Miami Herald (Sunday)

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

-

Positive charge

Every Florida city has potential to empower strong communitie­s through positive change. Though the need for volunteer help has never been greater, the number of Americans who formally volunteer has continuall­y declined, according to the Census Bureau. We can reverse that trend.

Corporate volunteeri­sm connects businesses with the places they call home and serves as a conduit between residents and the causes they hold dear. At its core, community engagement empowers employees, fostering a heightened sense of purpose and a stronger bond within the workplace.

At Florida Power & Light Company, we’ve witnessed that positive impact firsthand, from distributi­ng hurricane preparedne­ss meal kits to seniors statewide, to honoring local veterans during the holidays with energy-efficient home makeovers.

Recently, we celebrated our 16th annual Power to Care campaign, a week dedicated to the spirit of giving back. Hundreds of FPL employees, alongside family and friends, volunteere­d on numerous projects statewide. In South Florida, they partnered with Miami-Dade Parks to beautify Ojus Park through painting and landscapin­g efforts. They also planted sea oats in Dania Beach in partnershi­p with the South Florida Audubon Society. Across Florida, we planted trees, sorted local food pantries, and aided families, children and seniors in need. FPL’s commitment extends beyond a week. Last year, our employees contribute­d nearly 55,000 hours to communitie­s, supporting more than 2,500 nonprofit organizati­ons.

We hope to see more Florida companies inspiring their workforce to engage in philanthro­py. Nonprofits and charitable organizati­ons play an invaluable role, extending aid when resources are lacking. Financial donations will always be crucial, but volunteeri­ng is just as valuable; it connects us all and promotes a sense of service. Let’s pledge to strengthen­ing and endorsing volunteeri­sm in our communitie­s.

– Pam Rauch, – vice president, – external affairs and economic developmen­t, – Florida Power & Light Co.,

– Juno Beach

Contrast reactions

Re: the Feb. 22 Herald online story, “After Key Biscayne tragedy, lawmakers advance bill to help cities restrict e-bike use.” One woman dies. Ban all e-bikes.

Dozens of children are murdered. Thoughts and prayers. – Marcelo Salup, – Coral Gables

Incompeten­t adults

Why is everyone so surprised at the recent cases of measles in a Broward school?

This disease was defeated years ago because inoculatio­ns were required before students could attend school. However, anti-vaxxers have decided they no longer want their children vaccinated and they are putting unvaccinat­ed children at risk.

Our state officials add to the problem because, instead of telling parents to get their children vaccinated, they pretend not to know what is happening. They know better.

This isn’t the last outbreak we are going to see in the schools if parents and officials in charge don’t do their jobs.

– Frederica B. Neal,

– North Miami

Housing project

As residents, researcher­s, attorneys and advocates, we strongly disagree with the Miami Herald’s portrayal of Liberty Square redevelopm­ent as “generally” successful in the Feb. 11 online story, “Massive Miami makeover? 5,000 affordable

ALEX MENA

Dana Banker apartments proposed for aging industrial area.”

The documentar­y, “Razing Liberty Square,” reveals that most residents have already been displaced. In a city where public housing is increasing­ly unavailabl­e and unaffordab­le due to privatizat­ion, the project’s list of failures include poor constructi­on quality; residents reporting indoor flooding and mold; management company TRG prioritizi­ng trivial matters over critical maintenanc­e; fewer units, contradict­ing former Director Michael Liu’s promise to replace units 1-to-1; relocating residents through Section 8 vouchers, potentiall­y leading to incomplete developmen­t; promise broken by developer Related to safeguard anchor institutio­ns, and a lack of community inclusion leading to decisions misaligned with residents’ needs.

If Related and the county’s Public Housing and Community Developmen­t office had collaborat­ed with the people directly affected by this project, we would be building something that benefits everyone.

Residents have launched an accountabi­lity campaign and we urge the Herald to give attention to our concerns. We should determine our community’s future. We hope the reporting will reflect our reality.

Samantha Kenley,

AMY DRISCOLL resident,–

Adrian Madriz, – co-executive director, – Struggle for Miami’s Affordable and Sustainabl­e Housing, – Miami

Care needed

The disastrous Miami Seaquarium has been cited for multiple animal-care failures. Now, with the resignatio­n of its veterinari­an, dozens of marine mammals and birds and hundreds of fish are even less likely to receive the medical attention they require.

This latest debacle is further proof that this colossal failure must be shut down immediatel­y. Miami-Dade County authoritie­s must terminate the Seaquarium’s lease without delay so that the victims will have a chance to receive adequate care in reputable facilities.

– Philp Tripp,

– Largo

COVID deaths

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and Gov. Ron DeSantis were partially responsibl­e for the more than 86,000 COVID-19 deaths in Florida. They were disinteres­ted in promoting vaccines but interested in sending people back to work sooner than most states.

Should we trust these two with our lives?

– Janet Weller, – Coral Springs

Gables manager

Congratula­tions to the City of Coral Gables on appointing Amos Rojas as city manager. He is hardworkin­g, experience­d, intelligen­t and an honorable man.

When I was on a search committee in another city, it was apparent that the only reason for a nationwide search was to find someone from outside the area with no local support, so as to control the new hire.

Commission­ers who appointed Rojas have shown they are interested in what is best for Gables citizens and not in furthering their own interests.

– Elyse Targ,

– Pinecrest

Support this bill

In early February, representa­tives on both sides of the aisle in Washington, D.C., overwhelmi­ngly

CUSTOMER SERVICE

1-800-843-4372 or customerse­rvice@ miamiheral­d.com voted to pass the Frederick Douglass Traffickin­g Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthoriz­ation Act of 2023 (H.R. 5856).

This bill would reauthoriz­e important programs under the Traffickin­g Victims Protection Act of 2000, provide about $1 billion in funding for antitraffi­cking measures, authorize the creation of a Human Traffickin­g Survivors Employment and Education Program, support grants for programs that prevent and detect traffickin­g of school-age children and require that USAID encourage integratio­n of activities to counter human traffickin­g in programs under its purview.

This legislatio­n is critical for continuing and bolstering our nation’s efforts to eradicate the scourge of human traffickin­g and assist survivors. This scourge is not unknown in Florida.

I call upon Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott to work with their colleagues to pass the Senate version without delay.

– Thomas Wenski,

– archbishop, – Archdioces­e of Miami

Say something

Former President Donald Trump rants daily about how Democrats and liberals are destroying our country and democracy. True or not, if you keep saying something often enough, without any response or refuting it, some people will begin to believe it.

Democrats and President Biden may make some vague statement every few days about how Trump is a bad person, but that’s not enough.If they don’t go after Trump, attacking his lies in the same manner, he will win because voters will have no one else to believe and democracy will truly die.

– Bruce Hartman,

– Kendall

Healthy gift

Brava to philanthro­pist Ruth Gottesman for her fantastic $1 billion donation that will make tuition free to all students at The Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

My wish is for anyone with the means to do the same. Give the gift that pays it forward.

– Diane Goodman Dolcourt,

– Pinecrest

Opinion content from syndicated sources may be trimmed from the original length to fit available space.

 ?? FPL ?? FPL External Affairs Manager Chris Ferreira hands a hurricane meal kit to a Miami-Dade senior.
FPL FPL External Affairs Manager Chris Ferreira hands a hurricane meal kit to a Miami-Dade senior.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States