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Showing posts with label jeff greene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jeff greene. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Daily Clips for September 7, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Kick 'em right out of the 'Taj Mahal'
By Howard Troxler
St. Petersburg Times
Every taxpayer at every forum and every pre-election event from now until November should say to their legislator: You blew $48 million of my money on this? And you expect me to vote for you? And here is what each member who voted for that 2007 budget, and the sneaky deal, will say: I didn't know. Which is even worse.

Father of Senate candidate Marco Rubio dies in Miami
Beth Reinhard
Miami Herald
Republican Senate candidate Marco Rubio temporarily suspended his campaign on Sunday after the death of his father at Baptist Hospital in Miami.

Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times
In the aftermath of a mean-spirited primary, supporters of vanquished Bill McCollum are eagerly boarding the Rick Scott bandwagon, especially those Tallahassee special interests Scott vilified in the primary.

Governor candidates' job plans fuzzy on details
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau
Republican Rick Scott and Democrat Alex Sink are both former business executives duking it out in an increasingly hostile race to be Florida's governor, but they agree on one thing: more jobs are needed.

FIU gives downcast Labor Day report on state of Florida's work force
By Jeff Harrington
St. Petersburg Times
Researchers at Florida International University are overflowing with numbing numbers that illustrate the Great Recession's destructive force.

It's all about the money chase
By Daniel A. Smith
Miami Herald
Members of Congress are taking a hiatus from the summer heat in Washington, D.C., on recess until mid-September.

UF Muslims fear Koran burning may spark violence
By Jaweed Kaleem
Miami Herald
Related editorial:
Bonfire of hatred
Before she left her Miami home to return to the University of Florida this fall, Wajiha Akhtar's parents gave her some unusual advice: stay indoors as much as possible and, whatever happens, don't go near the Koran burners.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK


By Chan Lowe
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Read the artist’s commentary
here.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Democrats for Crist? Stick with party, not polls
By Justin Snyder
Palm Beach Post
Some in the Florida Democratic Party have gone missing. In the middle of one of the most important election cycles in Florida and U.S. history, some Democrats have run from policies to play politics instead of sticking to the principles that make us Democrats.

Rubio's image hides sham of a record
By Stephen Goldstein
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
For the frenzy he brings to politics, Marco Rubio has been called the Energizer Bunny.

Oh nevermind
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
To provide political cover for refusing to do anything when Gov. Charlie Crist called a special legislative session in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon spill this summer, House Speaker Larry Cretul appointed some phony baloney committees to pretend to look into things the state ought to do to better protect itself against oil spills.

Tallahassee's Taj Mahal
Editorial
Panama City News Herald
Alex Sink’s decision this week to order an audit of a new courthouse under construction in Tallahassee likely will benefit her campaign for governor. So be it.

POLITICAL RACES

Scott tries to tie Sink to Obama in governor's race
By Catherine Whittenburg
Tampa Tribune
Talking to GOP gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott about Democrat Alex Sink can feel like flipping from local television news to CNN.

As CEO, Scott urged private health care
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott could have to do some explaining about his past this fall, and not just what he knew about the Medicare and Medicaid fraud at his former company, Columbia/HCA.

If elected, Scott may find governor's chair an uneasy fit
By Bob Rathgeber
Florida Capital News
The political landscape is littered with failures — successful business executives who went bust when they took residence in the governor's mansion.

Rick Scott's pick for running mate doesn't look like GOP insider
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
So what does state Rep. Jennifer Carroll bring to Rick Scott's gubernatorial ticket?

A look at Scott's choice for GOP ticket
By Aaron Sharockman
St. Petersburg Times
Trying to keep the outsider label that propelled him to victory in the Republican primary for governor, millionaire businessman Rick Scott announced last week that he had picked a fellow outsider for lieutenant governor in Jennifer Carroll.

Running mates in Florida don't go anywhere after leaving office
By Larry Hannan
Florida Times-Union
Jennifer Carroll became a statewide figure Thursday morning when she accepted Rick Scott's offer to become his running mate for Florida governor.

On economy, who is best: Scott or Sink?
By Lloyd Dunkelberger
Gainesville Sun
With the state's jobless rate at a historic high and one million Floridians unemployed, the biggest question in this year's governor's race is: Which candidate can get Florida back to work?

Charlie Crist's strategy: Marginalize Kendrick Meek
By David Cantanese
Politico
With the three-way Senate field set in Florida, Gov. Charlie Crist’s fall campaign appears to be increasingly dependent on peeling off Democratic voters and sidelining Rep. Kendrick Meek.

Charlie Crist has had episodes of 'misspeaking' before
By William March
Tampa Tribune
When a television interviewer asked Gov. Charlie Crist about the national health care reform bill last week, Crist responded quickly, "I would have voted for it, but I think it can be done better."

Democrat's blog post exaggerates Crist's dip in approval ratings
By Aaron Sharockman
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Politifact
The man who ran President Barack Obama's successful presidential campaign in Florida has crunched the numbers in the state's high-profile U.S. Senate race and come up with a bold prediction: Charlie Crist, the state's governor and a no-party candidate, will not win.

As midterm election nears, Obama on shaky ground
By Alex Leary
St. Petersburg Times
The weekend in Florida was conceived to soothe one distraction — the gulf oil disaster — but only intensified another.

Grady asks judge to rule complaint against Crist is a class action lawsuit
By Aisling Swift
Naples Daily News
Two Republican campaign contributors to Gov. Charlie Crist’s U.S. Senate campaign filed a motion Friday that asks a judge to certify their lawsuit as a class-action complaint with more than 2,000 Republican donors.

