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As FIU fades, push for a Trump presidential library shifts to downtown Miami

As FIU fades, push for a Trump presidential library shifts to downtown Miami

Miami Heralda day ago

Could Miami's Freedom Tower have a MAGA tourist attraction as a neighbor?
Eric Trump, the presidential son helping vet sites for his father's future library, earlier this year visited parking lots next to the historic building in downtown Miami as part of the vetting process for potential sites, a Trump Organization lawyer said.
Multiple sources said the land on Biscayne Boulevard, owned by Miami Dade College, is being eyed as a potential library site — with enough space to display the Boeing 747 jet that President Donald Trump secured for free from Qatar and may want to be a star feature of his post-presidential center.
Miami Dade College also owns the Freedom Tower, an iconic building that once welcomed Cubans fleeing the Fidel Castro dictatorship. Representatives of the school were not available for comment Thursday.
While Trump's Miami backers are trying to woo the library their way, the president himself appears to have a favorite site about 45 miles away. The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Trump's team is close to an agreement to build his presidential library on free land provided by Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. Sources familiar with the Miami push confirm that FAU looks like the preferred choice, and there's an effort to pitch the downtown site as a satellite location aimed at Miami's steady stream of vacationers and business travelers.
'It's going to be smaller and more of a tourist attraction,' one source familiar with the plan said.
But a Miami lawyer representing Trump's resort business said he sees the two-acre Miami Dade College site between Northeast Fifth Street and Northeast Sixth Street as still viable for the main library.
'In my opinion, the Miami Dade College property is the most impressive site for a presidential library,' said Felix Lasarte, the Miami lawyer Trump hired to help secure zoning approval for an expansion of the Trump National Doral golf resort after he left office in 2021. 'It would become an iconic library instantly.'
Lasarte said he has remained in touch with Trump after the 2024 election but works mostly with the Trump Organization as its Miami lawyer.
The leading position for FAU reflects what multiple sources say is the increasingly fading position for Florida International University, the other state school on the short list of potential Trump library sites.
The Miami Herald reported in January that FAU in Palm Beach County was considered the Trump favorite, with FIU hoping to convince the president's camp that Miami-Dade County's global appeal, proximity to the Trump Doral resort and newly red politics made FIU the better pick. In November, Trump was the first Republican presidential candidate to win Miami-Dade since 1988, beating Kamala Harris by 11 points. Palm Beach County remained blue, with Harris beating Trump by less than a point. Eric Trump has also visited FIU as part of the library hunt, Lasarte said.
But FAU sits less than 25 miles from Trump's home at the private club he owns in Palm Beach, Mar-a-Lago. Miami is about a 70-mile drive from the palatial oceanfront property.
FIU representatives were not available for comment on Thursday. Lasarte said he's been pitching FIU as a good option — including the potential for a library on the school's waterfront campus north of Miami. 'Obviously, a site at FIU would be great, too,' he said.
So far, the known potential sites for a Trump library are owned by schools under state control, meaning Gov. Ron DeSantis would be playing the role of land benefactor if the Trump camp lands a deal before the term-limited governor exits in 2026.
An FAU spokesperson was not available for comment Thursday.
If Miami Dade College would try to match FAU with free land, a Trump library would mean giving up potential development profits for the commuter school. The parking lots by the Freedom Tower sit across from the new $6 billion Miami Worldcenter retail complex in the heart of downtown Miami.
A Trump library downtown would also bring a tribute to a president presiding over a massive deportation effort next to an iconic structure linked to Miami's historic embrace of immigrants. One of Miami's first skyscrapers, the building served as the Cuban Refugee Center in the 1960s and '70s.
Florida's Republican-controlled Legislature has been trying to coax Trump, a longtime New Yorker who's now a Florida resident, into building his library in the Sunshine State. Earlier this year, the Legislature passed a law barring local governments from passing ordinances to restrict presidential libraries, making the state the entity that would have authority over a future Trump library.
'The entire intent behind the bill was really to try and roll out the welcome mat for Florida's first presidential library,' said state Sen. Jason Brodeur, a Republican from Central Florida and the bill's sponsor.
Should the downtown Miami site win Trump's favor, the resulting building in the city's downtown would likely be far taller than what would be built at FAU, a suburban campus next to the Boca Raton Airport.
As Lasarte envisions it, a downtown Miami Trump library would rise up south of the Freedom Tower. While he declined to get into the specifics of the kind of structure being pitched for the location, Lasarte said the design would accommodate a presidential plane if Trump can take it with him when he leaves office.
'I think you can fit an Air Force One on that site,' he said.
Miami Herald staff writer Garrett Shanley contributed to this report.

