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Foreclosure Notices, DBA Filings, PERM Ads, Probate & Chapter 50 Compliant Newspaper Advertising
Miami’s Community Newspapers has been publishing legal notices for decades.
Foreclosure notices. Probate notices. Fictitious name (DBA) filings. Notice of Action publications. Public hearing advertisements. Government bids. PERM labor certification recruitment ads.
This is not new territory for us.
After years of consistent, compliant legal publishing and verified circulation, Miami’s Community Newspapers was officially designated as the Newspaper of Record for Miami-Dade County.
That designation was not given lightly.
It reflected a long-standing track record of meeting Florida Statute Chapter 50 requirements, maintaining documented circulation standards, and serving attorneys, courts, and government agencies with precision.
Michael Miller explains:
“We didn’t become the Newspaper of Record overnight. That designation came after years of doing the work properly. Legal notices require discipline, consistency, and accountability. That’s how we built our reputation.”
A Legacy Built on Responsibility
Long before digital dashboards and automated systems, legal notices were reviewed line by line at a desk.
Michael’s father built the paper understanding that a foreclosure notice was not just a block of text — it represented a property, a family, a lender, and a court case. The details mattered then, and they matter now.
Grant Miller reflects on that foundation:
“We grew up understanding that legal publishing wasn’t glamorous, but it was essential. If a notice ran incorrectly, there were consequences. That mindset never changed.”
That generational discipline shapes how Community Newspapers handles legal advertising today.
Expanding Professional Legal Notice Publishing into Broward County
Through Broward Community Newspapers, we now provide Chapter 50 compliant legal notice publication services throughout Broward County.
Broward Community Newspapers meets the requirements of Florida Statute Chapter 50 for legal notice publication.
For attorneys handling foreclosure litigation, probate administration, real estate transactions, lien enforcement, business registrations, or immigration labor certifications, statutory compliance is not optional.
It is mandatory.
Legal Notices We Publish in Broward County
We provide professional legal advertising for:
- Mortgage Foreclosure Notices
- Notice of Sale and court-ordered foreclosure advertisements
- Notice to Creditors (Probate / Estate Administration)
- Fictitious Name (DBA) Legal Advertisements
- Notice of Action (Service by Publication)
- Public Hearing and Zoning Notices
- Government Bid and RFP Advertisements
- Lien and Auction Notices
- PERM Labor Certification Recruitment Advertisements
Each notice is:
• Reviewed for statutory formatting
• Scheduled within required publication timelines
• Published in accordance with Chapter 50
• Supported by affidavits of publication suitable for court filing
Judges expect compliance.
Clerks expect documentation.
Opposing counsel reviews the details.
Michael Miller puts it plainly:
“When we publish a legal notice, we publish it correctly. The dates matter. The circulation matters. The affidavit matters. There is no room for casual mistakes in this work.”
PERM Labor Certification Advertising in Broward County
In addition to foreclosure and probate legal notices, Broward Community Newspapers publishes PERM labor certification recruitment ads in compliance with U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) requirements.
Immigration attorneys handling employment-based immigration cases understand that PERM advertisements must meet specific federal guidelines, including:
- Sunday newspaper publication requirements
- Proper job description formatting
- Geographic circulation standards
- Recruitment documentation for Department of Labor filing
These are not ordinary advertisements.
They are federal compliance notices.
Grant Miller explains:
“PERM ads are highly technical. Immigration attorneys can’t afford formatting errors or missed deadlines. Our team understands the documentation requirements and makes sure the publication is done properly.”
Why Chapter 50 Compliance Still Matters
Florida Statute Chapter 50 establishes the legal requirements for newspapers publishing legal notices, including circulation and frequency standards.
Courts require publication in a qualified newspaper.
A printed legal notice creates a permanent, third-party public record — archived, verifiable, and defensible.
Grant Miller explains:
“A legal notice isn’t about clicks. It’s about record. It’s about making sure the publication stands up if someone challenges it later. That’s what we deliver.”
That standard applies to foreclosure notice publication, probate Notice to Creditors advertisements, DBA filings, Notice of Action service by publication, PERM recruitment ads, and public hearing legal notices throughout Broward County.
The Team Behind the Legal Notices
Legal notice publishing at Community Newspapers is not automated and forgotten.
It is handled by a dedicated team that works directly with foreclosure law firms, probate attorneys, real estate counsel, immigration attorneys, lenders, municipalities, and business owners.
Michael Miller says:
“What makes this work is not just compliance with Chapter 50. It’s the team. We have real people reviewing notices, confirming deadlines, coordinating runs, and issuing affidavits. When an attorney calls, someone answers.”
From intake to affidavit, every step is monitored:
• Formatting reviewed
• Deadlines confirmed
• Consecutive week runs tracked
• PERM publication requirements verified
• Affidavits processed promptly
• Clear communication maintained
Behind every foreclosure notice is a case file.
Behind every Notice to Creditors is a family navigating probate.
Behind every PERM ad is a business seeking to hire legally and properly.
The team understands that legal advertising protects due process — at the state and federal level.
Professional Legal Notice Publishing in Broward County
Legal notice publishing is not about filling space.
It is about protecting the integrity of court proceedings and honoring the trust placed in us by the legal community.
Miami’s Community Newspapers earned its designation as the Newspaper of Record in Miami-Dade County.
Broward Community Newspapers now extends that same professional standard into Broward — meeting the requirements of Florida Statute Chapter 50 and serving attorneys who expect precision and responsiveness.
For placement, scheduling, or rate information, please contact:
Karina Soave
karina@communitynewspapers.com
305-582-9030
Or visit:
communitynewspapers.com/legals
We look forward to serving as your publication partner in Broward County.




