Contact
Reaching the right office within Miami-Dade's layered government structure requires knowing which of the region's 34 municipalities or county departments holds jurisdiction over a specific issue. This page explains how to direct inquiries to Miami Metro Authority, what information to prepare before making contact, and which alternative channels exist for different types of requests. Routing a message accurately reduces response time and ensures it reaches the staff member with authority to act on it.
Additional contact options
Miami-Dade County operates a unified 311 service line that handles non-emergency service requests across county-administered departments, including Miami-Dade Water and Sewer, Solid Waste Management, and Building Permits and Inspections. The 311 system accepts contacts by phone, web form, and mobile application, and issues a tracking number for each submitted request.
For matters involving public records, the Miami-Dade Public Records Requests process operates as a distinct channel governed by Florida's Public Records Law, Chapter 119, Florida Statutes. That process requires a formal written request and carries specific statutory response timelines rather than the general service windows that apply to routine inquiries.
For elected officials, two separate paths exist:
- County-level: The Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners maintains district offices for each of the 13 commission districts. Constituents contact the office representing their residential district, not the commission as a whole.
- City-level: Municipal matters route to the relevant city commission. The Miami City Commission handles matters within the City of Miami's incorporated limits, while residents of cities such as Coral Gables, Hialeah, or Aventura contact their respective municipal bodies.
Ethics complaints against county officials or lobbyists are submitted through the Miami-Dade Commission on Ethics, which operates independently of line departments and accepts complaints in writing.
How to reach this office
Miami Metro Authority functions as a reference and civic information resource covering the Miami metropolitan area. Inquiries directed to this site relate to the accuracy, completeness, or scope of published reference content — not to the delivery of government services, which remain the responsibility of the agencies described in the site's pages.
Written inquiries can be submitted through the contact form available on this domain. For questions about specific government agencies, the following routing applies:
- Property and tax matters — Miami-Dade Property Appraiser or Miami-Dade Tax Collector
- Court and legal proceedings — Miami-Dade Clerk of Courts or Miami-Dade Judiciary
- Elections and voter registration — Miami-Dade Elections Department or Miami-Dade Voter Registration
- Zoning and land use decisions — Miami City Zoning and Land Use or Miami-Dade Planning Department
- Emergency and public safety — Miami-Dade Emergency Management or Miami-Dade Police Department
Service area covered
The reference content published on this site covers Miami-Dade County in its entirety, encompassing the county's unincorporated areas and all 34 incorporated municipalities. The geographic footprint extends from Homestead and Florida City in the south to Aventura and North Miami Beach in the north, and from Key Biscayne in the east to Doral and unincorporated western communities near the Everglades boundary.
A distinction applies between county-administered services and municipal services. Miami-Dade County government, operating under its Home Rule Charter, provides services directly to unincorporated Miami-Dade — an area that holds a larger population than most Florida cities. Incorporated municipalities operate their own governments and in some cases their own police, fire, and planning departments. An inquiry about a property in the City of Miami routes differently than one about a property in unincorporated Miami-Dade, even when the two parcels sit within blocks of each other.
Regional and metropolitan topics covered include Miami-Dade Transit Governance, the Miami-Dade Transportation Planning Organization, Miami-Dade Environmental Regulation, and Miami-Dade Climate Resilience — all of which operate at a scale that transcends individual municipal boundaries.
What to include in your message
A message that includes the following elements receives a substantive response faster than one that omits them:
- Specific subject matter — Identify the page, department, or topic the inquiry concerns. A reference to a specific slug or article title eliminates ambiguity.
- Geographic precision — State whether the location involved is within an incorporated municipality or unincorporated Miami-Dade. Include a street address or zip code where relevant.
- Nature of the inquiry — Distinguish between a factual correction to published content, a question about which government agency holds jurisdiction, or a request for additional reference coverage on a topic not yet published.
- Supporting documentation — For factual corrections, include a citation to the authoritative public source — such as a Miami-Dade County ordinance number, a Florida Statutes section, or a named resolution from the Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners — rather than a secondary source.
- Contact method preference — Indicate whether a response by email or through the site's form system is preferred.
Incomplete submissions lacking a subject or geographic context are held for clarification before routing, which extends turnaround. Inquiries that are properly scoped are reviewed against the site's published content and answered with reference to the relevant authoritative source where one exists.
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