UNGUARDED: How a tight-knit network of Miami real estate players bought and sold Guardianship homes for profit (www.wlrn.org)
With Miami−Dade officials continuing their investigation of the Guardianship Program of Dade County and its real estate transactions, WLRN has learned that two companies — linked to Miami City Attorney Victoria Méndez — purchased and sold for hefty gains nearly three dozen properties that were once owned by the nonprofit,...
Miami's mango trade: Swap your excess fruit for bread (www.wlrn.org)
Zak the Baker in Wynwood is offering a trade for anyone who has excess fruit in their backyard. Customers can exchange mangos for bread.
In Miami, Trump's ardent backers are a sign of the city's rightward shift (www.wlrn.org)
The federal charges against former President Donald Trump over classified documents have propelled the city of Miami to the center of a storyline that had been thought to be unfolding in Washington.
After rowdy town hall, Broward school board tilts against clear backpacks (www.wlrn.org)
Hundreds of people turned out for a town hall meeting on school safety hosted by the Broward County school district on Monday. The vast majority of speakers railed against a plan to require students to use clear backpacks — a proposal which now may be scrapped.
In much of Miami Spanish-language media, Trump is the Latin-style victim (www.wlrn.org)
Kids with disabilities housed in Broward nursing homes could return to their families (www.wlrn.org)
A civil rights lawsuit filed by the Justice Department against Florida health regulators a decade ago has finally gone to trial. Carol Marbin Miller, the deputy investigations editor at the Miami Herald, spoke to WLRN about the case, and her eye-opening reporting on the living conditions of these children.
Activists push Broward sheriff to improve seldom-used arrest diversion program (www.wlrn.org)
A group of activists and religious leaders say thousands of Broward residents, mostly people of color, are being routinely sent to jail for minor offenses by police officers who rarely use a program to keep people from ending up behind bars.