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Friday, October 29, 2010

Daily Clips for October 29, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Charlie Crist asked Clinton camp to suggest Meek drop out, source says
By Greg Sargent
Washington Post
Charlie Crist personally called a top adviser to Bill Clinton and asked if the former president would discuss with Kendrick Meek the possibility of dropping out of the Florida Senate race, according to a source close to Clinton.

Dems release ad slamming Bondi for keeping Katrina dog from family that lost him
By Tristram Korten
Florida Independent
The Florida Democratic Party is airing an ad in which a New Orleans woman who lost a dog after Hurricane Katrina recounts the legal battle she and her family went through to reclaim the animal from Pam Bondi, the Republican candidate for Florida attorney general, who had adopted it from a shelter.

Fla. govenor hopefuls charge into final weekend
By Mitch Stacy and Tamara Lush
The Associated Press
Hurtling toward Election Day in a governor's race that's too close to call, Rick Scott and Alex Sink embarked Friday on a final weekend of statewide campaign stops to rally supporters and, more importantly, try to get more of them to the voting booth.

New polls show a skintight governor's race
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Florida's nasty gubernatorial contest has come down to this: If Republican Rick Scott is going to win the keys to the Governor's Mansion in Tallahassee, GOP voters must turn out in large numbers — and put aside their reservations about his business past.

BEST OF THE BLOGS

The Florida Doomsday Scenario: A Cautionary Tale
By Benjamin Kirby
The Spencerian
Despite a long night for some counting votes in several close races, including the race for Florida governor, most results were far clearer than expected: by overwhelming majorities, the Republicans in Florida have been ushered into unprecedented power.

Attention Rick Scott: cheating’s really not a good issue for you
By Joy-Ann Reid
The Reid Report
The St. Pete Times offers some much needed context to the now officially “overblown even more than Juan Williams is milking his firing” textgate dust-up.

FL22: Tea Party’s Allen West Once Said GOP Was Corrupt, Now Schmoozes with Boehner, Takes Bucks from Bailed-Out Corporations, Lobbyists
By Jon Ponder
Pensito Review
One of the oddest aspects of the 2010 midterms is how swing and right-leaning independent voters seem to be so willing to overlook troubling character flaws in fringe candidates, as long as the candidates repeat the tea party’s false narratives about bailouts, the Stimulus and the size of government.

Ban? What Ban? Meet Haridopolos’ Newly Hired Six-Figure “Double Dippers”
By Inkberries
Beach Peanuts
In spite of the state ban on “double dipping” where state employees collect a paycheck while also collecting a state pension, incoming Republican Senate President Mike Haridopolos (R-Drill-Baby) has announced that he has hired three veteran staffers to come on up to Tallahassee and double-dip anyway!

Rick Scott, pack your bags: DCA isn't killing jobs, the Growth Machine is
By Gimleteye
Eye on Miami
Florida has three industries: tourism, agriculture, and construction/development.

POLITICAL RACES

Senate race turns into political theater with Clinton, Meek, Crist and Rubio
By Beth Reinhard, Lesley Clark and Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
Related:
Meek calls report 'inaccurate at best'
Related Washington Post story:
Florida's U.S. Senate race turned into late-night political theater, as Democratic Senate candidate Kendrick Meek scrambled at his Miami Gardens campaign office Thursday to quash reports that his mentor and most important political ally, former President Bill Clinton, urged him last week to quit the race.

Sink asks fellow Democrats to talk up campaign, urge friends to vote
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
Related:
Scott shrugs off poll results, pushes 'jobs' message through Space Coast
With the day's polls showing her running nose-to-nose with her Republican rival in the governor's race, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink spent Thursday in Democratic strongholds preaching to the choir.

Polls show a real nail-biter in Florida governor's race
By Marc Caputo, Mary Ellen Klas and Lesley Clark
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
With Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott making multiple campaign stops Thursday, three new polls show the Florida governor's race remains a tough-to-call nail biter.

Rick Scott would pick agency head, but vows to stay clear of any state Solantic probe
By Liz Freeman
Naples Daily News
The state Department of Health won’t discuss its handling of a health-care fraud complaint against Solantic, a chain of walk-in centers co-founded by gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott in 2001.

The right-wing roots of Scott’s press strategy
By Tristram Korten
Florida Independent
Florida newspapers have so far unanimously endorsed Democrat Alex Sink for governor over Republican Rick Scott.

Poll: Scott battling Sink, image
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
In the final days of this fall's neck-and-neck race for Florida governor, Republican Rick Scott faces two foes: Democrat Alex Sink and an unfavorable image among many voters.

Smith says Democratic ticket for governor more centrist
By Christopher Curry
Gainesville Sun
Rod Smith made a brief stop in his hometown of Alachua County Thursday to cast his ballot before Election Day arrives and meet with a contingent of political supporters downtown.

Ad bashing Gelber in attorney general race has circuitous link to rival Bondi
By Jay Weaver
Miami Herald
Powerful lawyers accustomed to throwing their weight around the courtroom have pounced on recent attack ads accusing Dan Gelber, Democratic candidate for Florida attorney general, of being "toxic to Jewish education."

Feisty CFO race features Senate president and ex-lawmaker
By Lee Logan
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In a statewide race that's received little public notice, chief financial officer candidate Loranne Ausley has resorted to a 400-mile bike ride to get her message out.

Grayson, Kosmas plan final TV-ad blitz
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
U.S. Reps. Alan Grayson and Suzanne Kosmas are presenting barrages of TV commercials this week in the closing stretch before Election Day as they bid for re-election against Republicans Dan Webster and Sandy Adams.

Get your absentee ballots in the mail — and be sure to sign them
By Anthony Man
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Voters casting their ballots by mail need to get them back to the Supervisor of Elections Office by Tuesday at 7 p.m.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

State Rep. Gaetz: Amendments 5 and 6 would blunt ‘conservative comeback’
By Cooper Levey-Baker
Florida Independent
Related:
Republican Party dumps another $867K into anti-Fair Districts group
In a guest editorial published in Northwest Florida Daily News, state Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Shalimar, makes an explicitly partisan argument for the newspaper’s readers to vote down Amendments 5 and 6 — the so-called “Fair Districts” amendments that would create rules limiting politicians’ power to gerrymander districts.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Critical test not done on cement before blowout
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Halliburton Co. acknowledged that it skipped a critical test on the final formulation of cement used to seal BP's oil well before it blew out catastrophically in the Gulf of Mexico.

