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Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Daily News Clips for June 25, 2013



FEATURED STORIES

Goodbye, Miami

By Jeff Goodell
Rolling Stone
Related: Rising Seas: A City-by-City Forecast
When the water receded after Hurricane Milo of 2030, there was a foot of sand covering the famous bow-tie floor in the lobby of the Fontaine­bleau hotel in Miami Beach.

Scott team harvests reelection funds from Big Sugar
By Jim Turner
News Service of Florida
While Gov. Rick Scott was in Paris last week, his re-election team pulled in nearly $700,000, with a large part of the harvest coming from U.S. Sugar Corp.

Grandma vs junior? Senior arcade owners file suit, fire first salvo in battle over state gambling law
By Jane Musgrave
Palm Beach Post
If grandma and grandpa can’t gamble, neither should junior.

Florida's prisoners get little help once released
By Steve Bousquet
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Every single day all over Florida, the heavy steel doors of a prison swing open and an inmate walks free after completing a sentence.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Rubio’s favorable ratings slide with GOP voters nationally in Rasmussen poll

By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
A new Rasmussen poll shows 58 percent of Republicans nationwide have a favorable view of Florida Republican Sen. and potential 2016 presidential candidate Marco Rubio — down from a 68 percent favorable rating in May and 73 percent in February.

Comparing Scott's poll numbers
By Jeremy Wallace
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Florida Gov. Rick Scott is no longer on the bottom.

Dolphins owner forms super PAC, blasts Miami lawmakers
By Patricia Mazzei
Miami Herald
Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross has begun exacting his political revenge against state lawmakers who stood in the way of his proposed renovation to Sun Life Stadium.

Pensacola Chamber, Facing Problems, Keeps Public at Distance
By Steve Miller
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
We love spending time in the so-called “Redneck Riviera,” with its white sand beaches, fresh seafood and reasonable hotel rates.

Sentencing delayed for Democratic candidate linked to feds’ probe of ex-GOP Rep. David Rivera
By Jay Weaver
Miami Herald
If the feds are going to pursue an election conspiracy case against former U.S. Rep. David Rivera, a courtroom drama that played out Monday could hasten their timetable.

Orange leaders adopt text-tracking system
By David Damron
Orlando Sentinel
Months after "textgate" broke, many Orange County officials who lost or deleted text messages have switched over to county-issued phones with a tracking program that archives the records.
 


ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

DEP says it has saved $8.8 million through staff reductions and improved efficiency

By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection says it has reduced operating expenses in its regulatory program by $8.8 million this fiscal year and it's asking to keep some of it for employee bonuses.

Our water treasures are in danger
Editorial
South Florida Sun Sentinel
In a public forum in Jacksonville last week, environmental advocates sent another distress signal on the endangered health of two of Florida's most valuable natural assets: Silver Springs and the St. Johns River.

EDUCATION

High court insists on tough scrutiny when school uses affirmative action in admissions

By John Lantigua
Palm Beach Post
U.S. Supreme Court watchers expecting a definitive thumbs up or thumbs down Monday on affirmative action in university admissions instead heard a narrow ruling that may not affect how such admissions work in the future.

FLDOE offers help to teachers whose data became exposed
By Jeffrey S. Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
The Florida Department of Education will have staff on hand Monday afternoon to assist any of the 47,000 participants in the state's teacher preparation programs whose personal computerized information may have been compromised in recent weeks.

Is FAMU's Marching Band Coming Back? 'We'll Make A Decision Shortly'
By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
Florida A & M University’s Marching 100 band is still under an indefinite suspension due to the hazing death of a drum major in 2011.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Abandoned foreclosures mar Florida real estate

By Kimberly Miller
Palm Beach Post Tens of thousands of Florida homes in foreclosure have been abandoned by
their owners, ranking the state first in the nation for the number of properties sitting empty while waiting for the bank to take possession.

Orlando: Tops in tourism, near bottom in income
By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
Quick, name two things that Atlantic City, N.J., Detroit, Mich., and Youngstown, Ohio have in common. OK, time's up.

Administrative court judge notes lack of DOT bid policies in contract dispute worth millions
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
A dispute over a $5 million contract for electrical work on a Jacksonville highway has highlighted what an administrative court judge termed the Florida Department of Transportation’s “absence of regulations, policies, or even guidelines” governing when and under what circumstances to postpone deadlines for contract bids.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Medicaid expansion the subject of South Florida town halls

By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Broward County legislators Tuesday will gather health care providers, business groups and a few Democrats still stinging from the Legislature’s rejection of a push to expand Medicaid to 1.1 million low-income Floridians under the Affordable Care Act.

