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    Alexandra Saab

    Christmas comes early to Alexandra Saab’s home in Pinecrest. Right after Halloween, Saab and her mother bring out the Christmas lights and begin to create the Winter Wonderland that thousands of people come and visit throughout the Holiday season.

    “It takes a month to put them up,” Saab says. “We turn them off around the third or fourth of January.”

    The family has been putting up the 250,000-light display for the past 16 years. In the last few years, the display has helped raise money for St. Jude’s Hospital. “My cousin, when he was little, had a brain tumor, when he was three or four. He’s 10 now,” she says. “St. Jude’s was great. After that, we started collecting donations.”

    The Saab house is located on Southwest 104th Street and 60th Avenue, near Pinecrest Elementary. Saab says the lights are easier to take down than put up, but putting them away is an ordeal.

    “We rent a U-Haul,” she says. “When my brother went to the University of Miami, we had his fraternity brothers helping us; but not anymore.”

    While it all sounds like it would be too much to handle, Saab says she likes working on the display.

    “I find it very exciting when we put them up,” she says. “And to collect the donations is amazing. Every night we get donations. Even in this time of economic despair, people are willing to give.”

    Putting up the light display is a family affair. Saab says one grandfather’s role is fixing broken light sets.

    “Even when we changed from regular to LED, he learned how to fix the LED lights,” she says.

    The LED lights do help them conserve some electricity, but the family’s electric bill goes up a few hundred dollars because of the display.

    “Before LED, you couldn’t blow dry your hair or play video games at night because the power would go off,” she says. “We have a new electric box just for Christmas lights.”

    The display does not stay stagnant. Each year they get new figures to add to those already being shown.

    “Our neighbors bring us new figures. I guess they don’t want us to stop,” she says. In fact, she says, if they don’t start work on the display, neighbors come over to see what’s going on with the lights.

    Saab is a senior at Palmetto High where she the school’s Silver Knight nominee in the Vocational Technical category.

    “I’m big in television production at the school,” she says. “Last year we received the Excellence Award for Daily Broadcast at a national competition. This year on the national level we won a couple of awards, one called Sweet 16. You have 16 hours to put together a broadcast based on one word.”

    She comes by her broadcast talent by way of her father, who was a radio DJ in Miami and still does voice over work. Saab is also a member of the school’s water polo team and she was on the swim team.

    Outside of school, she plays beach volleyball and belly dances. She has 1,500 community service hours, including hours from working on the Mr. Panther event this year. Her community service and strong academics have earned her several college scholarship offers, including one from the University of Miami. Where ever she goes, she wants to end up in dental school and specialize in Oral Maxillofacial Dentistry.

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    Running in general election different than primary

    I really don’t think the U.S. Senate race in Florida is an “anyone can win” threeway race. Everything “was” nice and cozy for both Kendrick Meek and Marco Rubio as long as Charlie Crist stayed in the Republican Party.

    Rubio had the upper hand and short of some disastrous revelation would have coasted into the November elections. Independents were up for grabs.

    True, Rubio has the American Express debacle potentially hanging over his head. But I don’t think it will have much of an impact. Contributors to the Republican Party of Florida are more interested in having their man elected to office than they are about a ruckus over improper spending of political contributions.

    Meek currently has total control over the Democratic primary. He has a few opponents but they are underfunded and have the same problem as Meek, but to a far less extent. They basically are unknown north of Palm Beach County.

    The entry of Jeff Greene, a billionaire from Palm Beach County into the Democratic race can cause a primary race problem for Meek inasmuch as Greene plans on dumping millions of his own dollars into the race. Not being beholden to any power structure or lobbying groups will appeal to a number of voters.

    Gov. Crist’s long anticipated move out of the Republican Party, becoming an Independent, or as he calls it a “NPA” No Party Affiliation, is creating financial problems for Crist as many of the dollars he has in his campaign war chest will be going back to contributors angered by his move.

    Crist’s move will take votes away from Meek as a number of registered Democrats are concerned that Meek will not fair well in North Florida. In the general election, they may turn to Crist, who is more of a Democrat than many elected Democrats sitting in Washington, DC.

