Category Archives: Articles

Thank you supporters: WGOT is moving ahead

by Chris Lake and Debi Martinez, WGOT Board Members

Thanks to everyone who donated during the Amazing Give. 

Without donations, we wouldn’t be here, since we depend solely on listener donations and business underwriting. 

All contributions are directly invested in WGOT. There are no board members with a cushy six-figure job. In fact, there are no board members with a cushy one-digit job. WGOT raised $455 in one day through the Amazing Give and we appreciate everyone who made it possible.

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Actual, live (not virtual) Gainesville events

These are outdoor events. Mingle distantly with fellow humans. Please, masks required!

Mondays and Thursdays: Farmer’s markets with live music, 4-7pm
Mondays at Cypress & Grove (1001 NW 4th St.)
Thursdays at Heartwood Soundstage (619 S. Main St.)

Saturday, May 22: Celebrating Maura’s life, 2pm, Florida School of Massage

Sunday, May 23: Vintage market, noon-5pm, Cypress & Grove Brewing 
(1001 NW 4th St., across from Afternoon and Working Food)

Saturday, June 5: Bazar a La Carte, Outdoor market, 4-10pm, Seagle Building

Sunday, June 6: Bazar a La Carte, Sunday version of above, 12-5pm

Sunday, June 6: Chuck Ragan, High Dive, masks mandatory

Saturday, June 12: Artisans Guild Event, Eco-Art, 11am, at their new location, 224 NW 2nd Ave

Saturday, June 12: Pop-Up Market, noon-5pm, AUK Market (2031 NW 6th St.—behind Curia on the Drag) hosts outdoor pop-up markets on 2nd Saturdays; support local artists and makers!

Saturday, June 12: Tommy Emmanuel, Heartwood Soundstage, 7:30 pm

It’s just cheaper to bulldoze the trees

by Homer Jack Moore

Like many rural communities, Micanopy is rimmed by rural blight. Bombed-out vacant buildings are especially prevalent at the I-75 exit. 

The only building there that was ever successfully repurposed was an old Stuckey’s store, now the Cafe Risque, an escape place for lonely men who come to be titillated by naked girls.

Yet right across town on the other side, the minions in service to the multibillion-dollar Dollar General Corporation are warming up the heavy equipment to rip up trees at the corner of an Alachua County Scenic Road, and make way for a convenience store. You would have thought that one of those already distressed properties would have been cheaper and more suitable. But, no.

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Veterans display tombstones to remember fallen soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan 

by Gainesville Veterans for Peace

Veterans for Peace will be hosting a virtual Memorial Mile this year to remember those who have died in the wars in Afghanistan since 2001 and in Iraq since 2003. The virtual commemoration can be viewed at http://www.vfpgainesville.org/ starting on Saturday, May 29, through Memorial Day, May 31, at dusk. 

This is the 14th year that VFP has held a commemoration, as there are a continuing number of deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq. 

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Labor Coalition, others protest Collier Companies’ illegal discrimination against tenants with vouchers

by Dmitry Podobreev, ACLC coordinator

The Alachua County Labor Coalition (ACLC) held a protest on Monday, May 3, in front of the Collier Companies offices to respond to Collier’s illegal discrimination against tenants using Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) and Housing Choice Vouchers (HCV). 

Around 30 people came to register their complaints with Collier, which owns over 11,000 housing units across the state of Florida including 21 apartment complexes in Alachua County. 

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VP Harris on George Floyd: ‘This work is long overdue’

Following is the April 20 transcript of Vice President Kamala Harris’s speech on the Minnesota guilty verdict for Derek Chauvin, followed by relevant comments by Joe Courter, Iguana publisher

VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: Good evening. First I want to thank the jury for their service and I want to thank Mr. Floyd’s family for your steadfastness. 

Today, we feel a sigh of relief. Still, it cannot take away the pain. A measure of justice isn’t the same as equal justice. This verdict brings us a step closer, and the fact is we still have work to do.

We still must reform the system. Last summer, together with Senator Cory Booker and Representative Karen Bass, I introduced the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. This bill would hold law enforcement accountable and help build trust between law enforcement and our communities. 

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From the publisher: Looking forward

by Joe Courter

We seem to be emerging into a brighter future. The masking and distancing practices we at first felt awkward about became accepted, and now with the vaccines becoming widely available, we can start loosening up a bit, and get a sense of normalcy returning. 

Careful living vaccinated people can finally see each other’s faces and even share some well appreciated hugs. Those practices worked, as made obvious by the incredibly low flu rates during the same period. Looking forward we need to hope that our reopening won’t be compromised by the self-centered among us who won’t accept the science or the ethic of cooperation and enable the virus to continue to mutate and spread.  