Florida at bottom in providing dental care for poor children, Pew report finds
By Kate Santich
Orlando Sentinel
More than three-fourths of Florida's children covered by Medicaid do not get regular dental care — the worst rate of any state, according to a report released today by the Pew Children's Dental Campaign.

Scott extends safety net for foster children
By James Call
Florida Current
Gov. Rick Scott held a ceremonial bill signing Monday for the "Nancy C. Detert Common Sense and Compassion Independent Living Act."

Jackson Health System board seeks $830-million bond referendum for hospital upgrades
By Daniel Chang
Miami Herald
The board that runs Jackson Health System on Monday voted to ask Miami-Dade commissioners to call a special election in November asking voters to approve an $830 million bond to pay for renovations and equipment upgrades at the taxpayer-owned hospital system.

IMMIGRATION, CIVIL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES

ACLU wants prescription database release investigated

By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida is urging the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to investigate the release of 3,300 people’s private drug histories from Florida’s prescription database to lawyers in a narcotics sting last month.

Cost-benefit analysis makes case for immigration reform
By Andrew Marra
Palm Beach Post
For weeks, anti-immigration critics have complained about what they call the extraordinary cost of a Senate proposal to overhaul the nation’s immigration laws.

A Long, Slow Drift From Racial Justice
By Lee C. Bollinger
New York Times
The Supreme Court has again upheld the principles behind race-conscious affirmative action, no small feat for the cause of diversity in higher education.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Anti-death penalty groups outraged over law speeding up executions in Florida

By Janelle Irwin
WMNF Tampa
Florida Governor Rick Scott is poised to execute more people in one term than any of his recent predecessors based on a new law that goes into effect July 1 that speeds up the death penalty process.

Federal court halts execution of Miami killer Marshall Lee Gore
By David Ovalle
Miami Herald
A federal appeals court on Monday temporarily halted the execution of Miami killer Marshall Lee Gore, about an hour before he was set to die by lethal injection.

Supreme Court chooses new clerk
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
A Tallahassee lawyer with experience defending Death Row prisoners and expertise in court technology will become clerk of the Florida Supreme Court next November.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Daily News Clips for June 24, 2013



PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Liberal activists warm to Hillary Clinton for president

By Domenico Montanaro
NBC News
Excerpt: “We’re long past due to have a woman president,” Ray Seaman, online director for Progress Florida and a 2008 Obama supporter said, “and Hillary would be a great example.”

FEATURED STORIES

Florida waits on SCOTUS decision that may impact gay marriage

By Jackie Winchester
Ft. Myers News-Press
Southwest Florida’s same-sex marriage activists are awaiting a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that could nullify the state’s gay marriage ban.

With election looming, governor faces potential impact with every bill he signs
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
As the heap of bills awaiting Gov. Rick Scott’s signature diminishes, each one he approves or vetoes puts his mark on the state as chief executive but also carries potential impact on his re-election campaign.

The clock is Gov. Scott's ally in search for lieutenant governor
By Steve Bousquet
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
As Gov. Rick Scott ponders who to pick as Florida's next lieutenant governor, one factor on his side is the clock.

The real Charlie Crist
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Every day the Florida Republican Party blasts out "This Day in CRISTory" emails, reminding people how its former standard-bearer, who is expected to run for governor as a Democrat, used to hail Jeb Bush's expansion of vouchers, once supported offshore drilling, bashed former Sen. Bob Graham as a tax-raiser, campaigned as a prolifer, and so forth.

As Congress Weighs Immigration Overhaul, Different Perspectives On What It Means For Florida
By Lynn Hatter
WFSU Tallahassee
Recent polls show most Floridians in favor of an immigration overhaul bill pending in Congress.

Can Democrats Win Back the Deep South?
By Molly Ball
The Atlantic
A few weeks ago, municipal elections were held in Mississippi.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK

Editorial cartoon of the week
By Jim Morin
Miami Herald
Related column: Rising seas? Geezer pols will be dead by then

FLORIDA POLITICS

Governor Rick Scott's Wildflower Tag Veto: Its Impact And Moving Forward

By Sascha Cordner      
WFSU Tallahassee
Governor Rick Scott’s recent veto of a bill that would have provided more funds for Florida’s native wildflowers and other plants has left several people stunned.