    For the life of me I can’t understand the Republican position on the stimulus package embraced by Crist a year ago when President Obama visited our state and received a warm welcome from the the governor. It is a good political move by Rubio, but in my opinion rings hollow because the Republican-controlled Legislature in Tallahassee not only embraced Obama’s stimulus money, but proudly used it to balance the state’s budget.

    Simply said, without the stimulus dollars some $800 billion in all, we would be seeing many more cuts in services in next year’s budget. There just isn’t enough revenue to cover all of Florida’s needs. Without Obama’s stimulus dollars, the Republican Party would have had a tough time explaining even deeper cuts in services without any increases in taxes.

    It would appear that if Crist can quickly reassemble a statewide team of supporters and can cover the dollars he will loose to the far right Republicans then he should be our next senator from Florida.

    Crist doesn’t have to face the difficult task of moving his campaign to the middle of the political spectrum come the general elections. Republicans must appear to be to the right of the Tea Party to win their primary. Democrats must be to the left of the old Labor Party to win their primary. Once the primary races are settled, the winning candidates must pull to the middle of the political road to win the general election. Crist is lucky. He already is there.

    We appreciate your opinions on this column whether in agreement or disagreement. Please send your comments to (fax number) 305-662-6980 or email to < letters@communitynewspapers.com >.

    The opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of this newspaper, its editors or publisher.

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    New officers installed for Coral Gables Woman’s Club

    The GFWC Coral Gables Woman’s Club held its 87th Annual Installation dinner on May 5, during which Linda Hartwell was installed as CGWC President by former Florida Federation of Women’s Club President Charlyne Carruth. Hartwell follows Pam Schaefer as President and will serve two years, a fact Hartwell’s husband, John, only discovered that night.

    Bill Lapsley, former first husband who was standing in for Pam’s husband John Schaefer, gave the annual “First Husband’s Address” with some sage and very comical advice to the newcomer to the position.

    Members and guests enjoyed the festive evening organized by Past President Charo Bolanos, who was surprised and teary eyed that night on receiving the club’s top honor as the Barbara Rosenthal & Sherry Wheeler Leadership Award Recipient. Past President Barbara Lapsley presented the New Member Award in her name to Sabrina Perez-King.

    Outgoing CGWC President Pam Schaefer thanked her board before the installation of Hartwell and the new officers: First Vice President Mireya Kilmon; Second Vice President, Barbara Lapsley; Treasurer, Nancy Desmangles; Recording Secretary, MayraDomiguez; Corresponding Secretary, Charo Bolanos; Dental Clinic Director, Dr. Iris Torres; First Director, Pam Schaefer; 2nd Director, Claire Frances Whitehurst; and Third Director, Dorothy Thomson.

    Coral Gables Woman’s Club draws its members from as far south as Cutler Bay and the Redlands to as far north as Miramar. Members join to meet new friends and to volunteer their time to give back to the community by helping others.

    The Club owns and operates the May Van Sickle Dental Clinic which provides more than $150,000 annually in dental care for those children who fall through the gaps in our healthcare system. Anyone interested in learning more about the organization or in finding out how you can participate may go online to www.coralgableswomansclub.org .

    In other Club news, the Elk’s Club in South Miami is a busy place these days and most recently held one of their famous steak dinners with Exalted Ruler Ralph Coker and Fred Zipse doing the grilling for a hungry crowd. Word has it, the Elk’s Club also had a great Mother’s Day Brunch as well. Of course, Mother’s Day was celebrated around town in many ways, some with cook outs, camping and many lucky moms attended a beautiful brunch like this writer at the Westin Colonnade. Chef Thomas Russo had everything one could want on his menu. Westin’s General Manager, Mike Wurster, was among the sell out crowd enjoying the morning with his whole family including wife, Katherine, and daughters Caroline, Holly and baby Veronica. Other faces in the crowd included Eleanor Zahner, Tom and Carol Bovee, John Burns and Allison Bean, to mention a few.

    Until next week, keep making each day count.

    Gloria Burns is Executive Director of the Community Foundation of Pinecrest, a 501 (c) (3) non profit organization, as well as a columnist for Community Newspapers.

    Keeping abreast of community activities is a challenge. If you would like to submit information for this column, please send your news via e-mail to gloriagalburns@aol.com .

