logo
In first Miami-Dade fluoride meeting, ‘gut feelings and misguided passion'

In first Miami-Dade fluoride meeting, ‘gut feelings and misguided passion'

Miami Herald11-04-2025

Fluoride fiasco
After a Miami-Dade Commission meeting a month ago, in which the only invited guests were Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and UF researcher Ashley Malin speaking against fluoride, the commission rightfully admitted they had not heard enough information from 'both sides.'
As a dentist and oral surgeon practicing in North Miami Beach for more than 30 years, I testified before the commission on April 1, in which 'both sides' were invited. However, it was readily apparent the commissioners, in particular the sponsor of the bill to remove fluoride, were not interested in hearing information from both sides.
Public comments were allowed, but only for one minute per speaker. It is impossible to deliver any meaningful message on the decades of research-proven community health benefits of fluoride (at the low level of 0.7 ppm) in one minute, nor refute false and unsubstantiated claims, lacking any evidence, from the same anti-fluoride activists seen at all such meetings of late.
A town hall-type meeting was suggested for more thorough discussion and sharing of information, but fell completely on deaf ears. Neither facts nor truth mattered, only gut feelings and misguided passion.
Richard A. Mufson,
Sunny Isles Beach
Celebration season
During this time of the year, people across South Florida will be observing major religious holidays. Our neighbors and friends will be gathering for Eid al-Fitr, Passover and Easter — each elevating a sense of celebration, freedom, liberation, renewal and hope.
As families and friends gather in homes and respective houses of worship, I hope those basic religious values are extended to those who are now experiencing fear and oppression. Keep in mind the families being separated, the men who are being shipped to prison hellholes, people persecuted for who they are and what they read, think, say. During these difficult times, be that person of faith who elevates the humanity in each of us. Reject hate and fear, keep spreading kindness and love.
Peace to all my fellow citizens as these major holidays are observed and celebrated.
Luis A. Hernandez,
Coconut Grove
Vote on fluoride
Politicians are making medical decisions based upon partisan ideas and unsubstantiated research. For 70 years, fluoride has been added to the water provided by Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department. Fluoride has been proven to prevent cavities in children and adults. Some but not all toothpaste has fluoride plus not everyone follows dentists' suggestions regarding proper brushing and flossing.
What is the reason for even considering removing fluoride from our everyday water supply?
The Miami-Dade County Board of Commissioners voted to eliminate fluoride in our county's water based upon the urging of questionable sources of information. Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert Kennedy, Jr., have forwarded questionable theories about fluoride. County commissioners did not hear any testimony from proponents of fluoride before making their decision.
I hope County Mayor Levine Cava vetoes the commission's vote and puts it on the ballot in a future election. Let the voters make the decision to remove or leave fluoride in the county water supply. Let's use common sense in this decision.
Allan Tavss,
Kendall
Safe or not?
Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo said that adding fluoride to our drinking water is unsafe and should be discontinued. The dental community disagrees and says that science shows that fluoride is helpful in preventing tooth decay.
Ladapo's response is that fluoride found in toothpaste will make up for the loss of having it in our drinking water.
If fluoride is so unsafe that we need to stop adding it to our water supply, why is it okay to have it in our toothpaste?
Can't have it both ways.
Miles Woolley,
Kendall
Baseball on TV
