Category Archives: 2024 Articles

Vote YES on At-Large Districts, here’s why

by Susan Bottcher, One Alachua County

Update: On 10/8, Circuit Judge Olin Shinholser ruled in a case brought by Keith Perry against the At-Large District referendum that the ballot language was unlawful, but dismissed all other claims made by Perry (i.e., he ruled the County can return to At-Large Districts if specific ballot language is used). The County Commission decided the very same day to appeal the decision, which the County Attorney feels confident about winning. What’s more, Supervisor of Elections Kim Barton has confirmed she will count and certify the results of the referendum. The campaign is going full steam ahead and urges you to vote YES!

In last month’s issue of the Iguana, we laid out the reasons why restoring At-Large Districts (ALD) voting for county commissioners is better for democracy in Alachua County. 

In short, it increases your chances of having a majority voice and broader representation on county issues. The newly implemented Single Member Districts (SMD) model is now in place which is why you can vote for only one county commission seat this year. If you live in Districts 2 or 4 you don’t get to vote for any county commissioner this election cycle. 

As you’ll recall, in 2022 local Republican operatives used a dark money funded campaign to spew lies and disinformation about what SMD is and what it means to you, as a voter. They claimed it would provide “equal representation, equity, and end racism”. Their ruse worked on just enough people to pass.

We responded with two years of citizen outcry to the county commission asking they place a referendum on the 2024 ballot to return to ALD voting. They heard us and agreed: People need to hear the truth about ALD so they can be fully informed and vote accordingly. 

Now that ALD is on the ballot and voters are being educated with actual facts, Sen. Keith Perry has filed a lawsuit to prevent your vote on ALD from being counted. That’s right. You can vote, but he wants the courts to prevent your vote from being counted. And when the Supervisor of Elections does count your votes, Perry is asking the courts to prevent ALD from being implemented. 

Perry knows people will vote to restore ALD so is using his power to interfere in a free and fair election. This desperate act to silence you is an abuse of power and a betrayal of the public trust. 

In the meantime, they are launching their disinformation campaign, so be prepared. 

They claim that under ALD we won’t be able to elect minority candidates to public office. They’ll say there is a better chance of Black representation on the county commission under SMD. The bitter irony and ugly hypocrisy is this comes from the same people who voted to ban books about Black history and critical race theory in Florida.

Its stunning and disrespectful that they turn a blind eye to all the people of color already in office who have been elected throughout Alachua County. Our school board is elected by ALD and is majority-minority. 

Our Supervisor of Elections and Property Appraiser are Black women overwhelmingly elected countywide. We elected a Black judge to the 8th Judicial Circuit. The citizens of Hawthorne and Micanopy elected Black women to serve as their mayors. The towns of Archer, High Springs, Alachua, Waldo, and Gainesville have elected Black commissioners. 

The system of ALD we have had in place for decades, prior to this new SMD, worked well. 

It proved that voters throughout Alachua County will elect people they believe reflect their values and will represent their voices best in all areas of government, especially elevating those from the Black community. Perry and his group want to tell you not believe what you see with your own eyes. 

Furthermore, they’re not just trying to interfere with your voting on ALD. 

Perry and the wider Republican forces, including Gov. DeSantis, have been working to use the courts to block your right to vote on other citizen-led initiatives. 

This specifically includes the referendums that will be on your November ballot to amend our city and county charters and our state constitution: They’re suing to block the Local Public Utilities (LPU) referendum for Gainesville voters and are sending cops to intimidate voters from supporting Amendment 4 that will protect women’s reproductive rights. 

Instead of allowing these issues to be settled fairly at the ballot box, they are seeking to use intimidation and the courts to interfere with the democratic process by delaying and blocking the counting of your votes. 

Just like your YES votes on Local Public Utilities, your YES vote on ALD must be heard. An overwhelming turnout in favor of these issues will send a strong message. 

If we pass ALD this year, in 2026 when two county commission seats are up for consideration, you get to vote for both. Then, in 2028 when three seats are up, you get to vote in all three for a total of five over those two election cycles. More representation is better than less representation.

The campaign for YES on At Large Districts is proud of the endorsements we’ve earned. More are coming in every week and so far include: Alachua County Chapter of the NAACP; Alachua County League of Women Voters; Rep. Yvonne Hinson; Alachua County Central Labor Coalition; Alachua County Democratic Party; North Central Florida AFL-CIO; Tax Collector John Power; School  Board members Leanetta McNealy, Tina Certain, and Sarah Rockwell; County Commissioners Anna Prizzia, Mary Alford and Ken Cornell; and former Newberry City Commissioner Alena Lawson Bennett.