    New schools are still an issue

    Much ado over Palmetto Bay Village Council vote allowing Palmer Trinity School expansion, even as meetings continue in this neck of the woods about Riviera Day Schools building a high school campus on Galloway Road. Now, we understand that Trinity folks still opposing expansion by Palmer in that area are meeting with Continental Park and nearby homeowners to share common thinking.

    Those brainstorming avenues for a legal protest wondered if it is legal to grandfather property rights that would otherwise not be permitted, should the property be sold for a non-conforming use to the existing or a new ownership.

    Covenants originally granted normally “run with the land,” regardless of who may become the owner later on, one of the primary purposes of the Miami-Dade County CDMP (Comprehensive Development Master Plan), which, to our knowledge, was legally followed by the schools before announcing plans to expand.

    That being the case, those who care have to be on guard to read those legal notices when published, especially those seeking to amend covenants, as was the case in the current school developments. East Kendall folks may recall Baptist Hospital changed an already-adopted master plan (permitted under its original CDMP approval) to permit expansion not far from the same area of SW 87th Avenue where Riviera Schools now seeks to transform a church into a school campus.

    Baptist, however, only got its approvals after presenting a detailed traffic analysis required by East Kendall’s Community Council, the same body Commissioners no longer feel necessary to act on nonzoning issues.

    K-T Executive Airport update from MDC Aviation Department PIO Greg Chin: Project work expected by the end of the month. We’re getting the final administrative issues finalized between the Aviation Department, FAA and the contractor before the Notice to Proceed (NTP) is issued. Project is still within the scope of the contract and is now in the final contractor coordination and planning phase. Identifying needed office space, ordering materials, scheduling contractor labor and resources and coordinating work between FAA and FPL have all begun already.

    Florida Department of Transportation invites you to participate an “important” Regional Workshop on June 2 about making transportation decisions for “a better, more sustainable Florida, for our future.” If that tickles your fancy, you’ll head downtown, park at the Wolfson Campus Garage (free) and sit in on a presentation and possibly two or three seminars, advises David Korros, District Six Planner, who suggests visiting the web site for details at www.2060FTP.org before calling 305-470-5840.

    And, says MDX (Metropolitan Expressway Authority) “…moving forward with plans to implement Open Road Tolling (ORT) on five expressways by 2013. Overhead gantries will replace traditional toll plazas and tolls will automatically be calculated and deducted from your Surpass account. ORT will make driving faster (reduces congestion), safer (no toll plaza incidents), cleaner (reduces emissions), fair (pay for only the portion of road you travel) and will help fund roadway improvements for the future. By the summer of 2010, SR 924/Gratigny Parkway, SR 874/Don Shula Expressway and SR 878/Snapper Creek Expressway will be converted to ORT. Details are at www.MDXORT.com .

    Postscript: Kendall Federation of Homeowner Associations targets its June 7 meeting with an ORT presentation by MDX, so that residents missing the three workshops May 26-27 and June 1 get still another chance to vent their collective spleens over 75-cent one-way trips due on the Snapper Creek SR 878 Xway.

    Update on Kendall Campus of Miami- Dade College due when Dr. Armando Ferrer, President, addresses West Kendall Business Association on college’s “Impact on the Community” during noon luncheon on Thursday, May 27 at Signature Gardens, 12725 SW 122 Avenue. For details, reservations, etc., call 305-238- 9966. Miami Children’s Hospital is the luncheon sponsor.

    Thought for the Day:

    A closed mind is like a closed book: just a block of wood.

    Chinese Proverb

    Richard Yager contributed to this column. Got any tips? Contact me at 305-669- 7355, ext. 249, or send emails to < michael@communitynewspapers.com >.

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    KFHA attendees split on capping class size

    A near overflow audience of more than 100 educators, teachers and residents split a straw vote 50-50 on whether or not to reduce school class sizes as currently required by a 2002 Florida Constitution amendment.

    The straw vote during a Kendall Federation of Homeowner Associations (KFHA) town meeting on May 11 ended more than two hours of discussion of a Florida Legislature-approved voter referendum that will go on the Nov. 4 general election ballot. It would ask voters to approve modifying state-mandated class sizes set to become effective this October.

