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Showing posts with label purge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purge. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Daily News Clips for November 14, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Advocates: Review Florida's Election Issues

By Mike Schneider
Associated Press
Advocacy groups called Tuesday on Gov. Rick Scott and lawmakers to appoint a task force to review Florida's election, which was plagued by long lines at precincts and a four-day delay in determining which presidential contender won its 29 electoral votes.

Florida needs zero tolerance for obstructions to elections
By Charlie Crist
Orlando Sentinel
We just witnessed firsthand the consequences of tampering with people's right to vote.

Gov. Scott dropping his opposition to Obama's health care overhaul
By Gary Fineout
Associated Press
Florida Gov. Rick Scott, one of the most vocal critics of the federal health care overhaul, is dropping his staunch opposition to the law.

Weatherford Outlines Priorities; Targets Ethics, Campaign Reform and State Worker Benefits
By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
House Speaker-Designate Will Weatherford says the state can’t do ethics reform without campaign finance reform. Weatherford wants to make campaign contributions more transparent, and reduce the influence of third party groups.

Florida's Stand Your Ground panel: Keep self-defense law intact
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
A panel tasked with looking into the state’s “Stand Your Ground” law finalized its recommendations on Tuesday, essentially affirming the law and saying that citizens have a right to defend themselves with deadly force without the duty to retreat when they feel threatened.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Democrat lawmakers Dudley, Rouson and Soto — backed by Charlie Crist — to introduce voting reform legislation

By Peter Schorsch
Saint Petersblog
State Representative Darryl Rouson, with the support of former Governor Charlie Crist, will announce legislation for the upcoming 2013 legislative session to reform the flawed Florida elections statutes that changed in 2011 and led to a national embarrassment.

Consensus emerging that election-law reform is needed
By Jim Stratton and Kathleen Haughney
Orlando Sentinel
A week after Florida's electoral system melted down, there is growing consensus that the state must reform its election laws to avoid similar problems in the future.

Florida's elections a national disgrace again
By Nadine Smith
TC Palm
When I was a cadet at the Air Force Academy in the 1980s, we were taught that the answer to any question that began with "Why," was "No excuse."

Election flubs make Florida look like 'Keystone Kops'
By Joe Henderson
Tampa Tribune
Well, we did it again. We're No. 1! Florida's reputation for ineptitude in vote counting is secure.

State officials to examine St. Lucie recount in West-Murphy race
By George Bennett and Julius Whigham II
Palm Beach Post
Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner is sending three representatives to St. Lucie County Wednesday to try to figure out how 799 votes disappeared in Sunday’s partial recount of the tight, nationally watched congressional race bemayotween Republican U.S. Rep. Allen West and Democrat Patrick Murphy.

The Georgia GOP wants Allen West if Florida doesn't
Staff Report
Tampa Bay Times
If this whole Florida recount doesn't go U.S. Rep. Allen West's way, he has a standing invite to move to the more-Republican leaning state of Georgia.

Esther Scott, mother of Gov. Rick Scott, dies
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Esther Scott, the mother of Gov. Rick Scott who became something of a political celebrity during her son's 2010 campaign, has died.

Cretul, Cannon are lobbyists; former speakers start new firm
By Bill Thompson
Ocala Star-Banner
Former Florida House speakers apparently don't just fade away.

POLITICAL RACES

'Nones,' evangelicals played similar roles in election 2012

By Jeff Kunerth
Orlando Sentinel
On a Sunday morning, within blocks of a half-dozen churches, Lake Eola Park is full of people doing something other than sitting in church.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Constitutional Amendment for Voter Protection

By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
There are calls tonight to write voter protection measures in to the state constitution.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Panel OKs estuary nutrient limits as environmental groups mount new challenge

By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
A state panel on Tuesday approved phosphorus and nitrogen limits recommended by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection for Panhandle estuaries.

The Tampa Bay Times' Ivan Penn on the Future of Nuclear Power Plants in Florida
By Robert Lorei
WMNF Tampa
Today we’re going to talk with Ivan Penn who has been covering utility issues for the Tampa Bay times.

