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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Daily News Clips for October 3, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Presidential debate likely to focus on economy

By David Lightman and Anita Kumar
McClatchy News Service
President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney — who has struggled to find momentum — will offer voters two starkly different prescriptions for fixing the ailing economy as they duel Wednesday in their first and perhaps most critical debate.

Firm hired by Florida GOP knew weeks ago of possibly fraudulent voter registrations
By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Nathan Sproul was hardly unknown when his firm, Strategic Allied Consulting, was hired over the summer to register voters for the Republican Party.

Bill Nelson tries to weather third-party attacks in U.S. Senate race
By Katie Sanders
Tampa Bay Times
Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson said Tuesday he's taking nothing for granted in his race against Republican Rep. Connie Mack IV despite a lead in most polls.

Public-school cuts weigh on Republicans in state races
By Jason Garcia
Orlando Sentinel
In May 2011, in front of hundreds of cheering supporters in The Villages, under a banner proclaiming "Promises Made, Promises Kept," Republican Gov. Rick Scott signed into law a state budget that cut nearly $1.4 billion from Florida's public schools.

Groups hope to revive debate over felons' civil-rights restoration
News Service of Florida
Ft. Myers News-Press
Hoping to take advantage of a nationwide focus on new voting restrictions, advocates of allowing former felons to more easily gain the right to vote called Tuesday for Gov. Rick Scott and the state clemency board to reverse a decision last year making the restoration of those rights more difficult.

G.O.P. Aims to Remake Florida Supreme Court
By Lizette Alvarez
New York Times
In a bid to remake Florida’s judiciary, Republicans are asking voters to oust three state Supreme Court justices and give the Legislature greater power over Supreme Court appointments and judicial rules of procedure.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Florida GOP Caught in Voter Fraud Scandal

By Ashley Lopez
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
In the mother of all ironies, the Florida Republican Party is embroiled in a voter fraud scandal, putting hundreds of voter registration forms in about 10 counties in question.

Un-Suppressing The Vote: Victories Against GOP Voter Suppression Efforts
The Progress Report
Think Progress
Republicans have been on an all-out crusade against voting ever since they took control of numerous state legislatures in 2011.

Democrats' voter-registration effort swamps GOP's
By Scott Powers
Orlando Sentinel
Since the Republican Legislature passed laws last year to regulate groups that independently register voters in Florida, Democrats have swamped Republicans in registering new voters.

Fewer troops requesting absentee ballots in Florida
By Howard Altman
Tampa Tribune
With only a few weeks left for those in the military or overseas to cast a ballot, the number of absentee ballots requested by those groups has dropped nearly 50 percent in Florida compared with the last presidential election, according to a military voter watchdog group.

Gaetz's olive branch looks like a spear
By Daniel Ruth
Tampa Bay Times
There's an old line that says if you are going to plot to kill the king, you darn sure better pull it off. Otherwise, unpleasantries ensue.

Hardball politics back at Disney?
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
Years ago, Orlando was pretty much a one-mouse town.

Maitland Vice Mayor Phil Bonus on prostitution-ring client list
By Susan Jacobson
Orlando Sentinel
Maitland Vice Mayor Phil Bonus acknowledged Tuesday night that his name appears on the same prostitution-ring client list that last week led state Rep. Mike Horner to abandon his re-election campaign.

POLITICAL RACES

Five things to watch in the presidential debate

By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Related: Pay attention to the candidates' logic, or lack of it
Barack Obama and Mitt Romney hold their first debate tonight at the University of Denver, and by some estimates it may be Romney's best and last chance to shake up the race and overtake the president.

Mitt Romney's Outsourcing History Highlighted In New Obama Ad
By Andy Kroll
Mother Jones
In July, Mother Jones broke the story that Mitt Romney, when he was running Bain Capital, had invested in Global-Tech Appliances, a Chinese manufacturing company that profited from US outsourcing.

Campaigns for Hispanic vote in Florida not spending heavily on Spanish-language media
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
For months, you've heard how Hispanics could decide the presidential race in crucial battleground states like Florida, Colorado and Nevada.

Out-of-state donors pour cash into Mack Senate race
By William March
Tampa Tribune
Related: Suffolk University Florida poll: Obama up 3, Nelson up 6
Outside spending by independent groups helping Rep. Connie Mack IV's Senate campaign — mostly by attacking his opponent, Sen. Bill Nelson — has reached nearly $22 million, according to Nelson campaign figures.

West, Murphy exchange fire in congressional campaign attack ads
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Democratic congressional challenger Patrick Murphy, responding to an ad that features Murphy’s mug shot from a 2003 arrest, released a new ad Tuesday that slams Republican U.S. Rep. Allen West for a 2003 incident in Iraq in which West fired a gun near the head of a detainee during an interrogation.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Court ruling takes teeth out of health care amendment

By Mary Shedden
Tampa Tribune
 It's been surprisingly quiet around the state regarding Amendment 1, a constitutional proposal to block the controversial insurance mandate in the federal health care law.