    Florida voters in 2002 overwhelmingly approved capping class sizes throughout the state at 18 students for kindergarten through third grade, 22 in fourth through eighth grade, and 25 in high school.

    The amendment on the November ballot would roll back those requirements so that class size would be calculated at a gradelevel average, not an individual classroom cap, the legislature’s answer to disrupting budgets during the down economics of today.

    The amendment will need 60 percent voter approval to permit class sizes above the 2002 mandated levels by up to three students per class in elementary schools; four in middle schools, and five in senior highs while avoiding non-compliance penalties of $2,900 per student for those not adhering to the constitutional standard.

    “If the vote our audience took is any indication, the referendum will most likely fail in November,” said Miles E. Moss, KFHA president, who asked for the informal sampling just before adjourning the two-and-ahalf- hour panel discussion at 9:30 p.m.

    “But this is just the start of the debate,” Moss continued. “We’ll have further speakers and programs on the funding issues throughout the summer at KFHA meetings.” Prior to the action, two school officials and two state legislators offered commentary and answered classroom cap questions, then heard critiques of the recent teacher tenure issue vetoed by Gov. Charlie Crist in April.

    School administrators on the panel included Dr. Richard Hinds, Miami-Dade Schools associate superintendent and chief financial officer for the district, and Irada Montez-Cartaya, an assistant superintendent for intergovernmental affairs, joined by State Rep. Erik Fresen who chaired the Prekindergarten to Grade 12 House Policy Committee in the recent legislative session, and State Rep. Anitere Flores, committee vice chair who represents District 114 which includes a part of Kendall.

    While neither legislator served in the 2002 session, both were criticized for helping allow a situation to develop that could cost Miami-Dade Schools an estimated $30 million in fines, based on a per-student penalties, even if the referendum passes.

    Penalties are not already-funded dollars but represent “reductions of future state funding to Miami-Dade,” Rep. Flores explained. “Nevertheless, penalty dollars would become funding that will wind up elsewhere in Florida, not in our schools.” Currently, Miami-Dade receives $4 per pupil in annual state funding against a statewide average of $1.22, Rep. Flores noted.

    “We saw the situation coming during the down economics of the 2009 session but our attempt then to pass cap-sizing change failed of legislative support,” Rep. Fresen said.

    Should class sizes allow three to five per class exceptions if the November vote passes, a time gap until the vote is certified and the amendment becomes effective will still accrue penalties expected to cost Miami- Dade $30 million, Dr. Hinds estimated. Should the referendum be defeated in November, county schools stand to lose up to $90 million by failing to meet cap standards voted eight years ago.

    “That’s in addition to the $400 million we’ve cut back in budget reductions over the last two years,” he said.

    “Moreover, if we try in October to soften potential penalties by getting rid of nonelective class teachers (for example: music, drama, arts, etc.) and readjust classes to only basic studies, and the referendum passes, we’ll have to re-hire teachers we fired after a successful ballot, Dr. Hinds said.

    “Not only will that cost even more, in addition to the penalties, but where do we find new teachers for those we just replaced?” he asked rhetorically.

    Former East Kendall Community Council vice chair Millie Herrera said the legislators should have financed part of educational needs to allow caps “by taxing out-of-state businesses that are not paying their fair share due to special exemptions now in place.”

    Such savings were termed “a drop in the bucket” by Rep. Fresen who said they would only amount “to an $8-10 million saving,” adding “we studied more than 200 of them, one-by-one, in committee sessions. The difference was simply not significant.”

    Other arguments on legislative mishandling of educational funding included allowing private school vouchers to continue instead of financing only “public” education, and continuation of charter school development during an economic downturn. Don Kearns, KFHA internal vice president, panel moderator, was credited by Moss along with Yvonne Kearns as “the couple spearheading development of information and organization of the panel.”

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    A4-H “Bug Camp” creates buzz with local students

    A4-H “Bug Camp” on May 11 at a West Kendall elementary school created the kind of buzz that kids enjoy.

    It all came about after a teacher affiliated with 4-H Club activity and environmental causes decided a hands-on, outdoor lesson could create more interest than classroom lectures.

    Xonia Perez, who organized the 4-H Club at Oliver Hoover Elementary School in The Hammocks about 18 months ago, connected to Alex Diaz, agent for the Miami-Dade 4-H Extension and its extension programming.

