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Tag: FDOT

  • Florida officials gut rainbow crosswalk in South Beach amid statewide crackdown

    Workers remove part of the rainbow sidewalk at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.

    Workers remove part of the rainbow sidewalk at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.

    The Florida Department of Transportation on Sunday evening began removing the pride-themed crosswalk on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach.

    The Herald observed workers removing the rainbow pavers from the LGBTQ+ crosswalk at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street shortly after 6 p.m. The crew was seen operating an excavator, and slamming what appeared to be a sledgehammer, to pull out the colorful sidewalk pavers.

    A crowd of onlookers — beachgoers, residents and drag queens — formed as the workers removed the crosswalk.

    “Put a mask on so nobody sees who you are! You’re ashamed!” one man shouted. “You feel good about this?”

    Workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalk intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.
    Workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalk intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. Amanda Rosa Miami Herald

    Part of 12th Street before the crosswalk was closed to traffic.

    Part of 12th Street is closed after workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalks intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.
    Part of 12th Street is closed after workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalks intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. Amanda Rosa Miami Herald

    The crosswalk’s removal comes after FDOT ordered local governments, including Miami Beach, Fort Lauderdale, and Key West, to remove pavement art “associated with social, political, or ideological messages” — or risk losing state funding.

    READ MORE: Florida’s rainbow crosswalks are being painted over. Miami Beach could be next

    Workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalk intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.
    Workers remove part of the rainbow crosswalk intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. Amanda Rosa Miami Herald

    The rainbow crosswalk is steps away from Twist, a famous gay bar nearby on South Beach.

    FDOT didn’t respond to the Miami Herald’s request for comment as of Sunday evening.

    ‘Why waste so many resources?’

    CC Glitzer, Akasha O’Hara Lords and TP Lords were getting ready for a show at Palace Bar & Restaurant, a bar on Ocean Drive that hosts drag performances, when they heard about the crosswalk.

    From left to right TP Lords, CC Glitzer and Akasha O’Hara Lords pose for a photo holding “Miami Beach Forever Proud” signs as FDOT removes a rainbow-themed crosswalk.
    From left to right TP Lords, CC Glitzer and Akasha O’Hara Lords pose for a photo holding “Miami Beach Forever Proud” signs as FDOT removes a rainbow-themed crosswalk. Amanda Rosa Miami Herald

    “It’s very emotional to see that our people and our pride is getting erased just like that. It’s very painful,” said CC Glitzer, who moved to Miami Beach from Germany. “This is where we perform, where we live, where we show our craft and our art.”

    As the trio chanted “Miami Beach Forever Proud,” they waved signs with the same slogan.

    “They can erase the colors out of the street, but they can never remove the colors out of people,” CC Glitzer said.

    Miami Beach will forever be a proud and inclusive community – despite the state’s efforts to “chip away at [those values] one brick at a time,” Commissioner Alex Fernandez said.

    Fernandez added the city didn’t get notice that the “army of workers and heavy machinery” would be on Ocean Drive on Sunday.

    “The Rainbow Crosswalk” designed by Savino Miller studio, is made from terrazzo pavers, arranged in an Art Deco pattern at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in the Historic Art Deco District of Miami Beach, Florida and seen here on Friday, September 12, 2025.
    “The Rainbow Crosswalk” designed by Savino Miller studio, is made from terrazzo pavers, arranged in an Art Deco pattern at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in the Historic Art Deco District of Miami Beach, Florida and seen here on Friday, September 12, 2025. PHOTO BY AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiherald.com

    “Why waste so many resources, so much taxpayer dollars to remove something that is safe, that is beautiful, that is iconic, that is embraced by everyone…?” the commissioner.

    Angelo Lanza, 65, said he feels appalled that the state was removing the crosswalk without residents being informed. Lanza said he found out the decorative crosswalk was being removed as he was walking by.

    “It’s a [beautiful] addition to Ocean Drive,” said Lanza, who has lived in Miami Beach for 30 years. “It’s an Art Deco fixture… It’s very upsetting for us that live here.”