Legislature asks high court not to review an opinion shielding lawmakers from testifying in redistricting case
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
Attorneys for the Legislature are asking the Florida Supreme Court to not review an appeals court opinion that lawmakers don’t have to give depositions as part of a redistricting lawsuit, according to briefs filed Friday afternoon.

Obama's elections panel not expected to back major reforms
By Mark K. Matthews
Orlando Sentinel
A commission named by President Barack Obama to address the problem of long lines on Election Day had its first meeting last week — but few observers held out hope for major reform.

Nelson calls for Senate probe into contractor security clearances
By Howard Altman
Tampa Tribune
In the wake of security concerns about two contractors hired by Booz Allen Hamilton, including one in Tampa, Sen. Bill Nelson is calling for an Intelligence Committee investigation into who gets high level security clearance.

POLITICAL RACES

Rich says she's confident she can win governor's race

By William March
Tampa Tribune
Former state Sen. Nan Rich, the only prominent Democrat who has declared as a candidate for governor in 2014, told a Tampa audience Friday she thinks she can win the governor's race despite being a lesser-known, dark horse candidate.

Crist charms gathering of Democrats in Pasco
By William March
Tampa Tribune
Former Gov. Charlie Crist continued playing coy about his potential candidacy for governor despite a rock-star welcome at a Pasco County Democratic Party lunch Saturday.

Port commissioner aiming at primary run for Hastings’ House seat
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Since winning a bare-knuckle Democratic primary runoff against Lois Frankel in 1992, U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings hasn’t faced serious opposition while getting elected to Congress 11 times.

For C.W. Bill Young, Jack Latvala it's like father, like son
By Anna M. Phillips
Tampa Bay Times
Ever since he turned 16, people have been asking Bill Young II the same question: When are you going to run for office?
 

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

DEP's failure to serve and protect

Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
It's a sad reflection on the state of environmental protection in Florida when a state agency's lawyer fears for his job merely for enforcing the law.

NWF: Climate Change Threatens Florida Birds
By Stephanie Carroll Carson
Public News Service Florida
Tourists aren't the only ones flocking to Florida. So do birds, but according to a report from the National Wildlife Federation, migratory birds of all kinds are being threatened by a number of factors.

LGBT

Brito files to begin statewide petition drive, hoping to end Florida's gay-marriage ban in 2014

By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Miami political consultant Vanessa Brito, who successfully ran the 2011 campaign to recall longtime Miami-Dade Commissioner Natacha Seijas, on Friday filed paperwork to put gay marriage back on the Florida ballot in 2014.

On gay marriage, arc of history will show gay rights are merely human rights
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
This week will be a big one in the world of equal rights.

EDUCATION

Fighting to fix the FCAT

By Michael Vasquez
Miami Herald
Robert Krampf’s first e-mail to Florida’s Department of Education was cordial, even as he raised troubling allegations that poorly written FCAT Science exam questions could be grading students as wrong even when they chose right answers.

Charter school management companies flex political muscle on education issues
By Matt Dixon  
Florida Times-Union
Jim Horne stood at a lectern addressing the House Education Committee.

Teacher prep info exposed online in data transfer
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Florida's education commissioner has ordered a review of data security procedures after personal information for thousands of teachers-in-training was exposed on the Internet.

School districts balk at paying for students' college classes
By Danny Valentine and Lisa Gartner
Tampa Bay Times
Pinellas school superintendent Mike Grego stood before state educators this week with a simple message: You can't spend money you don't have.

Big dreams, big hurdles for new Florida Polytechnic University
By Tia Mitchell
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The new Florida Polytechnic University has grand plans, starting with the main classroom building scheduled to open next year.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Social service programs feeling sequestration cuts

By Sara Drumm
Tampa Tribune
Automatic federal spending cuts have been taking effect since March 1, and social service programs are among those being hit.

State loses jobs, but unemployment rate dips to 7.1 percent in May
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
Florida’s unemployment rate ticked down 0.1 percent to 7.1 percent in May, despite losing 6,200 nonagricultural jobs, according to numbers released Friday by the Department of Economic Opportunity.

Arrival of Amazon in Florida could renew push for online sales tax
By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Gov. Rick Scott’s deal with online retail giant Amazon is breathing new life into an issue almost as old as the Internet.

FEMA seeks millions in repaid aid from Florida
By Jennifer Sorentrue
Palm Beach Post
Lake Worth collected $12 million in federal disaster aid after Hurricane Wilma tore through the city, destroying electric lines, downing trees and damaging government buildings.

