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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Daily News Clips for February 28, 2013



PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Interest groups identify “Champions of the Middle Class”

By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
Business-interest groups have provided report cards on legislators for years, so it naturally follows that pro-labor, pro-worker organizations would do the same thing.

Tuesday: Rallies Planned Outside West Palm Beach Supervisor of Elections Office
By Deirdra Funcheon
Broward New Times
Excerpt: "On Tuesday, Floridians across the state will make it clear: We will not stand for an inadequate and undemocratic elections system hobbled by the antivoter elections law of 2011," said Mark Ferrulo, executive director of Progress Florida.

FEATURED STORIES

Voting Rights Law Draws Skepticism From Justices

By Adam Liptak
New York Times
A central provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 may be in peril, judging from tough questioning on Wednesday from the Supreme Court’s more conservative members.

Florida advocates say 2012 proved need for Voting Rights Act
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
As a skeptical U.S. Supreme Court raised doubts about a central provision of the federal Voting Rights Act on Wednesday, the law’s defenders said the 2012 election provided a vivid example for why it was needed to protect Florida from voter suppression.

Despite dire warnings, radical downsizing of government not imminent
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Wide-ranging federal spending cuts that are set to take effect Friday have been called “severe,” “brutal,” “harsh,” “harmful” and a “meat-cleaver approach” — and that was just in one speech by President Barack Obama.

Competitive Florida Field Shrinks in '14
By Joshua Miller
Roll Call
The Sunshine State has earned its reputation as a political battleground, filled with possibility and peril for Republicans and Democrats looking to pick up seats.

Changing to 401(k) pension plan would be costly for Floridians and public employees
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
A key Florida House committee didn’t wait for facts and figures before moving ahead with a plan to bar new state employees from enrolling in the Florida Retirment System’s most popular pension plan.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Suspect in Rivera campaign-finance probe to change plea to guilty

By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
A key suspect in a criminal case tied to former Congressman David Rivera will officially switch his plea to guilty in three federal charges for illegal campaign activity.

Universal rolls out red carpet for GOP lawmakers, lobbyists, state-party donors
By Jason Garcia
Orlando Sentinel
Just days before they head to Tallahassee for their annual legislative session, Republican lawmakers from across Florida will descend on Universal Orlando this weekend, where they will raise money from lobbyists amid thrill rides and mugs of butterbeer.

Business lobby lays out session goals
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Cuerrent
Florida's major business lobbying organization Wednesday endorsed Gov. Rick Scott's plans to repeal the sales tax on manufacturing equipment and to continue the phase-out of the state's corporate income tax during the 2013 legislative session.

33-year-old JU grad leads Florida House
Associated Press         
Florida Times-Union
It took Will Weatherford 10 years to catapult from political novice to one of Florida’s most influential legislators.

In Proposed Bill, Questions About the Business of Mug Shots
By Steve Miller
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
State Rep. Carl Zimmermann, D-Dunedin, is tinkering with a seedy industry that relies on the First Amendment with a bill, HB677, which takes on the mug shot industry.

Our Election Laws Should Be Smart, Efficient, Fair
By Susan Clary
Florida Voices
Who could forget the 102-year-old Miami woman who waited in line for three hours last November to cast her ballot?

In Search of Civility in Our Political Life
By Paula Dockery
Florida Voices
Once upon a time those who were afforded the opportunity to govern treated each other with respect and courtesy while working together to do what was in the best interest of those that elected them.

POLITICAL RACES

Does Rubio want to become the next billion dollar presidential candidate?

By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
A fundraising letter from Sen. Marco Rubio hitting homes nationwide this week ends on a dramatic note: "President Obama raised $1 billion to win. Any help you can give will be most appreciated."

Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer won't run for governor
News Service of Florida
Tampa Bay Times
Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer has decided against challenging Gov. Rick Scott in the 2014 elections, he announced Wednesday.