    “With cutbacks in school funding, local organizations are coming up with creative tools to expose our kids to higher learning,” said Sonya M. Perez, spokesperson for the Miami-Dade Consumer Services Department, which helps fund and operate the Cooperative Extension Service and its 4-H program.

    As the program’s local spearhead, Perez said she wanted “to get other non 4-H club members in our school excited about environmental sciences.”

    For four hours, the fifth-grade students took turns in the school’s outdoor yard, learning about vegetable and butterfly gardening after creating their own sites under Perez’s direction. This was to prepare them to “meet their new creepy-crawly neighbors.”

    Included were such items as “some kind of little green thing,” as described by Brian Escobar, 11. “I haven’t figured out what it is yet, but I will now.”

    It was that kind of enthusiasm that also led Daniel Perez and Kayla Gonzalez, both 11, to become president and junior sponsor of the 4-H Club activity, the first of its kind at Hoover Elementary.

    “It’s really neat, learning about bugs,” they said.

    “Some people eat mealworms in baked goods, stir fry, and on salads for their mild, nutty taste,” Diaz said.

    Focusing on how bugs are part of our ecosystem food chain and their importance in human interaction, students were equipped with magnifying glasses and butterfly nets and other insect-collecting paraphernalia, most of it furnished by the Miami-Dade Cooperative Extension Division’s 4-H Club and Urban Horticulture Program that operated the camp.

    Also on hand helping kids learn more about insects was Adrian Hunsberger, a Florida Yards and Neighborhood agent, along with Diaz who is co-sponsored by the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

    For information on programming, visit the Miami-Dade Cooperative Extension website or call 305-592-8044.

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    Killian grad boosts turning life around

    A 1992 Killian Senior High grad urged 37 Miami-Dade students “to turn your life into a success by doing what you do best —and sticking to it.” That was the advice from Dr. Billy Jones, divisional chair for Reading and Writing at Miami Dade College’s Kendall.

    “Learn what you can, but apply that learning to make a significant impact on someone —just as you have been recognized for what you were able to do for yourself,” said Jones, a former English professor and leadership development teacher in the Miami-Dade County Public Schools system for eight years.

    Dr. Jones addressed the 28th annual Kendall Federation of Homeowner Associations (KFHA) Operation Turnaround Awards Luncheon on May 13 as deserving elementary, middle and high school students were honored for scholastic excellence to achieve higher class standing, often overcoming personal hardships.

    All students attending were advised by Jones to use their proven positive outlook “not only to help yourself, but to help others in your search for a philosophy for living.” “Every one of these students has a special story,” said Miles E. Moss, KFHA president, who emceed the program with Frank Cobo, former school board member. The event marked 28 years since its founding by the late Dorothy Cissel, Kendall resident, educator and community activist.

    Honored seniors were Osuni Valdivia, Ferguson High; Geraldine Salinas, Coral Reef High; Christopher Alvarado, Felix Varela High; Courtney McGuire, Killian High, and Gilbert Mclean, Sunset High, each receiving $500 Operation Turnaround and $1,000 Miami Dade College scholarships. Middle and K-8 Center students honored were Fabian Gonzalez (Arvida), Jessica Turro (Devon Aire), Oshton Armstrong (Frank C. Martin), Daniel Sanchez (Glades), Mitchell Rodriguez (Hammocks), Stephania Diaz (Jane S. Roberts), Adam Suarez (Kenwood), Megan Cruz (Leewood), Myiesha Perry (Richmond Heights) and Devin Herrera (Winston Park).

    Elementary students who received certificates at school assemblies included Alfred Salazar (Blue Lakes), Joran Ramos (Calusa), Madelyn Garcia (Claude Pepper), Anthony Fiallo (Coral Reef), Juliette Valdes (Cypress), Jorge Zubrigary (Devon Aire), Robert Fonte (Ashe), Joshua Flores (Beckham), DeSean Perry (Martin), Danielo Aguirre (Gordon), Brian Van (Roberts). Also honored were Chris Herrera (Kendale Lakes), Jonathan Canales, Lucianna Doria, Jimmy Hauser, Florianne Jacques, (Kenwood), Veronica Montalvo (Leewood), Oliver Lemus (Olympia Heights), Natalie Rodriguez (Royal Palm), Ryan Sierra (Lehman) and Virginia Sanchez (Winston Park).

