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Progress Florida -- Progressive Solutions for Florida

Monday, February 21, 2011

Daily Clips for February 21, 2011

PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

New Fla. Senate president pushes conservative plan
By Brent Kallestad
Associated Press
Excerpt: “Progress Florida" has created a Website
http://www.Dirtyhari.org that it claims exposes the lawmaker's "lack of judgment and apparent absence of scruples."

FEATURED STORIES

Fla. threatens to shred 2012 calendar
By Alexander Burns
Politico
A deepening standoff between national Republicans and top party leaders in Florida has the potential to blow up the 2012 presidential primary calendar — and do lasting damage to the GOP in the nation’s largest swing state.

Gov. Rick Scott, still skeptical on high-speed rail, gives backers some hope
By Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
Related:
Federal officials balk at scaled-back plan for Florida high-speed rail
High-speed rail backers got a sliver of hope from Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Sunday after he said he would be willing to look at a plan that alleviates financial risk to the state.

Mike Haridopolos flip-flops, sides with Gov. Rick Scott on rejecting rail dollars
By Marc Caputo and Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
Related PolitiFact article:
Mike Haridopolos breaks silence on high-speed rail, then switches position
In a nod to tea party power, Florida Senate President Mike Haridopolos reversed course on a majority of state senators and his own voting record Friday by saying he supports Gov. Rick Scott's decision to refuse $2.4 billion in federal high-speed rail money.

Scott already headed to a showdown with Legislature?
By Gary Fineout
The Fine Print
The final year of Gov. Charlie Crist's term was one that featured a running series of skirmishes between Crist and the GOP-controlled Legislature.

Cuts in Education Could Lead to 20,000 Layoffs
By Lloyd Dunkelberger
Lakeland Ledger
While promising to create a world-class education system, Gov. Rick Scott has simultaneously proposed the deepest cuts for Florida public schools by any governor in recent history.

Scientist Finds Bottom Of Gulf Still Oily, Dead
By Seth Borenstein
Associated Press
Oil from the BP spill remains stuck on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, according to a top scientist's video and slides that she says demonstrate the oil isn't degrading as hoped and has decimated life on parts of the sea floor.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK

Editorial cartoon of the week
By Andy Marlette
Pensacola News-Journal

FLORIDA POLITICS

U.S. Rep. David Rivera's consultant collected $817,000 in fees since 2006
By Scott Hiaasen, Patricia Mazzei and Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Before launching his bid for Congress last year, David Rivera embarked on a record-breaking campaign for state Senate, amassing more than $1 million in donations some eight months before Election Day.

Scott looks to Texas, but both states have problems
By William March
Tampa Tribune
If Florida Gov. Rick Scott has an idol, it's probably Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

Scott: Cut Florida's taxes, fees, regulations -- and jobs will follow
By Kevin Turner
Florida Times-Union
Gov. Rick Scott got to work Friday in St. Augustine promoting his proposed budget and plans to bring jobs to Florida by slashing business taxes, property taxes and state regulations on developers, manufacturers and other businesses.

Gov. Rick Scott denies first contract
By Janet Zink
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
With state lawmakers debating putting Medicaid patients into managed care programs, Gov. Rick Scott canceled this week an $18 million Medicaid contract between MedSolutions and the Agency for Health Care Administration for outpatient imaging services.

Scott unwittingly empowers the press
By Antonio Fins
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Thank you, Gov. Scott. Thanks for making me, and my colleagues, relevant.

In just weeks, Scott makes state cry uncle
By Daniel Ruth
St. Petersburg Times
Perhaps a brief review is in order.

Redistricting process more complicated than just moving boundaries
By Morris News Service
St. Augustine Record
Even as some lawmakers begin to start work on the once-a-decade chore of redrawing the state's political boundaries, the politically contentious redistricting process is surrounded by more questions than usual.

Rubio, West taking different exposure strategies
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Marco Rubio has gone underground.

Lobbying income dipped nearly 4 percent last year
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
It turns out that lobbying in Tallahassee may not be recession proof after all.

Let lobbyists feed us again, says state Sen. Dennis Jones
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times
It takes a strong politician to admit a mistake.

Gov. Rick Scott's honeymoon period is coming to an end
Editorial
Tampa Tribune
And so it begins. Gov. Rick Scott's term as governor is off to a shaky start.

Tearing Down Tallahassee: The Governor Who Couldn't
Editorial
Lakeland Ledger
One has to wonder why Rick Scott ran for governor when he wants so little to do with governance.

POLITICAL RACES

Haridopolos leads state Senate with eye on Washington seat
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
New Senate President Mike Haridopolos is friendly, polite and politically ambitious — along the lines of Charlie Crist, albeit distinctly more conservative than the former Republican governor.

Maverick Connie Mack keeps GOP Senate field waiting on 2012 run
By Adam C. Smith and Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
Connie Mack IV is blessed with a golden political name that would make him an instant Republican front-runner against U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson in 2012.

Early voting begins Monday for Florida Senate race
By Patricia Mazzei
Miami Herald
Monday marks the beginning of the end in the race to determine U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson’s successor in the Florida Senate.