Environmental opposition announced to Amendments 3, 4
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
Some environmental groups have joined the opposition to Amendment 3 while others may be opposing Amendment 4, saying they are concerned that both proposals could restrict support for environmental programs.

Measure opens door to tax support for church schools
By Joie Cadle
Orlando Sentinel
No matter what we hear about the benefits of Amendment 8, I can only shudder at the unintended consequences that may erupt if it passes in November.

No to these amendments
Editorial
Miami Herald
Unaware Floridians may be in for a shock on election day when they discover what’s in store for them in the voting booth.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Duke Energy customers face $1 billion-plus tab whether nuclear plant is fixed or not

By Ivan Penn
Tampa Bay Times
Duke Energy faces a potentially $3 billion decision on whether to fix its busted Crystal River nuclear plant. Regardless of their choice, however, customers will still get stuck paying for the billion-dollar-plus blunder.

Rumors about BP fine settlement talks raise ire
By Nate Monroe
Pensacola News Journal
Rumored settlement negotiations between the U.S. Justice Department and BP are raising concerns that millions of anticipated dollars from the recently passed RESTORE Act could be diverted from Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.

Menu favorites endangered as federal regulators consider protections for conch
By Emily Roach
Palm Beach Post
Forget those crispy fritters or spicy chowder if queen conch is put on the Endangered Species List.

Water policy must change at state level
Editorial
Citrus County Chronicle
Issuing a permit for a well in Crystal River to provide water for a bottling plant in Ocala continues to stir outrage among residents who have been urged to take water-conserving steps like flushing toilets less, taking shorter showers, using less water bathing and putting in rain barrels to cut outdoor water use.

LGBT

Florida justices hear lesbian custody dispute

By Bill Kaczor
Associated Press
A bitter child custody dispute between two lesbians went before the Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday, but the justices suggested the case may be sent back to a lower court and lawyers on both sides said it is unlikely to affect other couples, gay or straight.

EDUCATION

After a parent complains, Dunedin High School stops promoting student volunteer opportunity for Obama group

By Curtis Krueger
Tampa Bay Times
The principal at Dunedin High School has stopped promoting a student volunteer opportunity tied to President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party after a parent complained.

Pasco School Board denies K12 charter school application
By Jeffrey S. Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
Despite an expected challenge, the Pasco County School Board on Tuesday denied a virtual charter school application from a group that is under investigation.

State Board of Education wants $442 million for school technology upgrades
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times
The Florida Board of Education is putting finishing touches on the budget request that it will send to Gov. Rick Scott, and at the center of its plan for the upcoming fiscal year is a $442 million technology initiative.

Study: Race-neutral college admissions can work
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
As the Supreme Court revisits the use of race in college admissions next week, critics of affirmative action are hopeful the justices will roll back the practice.

Florida schools deserve the best
Editorial
Ocala Star-Banner
This is one hire that Florida has to get right.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Consumer advocates blast Citizens’ rate increase, question plan to move customers

By Charles Elmore
Palm Beach Post
Regulators announced approval of a 10.8 percent rate increase for homeowners with Florida’s last-resort insurer Citizens Tuesday, but sparks are flying over a plan that would write $350 million in checks from the ratepayers’ surplus to lure private insurers to take over customers.

Pension promises still unmet
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
The slew of negative ads that Gov. Rick Scott ran two years ago about his opponent's role with the state public pension fund helped him win the election.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Doctor with the Midas touch

By Carol Gentry
Health News Florida
Dr. Kiran Patel of Tampa, who donated $12 million to University of South Florida on Tuesday, can well afford the gift.

Fla. Lawmaker, Activists Push Labeling Of Genetically Engineered Foods
By Jessica Palombo    
WFSU Tallahassee
Genetically engineered food was the subject of a demonstration at the Florida Capitol on Tuesday. 

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Florida Supreme Court considers: Can immigrant illegally in U.S. practice law?

By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In a unique case followed closely by immigration experts, the Florida Supreme Court will consider whether an undocumented immigrant can practice law in Florida.

Criminal justice coalition schedules summit
By James Call
Florida Current
A coalition of business groups, think tanks and mental health advocates is planning to develop alternatives for handling low-level criminal offenders.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Daily News Clips for October 2, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Florida elections supervisors wonder how to deal with GOP voter registrations

By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Why did Republican Party hire voter registration firm with dubious ties?
With less than a week before the deadline to register to vote in the November election, Republican state leaders who had made voter fraud a top issue are offering little insight into how they are handling the increasing numbers of suspicious registration forms being found throughout Florida.

Protesters: Florida amendment will slice spending on social services
By Toluse Olorunnipa
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
Florida religious leaders, labor unions and senior citizens marched to the state Capitol on Monday to protest a proposed constitutional amendment they say will lead to massive cuts to education and social services.

