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File #: 25-1376    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Presentation Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 10/24/2025 In control: City Commission
On agenda: 10/29/2025 Final action:
Title: RECOGNITION OF STUDENT VISITORS FROM DELRAY BEACH'S SISTER CITY OF MIYAZU, JAPAN AS PART OF THE ONGOING EXCHANGE OF CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING AND FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO CITIES.
Sponsors: City Manager Department
Attachments: 1. Agenda Cover Report
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
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TO: Mayor and Commissioners
FROM: Jeffrey L. Oris, CEcD, Assistant City Manager
THROUGH: Terrence R. Moore, ICMA-CM
DATE: October 29, 2025

Title
RECOGNITION OF STUDENT VISITORS FROM DELRAY BEACH'S SISTER CITY OF MIYAZU, JAPAN AS PART OF THE ONGOING EXCHANGE OF CULTURAL UNDERSTANDING AND FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO CITIES.

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Recommended Action:
Recommendation
The City Commission is asked to recognize and welcome Tsugumi Hori, Mihito Mizutani, Rikuto Siota, Reo Taga, Yosuke Takeshita, Suzuha Ueoka, and Tugumi Yano as honored student visitors from Delray Beach's Sister City of Miyazu, Japan.

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Background:
Miyazu, Japan, and Delray Beach, Florida, Sister Cities relationship was inspired by the generous donation from Mr. George Morikami. In 1906, Mr. Morikami immigrated to the United States joining the Japanese farming community in South Florida known as the Yamato Colony. Many of these Japanese farmers were also from Miyazu. Eventually Mr. Morikami purchased land in Delray Beach which is now the home to the Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens. In 1973, after more than 65 years of farming, Mr. Morikami donated 200 acres of his land to Palm Beach County to establish a park. He passed away three years later. In 1977, the Morikami Museum opened on that land, realizing Mr. Morikami’s dream of a permanent bridge between the two great cultures of East & West. That same year the relationship between Miyazu & Delray Beach formalized as “Sister Cities.”

In 1999, Sister Cities of Delray Beach sent its first group of high school students to Miyazu to act as student ambassadors between the two cities. Likewise, Miyazu also sent some of their high school students to Delray Beach. Since then, a group of student ambassadors from Delray Beach has visited Miyazu every two years to continue the exchange of cultural understanding and friendship, with Miyazu students visiting about every two years. The students share homestays and attend school with their host brother or...

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