Consumer advocate: FPL rate proposal an “atrocious deal” for most customers.
By Susan Salisbury
Palm Beach Post
Florida Power & Light Co.’s proposed rate increase settlement would be an “atrocious deal” for the vast majority of FPL’s customers, and is not in the public interest, the Office of Public Counsel said. 

EDUCATION

Common-Core Deal in Florida Sparks Legal Feud

By Jason Tomassini and Nikhita Venugopal
Education Week
If the implementation of the Common Core State Standards is an opportunity for government and the private sector to work together toward a mutual goal, a bitter dispute in Florida over a website planned to prepare teachers and students for the standards is proving the messy realities of what can happen when government agencies and private companies can't get along.

Board urges changes to high-stakes testing here
By Marcia Lane
St. Augustine Record
The St. Johns County School Board joined a growing trend Tuesday of school boards across the state by calling for a revision of the state’s “high-stakes testing” system.

For Pinellas teachers upset about evaluations, superintendent writes letter of explanation
By Curtis Krueger
Tampa Bay Times
For the many Pinellas schoolteachers who got less-than-perfect evaluations this year, superintendent Mike Grego plans to write a letter admitting the evaluation system itself was, well, less than perfect.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

New speaker will push for state pension changes

By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
Incoming House Speaker Will Weatherford said Tuesday that rapidly mounting public pension obligations are "a ticking time bomb" for Florida government, so he will ask the  2013 Legislature to make all new state employees join market-driven investment plans rather than the traditional monthly retirement systems.

Nice Work If You Can Get It
By Mary Jo Melone
Florida Voices
Florida unemployment offices are not cushy places.

Only "mission critical" job vacancies at DEP can be filled, deputy secretary says in memo amid layoffs
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
A Florida Department of Environmental Protection deputy secretary last month told managers they may only to fill "mission critical" job vacancies and that a cost-benefit analysis must be performed before filling them.

Florida privatization runs off the rails again
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Another state agency, another privatization scheme off the rails.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Obama Administration Gives States More Time To Decide On Health Exchanges

Staff Report
Kaiser Health News
On Friday afternoon, the Department of Health and Human Services extended the deadline until Dec. 14 for states to submit plans to set up state-based health insurance exchanges under the health care law.

Medical-marijuana organization asks Bondi's help
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
An organization advocating medicinal use of marijuana asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to take pot off the blacklist of totally banned drugs with no medicinal value Tuesday, so the Legislature can set rules for its therapeutic use by patients with painful or crippling afflictions.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Let courts strike down drug testing for Florida welfare beneficiaries

Editorial
Palm Beach Post
The best response to Florida’s wrongheaded requirement that all welfare applicants pass a drug test is to block the law entirely, and in October 2011 that’s what a federal judge did.

Clear up gun law laxity before more die
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
A mentally ill young man who should never have had a gun allegedly obtained a 12-gauge shotgun with the help of a friend and now is accused of a double murder.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Revisiting the Terms of Appointed Florida Appellate Judges

By Martin Dyckman
Florida Voices
There's a lot about American government that strikes people elsewhere as strange, notably campaigns that last too long and cost too much, a lascivious obsession with the sex lives of public servants, and the 18th Century relic we call the Electoral College.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Daily News Clips for November 13, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Voting made hard: Frustrated Floridians search for answers, call for investigation

By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Related: Depositions: A backstory of Florida voting law
Civic groups, civil rights organizations, labor unions and Democratic Party office holders are demanding changes in Florida’s electoral system after many voters in the the state experienced chaos and frustration at polling places during the recent early voting period and on Election Day.

Gov. Rick Scott, fix this voting problem now, not later
By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times
Four days before the start of early voting and the six-hour lines that made Florida a target of national outrage, Gov. Rick Scott got a heads-up.

Let’s amend the state Constitution to ensure voter access
By Dan Gelber
Florida Voices
Why were the lines so obscenely long? Because the state legislature wanted them long, and there was little anyone could do to stop them.