Reminders Of BP's Oil Spill Linger Along Gulf Coast
By Debbie Elliott
NPR
The Gulf of Mexico oil spill isn't making the headlines it did this summer, but that doesn't mean the oil is gone.

Appeals court blocks questioning of EPA official
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
In a divided decision, an appeals court in Atlanta on Thursday rejected a Miami federal judge's request to personally grill a top federal environmental chief on persistent pollution problems in the Everglades.

DCA rejects massive development planned for Hernando
By Barbara Behrendt and Dan DeWitt
St. Petersburg Times
In a rare move, the Florida Department of Community Affairs has put Hernando County on notice Wednesday that it intends to find the proposed Quarry Preserve project “not in compliance.”

LGBT

Department of Education says bullying could violate federal civil rights laws
By Bianca Fortis
Florida Independent
Last week The Florida Independent took a look at Florida’s anti-bullying law and found that, despite being a strong law, it is still lacking, especially in regard to LGBT protections.

EDUCATION

No raises in the works for school employees
Staff Report
Orlando Sentinel
The state's public education system is requesting more than a $650-million increase for next year to pay for higher enrollment, plus special reading and technology initiatives.

Fla. university tuition still one of lowest
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Tuition at Florida's 11 public universities continues to rank third-lowest in the nation even after 15 percent increases in each of the last two years.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Colors of Great Recession: Black, Brown and Pink (Slips)
By Ralph De La Cruz
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Among the first things to go when times get tough are good intentions.

Budget cuts could doom extra shuttle launch
By Mark K. Matthews and Robert Block
Orlando Sentinel
Just weeks after President Barack Obama signed into law a new blueprint for NASA -- one that was supposed to add another space shuttle launch next year -- the compromise is in danger of coming undone by a lack of money.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Living in fear, in Miami
By Felipe Matos
Miami Herald
It seems like it was yesterday when I arrived in Miami. I was only 14 then, but now I'm 24.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Florida high court approves longer prison terms for gun crimes
By Stephen Hudak
Orlando Sentinel
In a divided opinion, the state Supreme Court today said judges can dish out sentences that exceed a crime's maximum penalties in cases involving guns.


Thursday, October 28, 2010

Daily Clips for October 28, 2010

PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Florida, Guess Who's Voting?
Florida, Guess Who's Voting?
By Peter Schorsch
St. Petersblog 2.0
Progress Florida launches powerful new web video about who is voting and who is hoping you don’t.

FEATURED STORIES

A Campaign of Few Details, but Questions Keep Coming
By Damien Cave
New York Times
The question for Rick Scott at last week’s debate had been asked countless times: Why was he qualified to be Florida’s governor when his tenure as a chief executive of Columbia/HCA led to $1.7 billion in fines for defrauding the government?

Sink points to varied endorsements, touts 'character, integrity to lead'
By Betty Parker
Ft. Myers News-Press
Democratic candidate for governor Alex Sink promised to use her business experience in banking to help restore Florida's economy during her appearance Wednesday morning at Harborside in downtown Fort Myers.

Charlie Crist's likely demise leaves an uncertain legacy
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
With polls showing that he continues to lag behind rival Marco Rubio, the hour that Gov. Charlie Crist spent with David Gregory at Tuesday night’s U.S. Senate debate might be his final time in the national spotlight.

Former TV anchor challenges GOP chief Thrasher for Florida Senate
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
For two decades, Deborah Gianoulis was a nightly fixture in northeast Florida living rooms as anchor for the region's most popular news station.

Haridopolos facing ethics investigation over unreported income and investments
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
State Sen. Mike Haridopolos admitted Wednesday he made mistakes in five years of financial disclosure forms, but that came too late for the Florida Commission on Ethics, which found probable cause that the lawmaker violated the state ethics laws.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Judge denies conservative activists’ request to block campaign finance law
By Brett Ader
Florida Independent
Four conservative Sarasota activists who sought to sidestep state campaign finance laws in an effort to run radio spots opposing Amendment 4, citing the recent Supreme Court ruling in the Citizens United case which stripped financial disclosure requirements prior to electioneering, have had their request for a preliminary injunction denied by a federal judge.

Citizens have no right to speak at public meetings, according to Florida courts
By Bianca Fortis
Florida Independent
The Florida Supreme Court refused an appeal from a lower court ruling that says citizens have no right to participate at public meetings.

Haridopolos focus of state ethics probe
By Jeff Schweers
Florida Today
State Sen. Mike Haridopolos, in line to become president of the Florida Senate, failed to disclose on required state forms that he was paid thousands of dollars by the marketing arm of one of the state's largest appliance retailers for two years.

POLITICAL RACES

In governor's race, Sink and Scott's inner circles reflect distinctive styles
By Mary Ellen Klas
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related:
Candidates for governor light up Florida TVs with a bonfire of money
When Democrat Alex Sink fired Miami lobbyist Brian May from her campaign Monday for sending her a message in the midst of her last debate, she lost one of her campaign's top political advisers, and her temper.

Great Scott, this man is over the top
By Carl Hiaasen
Miami Herald
Even by Florida's shaky standards, Rick Scott stands out as one of the most outlandish characters ever to pop out of the woodwork.

Scott's big bucks, Sink's 'grass roots' show in each campaigns' final travel arrangements
By Dara Kam and Jeff Ostrowski
Palm Beach Post
Less than a week before the election, Republican Rick Scott's campaign for governor has the feel of someone running for president.

Scott's mom is his campaign co-star
By Bob Rathgeber
Ft. Myers News-Press
She's a great-grandmother. She gets co-star billing. She signs autographs, shakes hands and tells everyone what a nice boy her son is.

