe Wo unto for�ncome-elsa
resbents whose annual boor. is 0.1 to or ie. dun 30, of ore Ala
Maan.come COMIC for Awn ads County. w Dub.. annually by.
aned SDepartmenta.Department of 110.0g d atwine1, m oemp„GDj,1ap
l Does nor e enc.. reawhosedorpem .. whose annual nme d equal or Ms than 503 0010,
aCombo pMsfNd pDam ill
m for H,ad r meraled.r a elledbce ts. a reader.,M on a.wal Frond a equal
to or ma Ilan IOW MI for Oado County, w pOM W p HD, and
wiryadlor coma,• some d ap0 04,a nun
Nou▪ n 13Ag1ware feet. TM fundm ap011md•�mag and
blight nude mu e, anwdeme fang meow n ore areccIn
omannt nun Ne goad °at and n the Run.
Tm Boam redgaa all Ceres. panes. present a women. a the
net° are may be heard ad. reapecl m any pmmalpn babe the Bead,
▪ Do lye Pam may ale ocean. slag any arson deaaa m appeal aly
d err Board well respect m any matter concaved a No esearg,
flut person shall ensure Act a aww, ,word of err proms.. • made,
aI tiro. and eadace wan wnPh any aural nun be based
P ursua t...son No. CAA-2SD031. Mnevera rslduled 01311
CRA rrreNg a unrolled or a rml lied derma Wit of a awnm or Mar
emergency. a al OMN ON meet,orda a eaeoN aaMAds
Tuwdb mredae0 foMeag to cmcewd ^Mewing. n m ew[Jone oferr noreme msbmrho heldc., o spfreeheen
MN 23. 2021 0 9 ou
. a 30 a m, or unhmme pnafter, n err Cey Comecon
chambers gaited at nolsis CM Hal, 3500 Pan Ameman pow Wins, Florida
33133. All of No ache.md agenda rmv from as cancel. mooting gall
aummatwly be scheduled a an aaema item at rim spscal 05
. Taw a BOashall nobly Ix the SPOPn1meet .1 is
d of
doe by pbceg a node of Oil special O NI CM oven.
at mace ofCM Wo, pacnq a nonce a theOAF. CM, wens!,
and.A *Ole, sows an M in a newspaper of py1aL N.*. before
m,aa9 on lyemmdaleN to TwW0 These n
nalWa
node ty pml an rods. Io All arty ado sravdwd yard. inn
Nato modal to the sweat CMNI CR4 mad..
M.Cabm I. SNlx
became a 1130n 11 5. Mom M,2 d Flier. Nor. Ron.33136.
51679.0000
aearnad.. win Dimmblit o Ad d 1990, persons
d swam*n61 pause..nay
conmt sec eMCa. , p0N 050.5T51 NoneI, ru uar am
s.oals so sOa war
ea pronea.q.m,sa may sl nt rod.
now, ...ace), M W San tun RI is®tm prof to no pmedlro.
liams, expressed frustration
with the idea of still being
vulnerable to annexation
because the map doesn't
include all of the historic
Black neighborhood.
"I'm concemed we'll
have a situation like Over -
town or Little Haiti, where
our culture, or a little of the
history that helped shape
Brownsville, will get wiped
away, unacknowledged or
misused by municipalities
that may not have our best
interest," said Brownsville
resident Samuel Williams.
Yvette McLeod, a
Brownsville resident who
lives in the area that was
nearly annexed and has
been a staunch advocate
for incorporating, said her
concem is if the area re-
mains unincorporated, their
501 dollars will continue to
go toward things that bene-
fit other neighborhoods.
McLeod also emphasized
the urgency of incorporat-
ing and said that many
people get the wrong mes-
sage about what becoming
a city means.
"You have to educate
yourself on what incotpora-
tion is about," McLeod
acid. "It gives you your own
voice. It gives you your
Ice within your city, that
you can grow and expand
your city. But when you
don't have a voice, you
don't have nothing."
"We have a lot of se-
niors.... We want to make
CITA OF IAA FLORIDA
NONCE OF PO•lIC REARM
A pdho fem9 we be.d byre CM Ca msam of he C. of Mnemi,
Oar. on TnumM, Apo23,a0.1,nCOO AM. at CMMNI, Me.a
3500 Pan Amnon Ora, AWN, Ronda, data] for the papaw of ga..
M 6Jbng.
A IESOLUTON CF TIE MAN CATS CO-•0SSAN. COI TTGIAElTISI.
RASIMN7 TO 0EC110N 1681A1 of THE CODE OF TIE OTT OF MIMII,
RD0DA AS AMENDED. EN A FOURfFl10 MOMS) AFFUATNE LATE,
AFTERAN ADVERTISED HEARING, MTFSNG,G,
AND CONFIRM. DE CmMANAGERS FFFNGISI07r.oeND
FNUOM1mhEXHIBIT 4: TINT COWERINE NHGOMTON
1E'DICOS AND ROCE011fES ARE NOT RTACIIGBLE OR AINANOAOEOJS
FOR TIE cnY OF MAIN cum AND WANMO THE Tq11iFMMS FOR
SAD FPOCRo IFS. AUTORDNG ME ALLOC TON Of RINDS FROM
E
SCARE DISTRICT, SCF AVETHE CS MI MI FOR EVISTONS (ME') Rg0RA
ON A FESBU0NW SEMENT BASS. IN A TOTM AMOUR NTO UCFED 190
MOOED TIOUSNND ANO 00003 DalAPS MOO= 001 CO DSO
TO ALE TMATm FOUNDATION, INC., A FLOROA NOT-FORauFTr
WUOMMN CAGE FOUNMTCNI. FOR THE RPRSE OF
1EB10RNG A10 REIMBa1TATNG TIIE Hbnxd. ICE TEATER LOCATED
AT366a GRID O&
MOILS
0ROJELT), WH, IFCN COMrETONWILL,
WROIOE TIE COANTNr WITH A VENUE FOR EVENTS.)