Many Democrats more anti-Rubio than pro-anyone
By Beth Reinhard
Miami Herald
Remember the saying ``Anyone But Bush'' among Democrats in 2004 who feared a second term by George W. Bush?

Marco Rubio: Charlie Crist has ‘six different positions’ on healthcare law
By Amy Sherman
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Politifact
The press has written extensively about Gov. Charlie Crist's flip-flops amid his independent bid for U.S. Senate -- including about healthcare.

Will Dog Adoption Fight Hound Bondi?
By Emily Nipps
St. Petersburg Times
Before she became the Republican nominee for Florida attorney general, Pam Bondi was a familiar face as a legal analyst on CNN and the Fox News Channel.

Boyd 'makes no apology' for supporting Obama economic plan
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
U.S. Rep. Allen Boyd told labor activists Monday he will "make no apology" for supporting Obama Administration economic plans that Republicans are attacking.

Democratic donor seeks ethics probe of GOP candidate David Rivera
By Patricia Mazzei
Miami Herald
A Democratic donor from Miami has filed a complaint against state Rep. David Rivera, asking the Federal Election Commission to investigate whether the Republican congressional candidate violated campaign finance laws by “coordinating” attacks on Democrat opponent Joe Garcia with a political committee intended to remain independent.

Rematch of bitter rivals likely to be closer
By Amy Sherman
Miami Herald
It's round two in the race between Republican Allen West and Democratic incumbent U.S. Rep. Ron Klein.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Vote to repeal state's incumbent protection plan
By Randy Schultz
Palm Beach Post
In poll after poll, voters rage against the "political Establishment." On Nov. 2, Florida voters can put this rage to good use.

Amendment 4 lets voter decide land changes
By Lesley Blackner
St. Augustine Record
Who's afraid of Amendment 4, the constitutional revision that will give voters more control over major projects and growth in their communities?

Shameless, cynical politics
Editorial
Pensacola News Journal
The Florida Supreme Court struck a blow for political ethics this week in striking down a blatant, disingenuous attempt by the Legislature to water down proposed constitutional amendments to make redistricting less political.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

EPA gives Florida new Everglades cleanup guidelines
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Federal environmental regulators on Friday laid out a detailed blueprint for how Florida can finally live up to its repeatedly postponed pledge to clean up pollution flowing into the Everglades.

Making a high-stakes effort on behalf of manatees
By Dr. Katie Tripp
Daytona Beach News-Journal
I've never liked Jenga, the game where wooden blocks are stacked to form a tower, then removed one by one until the tower collapses.

US won't say if blowout preventer on way to shore
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
The Justice Department won't say if the blowout preventer that failed to stop oil from gushing from BP's undersea well into the Gulf of Mexico is on its way to shore.

Want to sue BP? No oil required
By Louis Cooper
Pensacola News Journal
For some beach businesses outside Northwest Florida, the effects of the BP oil spill may have resulted from perception, not reality.

LGBT

The politics of coming out of the closet
By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
You'd think with all the Republican support these days for same-sex marriage, that GOP stood for Gay Old Party.

EDUCATION

Racing to the top: Now the hard part begins for unions, educators
By Leslie Postal
Orlando Sentinel
Florida's victory in the federal Race to the Top education competition was barely a day old when school superintendents learned the grant program's clock was running down — and fast.

In Florida, scant oversight of private schools
By Christopher O'Donnell
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Bradenton Preparatory Academy owner Hendrik Lamprecht recently told parents the school had received a new accreditation from a “prestigious international accreditation body.”

Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Requirements to Toughen
By Richard Danielson
St. Petersburg Times
University of South Florida freshman Karsen Lonzo arrived this fall confident her Bright Futures scholarship would largely cover this year's $5,200 tuition and fees.

S. Florida districts weigh policy for teachers using social media
By Akilah Johnson
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
After people meet in the real world, their next step is often a visit to the virtual one, where they'll make a "friend" request on Facebook or MySpace.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

New Florida International University report underscores the depth of Florida’s recession
By Marcos Restrepo
Florida Independent
As President Obama unveiled his $50 billion program to generate jobs at the national level a Florida International University report released on Monday says the length and depth of this recession “means that it is likely to be a long time, if ever, before unemployment recovers to pre-recession levels.”

Florida's budget gap has shrunk by nearly $3 billion
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
Florida’s projected budget gap for the coming year has shrunk by nearly $3 billion, a new forecast released on Friday shows.

How to End the Great Recession
By Robert B. Reich
New York Times
This promises to be the worst Labor Day in the memory of most Americans.

Florida’s High-Speed Answer to a Foreclosure Mess
By Gretchen Morgenson and Geraldine Fabrikant
New York Times
Ten days from now, a four-bedroom house on a cul-de-sac in Middleburg, Fla., is scheduled to be auctioned off at the Clay County courthouse, 25 miles south of Jacksonville.

Florida slow to spend federal stimulus cash
By William E. Gibson
Orlando Sentinel
Florida agencies have spent only about 40 percent of their share of federal stimulus money, a slow flow of funds that has made a limited impact on the state's dire job market.

KSC workers refocus as cuts creep closer
By Megan K. Scott
Florida Today
Jaci Remrey woke up early one morning and thought, "Five weeks. That's all that's left of my job."

HEALTH AND SENIORS

State-funded pregnancy clinics disseminate questionable science on abortion
By Marcos Restrepo
Florida Independent
Crisis Pregnancy Centers, funded by the state of Florida, are distributing brochures that suggest abortion causes mental illness, including depression, addiction and suicide.