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The power of local community and divesting

By Sarah Goff, Executive Director and Co-Founder of The Repurpose Project

The most wonderful and amazing thing happened during The Repurpose Project Building Expansion Fundraiser: the bank loan that we were relying on fell through. 

Sure, those first few days were not wonderful. I sat in the office after that bank phone call, completely overwhelmed with emotion and unable to hold back tears as my mind visited each and every disappointed face. 

We were 36 days into our 60-day fundraiser and had raised an astounding $115,000 of our $200,000 goal. Our community was supporting us in a major way, plus they were shopping in our store.We experienced record sales, and we were gaining confidence that we would be able to bridge a fundraising gap with this extra revenue.

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No drilling!

Burnett Oil takes steps toward oil drilling in Everglades

by Vickie Machado

The weather was warm though not sweltering in the Everglades on the afternoon of Saturday, April 10. The region was dry, about a month away from the daily afternoon thunderstorms that are a mainstay of South Florida summers. White billowing clouds hovered over 50 to 60 demonstrators gathered along the grassy shoulder of Alligator Alley, near the Collier County rest-stop in the upper-reaches of the Big Cypress Swamp. 

The crowd and the signs they carried were hard to miss on the interstate stretch connecting Fort Lauderdale to Naples. Carefully painted capitalized black lettering on the yellow, blue, and lime green fabric of banners proclaimed: “SPEAK UP FOR NATURE’S RIGHTS,” “RESPETE LOS EVERGLADES,” and, announcing the central sentiment of the protest, “DEFEND THE SACRED.” A range of other signs of various shapes, sizes, and colors read: “Speak up for Nature,” “Say NO to Burnett Oil,” “Oil and Water Don’t Mix.” South Floridians from both coasts and between converged in the middle of Big Cypress for Signs Across the Alley, a rally to protect the glades from oil drilling. 

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May-June 2021 Iguana

The May-June 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.

Standing on the Shoulders of Women Before Us

One morning in February 2021, Nkwanda Jah wrote to me and said she was having many thoughts about the women who had died who had influenced her and taught her how to be an activist. She wanted to brainstorm how to honor these women for Women’s History Month. We talked and decided on 10 women who fit that category. We hired a graphic artist, Tanisha Byars, and started writing to women we knew who had known one of the women and asked if they could write a short tribute to that woman. That’s how Kim Barton came to write the tribute to Barbara Higgins, who had worked at the Supervisor of Elections office for years and was instrumental in getting many black folks to register to vote. Vivian Filer wrote about Verdell Robinson, because they were both nursing professors at Santa Fe College. And so on. We hope to be a cog in the wheel of history that keeps these women alive in our collective memory.                                          

In the struggle,  
Pam Smith and Nkwanda Jah

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Civic Media Center SpringBoard features author, anti-Amazon activist Danny Caine

by the Civic Media Center Board

Going back decades, the Civic Media Center’s Board, with the help of the coordinators and volunteers, have organized a fundraising event in the spring, which we cleverly named the SpringBoard. 

The goal was to raise funds to put us ahead financially before the slower period of summer, by means of a community dinner event where we could celebrate with our supporters, present a notable speaker, and with the partnership of United Faculty of Florida, Veterans for Peace, and the Alachua County Labor Coalition, occasionally present the Jack Penrod Brigadas Award to a local organizer/activist. 

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History and the people who make it: Howard K. Suzuki

Dr. Howard K. Suzuki [S], former UF Dean, anatomist/physiologist, wildlife sculptor and photographer, was interviewed by Don Obrist [O] in November 2011. 

This is the 66th in a series of transcript excerpts from the UF Samuel Proctor Oral History Program collection.

Transcript edited by Pierce Butler; notations in [square brackets] by SPOHP. 

O: Your date of birth?

S: April 3, 1927.

O: Where were you born?

S: In Ketchikan, Alaska. My father was born in Tokyo in the late 1800s and came to the United States around 1910 to work for the Great Northern Railway Company. He stayed there until 1914 thereabouts, then he moved to Ketchikan. At that time, he saved enough money that he was able to send for his bride. He had started a laundry and dry cleaning business. They worked hard like many of the immigrants would and still do. 

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Dollar General store provokes Micanopy unrest

by Homer Jack Moore

Protests continue against construction of a Dollar General store at Micanopy’s town limits. But why should anybody care?

Aside from the fact that the development site is at a scenic gateway into the historic town of Micanopy, abuts a Native American Heritage Preserve and burial mound, is cattycorner from the Tuscawilla Nature Preserve, and is across the street from a church, probably nobody would. Except for the fact that this land is sacred.

It serves to reflect on what “Micanopy” is all about. Micanopy was the Seminole Principle Chief in 1834 when things were getting a little hot in the Alachua area.