    John RZasa, 45, was returning from a day lounging on the beach when he and a friend noticed the decorative crosswalk was being removed.

    “This is the reason I moved to this neighborhood… I saw a rainbow flag. I saw the rainbow sidewalk,” said RZasa, who moved to South Beach during the COVID-19 pandemic. “I felt comfortable. I felt at home.”

    “The Rainbow Crosswalk” designed by Savino Miller studio, is made from terrazzo pavers, arranged in an Art Deco pattern at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in the Historic Art Deco District of Miami Beach, Florida and seen here on Friday, September 12, 2025.
    “The Rainbow Crosswalk” designed by Savino Miller studio, is made from terrazzo pavers, arranged in an Art Deco pattern at the intersection of Ocean Drive and 12th Street in the Historic Art Deco District of Miami Beach, Florida and seen here on Friday, September 12, 2025. PHOTO BY AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiherald.com

    RZasa added he plans on returning Monday to repaint the crosswalk rainbow.

    “There’s nobody here that wants it gone. Everyone wants it to stay,” he said. “This feels like an attack on the gay community right now.”

    In August, FDOT painted over the rainbow sidewalk located near the site of the 2016 Pulse Nightclub mass shooting in Orlando. The sidewalk was a memorial to the 49 people killed in the mass shooting at the gay nightclub.

    READ MORE: Protesters swarm South Beach after state-ordered rainbow sidewalk removal. See photos

    In a response days later, hundreds of Miami Beach residents and supporters protested the removal of the pride-themed sidewalks across the state. The “Forever Proud March” was organized by Miami Beach Commissioner Alex Fernandez and the Greater Miami LGBT Chamber of Commerce.

    From left, Adriana May and Cynthia Ordaz rally with other demonstrators carrying rainbow flags and signs reading ‘Miami Beach Forever Proud’ and ‘Won’t Be Erased’ during the Forever Proud March on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Fla., Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. The march followed state officials’ order to remove the city’s LGBTQ Pride crosswalk.
    From left, Adriana May and Cynthia Ordaz rally with other demonstrators carrying rainbow flags and signs reading ‘Miami Beach Forever Proud’ and ‘Won’t Be Erased’ during the Forever Proud March on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Fla., Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. The march followed state officials’ order to remove the city’s LGBTQ Pride crosswalk. Alexia Fodere for The Miami Herald

    This story was originally published October 5, 2025 at 7:29 PM.

    Grethel Aguila

    Miami Herald

    Grethel covers courts and the criminal justice system for the Miami Herald. She graduated from the University of Florida (Go Gators!), speaks Spanish and Arabic and loves animals, traveling, basketball and good storytelling. Grethel also attends law school part time.

    Grethel Aguila,Amanda Rosa

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  • FDOT repairs A1A after washout due to heavy rain in Ormond-by-the-Sea