Five Democrats endorse Rick Kriseman in nonpartisan St. Petersburg mayoral race
By Mark Puente
Tampa Bay Times
While past mayoral elections have gotten ugly at times, party politics largely hasn't mattered when voters cast ballots for a city leader. 

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

BP exec back on the stand in oil spill trial

By Michael Kunzelman
Associated Press
Another BP executive was expected on the witness stand Thursday to face more questions from attorneys for the U.S. government, which is trying to prove the oil company is mostly to blame for a deadly explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig that led to a massive oil spill.

Everglades Foundation beefs up Tallahassee lobbying team as governor dines with board
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
The Everglades Foundation has beefed up its lobbying team in advance of a legislative session that is expected to include debate over who pays for Everglades restoration.

Fred Grimm: Billboards trump trees when you have powerful pals
By Fred Grimm
Miami Herald
Flout the law, you pay the price. Unless the transgressor happens to be a politically connected outdoor-advertising enterprise, happy to splash the mug of an influential state legislator across 32 billboards in his district.

EDUCATION

Florida Democrats seek to cushion expected changes to charter school law

By Jeffrey S. Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
Majority Republicans in the Florida House and Senate have made no secret of their desire to expand the reach of charter schools in the state, with legislation filed to give charters more access to construction funds and to allow even more growth of the publicly funded, privately run schools.

Bennett looking for partners in Common Core rollout
By James Call
Florida Current
National and state business leaders gathered in Orlando on Wednesday to discuss Florida’s implementation of Common Core Standards in the public school system.

Florida House Speaker Clarifies Remarks on Florida Poly
By Mary Toothman
Lakeland Ledger
Florida House Speaker Will Weatherford said Wednesday his intentions are not for the Legislature to turn its back on Florida Polytechnic University but to support its efforts for a successful outcome.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Scott says Obama to blame for pending budget cuts

By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Gov. Rick Scott lashed out Wednesday at President Obama, saying it is up to the White House to resolve the congressional deadlock over looming budget cuts that could slash millions of dollars from Florida’s economy.

More misconduct allegations arise at Citizens
By Toluse Olorunnipa
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
In an attempt to clear its name after a series of scandals involving corporate misconduct and improper spending, Citizens Property Insurance Corp. released a laundry list of 474 internal complaints Wednesday.

Bill to shrink hurricane fund would make homeowners pay more
By Charles Elmore
Palm Beach Post
Home insurance premiums would rise statewide under bills filed Wednesday that aim to shrink the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund.

Gov. Scott pledges state help to secure spring training
Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
Gov. Rick Scott wants to spend $5 million in the coming year to help keep spring training alive in Florida.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Will a Medicaid expansion create jobs? A review of the evidence

By Amy Sherman
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald PolitiFact
In an about-face, Gov. Rick Scott announced that he would support a massive Medicaid expansion, providing health care coverage to an additional million Floridians thanks to billions of federal dollars.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Florida bill would broaden 'stand your ground'

By Rene Stutzman
Orlando Sentinel
A Polk County legislator who once fired a warning shot to scare away burglars has introduced a bill in the Florida House that would expand the state's "stand your ground" law.

Newtown "Changed America," But Will Congress Change Gun Laws?
By Gavin Aronsen
Mother Jones
"Newtown changed America," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal during Wednesday's Judiciary Committee hearing on the proposed Assault Weapons Ban of 2013.

Ex-lawmaker Adams says gun-control ideas simply "feel-good" efforts
By Mark K. Matthews
Orlando Sentinel
Former U.S. Rep. Sandy Adams returned to Capitol Hill Wednesday, defending gun rights at an emotional — and occasionally combative — U.S. Senate hearing that examined new proposals to ban military-style guns and high-capacity magazines.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

High Court weighs whether elections in Florida and other states need continued federal oversight

By John Lantigua
Palm Beach Post
Deirdre Macnab, president of the Florida League of Women Voters, says the electoral laws passed by Florida’s GOP-controlled legislature in 2011 provide the best evidence nationwide for why the U.S. Supreme Court should not strike down Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

