South Florida summit message: Climate change is here




















South Florida took the threat seriously before most everybody else, with four counties reaching a landmark compact in 2009 to work together to start addressing the risks of global warming.

But four years and one “super storm” named Sandy later, the risks to Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach and Monroe counties — as well as much of coastal Florida — seem only bigger, scarier and no longer quite so far down the road.

An eye-opening example: Fort Lauderdale’s famous “strip,” where waves from Sandy, followed by routine high tides and heavy seas three weeks later, chewed away beach, seawall, sidewalk and roadbed, leaving a four-block-long swath of State Road A1A whittled from four lanes to two.





During a two-day regional climate change summit that ended Friday in Jupiter, political leaders and climate experts stressed two messages: One, South Florida faces a long, immensely costly war to protect its heavily developed coast and economy from the rising sea and increasingly destructive flooding from hurricanes like Sandy. Two, the “super storm” underlined why the region should quickly ramp up “adaptation” efforts and spending to reduce its exposure — from restoring beach dunes to building bigger sea walls to elevating roads and homes and maybe even moving them from the most vulnerable areas.

“Planning is nice, but now it’s all about implementation,’’ said Susanne Torriente, an assistant city manager in Fort Lauderdale who helped craft a wide-ranging climate-change action plan approved by Broward and Monroe counties in the past few months. County commissions in Miami-Dade and Palm Beach are expected to consider the plans by early next year.

Fort Lauderdale, Torriente said, is working with Broward County and state transportation experts on shoring up its heavily eroded strip. Repairs will easily run into the tens of millions of dollars and include elevating some of the iconic strip or building beach dunes, which some residents have long resisted because it spoils the view from AIA.

“Adaptation is not something we’re talking about in textbooks any more. It’s happening right in our backyard,” she said. “People like to see the water, but let’s be realistic.”

Though Sandy’s worst impacts were in the Northeast — where the storm killed more than 100 people, flooded New York City subways, swamped New Jersey coastal — it also caused extensive erosion along much of the South Florida coast.

While it remains uncertain what if any impact climate change had on Sandy, the devastating storm, which caused tens of billions of dollars in damage, gave both the public and political leaders across the country a glimpse of potential future scenarios. It also has injected new urgency in efforts in South Florida, many of the elected officials, planners, scientists, engineers and other experts at the annual regional summit agreed.

John Englander, an oceanographer who this year published a book called High Tide on Main Street, called Sandy a wake-up call for many coastal communities like Fort Lauderdale.

“People are starting to get increasing awareness to their vulnerability from storm surge,’’ he said. “They just can’t ignore the beach and walk away from billions of dollars worth of hotels.’’





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The Era of Twitter Without Instagram Has Now Begun












We know everyone is a little bummed about all those filtered photos disappearing from your Twitter streams this weekend, but let’s not get all worked up about it: They are disappearing, and there is no scandal.


RELATED: Why You Can’t See Instagram Photos on Twitter Anymore












TechCrunch’s  Drew Olanoff got a little too excited on Friday and thought a single in-stream photo meant that Instagram was allowing its Twitter cards back on Twitter and thought the two services were planning a sudden reunion. You may have seen some, too, but a Facebook spokesperson assured users these Instagram photos on Twitter were the last holdouts in the switchover. ”What you are seeing now may be some sort of regression depending on the mobile client, but we’re checking in with the engineers,” read Facebook’s statement, via Talking Points Memo’s Carl Franzen.


RELATED: How to Get Over the Twitter-Instagram War on Photos


Which means the end of this particular social-media marriage is upon us. Despite the immediate user backlash, Instagram CEO Kevin Systrom has made it pretty clear that the photo-sharing app doesn’t plan on making nice with Twitter. In case you hadn’t accepted the reality of Silicon Valley competition the first time around, this photo-friendly weekend might be the time to check out our handy three-step guide to getting over it. 


Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News


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Lady Antebellum Singer Hillary Scott is Pregnant

Newlyweds Hillary Scott and Chris Tyrell of Lady Antebellum have announced that they are expecting their first child together.

RELATED: Lady Antebellum's Lady Talks Weekend Wedding

"Chris & I are excited to announce that our Christmas gift has arrived a little early this year! We are having a BABY!" Scott tweeted on Friday. "We feel so blessed!!!"

Newborns seem to be a new trend in country music, as this news follows the birth of Sugarland singer Jennifer Nettles' son Magnus Hamilton on Thursday.

Scott and Tyrell wed January 7 after getting engaged on Independence Day in 2011. On Monday Lady Antebellum announced the launching of their new charity, LadyAID. The mission of the organization is to aid children's hospitals.