Nice guy Charlie Crist playing rough trying to get to Washington
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
People "are tired of the games and the name-calling and the politics of personal destruction," Gov. Charlie Crist declared in April while announcing he would run as a nonpartisan candidate for U.S. Senate.

Crist, Meek, Rubio begin final push
By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
A day after the sixth and final debate in the race for U.S. Senate, Gov. Charlie Crist insisted he can make a move on frontrunner Marco Rubio, pointing to a new Zogby poll that shows him trailing the Miami Republican by about 6 percentage points.

Agriculture commissioner candidate Putnam fought to block water quality rules; rival Maddox remains silent
By Virginia Chamlee
Florida Independent
The race to become Florida’s agriculture commissioner has received little media notice, but the winner of the campaign will play an important role in the debate over efforts to protect Florida’s water quality.

Last District 8 debate features Grayson but no Webster
By Mark Schlueb
Orlando Sentinel
In the final debate before the election, one of U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson's opponents branded him "Ayatollah Alan," another promised she's not in cahoots with him to spoil the election, and two of the three slammed Republican Dan Webster for not showing up.

Gianoulis-Thrasher Senate race takes a negative, combative turn
By Tia Mitchell
Florida Times-Union
Related:
Duval school board member forms organization to oppose Thrasher's re-election
As the state Senate District 8 race has become increasingly negative, it is candidate Deborah Gianoulis, the well-liked TV anchor who has never run for office before, who has become more likely to lead the attack.

Outside groups spend big to oust Democrats
By Scott Powers and Mark K. Matthews
Orlando Sentinel
In the last two weeks, a trio of outside groups have come to the defense of U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson -- spending about $110,000 on canvassing and web ads to help the Orlando Democrat against his Republican challenger, Dan Webster, according to federal records.

Big Texas Green Flowing into Sunshine State Campaign
By Gina Presson
Public News Service Florida
Big Texas green is flowing into Florida, in the form of campaign dollars.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Amendment 1 Would be a Big Step Backward in Campaign Finance Reform
By Dennis Maley
Bradenton Times
I think I begin every column on ballot amendments with the same statement – that this is an imperfect solution to a problem that needs to be addressed, but has not.

Nos. 5 and 6 are about fairness
Editorial
Northwest Florida Daily News
In a guest column today, state Rep. Matt Gaetz makes an excellent case for approving Amendments 5 and 6 on Florida’s November ballot.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Global extinction crisis looms, new study says
By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post
A growing number of creatures could disappear from the earth, with one-fifth of all vertebrates and as many as a third of all sharks and rays now facing the threat of extinction, according to a new survey assessing nearly 26,000 species across the globe.

Deadline nears to file oil spill claims
By Sara Kennedy
Bradenton Herald
Attorneys are alerting those adversely affected by the Gulf oil spill to file claims before the Nov. 23 deadline.

LGBT

Appeals court upholds adoption by lesbian
By Diana Moskovitz
Miami Herald
upheld Wednesday the adoption of a toddler by a lesbian in Hollywood, one month after the court tossed the state's controversial gay-adoption law.

Ban on gay adoptions finally removed
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
Finally, one of the worst vestiges of orange juice pitchwoman Anita Bryant's 1977 campaign against gays and lesbians has been dispatched — although not quite permanently.

EDUCATION

Elections complaint filed against superintendent
By Marc Freeman
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The Palm Beach County Republican Party on Tuesday night announced the filing of Florida Elections Commission Complaint against schools Superintendent Art Johnson.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

South Florida has nation's highest total foreclosure filings for 3Q of 2010
By Kimberly Miller
Palm Beach Post
South Florida households accumulated the highest number of total foreclosure filings of any metropolitan area in the nation during the third quarter of this year, with one in every 41 homes affected.

Foreclosure filings rise outside the housing bust areas
By Jeff Harrington
St. Petersburg Times
Memo to Tampa Bay homeowners facing foreclosure: Seattle feels some of your pain.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Misinformation, ill-conceived legal challenge cloud benefits of new health law
By Laura Goodhue
Gainesville Sun
Before the ink was dry on the new health law, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), opponents had already launched a politically motivated campaign to undermine it.

Lawmakers take aim at Shands veto
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
Gov. Charlie Crist baffled and angered state lawmakers in May when he vetoed $9.7 million for the Shands teaching hospital at the University of Florida.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

David Rivera stays on the ballot
By Lesley Clark
Miami Herald
A Miami-Dade judge has thrown out a case trying to disqualify Republican congressional candidate David Rivera from Tuesday's ballot.

Norman back on ballot after appeals court decision
By Mike Salinero and William March
Tampa Tribune
Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman is once again the Republican candidate for state Senate District 12.


Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Daily Clips for October 27, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Sink forced to defend herself after she's accused of cheating during debate
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, the Democratic candidate for governor, was forced on Tuesday to explain why she broke the debate rules during her nationally televised debate with GOP candidate Rick Scott.

Debates ignore big health issues
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
Florida's next governor will face overhauling the $20 billion Medicaid program.

Rubio, Meek push Crist on leaving GOP in last debate for Senate seat
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Facing tough questioning about the no-party candidacy that has rocked Florida's U.S. Senate race, Gov. Charlie Crist tonight defended his shifts on issues as "heartfelt" and proclaimed himself "liberated" since abandoning the GOP six months ago.

Midterms will reshape Congress, but question is how bloody the GOP takeover will be
By Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
Two years after Barack Obama promised change in Washington, it's coming in a dramatic final torrent of campaign money, nasty commercials and voter rebellion that will answer not whether Nov. 2 will reshape Congress but how bloody the takeover will be.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Outspoken Skop bypassed for PSC chairmanship
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Tribune
The Florida Public Service Commission on Tuesday passed over outspoken Commissioner Nathan Skop as chairman, naming new Commissioner Art Graham by a 3-1 vote.

POLITICAL RACES

GOP leads Democrats in early-voting turnout
By Aaron Deslatte and John Maines
Orlando Sentinel
The Florida Democratic offices in a crowded storefront in Ybor City look like a bunker lined with relics from the last war.