State vows better monitoring of antipsychotics in juvenile jails
By Joel Engelhardt
Palm Beach Post
The state agency that oversees juvenile prisons is changing the way it distributes powerful antipsychotic medications in response to a series published two years ago in The Palm Beach Post.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Daily News Clis for February 27, 2013



PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Florida’s Top Political Tweeters

By Peter Schorsch
Saint Petersblog
Excerpt: This is SaintPetersBlog‘s ranking of Florida’s Top Political Tweeters for February 2013…And @ProgressFlorida at #19 is the top ranked organization.

FEATURED STORIES

Poll: Rick Scott no pushover vs. Charlie Crist in Florida

By Alexander Burns
Politico
A Democratic poll taken in Florida earlier this month raises questions about former Gov. Charlie Crist’s strength as a 2014 challenger for Republican Gov. Rick Scott.

Federal court blocks Florida drug-test law, but Gov. Scott vows appeal to Supreme Court
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Gov. Rick Scott is vowing to to take his case for drug-testing welfare applicants to the U.S. Supreme Court after a federal appeals court refused to lift a ban on the 2011 law he pressed into passage.

Federal sequestration cuts loom over state budget
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
On Friday, $85 billion in federal spending will be cut if President Barack Obama and Congress can’t reach a deal to stave off the “sequestration” cuts.

South Florida would feel squeeze from federal cuts
By Douglas Hanks and Martha Brannigan
Miami Herald
At PortMiami, federal dollars fund Customs agents, security operations and cargo inspectors.

5 GOP Myths About the Sequester
The Progress Report
Think Progress
The only reason that the damaging sequester cuts exist is because Republicans took the entire economy hostage in 2011.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Keep sharp watch on voting rights

Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
The last election cycle demonstrated that if given a chance, lawmakers will manipulate rules for voting and elections for partisan advantage.

Florida shows why nation still need key part of Voting Rights Act
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments today about whether the nation still needs two key provisions of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Fla Dem chair rewards supporters with leadership posts
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
If there are lingering hard feelings among supporters of Alan Clendenin for Florida Democratic party chairman, Allison Tant doesn't appear too worried about trying to smooth over divisions.

Who is Florida’s most liberal member of the U.S. House?
By Jeremy Wallace
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
After analyzing the votes for 2012, The National Journal put out their annual list of the most conservative and liberal members of the U.S. House last week.

RPOF: Never mind that disclaimer, this ain’t ours
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
The Republican Party of Florida appears a little touchy about playing any role in a policy rift that has opened between two of its stars, Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam and Gov. Rick Scott.

Politics in Florida House Speaker Will Weatherford's Blood
By Brent Kallestad
Associated Press
It took Will Weatherford 10 years to catapult from political novice to one of Florida's most influential legislators.

Law does not require citizen input at government hearings
By Mackenzie Ryan
Florida Today
Some parents and community members were left seething after a Brevard School Board meeting earlier this month in which school leaders denied requests to speak on the issue of school closures.

POLITICAL RACES

‘Draft Adam Putnam for Governor’ appears

By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
In the past couple of days the prospect of Florida Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam challenging the re-election of Gov. Rick Scott in a Republican primary has attracted a lot of chatter, and a denial from his staff.

Rick Scott in cross hairs of his own party
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
Let's say you're a Republican worried that Democrats are going to take out your party's governor next election.

Dems tap Frankel to recruit female candidates
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Seeking to build on their strong showing with women voters in 2012, national Democrats have tapped freshman U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel, D-West Palm Beach, to help the party recruit more female congressional candidates for 2014.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Orange leaders put sick-time measure to voters

By David Damron
Orlando Sentinel
Orange County leaders voted 6-1 this afternoon to put a paid sick-time measure on the August 2014 ballot. A three-judge panel ordered commissioners to do that just that earlier this month, ruling that the board had violated the "plain meaning of its charter" by denying the referendum a spot on the Nov. 6 ballot.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

BP executive testifies at Gulf oil spill trial

By Michael Kunzelman
Associated Press
A ranking BP executive testified Tuesday that the London-based oil giant and its contractors share the responsibility for preventing blowouts like the one that killed 11 workers and spawned the nation's worst offshore oil spill in 2010.

