COMMITTEE MEETINGS LIST
Archives Committee
Our Archives Committee meets every 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
District 17 Liason
District 17 General Service Meets Monthly, 1 st Mon at 1770 W. Flagler St, 8:00 pm
in-person meeting - This position links the Hispanic community to the English community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Cherokee Language Remote Communities Subcommittee
Meets the third Saturday of every month
Meets 3rd Saturday 9am to 10am
ID 827 4703 4327 | pw 014623
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the third Sunday of every month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the third Sunday of every month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
District 17 Liaison
District 17 General Service meets on the first Monday of the month at 8:00 pm - 1770 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL.
This D17 liaison is the link between the Hispanic community and the English-speaking community of AA in Miami-Dade County
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
PI/CPC
The Public Information & Cooperation with the Professional Community (PI/CPC) committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Archives Committee
Meets on the 4th Tuesday at 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
📚 A.A. Archives Committee
The Archives Committee preserves the history of A.A. in our area so future members can understand how the fellowship grew, served, and carried the message. Its purpose is to collect, protect, and share materials that reflect the experience of local groups, trusted servants, and events—keeping our story alive for generations to come.
What the Committee Does
Collects and preserves documents, flyers, meeting lists, recordings, photos, and artifacts related to local A.A. history.
Organizes and catalogs materials for safe storage and easy access.
Creates displays for district events, anniversaries, and workshops to help members connect with A.A.’s past.
Conducts interviews with long‑timers to capture their experience and memories.
Supports groups in preserving their own histories and encourages them to share materials with the archives.
Ensures all archival work honors A.A.’s Traditions, especially anonymity.
Why It Matters
A.A.’s history is one of hope, service, and spiritual growth. By preserving our past, the Archives Committee helps us understand where we came from, appreciate the work of those who came before us, and stay grounded in the principles that keep us sober today.
Literature Committee
Meets on the 4th Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
📘 A.A. Literature Committee
The Literature Committee helps make A.A.’s message easy to access by sharing Conference‑approved books, pamphlets, and materials throughout the district. Its purpose is to support groups and newcomers by keeping literature visible, organized, and up to date.
What the Committee Does
• Brings A.A. literature to district meetings, workshops, and events.
• Keeps groups informed about new and updated books and pamphlets.
• Provides materials to committees doing outreach in treatment, corrections, and the community.
• Encourages members to explore A.A. literature as part of recovery and service.
Why It Matters
A.A. literature carries the message wherever a meeting can’t. By keeping these materials available, the committee helps ensure every alcoholic can find hope and direction
Communications Committee
Meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 875-2561-7010
Passcode: Websmaster
🌐 Website Communications Committee
The Website Communications Committee maintains the district’s online presence so members, newcomers, and professionals can easily find accurate information about A.A. in our area. Its purpose is to keep the website clear, welcoming, and up to date—supporting unity and helping carry the message to anyone seeking help.
What the Committee Does
• Keeps meeting schedules, event calendars, and service information current and easy to navigate.
• Ensures the website reflects A.A.’s principles, including anonymity and non‑affiliation.
• Posts district announcements, committee updates, and service opportunities in a timely way.
• Supports other committees by sharing their flyers, descriptions, and event details online.
• Maintains accessibility features so the site is usable for all members, including those with visual, hearing, or mobility needs.
• Helps newcomers find meetings, resources, and clear next steps toward recovery.
Why It Matters
The website is often the first place someone turns when they’re looking for help. A clear, welcoming, and well‑maintained site makes it easier for alcoholics to find meetings, connect with the fellowship, and feel supported from the very first click
Cherokee Language Remote Communities Subcommittee
Meets the third Saturday of every month
Meets 3rd Saturday 9am to 10am
ID 827 4703 4327 | pw 014623
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Remote Communities
Meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
🌍 A.A. Remote Communities Committee
The Remote Communities Committee works to ensure that alcoholics in hard‑to‑reach or underserved areas have access to A.A.’s message. These may be communities separated by distance, language, culture, or life circumstances. The committee’s purpose is to help every alcoholic—no matter where they live or what barriers they face—find a path to connection and recovery.