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Why Musk's feud with Trump could jeopardize his business empire

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Why Musk's feud with Trump could jeopardize his business empire

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Federal cuts ripple through bioscience hub in Hamilton
Federal cuts ripple through bioscience hub in Hamilton

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Federal cuts ripple through bioscience hub in Hamilton

Protesters march in downtown Hamilton. (Photo by Kathryn Houghton for KFF Health News). HAMILTON — Scientists are often careful to take off their work badges when they leave the campus of one of the nation's top research facilities, here in southwestern Montana's Bitterroot Valley. It's a reflection of the long-standing tension caused by Rocky Mountain Laboratories' improbable location in this conservative, blue-collar town of 5,000 that was built on logging. Many residents are proud of the internationally recognized research unfolding at the National Institutes of Health facility and acknowledge that Rocky Mountain Labs has become an economic driver for Hamilton. But a few locals resent what they consider the elitist scientists at the facility, which has employed about 500 people in recent years. Or they fear the contagious pathogens studied there could escape the labs' well-protected walls. 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Postdoctoral scientists just starting their careers are seeing options dwindle. Some workers whose employment contracts expire within days or weeks have been in the dark about whether they'll be renewed. At least one Rocky Mountain Labs scientist moved to another country to research infectious disease, citing 'current turmoil,' according to an email sent from the scientist to co-workers that was reviewed by KFF Health News. 'The remaining staff has been discredited, disrespected, and discouraged from remaining in public service,' Hasenkrug said. The National Institutes of Health is the largest public funder of biomedical research in the world. It has 27 institutes and centers focused on understanding illness and disabilities and improving health. The agency's research has helped lead to vaccines against major diseases — from smallpox to COVID — and has been behind the majority of medicines approved for the U.S. market. That research also generated more than $94.5 billion in new economic activity nationwide, according to United for Medical Research, a coalition of research groups and advocates. The Trump administration aims to eliminate roughly 1,200 jobs at the NIH and shrink its budget by 40%. The administration's budget proposal to cut NIH funding calls the agency's spending 'wasteful,' deems its research 'risky,' and accuses it of promoting 'dangerous ideologies.' It's a dramatic political turnabout for the NIH, which for decades enjoyed bipartisan support in Washington. From 2015 to 2023, its annual budget grew by more than $17 billion. As of 2023, Rocky Mountain Labs was one of only 51 facilities in the world with the highest level of biosafety precautions, according to the Global BioLabs mapping project. In April, HHS indefinitely stalled work at another of those labs, the Integrated Research Facility in Frederick, Maryland, Wired reported. Kennedy has said the nation should pause funding infectious disease research, and the White House has said it plans to intensify scrutiny of gain-of-function research, which involves altering a pathogen to study its spread. Hamilton, in Ravalli County, is a place of scientists, ranchers, and outdoor recreationists. Here, 1 in 8 people live below the federal poverty line. Nearly 70% of county residents who participated in the 2024 presidential election voted for Trump, and Trump signs still dot U.S. Highway 93 leading to town. In the thick of the COVID pandemic, the sheriff and county commissioners refused to enforce a statewide mandate to mask in public spaces while Rocky Mountain Labs researchers worked to understand the virus. The lab's work dates to 1900, and even early on it was controversial. Rocky Mountain spotted fever was killing people in the valley. Researchers found the cause — ticks — and worked to eradicate the disease-carrying bugs by requiring ranchers to treat their cattle. That created resentment among locals who 'already harbored a healthy distrust of government-imposed programs,' according to an NIH account. The tension came to a head in 1913 when a 'dipping vat' used to chemically treat cattle was blown up with dynamite and another damaged with sledgehammers. Now, some residents and local leaders are worried about the economic consequences of an exodus of federal workers and their salaries. Most of the county is government-managed public land, and the first wave of federal cuts hit U.S. Forest Service workers who do everything from clear trails to fight wildfires. Rocky Mountain Labs generates hundreds of millions of dollars for the local economy by creating more work for industries including construction and bringing more people into the city's shops, a 2023 University of Montana study found. The rural community is also a base for international vaccine developer GSK due to the lab's presence. Kathleen Quinn, a vice president of communications for the company, said GSK's business with government agencies 'continues as usual' for now amid federal changes and that it's 'too early to say what any longer-term impact could be.' 'Our community is impacted more than most,' said City Councilor Darwin Ernst. He spoke during an overflowing March town hall to discuss the federal government cuts. Hundreds of people turned out on the weeknight asking city councilors to do something. Ernst, a former researcher at the lab who now works as a real estate broker and appraiser, said in an interview he's starting to see more homes enter the market, which he attributed to the atmosphere of uncertainty and former federal workers' having to find jobs elsewhere. 'Someone recently left with her entire family. Because of the layoffs, they can't afford to live here,' he said. 'Some people retire here but that's not everyone.' Jane Shigley said she's been a Hamilton resident for more than 30 years and initially thought the government would find 'some inefficiencies, no big deal.' But now she's worried about her hometown's future. 'Something's going on that we can't control,' Shigley said. 'And the people that it's happening to aren't allowed to talk to us about it.' The City Council sent a letter to federal officials in April asking for formal consultation prior to any significant changes, given Hamilton's 'interdependence' with Rocky Mountain Labs and the federally controlled lands surrounding Hamilton. As of May, city leaders hadn't received a response. People in town are split on how badly the federal cuts will affect Hamilton. Julie Foster, executive director of the Ravalli County Economic Development Authority, said the community survived the decline of logging, and she thinks Rocky Mountain Labs will survive, too. 'It will be here. There may be bumps in the road, but this is a resilient place,' Foster said. Even amid the cuts, Rocky Mountain Labs is in the process of a building expansion that, so far, hasn't stopped. And researchers' work continues. This spring, scientists there helped make the first identification in Montana of a species of tick known to carry Lyme disease. KFF Health News correspondent Rae Ellen Bichell contributed to this report. KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

