Miami Herald (Sunday)

Demings, Taddeo make bus tour stop in Miami to seek end to gun violence

- BY GRETHEL AGUILA gaguila@miamiheral­d.com BY ALEX HARRIS aharris@miamiheral­d.com

Regatta Park was the first stop in the Giffords Florida Bus Tour. Democratic nominees Val Demings and Annette Taddeo talked about gun violence in state.

More than four years ago, gun violence changed Fred Guttenberg’s reality. And he channeled his pain into activism.

Guttenberg’s daughter Jamie was one of 17 students and teachers who died in the Parkland school shooting.

“I visit my forever 14year-old daughter at the cemetery,” Guttenberg said.

Guttenberg shared his experience as the father of a victim of gun violence at a Thursday afternoon press conference at Regatta Park, the first stop in a bus tour to promote candidates who embrace gunsafety efforts. The event was organized by Giffords Florida, a gun-violence prevention organizati­on whose namesake, former U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords, was shot in the head in 2011 by a would-be assassin while meeting with constituen­ts in Arizona.

U.S. Rep. Val Demings, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, state Sen. Annette Taddeo and former U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell were at the

In South Florida, one of the surest signs that fall is here isn’t changing leaves or a chill in the air — it’s saltwater pooling in the street on a sunny day.

September marks the start of an annual series of high tide days, the highest tides of the season. These “king tides” push sea levels a foot or two higher than normal, causing street and yard flooding in low-lying spots along the east coast, like Miami.

These high tides are a natural occurrence during new and full moons, but unchecked climate change is making them worse. As sea levels rise, flooding is getting more common and worse. One neighborho­od in the Keys saw 90 straight days of flooded streets during a particular­ly nasty king tide season.

The combinatio­n of higher water levels with Miami’s leaky septic tanks and aging sewer system also means that the floodwater­s could be pretty gross. Experts strongly suggest staying out of it.

Cities are spending tens of millions of dollars to slow it down with more powerful stormwater pumps, bigger pipes, higher roads and special valves that allow water to drain from city streets into Biscayne Bay but stop it from flowing backward when tides rise. Despite the influx of cash, it will be years before most residents see relief from constant flooding.

The first king tide of the season is Saturday when the moon will be full, but the days leading up to and following that peak are generally higher too.

The other king tide windows of the year are Sept. 27-30, Oct. 6-12,

Oct. 24-30, Nov. 6-9, and Nov. 23-27. The highest king tide of the season is expected to be Oct. 10 around 10 a.m., when sea levels could be nearly 21⁄2 feet higher than usual.

Rain — or tropical storms and hurricanes — on top of these high tides can cause even more flooding.

That can cause havoc on roads. On some extrasoggy days, tow trucks are a common sight near flooded streets, yanking out disabled cars that went in too deep. Anything more than three feet of water is enough to float a car.

Dinner Key park as well.

Guttenberg shared his support for Demings, the former Orlando police chief and Democratic nominee challengin­g U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio. And he explained his frustratio­ns with Rubio.

Three weeks after the Parkland shooting, Guttenberg said, he was in Rubio’s office and the senator refused to release a message in support of a bill that eventually passed this June.

“I, unfortunat­ely, learned the hard way that my current senator failed me,” said Guttenberg, who has been hot-and-cold on Rubio for years. “He failed Florida and he continues to fail all of us.”

Thursday’s event was peppered with messages targeting Hispanic voters. Mucarsel-Powell, the first U.S. congresswo­man born in Ecuador, spoke about the effects of gun violence on the Latino community, with Hispanics twice as likely to die by gun violence than white people.

“Polling is showing us that [for] voters, especially in Latino communitie­s, gun violence is a top concern,” said MucarselPo­well, who has spoken publicly at times about her father’s death by gunfire in Ecuador. “It’s time to secure un futuro sin violencia.”

Some nights, said Taddeo, the Democratic nominee now facing Republican U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, she has to sit down with her daughter and make a difficult decision: Should she send her the next day if there was a threat at her school?

“Our kids should not have to hide under a desk, or [learn] how to get out or how to run,” Taddeo said. “They should be learning and worrying about their test grade, and where they’re going to go to school and what they’re going to do down the future.”

Taddeo told the Miami Herald the first thing she would do, if elected, is co-sponsor a ban on assault weapons.

“I am the daughter of a military man who actually taught me how to shoot,” she told the Herald. “And he also taught me that weapons of war have no business in our streets.”

Gun violence is a crisis, and Americans are tired of leaders’ silence, Demings said. As Orlando’s police chief from 2007 to 2011, she said she helped reduce violent crime and got guns out of the hands of dangerous people.

“We don’t think it’s OK for our children to be gunned down in first grade, in fourth grade, in high school, on a college campus,” she said. “[Or] in a movie movie theater, at a concert, at a mall, in a nightclub in my congressio­nal district in Orlando, at a church or a synagogue.”

Grethel Aguila: @GrethelAgu­ila

 ?? EMILY MICHOT emichot@miamiheral­d.com ?? King tide flooding along Northeast 10th Avenue just south of 79th Street made driving conditions difficult during the 2021 flooding season.
EMILY MICHOT emichot@miamiheral­d.com King tide flooding along Northeast 10th Avenue just south of 79th Street made driving conditions difficult during the 2021 flooding season.
 ?? GRETHEL AGUILA ?? Val Demings, the Democratic nominee hoping to unseat U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, speaks at a press conference Thursday at Dinner Key in Miami.
GRETHEL AGUILA Val Demings, the Democratic nominee hoping to unseat U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, speaks at a press conference Thursday at Dinner Key in Miami.
 ?? Getty Images ?? The Florida Ethics Commission recommende­d a $250 fine against Celso Alfonso for a campaign finance violation related to the 2020 state Senate election in District 39.
Getty Images The Florida Ethics Commission recommende­d a $250 fine against Celso Alfonso for a campaign finance violation related to the 2020 state Senate election in District 39.
 ?? GRETHEL AGUILA ?? Annette Taddeo, the Democratic nominee facing U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, speaks at a Thursday press conference.
GRETHEL AGUILA Annette Taddeo, the Democratic nominee facing U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, speaks at a Thursday press conference.
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