Nursing home closure rare, weighed heavily in Florida
By Deirdre Conner
Florida Times-Union
When state authorities made a move to shutter a Jacksonville nursing home for repeated problems, it was an uncommon step.

Social Security Under Assault
The Progress Report
Think Progress
This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Social Security Act, and despite its standing as arguably the most successful social program in the country's history, Social Security has come under assault from a variety of Republican lawmakers and candidates.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Afghans protest Florida church for plan to burn Quran on 9/11
The Associated Press
Pensacola News Journal
Hundreds of Afghans railed against the United States and called for President Barack Obama's death at a rally in the capital Monday to denounce a Florida church's plans to burn the Islamic holy book on Sept. 11.

Gainesville pastor's plan to burn Quran draws protest in Afghanistan
The Associated Press
Florida Times-Union
While hundreds of Muslims in Afghanistan protested a Florida pastor's plan to burn the Quran on the 9/11 anniversary, a Jacksonville man visited Gainesville on Monday in hopes of heading off more local, national and international turmoil.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Florida panel takes aim at legal injustices
By Susan Spencer-Wendel
Palm Beach Post
Across the country, 258 men and women - all wrongly convicted of crimes - have been exonerated by DNA evidence.

Courts work to clear housing cases
By Todd Ruger
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
When attorneys and judges complain that foreclosures are clogging the courts, this is what they are talking about: roughly 24,000 properties in Sarasota and Manatee counties are in foreclosure but have not been retaken, and many have seen no legal activity in almost a year.

Why 2 Florida prosecutors left posts a mystery
By Pat Gillespie
Ft. Myers News-Press
Two veteran prosecutors left the state attorney’s office last week, leaving it with the task of covering more than 300 juvenile law cases they were handling.


Friday, September 3, 2010

Daily Clips for September 3, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Bud Chiles will help Alex Sink's campaign for governor
By Lee Logan
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
As an independent candidate for governor, Lawton "Bud" Chiles railed against the corrupting influence of special interest cash. Out of the race, he's supporting an establishment figure: Democrat Alex Sink.

Republican Rick Scott and his new running mate, Jennifer Carroll, hit campaign trail
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Rick Scott and Jennifer Carroll made their debut as the Republican gubernatorial ticket Thursday and met small but enthusiastic crowds on a three-city flyaround.

State Sen. Al Lawson endorses Charlie Crist for US Senate
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
State Sen. Al Lawson endorsed Gov. Charlie Crist for the U.S. Senate Thursday, saying "Charlie's always been there for us" when state employees, rural counties and universities needed help.

BEST OF THE BLOGS

Sorry Charlie
By Steve Schale
Steve Schale
Related:
More on Crist's Steep Climb
Charlie Crist will not be Florida's next United States Senator.

How Do You Define “U-N-I-T-Y?”
By Inkberries
Beach Peanuts
Apparently for the Republicans in Florida, it depends on who you ask, and when you ask them.

Florida Supreme Court Clarifies Republican Agenda
By Daniel Tilson
The Examiner
In three 5-2 rulings, the Florida Supreme Court has slapped down and out the latest set of partisan ideological overreaches by Republican legislators.

Florida Legislature: Pathetic
By Gimleteye
Eye on Miami
On the last day of August, the Florida Supreme Court tossed the Florida legislature's effort to thwart redistricting on the November ballot.

POLITICAL RACES

Out-of-state groups to pour millions into U.S. Senate, congressional races
By Mark K. Matthews
Orlando Sentinel
For those few Florida voters unfamiliar with attacks ads, the latest TV spot by the conservative Americans for Prosperity offers a classic take on the genre.

Sink weighs Chiles factor
News Service of Florida
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Independent candidate Lawton "Bud" Chiles formally dropped out of the governor's race Thursday, throwing his support to Democrat Alex Sink.

Bud Chiles backs Alex Sink for Fla. governor
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
Bud Chiles, who until this week was running an independent campaign for governor, ended it Thursday with a kumbaya moment with Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, the Democratic nominee.

Rick Scott picks Jennifer Carroll as running mate
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Republican gubernatorial hopeful Rick Scott reached into a shallow bench of Republican African-American politicians and tapped state Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his lieutenant governor nominee on Thursday.

Gov. candidate Scott picks Florida Legislature's only black Republican as running mate
By Michael C. Bender
Palm Beach Post
After five months of campaigning as a "conservative outsider," Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott found his running mate Thursday from within the establishment he has promised to shake up.

Many questions surrounding Scott-Carroll ticket go unanswered
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
As Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott officially announced state Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate Thursday, questions about when he chose the Fleming Island legislator and the experience she feels she brings to the ticket were left largely unanswered.

McCollum right to be skeptical
By Joy-Ann Reid
Miami Herald
Allow me to defend Bill McCollum. Yes, that Bill McCollum.

McCollum briefing gives Bondi overview of office
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Republican nominee Pam Bondi got "a great overview" of the Cabinet office she is seeking Thursday and said Florida's legal staff can't afford further budget cuts.

Crist, McCollum, Bronson certify Florida primary results
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Gov. Charlie Crist and two Cabinet members formally certified results of the Aug. 24 Florida primary elections today.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Future of Amendment 8 campaign in question
By Kathleen Haughney
St. Augustine Record
Republican lawmakers have spent much of the past two years advocating a rollback of a constitutional cap on the number of students in school classrooms.

Supporters of growth measure go after Florida Chamber
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Supporters of Amendment 4 say the Florida Chamber of Commerce, a major opponent of the proposed growth management measure, is encouraging employers to pressure their workers to join the opposition.

