1655-4 African American/Black Boycott ❑ mh92
35 of 197, 1 Terms
mh92 MAYOR GELBER SAYS 05/31/1992
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1992, The Miami Herald
DATE: Sunday, May 31, 1992 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: OPIN LENGTH: 73 lines
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: Herald Staff
MEMO: OPINION
MAYOR GELBER SAYS
MIKVAH APPROVED
AFTER LEGAL ADVICE
Editor:
Permit me an additional note on your Par Three Mikvah story last week.
Although I do not speak for my colleagues, the issue for us was very clear.
A prior City Commission cons ated a exchange of p operty involving a
parcel of land encompassing a port on of ou. Par Three in exchange for a
Hebrew Academy building.
Deeds, transferring title, we e e .change. . The p. ior Ci y
Commission, as well as the public, as aware .f the 'ntent o ' the Hebrew
Academy to provide space for the mi 'v.. .
Presumably, our predecessors ac ed as the did because th city had
removed the mikvah from its present site and ha.. pro 'sed to he • f'nd a new
home. Our city attorney advised the present City o - 'ssion that e deed
transaction was final and no legal basis existed to repudiate the transfer of
title to the Hebrew Academy. We acted upon his legal advice.
Seymour Gelber
Mayor
Miami Beach
BEACH MAYOR SHOULD
DENOUNCE ORGANIZATION
Editor:
Sam Saferstein of the New Jewish Agenda adds a larger credibility problem
to Mayor Gelber when he supports Gelber's cave-in to the black boycott.
I wonder if Mayor Gelber and this supporters are pleased that he now is
supported by an organization whose agenda is, among other items, to have all
U.S. aid cut to Israel until it withdraws back to its 1967 borders?
Many of the NJA members also support what Castro has done to Cuba. I have
heard Jack Lieberman, a NJA member, talk on local talk shows about how much
better Cuba is now that Castro heads that government.
I have read the pamphlets of the NJA. It supports the African National
Congress.
It is pathetic that the New Jewish Agenda, Mayor Gelber and Nelson
Mandela are all Boys in the Hood together.
I call on Mayor Gelber to renounce the NJA's support at once, as
George Bush did of David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan.
Mayor Gelber is at least as wise our stupefied President.
Harvey Slavin
Aventura
HOTELS SHOULD PAY
RESORT TAXES WEEKLY
Editor:
I have a simple solution to the problem Miami Beach has with collecting
resort taxes from certain restaurants and hotels.
Why not require each hotel and restaurant to deposit on a weekly basis
all of the collected resort tax revenues? This money belongs to the city, not
to the respective businesses. This is similar to businesses depositing
withholding taxes collected from their employees, as well as the matching
funds they are required to pay.
There is no requirement for a new city ordinance; such a step can be
taken by administrative action.
I believe the city can save tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of
dollars.
To permit these businesses to become delinquent is not good business for
city taxpayers.
Gerald Schwartz
Miami Beach
TAG: 9205030487
96 of 197, 1 Terms
mh92 BEACH 04/27/1992
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1992, The Miami Herald
DATE: Monday, April 27, 1992 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 70 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: Nelson MANDELA
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: RALPH DE LA CRUZ Herald Staff Writer
BEACH
TO HONOR
MANDELA
TODAY
A proclamation by the city of Miami Beach declaring today as "Nelson
Mandela Day" will be read at the Council of Foundations convention in Miami
Beach, signaling a possible breakthrough in the 21-month-old convention
boycott by black groups.
"This is the first significant step that has been taken to redress the
snubbing of Nelson Mandela, " said H.T. Smith, one of the organizers of Boycott
Miami.
He called the proclamation "the biggest success on political issues" that
the boycott has had since the action began almost two years ago. "This just
goes to show you that patience and perseverance pays off, " he said.
The boycott began in July 1990, a month after government leaders in
Miami, Miami Beach and Dade County refused demands
from Smith and others to apologize for failing to officially welcome the South
African civil-rights leader to the area. Boycott Miami has said it will
continue to urge conventions to stay away until the perceived snub has been
addressed by honoring Mandela and creating more opportunities for blacks in
the tourism industry.