What the Committee Does
Reaches out to communities separated by geography, language, or culture to help them access A.A. meetings and resources.
Organizes phone, video, and online A.A. meetings for members who cannot attend in person.
Supports the creation of new meetings in underserved areas and helps strengthen existing ones.
Works with local leaders and cultural communities to share A.A. literature and information in meaningful, accessible ways.
Provides updates, reports, and workshops to keep remote communities connected to the wider A.A. service structure.
Collaborates with Accessibilities and other committees to reduce barriers and avoid duplication of efforts.
Why It Matters
Many alcoholics live in places—or circumstances—where A.A. is not easily available. By bridging distance, culture, and communication gaps, the Remote Communities Committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left without access to hope, fellowship, and recovery.
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the 3rd Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
🌿 District 10 A.A. Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee helps carry A.A.’s message of hope into treatment centers, detox units, and outpatient programs. Our purpose is to make sure anyone seeking recovery has a clear, supportive path into Alcoholics Anonymous—both while they are in treatment and after they return to daily life.
💛 How We Serve
• Bring A.A. meetings into treatment facilities — Volunteers share their experience, strength, and hope with clients who may be hearing about A.A. for the first time.
• Bridge the Gap support — We connect people leaving treatment with temporary A.A. contacts who can accompany them to their first meetings in the community.
• Provide literature and resources — We supply meeting lists, pamphlets, and Grapevine/La Viña materials so clients can explore A.A. on their own.
• Build relationships with treatment staff — We explain what A.A. is—and what it isn’t—so facilities understand how we cooperate without affiliation.
• Support and train volunteers — We offer guidance for A.A. members who want to carry the message in a respectful, consistent, and helpful way.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Many alcoholics first encounter A.A. while in treatment. A warm introduction, a friendly face, and a clear next step can make all the difference. The Treatment Committee helps ensure no one has to walk into their first meeting alone
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the third Sunday of every month at 9:00 am.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well-informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once the original books are completed.
E-mail the District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets on the 2nd Thursday of every month on Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
🏝️ Miami‑Dade Intergroup
Miami‑Dade Intergroup serves as a central hub for A.A. in the county, helping connect alcoholics with meetings, resources, and support. Its purpose is to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers and to maintain unity and mutual support among local A.A. groups. Intergroup protects A.A.’s principles while offering practical services that help newcomers and long‑timers alike.
What Intergroup Does
Operates the 24‑hour A.A. Helpline, ensuring anyone seeking help can reach a sober alcoholic at any time.
Maintains local meeting lists, including in‑person, online, and Spanish‑language meetings.
Coordinates communication among A.A. groups, supporting unity and shared service across Miami‑Dade.
Distributes A.A. literature and provides access to Grapevine/La Viña materials.
Hosts events, workshops, and service opportunities, strengthening recovery and fellowship.
Supports newcomers by offering information, guidance, and a clear path into A.A. meetings.
Upholds A.A.’s Traditions, ensuring Intergroup remains a resource—not an authority—within the Fellowship.
Why It Matters
Intergroup is often the first point of contact for someone seeking help. By coordinating meetings, offering information, and supporting local groups, it helps ensure that the hand of A.A. is always there when someone in Miami‑Dade reaches out.
PI/CPC
The committee meets on the 2nd Wednesday at 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
📣 A.A. PI/CPC Committee
The PI/CPC Committee helps make sure accurate information about Alcoholics Anonymous reaches the public and the professionals who work with alcoholics. Its purpose is to explain what A.A. is, what A.A. does, and how A.A. can be a resource, while honoring our Traditions of anonymity and non‑affiliation.
What the Committee Does
Public Information (PI) — Shares accurate A.A. information with schools, community groups, businesses, and local media. Provides meeting lists, presentations, and public service announcements while protecting anonymity.