PERFORMANCES, A CULTURAL RO0 MA0D SR!£, MO A WCIIMO*CE
FLO SLELIEGT TO ALL APPLICABLE FEDERAL STATE, AND LIXN LAWS
REtAMTNG THE USE OF SKIN RINDS: FURTHER ALMAXON G TE CRT
MaMGmm IE00TMTE AND MODE ANY MD Ill OOOAEJTS
ALES . N FORMS IGYEPTNIF m TIE CT' ATTUNES. mil SAD
ROOSEs.
Sad proposed rmdeonlsl may a.mpecad WOO p1Mc Id.mOff iced lye
Cite CI. 3500 Pan amerce, Drwe, Mama, Fdrb 3313a Mrdb Nra.h
rob, e.cu.g o,dbs, be0een the hours cis am. ad 5 or, or
1.0JAnan,5 Pm2 corn Ime oars news Ne ham of teCo,m..a1 see09.
The Man CM Comm.. ndumgs aII rum.. panes be ended.
beba�a,e�Cm at meeting
wna�n which tmay be he
"C reaps. m e, pmadan
N n of lye C0r rob take acts.
Shnud anyy asdace mauralaat Marrond.ACMCamrmnacre
er re be coos/an/ea at Ns mxaq.Mcanon Mernow*0
M aManlnY and
ewdere upon wnm any appeal may tome Fe 2afiDt00.
Faaw.l Mom CS Code Sec.. 233I01. when.. •imOUM CM
Comn.. mottos •s
or oF1a aw9a,w, a special CMorCamrm mMmg mnX be adawteal,
•added Cr be Tuesday imndamN dlbw.g to ancnda meet. In to
esd d our d ne aaratmntsmd 6 5003,0 t. uncial wag
be lid on nor, 33. pall, at 9.00 am. nOr CM Cons.. camas
N.. at Menu GN WIN, 3. Pan Amercs pun, Mad. R 33133. NI J
Vac rd,aus agenda teem from Nat an.. me..g .all automatically.
a.e Ws as an agenda iro n at the spaced CM Canmssmn meeting.
llr Ce1 Cerh gall notify lye pubic d the ducal meN.9 Nat o m lace JAM
IN oac.g a robe of Of specs, CM Cona.5m0n nrm0g at lye envade
of city Hal. and Ne CM s roam dmsn,saaw Iu,dm9 pacng a,are on
run CM's weale. ad. n Pass.. peono an ad n a newspaper a general
cram. 1,0 ore the vocal matg on be mmeda,N maw* Tuesday
There dad a ro maaei cud by oub.canon rend s any such
aaedad ageda ,ion act a mum m Ne specs, CM Cmmm, nmetg.
awodacewnhder Amemra0 wN gaiters.m. An d 1SE, peddle
n he prm ring row
Contact mod.
tye ONce off be CM Clem M51250-5361 noun no W Ow five
01 lsnness cars poor m lye omecearg. T, wed rrwy roe ra T11 Firm
Relay Sorel no act don lire Nl busman days rum b Iry mead...
sure that they get the best
services that they have paid
for,Brownsville resident
meeting.
McCullough said at the
"We pay a lot of
taxes and we don't always
get the best services."
Despite her frustration
that residents have to com-
plete a petition, McCul-
lough said it doesn't deter
her from pursuing city -
hood. "It gives you a boost
and a push to fight for what
you know is right, and we
just have to always fight for
ou
rselves," she said.
An online petition has
been launched with the
hopes it will get traction.
"We're still planning for
the actual ground game to
see if we can get something
established and moving,"
Kilpatrick said.
But getting a petition
signed will be tough, said
Kilpatrick.
"We've been pushing
back and saying, [a pet-
ition] costs money, that's
expensive, and wecon-
cerned about folks not
wanting to answer the door
because of the enviro
ment," Kilpatrick said
"There's ICE and all this
kind of stuff. What happens
if they don't answer? But
for us, the most important
aspect of it is we can't
afford it"
Rego*
fAYSUWM.ELOBCa
NOTICE OF RUC I05aC
A pule hang wnr a belt by the 000 Conmsie Jar ON of Mau,
F1mda on Ttar1E1, NM 33, pia at SOO AM at CMH.L, boated at 3500
Pan Amerman doe, Marv, FRN,, 33133 for err p.Y®oarwag the
A 8550111113N O TIE IAA. CITY COM.a0SIW, WITH AT0AO0ETT(S),
BY A FOLF.FFTS SPURS) AFFOOMTNE oom AFTER AN ADVRm5ED
WGLIC REARM RATIFYING, APPRONNG, ARO CONSUMING TIE CMS
MMAAUFSFTOG, AWACS. PND INWRVMTO3 AS ATTACHMENT
NT' TINT OGMEmNE NEGCIAT O N Mlrluu AND PRO0aOS Fs MF
NOTPRACISDIE OR AGWNTMEO S FOR TIE OTC OF MM. FLORIDA
COMM Rx6lMM TOat:coon.8HE W Or TCom OF THE Ory
MAI
M IM FLORA* AS MENDED'. .ANI N0 TIE REGUI RnCTS FOR
SAID PROC®lt,0: N TO
THE NLOGT W Of RIDS, W THE
AMOUNT OF 21001 00 TO SINSHINF FOR ALL, NC, AFLORM NOT FOR
ROm ORR PATONOI THE ACMNNISFMTDN OF CITY CF IMAMS
SENORmnAL ASSISTANCE ROOPAM MAMMY"), Fail ONE SDAa
sumo., WITH AN OPTION TO ENTER ONTO A SECOND WAR Cf
SER✓CES FOR AN AW rt10NAl 315.00000 AT TIE SOLE O60EFIGN OF
TEOBIAD.ENT 0 NCUSING AND WMANm' CEVELORJ JB
ITFOTOH OR DESIGNEE AS SU3RED N ATTAaeENr'ca.' 5€ 0n1S
TO RIDS GENERATED AND RLO GETEO EA. .YEAR t€ MTIE HISTORIC
PRESER.ATON SCI£AGLES OF FEES, SU ECT TO THE SINLABAm
OF RATING. 0.TMEF AJngRIDNG TIE OTC ISIN ET TO NEOOINIE
AND MORE NL NECESSUNOOCUMET, NOMONSIM 0a010S,
EM 9DNS. Ali SUBJECT TO
N A FUNSOLCCAHE m ME
OTT ATIOREn SUBJECT TO ALL FEDERAL, STaIEAFD LGUL LASS
THAT KOWIE irE .0 OF SLOP RINDS, FOR SAD CHOSE
Said proposed rmamol nay a a yams by to o1Ec a rm Office
of .CMCar.3600 Pan Unman Ome. Mato. Sob.33130 Wray
through foot,. excluding Mdaye, baaaal ore fan de am. and 5 pm., or
httpdrnansam2am five clays cew, Ole der. of the Com on.°swag.
