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Majority of South Florida residents support Fontainebleau redevelopment plan

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Fontainebleau Miami Beach’s proposed “family-friendly improvements” are enjoying broad support among South Florida residents, according to a new poll commissioned by the developers and conducted by MDW Communications.

The poll, obtained by Florida Politics and taken among 305 likely Miami Beach municipal voters Jan. 14-19, found nearly 60% of respondents supporting the proposal, including more than 30% who strongly support it. Fewer than 30% of respondents say they disapprove.

And most residents are aware of the plans, further signaling not just support, but informed support. Of those polled, more than 2/3 say they have heard information on the proposal, with just a third saying they’ve heard nothing about it.

Fontainebleau Development, led by Chair and CEO Jeffrey Soffer, is planning a sweeping rework of the hotel’s outdoor pool deck aimed at attracting more families, including a proposed water-park concept featuring 11 waterslides — one reportedly about 120 feet tall — along with other pool-deck upgrades.

Poll results are important, as the project requires approval from the city’s Historic Preservation Board because it sits on a historically significant site. The Preservation Board reviews alteration plans on designated historic properties.

The Fontainebleau, designed by architect Morris Lapidus and opened in 1954, is one of Miami Beach’s signature MiMo-era landmarks and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The project is carefully planned to “responsibly repurpose” outdoor areas of the hotel without expanding its footprint or altering its unique architectural character.

“Under the leadership of the Mayor and the City Commission, Miami Beach continues to evolve as a destination for visitors of all ages, and this vision reflects an increased emphasis on family-oriented experiences that align with the City’s broader tourism goals,” reads a note from developers shared along with poll results.

“The proposed enhancements are private amenities for hotel guests only, and the pool deck access will remain restricted, as it is today. Given the focus on hotel guest experience, the project is not expected to generate additional traffic as guests will be remaining on property.”

The project would repurpose the resort’s existing amenity footprint while integrating features designed to complement the existing historic pool deck and honoring the entire property’s iconic architecture.

The poll comes just days after the Greater Miami and the Beaches Hotel Association urged project approval from the Preservation Board, noting that the project would help maintain Miami Beach as a competitive global hospitality destination. The group’s CEO, Curtis Crider, said projects such as this one are “essential” to the city’s economic future.

“On behalf of the hotel community, we believe this initiative strengthens the city’s competitiveness, supports sustainable economic growth, and reflects the evolution necessary to ensure Miami Beach’s continued success,” he wrote last week in a letter to the Preservation Board.



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House subcommittee backs bill to regulate e-bikes in Florida, establish task force

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A House panel is on board with legislation that aims to increase regulations of electronic bikes and scooters in Florida.

Rep. Yvette Benarroch, a Naples Republican and co-sponsor of the House bill (HB 243), presented it before the House Government Operations Subcommittee. She offered a committee substitute bill, which the panel unanimously approved.

It’s identical to a measure that was approved by the Senate Transportation Committee Tuesday.

E-bikes especially have gained unflattering attention in recent years as they have been involved in more and more accidents. Benarroch during her presentation provided a list of about a half-dozen fatalities involving e-bikes on Florida roads recently.

“Unfortunately, this bill was inspired by tragedy,” Benarroch said during her presentation. “Young people have been seriously injured.”

She added that the number of e-bike accidents is not going down and there needs to be more data collected to understand how profound the issue is. She said she’s been working on the bill for about the past half-year.

“There are many others whose stories do not make the headlines,” Benarroch said. “The call to act is immediate.”

Benarroch’s bill is identical to Sen. Keith Truenow’s measure (SB 382). The Tavares Republican amended his original bill to include provisions establishing an “electric bicycle task force,” which are also included in the House proposal.

That task force would collect data on e-bike and scooter accidents, provide recommendations on enforcement, and submit a report to the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

The bill would also limit e-bikes to operating at 10 mph on sidewalks if a pedestrian is within 50 feet.

Several law enforcement organizations, hospitals and School Boards supported Benarroch’s bill Wednesday.

Rep. Linda Chaney, a St. Petersburg Republican and Chair of the House subcommittee, said she was thankful for Benarroch’s work on the measure because local municipalities have approached the e-bike issue with inconsistent measures.

“There are a lot of different areas in our state with different laws, depending on how fast the bike goes, how you peddle it if you have a motor (and) there’s a lot of confusion out there. … This is going to have far-reaching impact,” Chaney said.

Two actions in North Florida in 2024 demonstrate the wide range of approaches to dealing with e-bikes.