Coal ash waste would be exempt from hazardous waste regulation under bills
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
Legislation filed in Florida would exempt coal ash from power plants and cement kilns from being classified as hazardous waste.

LGBT

Big push to support gay marriage at high court

By Mark Sherman
Associated Press
Prominent Republicans, retired military leaders and U.S. businesses are among the factions ready to ask the Supreme Court to support marriage equality in two cases up for argument next month.

EDUCATION

Millions in cuts stand to hit neediest Palm Beach County students the hardest, officials say

By Jason Schultz
Palm Beach Post
Programs serving thousands of Palm Beach County’s neediest public school students could lose millions of dollars next school year if Friday’s automatic federal budget cuts take effect.

$10,000 bachelor's degrees may benefit few students
By Denise-Marie Ordway
Orlando Sentinel
For months, Gov. Rick Scott's office has been sending out news releases announcing that more colleges are agreeing to offer bachelor's degrees for the low, low price of $10,000.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Rubio on Fox: Sequester not ideal but better than raising taxes

By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
Sen. Marco Rubio appeared tonight on FOX News Channel’s The O’Reilly Factor.

Gov. Scott holding work day at Tigers game in Lakeland
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Florida Gov. Rick Scott is spending the day at the park. The ball park.

Florida's consumer confidence drops again
Staff Report
Florida Current
Florida's overall consumer confidence shed one point in February, repeating January's slide and bringing the score to 74, the same level as after the presidential elections, according to the University of Florida's Survey Research Center in the Bureau of Economic and Business Research.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Scott has company, another GOP governor calls for expanding Medicaid

By Jeremy Wallace
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Florida Gov. Rick Scott has company when it comes to Republican governors willing to expand Medicaid, a key element of President Barack Obama’s health care reform law.

Pam Bondi criticizes 'surrender' on Medicaid expansion
News Service of Florida
Miami Herald
A chorus of opposition is starting to take hold in the Florida Cabinet to Gov. Rick Scott’s stunning support for expanding Medicaid, with Attorney General Pam Bondi saying she objects to the idea.

Healthcare Providers Want More Authority To Treat Patients
By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
Some Florida healthcare providers are pushing lawmakers to make changes that would allow them to offer more services to patients.

Millionaires' Defense: Blame the State
By Carol Gentry
Health News Florida
The day that WellCare Health Plans dreaded for years arrived on Tuesday: The criminal trial of four company ex-executives began in earnest in Tampa's federal court, with lots of accusations about health fraud and conspiracy.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Lawmakers Still Seeking Stand Your Ground Repeal

By Mike Vasilinda
Capitol News Service
Despite a Task Force Report ordered by Governor Rick Scott, that the Stand Your Ground law should remain on the books, state lawmakers say they will continue to seek repeal of the law.

Trayvon Martin family attends NY anniversary vigil
By Deepti Hajela
Associated Press
Trayvon Martin's family marked the anniversary of his shooting death with a candlelight vigil in the city.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Justices affirm stay for Florida trooper's killer

By Tamara Lush
Associated Press
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to lift a stay of execution for a South Florida drug trafficker convicted of killing a state trooper with a pipe bomb, its decision issued hours before the inmate was set to die by lethal injection Tuesday.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Daily News Clips for February 26, 2013



PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Activists urge the Florida Legislature to expand Medicaid coverage

By Mitch Perry
Creative Loafing Tampa
Excerpt: Monday's news conference was organized by Awake Pinellas and Health Care for Florida, a new coalition that includes Florida CHAIN and Progress Florida.