The Marlins beat the visiting New York Mets the other night but I didn't see the game; I watched the Tampa Bay Rays play the Pittsburgh Pirates. I am still a Marlins fan, but I have to pay to watch them — through a subscription service on Prime — while the Rays games I get for free. I have not read any stories about this illogical situation, making me wonder if local interest in the Marlins has reached a new low.
Are we the only fans in the country who have to pay to watch their hometown team on TV? How does this affect the franchise, which, I always heard, didn't worry about poor attendance at games because its main revenue came from television?
Unless things change, I'll get to know the Rays better than the Marlins. They're playing this season in the Yankees spring training stadium in Tampa (due to hurricane damage to Tropicana Field), so at least I'll see the game played as it should be — under a summer sky.
Thomas Swick,
Fort Lauderdale
Struggling media
As someone who has lived under a repressive regime, I appreciate what Voice of America (VOA) means. Founded by the federal government as an anti-propaganda tool against Nazi misinformation, it later became the voice of the free press for people living in countries without it.
In places like Russia and Cuba, people could tune in to hear what was really happening around the world when they were only being fed what state-endorsed newspapers, radio and TV stations were allowed to say. It was a lifeline for those living under repressive regimes.
Last week, President Trump's executive order aimed to dismantle VOA. This is only one of many recent attacks on the media by our government. One of the first things authoritarian regimes do is abolish freedom of the press.
The press is the conscience of a country. When the government tampers with it without opposition, we become a country of zombies who either follow the autocratic rules blindly for fear of reprisal, or we leave. A third choice only happened once, more than a century ago. Let's hope we don't have to go that far.
Betty Heisler,
Aventura
Right a wrong
An old adage states, 'If it ain't broke, don't fix it.' Fluoridation of water is one of the most successful public health advancements of the 20th century. Efforts to discontinue this well-proven health benefit is nothing less than an assault on lower income families by privatizing a public good.
Babies will need fluoride vitamin supplements, the price of toothpaste keeps rising and the population that most needs it cannot brush their teeth efficiently. It is a lose-lose deal. I hope Miami-Dade County Mayor Levine Cava has the courage to veto this unnecessary pratfall.
Frederic A. Friedman,
Miami
Insurance transparency
There are so many insurance reform bills before Florida lawmakers right now it's hard to keep up with all of them. But I'm particularly interested in the ones that call for transparency within the industry.
For years, Floridians have paid the highest homeowners insurance premiums in the nation not because of exposure to hurricanes; homeowners were told too many lawsuits and fraudulent roof replacement scams were to blame.
When the crisis hit a boiling point in 2022, Gov. DeSantis and Florida lawmakers passed a bill reducing excessive litigation based on the insurance industry's explanation of the issue. But now a report has come out revealing that in 2022, the insurance industry may have been playing us all by running a sophisticated sort of shell game, crying poor and raising premiums while hiding billions in profits by funneling money into affiliate companies.
This shameful practice and the industry report are now under investigation but that doesn't help the people who had to move out of the state or lost homes as a result of excessive premiums. Two bills introduced during this legislative session, Senate Bill 1656 and House 1429, call for insurers to file a 'transparency report' when filing rate requests with regulators. These companies would have to break down costs like profits, affiliate payments, litigation fees and claims.
It makes you wonder why we didn't have a transparency system in place to begin with. The time has come to make it law now.
John Grant
retired Florida senator,
president of Seniors Across America