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Bonanno mob underboss gets 2 years in racketeering case








The underboss of the Bonanno crime family was sentenced to two years in prison today on racketeering extortion charges after he was caught on tape by the ex-husband of a “Mob Wives” star.

Nicholas “Nicky Mouth” Santora, 70, the crime family’s reputed second-in-command, must also serve three years probation and forfeit $5,000 - although he says he doesn't have the cash.

Part of his sentence — four months — is a penalty for spending time with wiseguys and committing the extortion while on probation for an earlier mob conviction.

Brooklyn federal Judge Carol Amon noted that Santora was present at a sit-down discuss of an overdue loan and "played a critical role" in the collection negotiations.





Robert Miller



Nicholas 'Nicky Mouth' Santora after his arrest in January.





Santora already had pleaded guilty to taking part in the Mafia shakedown from 2006 to 2008 to recoup a debt.

“I was trying to collect the money — that’s all,” Santora said at an earlier hearing.

His arrest last year came after Hector “Junior” Pagan, a Bonanno associate and the ex-husband of “Mob Wives” star Renee Graziano, recorded more than 70 conversations with Santora that centered on talk about Mafia business, officials say.

Pagan - who was featured on the VH1 reality show - left the mob to become a DEA informant.

mmaddux@nypost.com










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Pilots approve new contract




















Pilots at American Airlines approved a new labor contract, which could clear the way for consideration of a merger with US Airways.

The pilots’ union announced Friday that 74 percent of its members voted to ratify the contract. Pilots rejected a similar offer in August, but union leaders lobbied hard for passage the second time around.

Under the contract, pilots will get pay raises and own 13.5 percent of American Airlines’ parent AMR Corp. after it emerges from bankruptcy protection.





Union officials and analysts say the vote gives AMR creditors certainty about the company’s labor costs, making it easier for them to weigh which gives them more money — American on its own, or getting bigger through a merger with US Airways.

“This contract represents a bridge to a merger with US Airways,” said union spokesman Dennis Tajer. He said the vote “should not in any way be viewed as support for the American stand-alone plan or for this current management team.”

American also hailed the vote as a key step in its turnaround after years of heavy losses.

The pilots’ vote “gives us the certainty we need for American to successfully restructure,” said Denise Lynn, American’s senior vice president of people, in a statement. She added that “the modernization of our company is well under way, and we remain focused on emerging as a competitive, world-class airline.”

American employs 9,000 workers at its Miami International Airport hub.

“The members of the unions and other employees are relieved this part of the process is over,” Sidney Jimenez, president of Transport Workers Union 568, said in an email to The Miami Herald, “but now we have to adjust, take a deep breath and once again look towards the challenges ahead. Most prominent is the reported merger between American and US Airways which hold its own set of obstacle we must now contend with and overcome.

“It seems we’re in the middle rounds of a heavyweight fight and we haven’t been knocked out despite all the blows. We’re getting our wind back and preparing for the second half of the bout. Don’t count us out yet.”

AMR and American filed for bankruptcy protection in November 2011. With the pilots’ deal in hand, the company could exit Chapter 11 early next year, a faster reorganization than those in the last decade at United Airlines and Delta Air Lines.

Friday’s vote filled in the last unknown piece in AMR’s labor-cost puzzle. The company’s creditors “very much wanted a contract because they want some visibility on what the cost structure will be,” said Ray Neidl, an airline analyst for Maxim Group PLC.

US Airways has proposed a merger that would give AMR creditors 70 percent of the combined company, which would be run by US Airways Group Inc. CEO Doug Parker, according to a person familiar with the discussions and who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private.

There have been reports that AMR might seek up to 80 percent for its creditors, which could be unacceptable to US Airways shareholders, the person said. Last month, a committee of bondholders told the pilots’ union they would only support an independent American if AMR had a new board that would pick managers to run the airline.

The airlines have exchanged confidential financial information and talked about a potential merger for several weeks, although a deal is not certain.

American has about 7,500 active pilots plus a few hundred others on furlough. The union said the vote to ratify the contract was 5,490 to 1,951.

The six-year contract will raise pilots’ pay by 4 percent on signing and 2 percent per year after that, with an adjustment in the third year to bring pay in line with that at other big airlines. The union will get 13.5 percent of the stock in the new AMR when it emerges from bankruptcy, which analysts estimate would amount to at least $100,000 per pilot.

In exchange, pilots will fly more hours and American will get more flexibility to outsource flying to other airlines.