    FDOT repairs A1A after washout due to heavy rain in Ormond-by-the-Sea

    NEIGHBORHOOD RIGHT NOW AND WILL HAVE AN UPDATE AT FIVE. MEANTIME, THAT RAIN IS ALSO CAUSING ISSUES ON A MAJOR ROAD IN VOLUSIA COUNTY. IT WASHED OUT A PORTION OF A-1-A IN ORMOND BY THE SEA, WHICH, AS WE KNOW, TOOK A HIT A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO FROM HURRICANE IAN. WESH 2’S PAMELA MCCOMB TELLS US WHAT CREWS ARE DOING TO STOP THIS FROM HAPPENING AGAIN. WHEN HEAVY RAIN COMES, IT’S ALWAYS THE SAME STORY ON STATE ROAD A-1-A. AND I WAS SURPRISED WHEN I LOOKED OUT AND THERE IT WAS GONE AGAIN. CINDY LANE WITH THE FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TELLS US A PART OF A-1-A IN ORMOND BY THE SEA WASHED AWAY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE IS IT LOOKS LIKE A DEEP HOLE THAT LIKE A TRENCH ALMOST BETWEEN THE OCEAN AND THE ROAD. THERE WAS NO DAMAGE TO THE ASPHALT, SO IT ONLY TOOK A FEW HOURS TO FILL IN THE HOLE AND PACK IT DOWN. FDOT HAS COMPLETED 20 EMERGENCY REPAIRS IN THE LAST 20 YEARS. AFTER PARTS OF THE ROAD WERE WASHED AWAY. THE MOST RECENT ONE WAS THURSDAY’S REPAIR. BUT IF YOU GO JUST A FEW FEET DOWN WHERE THAT DARKER ASPHALT IS, YOU CAN SEE THERE WAS A FIX MADE NOT LONG AGO. THIS ONE MILE STRETCH OF ROAD IN ORMOND BY THE SEA IS INCREDIBLY VULNERABLE TO STORM DAMAGE. BUT NEXT WEEK, FDOT WILL BEGIN THEIR BURIED SEAWALL PROJECT THAT’S SUPPOSED TO HELP. IT’S BEEN A SUCCESS UP IN FLAGLER COUNTY. WE DON’T HAVE THE SAME LEVEL OF WASHOUTS, YOU KNOW, IN THAT AREA THAT WE SEE IN THE OTHER AREAS. SO, YOU KNOW, ONCE THAT WALL IS THERE, IT IS VERY PROTECTIVE. RESIDENTS DON’T KNOW HOW MUCH OF A DIFFERENCE THE PROJECT WILL MAKE, WHETHER THAT WILL HELP OR NOT. I DON’T KNOW, WE’LL SEE. SHE HOPES FOR THE BEST IN THE MEANTIME, FDOT WILL KEEP AN EYE ON THE ROAD AND RESPOND IF NEEDED. REPORTING IN VOLUSIA COUNTY PAMELA CAM WESH TWO NEWS. THE BURIED SEAWALL PROJECT IN ORMOND BY THE SEA IS SET TO START NEXT WEEK. RESIDENT

    FDOT repairs A1A after washout due to heavy rain in Ormond-by-the-Sea

    FDOT had a buried sea wall project starting next week hoping to stregthen a stretch of A1A.

    When heavy rain comes, it’s always the same story on State Road A1A. “I looked out, and there it was, gone again,” said Shirley Bennett, Volusia County resident.Cindi Lane with the Florida Department of Transportation said a part of A1A in Ormond-by-the-Sea washed away Thursday afternoon. “It looks like a deep hole… like a trench almost between the ocean and the road,” said Lane. There was no damage to the asphalt, so it only took a few hours to fill the hole and pack it down. FDOT has completed 20 emergency repairs in the last 2 years along A1A.This one-mile stretch of road in Ormond-by-the-Sea is incredibly vulnerable to storm damage.However, next week, FDOT will begin its buried sea wall project, which is supposed to help. It’s been a success up in Flagler County. “We don’t have the same level of washout, you know, in that area that we see in the other areas,” said Lane. “So, you know, once that wall is there, it is very protective.”The buried sea wall project is expected to start next week.

    When heavy rain comes, it’s always the same story on State Road A1A.

    “I looked out, and there it was, gone again,” said Shirley Bennett, Volusia County resident.

    Cindi Lane with the Florida Department of Transportation said a part of A1A in Ormond-by-the-Sea washed away Thursday afternoon.

    “It looks like a deep hole… like a trench almost between the ocean and the road,” said Lane.

    There was no damage to the asphalt, so it only took a few hours to fill the hole and pack it down.

    FDOT has completed 20 emergency repairs in the last 2 years along A1A.

    This one-mile stretch of road in Ormond-by-the-Sea is incredibly vulnerable to storm damage.

    However, next week, FDOT will begin its buried sea wall project, which is supposed to help. It’s been a success up in Flagler County.

    “We don’t have the same level of washout, you know, in that area that we see in the other areas,” said Lane. “So, you know, once that wall is there, it is very protective.”

    The buried sea wall project is expected to start next week.

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