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    Bicyclists hit the highway to fight multiple sclerosis

    The National MS Society event, which took place on Apr. 17 and 18, is Florida’s premier charity cycling event, raising money to support research, programs and services for 6,000 South Floridians affected by multiple sclerosis.

    South Miami resident Claudette Halluk is the captain of Team Bacaradi, sponsored by 42Below vodka, riding in the MS Bike Ride. The team consisted of two riders in 2004 — Claudette and one her best friends — and now there are over 150 riders. At the beginning, they wanted to do this ride because they had participated in the MS Ride from Boston to Provincetown, MA, in 2001. They realized that this event makes such a difference for people living with multiple sclerosis as well as providing people a way to get out and enjoy riding their bikes again.

    Bacardi USA Inc., located in Coral Gables, has been a tremendous support to Halluk’s vision for the team, which has become one of the largest teams participating in the event, as well as educating people about MS.

    “I work very hard as our team captain to provide an environment that people remember and enjoy for various reasons,” she said. “As a result, our team has been rewarded with more riders every year.” True to Bacardi’s passion for its people and its community, the company has continued to provide financial support behind the team and the event.

    The Bacardi VIP tent at John Pennecamp State Park is the talk of the ride and definitely helps in the recruiting of new team members. Team Bacardi has a great blend of every level rider, a variety of most every age, plus participants who have MS, coming together from all South Florida communities.

    “This ride is important to our team because we must remember that life is what we do every day and those moments can change in an instant,” Halluk said. “Team Bacardi rides to show our support for the cause and to raise awareness of multiple sclerosis in South Florida.”

    Some 3,000 riders began their journey at 7 a.m. on Saturday, Apr. 17, at the new starting line, Homestead-Miami Speedway. They spent the night in Key Largo at the 42Below Village at John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park. Once all the riders arrive, they celebrated with food, fun, and entertainment. After a good night’s sleep, riders returned to Homestead-Miami Speedway.

    “The efforts of every MS Bike Ride participant, volunteer and supporter is significant to the success of this event,” said Karen Dresbach, National MS Society, South Florida Chapter president. “As a community we need to help raise the funds necessary to support those in dire need.”

    You can join the 2011 MS Bike Ride by calling 1-800-344-4867 or going online at < www.msbikeflorida.org >.

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    Residents’ ‘Green House’ attracting many visitors

    When Albert and Enid Harum-Alvarez set out to build their “Green House,” they decided they wanted something special.

    Now it has become an environmental “first” in its Continental Park neighborhood, attracting hundreds of visitors who want to learn more about “green” building and savings on their power bills. Unique construction features and conservation methods abound at almost every corner, from the home’s rare “cellar” to composting bathroom waste to fertilize fruit trees.

    The two-story, 2,300-square-foot residence overlooks a secluded Florida hammock where SW 98th Terrace reaches a dead-end, a block east of SW 82nd Avenue and only a short distance from the Dice House, Kendall’s first residence, that Harum-Alvarez helped salvage.

    The Green House faces north toward a 1,100-square-foot house, known to Kendall old-timers as the “Smoak Cottage,” where the family has continued to live during the construction of the Green House, including the couple’s three teens — Gabriel, 18, attending Miami Dade College; Giovanna, 16, a junior at Killian High School, and Marjory, 11, attending Kenwood K-8 Center.

    As history buffs, the Harum-Alvarez couple compiled a history of Kenwood Elementary, Kendall’s first school, when its PTSA celebrated the school’s 75th anniversary in 2005, then newly designated as Kenwood K-8 Center.

    Projects like that are second nature to the Harum-Alvarezes, who decided a “second” home in their tropical surroundings should reflect what pioneers discovered when building year-around homes, long before air-conditioning, by using contemporary materials to duplicate what earlier Floridians knew was needed to create cooling interiors and living comfort in a sub-tropic climate.

    “We delayed naming the new home because we wanted special name,” Harum- Alvarez told nearly 50 touring friends, business associates and inquisitive professionals concerned with preservation and “green” construction on May 4. Harum- Alvarez estimates he has hosted as many as 50 informal tours during the past two and a half years).

