Miami Herald

Orlando seeks to build new consensus around fractured Pulse memorial effort

- BY RYAN GILLESPIE Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO

Hoping to build consensus around the long-disputed Pulse memorial effort, Orlando has decided its best first move is to step aside.

Mayor Buddy Dyer announced Tuesday that the city has hired a profession­al facilitato­r to engage the community in a memorial design. The move is the first tangible step that Orlando has taken since buying the former Pulse nightclub, the site of a 2016 mass shooting, late last year from the failing onePulse nonprofit, which previously led memorial planning.

Invitation­s from facilitato­r Larry Schooler, who runs Public Participat­ion Partners, went out Monday evening to survivors and families of the victims, asking them to participat­e in meetings, interviews and discussion­s with Schooler and his team.

The company will be paid a maximum of $88,735 for its work, which is expected to last several months, records show. The aim is to reveal a conceptual design by the end of the year, Dyer said.

“I know it may seem far-fetched to imagine that we can craft a consensus vision for the memorial,” Schooler said Tuesday in a news conference that he joined via video feed. “That said I’m with you here today because I believe that is both possible and probable with our shared efforts.”

For nearly eight years since the shooting that killed 49 and wounded dozens more, much of the Pulse community has been frustrated by the lack of progress toward a memorial, with the city drawing at least some of the mistrust bubbling among various groups.

The mayor said by hiring Schooler, who worked on memorial efforts in Virginia Beach and San Leandro, Calif., the city hopes to bring more voices to the table.

“The process we’re running now today we hope addresses that,” Dyer said. “It’s not going to be a city-run process, it’s going to be run by a neutral facilitato­r.”

Last October, the city purchased the nightclub property for $2 million from the onePulse Foundation, and Orlando businessma­n Craig Mateer bought an adjacent property soon after and said he planned for it to be part of a future memorial.

onePulse had grand ambitions for a memorial on the nightclub site and a museum nearby but struggled to raise anywhere close to the money it needed to fund both.

The city has no plans to pursue the museum idea, Dyer said.

Dyer said there are many unresolved items, including what the memorial will look like, how much it will cost, how it would be paid for and whether the nightclub would remain standing on the corner of Kaley Street and Orange Avenue.

While onePulse commission­ed renowned architects at significan­t expense to design a memorial and museum, the city has not committed to using any of their work.

A Pulse memorial is likely to require at least some public financing, Dyer said. Following Schooler’s work, some family members and survivors will be asked to join a memorial design committee.

“The memorial shouldn’t be what I want it to be, it shouldn’t be what the commission­ers want it to be,” Dyer said. “It should be — and it will be — what the families and survivors want it to be.”

Jorshua Hernández Carrión, a Pulse survivor, told the Orlando Sentinel on Tuesday that he received an email from Schooler and plans to participat­e. However, building trust fractured by nearly eight years with minimal progress will be difficult, he said.

“I don’t want it to be the same as onePulse,” he said. “We want a memorial, and we need to make sure the city hears our voices.”

Dyer, who will serve as mayor until 2028, said he hopes to cut the ribbon on the memorial while he’s still in office.

“We need to remember the 49,” he said. “We need to honor them. Our entire community needs a place that they can go and remember.”

 ?? RYAN GILLESPIE Orlando Sentinel/TNS ?? Larry Schooler, appearing virtually on the left, addresses reporters alongside Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and City Commission­er Bakari Burns. Schooler was contracted to do outreach to Pulse survivors and families of victims as the city tries to build a memorial.
RYAN GILLESPIE Orlando Sentinel/TNS Larry Schooler, appearing virtually on the left, addresses reporters alongside Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and City Commission­er Bakari Burns. Schooler was contracted to do outreach to Pulse survivors and families of victims as the city tries to build a memorial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States