Two 15-year-old boys were seriously injured in St. Johns County alone last year. The St. Johns County Commission passed a resolution in August to join forces with the Sheriff’s Office and the St. Johns County School District to promote more awareness and safety for the operators of e-bikes, as well as e-scooters and other electronic motorized devices.

The County Commission’s measure promised joint education with the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office and the St. Johns County School District.

St. Johns County Sheriff Rob Hardwick said the resolution’s timing was right.

The Palm Coast City Council in 2025 also passed an ordinance that makes it illegal for e-bike owners to modify their vehicles so they can exceed state-defined speed limits on streets, sidewalks or paths.



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Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance bills advance in Senate, House

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An annual day to remember fallen conservative icon Charlie Kirk is closer to becoming law after meetings of the Senate Education Postsecondary Committee and the House Governmental Operations Subcommittee.

The panels voted on party lines to devote Oct. 14 to remember the activist and commentator who spoke for a generation on the Right before he was gunned down while addressing a Utah university crowd.

Under bills from Sen. Jonathan Martin and Rep. Yvette Benarroch (SB 194, HB 125), the Governor would be compelled to issue a proclamation every Oct. 14  — Kirk’s birthday — for the “Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance.”

“This bill would have this day be a day of remembrance and recognition of Charlie Kirk’s influence on civic engagement, youth leadership, and constitutional education. It does not create a state holiday or mandate closures,” Martin said Wednesday.

Martin extolled Kirk’s “alternative viewpoint” and willingness to debate, saying “what he was doing when he was assassinated goes to the very core of who we are as Americans.”

“The First Amendment does not exist to protect comfortable speech,” Benarroch said. “It exists to protect speech we disagree with. It exists to protect debate, House Bill 125 is not about asking anyone to agree with Charlie Kirk. It is not about endorsing every statement he ever made. It is not about elevating a personality. This bill is about what happens when violence replaces debate.”

Ahead of the Senate vote and after numerous members of the public cited various racially provocative things Kirk said into live microphones, an amendment from Sen. Shevrin Jones creating the gubernatorial option for a George Floyd day of remembrance was rejected, saying his killing, like Kirk’s, changed “public consciousness.”

Jones noted that when he was in the House, legislation like the main bill wouldn’t have advanced, which he framed as a measure of how far to the right discourse in the Capitol has moved in just the last few years.

“We’re passing days of remembrance of an individual who … probably wouldn’t spit on me if I was on fire,” Jones said, before his amendment was turfed.

These bills are part of several efforts to remember the founder of Turning Point USA.

A proposed road renaming in Miami-Dade, an honorary naming of the Florida Civics and Debate Initiative championship trophy, and Attorney General James Uthmeier’s Combat Violent Extremism Portal all exemplify state leaders’ effort to pay tribute to a leading advocate for the kind of unapologetic conservatism Florida Republicans embrace.



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Education consortium leaders will bring concerns of Florida’s rural schools to Tallahassee

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Educators from rural counties will host a breakfast at the Governor’s Club on Thursday morning. The event, scheduled in the midst of Rural County Days in Tallahassee, will touch on concerns for Florida’s small School Districts.

“In rural school districts, everybody knows each other. These are truly community schools,” said John Selover, Executive Director of the Panhandle Area Educational Consortium. That consortium is one of three such regional entities hosting the event, along with the Heartland Educational Consortium and North East Florida Educational Consortium.

Jim Norton, Gulf County Superintendent of Schools and Florida’s longest-serving Superintendent, noted that rural counties more often have long-serving, elected Superintendents who boast a particular understanding of families’ educational needs.

“Small county educators are convened to discuss things important to education,” he said. “One size does not fit all.”

Selover said the event created an opportunity for Superintendents and officials from Florida’s 37 small counties to come together in the state’s capital city during the Legislative Session.

Education consortiums are authorized by statute and allow smaller counties to share resources and services, such as risk management pools for property and casualty insurance, financial administration, professional development and cooperative purchasing.

The Panhandle consortium, for example, includes 13 county School Districts, along with a pair of schools run by Florida A&M University and Florida State University in the region. Those university-headed schools and other ones around Florida operate independent of School Districts and thus are able to participate in the consortiums.

The meeting also occurs as lawmakers tackle a number of issues surrounding education and policy in public schools, including the impact of universal school choice and the expansion of Schools of Hope charter school operations, matters that have financially impacted districts of all sizes.

Officials said the breakfast marks a chance for lawmakers to communicate directly with school leaders on policy, and many Superintendents plan to visit with lawmakers in the Capitol during the trip as well.



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