The Man CM Cessna.. reqpeas all interest. mess be present o
reOnsenNI at e meet. ndwmay bench be
sob respect to sly prods.
MorerelyeCM C N Corr... may more action.
Shag am person dame b appal any deoson d We CM Cpnnw011.11
rdlleCt m any m.er O be conar#1N al Ile',ec.g. ea moan gall en-
sure Mat vertatIrn ,000rrl of the proceebngs is made nod. air teetworr
and arclee Loon 2860105,
Neural b Me ni CCaSector 233b1. when erh any appeal may he bal. a aMa achwmd CM
Coeneam Dee. a cancelled as not Me due m a air d a ouonm
or other emergency, a spec. CM Comm/moo mebtg won Ito aumrah®IN
the Tu.]. c.o.., IN..q be ca els meeting. n Oil
a meeting wed
on .1 28. 2026, a 993am. n the CAN Cerntsm chanters
lecabe at an. CM Hall, 3500 Pan Amens Erne, Mam., 0. 33133. All d
terem1 aNad+ earns lion that caenld mxrag Gallaammtmally
ns eMas w an+gen. am at the special CM rn."m, men.-
1. Car clerk shall nMy the mbho of Nr .meal meet. Na a m air
rice IN oac.. a moece 3 Se specs. CN Comm.. neetas a the
entranoe of UN, nonce on x CM.Im*kasana the CNN man aetnnotrat...e went,
0, ad. n ha,ead a, n mm wspar of
9ene0 or.Mco peb1e Ne enamel neeerg on to rmmdamy
T,edb. There Man P no adddnxl nape by 0O1ma1m reqc,nd br any
such ...agenda lion eml a n*Nd m the yard. CM 00wl,m1
many,
in amwtlwce win de Amerman, wMAw0e 0d1.0, persona
nwd.. weal ,®nnm n Nle pmaad.g rosy
er ON Clerk5at 501095) 250.5361 Noce) m tali can Ice
I51 Comm days pad lye proceed. m wan rob cab a 711 IFlerda
nes, Saracen no n hoer Nun e Nl Ns.. days pe
a m Nr vaea.g.
Todd FL Craton
Cmnd
Al No 43338
bid 0, Hannon
Gay M No Clerk
oil B. Haim
ON CM*
Ael A391T
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
49472
Legal Ad - IPL0330058
43936
3.0
258.0L
ATTENTION: CITY OF MIAMI CITY CLERK IP
3500 PAN AMERICAN DRIVE
MIAMI, FL 33133
mclopez@miamigov.com;thannon@miamigov.com
Notice
CITY OF MIAML FLORIDA
MOTILE OF PROPOSED ORDEWNCE1S►
Notice a hereby given that he City Commission of the ON of Miami. Florida, will consider the following ordinance(s)
on second and final reeding on Thursday, Apnl 23, 2026, commencing a1900 A.M., in the City Commission Chambers
located at 3500 Pan Amenban Drive, Miami, Ronde 33133:
ORDINANCE
AN ORDNANCE OF THE MIAMI CRY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER 2/ARTICLE N OF THE CODE OF THE CITY
OF MIAMI. FLORIDA, AS AMENDED ("CIT1' CODE'), TRIED'ADMINISTRATION/DEPARTMENTS; MORE SPECIFICAI I Y
BY AMENDING DIVISION 2, TITLED PLANNING. BUILDING AND ZONING DEPARTMENT,' DMSION 3, TITLED
'DEPARTMENT OF FIRE -RESCUE,' AND DMSION 4, TRIED RESILIENCE AND PUBLIC WOOFS DEPARTMENT-;
CHAPTER 3 OF THE CITY /YX]F, MORE SPECIFICALLY AMENDING ARTICLE II TITLED, 'ALARM SYSTEMS/BURGLARY
AND RO6B6iV ALARMS'; AND ARTICLE III TITLED, "FIRE ALARMS'; CHAPTER 10/ARTICLE VDMSION1 OF THE CITY
CODE, TITLED "BUILDINGS/IN GENERAL," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE N, TITLED REGISTRATION
OF VACANT, BLIGHTED. UNSECURED OR ABANDONED STRUCTURES, AND OF DEFAULTED MORTGAGED
PROPERTIES," AND ARTICLE V, TITLED'CODE REUEF PROGRAM'. CHAPTER 11 OF THE CITY Mac TITLED, "CAW F
TELEVISION'; CHAPTER 12 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED, "AMUSEMENT GAMES OR MACHINES': CHAPTER 17 OF
THE CITY CODE TITLED, "ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION.' MORE SPECIFr'.AI I Y BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED,
'TREE PROTECTION N GENERAL' AND ARTICLE II, TITLED,'QMiOMMENTAL PRESERVATION DISTRICTS'; CHARTER
18 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, 'FINANCE; MORE SFECIFral Y BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED 'IN GENERAL'
AND ARTICLE III, TITLED, 'CRY OF MIAMI PROCUREMENT ORDNANCE'; AND ARTICLE VIII, TITLED -STORMWATER
11LA)TY FEES" AND ARTICLE XI TTRLED, 'LEASES OF CITY OWNED SUBMERGED LANDS'; CHAPTER 19 OF THE
CITY CODE, TITLED "FIRE PROTECTION ; CHAPTER 20 OF THE CRY CODE. TITLED,'FLOOD DAMAGE RMEVENTION",
CHAPTER 22/ARTICLE I OF THE CITY CODE, TRIED "GARBAGE AND OTHER SOLID WASTE/IN GENERAL'; CHAPTER
22.5 OF THE CITY CODE, "GREEN IMMTNES,' MORE SPECIFIC.AI I Y AMENDING ARTICLE VI TITLED. 'SOIL EROSION,
WATERWAY SEDIMENTATION. AND AIRBORNE DUST GENERATION CONTROL'; CHAPTER 23/ARTICLE I OF THE CITY
(YYR TITLED "HISTORIC FRESERVATDN/HISTORIC PRESERVATION"; CHAPTER 32/ARTICLE I, TRIED
'MERCHANDISING/BANKRUPTCY AND CLOSING -OUT SALES', CHAPTER 35 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, 'MOTOR
VEHICLES AND TRAFRC,- MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ALT%XE N. TITLED "PARING RATES, AND ARTICLE
IX TITLED, 'VALET PARKING", CHAPTER 38 OF THE CITY MnF TITLED 'PARKS AND RECREATION' MORE
SPECIROAI I ARTICLE I TITLED, 'IN GENERAL' AND ARTICLE N TITLED. 'DAY CARE PROGRAM'; CHAPTER 39/