Cheating flap grows as Alex Sink's campaign winds down
By Marc Caputo and Michael C. Bender
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In a campaign season of wall-to-wall negative commercials, Democrat Alex Sink's worst television moment came during a commercial break.

Debate debacle hot topic as far away as the UK
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Barnstorming through Republican regions where Florida elections are largely decided, Rick Scott said Tuesday Democrat Alex Sink "broke the rules" in their final debate and tried to duck responsibility by firing an aide who sent her a message.

Alex Sink fires aide who text-messaged during debate
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott began a six-day tour of the state Tuesday by blasting Democratic foe Alex Sink for cheating during their Monday night debate by looking at a phone with a message from a top adviser during a commercial break.

Education, no new taxes Sinks' top pledges
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
Sticking to retail politics with only a little more than week to go before Election Day, Alex Sink, the Democratic nominee for governor, flew to Jacksonville on Tuesday to meet with a handful of business and community leaders.

Alex Sink back in bishop’s good graces
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink today won the support of one of Miami-Dade County’s most influential blacks, a week after Bishop Victor Curry blasted her for taking the African-American vote for granted because she blew off an NAACP candidate forum.

Sink holds roundtable with First Coast business leaders
By Dan Scanlan
Florida Times-Union
The Democrat who wants to occupy Tallahassee’s statehouse for the next four years brought her business plan to Northeast Florida executives and small business owners Tuesday afternoon.

Scott bus tours across Florida in final seven days of campaigning
By Bob Rathgeber
Ft. Myers News-Press
The final week of campaigning for the governor's job is an all-out sprint to capture Florida's undecided voters. Rick Scott, the Republican from Naples, has embarked on a whirlwind 30-city odyssey from Pensacola to Miami, meeting voters at events from pancake breakfasts to barbecues to black-tie affairs.

Senate debate more civil, substantive
By William March
Tampa Tribune
In the most substantive and civil debate so far, Florida's three Senate candidates refined their messages but stuck to the themes that have dominated the race.

Governor is target as Crist, Meek and Rubio square off for final debate in U.S. Senate race
By Beth Reinhard
St. Petersburg Times
The portable fan that Gov. Charlie Crist insists on at every public appearance could be seen and even heard during Tuesday's televised debate, but it didn't keep the independent U.S. Senate candidate out of the hot seat.

Health care law's Medicare trims altering seniors' views
By Marilyn Serafini
USA Today
Until this spring, life-long Democrat Carolyn Land never had a second thought about voting for Rep. Allen Boyd, a Democrat who has represented her area since 1997.

Caution may cost Kosmas at the polls
By Mark K. Matthews
Orlando Sentinel
By her own admission, U.S. Rep. Suzanne Kosmas is a "careful" lawmaker.

Despite anti-union rhetoric, West voluntarily joined teachers’ union in ’04-’05
By Luke Johnson
Florida Independent
“We don’t need to see unions to come down here and pressure the abilities of our small businesses and our corporations and businesses to grow,” said Allen West, the Republican challenger in Florida’s 22nd congressional district, in an Oct. 13 debate with his opponent, Rep. Ron Klein, at Lynn University in Boca Raton.

Lawyer seeks removal of Miami congressional candidate David Rivera
The Associated Press
Miami Herald
A case involving the potential removal of a Florida congressional candidate from the ballot over questions about his financial disclosures is set to go before a judge days before the election.

Spending by congressional candidates may reach $2 billion, watchdog says
By Michael Muskal
Los Angeles Times
It was Mark Twain who dryly noted that Americans have the best government money can buy.

Unlike 2006 and 2008, Republicans feeling good with one week to go
By Anthony Man
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Doug Blanz says his election-season task – knocking on doors, soliciting votes for Republicans – has been much more rewarding this year than it was in 2006 or 2008.

Group run by writer claiming that atheists promote ‘religious cleansing’ endorses Republicans for Congress
By Marcos Restrepo
Florida Independent
Republican candidates for Florida congressional seats David Rivera, Allen West and Dan Webster, as well as Republican U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio have earned the endorsement of Government Is Not God, a political action committee for social conservatives.

Sarasota NAACP president: Voting glitch a concern as election day approaches
By Cooper Levey-Baker
Florida Independent
Questions about the voting machine glitch that struck an early vote location in Sarasota’s largely African-American community of Newtown Sunday evening continue to linger.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Amendment 4 would give power to the people
By John Hedrick
Tampa Tribune
On Nov. 3, Floridians will celebrate bright prospects for the Sunshine State.

Amendments 5 & 6 empower voters, end office-for-life politics
By Caroline Emmons-Schramm
Orlando Sentinel
This November, voters have the chance to improve Florida government for decades by voting yes on Amendments 5 and 6.

Amendment 8 and Overcrowded Classrooms
By Rick Stone
WLRN Public Radio Miami
Among the amendments facing voters on next week's ballot is a proposal to relax hard caps on class sizes.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Visit Florida fighting oil spill image
By Grace Gagliano
Bradenton Herald
Proprietors for the White Sands Beach Resort are adamant about updating the hotel’s website and Facebook page with fresh content.

PSC approves rate increase for Progress Energy customers to construct uncertain nuke plants
By Sean Kinane
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
Today the Florida Public Service Commission elected a newcomer, Arthur Graham, to be chair, instead of outgoing Commissioner Nathan Skop.

LGBT

SAVE Dade: 'Don't Vote'
By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Video on SAVE Dade's YouTube channel.

EDUCATION

FL Prepaid College Plan: New Plans, New Prices, New Peace of Mind?
By Gina Presson
Public News Service Florida
As families try to make ends meet, the Florida Prepaid College Plan helps some by providing greater options for higher education for those who plan early.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Haridopolos wants a new Medicaid waiver
By Christine Jordan Sexton
Florida Tribune
Florida -- which is already among a handful of states trying to derail the federal health care overhaul -- may ask for a waiver so it does not have to comply with some provisions dealing with the state's safety net program for the poor.