Cooperation with the Professional Community (CPC) — Meets with professionals such as healthcare workers, counselors, clergy, educators, and social service agencies to explain how A.A. works and how to connect people with us.
Builds relationships — Maintains communication with organizations that encounter alcoholics in their work, offering A.A. as a resource without affiliation.
Supports local outreach — Helps groups and districts carry the message responsibly and consistently in the community.
Why It Matters
Many people first hear about A.A. from a teacher, doctor, counselor, or community program. By providing clear, accurate information, the PI/CPC Committee helps ensure that anyone seeking help can find their way to A.A. with confidence and understanding.
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
🍇 A.A. Grapevine Committee
The Grapevine Committee helps share A.A.’s “meeting in print”—the A.A. Grapevine and La Viña—so that stories of recovery can reach alcoholics everywhere. Its purpose is to keep these powerful tools visible, accessible, and woven into the life of our groups and district. Through personal stories, humor, spiritual insights, and shared experience, the Grapevine continues to carry hope to anyone seeking sobriety.
💛 How We Serve
Promote Grapevine & La Viña resources — We help members discover the magazines in print, digital, and audio formats, offering inspiration between meetings.
Support Group Grapevine Representatives (GvRs) — We guide GvRs in sharing announcements, highlighting new issues, and keeping the Grapevine present in their home groups.
Encourage member contributions — We inspire A.A. members to submit their own stories, photos, and artwork, keeping the spirit of shared experience alive.
Create displays at events — We set up Grapevine/La Viña tables at district gatherings, workshops, and assemblies to showcase literature and digital offerings.
Share digital tools — We help members explore online archives, audio stories, and other resources that make the Grapevine accessible anytime, anywhere.
Support Twelfth Step work — We provide issues to Treatment, Corrections, and other committees so the message can reach alcoholics in facilities.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
The Grapevine has been connecting alcoholics since 1944, offering hope to those who may feel alone, isolated, or unsure where to begin. The committee helps ensure these stories continue to reach the newcomer, the long‑timer, and everyone in between. By sharing our experience through the written word, we strengthen the fellowship and keep A.A.’s message alive—one story at a time.
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm.
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
An A.A. Accessibilities Committee focuses on ensuring that every alcoholic—regardless of physical, mental, or sensory limitations—can participate fully in Alcoholics Anonymous. It exists to remove barriers, increase inclusion, and help groups create spaces where all members feel welcome and supported.
♿ What the Accessibilities Committee Is
The committee serves alcoholics who may face challenges such as mobility limitations, hearing or vision loss, chronic illness, cognitive differences, or other conditions that make attending or participating in A.A. difficult. Its purpose is to help groups, districts, and the community understand these needs and respond with compassion, practicality, and respect.
This work reflects A.A.’s spiritual foundation: we don’t exclude anyone who wants to stop drinking.
🌟 Key Areas of Service
Mobility and physical access — Helping groups identify and improve accessibility features such as ramps, accessible bathrooms, seating arrangements, and transportation options.
Support for Deaf and hard‑of‑hearing members — Coordinating ASL interpreters, captioning, or written materials so members can fully participate in meetings.
Support for blind or low‑vision members — Ensuring literature is available in large‑print, audio, or Braille formats.
Connection for homebound or hospitalized members — Facilitating remote participation, phone meetings, or special visits when appropriate.
Guidance for groups and districts — Offering practical suggestions on how to make meetings more inclusive and accessible.
Awareness and education — Helping A.A. members understand accessibility needs and how small adjustments can make a meaningful difference.
🌱 Why This Work Matters
Accessibility is an expression of A.A.’s responsibility statement: “When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help…” The committee helps ensure that no alcoholic is left behind because of a barrier that can be removed with awareness, willingness, and simple action.
When meetings are accessible, more people can find recovery—and the entire fellowship becomes stronger, more compassionate, and more connected.
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
Meets on the 1st Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
🏛️ District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service Business Meeting is where A.A. groups come together to share information, make decisions, and support the work of carrying the message throughout Miami‑Dade. It’s the monthly gathering where GSRs, committee chairs, and district officers coordinate service, discuss group needs, and keep our district connected to the wider A.A. structure.