Backers of Amendment Four: Florida Hometown Democracy (audio interview)
By Robert Lorei
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
Coming up today we’ll hear about Hometown Democracy—it’s on the ballot this November and it’s backers say it’s a way for Floridians to curb the sprawling development that’s spoiled much of Florida’s natural beauty.

Pols can't summarize
By Mark Lane
Daytona Beach News-Journal
On topics from health care to redistricting to property taxes, the state Supreme Court said Tuesday the Florida Legislature can't write a decent constitutional amendment.

Fooling the voters
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
It's not nice to fool the voters. Our state Legislature doesn't get that. Fortunately, the Florida Supreme Court does.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Another Gulf rig explodes; no hazard apparent
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Another offshore rig exploded Thursday in the Gulf of Mexico, an unsettling echo of BP's deep-sea blowout less than six months ago, but this time it appears there won't be another environmental catastrophe.

New oil rig explosion creates Florida political firestorm
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
A new oil rig explosion off the Louisiana coast on Thursday led House Republicans and Democrats to trade accusations about oil drilling.

BP Says Limits on Drilling Imperil Oil Spill Payouts
By Clifford Krauss and John M. Broder
New York Times
BP is warning Congress that if lawmakers pass legislation that bars the company from getting new offshore drilling permits, it may not have the money to pay for all the damages caused by its oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Snook fishing ban extended another year
The Associated Press
Miami Herald
State wildlife regulators Thursday extended a ban on snook fishing along the state's Gulf coast for another year, hoping that will give the species enough time to rebound from last winter's cold snap that killed thousands of the fish.

Lift liability cap for oil spills
Editorial
Miami Herald
Foot-dragging and partisan politics are likely to replace common sense this fall in the U.S. Senate.

LGBT

St. Petersburg poised to offer same-sex health benefits to police officers
By Jamal Thalji
St. Petersburg Times
The city is on the verge of extending same-sex health benefits to rank-and-file police officers.

EDUCATION

Florida gets millions to devise new student assessment tests
By Carli Teproff
Miami Herald
Florida is part of a consortium of 26 states that will receive a total of $170 million in federal funding to help develop new tests to assess students' mathematics and language arts skills, the U.S. secretary of education announced Thursday.

Students to take new FCAT, end-of-course exams
By Marc Freeman and Akilah Johnson
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The FCAT you've come to know — and often complain about — is changing this school year as the state pushes higher academic standards and new testing.

Packed schools at issue again in Broward
By Rafael A. Olmeda
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The contentious issue of school boundary changes is once again on the table.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Bankruptcies in South Florida up 5.7% in August
By Marcia Heroux Pounds
Orlando Sentinel
Personal bankruptcies in South Florida rose in August, by 5.7 percent from July and by 59 percent from August 2009, according to data released by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Miami on Wednesday.

Florida reverses 2009 population decline
By Jeff Ostrowski
Palm Beach Post
Florida posted a slight increase in population this year, but head counts in Palm Beach, Martin and St. Lucie counties continue to edge down, the University of Florida said Thursday.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Employers Push Higher Health Insurance Costs Onto Workers
By Phil Galewitz
Kaiser Health News
The day after President's Day this year, employees of the President Abraham Lincoln Hotel and Conference Center in Springfield, Ill., got bad news: The hotel would no longer help pay for health insurance coverage for workers' spouses and children.

Big leap in private health coverage predicted
By Stacey Singer
Palm Beach Post
The oft-repeated GOP warning that the Affordable Care Act will lead to a government takeover of health care does not materialize under computer simulations run by the Rand Corp. that were released on Thursday.

Fla. 'pill mill' program has raised $500,000
The Associated Press
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Cash-strapped Florida is about halfway to it's goal of raising $1 million in donations to pay for a prescription tracking program.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Lawmakers Say Crackdown on Illegal Immigrants Would Have Downside
By Margie Menzel
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Voters liked the get-tough-on-illegal-immigration stance of Republican gubernatorial candidates Rick Scott and Bill McCollum.


Thursday, September 2, 2010

Daily Clips for September 2, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Rick Scott's No. 2 expected to be Rep. Jennifer Carroll
By Steve Bousquet
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Rick Scott's running mate on the Republican ticket for governor is expected to be state Rep. Jennifer Carroll, a U.S. Navy veteran and mother of three who, if elected, would be Florida's first African-American lieutenant governor.

Chiles drops out of governor race, throws support to Sink
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Independent candidate Lawton "Bud" Chiles announced his withdrawal from Florida's race for governor Wednesday and endorsed Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink as the best hope for children, campaign finance reform and economic recovery.

Rick Scott wants it his way
Editorial
Orlando Sentinel
Despite confirming that he'd appear alongside political rival Bill McCollum at the Boca Raton Republican Club last month, Rick Scott canceled at the 11th hour, sending his mother in his place.

Court clears up ballot, and voters win
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
The Florida Supreme Court has properly responded to the Legislature's deceptive efforts to get voters to amend the state Constitution to suit its political purposes.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Florida legislative leaders say no to special session on oil spill
By John Frank
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
A special legislative session to provide relief for the oil-stained Florida coast dissolved Wednesday as a top Republican lawmaker said no urgent action is needed.

Special session on oil a decision to be left up to new leaders of Legislature
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
When Dean Cannon and Mike Haridopolos take up gavels as the newest House speaker and Senate president, respectively, in November, their first official act could be calling a special session to deal with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

Legal smackdowns should send politicians a strong message
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
In wrestling terms, Florida politicians have suffered a pile-driver, full-nelson and double-knee gut-buster.