"This is only one issue, but obviously a very important issue, " Smith
said Sunday night.
Smith said the move should increase pressure on Metro-Dade Mayor Steve
Clark and Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez to make a similar gesture. "The ball is
clearly in the court of Mayor Clark and Mayor Suarez, " Smith said.
If they failed to do anything, he noted that the two could face
retribution at the polls. Clark is up for re-election in September; Suarez's
term expires in 1994.
As a result of the Beach proclamation, sponsored by Mayor Seymour
Gelber, the boycott committee called off planned picketing and demonstrations
at the council's convention site, Smith said. About 15 or 20 picketers were
outside the Fontainebleau Hilton on Sunday, but they agreed to halt their
demonstration after learning of the proclamation.
The proclamation is the result of intermediary efforts by the Council on
Foundations, a national coalition of charitable organizations. The group opens
its three-day convention today. The council was urged by the Boycott Miami
organization to take its convention away from Miami Beach. Instead, the
council came up with a twofold response. It decided to keep Miami Beach as the
site of its annual convention. James A. Joseph, the council president, assured
boycott organizers that the decision to keep the convention in Miami Beach was
not a snub of the boycott or the local African-American community. He said the
organization was simply choosing to use "strategies that are most efficient
for our kind of organization. "
Those strategies appear to have led to the proclamation. "We told the
boycott committee from the very beginning that we thought we could do more by
coming here than staying away, " Joseph said.
Joseph met with Gelber last week to discuss the boycott. "They told me
that they had withstood the pressure, but wanted the city to give an
appropriate tribute, an appropriate gesture, to Mr. Mandela, " Gelber said.
Gelber said in addition to the proclamation, Joseph would be given the
Miami Beach Medallion of Honor on Wednesday. Joseph
plans to personally present the medallion to Mandela in South Africa later
this year. Joseph helped plan part of Mandela's trip to the U.S. in 1990.
However, despite the proclamation and medallion, Gelber said that the
honors should not be seen as a concession to the boycott.
"I did not make an effort to publicize this, " Gelber said. "I have not
discussed this with the boycott organizers and it's not part of any
discussions or negotiations. I'm doing what I think I should do as far as
Nelson Mandela is concerned. I'm trying to do the right thing. "
KEYWORDS: MD MANDELA AWARD BLACK
TAG: 9204250045
124 of 197, 10 Terms
mh92 TOURIST BUREAU VP RESIGNS POST 03/19/1992
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1992, The Miami Herald
DATE: Thursday, March 19, 1992 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 109 lines
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: TOM FIEDLER AND DAVID KIDWELL Herald Staff Writers
MEMO: see end of text for TY STROH
TOURIST BUREAU VP RESIGNS POST
A top official of Dade's tourism agency resigned under fire Wednesday to
"curtail any further destruction" from allegations the bureau is insensitive
to blacks.
Ty Stroh, 51, vice president of convention sales for the Greater Miami
Convention & Visitors Bureau, was recently criticized for his bureau-paid
membership in the once-segregated Riviera Country Club.
Stroh insisted in a four-page resignation letter that he was
"unequivocally not a racist."
But he said his departure was the only way to end the controversy that
has engulfed his boss, bureau President Merrett Stierheim. The dispute
climaxed Monday when the Miami-Dade branch of the NAACP asked Stierheim to
resign, primarily because of several incidents involving Stroh.
"The damage caused by these incidents . . . to you and the bureau is
disgraceful and very unfair, " Stroh wrote to Stierheim. "Sadly, I don't see
any abatement of this from its architects or The Miami Herald. "
It's not clear whether Stroh's decision will quell the controversy.
NAACP President Johnnie McMillian said Wednesday that Stierheim himself
should resign -- unless he can satisfy black demands for a greater role in the
tourism industry.