ARTICLE II OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED 'PEDDLERS AND ITINERANT VENDORS/SIDEWALK AND SIHEE I VENDORS";
CHAPTER 42 OF THE CITY /YYDF TRLED,'P000E' MORE SPECIF6'e1 I Y ARTICLE I TITLED, "N GENERAL"; CHAPTER
53 OF THE CRY CODE, TITLED 'STADIUMS AND CONVENTION CENTERS; MORE SFEOFK'el I V BY AMENDING
ARTICLE!, TTTLED "N GENERAL,' ARTICLE IVDFISION 2, TITLED 'CITY STADIUMS/MARINE STADIUM; AND ARTICLE
IV, TITLED "CONVENTK)N CENTER OF THE CITY OF MLAMVUNIVERSITY OF MIAMI, JAMES L KNIGHT'; CHAPTER 54
OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, 'STREETS AND SIDEWALKS; MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED
"N GENERAL," ARTICLE t, TTTLED CONSTRUCTION, EXCAVATION, AND REPAIR; ARTICLE VI, TITLED "SIDEWALK AND
STREET CAFES," ARTICLE VD. TRLED'NEWSRACKS ON PUBLIC RIGHTS -OF -WAY,' AND ARTICLE IX, TITLED
'COCONUT GROVE SPECIAL EVENTS DISTRICT"; CHAPTER 55 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED -SUBDMSION
REGULATIONS'; CHARTER 57/ARTICLE III OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED 'VEHICLES FOR HIRE/6500 BS FOR HIRE;'
AND CHAPTER 62 OF THE CRY CODE. TITLED'FLAMLNG AND ZONING; MORE SPECIFr'.AI I Y BY AMENDING
ARTICLE ), TIRED 'N GENERAL; ARTICLE III, TTTLED PLANNING. ZONNG AND APPEALS BOND,' ARTICLE VII,
TIRED' HISTORIC AND ENVROMIENTAL I1LESERVAT1aN BOARD,' ARTICLE XII, TITLED "PARKS AND OPEN SPACE
TRUST FUND; AND ARTICLE XIIVDNISDN 8. TITLED 'PLANNING AND ZONING APPROVAL FOR TEMPORARY USES
AID OCCUPANCIES; PERMIT REOURED/TE.MPORARY BANNERS; AND ARTICLE XIIVDNISDN 9 TTTLED, PLANNING
AND ZONING AFFROVAL FOR TEMPORARY USES AND OCCUPANCIES; PERMIT REWIRED /FARMERS' MARKET; TO
REMOVE THE REQUIREMENT FCR FEES TO BE ADOPTED BY ORDNANCE AND PROVIDE FOR FEES TO BE SET BY
THE CITY COMMISSION THROUGH RF: �1I UNION; CONTAINING A SEVELABILfTY CLAUSE; AND PROVDNG FOR AN
EFFECTIVE DATE.
Said proposed ordinance(s) may be inspected by the public at the Offx:e of the Gib Clerk 3500 Pan American Drive,
Miami, Fbnde 33133, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays, between the hours of 8 am. and 5 p.m., or
htbl/memill.gm2.oarn five days before the dale of the Commission Meeting.
At interested persons are invited to appear et he meeting and may be heard with reaped to the proposed
0,dinance(s). Shobld any person desire to appeal any decision of the City Commission w,h respect b any matter to
be considered et this meeting, that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including all
testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may the based (FS. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Commission meeting is cancelled or is not
held due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled
for the Tuesday inmediatey following he cancelled meeting. In he event of one of the eforementoned circumstances,
the special meeting would be held on April 28, 2026, at 900 am. in the City Commission chambers boated at Miami
Cry Hell, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, FL 33133. All of the scheduled agenda items from that cancelled meeting
shell automatically be scheduled as an agenda item at the special City Commission meeting. The City Clem shall notify
the public of the special meeting that is to take pace by placing a notce of to special City Commission meeting at he
entrance of city Hall and the Citys mein administrative building, piecing a notice on the Cty's wehsite, and, if feasible,
placing an ad in a newspaper of general circulation before the special meeting on he inmedietey b1oaing Tuesday.
There shell be no addt50nal notice by publication required for any such scheduled agenda item that is moved to the
spacial City Carrnisabn meeting.
h accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, persons needing special accommodations to participate
h the proceeding may contact the Office of to Ciy Clerk at (305) 250-5361 (Voice) no later than five (5) business
days prior to the proceeding. TTY users may call via 711 (Ronda Relay Service) no later than five (5) business days
prier b the proceeding.
PUBLISHED DAILY
MIAMI-DADE-FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF MIAMI-DADE
Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, the under-
signed, who on oath says that he/she is Custodian of Records of The
The Miami Herald, a newspaper published in Mlami Dade County, Flor-
ida, that the attached was published on the publicly accessible website
of The Miami Herald or by print In the issues and dates listed below.
Affiant further Says that the said Miami Herald website or newspaper
complies with all legal requirements for publication in chapter 50,
Florida Statutes.