Nursing Homes Regulations Fight Abuse and Neglect
By Tom Flanigan
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Because Florida has such a large population of seniors, the state also has a large number of nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Whose Standards?
By Amy Keller
Florida Trend
Parents who want to adopt a child from another country face big expenses, piles of paperwork, long waits and a host of logistical challenges.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Fla. justices refuse to hear open meetings case
By Bill Kaczor
The Associated Press
The Florida Supreme Court has refused to take an appeal from a lower court ruling that says citizens have no right to speak at meetings of government bodies.

Florida to have all-female parole commission
The Associated Press
Florida Today
Florida will have an all-female Parole Commission for the first time ever next year.


Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Daily Clips for October 26, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Anger, contempt flare in final Scott and Sink debate in Florida governor's race
By Steve Bousquet and Michael C. Bender
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related editorial:
Sink shows grit, command
Related article:
Sink fires advisor who sent message during her televised debate with Rick Scott
Related Politifact article:
Governor candidates take national stage for CNN debate
Related Video:
Watch the debate
Rick Scott and Alex Sink displayed contempt for each other in their final debate Monday and gave a nationwide TV audience a glimpse of the mounting tension in the close race for governor.

Enthusiasm gap hits young voters, hurts Dems
By Luis Zaragoza
Orlando Sentinel
Law student and staunch Democrat Rafael Nunez is worried.

GOP poised to win Congress redistricting edge, too
By Jennifer C. Kerr
The Associated Press
The Republicans' expected gains next week go way beyond Congress.

3 US Senate candidates set for for final debate
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Gov. Charlie Crist and U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek have one last opportunity to derail front-runner Marco Rubio in their final U.S. Senate debate.

Bullet train money not enough to start project
By Alfonso Chardy
Miami Herald
Florida on Monday got the news it will receive an additional $800 million from the federal government to build a bullet train line from Tampa to Orlando -- but the grant is $300 million short of the amount the state needs to start construction.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Florida's Campaign Finance Laws Under Fire
By Lynn Hatter
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Florida's campaign finance laws are under fire. There are two pending lawsuits challenging the state's rules on political advertising.

Crist Gets The Old PSC Nominee List For Next Year's Chairs
Staff Report
Lakeland Ledger
Gov. Charlie Crist is getting a familiar list of candidates to chair the Public Service Commission for the rest of the year.

Braman: Signatures in place for recall
By Matthew Haggman
Miami Herald
In his bid to recall Miami-Dade's first strong mayor, billionaire businessman Norman Braman announced Monday he has collected 90,000 signatures from registered voters, more than enough to put Mayor Carlos Alvarez's fate with the voting public.

POLITICAL RACES

Sink, Scott spar over issues, slam each other's character in final gubernatorial debate
By George Bennett and Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Rick Scott and Alex Sink sparred on the economy, Florida's budget, abortion and other issues tonight but continually returned to slamming each other's character in a testy final gubernatorial debate before the Nov. 2 election.

Sink, Scott have heated exchanges in final debate
By William March
Tampa Tribune
Accusations of fraud, lying and incompetence flew thick Monday night in the last public confrontation between Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott in the too-close-to-call Florida governor's race.

Gubernatorial hopefuls hurl mud in last debate
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink called Republican Rick Scott a liar who knows nothing about government Monday and Scott called her "a failed fiscal watchdog" and an "Obama liberal" who supports costly big-government policies.

Now that talk's over, it'll be fight to finish
By Bob Rathgeber
Ft. Myers News-Press
The Florida gubernatorial debates have concluded, and for those who still haven't made up their minds between Republican Rick Scott and Democrat Alex Sink, it's doubtful Monday night's argument at the University of South Florida did anything to help voters make a decision.

Sheriff wary of Scott's plans for pensions
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
A Republican sheriff has written a memo to his employees urging them to consider how they vote this election while recounting a meeting with gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott and changes to the Florida Retirement System.

Sink to seek forgiveness for skipping NAACP forum
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
After being blasted for ignoring black voters, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink on Tuesday is to expected to perform a mea culpa on a radio station owned by one of Miami-Dade County’s most influential African-Americans.

Ausley hits campaign trail on her bicycle
By Paul Flemming
Florida Capital News
Call her Spinnin' Loranne, the 2010 answer to Walkin' Lawton.

Two outlooks, but only one state job
By Lee Logan
Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau
Adam Putnam and Scott Maddox both want to be Florida's next commissioner of agriculture, but their campaign rhetoric makes it sound like they're running for two separate jobs.

Alan Grayson in danger of losing his seat in Congress to Daniel Webster says analyst
By Sean Kinane
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
On Friday we brought you our interview with progressive member of Congress from Orlando, Alan Grayson.

West’s campaign finance sheets link him to controversial figures
By Dan Sweeney
Florida Independent
Congressional candidate Allen West‘s massive quarterly financial reports document donations made to the far-right Republican by a pair of controversial figures: an Ohio man accused of “racial vigilantism” and a soldier imprisoned for the unpremeditated murder of an Iraqi terror suspect.

Rivera accuses opponent of promoting deceitful off-hours phone calls
By Marcos Restrepo
Florida Independent
Republican David Rivera, running to represent U.S. congressional District 25 against Democrat Joe Garcia, posted today on his Facebook page the following statement.

Miller: shoo-in or incumbent foe? Voters will decide
By Tom McLaughlin
Northwest Florida Daily News
To hear U.S. Rep. Jeff Miller’s opponents tell it, the incumbent Republican from Chumuckla, who hasn’t been in a close political race since his first one nine years ago, is as susceptible to this cycle’s anti-incumbent sentiment as anyone.

Political commercials: annoying but effective
By Hal Boedeker
Orlando Sentinel
Political commercials pack the Orlando airwaves to such an extent that even TV executives acknowledge some fatigue.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Florida's 60 percent rule may doom amendments on ballot
By Howard Troxler
St. Petersburg Times
Floridians might have made the biggest decision of the 2010 election already — back in 2006.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

BP to give Fla. additional $20M
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
Oil giant BP has agreed to give Florida $20 million for more aggressive seafood safety inspections and marketing.

