Carolyn DiPaolo | Stet News
Person Page
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Juno Beach-based FPL is so desperate for more employee parking that it asked the town for permission to pave over part of a small nature preserve at its headquarters to build a 200-space parking lot.
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New York-based Continuum announces workforce housing on church land is part of project.
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Riviera Beach’s utility director, Joshua Niemann, is no longer on the job he held for less than a year.
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A Riviera Beach special City Council meeting was abruptly canceled Monday afternoon, hours before it was set to begin. The single item on the agenda was a discussion of a nearly 2-year-old investigation of top city staff launched by former Mayor Ronnie Felder.
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The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office is for the first time collecting data on verbal warnings made during traffic stops. The change comes after years of urging by faith-based social justice coalition PEACE and is advised by a nationally recognized expert on bias in policing.
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Advocates for homeless people are updating Palm Beach County’s plan to support and protect many of the county’s most vulnerable residents.
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The final report on West Palm Beach’s downtown waterfront urges the city to appoint a waterfront czar for the city’s signature asset.
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A Palm Beach County social justice organization is part of a growing network dedicated to improving access to mental health services.
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Riviera Beach City Council members decided Wednesday that they needed to hear from both closely ranked finalists before choosing a private partner to help rebuild their city, despite the selection committee having recommended Sonnenblick Development for the project.
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Riviera Beach City Council members voted Wednesday to give themselves a $12,000 raise. During their meeting as the board of the city’s Utility Special District, members voted 3-2 in favor of a $1,000 monthly stipend. They said it will compensate them for their work guiding Riviera Beach’s faltering water system while managing construction of a $400 million plant.
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Riviera Beach leaders took a major step last month to launch construction of a $400 million water plant and to shore up its faltering drinking water system. Last year, the city was fined more than $1.2 million for violating Florida Department of Health water standards.
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A new initiative is showing promise as a way to help teachers prepare Palm Beach County children for the growing rigors of kindergarten.