1.0 insertion(s) published on:
04/13/26 Print
Print Tearsheet Link
Marketplace Link
c,(s5' Davis
Russ Davis
oiortay
1 SIGNED
J
c5Welezya efftasteen,
Sworn to and subscribed before
me on
SHERRY hNOAsrrzu
NOTARY ELECTRONIC STATE or TEXAS sac
COMMISSION a 12532.93
NY caMMLSSION EXPIRES 4/1.3029
Apr 13, 2026, 10:32 AM ED
Online Notary Public. This notarial act involved the use of online audio/video communication
technology. Notarization facilitated by SIGNiX'
Todd B. Hannon
City Garb
Ad No. 43936
Notice
CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE(S1
Notice is hereby given that the City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida, will consider the following ordinance(s)
on second and final reading on Thursday, April 23, 2026, commencing at 9:00 A.M., in the City Commission Chambers
located at 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida 33133:
ORDINANCE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MIAMI CITY COMMISSION AMENDING CHAPTER 2/ARTICLE N OF THE CODE OF THE CITY
OF MIAMI, FLORIDA, AS AMENDED ("CITY CODE"), TITLED "ADMINISTRATION/DEPARTMENTS," MORE SPECIFICALLY
BY AMENDING DIVISION 2, TITLED "PLANNING, BUILDING AND ZONING DEPARTMENT," DIVISION 3, TITLED
"DEPARTMENT OF FIRE -RESCUE," AND DIVISION 4, TITLED "RESILIENCE AND PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT";
CHAPTER 3 OF THE CITY CODE, MORE SPECIFICALLY AMENDING ARTICLE II TITLED, "ALARM SYSTEMS/BURGLARY
AND ROBBERY ALARMS"; AND ARTICLE III TITLED, "FIRE ALARMS"; CHAPTER 10/ARTICLE VDNISION 1 OF THE CITY
CODE, TITLED "BUILDINGS/IN GENERAL," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE N, TITLED "REGISTRATION
OF VACANT, BLIGHTED, UNSECURED OR ABANDONED STRUCTURES, AND OF DEFAULTED MORTGAGED
PROPERTIES," AND ARTICLE V, TITLED "CODE RELIEF PROGRAM"; CHAPTER 11 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, "CABLE
TELEVISION"; CHAPTER 12 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED, "AMUSEMENT GAMES OR MACHINES"; CHAPTER 17 OF
THE CITY CODE TITLED, "ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED,
"TREE PROTECTION IN GENERAL" AND ARTICLE II, TITLED, "ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION DISTRICTS"; CHAPTER
18 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, "FINANCE," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED "IN GENERAL"
AND ARTICLE ID, TITLED, "CITY OF MIAMI PROCUREMENT ORDINANCE"; AND ARTICLE VIII, TITLED "STORMWATER
UTILITY FEES" AND ARTICLE XI TITLED, "LEASES OF CITY OWNED SUBMERGED LANDS"; CHAPTER 19 OF THE
CITY CODE, TITLED "FIRE PROTECTION"; CHAPTER 20 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED, "FLOOD DAMAGE PREVENTION",
CHAPTER 22/ARTICLE I OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "GARBAGE AND OTHER SOLID WASTE/IN GENERAL"; CHAPTER
22.5 OF THE CITY CODE, "GREEN INITIATIVES," MORE SPECIFICALLY AMENDING ARTICLE VI TITLED, "SOIL EROSION,
WATERWAY SEDIMENTATION, AND AIRBORNE DUST GENERATION CONTROL"; CHAPTER 23/ARTICLE I OF THE CITY
CODE, TITLED "HISTORIC PRESERVATION/HISTORIC PRESERVATION"; CHAPTER 32/ARTICLE I, TITLED
"MERCHANDISING/BANKRUPTCY AND CLOSING -OUT SALES"; CHAPTER 35 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, "MOTOR
VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE N, TITLED "PARKING RATES," AND ARTICLE
D( TITLED, "VALET PARKING"; CHAPTER 38 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "PARKS AND RECREATION" MORE
SPECIFICALL ARTICLE I TITLED, "IN GENERAL" AND ARTICLE N TITLED, "DAY CARE PROGRAM"; CHAPTER 39/
ARTICLE II OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "PEDDLERS AND ITINERANT VENDORS/SIDEWALK AND STREET VENDORS";
CHAPTER 42 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, "POLICE" MORE SPECIFICALLY ARTICLE I TITLED, "IN GENERAL"; CHAPTER
53 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "STADIUMS AND CONVENTION CENTERS," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING
ARTICLE I, TITLED "IN GENERAL," ARTICLE II/DIVISION 2, TITLED "CITY STADIUMS/MARINE STADIUM," AND ARTICLE
IV, TITLED "CONVENTION CENTER OF THE CITY OF MIAMVUNNERSFTY OF MIAMI, JAMES L. KNIGHT"; CHAPTER 54
OF THE CITY CODE TITLED, "STREETS AND SIDEWALKS," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING ARTICLE I, TITLED
"IN GENERAL," ARTICLE II, TITLED CONSTRUCTION, EXCAVATION, AND REPAIR," ARTICLE VI, TITLED "SIDEWALK AND
STREET CAFES," ARTICLE VII, TITLED "NEWSRACKS ON PUBLIC RIGHTS -OF -WAY," AND ARTICLE DC, TITLED
"COCONUT GROVE SPECIAL EVENTS DISTRICT"; CHAPTER 55 OF THE CITY CODE TITLED "SUBDIVISION
REGULATIONS"; CHAPTER 57/ARTICLE III OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED 'VEHICLES FOR HIRE/PEDICABS FOR HIRE,"
AND CHAPTER 62 OF THE CITY CODE, TITLED "PLANNING AND ZONING," MORE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING
ARTICLE I, TITLED "IN GENERAL" ARTICLE III, TITLED "PLANNING, ZONING AND APPEALS BOARD," ARTICLE VII,
TITLED "HISTORIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION BOARD," ARTICLE XII, TITLED "PARKS AND OPEN SPACE
TRUST FUND," AND ARTICLE XIII/DIVISION 8, TITLED "PLANNING AND ZONING APPROVAL FOR TEMPORARY USES
AND OCCUPANCIES; PERMIT REQUIRED/TEMPORARY BANNERS," AND ARTICLE XIII/DIVISION 9 TITLED, "PLANNING
AND ZONING APPROVAL FOR TEMPORARY USES AND OCCUPANCIES; PERMIT REQUIRED /FARMERS' MARKET," TO
REMOVE THE REQUIREMENT FOR FEES TO BE ADOPTED BY ORDINANCE AND PROVIDE FOR FEES TO BE SET BY
THE CITY COMMISSION THROUGH RESOLUTION; CONTAINING A SEVERABILITY 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 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
httpi/miamifl.igm2.com five days before the date of the Commission Meeting.
