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Annexation AffidavitStreet Publication Date 1225 Main St 9/4/2022 City Ad Number Sebastian GC10933164 State Publication FL Indian River Press Journal - full run ZIP Code Market 32958 Treasure Coast Your Name Delivery Method Marita Froimson Both Email Address Number of Affidavits Needed mfroimson@gannett.com 1 Customer Email jwilliams@cityofsebastian.org & ctesta@cityofsebastian.org Customer Name City Of Sebastian Customer Phone Number (772) 589-5330 Customer Address 1225 Main St Sebastian, FL 32958 Account Number (If Known) 435563 Name City Of Sebastian Attn: Jeanette Williams Treasure.Coast Newspapers W PART OF THE USA TODAY NET WORK Indian River Press Journal 1801 U.S. 1, Vero Beach, FL32960 AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION CITY OF SEBASTIAN 1225 MAIN ST SEBASTIAN, FL 32958 ATTN STATE OF WISCONSIN COUNTY OF BROWN Before the undersigned authority personally appeared, said legal clerk, who on oath says that he is a legal clerk of the Indian River Press Journal, a daily newspaper published at Vero Beach in Indian River County, Florida: that the attached copy of advertisement was published in the Indian River Press Journal in the following issues below. Affiant further says that the said Indian River Press Journal is a newspaper published in Vero Beach in said Indian River County, Florida, and that said rewspaper has heretofore been continuously published in said Indian River County, Florida, daily and distributed in Indian River County, Florida, for a period of one year next preceding the first publication of the attached copy of advertisement ; and affiant further says that she has neither paid or promised any person, firm or corporation any discount, rebate, commission or refund for the purpose of securing this advertisement for publication in the said newspaper. The Indian River Press Journal has been entered as Periodical Matter at the Post Offices in Vero Beach, Indian River County, Florida and has been for a period of one year next preceding the first publication of the attached copy of advertisement. 8/29/2022; 9/4/2022 Subscribed and sworn to before on September 4th, 2022 eel otary, to of I, Co y f Brown My commi sio expires: Publication Cost: $630.00 Ad No: GC10933164 NANCY HEYRMAN Customer No:435563 Notary Public PO#: PUBLIC NOTICE State of Wisconsin THIS IS NOT AN INVOICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION CITY OF SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA The City Council of the City of Sebastian, Indian River County, Florida, has received a petition for voluntary annexation, and therefore proposes to consider the following ordinance: ORDINANCE NO. 0-22-07 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA, PROVIDING FOR THE VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION FOR LAND CONSISTING OF 1984.22 ACRES, MORE OR LESS, LOCATED SOUTH OF COUNTY ROAD 510 ROW, WEST OF LANDS ADJACENT TO THE 74TH AVE ROW, NORTH OF 69TH STREET ROW, AND EAST OF 90th AVE ROW; PROVIDING FOR THE EXTENSION OF THE CORPORATE LIMITS AND BOUNDARIES THEREOF; PROVIDING FOR INTERIM LAND USE AND ZONING CLASSIFICATION; PROVIDING FOR SCRIVENER'S ERRORS; PROVIDING FOR CONFLICT AND SEVERABILITY; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. A public hearing on the ordinance will be held on Tuesday, September 13, 2022, at 6:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, City Hall, 1225 Main Street, Sebastian. Following the public hearing, the City Council may adopt this ordinance to annex the property as shown in the map below and generally described in the ordinance title above: Interested parties may inspect the proposed ordinance and the complete legal description of the property by metes and bounds in the Community Development Department at City Hall, Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and may appear at the hearing and be heard with respect to the proposed ordinance. Any person who may wish to appeal any decision which may be made by the City Council at this hearing will need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal will be based. (FS.286.0105) In compliance with the American with Disabilities Act (ADA), anyone who needs a special accommodation for this meeting should contact the City's ADA Coordinator at (772) 388-8220 at least 48 hours in advance of the meeting. Publish: Display Ad, Vero Beach Press Journal Monday, August 29, 2022, Sunday September 4, 2022 TR-CC1093016.01 K TCPALM.COM I SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,2022 129A Chile tries to replace constitution Chileans may be poised to reject the document Daniel Politi ASSOCIATED PRESS SANTIAGO, Chile -'Two years