Miami Beach

Workers March To Miami Beach City Hall To Oppose 2 A.M. Referendum

Bouncing to the rhythm of a musical troupe from Mango’s Tropical Cafe, an organized group of hospitality workers marched from Lincoln Road to Miami Beach City Hall on Wednesday to make yet another push to oppose a Nov. 2 voter referendum that proposes to limit early-morning alcohol sales. The demonstrators, who wore matching t-shirts from the political committee Citizens for a Safe Miami Beach, carried signs and banners and chanted slogans opposing a proposed citywide 2 a.m. the last call for drinking at late-night businesses. “Service is Our Industry. Save our Jobs,” the group chanted as a trumpeter, percussionists, and megaphone-wielding emcee led the demonstration.

With early voting underway ahead of Miami Beach’s Nov. 2 election, a group of hospitality workers marched to City Hall on Wednesday to oppose a referendum that proposes to stop alcohol sales at 2 a.m. citywide on Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2021. PEDRO PORTAL

The referendum is on the ballot Tuesday. Early voting began last week. The non-binding ballot question asks voters whether the City Commission should restrict the sales and consumption of alcohol citywide at 2 a.m., with still-undetermined exceptions commissioners can propose.

The gathered workers read a letter in front of TV cameras expressing their “serious concerns” with the 2 a.m. booze ban. Proponents of the referendum, like Mayor Dan Gelber, want to eliminate South Beach’s entertainment district, which Gelber says attracts crime and misbehavior. His critics argue that the 2 a.m. ban would not curb crime and put people out of work. “We all want a safer Miami Beach, but this attempt to take away our jobs, destroy our livelihoods, and threaten how we provide for our families is not the answer,” the letter reads.

Read more here.

Miami Beach City Manager Offers Recovery Plan to Reopen Restaurants

Yesterday, Miami Beach City Manager Jimmy L. Morales sent a memorandum to members of the city's Finance and Economic Resiliency Committee that outlines what he described as a "Resilient Recovery Plan" for the city, including restaurants.

Morales did not set a schedule, but he based his approach on the White House's recently released Opening Up America Again guidelines and noted that the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington estimates June 8 as the "earliest date that Florida can relax social distancing with containment strategies that include testing, contact tracing, isolation, and limiting gathering size." 

The plan addresses many aspects of daily life, including schools, childcare, transportation, government services, parks, places of worship, community centers, hotels, retail, beaches, entertainment, bars, and restaurants.

Restaurant reopenings would proceed in two phases, according to the memo and accompanying information.

Phase one would allow restaurants to open with outdoor seating only at first, and would request that restaurants consider special hours to accommodate vulnerable populations. In addition, restaurants would operate at 50 percent capacity or require a minimum of six feet of space between tables. Employees would be required to work staggered shifts and wear masks, and hours would be reduced and menus limited. Restaurants would be required to implement measures to prevent servers and bussers to cross-contaminate tables. Establishments with liquor licenses could offer table service, but bars would remain closed to patrons.

Under phase two, restaurants would be allowed to relax social-distancing measures and increase capacity.

Read the full article here.