Craft brewers clash with Big Beer lobby
By James L. Rosica
Tampa Tribune
A battle is brewing between Florida's craft beermakers, including Tampa's popular Cigar City, and the Big Beer lobby, representing the state's distributors.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Expanded Medicaid makes economic sense

Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Related editorial: Health care act improves coverage, at lower cost
Leadership matters. In Arizona, Republican Gov. Jan Brewer set aside her opposition to health care reform, called the legislature into special session and forced it to approve Medicaid expansion.

Millions to be Sent to Florida Families
By Matt Horn
Capitol News Service
You may be one of 614-thousand Floridians receiving a check in the mail later this summer.

Fla. struggles with shortage of primary care docs
By Kelli Kennedy
Associated Press
Darlene O'Neil just saw a doctor at a mobile health clinic for the first time in months after dropping her health coverage six months ago because she could no longer afford it.

Medical marijuana battle coming to Florida
By Stephen Nohlgren
Tampa Bay Times
Sitting at the kitchen table in her wheelchair, arms useless at her sides, Cathy Jordan begins another day with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Lou Gehrig's disease.

IMMIGRATION, CIVIL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Rubio’s steadfast immigration reform foe: Sen. Jeff Sessions

By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio stepped off the trolley that takes lawmakers from their offices to the Capitol, and as he brushed past Sen. Jeff Sessions, he suggested his colleague get lost in Hawaii for the week.

Bill on Gov. Rick Scott's desk divides gun rights activists
By Rochelle Koff
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The former president of the National Rifle Association and Florida's most powerful gun rights lobbyist is urging Gov. Rick Scott to sign a bill restricting gun purchases.

Caught on camera: Rally against the NSA
By Chip Weiner
Creative Loafing Tampa
Dozens of people gathered across the street from the Federal Building in downtown Tampa on Friday afternoon to rally against the allegations that the National Security Agency is using the Internet and other technology to spy on U.S. citizens.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Opening statements coming up in George Zimmerman trial

By Evan Benn and Audra D.S. Burch
Miami Herald
After weeks of jury selection and pretrial motions, the second-degree murder trial of George Zimmerman is set to begin in earnest Monday with opening statements from prosecutors and defense attorneys.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Daily News Clips for June 21, 2013



FEATURED STORIES

FDLE never interviewed GOP voter fraud whistle-blower

By Michael Van Sickler
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Why aren't Republicans going after voter registration fraud now? (Part 2)
Criminal investigators couldn't find a better witness than Jeff Jewett.

Records show Cannon aide gave redistricting maps to GOP operative before the public
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
New records in a court fight over Florida's re-drawn congressional and legislative maps show  an aide to former House Speaker Dean Cannon released congressional maps to a Republican operative two weeks before they were made public.

Democrats looking beyond Scott in 2014
By Brandon Larrabee
News Service of Florida
Even as they aimed most of their fire at Gov. Rick Scott during last weekend’s Jefferson-Jackson Dinner, Democrats said they weren’t focused exclusively on Scott.

Florida leads nation in vacated foreclosures -- and it's not even close
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
Florida has more vacant homes in foreclosure than any other state in the nation, easily beating out other large states with troubled housing markets, according to a report released Thursday by RealtyTrac, a California company that tracks distressed properties.

Study Confirms Tea Party Was Created by Big Tobacco and Billionaire Koch Brothers
By Brendan DeMelle
Huffington Post
A new academic study confirms that front groups with longstanding ties to the tobacco industry and the billionaire Koch brothers planned the formation of the Tea Party movement more than a decade before it exploded onto the U.S. political scene.

BEST OF THE BLOGS

A Ten Point Loss Is Welcome News for Florida Gov. Rick Scott

By Trish Ponder
Pensito Review
The news was all good for Florida Gov. Rick Scott (Tea/GOP) in a recent Quinnipiac University poll…if you consider losing re-election to any competitor by at least six points to be good news.

Nuclear renaissance in Florida crumbles, meets economic reality
By Sara Barczak and George Cavros
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy
Has the so-called “nuclear renaissance” finally met economic reality? The nuclear industry recently experienced their “worst week” since the Fukushima disaster in Japan.
Medically Needy and Out of Luck in Florida
By FloridaSNMOM
Daily Kos
Florida has so far still refused medicaid expansion. In the meantime, those of us living between the cracks are royally screwed.