    “As time went on, we kept calling it the ‘Green House,’ so that became its name,” smiled the former schoolteacher turned businessman who has long treasured original Florida homesteads and their histories.

    Features built-into the Green House will doubtless comprise a book some day, including the unique ICF (Insulated Concrete Forms) units creating solid walls “stronger than concrete block that also help to maintain even temperatures from summer through winter,” Harum-Alvarez said. “The interior walls also work to maintain temperatures despite fluctuations outside. We packed interior walls with scrap drywall instead of throwing the scraps out.”

    Reduced electrical costs resulted in March billing of $35 for the Green House, compared to those of typically sized homes averaging in the $200 range, he noted.

    “We re-circulate directly underground, rather than have the return unit above ground where it would be subject to 95- degree air. We recirculate air six feet below ground level where the temperature stays at 73-degrees the year around.”

    He estimated the Green House probably saves about $8,000 a year, between energy savings and windstorm insurance, over a comparable home, even without the added cost of a full solar PV array on the roof. “At a time when families don’t have money to waste, such savings are a godsend.

    That overview also led to preserving a towering 80-foot high oak that dominates the east side of the landscape, towering above a natural pool, because “the tree provides an aesthetic anchor for siting the house itself,” Harum-Alvarez continued. “It’s a vertical accent, viewed from the eastern double-door deck entry, right through the home interior.”

    The philosophy of preserving what is natural to a hammock setting extends to the Green House grounds.

    “That rubberized mulch you walk on will eventually be replaced by whatever naturally takes to the soil,” Harum- Alvarez said. “Right now, we have five different species trying to take hold. The one that wins will become permanent.” Harum-Alvarez often ends his tours by saying, “While it took two years to build the house, it’s taken seven years to get our permits.”

    He will seek Miami-Dade Commissioner Katy Sorenson’s soon-tobe- vacated District Eight seat, having counted more than a dozen community organizations on which he has served, including a steering committee for Downtown Dadeland, Habitat for Humanity, Kendall Public Space Committee and a transit corridor study group, among several.

    “Miami-Dade has to make it much easier to build new or remodel existing homes,” Harum-Alvarez concluded. “With so much at risk in the face of global climate change, the county should be worldleaders in building strong and efficient housing.”

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    Permanent village hall rapidly taking shape

    The new building that will become the permanent village hall for Palmetto Bay is so far along in the construction process that it’s immediately recognizable to anyone who has seen the architect’s renderings.

    Located at 9705 E. Hibiscus, on the site of the former Neighbors Supermarket, the new village hall is expected to be completed by October or November. The roof will soon be completely in place, what they call “topping out” in construction jargon, and the dome over the clock tower will be added shortly.

    “Everything is on schedule,” said Mayor Eugene P. Flinn, Jr. when interviewed on Wednesday, May 12. “Because there’s a need for work right now, the construction crews have been able to give this their undivided attention. I think that the only thing that could delay the project at this point is if a product, like windows or something else, isn’t delivered on time, or if we get any hurricanes.”

    Designed as a USBG LEED-certified Platinum building, the new village hall will be the first municipal center of its kind in Florida. The building will use solar cells to produce more than 57 percent of its needed power, will use 98 percent LED lighting and a special new air-conditioning system that is supposed to reduce the cooling load by more than 30 percent, all of which will reduce day-to-day costs.

    The building also will capture rainwater to use for flushing and irrigation purposes, using a 30,000-gallon cistern for storage, one of the largest such systems in South Florida.

    “They’re using special paver stones that allow us to collect the rain water,” Flinn said. “This is going to be a truly ‘green’ and hopefully precedent-setting example of ‘LEEDership.’ Seriously, though, I feel really good about how we’re doing on the project.

    “We’ve got the timing and price — a great price on everything — and we’re going to be doing great things with economically revitalizing that area by having a unique village hall there, and there’s the environmental aspects of the village. We’re going to show that it can be done and done quite efficiently. And the taxpayers are going to get it back in reduced operating expenses in the years ahead.”

    The new village hall, the first Palmetto Bay municipal headquarters that hasn’t borrowed or rented space for its offices, is close to S. Dixie Highway and on Franjo Road, so it’s easily accessible.