AWAKE THE STATE IN THE NEWS

Voting rights bill will honor Desiline Victor, 102-year-old Florida voter

By Clare Kim
MSNBC
Excerpt: On March 5, participating organizations and allies will hold “Awake the State” rallies aimed at voting rights and reforms and improving Florida’s overall voting system.

Supporters of Medicaid extension rally in St. Pete
By Chris Hopper
Tampa Bay News 9
Supporters of Medicaid expansion made their voices heard in St. Petersburg on Monday.

FEATURED STORIES

Sequestration will hit the youngest and oldest Floridians

By Stephen Nohlgren and Marlene Sokol
Tampa Bay Times
The federal budget needs to be reduced, Gov. Rick Scott said Monday, but automatic cuts scheduled to start Friday will mean disastrous job losses in the defense industry and could threaten Florida's response to natural disasters.

Federal cuts would hurt state
By Michael Pollick
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Like a family that loses one of its paychecks, a number of agencies and private companies in Southwest Florida will have to make do with less should Congress and the White House fail to find an alternative to the automatic budget cuts scheduled to kick in Friday.

Senate President Don Gaetz knows his history
By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Adam Putnam touts his opposition to Rick Scott's Medicaid stance
Florida has no choice. It must expand its Medicaid program under the federal law known as Obamacare, Senate President Don Gaetz says.

Scott no-show as governors talk Medicaid, sequestration in DC
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Florida Gov. Rick Scott was again a no-show at the National Governors Association annual meeting this year as the states’ chief execs met with President Obama and White House staff to discuss looming budget cuts that will impact virtually every sector of their economies.

The Trayvon Martin Killing, One Year Later
By Mark Follman
Mother Jones
It's been one year since Trayvon Martin was confronted, shot, and killed in Florida by George Zimmerman.

FLORIDA POLITICS

What have Ethics Rules Wrought? Maybe not much

By Bill Cotterell
Florida Voices
On the eve of the 2013 legislative session next Monday, just about everybody with an interest in what happens in the Capitol during the ensuing 60 days will gather in the sedate courtyard of Associated Industries of Florida for Tallahassee's biggest party of the year, a welcoming reception that the state's "voice of business" sponsors.

Marco Rubio is really conservative, groups say
By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
Last week, two groups issued vote scorecards that put Rubio squarely in the conservative camp.

Gov. Scott names 3 to Florida Women's Hall of Fame
Associated Press
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Gov. Rick Scott has named a black hospital founder - a pioneer who was taught to hunt and fish by Seminole Indians and a national safety leader - to the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.

Ex-Fla. Senate president Childers gets new appeal
By Bill Kaczor
Associated Press
Former Florida Senate President W.D. Childers on Monday received another chance to clear his name from the U.S. Supreme Court.

State cops collect Orange leaders' cellphones in text investigation
By David Damron
Orlando Sentinel
Several Orange County officials involved in the "textgate" controversy have turned over their personal cellphones to state investigators looking into possible violations of open-government laws. 

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Poll: 7 in 10 back FL medical-marijuana plan, could affect governor’s race

By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
As many as seven in 10 Florida voters support a state constitutional amendment legalizing medical marijuana – more than enough to ensure passage and possibly affect the governor’s race — according to a new poll from a group trying to put the measure on the 2104 ballot.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

High-stakes trial begins over 2010 Gulf oil spill

By Michael Kunzelman
Associated Press
BP put profits ahead of safety and bears most of the blame for the disastrous 2010 spill in the Gulf of Mexico, a U.S. Justice Department attorney charged Monday at the opening of a trial that could result in the oil company and its partners being forced to pay tens of billions of dollars more in damages.

Investigation sought into Crystal River nuclear plant deal
By Ivan Penn
Tampa Bay Times
Consumer advocates want Duke Energy to refund its Florida customers hundreds of millions of dollars for "woefully inadequate" handling of the now shuttered Crystal River nuclear plant.