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Dangerous Dam: Rodman Dam suffers from serious structural problems

by Bruce Kaster

Rodman Dam, near Palatka,  has potentially serious structural problems that were initially recognized in a dam assessment report to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection in 2015. 

This report listed numerous problems that indicated the potential for dam failure. When we gained access to the report in 2020, we became concerned. We learned that dam assessments were conducted in 2017 and 2019, but these subsequent reports were not  available to the public. 

Pursuit to a FOIA request to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, we obtained these reports causing us increased concern about the dam’s integrity. 

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5th Avenue Arts Festival moves online

This year’s 5th Avenue Arts Festival has moved online and expanded to more than a week’s length, on the theme of “Buy the Block, Build the Block, Keep the Block.” 

See www.culturalartscoalition.org/annual-5th-ave-arts-festival/ for the 41st celebration of the rich cultural heritage of the historic African American Community in music, dance and exhibits, with articles, historical exhibits, and virtual booths vending arts and crafts from our area, the nation, and across the world running from Saturday,  April 24 to Monday, May 3.

Civic Media Center Update

by JoJo Sacks, CMC Coordinator

We’re moving into Spring at the CMC and our volunteers have been putting in work! In the past month, we’ve put on some great Zoom programming, Free Grocery Store has served hundreds of people, and our book club read Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. 

Our April book club pick is Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Davis. Sign up here: https://bit.ly/3su299f.

Coming up, we will have a pop-up Free Store in our courtyard on April 17th and our annual Springboard fundraiser to look forward to on May 21st on Zoom, featuring author Danny Caine. Keep an eye out on our Facebook and Instagram for updates, including new T-shirts we are printing for sale.

To get involved, register for our April volunteer meetings at: https://bit.ly/3w4hjl3. Of course, email with any questions: coordinators@civicmediacenter.org.

Actual, live (not virtual) Gainesville events

These are outdoor events. Mingle distantly with fellow humans. And please, masks required!

Mondays and Thursdays: Farmer’s Markets with Live Music, 4-7pm
Mondays at Cypress & Grove (1001 NW 4th St.); Thursdays at Heartwood Soundstage (619 S. Main St.)

Friday, April 9: Tedx UF kickoff event, 6-9pm
Heartwood Soundstage (610 S. Main St.), with tabling by local organizations (come say hi)

Saturday, April 10 (also May 22): Upper Santa Fe River Paddle, 9am-1pm
Join Lars Andersen for a guided paddle to Alachua Conservation Trust’s newest conservation purchase, Santa Fe Springs Preserve. Register at https://www.alachuaconservationtrust.org/upcoming-events.

Saturday, April 10: Artisans Guild event, 11am
At their new location, 224 NW 2nd Ave.

Saturday, April 10 and Saturday, May 8: Pop-Up Market, noon-5pm
AUK Market (2031 NW 6th St. – behind Curia on the Drag), hosts outdoor Pop-Up markets on 2nd Saturdays; support local artists and makers

Saturday, April 17: Bat Appreciation Day, noon to 4 pm
Black Adder Brewing (618 NW 60th St.)

Sunday, April 18: 7th Annual Tree Fest Drive-Thru, beer pre-sales begin online at 10am with pick-up from noon-7pm
Join Alachua Conservation Trust at Swamp Head Brewery (3650 SW 42nd Ave.) and help us plant trees in Alachua County. Hosted by Solar Impact, Inc. and Swamp Head Brewery. 
More at https://www.alachuaconservationtrust.org/upcoming-events.

Sunday, April 25: Glam Craft Show, noon-5pm
Cypress & Grove Brewing (1001 NW 4th St., across from Afternoon and Working Food) D

Matheson Museum reopens on weekends with two exhibits

The Matheson Museum, which hosts exhibits on Alachua County and Florida history, has reopened on a limited basis, with strict standards for covid precautions. It will be open on Fridays and Saturdays only, from 1 to 4 pm, and will allow only 12 people inside at a time. Masks must be worn (no bandanas, masks with exhale valves, or neck gaiters). The museum is located at 513 E University Ave.

Two exhibits will be on display: Trailblazers: 150 years of Alachua County Women and McCarthy Moment: The Johns Committee in Florida.

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The Repurpose Project seeks funds for expansion

by Chelsea Carnes

The Repurpose Project, a 501c3 junk shop and arts hub, has been so successful in its mission of helping folks rethink what they throw away, that the shop is running out of space. 

Consider: when we purge our closets of old clothing, we don’t usually trash it – we donate to a thrift store. But where does one send old kitchen cabinets after a remodel? Old garden pots? Used crayons? There are few easy options for repurposing goods such as building materials, art supplies, metals, furniture, appliances, and fabrics. 

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