All interested persons are invited to appear at the meeting and may be heard with respect to the proposed
ordinance(s). Should any person desire to appeal any decision of the City Commission with respect to any matter to
be considered at this meeting, that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made including all
testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may be based (FS. 286.0105).
Pursuant to Miami City Code Section 2-33(o), whenever a scheduled City Commission meeting is cancelled or is not
held due to a lack of a quorum or other emergency, a special City Commission meeting will be automatically scheduled
for the Tuesday immediately following the cancelled meeting. In the event of one of the aforementioned circumstances,
the special meeting would be held on April 28, 2026, 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 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. 43936
IRA I
MOW HERALD
MOIJMY APRIL 11'02D
Masters
RY DETER RAPPER
FW Level Media
players surprised by Augusta National conditions
AUGUSTA. CA,
It's not often the word
"gettable" is used to de-
scribe Augusta National
n a Saturday at the Mas-
ters, but that's exactly the
adjective several players
used after this year's third
round.
Nineteen of the 54 play-
ers who made the cut
posted rounds in the 608
on Saturday, led by the
65s posted by Scottie
Scheffler and Cameron
Young. In all, 35 broke par
on a day in which Augusta
National yielded a scoring
average of 70.63, lowest
m a third round in Mas-
ters history.
After the field averaged
74.65 on Thursday, Ire-
land's Shane Lowry pre-
dicted this might prove to
be "the toughest Masters
we've played in a while
due to the dry and firm
conditions. Lowry made a
hole -in -one on Saturday
that catapulted him to a
4-under-par 68 and 9
under for the tournament.
The scoring average
dipped to 72.85 on Friday,
leading many players to
predict tournament offi-
cials would ratchet up the
difficult dial for the third
round, but most were
surprised to find the
greens mostly still recep-
tive and many pins in
attackable positions.
"Pretty easy," Max
Home said when asked
how the course was play-
ing after posting what he
felt was a disappointing
71. "The front nine is
pretty — I mean, very
gettable. 1 didn't feel like
it was too fast, too firm.
Obviously the weather is
amazing, so it helps."
Even Rory Mcllroy, the
co -leader despite shooting
a I -over -par 73 on Sat-
urday, acknowledged low
out there for
the taking.
e taking.
"The course was obvi-
ously gettable," he said.
"There was a lot of good
scores Out there, and the
quality of the chasing pack
s obvious. There was a lot
of guys that shot good
scores."
Patrick Reed said on
Thursday that he hoped
the tournament officials
would ratchet up the diffi-
cuity level. Adam Scott
echoed that sentiment to a
degree given the lack of
the traditional winds that
create additional difficulty
around Augusta National.
"1 think the tamer and
faster they can get it, the
better," Scott said. "1
mean, there's no wind.
The greens are still very,
very friendly.
"1 don't think it's the
scariest I've ever seen it
here, but I love seeing the
farsways play firmer. On
some of these holes that
tum, having the ball inn
and you're having to be
more precise with your
line off the tee is an im-
portant defense of the golf
Jason Day wasn't com-
plaining after shooting a
4-under 68 that left him
m a tie for fifth, just three
shots off the lead at 8
under for the tournament.
"1 expected to see it a
little bit different than
what 1 saw today. I mean,
you were hitting shots in
there that were spinning,"
Day said._ "Typically
sometimes you get to
Saturday at Augusta and
they're bouncing It's
really difficult to hold
some shots.
"So,1 Thought the green
speeds were lovely. 1
thought the green firm-
ness
was great. It was very
fair, and 1 think that's why
you're seeing a lot of, like,
decent scores out there,
which brings in a lot of the
crowd, which is great."
Scheffler also took ad-
vantage of an early tee
time to make his turn in
5-under 31 on his way to a
career Masters -best 65
that could have been even
lower. He'll go out in the
fourth -to -last group on
s.
Third -round co -leader Rory Mcllroy relinquish his spot
on lop of the leaderboard early Sunday, but was Hill
fighting to win his second consecutive Masters
Tournament championship at Augusta. Georgia. Others
who were near the top late Sunday included Justin Rose.
Cameron Young and Tyrell Halton. For the late results of
Sunday's final round, go to miamihemM.com.
Justin Rory
Rose Mcllroy
Sunday, when the course
will likely be at its firmest
and fastest of the week.
"1t depends on what the
leadership here wants to
do," Scheffler said. "If
they want to see some
lower scores, they can
make them softer if they
want. They're already
pretty firm, so they can
just go full Bay Hill [at the
Amold Palmer Invitation-
al] and just let them die.
"It's Augusta. They'll
figure it out after that."
MASTERS CHAMPION
TO EARN $43 MILLION
Twenty players will
begin Sunday's final
round of the Masters with-
in six shots of the lead,
and they will all be chas-
ing a $4.5 million winner's
check out of a majors -
record $22.5 million prize
purse.
The Augusta National
Golf Club released the
2026 prize money break-
down on Saturday, with
the winner's check in -
Mena.