10 Florida Republicans Who Helped Make Voting More Difficult (PHOTOS)
By Janie Campbell and Joey Francilus
Huffington Post
Who is responsible for Florida's second infamous elections debacle since 2000?

With Dorworth defeated, Meritt Island’s Crisafulli named Florida House Speaker-designate
By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
In the wake of the surprising upset of a future leader, House Republicans on Monday chose Rep. Steve Crisafulli, R-Merritt Island as speaker-designate for 2014.

FLORIDA POLITICS

West, Murphy both head to Washington Tuesday

By George Bennett and Laura Green
Palm Beach Post
Related editorial: West will need evidence for successful challenge
Republican U.S. Rep. Allen West and his apparent Democratic successor, Patrick Murphy, are both heading to Capitol Hill Tuesday.

Democrats, Republicans cheer gains in Legislature
By Jerome R. Stockfisch
Tampa Tribune
Democrats will have a slightly stronger presence in the state Capitol this spring, but Republicans still dominate the Legislature, and one GOP leader says he can't stifle a smile over Tuesday's election results.

Groups call for sweeping election changes in Florida
By Lloyd Dunkelberger
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Democratic lawmakers, liberal activists and labor unions on Monday called for sweeping changes in Florida’s voting laws, warning that if Gov. Rick Scott and lawmakers do not act the issues could end up in court.

Florida's election season chaos no joking matter
Editorial
Orlando Sentinel
Florida became a punch line after the 2000 presidential election when pregnant and hanging chad and butterfly ballots became household words.

More ballots turn up in Broward
By Brittany Wallman
South Florida Sun Sentinel
Seven days after the election ended, and two days after the results were unofficially certified, Broward elections workers Monday said they had found 963 unaccounted-for ballots in a warehouse.

Kudos to the woman behind Florida's new fair legislative districts
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Voices
The game changer in Florida's 2012 elections is a woman who wasn't running, who did her campaigning more than two years ago and whose name is little remembered in the ebb and flow of political events.

Lenny Curry to seek second term as chair of the Florida GOP
By Peter Schorsch
Saint Petersblog
Lenny Curry, the media-savvy chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, is telling colleagues he intends to seek a second term (his first full-term) as head of the state GOP and will publicly announce his intentions sometime before Thanksgiving.

POLITICAL RACES

Did Obama or Romney win the Cuban-American vote?

By Juan O. Tamayo
Miami Herald
A claim that nearly half of Cuban-American voters favored President Barack Obama continued under dispute Monday, with one side claiming it had new evidence that it was true and the other insisting it was false.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Why Florida voters rejected amendments this year when they usually don’t

By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
If GOP lawmakers put 11 proposed changes to the state constitution on Tuesday’s ballot to drive voters to the polls, some might say their plan was a success.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Florida nutrient pollution battle wanes, Tampa Bay still a focus

By Janelle Irwin
WMNF Tampa
The EPA has set new standards for nutrient pollution in Florida waterways after years of head butting and legal battles.

The biggest loser
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
Arguably the biggest loser in last week's election was the fossil fuel lobby, which spent upwards of $200 million on negative ads with very little to show for it.

LGBT

Florida's first openly gay lawmakers appear together at Equality Florida Broward gala

By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Florida's first two openly gay state legislators made their first joint appearance after the November 2012 election on Sunday at Equality Florida's annual Broward awards gala.

EDUCATION

Florida charter school group leader calls it quits

By Jeff Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
For some reason, Florida has not one but two charter school associations, each led by well-known and influential movers in school choice circles.

Governor's higher ed math doesn't add up
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Gov. Rick Scott has said repeatedly that Florida needs more high-tech college graduates, including more math majors.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Florida Increase Veteran’s Benefits

By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
One point six million veterans call Florida home, and more are being added to their ranks as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan slowly wind down.

