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😋 Where to get one of the best sandwiches in the U.S.
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😋 Where to get one of the best sandwiches in the U.S.

Snapped on a run. Serious inspo.

SQUAD.

If you’re looking to amp up your running game and need a squad to help you get there, we’ve got you covered.

We’ve put together a guide to running clubs across Miami that are all conveniently priced at the low cost of Free.99. All you’ve got to do is grab your sneaks and show up.

You can find the list of clubs and how to join here. If you think we missed one, let us know!

Made Possible by Baptist Health South Florida

 

WHAT'S NEW IN THE 305

Paved paradise. Preservationists in Coconut Grove scored a win recently – the zoning board said “nope” to a developer’s bid to demolish a century-old cottage so he could build a larger home on the lot. The Grove’s been in a fierce battle between old and new for years now, and it’s rare the preservationists win a round. The developer is expected to appeal the decision though. (Miami Herald)

Strut it out. Designer Naeem Khan – who has styled fierce ladies like Beyoncé and Michelle Obama – is ditching the Big Apple for the 305 and will be opening up a fashion school next door to his new headquarters. It will be part of Design and Architecture Senior High’s fashion program and Khan says he hopes it will take Miami’s fashion industry up a couple notches. (Miami Herald)

Boy bye. City of Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo, elected in November, will get to keep his seat. His opponent, Alfie Leon, took him to court, questioning whether Carollo had really met the residency requirements for the seat. A judge ruled Monday that Carollo was in the clear. (Miami Herald)

Sketch. Federal immigration agents boarded a Greyhound bus in Ft. Lauderdale this weekend and asked riders for proof of citizenship or residency. When they found a woman who had neither, they arrested her. As a cheap way to get between cities, Greyhound’s a popular choice for working immigrants – and popular among federal immigration agents looking for the undocumented. (Miami New Times)

Fixing the system. For substitute teachers, bus drivers, and other hourly employees of the Miami-Dade school system, Hurricane Irma was financially devastating. That’s because they don’t get paid when natural disasters force schools to close for days at a time. But the district is considering changes that would pay hourly workers next time around. (WLRN)

Don’t sleep on this. Felecia Hatcher and Derick Pearson, the cofounders of BlackTech Week and Code Fever, have just launched Tribe, a new coworking space in Overtown. They hope it will bring the long-marginalized neighborhood the same kind of creative collaboration that has helped the tech scene boom in places like Wynwood. (Biscayne Times)

High time. Plantain Action News is back with new episodes. This time it’s explaining why, more than a year after Floridians voted to allow medical marijuana, you still can’t actually get it anywhere (legally). P.S. The Plantain is satire. Sometimes people forget that.

THAT’S ALL FOR TODAY.

Now go get yourself an Enriqueta’s medianoche.

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