What the Meeting Covers
Reports from district officers and standing committees.
Updates from groups through their GSRs.
Planning for workshops, events, and service opportunities.
Discussion and voting on district matters and recommendations.
Communication with the South Florida Area and A.A. as a whole.
Why It Matters
The business meeting is the heartbeat of local A.A. service. It ensures that every group has a voice, that information flows clearly, and that District 10 stays united in its primary purpose—to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
District 17 Liason
District 17 General Service Meets Monthly, 1 st Mon at 1770 W. Flagler St, 8:00 pm
in-person meeting - This position links the Hispanic community to the English community of AA in Miami-Dade County
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the Fourth Thursday of every month at 7 pm.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once the original books are completed.
E-mail the District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.
Literature Committee
The Literature Committee meets on the fourth Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
Archives Committee
Our Archives Committee meets every fourth Tuesday at 7:00pm on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
Communications Committee
Our Communications Committee meets monthly on the last Tuesday of each month at 11:00 am on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 854-0431-5258
Passcode: CC2023
Cherokee Language Remote Communities Subcommittee
Meets the third Saturday of every month
Meets 3rd Saturday 9am to 10am
ID 827 4703 4327 | pw 014623
Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
62nd Annual Gratitude Dinner Planning Committee Meeting
Remote Communities
REMOTE COMMUNITIES Meets 3rd Tuesday of the Month at 7:00 pm.
MEETING ID 896-6589-5040
PW 30511
Treatment Committee
The Treatment Committee meets on the third Monday of each month at 6:00 PM EST.
Zoom ID: 854-7504-9946
Passcode: 551450
Miami-Dade Intergroup Business Meeting
Intergroup Business Meets the 2nd Thursday of every via Zoom
Meeting ID: 881 3127 6596 — Password: GB_2023
PI/CPC
PI/CPC Committee Meets on the 2nd Wednesday @ 7:00pm.
Meeting ID: 897-0307-8285
Password: 672322
Grapevine
The Grapevine Committee meets on the first Thursday of the month at 7:15 pm on Zoom.
Click to join Meeting ID 868-0767-0316
Password 640708
Accessibilities Committee
Our Accessibilities Committee meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month @ 7:00 pm
Meeting ID: 867-3628-8049
Passcode: 253418
District 10 General Service Business Meeting
The District 10 General Service business meeting takes place on the first Tuesday of the month at The Coral Gables Congregational United Church - 3010 DeSoto Blvd.
District 17 Liason
District 17 General Service Meets Monthly, 1 st Mon at 1770 W. Flagler St, 8:00 pm
in-person meeting - This position links the Hispanic community to the English community of AA in Miami-Dade County
Literature Committee
The Literature Committee meets on the fourth Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm
Zoom Meeting ID: 89693601670
Passcode: 533821
Archives Committee
Our Archives Committee meets every fourth Tuesday at 7:00 pm on Zoom.
Meeting ID: 265-911-0162
Passcode: ArchiveS
Current Practice Committee
The Current Practice Committee meets on the Fourth Tuesday of every month at 7 pm.
Zoom ID: 821-3911-2225
Passcode: 014623
Our District Guidelines help guide us in the best possible direction when conducting our monthly business meetings. The result of these guidelines will keep both ourselves and the groups we represent well informed and ultimately help the still-suffering alcoholic who steps into our rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
WHAT WE DO …
Create a Book of Motions and District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) from Archived minutes.
Present a report of Committee activities orally at the District meeting and in written form for inclusion in the District minutes.
Hold quarterly meetings to fulfill its responsibilities
Update the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices) quarterly once original books are completed.
E-mail District Web Chair each quarter an updated copy of the Book of Motions and the District Guidelines (Book of Current Practices).
Provide the District Finance Committee with an annual request for funds at budget time.
Current Practices Guide:
Access our latest Current Practices guide and other District 10 documents here.