Miami Herald

Commission­ers discuss Miami Herald series on race

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

During one of his final Miami-Dade commission meetings after nearly three decades on the dais, Dennis Moss led fellow board members through a talk of unrealized progress for Black Miami in the Miami Herald’s “Separate and Unequal” series.

“It’s an issue I believe needs to be taken up in the future,” said Moss, a commission­er since 1993 and the longest-serving of the 13-seat board’s four Black members.

“While this is a difficult topic of discussion ... still, it is a topic of discussion this board needs to take up ... to respond to the plight of the Black community here.”

The comments came during the final regular meeting for Moss and four other commission­ers reelected in 2012 as voters approved a term-limit rule that gave them eight more years in office. The outgoing group of commission­ers includes three of the four Black members: Moss; Commission Chairwoman Audrey Edmonson, in office since 2005; and Barbara Jordan, a commission­er since 2000.

They’ll be meeting at least twice again, with a special session scheduled Monday to vote on coronaviru­s-related legislatio­n and another meeting expected to have a vote on a deal with Brightline for a commuter train between Miami and Aventura.

The November elections could alter the demographi­c mix of the commission.

In District 9, the seat that Moss is vacating, a Hispanic candidate, former Homestead city council member Elvis Maldonado, is running against a Black candidate, outgoing Florida House Democratic leader Kionne McGhee. Moss, who is running for a School Board

seat, endorsed McGhee.

Outgoing Miami Gardens Mayor Oliver Gilbert, who is Black, won Jordan’s District 1 seat in August, and two Black candidates, Miami Commission­er Keon Hardemon and nonprofit executive Gepsie Metellus, both Black, are running for Edmonson’s District 3 seat.

That will leave Jean Mon

estime, a former board chairman with two more years on the commission before term-limits kick in for the seat that he won in 2014, as the lone veteran Black commission­er.

“Hopefully, this conversati­on will continue on,” Edmonson said. “Commission­er Monestime, we’re leaving it on you.”

For the discussion, Moss had Stephen Hunter Johnson, chairman of the county’s Black Affairs Advisory Board, walk commission­ers through a summary of the Miami Herald’s reporting on the prosperity divide that the Black population faces in Miami-Dade and the roots of the gap in segregatio­n, racism and unequal opportunit­ies at education, work and housing.

The Herald series pointed to county cuts for an economic-developmen­t agency aimed at Black residents, the Miami-Dade Economic Advocacy Trust, and how a home-ownership program designed to close the prosperity gap for Black residents mostly underwrite­s loans for Hispanic residents.

“I just want to add that the quality of life for MiamiDade’s Black community is unequal and separate,” John Dixon, director of the Advocacy Trust office, told commission­ers Thursday. Dixon said he expected Miami-Dade’s poverty rate, currently 16%, to nearly double once updated figures are announced to reflect the coronaviru­s crisis.

“Everybody on this screen knows, I would suspect, that Black people are going to be faced with the most impact of what is happening with COVID,” he said during the online meeting. “Whether that be employment, whether that be healthcare, whether that be transporta­tion, whether that be housing.”

Rebeca Sosa, a Hispanic commission­er with two more years in her term, suggested more MiamiDade funding for vocational training.

“Let’s help them with training schools, technical schools. Let’s change their future,” said Sosa, a MiamiDade School Board employee. “Let’s improve, and let’s continue working on this.”

Jordan recalled a visit to Miami-Dade’s TERRA magnet school in Kendall with Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho. She said she began counting the number of Black students and was discourage­d to see so few. The public school with about 1,800 students has fewer than 50 who are Black, leaving Black enrollment at less than 3%, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

“That’s a top-notch school,” Jordan said. “We’re talking about, first of all, having to have a recognitio­n that in our school system, we are segregated.”

 ?? Miami Herald file ?? In one of his final meetings as a Miami-Dade commission­er, Dennis Moss, the senior Black member of the board, walked fellow commission­ers through a discussion of the Miami Herald’s ‘Separate and Unequal’ series.
Miami Herald file In one of his final meetings as a Miami-Dade commission­er, Dennis Moss, the senior Black member of the board, walked fellow commission­ers through a discussion of the Miami Herald’s ‘Separate and Unequal’ series.

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