Tampa mayor's race is up for grabs, poll suggests
By Richard Danielson and Colleen Jenkins
St. Petersburg Times
Former Mayor Dick Greco has a narrow lead in his quest to win a fifth term as Tampa's mayor, but nearly a third of voters are undecided, according to a St. Petersburg Times-Bay News 9 poll.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

U.S. House budget vote threatens Florida clean-water rule
By Steve Patterson
Florida Times-Union
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a budget bill early Saturday that would stop the federal government from enforcing new clean-water rules affecting the St. Johns River and other Florida rivers and lakes.

EPA regional chief, responding to critics, says pollution prevention is good investment
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator Gwen Keyes Fleming said Friday that investing in clean water is better than paying more to clean up dirty water and fight harmful algal blooms.

Everglades refuge plan in Central Florida draws fierce opposition
By Craig Pittman
St. Petersburg Times
A proposal to create a new wildlife refuge in the headwaters of the Everglades has sparked a strong backlash against what opponents are calling "another government land grab."

BP claims administrator promises to do better
By Paul Flemming
Florida Capital News
Two hours of contentious questioning by Florida lawmakers — interrupted by a group of hotel-owners loudly leaving the meeting — ended with Kenneth Feinberg promising to do better compensating losses from last year's Gulf oil spill.

EDUCATION

With eye on Wisconsin, Florida teachers planning similar rallies in Tallahassee
By Ron Matus
St. Petersburg Times
Opposition is heating up statewide as the Florida Legislature closes in on monumental changes to the teaching profession.

Digital learning: The future is now, but change is slow
By Leslie Postal and Denise-Marie Balona
Orlando Sentinel
The students at Orlando's Audubon Park Elementary School finished a math worksheet and started that long-standing third-grade tradition: the timed multiplication test.

Michelle Rhee right about per-pupil spending, wrong about student performance
By Aaron Sharockman
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald PolitiFact
Florida legislators recently fawned over former Washington, D.C., public school chancellor Michelle Rhee as she addressed House and Senate members.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Scott now has to deliver on job growth
By Mitch Stacy
Associated Press
Rick Scott successfully ran for governor as the jobs candidate, selling the voters a mostly vague plan to create 700,000 new ones in the next seven years.

Scott would take 'trust' out of trust funds
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Gov. Rick Scott's budget-balancing plan to redirect $8.5 billion from 124 trust funds into the state's general-revenue checkbook could hold broader long-term implications for the state's environment, work-force housing and scores of services, ranging from restaurant inspection to professional licensing.

Florida gets a few more jobs, but their salaries are lower
By Jeff Harrington
St. Petersburg Times
Everybody knows Florida isn't creating enough jobs to dent its double-digit unemployment.

FL Needs Job Diversity in Post-Spill Economy
By Glen Gardner
Public News Service Florida
The BP oil spill may have been the wake-up call that pushes the Gulf Coast region to become more economically diverse.

For some Florida officials, part-time duties but full-time benefits
By Megan O'Matz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
An obscure local agency that regulates drainage and maintains small canals over 45 square miles of southwestern Broward County gives its six elected commissioners a modest payment for their service: $400 per month.

Foreclosure mediators: Banks pushed us to fail
By Kimberly Miller
Palm Beach Post
Florida's Supreme Court sought a foreclosure lifeline in forcing banks and borrowers to mediation.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Lobbying group picks up costs of Florida's health-care legal challenge
By Charles Elmore
Palm Beach Post
Florida has paid less than $6,000 for its landmark challenge to President Obama's health care law largely because a business lobbying group is picking up an undisclosed share of the remaining legal costs.

House votes to block all funding to Planned Parenthood
By Sofia Resnick
Florida Independent
The House voted Friday to block federal funding to Planned Parenthood, passing the measure 240 to 185.

Sebelius reacts to Gov. Rick Scott's Medicaid, drug monitoring cuts
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
Florida Gov. Rick Scott's daily attacks on the Barack Obama administration aren't winning him any friends in the White House, but Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at least sounds like she wants to be helpful to Scott's efforts to cut Medicaid expenses.

Doctors and health care providers divided over Medicaid overhaul
By Christine Jordan Sexton
Florida Tribune
The day after the Florida Senate unveiled a 202 page rewrite of Florida's $22 billion Medicaid system, providers still are reading through the thick bill to determine how they are affected.

Thrasher's bill would limit awards under medical malpractice lawsuits
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
A bill filed by state Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, would save the University of Florida's Shands teaching hospitals in Jacksonville and Gainesville millions each year by capping the amount an injured patient could win in a medical malpractice lawsuit.

Big, troubled DCF in hot seat again
By Ana M. Valdes
Palm Beach Post
There's an intricate set of guidelines every child protective investigator at the Department of Children and Families must follow each time an abuse or neglect allegation is reported.

Report card ranks Florida near the bottom in access to health care for children
Editorial
TC Palm
A recently released report ranks Florida among the worst states in the nation in health services for children.

Scott wrong on pill-mill law
Editorial
Tampa Tribune
Seven people die each day in Florida because of prescription drug overdoses.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Power struggle over courts could result in more control for Florida Legislature
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
Stepping up a power struggle between Florida's courts and the GOP-controlled Legislature, the Florida House has unveiled this week two measures that would sharply curtail the ability of the state's high courts to set rules for the state's courtrooms.

Florida won’t pay for injustice
By Fred Grimm
Miami Herald
All this talk about compensation for wrongful convictions. Not in Florida. Not for the likes of Anthony Caravella.


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