Nelson, Growers Feeling Better
By Kevin Bouffard
Lakeland Ledger
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson took a victory lap Monday in Lake Wales, and executives at Florida's Natural Growers ran right alongside.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Getting beyond ‘no’

Editorial
Miami Herald
At long last, the state’s Republican leaders appear to have done the math and seem ready to hold what Sen. Don Gaetz, the Senate’s incoming president, called an “adult debate” with Democrats to bring Florida into compliance with the new federal health reform law.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Stand Your Ground group wrapping up

By Bill Thompson
Gainesville Sun
The task force formed by Gov. Rick Scott to review Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law holds its last hearing Tuesday, with recommendations about possible changes, if any, to shortly follow.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

State courts struggle with Supreme Court ruling on young killers

By David Ovalle
Miami Herald
Five months ago, the U.S. Supreme Court banned mandatory sentences of life in prison without the possibility of parole for juveniles convicted of murder.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Daily News Clips for November 12, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

And ... it's official: Barack Obama wins Florida

By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Winners and losers of election in Florida
Four days after Election Day, we have a winner in Florida: President Barack Obama takes all 29 of our electoral votes — not that he needed them.

Voter suppression and Florida’s butterfly effect
By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Related column: Once again, Florida’s the national punchline
Edgar Oliva waited to vote at Shenandoah Elementary School and fretted.

Could Democrats tap former Gov. Charlie Crist to unseat Gov. Rick Scott in 2014?
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
President Barack Obama’s narrow victory over Mitt Romney in Florida this week has Democrats eager to seize the momentum to focus on the next hurdle: defeating Republican Gov. Rick Scott.

Dorworth recount headed to manual count today
By Jason Garcia
Orlando Sentinel
Related: Republicans scramble to make Dorworth replacement
The political fate of state Rep. Chris Dorworth, the Lake Mary Republican who once expected to become speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, should be determined once and for all today.

Florida moving to work on implementing health-care law
By Stacey Singer
Palm Beach Post
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled, President Barack Obama has won re-election and a majority of Florida voters rejected Amendment 1, the effort to etch into the state constitution a permanent ban on mandatory health insurance.

New allegations surface in case against Jim Greer
By Lucy Morgan
Tampa Bay Times
Allegations of a golf cart filled with prostitutes at a party in the Bahamas surfaced Friday in the criminal case against former Florida GOP Party Chairman Jim Greer.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK
Editorial cartoon of the week
By Jim Morin
Miami Herald
Related editorial: Gov. Scott, Legislature are accountable for election fiasco

FLORIDA POLITICS

Fresh Off Election Day Wins, Dems Look To Keep Momentum Going

By Lynn Hatter
WFSU Tallahassee
Florida Democrats had what may be their best election day in a very long time.

Is Florida U.S. Senator Rubio ready to run for president in 2016?
By Ledyard King
Ft. Myers News-Press
Some Republicans eager to look past Mitt Romney’s defeat are looking to Sen. Marco Rubio.

Obama coattails get partial credit for shift within Florida GOP leadership
By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Ruling Republicans scrambled Friday to recast their lines of House leadership following the apparent defeat of a powerful incumbent in line to become speaker.

Republicans in Florida ignoring the new majority
By Randy Schultz
Palm Beach Post
In 2011, Republicans in the Florida Legislature passed and Gov. Rick Scott signed HB 1355, legislation designed to suppress the votes of minorities, working women and young people.

Campaigns over, Weatherford, Gaetz ponder committees, organization
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
Incoming presiding officers Will Weatherford and Don Gaetz are turning their attention to organizing the Legislature after a campaign season that saw Republicans lose a handful of seats in each chamber.

Gov. Scott gets to work on reinventing himself
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
It's time everyone meet the new Gov. Rick Scott, the softer, family-friendlier version who cares about the poor, public schools and state workers.

Charlie Crist's phone rings: It's Obama
By Tim Nickens
Tampa Bay Times
Charlie Crist was waiting on a call and had to call me back.

POLITICAL RACES

Gov. Rick Scott defends Florida election as his chief says, 'We could have done better'

By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
As his top elections official conceded that the state bears responsibility for long lines and late vote counts that have made Florida a target of national ridicule, Gov. Rick Scott on Friday defended the state's handling of the election.