BP CEO hits back at media and politicians
By Jane Wardell
The Associated Press
BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley accused some politicians and the media on Monday of being too hasty to pin all the blame on his company for the devastating Gulf of Mexico spill - and emphasized the need for deep-water drilling.

EPA taps Florida's Hankinson as director of Gulf restoration panel
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
John H. Hankinson Jr., a Florida native and former regional U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator, was named Monday as executive director of the new federal Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force.

Protests Grow over New Septic Tanks Rules
By James Call
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Two Panhandle lawmakers say after the November election they will begin work to repeal a law requiring septic tank inspections every five years.

Builders, environmentalists at odds over wood stork's spot on endangered species list
By Christine Stapleton
Palm Beach Post
The endangered wood stork — the pterodactyl-like bird that faced extinction in the 1980s, has made a comeback.

BP's big plans
Editorial
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
There's great uncertainty about the long-term impacts of the BP oil spill.

LGBT

McCollum folded bad hand: Attorney general had no case to fight gay adoption.
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
On Friday, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum announced that he would not appeal a September court ruling that effectively ended the state's 33-year-old ban on gays and lesbians adopting children.

EDUCATION

Broward teachers say some schools creatively skirting class-size limits
By Rafael A. Olmeda
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Some of the math being used to measure class-size compliance in Broward County is getting an F from teachers at about two dozen schools, union officials said Monday.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Feds authorize additional $800 million for Tampa-to-Orlando high-speed rail line
By Shelley Rossetter and Justin George
St. Petersburg Times
The high-speed rail line slated to run between Tampa and Orlando received an additional $800 million Monday.

Banks continue to cancel hearings
By David McLaughlin
Miami Herald
Banks are still canceling foreclosure hearings and sales in Florida, the state with the third-highest foreclosure rate behind Nevada and Arizona, after Bank of America said it was resuming efforts to seize homes.


Monday, October 25, 2010

Daily Clips for October 25, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

U.S. Senate candidates spar in debate at USF
By William March
Tampa Tribune
Related:
Watch the debate
Related:
Some Democrats thinking strategically on Senate vote
Related AP story:
Fla. gubernatorial hopefuls to debate for last time Monday night
In a debate marked by crosstalk and verbal jabs, Florida's three U.S. Senate candidates tried to stake their territory and sharpen their images, mostly on familiar issues, in a Sunday morning debate on CNN.

TCPalm.com/Zogby poll: Sink opens lead over Scott in governor's race
By Ryan Mills
TC Palm
Related:
TCPalm.com/Zogby poll: Rubio pulling away from Crist, Meek
Driven by the overwhelming support of independents and moderates, Democrat Alex Sink has opened a nearly 5-point lead over her Republican opponent, Rick Scott, in the race to be Florida’s next governor, a new TCPalm.com/Zogby poll shows.

Rick Scott and Alex Sink diverge on environment
By Craig Pittman
St. Petersburg Times
Related editorial:
Scott's development policy bad for Florida
Related editorial:
Scott's Florida is grim place for average citizen
If you don't think humans cause global warming, offshore drilling might still be a good idea for Florida and growth management should be left to local governments and not state bureaucrats, then Republican Rick Scott is your candidate for governor.

Are Democrats taking black voters for granted?
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
Gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink was quietly jeered at a NAACP candidate forum last week in Miami.

Six House seats could help tip balance of power
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
In two months of TV advertising, Democratic U.S. Rep. Ron Klein has kept mum about his record in Washington, where he supported the health care and stimulus bills and went along with his party on 98 percent of votes.

GOP leader faces tough Senate race in Jacksonville
By Brent Kallestad
The Associated Press
Florida legislators rarely lose re-election, but the Democrats have one powerful Republican they hope to defeat: Sen. John Thrasher, who doubles as state GOP chairman.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK

Editorial cartoon of the week
By Chan Lowe
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Artist’s commentary:
Buying the midterm election

FLORIDA POLITICS

Ethics panel spells out who McCollum can lobby
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
Calling it a model for the future, the Florida Commission on Ethics on Friday adopted a detailed opinion that spells out who Attorney General Bill McCollum can and cannot lobby once he leaves office.

Rep. Miller in line for veterans committee post
By Bart Jansen
Pensacola News Journal
If the Nov. 2 elections give Republicans control of the House as expected, Rep. Jeff Miller could become chairman of the committee that oversees issues vital to veterans living in Florida's Panhandle.

A recap of how Tampa Bay's legislators voted
By Howard Troxler
St. Petersburg Times
For the past few weeks we've been looking at how our Tampa Bay legislators voted on a series of controversial bills since the last election.

POLITICAL RACES

Marco Rubio takes huge lead in Senate race, a new Times/Herald/Bay News 9 poll shows
By Adam C. Smith and Beth Reinhard
St. Petersburg Times
Related:
Republicans appear headed to sweep Cabinet races
Related:
Voters unlikely to approve constitutional amendment proposals
Republican Marco Rubio is on the verge of delivering one of the biggest political knockouts in Florida history, as a new St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald/Bay News 9 poll shows him barreling into Florida's open U.S. Senate seat 15 percentage points ahead of Gov. Charlie Crist.

Aggressive Crist plays role of "heckler" in Senate debate
By Beth Reinhard
St. Petersburg Times
Related:
Transcript of the "heckler" exchange from U.S. Senate debate
Related Politifact rulings:
CNN/St. Petersburg Times debate brings attacks old and new
Related editorial:
Rubio’s rigid ideology
Gov. Charlie Crist tried to turn himself into a human speed bump to stop U.S. Senate front-runner Marco Rubio from racing into the last week of the campaign, frequently rising up out of turn during Sunday's nationally televised debate with sweeping accusations against Rubio's politics and character.

'Welcome to the NFL': Charlie Crist, Kendrick Meek hit hard in Senate debate with Marco Rubio
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Charlie Crist and Kendrick Meek cited their football-playing pasts during a nationally televised debate this morning as both Senate candidates tried to deliver a helmet-jarring hit against Republican frontrunner Marco Rubio with time running out in the campaign.

