Renee O’Connor stands in one of the classrooms where she teaches Black history at Miami Norland Senior High School, Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024, in Miami
Tag: florida
Florida’s agriculture industry hit with $190-million losses from Hurricane Milton
FILE – Foundations and debris remain after buildings were swept from their foundations and destroyed during Hurricane Milton, on Manasota Key, in Englewood, Fla., Sunday,
Barkov scores power-play goal late in OT, Panthers beat Blues 2-1
CBS News Miami Live Aleksander Barkov scored a power-play goal with 18 seconds left in overtime, giving the Florida Panthers a 2-1 win over the
Miami-Dade unemployment rate in November again lowest in Florida at 2.4%
TALLAHASSEE — Miami-Dade County continues to have the state’s lowest unemployment rate in November at 2.4%, much better than the 3.4% state figure and the 4.2%
California family injured in Florida Everglades airboats crash speaks out, hires lawyers
MIAMI — A California family has hired a legal team and is speaking out after a Florida Everglades airboat tour they were on ended in
Hurricane Milton farm losses could top $642 million in Florida
TALLAHASSEE — Agricultural production losses in Florida from Hurricane Milton could reach $642.7 million, pushing the state’s potential crop and livestock losses from three hurricanes
Advocates train immigrants in the U.S. on how to protect themselves under Trump
Winston Leiva rattles off a long list of things immigrants should do to protect themselves against President-elect Donald Trump’s promise to conduct mass deportations when he
Marine stationed in Florida charged with murdering woman found dead in Alabama pond
CBS News Miami Live PENSACOLA, Fla. — A U.S. Marine stationed in the Florida Panhandle was arrested in an interstate investigation of a missing woman
Driven partly by international migration, Florida’s population tops 23.3 million
TALLAHASSEE — Growing faster than almost any other state, Florida’s estimated population topped 23.3 million people this year, according to data released Thursday by the
A race is on to save the Florida Everglades and protect a key source of drinking water
Florida International University professor John Kominoski, right, and research specialist Rafael Travieso adjust automatic water sampling equipment in Shark River Slough in Florida’s Everglades National