Murphy wins; West supporters skeptical
By Christine Stapleton
Palm Beach Post
At 4:45 a.m. today, after 21-hours of non-stop ballot copying and counting, Democratic candidate Patrick Murphy defeated Republican U.S. Rep. Allen West for the District 18 congressional seat.

Florida's 2012 election mess: Heavy turnout, wordy ballot, fewer early voting days
By Tonya Alanez
South Florida Sun Sentinel
After Election Day, America went to bed — four times — and still the Sunshine State hadn't declared official results.

Voters see through cash and chicanery
By Daniel Ruth
Tampa Bay Times
Perhaps one of the lessons from Tuesday night is that money doesn't buy you love.

'The right thing'
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
In the wake of Florida's endless, inconclusive election, Gov. Rick Scott commented: “Well I'm very comfortable that the right thing happened. We had 4.4 million people vote” early or absentee.

For GOP’s Outside Spending Groups, Poor Returns on Investment
By Ashley Lopez
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Outside spending groups such as super PACs spent millions on this most recent general election, particularly in swing states like Florida.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Critics call failed constitutional amendments too conservative, too controversial

By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
From judicial activism to Obamacare, a lot of Florida's conservative heart and soul was on the ballot this year.

Big losers Tuesday: Politicians’ sneaky proposals
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
Floridians’ respect for those who have served in the military is not in doubt on this Veterans Day.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Environmentalists criticize new Florida development rules

By Nick Williams
Bradenton Herald
A Florida bill that amended growth management rules to eliminate duplicative regulations and expedite the permitting process is receiving mixed reviews.

St. Johns River Water Management District shouldn't sell Lake County conservation property
By Lauren Ritchie
Orlando Sentinel
What does "forever" mean? For Florida Gov. Rick Scott, the definition likely won't be the same as yours.

EDUCATION

Scott shows his real priority: tax cuts over schools

Editorial
Palm Beach Post
In his new quest to be hailed as the Education Governor, Rick Scott last week announced in Boca Raton that for next year he intends (drum roll, please) to hold education spending in Florida flat.

School superintendents set sights on red tape
By Travis Pillow
Tallahassee Democrat
A panel of Florida school superintendents appointed by the governor has zeroed in on a list of state regulations they want to see eliminated or changed.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Critics: Florida oversight lax for contractors like LightHouse providing services to the blind

By Brittany Alana Davis
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Looking for a lesson in how government outsourcing is working in Florida?

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Time to put health care over politics

Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Gov. Rick Scott is poised to deny up to a million Floridians health coverage through Medicaid and invite a federal government takeover of what should be a state-controlled health insurance exchange.

A child’s sad death in a Florida nursing home
By Carol Marbin Miller
Miami Herald
For 14 years, Doris Freyre cared for her profoundly disabled daughter in her modest Tampa home, pureeing fresh fruit, yams and vegetables and surrounding the girl with family photos and pictures of angels.

Health officials developing new TB list
By James Call
Florida Current
Florida Health officials said Friday that this week there were no new reports of a strain of tuberculosis linked to 13 deaths.

Medicare initiative puts pressure on hospitals and patients
By Barbara Peters Smith
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Coughing and barely able to speak, the 99-year-old patient reached Sarasota Memorial Hospital's emergency room by ambulance on a Tuesday morning in June.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Recounting the deadly hazing that destroyed FAMU band's reputation

By Ben Montgomery
Tampa Bay Times
The young man stood at the front of Bus C, his ribs rising and falling with each breath.

Florida group pushes for more alimony reform
By Ana Veciana-Suarez
Miami Herald
Debbie Leff Israel, the Weston woman who helped start the Florida Second Wives Club, won’t marry her fiancĂ©e because her salary can be used to recalculate what he pays to support his ex-wife.

At least don’t make “stand your ground” law worse
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
The task force studying Florida’s “stand your ground” law didn’t go into hiding during the election. It just seemed that way.