You can help increase awareness and build support by putting a YES on At Large Districts sign in your yard. And as with any campaign we need funding to get the truth out. The Perry GOP machine has deep resources, so every dollar you can donate to ALD is meaningful and will be put to good use. 

You can request a yard sign and make a donation by visiting OneAlachuaCounty.com or send a check to One Alachua County P.O. Box 358986, Gainesville 32635. Yard signs for ALD and LPU are now available for free at the Democratic Party office 901 NW 8th Ave.

Vote YES for Local Public Utilities

Kick DeSantis out of town and put the ratepayers back in charge

by Dr. David Hastings, Suwannee St. Johns Sierra Club and Jyoti Parmar, Sierra Club of Florida 

It’s impossible to ignore the upcoming election, which may be the most important vote we will ever cast. At the top of our ballots, we are choosing between a Black and South Asian woman who worked for McDonalds as a teen, and a chaotic candidate who has called climate change a “hoax.” 

At the bottom of your ballot, the last item on the back page is an important reminder to Think Globally and Act Locally. It is a referendum to remove the DeSantis appointed “GRU Authority” and return decision making to ratepayers in Gainesville. 

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From the publisher… Please cast your vote

by Joe Courter

November 5th is fast approaching and the outcome of it will be important to all of our futures. When I think ahead to Election Day, what worries me is not the voters who will choose to vote for Trump, but the non-voters  who, for whatever reason, choose to stay home. It is those citizens who truly have the impact to decide elections, and even as access to voting is expanded in time and method, still they choose to stay home. Who recognizes their significance? Republicans, whose efforts to make voting harder through harassment, misinformation, and registration hurdles strive to keep likely Democratic voters home. 

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On keeping the Streatery   

by Joe Courter

Back in 2020, during Covid, the city of Gainesville created a walkable area downtown on SW 1st Ave from Main Street to where it ends at the base of the parking garage at SW 2nd Street. This allowed for outdoor seating and strolling, and by lifting the open container laws, allowed downtown bars and restaurants to stay open instead of shutting down. It became known as The Streatery.

The initial hope was to have landscaping and planters put in, but that never happened. To this day there are activities going on that would not be happening otherwise. One or two nights a week there a hundred or more people doing Latin and salsa dancing, the Bull has an outdoor stage which gets regular use, and also provides seating. Further west by the garage, Loosey’s has outdoor seating and tables, and every Monday those tables are packed for the weekly trivia night, and it is otherwise an outdoor dining or socializing area.

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Medication vs. surgical abortion, YES on 4 vs. further organizing

by The Gainesville Radical Reproductive Rights Network

In 2022, the story of the Jane Collective experienced a resurgence in popularity. Read about them and ask yourself whether they did anything wrong, or if the state did. Abortion has long been under attack. Anti-choice actors worked for 50 years to overturn Roe v. Wade, which overturned abortion bans in several states. That includes Texas, where Roe was filed, and partly from where a 2023 Supreme Court case targeting access to Mifepristone originated. Dobbs led to Florida’s bans and our ability to vote Yes on Amendment 4 in November.

Defending abortion access in the face of the 6-week ban, we’re forced to weigh the options we have left. Naturally, we might ask whether abortion is better via pill or surgery, or perhaps, does medication abortion replace surgical abortion? As reproductive rights advocates who support the Amendment to Limit  Government Interference, we also ask ourselves: how does Yes on 4 comport with further organizing?

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October 2024 Gainesville Iguana

The October issue of the Iguana is now available, and you can access it here! If you want to get your hands on a hard copy, check out our distro locations here.

Editors’ picks: News that didn’t fit

Cornell Graduate Students United demands university bargain with union over pro-Palestine international student’s suspension
by Gabriel Muñoz ~ The Cornell Daily Sun ~ Oct. 3 ~ tinyurl.com/Iguana2094
Approximately 180 Cornell Graduate Students United members and supporters gathered to protest for the University to bargain with CGSU over international graduate student Momodou Taal’s suspension. The graduate student union is demanding the University rescind Taal’s suspension under a Memorandum of Agreement reached in July 2024. The agreement gives CGSU the right to bargain over the effects of academic discipline of graduate students as long as it affects their working conditions. The union suspended Taal for his involvement in a Sept. 18 disruption of a career fair attended by defense contractors L3Harris and Boeing. If Taal is withdrawn from the University, he will be in violation of his  F-1 visa status, likely leading to his deportation. 