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute
Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute

San Francisco Chronicle​

time25 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute

BAGHDAD (AP) — Tensions have escalated between Iraq's central government in Baghdad and the semiautonomous Kurdish region in the country's north in a long-running dispute over the sharing of oil revenues. The central government has accused the Kurdish regional authorities of making illegal deals and facilitating oil smuggling. Baghdad cut off funding for public sector salaries in the Kurdish region ahead of the Eid al-Adha holiday. Kurdish authorities called the move 'collective punishment' and threatened to retaliate. A long-running dispute It's the latest flare-up in a long-running dispute between officials in Baghdad and Irbil, the seat of the Kurdish regional government, over sharing of oil revenues. In 2014, the Kurdish region decided to unilaterally export oil through an independent pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan. The central government considers it illegal for Irbil to export oil without going through the Iraqi national oil company and filed a case against Turkey in the International Court of Arbitration, arguing that Turkey was violating the provisions of the Iraqi-Turkish pipeline agreement signed in 1973. Iraq stopped sending oil through the pipeline in March 2023 after the arbitration court ruled in Baghdad's favor. Attempts to reach a deal to restart exports have repeatedly stalled. Last month, Prime Minister Masrour Barzani of the Iraqi Kurdish regional government traveled to Washington, where he inked two major energy deals with U.S. companies. The federal government in Baghdad then sued in an Iraqi court, asserting that it was illegal for the regional government to make the deals without going through Baghdad. Iraq cuts off funds for public employees in the Kurdish region The Iraqi Ministry of Finance announced a decision last month to halt funding for salaries of public sector employees in the Kurdish region. The move sparked widespread outrage in Irbil, triggering strong political and public reactions. The ministry said in a statement that the decision was due to the Kurdish regional authorities' 'failure to hand over oil and non-oil revenues to the federal treasury, as stipulated in the federal budget laws.' It added that any transfer of funds would be conditional on 'the region's commitment to transparency and financial accountability.' The federal Ministry of Oil accused Irbil of failing to deliver crude oil produced in the region's fields to the ministry for export through the state-run SOMO company, which it said had led to massive financial losses amounting to billions of dollars. The ministry warned that 'continued non-compliance jeopardizes Iraq's international reputation and obligations, forcing the federal government to reduce oil production in other provinces to stay within Iraq's OPEC quota — which includes Iraqi Kurdish production, regardless of its legality.' Accusations of oil smuggled out of the Kurdish region Baghdad has also accused Irbil of smuggling oil out of the country. An Iraqi official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly said the government had tracked 240 cases of illegal border crossings from Iraq's Kurdish region into Iran between Dec. 25, 2024, and May 24, 2025, aimed at smuggling oil derivatives. The Kurdish region's Ministry of Natural Resources in a statement called those allegations 'a smokescreen to distract from widespread corruption and smuggling in other parts of Iraq. The KRG agreed to sell its oil through SOMO, opened an escrow account, and handed over revenues — yet Baghdad failed to meet its financial obligations.' It accused the federal government of being responsible for the halt in oil exports via Turkey due to the lawsuit it filed in 2023 and said the Kurdish region had delivered over 11 million barrels of oil to the Ministry of Oil without receiving any financial compensation. The ministry accused Baghdad of 'violating the constitution and pursuing a deliberate policy of collective punishment and starvation against the people" of the Kurdish region through the halt in funding for salaries. Barzani in a statement on the eve of the Eid al-Adha holiday described the withholding of salaries as an 'unjust and oppressive decision' and a 'policy of mass starvation' comparable to the chemical attacks and 'genocide' launched by Iraq's former longtime strongman ruler, Saddam Hussein, against the Kurds. The Iraqi Kurdish people "have resisted with steadfastness and courage in the face of all forms of pressure and tyranny' and 'regret was the fate of the tyrants," he said. In the meantime, residents of the Kurdish region feel caught in the middle of the yearslong political dispute once again. Saman Ali Salah, a public school teacher from the city of Sulaimaniyah, said the salary cutoff comes at a particularly bad time for him — his daughter was hit by a car 40 days ago and is still in the hospital. He blamed both Baghdad and Irbil for the situation. 'All the money I had was spent on transportation from the house to the hospital and I haven't paid my rent for the past two months," Salah said. 'I don't know what to do. All I can say is that God will take revenge on these so-called officials on Judgement Day.'

Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute
Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Public employees in Iraq's Kurdish region caught in the middle of Baghdad-Irbil oil dispute