"No, this little sprinkle of something to keep our mouths
closed isn't enough, " she said. "The heat goes up and they sacrifice the
person most expendable."
McMillian said the resignation was motivated by politics, not a
commitment to reform.
"All we want is for Merrett Stierheim to do his job, not to start firing
people to look good, " she said. She urged him "to make blacks an integral part
of the tourism industry. "
By contrast, Miami lawyer H.T. Smith, leader of a 16-month- old effort to
get black conventions to boycott Miami, said in an interview earlier Wednesday
that Stroh -- not Stierheim -- was his main target. With Stroh out, Smith is
optimistic the black community can negotiate for greater minority
participation.
For years, black leaders have said the tourism industry has denied blacks
a fair share of business. Although the convention boycott headed by Smith was
triggered by the political snub of South African anti-apartheid activist
Nelson Mandela in June 1990, many of the demands for redress centered on jobs
in Dade's No. 1 industry -- tourism.
Smith said he grew skeptical of Stroh's sensitivity to black issues in
early 1991, when he learned of a memo from Stroh to Stierheim. Stroh
criticized a black meeting planner who wanted to direct business to minority
firms.
1 "This was an obvious act of reverse discrimination! " Stroh wrote.
E The most recent controversy erupted when Stroh's membership in the
formerly all-white Riviera Country Club became public last week.
Stierheim , who authorized bureau money for Stroh's membership when he
became president in January 1990, ordered the payments stopped last April,
when U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Ryskamp was criticized for his
membership.
But Stierheim resumed the payments in September, after the club admitted
its first black member.
Also last fall, Stroh helped prepare a brochure for black meeting
planners, touting greater Miami's amenities and citing improved minority
participation. But that brochure was wrapped in a pre-printed "shell" that
featured, along with scenes of Miami, pictures of three white or Hispanic
models.
In early February, one of the bureau's two black executive committee
members, lawyer George Knox, resigned. He expressed frustrations with Stroh.
Stroh, in his resignation letter, addressed many of those concerns,
insisting none could independently be "construed in any way, shape or form as
a racist action."
He said the brochure was prepared with the help of three black bureau
staffers -- Marc O'Ferrall, Milton Vickers and Akua Welsh -- "to make sure
that the information in the brochure was accurate."
He absolved Stierheim of any involvement, saying in his letter that he
should have "requested a sign-off on the brochure by you and others before
using it."
He called his problems with Knox, the black board member, "a breakdown in
communication, for which I apologized to him."
Stroh was apologetic about his membership in the formerly segregated
country club.
"The Riviera Country Club issue was always a tentative situation, albeit
dangerous, and if I had known that it would have caused even a 10th of what
I've seen, it's for sure I never would have requested membership there," Stroh
wrote.
Stierheim said Wednesday he accepted the resignation "with regret and
sadness." He asked Stroh to stay on until a replacement is found.
Stroh did not return repeated telephone messages Wednesday seeking
further comment on his resignation.
Stierheim said the resignation was not part of a deal to mollify the
NAACP or other critics.
Stierheim conceded partial responsibility for the controversies. He said
he should have reviewed the brochures before distribution, and shouldn't have
permitted the Riviera membership.
"If I had to make that decision all over again, I wouldn't have made the
same decision, " he said of the club. "Let the masthead say, 'Stierheim made a
bad decision. ' What more can I say?"
* Age: 51.
* Education: Bachelor's degree in business administration, University of
Puget Sound, Tacoma, Wash.
* Title: Vice president of convention sales, Greater Miami Convention &
Visitors Bureau.
* Salary: $111,000 plus bonuses and perquisites.
Stroh is in charge of the bureau's sales efforts for conventions and
corporate meetings. He joined the bureau in 1988, after 10 years as vice
president and general manager of the Greater Los Angeles Convention and
Visitors Bureau.
From 1968 to 1978, he worked for the Westin Hotel chain, based in his
home town of Seattle, where his titles included director of sales.
KEYWORDS: STROH END QUOTE BOX AGE BIOGRAPHY BLACK
TAG: 9204150248
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