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Drop the Charges for the UF 9

Seeking Justice: The Repercussions of Our Peaceful Protest Against Genocide

By Parker Hovis and Keely Gliwa

One would think in our modern age, with knowledge of past horrors and the everyday people that enabled them, that protesting against genocide would be encouraged. Yet, the reality across the United States is the direct opposite. First Amendment rights are being trampled to conceal growing criticism of Israel’s blatant violations of international law. Such repression occurred at the University of Florida in late April of 2024, as part of a concerted national effort to silence anti-genocide, anti-apartheid, and anti-colonial speech on college campuses. For nine individuals arrested in the Plaza of the Americas, now known as the UF 9, the supposed misconduct which triggered their arrests was sitting peacefully in folding chairs while playing cards. A campaign has begun to demand the frivolous charges, criminal and academic, be dropped immediately. Sign the petition, connect us with legal support, donate to the legal fund, and learn more at https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/drop-the-charges-against-the-uf-9/ – or by following @UF9ForPalestine on Instagram. We are a subset of the UF 9, and this is our story of how our lives were uprooted for engaging in peaceful protest against the US funded genocide in Gaza.

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The Repurpose Project: A bigger better building supply store

By Aurora Hadsock, HR Director of The Repurpose Project

Imagine you’ve got a DIY project around the house. Instead of heading straight for the big box hardware store, what if there was a local nonprofit alternative that provided valuable building materials to the community at good prices and prevented construction waste from ending up in landfills? If that sounds like an appealing addition to the neighborhood, you are in luck. The Repurpose Project is moving and expanding its reuse hardware store (and you might be surprised to hear where).

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In memoriam: Phil Donahue (1935-2024)

by Joe Courter

In late August 1990 there was a media frenzy in Gainesville around the infamous student murders. Satellite trucks were all over town covering every press conference, and throwing mics in peoples’ faces. Into that came Phil Donahue on Sept. 7, who asked for and was allowed to do his one-hour live 9am show from the downtown plaza (now Bo Diddley Plaza). Donahue passed away on Aug. 18 of this year. Below is an article from the Tampa Bay Times from Sept. 8, 1990, as well as a Democracy Now! interview with Donahue from Nov. 14, 2014.

From the Tampa Bay Times:

Phil Donahue was a not a popular visitor when he came to town Friday. The mayor, police chief and University of Florida president refused to appear on Donahue’s television show, a segment about the slayings of five college students. A letter to the editor in the Gainesville Sun urged residents to boycott the show.

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Who/what is GAU?

Who/what is GAU?

by UF Graduate Assistants United

Suppose you’re a new graduate assistant who has attended an orientation or has been involved in activism on campus. In that case, you’ve likely heard of Graduate Assistants United (GAU), the labor union that represents all (over 4,200) Graduate Assistants at UF. UF GAU is a family, a haven, and a safeguard against entities that often don’t have our best interests at heart.

What have we been up to?

Despite legislative attacks, we’ve been productive both at and away from the bargaining table. The series of bargaining sessions that began in January of 2023 has resulted in the largest raise to the minimum stipend UF-GAU has seen in its 50-year history, more than doubling our historic win the year prior. Since we still haven’t quite caught up to inflation and remain below a livable wage, our team is continuing to work on getting another raise from the university. With the recent unveiling of exorbitant spending on salaries under the Sasse administration, it’s clear that UF has enough money to pay us what we deserve. 

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Vote “Yes” on the Local Public Utilities Referendum

by the Community Weatherization Committee

The Community Weatherization Coalition (CWC) urges its supporters and clients to vote “yes” on the “Local Public Utilities” referendum this November to put our utility in the hands of locally-elected officials who know and represent our community’s needs and interests.  

The CWC was founded in 2008 as a collaboration of nonprofit, government, faith-based, business, and university partners working together to address the high energy burdens faced by residents in Alachua County.  We help our neighbors lower their utility bills by saving energy and water through engaging volunteers, building community, and learning together.  

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Make a plan to vote! 

by Janice Garry, President, League of Women Voters of Alachua County

Have you made a voting plan? Voting can be one of those things that you know is coming up, but seems remote, and then, suddenly, the day arrives. That’s why the League of Women Voters of Alachua County (LWVAC) encourages each person to think ahead and make a plan on where you will be and how you will vote. 

All the important dates and information can be found on the Supervisor of Elections website, but here are a few to pay attention to. Oct. 7 is the deadline for registering to vote. Oct. 21 – Nov. 3 is the period for early voting. Oct. 24 is the deadline to complete a Vote by Mail application. Nov. 5 is election day. If you’re going to be out of town or unable to get to the polls, make a plan to vote by mail or vote early. 