ago, the vast major- Ity of Chileans reached a conclusion" 1'he constiUu ion needs to change. Now, as voters prepare for a referendum Sunday, many Chileans think the proposed new chatter will be rejected aroW frustration over the process, questions about its content and what supporters say is a surge in f dia news that has confused citizens about what is ac- tually in the document. Just under 80% of Chileans voted to call for a new constliutiun in October 2020 and in 2021elected dele- gates to a convention to draft the new document. Getting rid of the constitution dating from Chile's 1973-1990 military dictatorship was seen as a way to answer student -led protests that were sparked by a hike in public transportation prices but which quickly expanded Into broader demands for greater attire City and more social protections. But opinion polls ladcate Chileans may be poised to reject the replacement document written by the contention, which Included issues like gender equal- ity, environmental protections and Indigenous rights throughout the document's 388 articles and 178 pages that would fundamentally change Chilean society. "We arc facing one of oc must important electiats that we've hod in the history of Chile, If not the most ort impant;' said Gaspar Dominguez, former vice presi- dent of the constitutional convention. Dominguez, a 33-year-old rural physician and polit- ical independent, exemplifies the type of delegate that Chileans elected to draw at, their new constitution amid the anti-establishment fervor that followed the street protests. The majority of the convention dele- gates did not come from the traditional political par- ies. Dominguer says he is confident the polls are wrong and Chileans will end up adopting the new constitu- tion. But if it fails, he insists misinformation will be a main culprit. "There are multiple and diverse reasons to reject Ohe proposed constitution), but many do It because they heard the text has things if atit doesn't' he said. noting, for example, a persistent rumor that people would have to give up their houses or share them with migrants. Others path hark against th? insistence that faks news is to blame for people souring on the document. "Constitutions can be interpreted, that why we have supreme courts," sold Robert Funk, a political sci- enlist at Chile University. While Funk agrees that lies have been spread about the document, he says that "treating a different interpretation as fake news is ex- tremely dangerous" Dominguez points to events that affected "the con- fidence of the citizenry in the jiroens' of writing the new constitution, among them a delegate lying about having leukemia, another casting a vote while taking a shower and others slowing up for work at the co rven- tion dressed in costumes. These headline -grabbing events undermined the credibility of the convention and raised questions about what the delegates were doing. "The literature always says that the process is as important as the result,' said Octavio Avendarlo, a so- ciologist at Chile University. "The process failed her, For Paulina Lobos, the delegates "did not rise to the occasion of the responsibility that the country handed to them" Lobos voted in fnvorof changing the constitution in 2020 "with a lot of hope," but she has since grown so disillusioned with the work ofthe convention that she has been campaigning against the document. It wasn't just about the process, but the contents of the document as well, she said. "It went from being the Imposition that we had in 1980 by a group of military officers and right-wingers to tieing an imposition by leftist radicals on society at large;" Lobos said. Some of the most controversial articles in the pro- posed consl nation have to do will, Chile's Indigenous population. which stakes up ahnost 13%of the coun- try's 19 million people. 'fit' 'barter would characterize Chile as a plurina- tionalstao, establish autonomous territa—drecog- nlze u parallel justice system in those at ;, although how far-reaching that would be e to be decided w by lamakers. 