The 11 Sports Moments Miami Is Thankful for This Year
Let’s relive and highlight the Miami sports moments we’re most thankful for in 2020.
Let’s relive and highlight the Miami sports moments we’re most thankful for in 2020.
The workers say staffing cuts in recent months have meant there isn’t always someone available to cover for a sick employee.
Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava is already turning off some of her staunchest supporters after her first week on the job.
Last week, Voters Opinion was abruptly shut down.
While the NYU researchers say further study is needed, they suggest Florida might be better off without the wrestling shows.
To recap: The Dolphins came into Mile High Stadium high on life and left dazed and confused.
Mr. Please Clap did not take the criticism too well.
The 100 or so homeless people who live in Miami Springs weren’t eligible for the giveaway.
Cava says she will make good on her campaign promises with the help of a pro-transit nonprofit and its appropriately named plan.
What would some of our favorite Miami sports stars show up with if we invited them to dinner? We have some guesses.
With COVID-19 cases surging again in Florida, a Miami epidemiologist recommends virtual Thanksgiving gatherings.
They’re joining a “freedom squad” to fight against the Republican Party’s bogeyman — socialism in the Democratic Party.
After ten years of digging up public records and telling elected officials to go fuck themselves, blogger Al Crespo is retiring.
For the past ten years — ten very long, very wet years — residents have been complaining about flooding.
COVID-19 testing centers are opening across Miami-Dade and Broward as test supplies become available.
Both Fox News and CNN have seen enough. They’re calling it: The Miami Dolphins are a good football team.
Students tell New Times they’re concerned about the “slippery slope” of surveillance techniques.
Outgoing Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos A. Giménez is among those encouraging President Donald Trump not to concede.
Team hires longtime baseball exec Kim Ng as general manager.
In a dense, 37-page document, the Florida Department of Corrections laid out a series of new guidelines.
Miami organizations are collecting donations for Eta survivors in Nicaragua, Honduras, and Guatemala.
The mishaps collectively discharged nearly 1.7 million gallons of untreated wastewater into Biscayne Bay.