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Matheson History Museum 2024 Fall Program Series 

The Matheson History Museum has announced its 2024 Fall Program Series. The full slate of programs includes live music, elections and voting history, author talks, and more. 

Along with their regular local and Florida history programs and Second Saturdays at Sweetwater series, they will be hosting programs to coincide with the “Voices and Votes: Alachua County” exhibition.

Check out their website for more information: https://mathesonmuseum.org/.

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Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid on the ballot in November

by Tia Maria

American poet and author Maya Angelou once said, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” 

Let us apply these wise words of warning to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. Trump ran for president in 2016 with the same rhetoric as today regarding Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. He promised no cuts, but then spent four years trying to dismantle these great American programs through tax cuts to benefit his billionaire buddies.

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Bee-luther-hatchee at the Acrosstown Repertory Theatre

What: Bee-luther-hatchee by Thomas Gibbons 
Where: The Acrosstown Repertory Theatre, 3501 SW 2nd Ave, Suite O (in Creekside Mall), Gainesville 
When: Sept. 13-29, Fridays and Saturdays 8pm, Sundays 2pm 
Web: https://tinyurl.com/Iguana2057
Facebook event: https://tinyurl.com/Iguana2058

Shelita Burns, an African American editor, publishes Bee-luther-hatchee, the autobiography of a reclusive 72-year-old black woman named Libby Price. Shelita has never met Libby, and when the book wins a prestigious award she decides to deliver it to her in person. To her profound shock, the actual author of the book is a white man named Sean Leonard. Furious and resentful, Shelita accuses Sean of perpetrating a hoax, while he defends the book as a truthful work of imagination. 

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Voting yes on 4 in November, continuing the fight for reproductive rights

by The GRRR! Network

On Nov. 5, Floridians will have the chance to vote Yes on Amendment 4, the Amendment to Limit Government Interference with Abortion. 

On April 1, Florida’s Supreme Court officially placed it on the November ballot and Floridians Protecting Freedom launched its Yes on 4 campaign, to ensure that voters enshrine abortion rights into the Florida Constitution. However, on the same day, the Court allowed Florida’s 6-week abortion ban to go into effect on May 1. 

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From the publisher: Difference makers

by Joe Courter

Sometimes one act can have huge impact that could not have been foreseen. The decision of Joe Biden to step away from the Presidency was contemplated for weeks, but that possibility was tempered with uncertainty as to what would happen next. That sure resolved quickly as Kamala Harris not only secured broad support in the party but was rather stunningly embraced as the obvious choice by people, and then her picking Tim Walz for VP was equally embraced. What a difference!  

The recent State Parks controversy presented another case of a single event being a catalyst for change. James Gaddis was working as a cartographer for the State Department of Environmental Protection,  and he became aware of a plan to add lodges, golf and pickleball to our State Parks in a rather rushed way, and he leaked the information out, costing him his job but, what difference it made.  Citizens around the state mobilized with calls, letters, and sign-holding demonstrations and forced an embarrassing turn around on State officials.

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Saving land: Two approaches

by Robert “Hutch” Hutchinson

A nearly secret proposal to build golf courses, hotels, and recreational facilities in nine state parks was exposed by a whistleblower within Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).  The subsequent uproar and protests caused quick backpedaling by state officials, who then began pointing the fingers at anybody else. One long-time DEP employee told me there was no way that agency officials would have proposed these projects if the orders had not come from the highest levels of government. Fortunately, the fired state employee became a hero, and his GoFundMe campaign, which has raised over $200,000, provides a strong signal to other bureaucrats that doing the right thing shouldn’t damage them financially.

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Elections: Looking back on August primary and forward to November

by Joe Courter

The primary voting went down okay in August; turnout was seen as low, but we are happy with outright wins for James Ingle and Desmon Duncan-Walker in City Commission races. For School Board, Leanetta McNealy and Thomas Vu were handily approved by the voters.

Moving on to face off against Republicans in the Nov. 5 general election, of course, at the top of the ballot we get to vote for Kamala Harris for president! Locally on the ballot are Chad Scott for sheriff and Mary Alford for County Commission, joined by other local Democrats who were not challenged in the primaries: Anna Prizzia for County Commission and Kim Barton for election supervisor here in Alachua County. Anna has a well-funded Republican opponent and, with the Tallahassee-mandated district-only voting as opposed to at-large voting, a steeper climb; this is a very important race. Kim Barton, a career elections office worker who has done a fine job, is against a well-funded local Republican Party officer with no elections office experience(!). 

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