3 candidates vie for short term on Biscayne Park Village Commission
Biscayne Park voters will head to the polls Tuesday for a Special Election featuring three candidates seeking a seven-month term on the Village Commission. The candidates include Ryan Huntington, Daniel Samaria and Carlos Trejo Pereira. All filed pa…
Biscayne Park voters will head to the polls Tuesday for a Special Election featuring three candidates seeking a seven-month term on the Village Commission.
The candidates include Ryan Huntington, Daniel Samaria and Carlos Trejo Pereira.
All filed paperwork in February to run for the seat of now-former Commissioner John Holland, who was appointed to the post a year before.
Huntington, a firefighter, told Florida Politics that addressing traffic in the small, 3,100-resident municipality is his No. 1 issue. Too many cars drive through the village daily, he said, and there should be more traffic-calming measures and pedestrian protections.
Another priority of his is to make sure the village completes its capital improvement plan. He said he'd also work to make officials more accessible to their constituents.
"Biscayne Park residents are informed and want more interpersonal relationships with Commissioners," he said. "I've always felt we were lacking in that."
Huntington said he ran a mostly self-funded campaign with $400 from his bank account, $200 from a family member and $100 from the Miami Association of Firefighters, which endorsed him.
He plans to run in November, when three Village Commission seats are up for grabs, whether or not he wins Tuesday.
Samaria, a former Biscayne Park Commissioner, said he'll do the same regardless of the Special Election outcome. His platform prioritizes lower taxes, addressing traffic congestion and improving the village's public works.
He told Florida Politics that especially in Tuesday's election, which he said came at a $15,000 cost to taxpayers, a candidate's experience in elected office should influence residents' decisions in the voting booth.
"This is not a regular election where you have two years to do what you need to do," he said. "We have a seven-month term here. We have the budget coming up. Experience counts."
A U.S. Marine Corps veteran and active community member, Samaria spent most of the 1990s working as an exterminator and in 2001 founded his own pest control company.
He said his campaign is almost exclusively self-funded, with only a pair of contributions totaling about $50 coming from anywhere but his wallet.
He made headlines in 2020 after he became embroiled in a legal battle with the village, which sued him on allegations that he no longer lived there and was in office illegally. Samaria said he fell victim to a loan scam, was unable to pay his mortgage and was eventually evicted from his home, but he never moved out of the municipality.
A judge tossed the lawsuit, and Samaria countersued for $1 million in damages, accusing the former Mayor, Manager and Attorney of collaborating to remove him from office. He said he initially included Biscayne Park in the lawsuit on legal advice, but the complaint that was ultimately heard in court only included the Mayor, Manager and Attorney as respondents.
"Since I had no intention of making residents pay any which way — that was never the intention — the lawsuit against Biscayne Park was thrown out," he said. "A lawsuit against the other three kept going and has now been settled. That's all I can say."
Pereira, who did not respond to an interview request by press time, is a stalwart GOP operative who previously worked in the offices of Miami Republican Sen. Ileana Garcia and embattled Miami City Commissioner Joe Carollo.
His political work also includes stints as a field director for Latinos for Trump, Americans for Prosperity and the LIBRE Initiative. He is now the Executive Director of Amigos of our Parks, a North Miami-based nonprofit dedicated to conserving Miami parks that promote Central American values.
He said on X last month that he decided to run for the Biscayne Park Commission after "several neighbors" asked him to do so.
Holland was appointed in February 2023 to replace former Commissioner Lucille Olivera. She resigned two months earlier to move out of the village.
The seat will again be open in November, when voters will also elect people to the seats of Commissioners Art Gonzalez and MacDonald Kennedy. The November election will be at-large, with voters choosing between a field of candidates and the top three vote-getters winning office.
The two candidates with the most votes will win four-year terms, while the third winner will serve for two years.
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