Sink goes to bat for taxpayers
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
Good for Alex Sink. Florida's chief financial officer is ordering a thorough audit of the new courthouse under construction in Tallahassee for the 1st District Court of Appeal, dubbed the "Taj Mahal" due to its cost and luxury appointments.

POLITICAL RACES

Scott to announce running mate in Fla. governor's race Thursday in Jacksonville
By Michael C. Bender
Palm Beach Post
Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott will name his running mate on Thursday in Jacksonville, the first major decision of his general election campaign.

Political pros: Jennifer Carroll balances Rick Scott ticket
By Abel Harding and Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
State Rep. Jennifer Carroll will be announced as Rick Scott’s running mate this morning during a news conference in Jacksonville.

Bud Chiles to endorse Democrat Alex Sink for Florida governor
By Lee Logan
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Saying he simply didn't have enough money to run a viable campaign, Lawton "Bud" Chiles abandoned his longshot independent bid for governor Wednesday and said he plans to endorse Democrat Alex Sink.

'Bud' Chiles dropping out of governor's race
By Catherine Whittenburg
Tampa Tribune
Independent candidate Lawton "Bud" Chiles III is departing the governor's race and endorsing Democratic candidate Alex Sink.

Florida gubernatorial debate to focus solely on children
By Sergio Bustos
St. Petersburg Times
The first-ever gubernatorial debate to focus solely on the future of Florida's children will be held next month at the University of Miami and organizers expect both Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott to participate.

Why Rick Scott failed to add Tampa General to his giant hospital chain
By Robert Trigaux
St. Petersburg Times
Courtesy of ad nauseam campaign ads, many Floridians are familiar with candidate Rick Scott's denials of wrongdoing over Columbia/HCA's Medicare/Medicaid fraud (and the subsequent $1.7 billion fine) when he was CEO of the hospital giant.

Meek campaign calls out self-proclaimed ‘Jeb Bush Republican’ Charlie Crist for backing Sarah Palin
By Brett Ader
Florida Independent
Democratic Senate contender Kendrick Meek’s campaign unveiled it’s first radio ad today, highlighting some comments made by Charlie Crist regarding his support for his former party’s vice presidential nominee, Sarah Palin, as well as some statements that attempt to align the newly minted independent candidate with the policies of his Republican predecessor.

What moves Gov. Crist? Ask again later
By Frank Cerabino
Palm Beach Post
I think it's time to de-mystify the decision making process of our beloved governor.

GOP to pump $2.5 million to help Rubio in Florida
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
The Republican Party is supplying $2.5 million in advertising support to Marco Rubio's Senate campaign in Florida, a sizable commitment to a candidate the party once tried to push out of the contest.

Jeff Greene sues Miami Herald, St. Petersburg Times over coverage
By Jay Weaver
Miami Herald
Palm Beach billionaire Jeff Greene accused The Miami Herald and St. Petersburg Times in a libel lawsuit filed Wednesday of orchestrating a “plan to assassinate [his] character” that cost him the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate in Florida.

Alternative political parties hold some sway in Florida
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
If they voted as a bloc, Florida's third-party members could have a decisive impact on close races throughout the state, including some in Central Florida.

House candidates David Rivera, Joe Garcia can't escape Cuba factor
By Patricia Mazzei and Lesley Clark
Miami Herald
The campaign websites and stump speeches of congressional hopefuls David Rivera and Joe Garcia don't mention the defining issue of their careers: Cuba.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Dueling sides differ on effect of Florida zoning amendment
By Brandon Larrabee
Florida Times-Union
Supporters call it a needed check on growth; opponents say it will likely kill jobs.

Hometown Democracy foes (politely) square off
By Kate Bradshaw
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
Many Floridians are fed up with the unchecked sprawl that defines much of the state’s landscape. In November voters may adopt a state constitutional amendment that lets them have a say in every land use change proposed in their communities.

How the Legislature voted on the devious Amendment 7
By Howard Troxler
St. Petersburg Times
Sometimes what our Legislature tries to get away with is bad enough.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

FDEP workshop suggests the agency will recommend ineffective water quality standards
By Virginia Chamlee
Florida Independent
In the wake of a rash of fish and bird deaths likely due to toxic blue-green algal blooms in the St. Johns River, there are renewed calls for standards that dictate how much nutrient runoff citizens and businesses can dump into Florida’s fresh water.

Planning new water-quality standards, state asks if St. Johns rules are OK already
By Steve Patterson
Florida Times-Union
Despite a federal court order to set new clean-water standards for Florida's rivers, a state agency is debating whether rules for the St. Johns River in Jacksonville are good enough already.

Despite critics, Feinberg says he's paid $17 million in 3,000 emergency oil-spill checks
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
BP oil spill claims czar Ken Feinberg has overpromised and underdelivered, Florida officials and others said Wednesday.

BP Claims administrator Feinberg responds to Florida oil spill task force criticism
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
Members of a state oil spill task force on Wednesday sharply criticized independent claims administrator Kenneth R. Feinberg for his new claims review process while Attorney General Bill McCollum said he plans to meet with Feinberg to discuss their differences.

Florida wildlife agency adopts new species classification system
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission on Wednesday approved a new process for identifying threatened species that would replace the controversial state listing process.

EDUCATION

School enrollment up slightly; no plans for new schools after this year
By Marc Freeman
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Related:
How FCAT will change this year
Palm Beach County's school enrollment is rising again, but officials aren't planning any new schools for at least five years because of a funding drop, according to two new reports out Wednesday.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Housing prices up, yet doubt persists
By Tom Bayles
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
On a Tuesday morning conference call featuring the housing experts behind the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, only one clear point emerged about the future of the housing market: uncertainty.