Crist hammers Rubio in debate
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
With time running out in the U.S. Senate race, Gov. Charlie Crist fought so hard to depict Marco Rubio as a right-wing extremist Sunday that the Republican nominee called him a "heckler" in their nationally televised debate.

Hardscrabble past in Miami powers Kendrick Meek
By Zac Anderson
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
The news was not good last week as Kendrick Meek brought his campaign for U.S. Senate back to this poor Miami neighborhood where he grew up.

The Apprentice: Jeb Bush, the man behind Marco Rubio
By Joy-Ann Reid
The Reid Report
If, as the pundits and prognosticators expect, Florida voters elect Marco Rubio to the U.S. Senate, the tea party may get the credit from the media, but Rubio will owe a much greater debt to someone else: former Florida governor Jeb Bush.

Democrats' chances with Alex Sink may ride on black voters turning out to support Kendrick Meek
By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
In Florida's three-way race for the U.S. Senate, Congressman Kendrick Meek is stuck in third, 20 points behind frontrunner Marco Rubio and facing almost certain defeat.

Rick Scott, Alex Sink campaigns spent $5 million in single week
By Michael Peltier
Miami Herald
Candidates for governor combined to spend more than $5 million in their respective bids last week as they saturated the air waves and amped up efforts to finish strongly in a race set to end in less than two weeks, the state Division of Elections reported on Friday.

Sink, Scott promise jobs are top goal
By Jeff Ostrowski
Palm Beach Post
In a close and unusually nasty governor's race, there's one thing rivals Alex Sink and Rick Scott can agree on: Florida desperately needs jobs.

Palin helps rally Orlando Republicans as election nears
By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
With former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin leading the charge, Florida Republicans sought to rally their base Saturday, telling a cheering crowd of activists and party officials that a GOP wave was poised to wash over Tallahassee and Washington.

Palin stumps for GOP candidates in Orlando
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Lampooning Tallahassee's "turtle tunnel" as an example of wasteful stimulus spending, Sarah Palin told fired-up Republicans on Saturday that Florida can change the country's direction by electing GOP congressional challengers next month.

Candidates for governor, Senate keeping an eye on states' unemployment figures
By Michael A. Memoli
Orlando Sentinel
The national unemployment rate has long been identified as an important electoral metric, particularly so this year for Democrats seeking to hold majorities in Congress.

Few ideological stances by Sink
By Brandon Larrabee
Florida Times-Union
For more than a year now, Alex Sink has been running for governor, unveiling positions on issues ranging from the economy to public safety.

Alex Sink turns attention to I-4 corridor as governor’s election nears
By Leslie Williams Hale
Naples Daily News
In a tight, unpredictable race, Alex Sink is hoping to turn the tide one Silly Band and Facebook photo at a time.

Following the footsteps of Walkin' Lawton. Alex Sink campaigns in North Florida
By Michael C. Bender
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Alex Sink quickly identifies the bulldog mascot on Wanda Kemp's denim shirt and asks about the Friday night high school game.

Sink Courting Rural Voters
By John Kennedy
News Service of Florida
With campaign stops across North Florida, Democrat Alex Sink tried to woo support Friday from rural voters - rallying a loosely defined, but potent swing bloc that once powered late Democratic Gov. Lawton Chiles to a hard-fought second term.

Ignoring her black base
Staff Report
Florida Courier
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink turned down an offer no other Florida politician running for statewide office would consciously refuse.

Secrecy envelops Scott campaign
By Jeremy Cox
Florida Times-Union
Ousted as the leader of a hospital chain amid a federal fraud probe, unsuccessful in his bid to defeat Democrats' larger-government solution to health care, Rick Scott nevertheless struck a familiar theme as he began the third chapter of his public life.

Nurses say former hospital exec Rick Scott not best prescription for Florida
By Eloisa Ruano Gonzalez
Orlando Sentinel
While supporters gathered Saturday in Apopka to rally for Rick Scott, a group of nurses held their own event to oppose the Republican gubernatorial candidate.

Corrections workers weigh gubernatorial candidates
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
In the heart of North Florida prison country, where corrections jobs are handed down like a birthright and mistrust of government runs high, picking a governor has become more complicated than marking Democrat or Republican.

Rod Smith says Rick Scott is using Obama to paint the Democratic ticket as liberal
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Barack Obama was a symbol of hope and change only two years ago.

Law-enforcement ties, bipartisan reach seen in Rod Smith's appeal
By Bridget Murphy
Florida Times-Union
When Rod Smith argued for a serial killer's execution in 1994, more than just Gainesville was watching.

From stammering to spot-on: Jennifer Carroll's abrupt evolution
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
It was not a smooth roll-out.

Scott, Sink Differ in Environmental Policy Stances
By Tom Palmer
Lakeland Ledger
Environmental issues usually don't play a large role in gubernatorial campaigns, according to veteran Audubon lobbyist Charles Lee.

Gubernatorial candidates get big bucks from different donors
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
With hundreds of thousands of ballots already cast in the governor's race, Alex Sink was scrounging for votes in small North Florida communities Friday with a style reminiscent of Democratic candidates of decades past — appealing to fiscal conservatism and promising to help bring jobs.

Stark policy differences separate attorney general candidates Pam Bondi and Dan Gelber
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In the cozy confines of a cable TV studio, Pam Bondi and Dan Gelber exchanged light banter, but when the lights went on the tone changed dramatically.

Dan Gelber says attack mailer is insulting and inaccurate
By Paula McMahon
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
A round of political mailers and newspaper ads, targeting Jewish voters in South Florida, is attacking Democratic attorney general nominee Dan Gelber's criticism of the state's school voucher program.

Interview with US Rep Alan Grayson who faces uphill battle for reelection
By Sean Kinane
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
One of the most progressive members of the U.S. Congress represents parts of the Orlando area…and his seat is in danger.

Shady Florida PAC continues to spend big in national races
By Luke Johnson
Florida Independent
The Ending Spending Fund, a recently incorporated “super PAC” registered to CPA Nancy Watkins at a Tampa address housing 32 other active political committees in Florida, spent $555,562 in media buys Thursday in three close House races as well as the deadlocked Nevada Senate race.

