Today Begins Pandemic Hurricane Season 2: Electric Boogaloo
Just when you thought life was getting easier, today marks the beginning of Florida’s second hurricane season amid the pandemic.
Just when you thought life was getting easier, today marks the beginning of Florida’s second hurricane season amid the pandemic.
For years, no one knew for sure where the monkeys came from or how they came to drive Dania Beach bananas.
Turkey Point will be subject to elevated scrutiny from federal regulators after a series of unplanned reactor shutdowns.
In the tiny municipality of North Bay Village, commissioners are taking bold action against scat scofflaws.
Residents near the Calusa Country Club say they have evidence of an endangered bat on the site.
The National Weather Service continues to issue flood warnings in Miami-Dade and Broward as storms and showers move inland.
Already this year, at least 211 manatees have died in Florida, including 12 killed by watercraft.
Florida once again absolutely refuses to conform to the national narrative.
Nobody asked for a new bloodthirsty mosquito, but here we are.
Industry watchdogs are questioning why so many things went wrong at Turkey Point last summer.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reported 25 manatee deaths in Miami-Dade County.
Athlete and activist Andrew Otazo cleared out nearly 2,000 pounds of garbage and lugged it to the mainland on a kayak.
New Times goes hunting for Miami’s new urban legend: Iguana Bandannicus, the bandannaed iguana.
Environmental groups have cited concerns about a potential oil spill.
An old water main burst in downtown Miami, spewing sediment into Biscayne Bay and pausing Metromover service in the area.
The helicopter gender reveal was dubbed “THE MOST EPIC REVEAL EVER.”
The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season shattered record after record.
The mishaps collectively discharged nearly 1.7 million gallons of untreated wastewater into Biscayne Bay.
Instead of reading the room and graciously calling it a night, that straggler Eta is just going to kind of… hang out for a bit.
Eta could deliver between six and eight inches of rain to Miami-Dade, with up to 15 inches in isolated areas.
A new study finds that the Miami Wilds project, due for a vote October 20, may threaten endangered bats with extinction.
“I wanna see them arrest me for trying to feed starving cats,” says 74-year-old Arlene Bercun.