Corporate support for Pride is dwindling nationwide. In NC, it's a mixed bag
Corporate support for Pride is dwindling nationwide. In NC, it's a mixed bag

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Corporate support for Pride is dwindling nationwide. In NC, it's a mixed bag

Pride Month has long been an occasion for companies and institutions to display their support for the LGBTQ+ community, whether it be for profit or for principle. It's often a trivial gesture, but it can have a meaningful impact for a community that had long been relegated to the shadows of society. But more recently, that support has waned amid a regressive political climate that has made many companies rethink their commitments to diversity, equity and inclusion. A survey conducted by the national risk management firm Gravity Research found that around 39% of companies said they would reduce their engagement around Pride Month this year. Some of the top reasons for the change were the Trump administration, conservative activists and conservative policymakers, the survey found. Major corporations, including Mastercard and Pepsi, have pulled their sponsorship of major Pride events or avoided the topic on social media. In North Carolina, the results are mixed. Take Lowe's, which is based in Mooresville. Lowe's hasn't yet acknowledged Pride Month on its social media — a marked difference from past years when it openly embraced the occasion. That's not unexpected, given that Lowe's has already announced an end to many of its DEI initiatives. Last year, the company said it would no longer participate in surveys conducted by LGBTQ+ groups and ended its support of outside events like festivals, parades and fairs. (Lowe's had previously been a longtime supporter of Charlotte's annual Pride festival.) But surprising or not, it's reflective of a growing trend away from publicly embracing the LGBTQ+ community. Charlotte-based Bank of America also has remained quiet about Pride so far. In past years, Bank of America has been vocal about celebrating the occasion on social media and honoring its LGBTQ+ employees with the hashtag #BofAPride, but that support has been absent this year. Compare that with Truist, which posted in celebration of Pride on its Facebook and Instagram accounts. For North Carolina's professional sports teams, the results are mixed, too. While the Carolina Panthers and Charlotte Hornets both celebrated the start of Pride on social media, the Carolina Hurricanes have not. In fact, the team has remained largely silent about Pride since 2023 — the Hurricanes are one of just a handful NHL teams to not acknowledge it this year — a decision that has disappointed many fans who feel a simple acknowledgment of the occasion is not too much to ask. The same goes for the state's largest cities. The city of Charlotte posted on its social media accounts at the beginning of Pride, in addition to updating its profile picture to a rainbow version of the city's crown logo. The cities of Raleigh and Greensboro, however, did not. This move toward silence comes at a time when things like Pride celebrations and flags are under attack from lawmakers across the state. Legislation has been introduced at the state level that would effectively ban the display of Pride flags in government buildings, while some counties have passed ordinances governing public events that some interpret as targeting Pride events or drag performances. Of course, a social media post is just that: a social media post. It's not going to defeat anti-LGBTQ legislation, or save gay kids from being bullied, or change the country's attitude towards transgender people — at least not on its own. From some companies, it's just a lot of empty words or glorified virtue signaling. But public support for any marginalized group can be meaningful, especially when it happens on a large scale. And when institutions cower in the face of political pressure to stay silent, they're just letting the bullies win. It makes real change all the more difficult. Ultimately, it's not the silence that is the problem. It's the fact that the silence is new — a sudden absence of the public support and acceptance that existed before. It feels like another step backward during a time when progress feels like it's constantly stuck in reverse.

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