'filedocument also enshrines sexual States' red flag gun laws get little use Bernard Condon ASSOCIATED PRESS Many U.S. states barely use laws they have on the books that give Ilmm the power to lake guns away from Profile threatening to kill, an Associated Press analy- sis found, a trend blamed on a lack of awareness of the laws and resistance by some police to enforce them even as shooiings and gun deaths soar. AP found the so-called red flag laws in 19 states and the District of Columbia were used to remove firearms from people 15,049 times since 2020, fewer than 10 per 100,000 adult residents. Experts called that woefully low and not nearly enough to make a dent in gun vio- lence, considering the millions of firearms in circula- tion and countless potential warning signs law en- forcement ollicers encounter from gun owners every day. "It's too small a pebble to make a ripple," Duke Uni- versity sociologist Jeffrey Swanson, who has studied red Bag gun suvender orders across the nation, said of the AP tally. "Its as if the law doesn't exist' "The number of people we are catching with red flags is likely infinitesimal;' added Indiana University law professor Jody Madeira, who like other experts who reviewed AP's findings wouldn't speculate how many red flag removal orders would be necessary to make a difference. The search for solutions conics amid a string of mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, Uvalde, Texas, and I ligluland Park, Illinois, and a spike in gun violence not seen in decades: 27,000 deaths so far this year, fill - towing 45000 deaths each ofthe past two e R V years. AP's count, compiled from inquiries and Freedom of Information Law requests, showed wide disparities in how the laws were enforced, most without regard to population, gun ownersldp or crime rates. Florida led with 5,800 such orders, or 34 per 100,000 adult residents, but that is due mostly to ag- gressive enforcement in a few counties that don't in - elude Miami -Dade and others with more giro killings. More than a quarter of Illinois' slim 154 orders cane front one Suburban county that makes up just 7% of the state's population, and just four orders came from shootings -wracked Chicago. California had 3,197 or- ders but was working through a backlog of three times that number ol'peoplebarred from owningguns under a variety of reasures who had not yet surrendered them. And a national movement among politicians and sheriffs that s declared nearly 2,000 counties as "Sec- ond Amendment Sanctuaries," opposing laws that in- fringe on gun rights, may have affected red flag en- forcennent in several slates. In Colorado, 37 counties that consider themselves "sanctuaries" hauled just 45 surrender orders in the two years througltlast year, a fifth fewer than non -sanctuary counties did per resi- dent. New Maxi co and Nevada reported only about 20 orders combined. 'The law shouldn't even be there in the first place," argued Richard Mack, a former Arizona sheriff who heads the pro gun COnSlltBli.nal Sheriff's and Peace Officers Association. "You'ro taking away someone's property and means of self-defense" Red flag laws, most of which came into effect over the last four years, allow police officers who believe gun owners are an imminont danger to themselves or of hers to petition a judge to order firearms surrendered or, barring that, seyzed for an "emergency" period, typically two weeks. The judge can then convene a courthearing in which petitioners present evidence to withhold weapons longer, typically a year, and the owner can ague against that. AP's tally counts an emergency order followed by a longer one as a single order if they involve the same gun owner. Some states also allow family members of gun own- ers, school officials, work colleagues or doctors to ask for gun removal orders, also known as extreme risk protection orders. But data reviewed by the AP shows nearly all petitions to several states were initiated by poke, possibly because, as several surveys have shown, few people outside law enforcement are even aware the laws exist. 'fhe recent spike in shootings has brought renewed attention to red flag laws, with states Including Alaska, Pennsylvania and Kentucky introducing legislation to addthem.'I'he Bidenadninlstredonisseekhigtot R- ter wider use of red flag laws by allocating money in a newly passed federal gun law to help spread the word about such measures. An AP-NORC poll in late July found that 78%of U.S. adults strongly or somewhat favor red flag laws, but the backlash against them has been intense in some states, part4cularly In rural areas. Opponents argue that allowing -Judges to rule on gun seizures in initial emergency petitions before full hearings violates due Process rights, though court Cases claiming this have generally found the laws constitutional. Many police believe seizing guns can also be dan- gerous and unnecessary, even as a last resort, espe- cially in sparsely populated areas where they know many of the residents with mental health issues, said 'Pony Mace, head of the New Mexico Sheriffs' Associa- tion, which lobbied against the state's law. "You're shoving up with 10 to 15 law enforcement officers and coming in Om middle of the alght and kick- ing in the door, and it's already a dangerous environ- ment;'sald Mace, sheriff of