American, which has already frozen pension plans and made other changes in benefits and work rules, is trying to use the bankruptcy process to cut annual labor costs by 17 percent or about $1 billion.

In recent months flight attendants and ground workers have ratified separate contracts that reduced benefits and outsourced thousands of jobs. American expects to cut about 10,000 jobs, with 3,000 layoffs and the rest coming from early retirements and attrition.

Miami Herald staff writer Hannah Sampson contributed to this report.





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A year away: Miami Art Museum’s new name, site, building on Biscayne Bay




















By this time next year, if all goes according to a very immodest plan, the modern-art museum that bears Miami’s name will metamorphose into something almost entirely new.

The institution soon to be formerly known as the Miami Art Museum will have a conspicuous new location, at the downtown edge of Biscayne Bay; a striking new building designed by the Swiss “starchitecture” firm of Herzog & de Meuron; and a new, if not uncontroversial, name and less-than-sonorous acronym.

When it opens in time for Art Basel/Miami Beach in 2013, it will be as the Perez Art Museum Miami, or PAMM, after the Related Group’s Jorge Perez, a prominent Miami developer who made a contribution of cash and art valued at $35 million.





The fresh start, museum backers and administrators say, will propel PAMM toward the status that has long eluded the institution, launched in 1984 as a public exhibition hall with no collection: Art-world player. Agent of transformation.

“We have huge ambition for this institution,’’ said MAM director Thom Collins. “We have outsized ambition. In terms of scope and exhibitions and new commissions, it’s like going zero to 100, not zero to 60.’’

The new building, the product of an infusion of $100 million in public money and a private obligation to raise $120 million more in contributions, is rising at the foot of the MacArthur Causeway. The site occupies several acres of 29-acre Bicentennial Park, a desolate space that’s also slated for an eventual makeover as Museum Park.

Next to PAMM’s home, and about a year behind it in construction, will be a new cutting-edge science museum. The two buildings will flank a lushly planted new public plaza designed by James Corner Field Operations, landscape architects for New York’s High Line, the elevated rail running along the west side of Manhattan that was famously converted into a park.

For an art museum, Herzog & de Meuron’s building has an unusual configuration, designed to provide considerable exhibition flexibility and take maximum advantage of the waterfront location. It’s an arrangement of stacked, interconnected concrete boxes containing dramatically expansive exhibition and performance spaces that were made possible by a structural system that all but dispenses with interior columns.

“It really gives us much more space and makes it possible for us to create unusual juxtapositions,’’ Collins said. “We can do one gigantic thing or we can do multiple things of different character.’’

Large, hurricane-resistant windows will afford views of bay and skyline, and a grand staircase will lead down to a new baywalk. An open terrace wraps around the building and will be shaded by a massive, overhanging lattice-like canopy just now being installed. The landscape plan looks like a surreal dream out of a J.G. Ballard novel: Vines will hang from the canopy and trees will grow through the terrace, as if a subtropical jungle were about to engulf the building.

Like so many recent museum commissions, the building was conceived in part as a revitalization scheme. Forming a cultural nexus with the nearby Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, the museum should bring new life to the once-forlorn north end of downtown Miami, civic and government leaders say.

But museum backers’ hopes extend well beyond that. They say they want PAMM to function as cultural rocket fuel for the city and its maturing arts community, providing greater local visibility for contemporary art and helping boost Miami artists to the world stage. They plan to do so by bringing the best of the art world to show at PAMM, but also to work here and mix it up with the locals.





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First Look: Bloom is Back for Third 'Hobbit' Flick

Talk about third breakfast! The first film in the new Hobbit trilogy hits theaters in just one more week, and we've got a look at the return of Orlando Bloom in the third film of the trilogy -- The Hobbit: There and Back Again -- to whet your insatiable Middle-earth appetite for even more goodies.

Video: Exclusive -- The Hobbit's Naughty Dwarf Calendar?!

In this exclusive first photo from Entertainment Weekly, Orlando's loyal Elf Legolas appears opposite Bard the Bowman, played by Luke Evans. There and Back Again serves as a narrative bridge between The Hobbit trilogy and The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and having a few familiar faces like Orlando's certainly helps the transition, even though Legolas does not appear on paper in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.

Also helping ease the Hobbit transition are returning Lord of the Rings stars Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins, Ian Holm as the elder Bilbo Baggins, Christopher Lee as Saruman and, of course, Ian McKellen as Gandalf.

Video: Watch 'The Hobbit' Trailer

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey rides into theaters in 3D and 2D in select theaters and IMAX on December 14. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug will be released Dec. 13, 2013; while the third installment in the series, The Hobbit: There and Back Again, will hit theaters July 18, 2014.