State's Banks Lose In Second Quarter
By John Hielscher
Lakeland Ledger
While U.S. financial institutions boasted their highest profits in nearly three years, Florida banks continued to rack up sizable losses.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Florida is going after millions tied to health care reform
By Christine Jordan Sexton
Florida Tribune
Gov. Charlie Crist may be wrestling with his position on federal health care reform but Florida’s state agencies are not.

69 FL employers get federal $$
Staff Report
Health News Florida
Florida may be leading a multistate legal battle against the federal health law, but that isn't stopping the state's businesses and public agencies from taking advantage of money the law offers to help pay for early-retiree coverage.

Area lawmakers urge Congress bypass judge, pass law allowing embryonic stem cell research
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Democratic Senate candidate and U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek and local U.S. Reps Ron Klein and Ted Deutch today called for Congress to quickly pass legislation to overturn a recent federal judge's order that blocked federal funding for embryonic stem cell research.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Florida's illegal immigrants have fled state
By Victor Manuel Ramos
Orlando Sentinel
The threat of illegal immigration may have been a political flashpoint in the recent Florida primaries, but a new study suggests that fewer undocumented immigrants call the state home.

Illegal immigration to U.S. in sharp decline
By Alfonso Chardy
Miami Herald
At a time when immigration is a political flash point across the country, the number of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. is in sharp decline.


Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Daily Clips for September 1, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Florida Supreme Court strikes 3 GOP-backed amendments from Nov. 2 ballot
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
The Florida Supreme Court struck a blow to the GOP-dominated legislature Tuesday by stripping three proposed constitutional amendments off the November ballot, ruling they were confusing to voters.

Independent Bud Chiles expected to drop out of governor's race
By Lee Logan and John Frank
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In a sign of relief for Democrats, Lawton "Bud" Chiles III is expected to announce today that he is abandoning his independent bid for governor.

Report may aid Glades land buy
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Forcing water managers to build a massive abandoned reservoir would cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars but still not do enough to clean up the Everglades, according to an advisor to a federal judge.

POLITICAL RACES

Scott eyes insider as No. 2
By Gary Fineout
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
In the days before Rick Scott landed his knockout win over Attorney General Bill McCollum, he disparaged his GOP rival as a "career politician."

Hispanic lawmakers urge Rick Scott to focus less on illegal immigration
By Beth Reinhard
Miami Herald
The "800-pound gorilla'' in the room at Tuesday's closed-door meeting between the newly crowned Republican nominee for governor and Hispanic state legislators wasn't their strong support for his former rival, according to one participant.

Jeb Bush: Scott prepared to be governor
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Former Gov. Jeb Bush says political novice Rick Scott is prepared to be Florida's next governor — and a good one.

Alex Sink unveils plan for school changes
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink envisions an education system in Florida where at-risk students have incentives to stay in school, better-trained teachers get performance-based raises and school buildings become community centers.

Chiles to drop bid for governor
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
Bud Chiles, son of the late Gov. Lawton Chiles, is expected to announce today he'll drop his independent bid for governor.

Aspiring Politician to Sue 2 Florida Papers
By Jeremy W. Peters
New York Times
Jeff Greene, a Florida real estate developer who lost one of the year’s most bitter and closely watched primary elections, is preparing to sue The St. Petersburg Times and The Miami Herald for libel, claiming that articles they published cost him his bid for the United States Senate.

NRSC puts $2.5M behind Marco Rubio
By Sean J. Miller
The Hill
Republicans are making a multi-million dollar investment in Florida Senate candidate Marco Rubio (R).

Rick Scott owes the voters: He's trying to avoid discussing his business record
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
Rick Scott won the Republican nomination for governor by buying, and controlling his contact with, the public.

Charlie, who are you now?
Editorial
Tampa Tribune
Charlie Crist seems to have become a campaign chameleon, shifting shape and changing colors depending on where he is and to whom he's talking.

Return to controversy
Editorial
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
It's not deja vu all over again. There are no "butterfly" ballots, no presidency at stake, no Supreme Court arguments and no candidates by the name of Bush or Gore.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Florida Supreme Court keeps three amendments from ballot
By Lee Logan
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The November ballot just got less crowded.

Legislature loses court battles over redistricting
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
Florida lawmakers were given a resounding defeat in their bid to control redistricting on Tuesday.

Fla. justices nix health care amendment
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
A measure intended to let voters voice opposition to the U.S. health care overhaul was kicked off Florida's Nov. 2 ballot Thursday by the state Supreme Court, along with two other proposed state constitutional amendments.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Special master's recommendation buoys supporters of Everglades land buy
By Ana M. Valdes
Palm Beach Post
The South Florida Water Management District may be allowed to abandon a $700 million reservoir project in the southern Everglades Agricultural Area, after a court-appointed Special Master on Tuesday said the Everglades would benefit more from the district's purchase of 27,000 acres from U.S. Sugar than from completing the reservoir.

Oil spill: Bank suing BP for leaving mess
By Jamie Page
Pensacola News Journal
Regions Bank is suing BP, claiming the oil company, without notifying the bank, moved oil spill response equipment onto a piece of vacant Baldwin County, Ala., property owned by the bank.

Officials pledge to work more closely on oil spill research
By Kameel Stanley
St. Petersburg Times
The academic community and the federal government are one step closer to coordinating research efforts concerning the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Drilling agency imposes conflict-of-interest rules
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Scandalized by federal regulators who had sex with oil company executives and negotiated with them for jobs, the agency that oversees offshore drilling is imposing a first-ever ethics policy that bars inspectors from dealing with a company that employs a family member or personal friend.

