Key Biscayne mayoral candidates advance, Miami green-lights Riverside Wharf project
Two Key Biscayne mayoral candidates are heading for a runoff on the November ballot.
Former Mayor Joe Rasco remained in the lead on Wednesday morning in what is Key Biscayne’s first mayoral primary in over 20 years. Rasco chairs the Virginia Key Advisory Board and is the former director of Miami-Dade County’s Office of Intergovernmental Affairs. He has the endorsement of outgoing Mayor Mike Davey.
Former lobbyist Fausto Gomez held onto his second-place position, with approximately 3,000 ballots counted as of Wednesday morning. About 100 ballots separate him from third-place candidate Katie Petros, former Key Biscayne Village Councilor.
Gomez and Petros trailed Rasco by approximately 500 and 600 votes, respectively, as of 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Key Biscayne’s charter requires the two candidates who earn the most votes during the primary to advance to the regular election, even if one candidate wins the majority. The village has a population of about 15,000.
In November, Key Biscayne voters will decide who will be their next mayor for a two-year term. The mayor will be eligible to run for another consecutive two-year term in 2024.
Mayor Davey, elected in 2018, reached the term limit. In a recent interview with the Miami Herald, he called this election “the first true battle we’ve had for how we’re going to operate as a village.”
Miami referendum on wharf lease
Miami voters passed a referendum authorizing a 100-year lease for the private development of the downtown Riverside Wharf project, with all of the 209 precincts reporting as of 9:30 p.m. Tuesday.
The vote paves the way for developers Alex Mantecon and Guillermo Vadell, in partnership with Driftwood Capital, to build a nightlife venue on the north bank of the Miami River. Their plans include a $185 million luxury hotel and a 16,000-square-foot restaurants complex with a nightclub, rooftop day club and event hall.
The deal also raises the private investment minimum requirement to $30 million from $7 million, and it increases rent, which will be paid to the city, by 50%. The developers must also construct a new seawall and a publicly accessible riverwalk.
Golden Beach capital improvement bond
Golden Beach voters overwhelmingly passed a $7 million general obligation bond, preliminary election night results show.
The approval gives the city funding for proposed and upcoming projects, including a Wellness Center; improvements to Tweddle Park that include the addition of a clay tennis court, accessible restrooms and a stroller track; and energy-efficient lighting for palm trees along the A1A highway, “which would be both easy on the eyes and easy on the planet,” the city wrote in its bond brochure.
This story was originally published August 23, 2022 at 9:33 PM.