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City agrees to pay out nearly $10M in Judith Leekin child abuse lawsuit settlement








New York City agreed today to pay out nearly $10 million as the first settlement in a lawsuit that followed one of the more disturbing child abuse cases in recent history.

The money will go to victims of Judith Leekin, who 30 years ago in Queens began mistreating foster kids in her care, then moved to Florida, adopted 11 special-needs children from New York, and abused and tortured them - all while collecting more than $1 million in government subsidies.

A federal judge in New York sentenced her to 11 years in prison in 2008 on fraud charges.

A judge in St. Lucie County sentenced her to 20 years in prison in 2009 for abuse of children and disabled adults.





AP



Judith Leekin.





Among them was an autistic boy - now an adult - who spent his childhood "essentially in a bucket, where he would eat, sleep, urinate and defecate," according to letter used at one trial.

Authorities in Florida said that Leekin had utilized numerous aliases - including Judith S. Johnson, Judith Lee-kin-de Johnson, Michelle Wells and Eastlyn J. Giraud - to adopt the 11 children and disabled young adults in New York between 1993 and 1996.

Child welfare officials have said the adoptions took place before a policy was instituted in 1999 to take fingerprints from adoptive parents to verify their identities.

After one of Leekin's trials in 2008, attorneys for the victims slammed New York state's Office of Children and Family Services for the lax oversight that led to Leekin's adoptions, saying that that "the process to foster and/or adopt children in New York during this time was easier than buying a used car."

The victims' identities are not revealed in court papers, because they were juveniles at the time the crimes took place.

Of the $9.7 million settlement, $6 million will go to two of the victims, officials said. The remaining $3.7 will be shared among the eight other victims, officials said.

Claims against a variety of other agencies named in the lawsuit are still pending in Brooklyn federal court, officials said.

"Judith Leekin’s extraordinary criminal scheme was unprecedented," said Bruce Strikowsky, an attorney who represented the city.

"Though the city had strong legal defenses, this settlement will benefit those harmed most by Leekin -- the children she abused. They have been, and continue to be, the city's primary concern," the attorney said.

mmaddux@nypost.com










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New equity options exchange owned by Miami company starts trading on Friday




















MIAX Options Exchange, a new fully electronic, equity options trading exchange, said it will begin trading on Friday.

MIAX Options Exchange is based in Princeton, N.J., but its parent company is Miami International Holdings. While MIAX’s executive offices, technology development center and national operations center are based in Princeton, additional executive offices, and a multi-purpose training, meeting and conference center will be located in Miami, the company said.

MIAX Options Exchange’s trading platform has been developed in-house and designed for the functional and performance demands of derivatives trading, the company said.





INA PAIVA CORDLE





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Leon County judge accused of using office to promote for-profit religious business




















Leon County Judge Judith W. Hawkins was charged Wednesday with misconduct, accused of using her office to promote a business that sells Bible study books, souvenirs and other products to attorneys and others who regularly appear in her courtroom.

The charges focus on Gaza Road Ministries, a business that sells books, stages seminars and conferences and sponsors mission trips to other countries, including Guyana, Romania, Mongolia, Mexico and Brazil.

Her sermons have included “Your Day in Court,’’ emphasizing that “God will bring every work into judgment, including every secret thing, whether it is good or whether it is evil.’’ In October she appeared at a seminar discussing, “When Life Gives You Lemons,” turning obstacles into opportunities.





Florida’s Judicial Qualifications Commission alleges that these activities and the use of a judicial assistant who has helped promote the ministry take time away from judicial duties for a profit-making business.

The Commission also alleges that selling and attempting to sell her books, study guides and other publications in her Leon County Courthouse chambers and courtroom to attorneys and court staff is an abuse of Hawkins’ position.

In 2011, Hawkins reported it as a business interest that generated more than $13,500 in income, the Commission noted.

“You often take time away from your judicial duties to promote your business to the detriment of the prompt and efficient administration of justice,’’ the commission charged.

Hawkins was elected in 1996, the first African-American elected in the Second Judicial Circuit that includes Leon County. She is married to Dr. James Hawkins, former dean of the school of journalism at Florida A&M University.

Contacted at the courthouse shortly after the charges were released by the Florida Supreme Court, Hawkins said she could not discuss them because she had yet to receive a copy.

She has 20 days to respond to the charges. The commission has the authority to recommend a reprimand or removal from office after a hearing. The final decision is up to the state Supreme Court.





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