BAGHDAD (AP) — Tensions have escalated between Iraq's central government in Baghdad and the semi-autonomous Kurdish region in the country's north in a long-running dispute over the sharing of oil revenues. The central government has accused the Kurdish regional authorities of making illegal deals and facilitating oil smuggling. Baghdad cut off funding for public sector salaries in the Kurdish region ahead of the Eid al-Adha holiday. Kurdish authorities called the move 'collective punishment' and threatened to retaliate. A long-running dispute It's the latest flare-up in a long-running dispute between officials in Baghdad and Irbil, the seat of the Kurdish regional government, over sharing of oil revenues. In 2014, the Kurdish region decided to unilaterally export oil through an independent pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan. The central government considers it illegal for Irbil to export oil without going through the Iraqi national oil company and filed a case against Turkey in the International Court of Arbitration, arguing that Turkey was violating the provisions of the Iraqi-Turkish pipeline agreement signed in 1973. Iraq stopped sending oil through the pipeline in March 2023 after the arbitration court ruled in Baghdad's favor. Attempts to reach a deal to restart exports have repeatedly stalled. Last month, Prime Minister Masrour Barzani of the Kurdistan Regional Government traveled to Washington, where he inked two major energy deals with U.S. companies. The federal government in Iraq then sued in an Iraqi court, asserting that it was illegal for the regional government to make the deals without going through Baghdad. Iraq cuts off funds for public employees in Kurdistan The Iraqi Ministry of Finance announced a decision last month to halt funding for salaries of public sector employees in the Kurdistan Region. The move sparked widespread outrage in Irbil, triggering strong political and public reactions. The ministry said in a statement that the decision was due to the Kurdish regional authorities' 'failure to hand over oil and non-oil revenues to the federal treasury, as stipulated in the federal budget laws.' It added that any transfer of funds would be conditional on 'the region's commitment to transparency and financial accountability.' The federal Ministry of Oil accused Irbil of failing to deliver crude oil produced in the region's fields to the ministry for export through the state-run SOMO company, which it said had led to massive financial losses amounting to billions of dollars. The ministry warned that 'continued non-compliance jeopardizes Iraq's international reputation and obligations, forcing the federal government to reduce oil production in other provinces to stay within Iraq's OPEC quota — which includes Kurdistan's production, regardless of its legality.' Accusations of oil smuggled out of Kurdistan Baghdad has also accused Irbil of smuggling oil out of the country. An Iraqi official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly said the government had tracked 240 cases of illegal border crossings from Iraq's Kurdistan Region into Iran between Dec. 25, 2024, and May 24, 2025, aimed at smuggling oil derivatives. The Kurdish region's Ministry of Natural Resources in a statement called those allegations 'a smokescreen to distract from widespread corruption and smuggling in other parts of Iraq. The KRG agreed to sell its oil through SOMO, opened an escrow account, and handed over revenues — yet Baghdad failed to meet its financial obligations.' It accused the federal government of being responsible for the halt in oil exports via Turkey due to the lawsuit it filed in 2023 and said the Kurdish region had delivered over 11 million barrels of oil to the Ministry of Oil without receiving any financial compensation. The ministry accused Baghdad of 'violating the constitution and pursuing a deliberate policy of collective punishment and starvation against the people of the Kurdistan Region' through the halt in funding for salaries. Barzani in a statement on the eve of the Eid al-Adha holiday described the withholding of salaries as an 'unjust and oppressive decision' and a 'policy of mass starvation' comparable to the chemical attacks and 'genocide' launched by Iraq's former longtime strongman ruler, Saddam Hussein, against the Kurds. 'The people of Kurdistan have resisted with steadfastness and courage in the face of all forms of pressure and tyranny' and 'regret was the fate of the tyrants," he said. In the meantime, residents of the Kurdish region feel caught in the middle of the yearslong political dispute once again. Saman Ali Salah, a public school teacher from the city of Sulaimaniyah, said the salary cutoff comes at a particularly bad time for him — his daughter was hit by a car 40 days ago and is still in the hospital. He blamed both Baghdad and Irbil for the situation. 'All the money I had was spent on transportation from the house to the hospital and I haven't paid my rent for the past two months," Salah said. 'I don't know what to do. All I can say is that God will take revenge on these so-called officials on Judgement Day.' ___ Associated Press journalist Salam Salim in Irbil, Iraq contributed to this report. Qassim Abdul-zahra, The Associated Press 擷取數據時發生錯誤 登入存取你的投資組合 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤

Former NOAA employees speaks out against budget cuts heading into hurricane season
Former NOAA employees speaks out against budget cuts heading into hurricane season

CBS News

time14 hours ago

  • CBS News

Former NOAA employees speaks out against budget cuts heading into hurricane season

Not too long ago, Andy Hazelton was gathering data in a plane for NOAA. He had just joined the agency in October 2024, but he was let go in February 2025. He doesn't know why. "We're public safety, and what we do, it matters for everybody, like I said. It's not political," Hazelton said. John Cortinas said he retired from the NOAA office in Virginia Key after cuts were being made. He said he didn't like the direction the agency was headed. "I was worried about what was happening and what we see happening, and I didn't want to be a part of that," Cortinas said. According to CBS News, about 2200 NOAA employees have been fired or have taken buyouts since January. About 500 people worked at the National Weather Service, which oversees the National Hurricane Center. A protest was held in downtown Miami about the cuts. "The work we do in a lot of ways pays for itself and is really one of the most efficient things out there," Hazelton said. "Many of these cuts happened just before hurricane season. And now that we're in hurricane season, many of these protestors feel these cuts make them vulnerable." CBS News asked the National Hurricane Center Director, Mike Brennan, about the agency's preparedness for storm season. "We're fully operational, ready for the hurricane season. Our products, services and warnings are going to go out as they always do," Brennan told CBS News. But protesters feel the cuts are an attack on science. "To think that our federal government would even consider cutting scientific research that could literally be life-saving for so many millions of people that live along the coastline here in Florida... It's just appalling and it's shocking," said Raquel Pacheco, of Indivisible Miami, which is a progressive, grassroots, political organization. The Trump administration said the cuts are part of a broader strategy to cut federal spending and streamline the federal workforce.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store