Cover Story

Politics and Happy Hour

County Commissioner and Downtowner Eileen Higgins. We met at Lost Boy to talk local politics. From our archives, 2018.

Raul Guerrero
Downtown NEWS

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Commissioner Eileen Higgins has one spontaneous and contagious laugh, which can be deceiving. Her affable demeanor hides a multifaceted and relentless persona — what we used to call a woman of substance.

The Neighborhood Bar

Lost Boy during a soccer — fútbol — game. Photo Niels Johansen for Downtown NEWS.

The popular downtown bar Lost Boy has been in the news lately, where it was described as the “epitome of a neighborhood bar.” A somewhat dislocated urban philosopher and regular at Lost Boy takes offense at what has become a meaningless designation. “One article mentioned that this is the authentic downtown neighborhood watering hole, and five or ten bloggers and journalists immediately parachuted in and started to parrot the first one, without allusion to the social impact local bars exercise.” Perched on a stool, the urban philosopher downs a Guinness with gusto, and concludes, “Voltaire said it best: the first man to compare a woman to a flower was a poet, the second an imbecile.”

A definition is in order. Commissioner Higgins, nursing a glass of red wine, elaborates on the importance of public places to forge a sense of community. People frequent Lost Boy not only to drink but to discuss local issues, get to know neighbors, analyze soccer strategies and, one supposes, fall in love. “It’s not like we have many places for the downtown community to connect — even Bayfront Park is closed most of the time…” Besides, Commissioner Higgins laughs, nodding her approval at a truism: conversations are livelier over a drink.

Downtown NEWS: One of your campaign banners was living wages. How is the commission doing on that?

Commissioner Higgins: I believe that we should pay living wages in all properties and contracts that the County controls. Concessionaires at the Airport, for example. We recently passed a living wage for new contracts there. It’s a small step towards balancing inequity.

DN: The New York Times claims you are part of a New Blue Wave… That a changing of the guard is taking place in Miami-Dade, a lessening influence of the conservative Cuban establishment, and the rising influence of the Florida Democratic Party…

CH: The County Commission is nonpartisan, you know. What we are seeing might be a blue-collar wave.

DN: When we first met, you pointed out that one way out of wages that hardly pay the bills was starting your own business. But you also pointed out many failed to become scale-ups because they lacked access to capital or simply didn’t know how to connect with potential clients. Are you still championing business training, what you labeled 21st-century skills?

CN: Let’s face it. Many jobs in Miami are $15 an hour or worse. We can create our own high-paying jobs by enabling entrepreneurs to grow their business faster. The County is very much committed to investing in training programs. And residents have avenues for training: Miami Dade College, CIC, even the Public Library offers many training tools. [Commissioner Higgins’s face lightens as she mentions the Library. She has been selected a Voice for Libraries.] Old conceptions of the Public Library need revising. The library is not one building. Now it can be anywhere. I ride the bus listening to my favorite audiobooks, streamed from the library. The library is my living room.

DN: Historically public libraries also have been community-building centers.

CH: Yes, that is a tradition going back to Benjamin Franklin, but libraries need to be closer to where people are.

Inevitabilities

Randy Alonso, one of Lost Boy’s owners, stops by our table and joins in the conversation about neighborhood bars. He seconds the commissioner. One of the reasons behind the bar was to serve as a place for downtown residents to gather without feeling ripped off. He is right about that. Happy hour drinks are between $5 and $6. Not crappy stuff, these are well-crafted drinks, a must for the modern reincarnation of the local bar populated in great part by millennials.

On the subject of millennials, it must be noted that our commissioners, both City and County, surround themselves with savvy energetic millennials.

Lost Boy, photo by Niels Johansen.

And the inevitable happens. This is the problem with Happy Hour: it’s over before you know it. Time to wrap up the conversation. Commissioner Higgins raises her glass: “Cheers.”

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Raul Guerrero
Downtown NEWS

I write about cities, culture, and history. Readers and critics characterize my books as informed, eccentric, and crazy-funny.