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    Author relishes her first book on hot dog history

    Cutler Bay resident Adrienne Sylver is on top of the world. Her first book, Hot Diggity Dog: The History of the Hot Dog hits the shelves this month.

    “I wrote the book in the fall of 2005. I had heard the story on National Public Radio, talking about how Americans eat two billion hot dogs in the month of July,” Sylver said. “That got me thinking, wow, that’s just a crazy number. I thought about kids and who doesn’t like hot dogs. I started doing some research. It seemed that everything I looked at was more interesting than the last.” Her research even turned up that hot dogs were eaten in space during the Apollo 11 trip, the first time man walked on the moon.

    While researching and writing the book was quick, the road to publication wasn’t. Sylver met an editor from Dutton Children’s Books at a Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Conference a few months later and he told her to send him the book.

    She already had sent out a few queries to publishing companies to gauge interest in the manuscript.

    “There was one very small publishing company that liked it and had it under consideration when I sent it to Mark [McVeigh],” she said. “When I met him and told him about it, he said, ‘wouldn’t you rather publish with a big publishing company.’”

    So she wrote the small company to withdraw it from consideration. There may have been times when she wasn’t sure if she had done the right thing, because the publication process stalled. It took almost a year before the editor came back with a formal offer. The initial editing process was quick, but the search for just the right illustrator was lengthy.

    “I think I’m lucky to be paired with Elwood Smith. His illustrations are fun,” she said. “Every time I flip the page, there is something new every time you look through it.” Just when it seemed all systems were go, the editor left to go to a new publishing house. The result was like starting all over again.

    “I had a new editor who wanted me to make the book much shorter, which I did. Then they said they wanted the book to be longer with more fun facts. I did more research found out more fun little things,” Sylver said. “I broadened the scope a little bit. There is a page I talk about how a hot dog is a staple at a baseball game in America. We went into how if you went to a baseball game, what you would have there. It talks about other countries, other cultures. It adds some more appeal.”

    That appeal has resulted in good reviews across the board, which makes the book viable for schools and libraries. It also can be found in local bookstores and online.

    Sylver will have her first signing at Books and Books, 265 Aragon Ave. in Coral Gables on May 22 at 11 a.m. Naturally hot dogs are on the menu. She also will sign on June 8 at 7:30 p.m. at Barnes and Noble, 12405 N. Kendall Dr.

    Sylver is giving away autographed copies of Hot Diggity Dog on her website at < www.adriennesylver.com >

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    Village partners with local firm to put businesses ‘on the map’

    Palmetto Bay is in the early stages of developing the premier edition of a colorful, fold-out village map to be distributed within the municipality and at other strategic points throughout South-Dade in early 2010.

    Business advertisers currently are being invited to participate as only about 35 preferential display-ad slots are available per year.

    This program is the cornerstone of the village’s promotion of businesses and attractions in Palmetto Bay, thereby literally putting Palmetto Bay “on the map” for use by local residents and visitors to South Florida.

    By partnering with a firm called Miami Maps, more than 75,000 maps will be produced and updated annually, partly in a “green” attempt to encourage residents to buy locally (whereby reducing their carbon footprint), but also to set the stage for the wave of anticipated development in Palmetto Bay’s emerging downtown district and northward along the US1 commercial corridor Miami Maps has produced this valuable marketing tool for several other South Florida communities during the past 20 years. Miami Maps currently produces maps for Coral Gables, Coconut Grove, Key Biscayne and Brickell. Merchants located in Palmetto Bay will receive a free standard listing inside the map. Visit < www.miamimaps.com > for an example of these informative and useful maps.

    Maps are distributed throughout the year to local businesses and residents, stores, restaurants, Village Hall, hotel concierge desks, the Deering Estate at Cutler, and many more locations. The maps also will be available at village events and will be mailed to all residences located within the village.

    Merchants and business owners wishing to participate should contact Alex Schreer at 305- 962-2727 or Marshall Steingold at 305-710- 2720, via email at < as@miamimaps.com > or < ms@miamimaps.com >, or visit Miami Maps on the Web. Display advertising is available. Join other businesses and become a part of an excellent way to promote your business — and our wonderful community.

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