Rick Scott Will Have His Revenge On Wildflowers
By Jason Linkins
Huffington Post
Lord knows I should expect no end of perplexing behavior from Florida's fraud-tastic supervillain governor Rick Scott, but I am truly perplexed by one of his recent decisions.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Judge orders delay in trial on congressional redistricting case

By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald
A Tallahassee judge agreed Thursday to extend the court date in the already long-running lawsuit challenging the state’s congressional redistricting map to give the parties time to fight over whether or not legislators will be required to testify.

New name surfaces in L.G. guessing game: George LeMieux
By Steve Bousquet
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
It doesn't take much to stoke the most popular parlor game in Tallahassee these days: Trying to figure out who Gov. Rick Scott will pick as his lieutenant governor and campaign running mate in 2014.

5 questions for Allison Tant
By Peter Schorsch
Saint Petersblog
When Allison Tant became chairwoman of the Florida Democratic Party in January, many thought she’d bring new energy to the organization.

POLITICAL RACES

Has Jeb's Time Come?

By Jon Meacham
Time Magazine
It's one of the more interesting what-ifs of the past few decades
 

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Sea level rise in South Florida: expect floods, sea wall woes

By David Fleshler
South Florida Sun Sentinel
President Obama's top environmental adviser came to Fort Lauderdale Thursday to express the administration's commitment to fighting global warming and protecting the nation from rising sea levels.

Commission easily approves steps involving long-standing controversies
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
The state Environmental Regulation Commission on Thursday approved two rule changes without controversy although the topics involved have been controversial for years.

Aquatic die-off
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
Three of Floridians' favorite coastal animals are dying at a rate destructive to their populations in the Indian River Lagoon on the state's east coast.

LGBT

Exodus International announces plans to shut down

Staff reports
Orlando Sentinel
Exodus International, an Orlando-based Christian ministry which sought to convert homosexuals through prayer, has announced that it is shutting down after 37 years, according to its Web site.

EDUCATION

University board agrees with Rick Scott, keeps student fees unchanged

By Tia Mitchell
Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The board that oversees the state university system mitigated a slight tuition increase for most schools on Thursday when it rejected a series of proposed fee hikes.

FCAT task force is formed
By Erin Kourkounis
Pensacola News Journal
In just a few weeks, local students, teachers and school leaders will find out letter grades handed out to their schools by the Florida Department of Education.

Board of Governors notes unmet building/maintenance needs
By Jeff Schweers
Gainesville Sun
Florida’s state universities have critical unmet building and maintenance needs that aren’t being financed, the Florida Board of Governors determined this week during its annual meeting in Tampa.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Goodson Receives Award For Championing Wage Theft Bill; Opponents Say He Deserves It

By Sascha Cordner      
WFSU Tallahassee
A Florida lawmaker has received an award for his work on a wage theft bill that he’s filed for three years in a row on behalf of the Florida Retail Federation.

Communities seek Amazon facility
News Service of Florida
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
The Hillsborough County Commission has started to fill its shopping cart with a fiscal package to try to attract Internet giant Amazon, an action under consideration in several communities across central and northeast Florida.

Fla. to release May jobless numbers
Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
Florida is releasing new unemployment numbers that will show if the state's economy continues to improve.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Health insurers to rebate $54 million to Floridians

By William E. Gibson
Orlando Sentinel
Health insurance companies will have to pay $54 million in rebates this summer to 614,245 of their Florida policyholders, federal officials announced on Thursday.

IMMIGRATION, CIVIL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Immigration reform compromise would improve border security

By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
A deal to spend tens of billions more on border security was announced by a bipartisan group of senators Thursday, who heralded it as a major breakthrough on a comprehensive immigration bill that has been hung up over the issue.

Disney workers' children urge Rubio: Push immigration plan
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
About 15-20 children of Walt Disney World workers gathered outside Orlando's federal detention center Thursday to show U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio that they are the face of those seeking immigration reform from Washington.

NRA urges Scott to sign gun bill
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
The National Rifle Association is rallying its influential membership to defend the unique proposal it negotiated with urban legislators during the 2013 session to help keep mentally ill people from buying guns in Florida.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Fired Trooper Who Went Easy On Lawmakers Deserves No Punishment, Lawyer Says

By Jessica Palombo    
WFSU Tallahassee
The lawyer for a Florida Highway Patrol Trooper fired after he went easy on state lawmakers, says the punishment suggested for the officer is too steep.

Attorneys clear issues before opening statements
By Mike Schneider and Kyle Hightower
Associated Press
With six female jurors now seated to consider whether George Zimmerman committed murder when he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, prosecutors and defense attorneys turn Friday to unresolved issues before next week's opening trial statements.