Getting lowdown on judges on the ballot not easy
By Chad Smith
Gainesville Sun
With no campaigning, fundraising or opponents, Florida's Supreme Court justices and appellate court judges are undefeated in that voters have never rejected one.

Republicans pick Rob Wallace as state Senate candidate in District 12
By Janet Zink
St. Petersburg Times
Republican Party leaders on Saturday chose former state Rep. Rob Wallace to replace Jim Norman on the November ballot as the state Senate candidate in District 12.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Former Florida Secretary of State Browning leads Republican-bankrolled anti-Fair Districts group
By Bianca Fortis
Florida Independent
One particularly heated debate during the current election is the battle over Amendments 5 and 6, which, if passed, would create stricter rules for legislators to follow while redrawing state districts.

It's about control: 'Yes' on Amendment 4 puts it in your hands
By Byron Keesler
Florida Independent
In recommending a vote against Amendment 4 to the Florida Constitution (Editorial Board recommendations, Oct. 9), the PNJ suggests that amendments to local comprehensive plans are "exactly the sort of thing representative government is supposed to handle."

Class-size limits again up for vote
By Linda Trimble
Daytona Beach News-Journal
Linda White and Amy Nowell both voted in 2002 to amend the Florida Constitution to limit the size of classes in the state's public schools.

Stand and deliver for students: Vote no on 8
By Karen Aronowitz
Miami Herald
The Legislature has painted a bull’s eye on our school districts, expecting that parents and teachers will back down from their support of the class-size amendment.

Amendment 8: Bait and switch is being used
By Rocky Hanna
Florida Tmes-Union
As a high school principal, I'm charged with ensuring the highest quality education possible to nearly 2,000 students every year.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Should BP’s Money Go Where the Oil Didn’t?
By David Segal
New York Times
In late April, a week after the BP oil spill began, Keith Overton had an alarming encounter with one of his employees here at the TradeWinds Resort.

Learn from oil spills or be doomed to repeat them
By Chasidy Fisher Hobbs
Pensacola News Journal
BP has another deepwater rig, Atlantis, in even deeper water than the Deepwater Horizon, with a similar record.

So much for the oil spill's impact
By Fred Grimm
Miami Herald
Not only did that giant horrible plume of oil seem to disperse in the Gulf, it disappeared from politics.

LGBT

Gay adoption ban officially ends, state won't appeal court ruling
By Mary Ellen Klas and Mimi Whitefield
Miami Herald
Frank Martin Gill and his partner breathed a big sigh of relief after learning that Attorney General Bill McCollum on Friday had announced he would not appeal last month's appellate court ruling striking down Florida's 33-year law banning adoptions by gay couples.

End of Florida's gay adoption ban increases pool of prospective parents
By Georgia East
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
For 33 years, Florida forced them to hide behind a veil of secrecy.

Anti-bullying efforts must specifically address gays
Editorial
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Out of tragedy often comes progress.

EDUCATION

Parents say FCAT an unreliable measure of student, school performance
By Rebecca Catalanello
St. Petersburg Times
Related:
Poll shows high school parents want AP classes open to all students
Tampa Bay parents overwhelmingly believe the state-required FCAT standardized test is an unreliable measure of student and school performance, according to a recent St. Petersburg Times-Bay News 9 poll.

Pell Grants popular again
By Dave Breitenstein
Ft. Myers News-Press
Southwest Florida is leading a statewide resurrection of Pell Grants, a historically underutilized program that pays tuition bills and buys textbooks for college students.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Florida's unemployment rate rose to 11.9 percent in September
By Jeff Harrington
St. Petersburg Times
Government was in job creation mode a year ago, in hope that new public sector positions and federal stimulus jobs would lead Florida out of the Great Recession.

Stimulus jobs program falls short
By Rebecca Basu
Florida Today
Ten months ago, a stimulus-funded jobs program designed to spark the hiring of low-income citizens filled more than 750 jobs in Brevard County among the 5,500 jobs it generated statewide.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Health care on voters' minds
By Barbara Peters Smith
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Just seven months after President Barack Obama signed into law a historic plan to reform the nation's health care system, Florida's Nov. 2 election is turning into a virtual referendum on whether the state welcomes the new law, or fights it every step of the way.

Poll: Americans split on health care repeal
By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Jennifer Agiesta
The Associated Press
An AP-GfK poll finds likely voters split on whether the health-care law should be scrapped or retooled.

Cities start employee clinics to keep health care costs down
By Bill DiPaolo
Palm Beach Post
When 12-year-old Anna Koeser hurt her right ankle dancing a few weeks ago, the Delray Beach resident went to the city's health clinic on Northeast Third Avenue. She was X-rayed and fitted with a brace.

Halloween Costumes "Mask" Dangers for FL Kids
By Gina Presson
Public News Service Florida
Halloween costumes can be scary - although Florida parents may not realize just how scary.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Report: Tea Party Movement Racist
By Ralph De La Cruz
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Devin Burghart and Leonard Zeskind have made careers out of ferreting out white nationalists and extemist anti-immigrant groups.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

New Approach to Prison Costs Coming - But Whose?
By Margie Menzel
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Republican candidate Rick Scott roiled the governor's race by proposing to slash $1 billion from the Department of Corrections budget - nearly half.

Champion of Florida's palatial court once preached frugality
By Lucy Morgan
St. Petersburg Times
Four times Paul M. Hawkes tried to become a judge, four times without success.

Inmates' health costing millions
By Jay Stapleton
Daytona Beach News-Journal
The state won't have the expense of trying a man accused of stabbing his girlfriend to death, but Christopher Jodon -- who died after he hanged himself in jail -- left behind a medical bill of more than $51,000.

Broward School Board won't say why it gave up $507,942 to help developer
By Megan O'Matz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Six Broward School Board members voted unanimously in 2007 to forgo $507,942 in fees from a developer without question, without debate.

Medicare money paid for posh life, court files show
By Jay Weaver
Miami Herald
Lawrence Duran and Marianella Valera loved spending taxpayers' money.