Of, OF ■MBL P awe
Nona OF MOMS40 OMD.IANDMM
ace a Hemby gams tug to CM Cemnwam of the CM a Mama, nor0a+ill nonage Pe yM,a a0nencon l
e, final reading on Monday, Apol s, 2026, commences Q, rvces at9DO AM, n to CAr Comminlets
caned Wore
Pan Amen n Drae, scam. Fain stag.
arm.r.Mw
MI ORDINANCE of w. tem. nY COMIES 90u0I Tax0Fl QNER 2MRIEiN f DTHT FECCCE Of CRY
Of NAM FLORIDA AS AMENDED MEN RATICSD8,19..1ESM-MCIE SPECIFICALLY
2, TILED PUNNING, BUILDING AND 2INND DEPAPD6VE. DMSON 3,1171.139
RESCUE' AND DNSOM q TITLED TESIENLF MO PIRG PO WS DEMRIABn':
CHAPTER 3 OF TIE CRY C/COE, MOW SPECIYAL1Y AMENDING ARTCLE II TRIED. N HIM SYSTEMS/HAOLNif
OIV
AND ROBBERY ALARMS- NVO ARTICLE MIMED, FIEMARAS: CHAPTER 00501E VDNtSIONI OF THE env
CODE TPLED SHIN GENERAL: MORE SKCFGMLY era/EwwG Amax N mutt IWOMRATIDN
CCLPED OR AaV DONED STRLICnaUm ES, AND OF LETM.MDRmaGED
PROPERTES - AND CLE V, TmfD'CWE FELEr P OC..... CHAPTER II C.D. Cm CODE 'MED,'GaHE
TELEVISION' OnaPTER 12 a THE CRY CODE. TIED, WA PELCNT GAMES OR MACHINES': CRATER 17 OF
THE CITY CODE muss ENVIRONMENTAL RESEREDON: MORE SPECIFICALLY BYM EMNG ARTICLE I, TILED,
TREE PROM -CPO. IN °Ei OP, AND ARTICLE u, PRED, 9wNONNENTAL P ESER/ATON DWI m1.Ia':CHMTFR
18 OF THE CITY CCOE MED,-MA £: PADRE SPECIFICALLY BY AMENDING MIME I PTED-N GENERAL:
AND ARDCLE III. RILED. 'UN OF MAW PPOCLPEVIEVT C ONANACE. AND MIME VIII, TINED STOMNATEA
IRILRY FEES. ANOMIE. XI TITLED, -LENSES OF Cm' OWNED SUBMERGED LEADS', CHAPTER 19 OF THE
t,ry HOE. TRIED AIE F OTECTION-, CHAPTER 20 OF THE CITY C/JOC, TIED, -RCM DAMAGE REYHVIOM,
CHAPTER
021061 22/AFTIrxE OFTHE CM( CODE, TTGA PILED AND OTHER SOLE, w STF/N GBBNL: CHAPTER
22.5 OF THE OM CODE, PREEN EMATNES: MORE SPECFIALLY AMENDTVO AMIE M TIRED, -SOP 605ION,
WATERNAN' SEDIMENTATION, ANTI AIRBORNE DUST GENERATION CONTROL", CINPHER 21/ARfOE I OF RE CITY
CODE, TRIED MSRwC PRESEMATIGN 16TORC NESERVATOM. CHAPTER avMRpEI. IDLED
AERC AND6WG,GANKRUPTCY AND CLOSNGOIR SATES-. CHAPTER 35 OF ERE CRY CODE TIED, tLOmR
VEHICLES ANa TRAFFIC,- MORE SPECPCAUY BY MAF-Wa G ARTICLE N. 1mED PAWL. RATES: MD ARTICLE
N Tmm, VALET P.C.'. CHAPTER Oa OF THEORY COCG, TIRED PARKS AND RECIEATHCN' MOTE
9PECFCA LARTCLE I TITLED, RN GBERAL-AID I0TICLE N TITLED, -DM CAPE PROGRAM, CHAPTER 39/
ARTICLE A DFITE CRY CODE, RILED PEDCIBBANDITTERCNT VBOORl5EIIIIO MM D SWEET VENDO
CIAER VRBR A2 OF E CRY CDOE TITLED, OLDF ED,-MORE SPECIFICALLY WEIG E I TITLED. m OBEJALE CHAPTER
530E THE CRY(X0E, TITIB).3fAMAC MOCOME.RCCN ODGERS.. MOPE S E JOMPY BY MBOeD
AMPLER, TIRED G@HAL,' ARfxxE AIDNVSIONA 2.PILED 'CITY STADOMSMWaE STAMM. ATO ARTICLE
M, TITLED CONVENLON CENTER CF THE OW OF MAIN NTrBtSRY Of MANI,.A.ES L PSG,: CHAPTER Sot
CEDE CRY CODE TRIED, attach, AND SECYWS,-MOHE SPECIFICALLY EN MEIDFD INTIDE I,111ED
ISmGICSE ARMSARTr1TID
ED EXCAVATION. MO REPAIR.' ARTICLE Vt, TITLED
SBi AND
STREET CAFESARMSVa TnLED NEw5RID0:0A PUBLIC ROHTSOF-w,- AND ARTICLE 0(TIT.ED
WGRa1f GsO.E SPEW, EVENTS DIS0BCT•, CHAPTER 55 OF THE CITY CODE WILED SUEIDNSgN
PEOULMICPS: CHAPTER 52/M0CLE Ill OF nnE DnY CODE, WILED VEHICLES FOR HEE/MDIC/SS FOR NEE,'
AND CNN..@OFm1E Cm CODE,ro11 PLANNG AND ZONING: MORE SPECIFICALLY es SW-W G
MTOE0.I00N1 ee200I-MTCLEIn. PPM PLAANNG, ZONING AND APPEALS -HARMBOARD ' NIGLE AI,
mRID0lccrnC Min ENVFONMEMOL R5ESERVATON 0200E:ARTICLE 0 T'LE001001 AND OPEN SPACE
BAUERF N° AND ARTICLE lIIVDMSON 8. TIED PLAN LNG ASO ZONING APPROVAL FOR TEh3LNARY LEES
ANDOCCUMNCES, REPAIR RECU.FEDREWCYARRY aANaBB: AND ARTICLE HODS -SON 9 TIED. PLANED
A20201E4 APROVALFOR 5PORARY'USES AND OCQFMGES PERMIT REQUIRED TAMERS'MYacET: TO
TBAOETFE REQUIREMENT FOR FEES TO BE ADOPTED BY 0FONNCE AND F OVIDE FOR FEES TO BE SET BY
INC COP CO5MI6SON THROLDH RESOLUTION, COTANM A SEMIS., CI RAISE, AHD PROVUNG FOR AN
STECT E DATE
Sd 0A.om0 omeadNM TIN be napped by E,e plle . the Office of l,0 CMGs. 3600 Pan Almnun Doe,
ham, Faroe sls, 04s/ through Foray.m01. wear,blMeen to lours M Bam. and 5 pm, or
M.Y/m.ne em2.mm fine new bean to Palo n se Coro -Pam M.Na1a.