Cannon makes ‘anti-environment’ candidates list
By Tristram Korten
Florida Independent
The League of Conservation Voters has named state Rep. Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park, to its first-ever state-level Dirty Dozen — a list of 12 state legislators throughout the country who the group claims, have an “anti-environment record.”

UCF climate study: Is our weather getting wacky?
By Linda Florea
Orlando Sentinel
If the Australian pine and the cabbage palmetto are to be believed, Florida's winters and springs have grown a bit cooler during the past half century — even as the state's summers and autumns have heated up a touch.

PSC delays action on contested utilities' conservation plans
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
The Florida Public Service Commission on Tuesday agreed to delay action until September on energy conservation plans proposed by six utilities.

LGBT

Adoption, Raising Questions
By Lisa Belkin
New York Times
Charles Perez is a former Miami news anchor, now living in Kansas. Scott Simon is the host of NPR’s Morning Edition.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

In Tampa, officials tout high-speed rail's jobs potential
By Kate Bradshaw
WMNF Community Radio Tampa
The U.S.’s first “real” high-speed rail line is quickly approaching Tampa.

Good riddance to sprawl-promoting law
Editorial
Miami Herald
Local governments -- and the taxpayers who pay for them -- got a fair shake when a judge struck down a controversial 2009 growth-management bill that put an undue financial burden on cities and counties.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Court tosses Amendment 9
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
The Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected a proposed constitutional amendment that targeted the new federal-health reform law, ruling that state lawmakers included misleading wording that could not be fixed.

High court tosses "health care freedom" amendment
By Christine Jordan Sexton
Florida Tribune
A move to blunt the impact of the federal health care reform act was thrown out by the Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday.

It's the end of the Tom Arnold era
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
Tom Arnold spent part of his last day at the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration talking about the Medicaid "reform" pilot and potential budget cuts. With or without Arnold, some things presumably will never change.

Unhealthy habit brings casinos healthy business
By Nick Sortal
Orlando Sentinel
One casino boasts that it is endorsed by the American Lung Association.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

The Hate Turns Violent
The Progress Report
Think Progress
For months, the right wing has been leading a hateful campaign against the proposed Park 51 Islamic community center that will be built two blocks from Ground Zero in New York City.


Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Daily Clips for August 31, 2010

FEATURED STORIES

Since primary, Charlie Crist is hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping
By Beth Reinhard
Miami Herald
Related editorial:
Running as independent is no free pass to flip-flop
A longtime target of finger-to-the-wind accusations, Gov. Charlie Crist has engaged in an unusual amount of hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping since last week's primary crystallized his opposition in the U.S. Senate race.

Meek, Thurman: Few Dems will defect
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Capital News
Florida Democratic Party chief Karen Thurman and U.S. Senate nominee Kendrick Meek said Monday not many Democrats will defect to Gov. Charlie Crist's independent candidacy.

Rick Scott, Mr. Outsider, on the verge of being kingpin of insiders
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
Politics is funny sometimes in Florida.

Alex Sink orders audit of 'Taj Mahal' courthouse finances
By Lucy Morgan
St. Petersburg Times
A preliminary review of funding for the "Taj Mahal'' courthouse indicates the 1st District Court of Appeal may have spent money initially appropriated for other purposes and got $16 million in a raid on the state's Workers' Compensation Trust Fund, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink said Monday.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Oil spill special session not likely
By Jim Ash
Florida Capital News
As a House panel wrapped up its work on Monday, chances for a September oil spill special session appeared to be slim and none.

Sink orders audit of building deal
Staff Report
Florida Capital News
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, the Democratic nominee for governor, ordered an audit of the new $48-million 1st District Court of Appeal building Monday.

Money from indicted lobbyist flowed to First Coast lawmakers
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
When a well-connected defense industry lobbyist with First Coast ties was indicted this month on charges of giving illegal campaign contributions, it sent a ripple effect throughout the political world.

POLITICAL RACES

Crist comments on health care, gay marriage may drive votes to Meek
By Jesse Zwick
Florida Independent
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist continues to walk an increasingly fine line in his Senate bid as an independent, making a few statements this weekend on CNN’s State of the Union that are sure to roil some of his Democratic supporters — and perhaps draw them to Rep. Kendrick Meek, D-Fla.

Charlie Crist: A puzzle wrapped in an enigma shrouded in mystery
By Ezra Klein
Washington Post
In a bid to pick up Democratic votes without losing every last Republican vote, Charlie Crist is refusing to say who he'll caucus with if he's elected to the Senate in November.

Warm welcomes greet Rubio in Pasco, Hernando visits
By Jodie Tillman and Tony Marrero
St. Petersburg Times
His campaign likes to say the road to victory runs through Pasco, which explains why U.S. Senate hopeful Marco Rubio headed down a dirt road Monday afternoon and climbed the steps of the spacious gazebo bearing a "Margaritaville Way" sign.

Outsider Scott surrounds himself with GOP insiders
By William March
Tampa Tribune
Rick Scott, who ran for the Republican nomination for governor as an outsider bashing politicians, surrounded himself with political insiders today as he and party leaders -- his bitter enemies a week ago -- put on a show of unity for the general election.

Florida Republicans line up behind Rick Scott
The Associated Press
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Fraud? What fraud? The key argument against Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott in the primary is no longer on the lips of the GOP establishment as legislative and party leaders came together Monday to tout the former Columbia/HCA CEO as a business leader who will create jobs.

Scott, GOP make a show of unity
By Jim Stratton and Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Eager to put a nasty primary campaign behind them, Republicans descended on Orlando on Monday for a political group hug designed to show voters that all is well in the state GOP.