Clbola County, a l mmhlary county with just one order since 2020. One fierce gun rights defender who still aggressive- ly uses the law is Polk County, Florida, Sheriff Grady Judd, who says he doesn't let his beliefs stand in the way of moving fast when gun owners threaten vio- lence. "We're not going to wait for an Uvalde, Texas, or a Parkland or a Columbine if we have the information and people say that they're going to shoot or kill;'said Judd, who enforced 752 orders since 2020 in a county of 725,000 residents, a tally that is more than the total orders for 15 entire slates. "We're gdhng to use the tools that the state gore us," Demonstrators rally" last allyaginst the proposed Constitution on Thursday in S. ntiago, Chile. aASUAUEEyAP live rights, alluding to abortion without mentioning it in a country where terminating pregnancy remains Il- legal except for medical reasons or in cases of rape_ It also puts the environment on center stage in a country that is the world's top copper produces As more Chileans started hearing details about what the new constitution would include, many began growing wary. Valentina Rosas saw this switch first hand. Roses is the deputy director of We Have to 'Palk About Chile, run by the Catholic University and Chile University, a platform that seeks to get citizens to talk to each other about important issues through a virtual platform. In the beginning of the constitutional process "the word we registered the most was 'hope';' she said. "These days, the word we register the most is'uncer- tainty'" ']'hat uncertainty has to do at least in part with the sheer length of the document. "It s at, excessively long proposal, one of the biggest in the world said Kenneth Bunker, head of PTO, a Santiago -based political consultancy. "The text is way too longand leaves a lot ofspace for criticism," Avenda}o agrees. "More than a constitu- tional text it looks like a government program: In an effort to deal with this uncertainty, President Gabriel Boric, a strong proponent of amending the constitution, and his allies have publicly committed to changing or clarifying some of the most controversial points of the document Wit is approved. The administration of Boric, 36, is so closely fled to the new constiftlon that a lot of people "associate the. referendum with the government;' Bunker said. That is bad news for the proposed document be- cause the approval ratings of the country's youngest ever president have plunged since he took office in March. The latest poll by Cadem, a local pollster, said 46% percent of ClAleaas leaned toward rejection and 37% supported the new charter, with a margin of error of Plus or minus three percentage points. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION CITY OF SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA The Cily Council of the Cry of Sebasiwn, firkal Rwer Count,, Rados, has received a pehtbn for vduntay aneexaran, and Jame— prep— to consider the fdlawiag adaancK ORDINANCE NO. 0.M-07 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA, PROVIDING FOR THE VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION FOR LAND CONSISTING OF 111114.22 ACRES, MORE OR LEW, LOCATED SOUTH OF COUNTYROAD510ROW,WESTOFLANDSADJACENT TO THE 74TH AVE ROW, NORTH OF 69TH STREET ROW, AND EAST OF Sol, AVE ROW; PROVIDING FOR THE EXTENSION OF THE CORPORATE LIMITS AND BOUNDARIES THEREOP, PROVIDING FOR INTERIM LAND USE AND ZONING CLASSIFICATION; PROVIDING FOR SCRIVENER'S ERRORS; PROVIDING FOR CONFLICT AND SEVERABILITY; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. A public Irealrg lire ornce All dnall be 1reW an Tuesday, soptemtrer 13, 2022, at ooD p-at u, lire City Council Chambers, Cry Han, 1225 Mai. Strset. Sebasaan. Following the pubic Ileanng, Pat CRY Council may adopt this ad.aace to aaaex the property as show. I. me —P blow and generally de..Abed In are onto rce tille above: Intetestro panes may'mslrecl the Propos of ordwace i M the oo.RxCie kgal descrplbn of the ProPettY by metes aatl Wands M the Canmunlly DevNgxnmt DCpanmmt at CItY Hall, Monday ihawgh Fritlay B.OD am to 4�30 p,m aatl may appear al the n�n�.g a.d tie heard wnh respett Ia are movoar-d ord,aaaca. Any Person who may wish to appeal anY decakn whiGr ITIay be do by alp Ch Coundl at Iris hearlg w111 Iratl to etrsure ihal a verbatim record of the proceedings IS made Mile, mead includes Ilre tesfn coy and evideno, upon which Ilm appeal will be fused, (E S.2960105) b canpraare Art are —can will, LSsab,ll0trs Ad IADAI, should contact theme CIIyA Coardlrlaiaatat (]]2)13B6-6220 a9 least 4a lours In advaMe d Ore mMlag. Publish' D'eplay Ad, Veto Boaeh Puss Jou—I Ma day. A glsl 29, 2022, Sunday September 4, 2022 ,v... ,,...