State appeal court upholds water quality rules but delays remain
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
The 1st District Court of Appeal has affirmed an administrative law judge's ruling in support for state water quality standards although implementation still is uncertain.

Scott highlights $3 million request for Apalachicola Bay as rains bring flooding threat to river
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
Gov. Rick Scott on Monday highlighted $3 million in his 2013-14 budget request for Apalachicola Bay including $500,000 for a water flow study as rain threatened flooding along the Apalachicola River.

LGBT

Republicans Sign Brief in Support of Gay Marriage

By Sheryl Gay Stolberg
New York Times
Dozens of prominent Republicans — including top advisers to former President George W. Bush, four former governors and two members of Congress — have signed a legal brief arguing that gay people have a constitutional right to marry, a position that amounts to a direct challenge to Speaker John A. Boehner and reflects the civil war in the party since the November election.

EDUCATION

FAU president agrees to discussion of naming stadium for GEO Group

By John Lantigua
Palm Beach Post
Florida Atlantic University President Mary Jane Saunders has agreed to conduct a public meeting on campus to discuss the school’s recent decision to accept a $6 million donation from the private prison corporation GEO Group of Boca Raton, which pledged the money in exchange for naming rights on the school’s football stadium.

Florida Poly Board May Not to Ask for $25 Million More
By Mary Toothman
Lakeland Ledger
Florida Polytechnic University COO Ava Parker recommended Monday that board members not ask for an extra $25 million they had planned to request from the state to start the new school.

FCAT writing: Are students ready for tougher scoring?
By Leslie Postal
Orlando Sentinel
Asked to write about a favorite place, 14-year-old Aja Williams picked her grandmother's house in rural Highlands County. She wrote about baking cakes and watching TV.

Schools to get their recognition funds on Tuesday
By Jeffrey S. Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
With all school grade appeals complete, the Florida Department of Education is now ready to distribute recognition funds to schools that either improved their state-assigned grade or maintained their A rating.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Federal budget can be trimmed without adding to the pain

Editorial
Miami Herald
The wholesale reduction in federal spending now looming for week’s end was once thought to be so horrible, so disastrous for the national economy, that responsible leaders would never let it go into effect.

Federal spending cuts could close 20 Florida airport facilities
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
Gov. Rick Scott, who famously sold state airplanes as one of his first acts as Florida’s chief executive, could face flight delays at his hometown airport in Naples if massive federal spending cuts hit the state.

Critical of Federal Pensions, Rich Nugent Draws Handsome Retirement From Florida Taxpayers
By Steve Miller
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
U.S. Rep. Rich Nugent, R-Spring Hill, author of January’s Congress is Not a Career Act that would allow federal lawmakers to refuse their pension, is himself receiving a $70,232 annual pension from the state of Florida in addition to his $174,000 federal salary.

Citizens Property Insurance strains to pull in belt on spending
By Susan Taylor Martin and Jeff Harrington
Miami Herald
The Maryland insurance executive charged with cleaning house at Citizens Property Insurance has had trouble sticking to the tighter travel expense policy he put in place.

Floridians get average $75,949 in relief from national mortgage settlement
By Donna Gehrke-White
South Florida Sun Sentinel
The historic settlement involving the nation's five largest mortgage lenders has so far helped nearly 102,000 struggling Florida homeowners for an average $75,949 in relief, according to a new report.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Fla. economists discuss cost of Medicaid costs

Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Legislative economists are meeting to discuss Medicaid costs.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Fact-checking Marco Rubio's immigration claims: Mostly False

By Amy Sherman
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald PolitiFact

One reason the United States needs immigration reform is to bring in more farm workers, says U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.

Deck stacked against 'stand your ground' reform
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
One year ago tonight, an unarmed black teenager was shot and killed by a Hispanic neighborhood watch captain.

Trayvon Martin family in NYC on anniversary
Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
Trayvon Martin's family is marking the one-year anniversary of his shooting death with a candlelight vigil in New York City.