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STF na Mídia - MyClipp

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He has called on the Justice Department, which is<br />

investigating Trayvon's death, to look into other cases<br />

where residents have raised concerns about police<br />

treatment. He also wants people to contact the federal<br />

officials with their complaints.<br />

"We need to address this head-on," Bo<strong>na</strong>parte says.<br />

"The shooting has had a polarizing effect … but it's<br />

based on something that's been going on longer than<br />

the Trayvon Martin case."<br />

Bo<strong>na</strong>parte, a transplant from Topeka, is still getting to<br />

know Sanford. He was on the job for five months when<br />

Trayvon was killed. He was smitten when he came for<br />

a job interview in July.<br />

"I drove down this beautiful waterfront, people were out<br />

walking, there were people of all races," he says. "It<br />

was a weekday and they were all out enjoying<br />

themselves. It seemed idyllic."<br />

He doesn't want the negative publicity to shatter that<br />

image and the city's small-town charm. The city has<br />

hired a crisis ma<strong>na</strong>gement firm to help deal with the<br />

fallout from the shooting.<br />

"What happened between Trayvon Martin and George<br />

Zimmerman was tragic, (but) these are two individuals<br />

out of a community of 54,000. Let's put that in<br />

perspective," Bo<strong>na</strong>parte says.<br />

Nicholas Mcray, the city's economic development<br />

director, who is white, says, "It's obviously a<br />

tumultuous time."<br />

He says the attention brought by the shooting "doesn't<br />

help" efforts to build on the growth the city has seen in<br />

the past decade. The population grew 40% since<br />

2000.<br />

Bo<strong>na</strong>parte and Mcray point to the downtown<br />

redevelopment that rebuilt the river walk along the<br />

southern edge of Lake Monroe, the refurbished park<br />

across the river walk that hosts 90,000 people every<br />

July 4 and the redeveloped downtown with its brick<br />

sidewalks, benches and new facades.<br />

The park, with new basketball courts, jungle gym and<br />

swing set, fountains and football field, is a hub every<br />

day of the week.<br />

USA Today/ - News, Seg, 02 de Abril de 2012<br />

CLIPPING INTERNACIONAL (Civil Rights)<br />

Mcray says more redevelopment is under discussion<br />

along the city's main thoroughfare, French Avenue, a<br />

busy boulevard of check-cashing places, fast food and<br />

take-out Chinese restaurants, boarded-up businesses<br />

and vacant lots. The housing authority has met with<br />

federal officials to figure out how to redevelop land<br />

where now-closed housing projects sit in Goldsboro,<br />

one of the city's historically black communities. That<br />

part of town has boarded-up houses and storefronts<br />

and homes in need of repair.<br />

Mcray says the city strives to live up to its slogan, "The<br />

Friendly City." The city even posted on its website a<br />

map of downtown and places to stay and eat for<br />

out-of-towners attending the rallies.<br />

"I think the characterization of our community has not<br />

been as broad as it truly is," he says. "We are a<br />

welcoming, open and safe community."<br />

Kruckemyer and family friend Hank Dieckhaus<br />

discussed the case last week as they sat outside the<br />

Taste of Thyme Café downtown.<br />

Dieckhaus, who is white, moved to Sanford from<br />

Philadelphia nine years ago. He says he's attended all<br />

the meetings and rallies for Trayvon Martin. "I wanted<br />

to go to show support," he says.<br />

Still, he says Sanford bears no resemblance to the Jim<br />

Crow towns of the Deep South.<br />

"This is not 1965; this is not Selma, Alabama, or<br />

Birmingham. This is Sanford, Fla., 2012, and we'll get<br />

through this," says Dieckhaus, 64.<br />

Yet the stigma of the case is strong.<br />

Molly Meyerholtz, ma<strong>na</strong>ger of The Treehouse Fine<br />

Furniture and Antiques, which has been on First Street<br />

about five years, says the Trayvon Martin case<br />

exploded just at the end of the January-March tourist<br />

season.<br />

"It's very overwhelming," she says. "If the city of<br />

Sanford wanted to put itself on the map, they certainly<br />

didn't do it in the right way."<br />

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