Chiles Long Shot Campaign
By James Call
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
Self-financed political newcomer Rick Scott's victory in the Republican primary for governor stunned a sitting attorney general with decades of public service and may have split the GOP.

Chiles’ previous work for controversial church comes to light
By Tristram Korten
Florida Independent
Bud Chiles touts his work running a nonprofit in New York City as a significant step in giving him the experience necessary to be Florida’s next governor.

Candidates debate having debate
By Mark Schlueb
Orlando Sentinel
The candidates in the most closely watched congressional race in Florida might not have a televised debate because the campaigns disagree over who should be invited.

Slightly more than 1 in 5 in Fla. went to polls
The Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
Slightly more than one in five eligible Florida voters participated in the primary election.

Blind party loyalty can be stifling
Editorial
Ft. Myers News-Press
Attorney General Bill McCollum has refused to endorse Rick Scott - the man who beat him for the GOP gubernatorial nomination - citing questions about Scott's integrity and honesty.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Ex-mayor of Port St. Lucie, his council's rubber-stamping of development, one of reasons Amendment 4 on ballot
By Lesley Blackner
TC Palm
Remember when St. Lucie County was going to declare itself a man-made disaster area?

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

BP data reveals high stakes for Florida in oil spill claims process
By Travis Pillow
Florida Independent
A week ago today, Kenneth Feinberg began administering the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, which he has said will be an improvement over BP’s process and more generous than the treatment claimants can expect in court.

New Man in Charge of BP Claims Greeted With Threat of Widespread Lawsuits
By Gina Jordan
WFSU Public Radio Tallahassee
The man who's been overseeing the Gulf Coast Compensation Fund has now taken over the oil spill claims process from BP. In his first week, independent Administrator Ken Feinberg has been hit with the threat of legal action by Florida's hoteliers.

Panel member: Blowout preventer may hold key
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Accurate conclusions about what caused the blowout of BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico and the massive spill that followed will have to wait for a key piece of equipment to be raised from the seafloor and analyzed, a member of a federal investigative panel looking into the disaster said Monday.

State wildlife agency may stop deciding which animals are endangered
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
State wildlife officials say they will get out of the business of determining whether species should be listed as endangered under a proposed new classification process.

Fla. black bears may have rebounded too much
The Associated Press
Bradenton Herald
It wasn't too long ago that Florida was desperate to save the black bear.

On growth law, judge protects taxpayers
Editorial
Tampa Tribune
Leon County Circuit Judge Charles Francis has agreed with the city of Weston that a law passed last year by the state Legislature would create unconstitutional expenses for local governments.

LGBT

Charlie Crist opposes gay marriage, sort of
By Alex Pareene
Salon
Charlie Crist refuses to say whom he will caucus with, should he be elected to the Senate.

EDUCATION

A nightmarish education picture for black males
By Bill Maxwell
St. Petersburg Times
A sound formal education is the surest way to succeed in America's increasingly tough, knowledge-based economy.

More public schools requiring uniforms
The Associated Press
Miami Herald
More public schools are asking their students to wear uniforms.

Broward teachers on layoff list to get their jobs back
By Carli Teproff
Miami Herald
Most of the remaining teachers on the Broward school district's layoff list will be rehired in the next week or so -- the third or fourth week of school -- Superintendent Jim Notter said Monday.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Florida's massive reinsurance fund is much smaller this storm season
By Gary Fineout
Florida Tribune
The size of Florida’s state-created reinsurance fund has dramatically reduced in size this storm season.

Real estate industry devastated along gulf coast
By Heather Biance
WCTV News Tallahassee
It's been a rough go for Realtors nationwide since the economy took a dive, but those along the Gulf Coast say business dried up within weeks of the Deepwater Horizon Oil.

Small businesses in Florida post uptick in jobs in August, payroll analysis shows
By Jeff Harrington
St. Petersburg Times
Small businesses in Florida added jobs in August at a quicker pace than most of the country, according to an analysis released Monday by software maker Intuit.

Old air conditioners ready for cool cash
By Nirvi Shah
Miami Herald
The desperate wheezing, rattling and jangling of some 10,000 old, energy-guzzling air conditioners across Florida could soon be quieted following the kickoff Monday of a new state rebate program.

Florida Experiences Big Decline in Births
By Scott Finn
WUSF Public Radio Tampa
As the state’s unemployment has risen, something else has dropped – our birthrate.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Meek defends law; Crist flip-flops
By Jim Saunders
Health News Florida
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Kendrick Meek today vigorously defended the new federal health-care overhaul and blasted rival Charlie Crist for what appeared to be shifting positions on the issue.

Law should allow federally funded embryonic stem cell research
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
The Obama administration has no choice but to appeal a recent decision by a federal trial judge that temporarily suspends federal funding for embryonic stem cell research.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Sen. Merkley: Federal immigration ‘reform isn’t going to happen this year’
By Elise Foley
Florida Independent
This weekend Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., shot down prospects for a comprehensive immigration reform bill in the fall, telling constituents that “reform isn’t going to happen this year.”

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Fla. justices hearing Ecuadorian's death appeal
The Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
A businessman with dual U.S.-Ecuadorian citizenship is appealing his death sentence and four murder convictions to the Florida Supreme Court.

Judge orders Rothstein to forfeit half of prison wages
By Peter Franceschina
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein would have to be the highest paid federal prison worker in the country if he ever hopes to repay the $363 million he owes to his hundreds of bilked investors.

Twice trumped
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
The Florida Constitution isn't on the required reading list for state legislators.