SEARCH BARS & CLUBS RESTAURANTS CALENDAR MEDIA KIT ADVERTISING CONTACT SPECIAL ISSUES

May 08, 2008

 

The Price of Kindness

Think twice before helping out someone in need — especially if you’re an elderly man on your way to the market. It could cost you thousands.

 

A Silver-Lining Legacy

Miami City Commission may rename a Little Haiti park after disgraced late Commissioner Arthur Teele Jr.

 

The Sound of Hope

Barton G. Weiss turns his efforts to his most important challenge yet: helping the deaf to hear.

 

NEWS

 

Miami-Dade County overrides mayor’s UDB vetoes

 

Miami-Dade County eliminates 600 bus routes

 

Miami-Dade County extends trailer park moratorium for 180 days

 

Teachers outraged that Dade School Board pays $1 million a year to United Teachers of Dade officers

 

Related Group founder Jorge Pérez is sharing the principles that made him billions

 

Miami Beach union files a lawsuit against building department heads

 

Miami Beach Transparency, Reliability and Accountability Committee not so sure where to begin

 

Miami Beach Green Committee envisions a green city of the future, but needs support

 

Aventura approves a transit impact fee 40 percent lower than what it initially approved

 

Sunny Isles Beach plans to build a bridge on North Bay Road to ease traffic

 

Sunny Isles Beach voters will get to decide on two charter changes

 

Broward County is refining its management strategy and its budget

 

Hollywood High students may find out what they want to be when they grow up—at Hollywood City Hall

 

Letters

 

COLUMNS

 

Bound

Aleksander Hemon resurrects us all in The Lazarus Project.

 

Make Me The President

Gandhi, Rocky or Rooster Cogburn — who would you like to drink a beer with?

 

The 411

Don’t know what to do now that season is ending? Neither does Kris Conesa.

 

Groundwork

Miami topped Forbes’ list of “America’s Worst-Selling Housing Markets.” Who knew?

 

Bites

Danny Brody takes a second look at three Miami restaurants to see if they really deserve their accolades.

 

Wakefield

Miami-Dade commissioners just don’t get it. Neither do the voters who keep electing them.

 

Film

Go See Speed Racer, Go!

And: Film Capsules

 

Theater

The Accomplices at GablesStage details a shameful chapter in American history.

 

Avenue Q

If you want to know what happens to Muppets when they grow up, go see Avenue Q.

 

Calendar

Did you forget Mother's Day?

 

Special Sections 2007

Special Sections 2006

Wakefield Archive

Make Me The President Archive

 

 

 

News

 March 27, 08

Gay Pride

Mayoral committee hopes to restore the city’s gay image

By Ben Torter

Most people know that the rainbow flag is seen as a symbol of the gay community throughout the world. It is proudly hung in neighborhoods with large gay populations, like Greenwich Village in New York City.

But in Miami Beach, where domestic partnerships are recognized with an official registry, it’s actually illegal to hang the rainbow flag. The ban doesn’t have anything to do with discrimination. It’s more a technicality.

“The code allows flags of the United States and other sovereign nations, but it treats flags like the rainbow flag as nonconforming,” Deputy City Attorney Raul Aguila explained. He’s the city’s legal liaison to the Mayor’s Gay Business Development Ad Hoc Committee, which had its first meeting at City Hall on March 26.

The issue of the rainbow flag was raised as members of the 17-person committee of gay business leaders discussed their goals, such as how to re-create the sense of community among gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender individuals and businesses that many think has faded with higher costs of living and doing business in Miami Beach.

“The first priority is to create a sense of community for those who live here and want to move here,” said committee Chair Babak Movahedi, owner of Halo nightclub and a former elected official from Washington, D.C.

Many at the meeting longed for the Miami Beach of 15 years ago, with its bohemian feel and small stores and restaurants. They agreed that Miami Beach is losing its edge, along with a lot of LGBT residents and tourists to places like Fort Lauderdale.

“I’m concerned we’re becoming a generic Anywhere, U.S.A.,” said committee member Nellie Barrios, a 9-year Beach resident who is on the board of the Gay and Lesbian Film Festival.

Bower, the city’s first Cuban and first female mayor of Miami Beach, founded the committee to help strengthen the city’s LGBT community. She told the committee that she thinks what has happened to the LGBT community in Miami Beach is what eventually happens to all minority communities — they become mainstream, and thus lose a sense of identity. She suggested organizing as a strong voting block is one way to be heard.

“If the perception continues that the gay community doesn’t vote, you aren’t going to get it,” Bower said.

“We’re the organization of the future, not the past, and we need to figure out how to make us the vanguard,” said committee member George Neary, the cultural tourism associate vice president for the Great Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau.

The committee’s first meeting was organizational. It created four subcommittees to explore issues related to LGBT residents, businesses, tourism and special events. It will meet the second and last Tuesday of each month. The next meeting is April 18 at 1 p.m. at Miami Beach City Hall.

Comments? E-mail ben@miamisunpost.com

 

Comments? E-mail letters@miamisunpost.com