NI Non.. pers. are .at...appear n to mmeg am may he Main SUM reaper lone Reposed
od.almlM. Shedd any person deeare la appeal am meson of the CM Cone arm wd1 meant a am mate,.
be cmehlm at M rreeing, Ne peon full arwre Pala MNan recce d the wowed.. a male ftelm"g ere
losMmN a4 ammo neon W1N any appeal may Me Need IFS. 286.0,051
Pureatansp Mom CM Code Section rEaska a massagedCMmmheen Ir Caaelaga`aeeam a e, la r
a plot anew.,, a vocal CINC...awn rrlpeRg will N aee.me. M eoo.
P r w wT ANY emedaob tlt0rg Pe I2t 202 nec on.. we pe0A d Cornrows.one of Pe Nomm nareo chrcuneprcn,
the vocaonet"g word he held m Apn129, 2026, at 900 a m. n tle CM tweed al Murry
eam, FL its. All a, the MLlmPere were. a from
m let 0aceed ovn.q
• adomaten. he snenn. as an agcma um1 M the vocal City Comsat. mewl M CM Ce. still teary
Pe p.m of the apace meow. that,. We Pee owns
a a,ns a aorta a row., Mmcn ua peal CCAma^9..9 a ear
entrance a 0AM y HMI e Pe CAN, man admnettra0e h e.eg, placing a r01re on Pe CAy.mesa, and ,t l®sey,
OMR., M ad. a newapaper ofgeneral urwlaml were we pace manna on t9e Emmaely Mee. Tun..
Thom IRA beroam o,11 merecce by prenown for arty N,au.adeduete o wends nem al a npe0. Po
MOM!CM DGmstmOn in.
n Poconime wet to/vne.asrswet Dard. Ad of 1900 persona mmnO specal amsmmeap to pare.*
n tspocmdeg ERN Mead Pe Office of the Cry Cent a1 GOS, 2505391 Noce, no Nor tan We 151 Oneness
Paw poor It the Name.g_TIY wen raw Whoa 211 Fonda Reny SoNel no liter tun ere 151 borne. dove
poor le Pe Rocamelg.
Todd B. Hanson
OM Cent
Ad No. OM
Cameron Tyrrell
Young Hatton
creasing from S4.2 million
out of a S21 million total
prize purse last year. 1t
remains the highest
among the four golf ma-
jors-
The only other larger
purse currently in profes-
sional golf is The Players
Championship. Cameron
Young, who is tied for the
54-hole lead at the Mas-
ters with Rory Mcllroy,
won S4.5 million out of a
S25 million total purse last
month.
The second place fin-
isher on Sunday will eam
82.43 million, followed by
81.53 million for third and
$1.08 million for fourth.
Fifty-fourof the 91
players in the field made
the 36-hole cut. The re-
maining players will re -
cash prizes ranging
re-
ceive from S55,350
depending on their final
reAll players who did not
make the cut will receive
S25,000.
POTGIETER LAMENTS
COUNTRYMEN JOINING
LIV GOLF TOUR
Aldrich Potgieter's
name surfaced late last
year in the annual rumors
of young players who
might be negotiating with
LW Golf, but it doesn't
sound like the PGA Tow
has to worry about one of
its emerging stars bolting
for the rival league any
time
Potgeeter, 21, was a PGA
Tour winner before he
was able to legally con-
sume alcohol with his
victory at the 2025 Rocket
Classic in June. That
earned the young South
African a spot in the 2026
Masters Tournament,
where his two-day total
was better than only two
players in the 91-player
field. He finished with a
15over 159.
Once he punched his
ticket to Augusta, spec-
ulation ramped up that
Potgieter was being court-
ed by LW when he with-
drew from the Bank of
Utah Championship in
October. He quelled those
rumors at the time by
saying the withdrawal was
due to food poisoning.
After missing the cut
Friday at the Masters,
Potgieter was asked about
the status of South African
players in the world of
professional golf. There
were only three competing
at Augusta this week -
Potgieter, Casey Jarvis
and Cheri Schwaotzel,
who was in the field as a
past champion in 2011.
Schwartzel is one of
several players who have
signed lucrative deals with
LIV Golf, which has an
all -South African team in
the Southern Guards GC.
Captained by former ma-
jor winner Louis Oosthui-
r n, the team also in-
cludes Schwartrel, Dean
Bunnester and Branden
Grace,
"It was unfortunate to
see me guys go to LW,
and obviously some South
African players went that
route, so ... that's why
there's not as many out
here as it was five or six
years ago," Potgieter said
after his second round.
The future remains
extremely bright for Pot-
gieter and several of his
fellow young countrymen.
He has been ranked as
high as 49th in the Offi-
cial World Golf Ranking
and currently, at No. 77,
Potgieter is the third -
ranked South African in
the world behind only
Jayden Schaper at No. 63
and 70th-ranked Jarvis.
Schaper won consec-
utive events earlier this
season on the DP World
Tour, where Jarvis also
competes. Garrick Higgo,
26, is already a two-time
winner on the PGA Tow
and is ranked 85th in the
world with a high of 38th.
Potgieter was asked why
he thinks South Africans
rarely have been in con-
tention late in majors over
the past few years.
"These weeks are huge.
1 thine there's a level of
experience like especially
this week," Potgieter said.
"You've got to know this
golf course inside and out,
and 1 think that 'just plays
a big advantage into the
week as well.
"These moments are
really big, and we've got
to team to kind of put
ourselves in thou big
moments, and it helps
putting yourself in conten-
tion on the PGA Tour or
on the European Tour all
the time and kind of - but
this is just a big step up to
that as well.
"It just comes down to
preparation, and it's all
jst mental as weii. So,
we've got the game and
the players to be able to
jompete, I think. We've
ust got to put hose small
blocks together."
The Retirement
Planning Guide
Everyone
Should Read
How to defend your
portfolio, generate
reliable income,
and retire on your
terms regardless
of what the market
does next.
Scan the
QR code to
GET THE GUIDE.
Powered by TRENDHUNTER"