Proposed abortion amendment rekindles debate on limits
By Jerome R. Stockfisch
Tampa Tribune
The culture war over a woman's right to an abortion will play out at the polls in November as a measure billed as a ban on public funding of the procedure – which could have much more far-reaching implications – appears on Florida ballots.

PIP rates go up for some insurers despite promised savings under state law
By Charles Elmore
Palm Beach Post
The payoff for one of Gov. Rick Scott’s top legislative priorities in 2012 was supposed to be lower auto insurance rates after sharp reductions in Personal Injury Protection benefits, but early returns show PIP rates increasing in at least half the cases.

Amid FBI probe, GOP prepares for Rivera indictment, loss and future successors
By Manny Garcia and Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Bracing for embattled U.S. Rep. David Rivera to be indicted or lose his election, Republicans have started lining up potential successors to regain the seat in 2014 if the congressman’s Democrat opponent defeats him in November.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Fla. election supervisor won't reinstate voters

Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
A Southwest Florida election official is sticking with a decision to remove nearly a dozen voters from the voting rolls, even though the state no longer suspects them of being ineligible.

Fort Lauderdale judge hears arguments in voter-purge case
By Patricia Mazzei
Miami Herald
A federal judge in Fort Lauderdale heard arguments Monday — but likely won’t rule until later this week — in a lawsuit challenging Florida’s contentious noncitizen voter purge.

Deutch demands GOP voter registration fraud probe
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Boca Raton, sent a letter to Gov. Rick Scott today demanding an immediate, bipartisan investigation of the “apparently growing voter fraud scandal engulfing the Republican Party of Florida.”

New evidence released in busted brothel that listed Rep. Horner as a client
By Jeff Weiner
Orlando Sentinel
About 50 pages of evidence released on Monday provide new details about a complex prostitution bust that led to the arrest of an alleged brothel owner who listed State Rep. Mike Horner of Kissimmee as a client.

Scott mouthpiece Wright heads to APD
By Kathleen Haughney
South Florida Sun Sentinel
Gov. Rick Scott spokesman Lane Wright left the governor's office Friday for a new role at the Agency for Persons With Disabilities, according to an email he wrote to his colleagues.

Smaller Occupy Tampa movement marks first anniversary
By Keith Morelli
Tampa Tribune
The numbers didn't add up to what they were one year ago.

Washington still needed to protect voters' rights
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
The United States Supreme Court opened a new term Monday in which it is expected to consider overturning a key portion of the Voting Rights Act.

POLITICAL RACES

Step 1 in presidential politics: win over the base

By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times
John McCain will stump for Mitt Romney today in a part of Florida where Republicans usually don't need much outside help.

Gov. Scott on Fox News: Mitt Romney needs to 'do what I did' and focus on jobs
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald
Gov. Rick Scott was in New York today making the media rounds and offered up a bit of advice for Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

Marco Rubio campaigns with Senate candidate Connie Mack in Tampa
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Republican U.S. Senate candidate Connie Mack IV imported some star power into his campaign Monday, traveling around the state with Sen. Marco Rubio at his side.

Political ads will ramp up during your favorite TV shows
By Johnny Diaz
Orlando Sentinel
If you thought there were a lot of presidential ads on your TV sets this summer, hold on to your political hat.

Maverick pollster continues to show tight Senate, presidential races in Florida
By William March
Tampa Tribune
While numerous pollsters are showing Sen. Bill Nelson with a comfy lead over challenger Rep. Connie Mack IV, and President Barack Obama narrowly leading challenger Mitt Romney in Florida, a Winter Springs-based political consulting firm stands by its differing results.

Frankel, Hasner run for Congress on experience, philosophical divide
By Andrew Abramson
Palm Beach Post
If Adam Hasner is to defeat Lois Frankel and head to Washington, he’ll have to do what Allen West wouldn’t attempt — win as a Republican in a congressional district with a significant Democratic advantage.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

GOP-themed ballot issues may boost voting

By Joe Henderson
Tampa Tribune
Amendments to the state's constitution have to be approved by a vote of the people.

Abortion amendment attracts big-dollar opposition
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
A battle among religious groups, abortion providers and conservative politicians over taxpayer support of abortions is drawing big checks this election season — despite the fact that Florida doesn't spend tax dollars on abortion services now.

Preachers say no on Amendment 3
By James Call
Florida Current
About 50 protestors marched on the state Capitol Monday to protest a proposed revenue cap on the November ballot.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Florida Bears Looking for Food in Fall

By Stephanie Carroll Carson
Public News Service Florida
The 3,000 black bears that live in Florida are busy at this time of year, foraging for food to last them through the winter. 

EDUCATION

Readers Poll: Scott's education tour didn't make grade

Staff Report
Florida Current
Gov. Rick Scott started his administration making few friends among Florida's public school educators.

More applications for Florida education commissioner arrive
By Jeff Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
Another 18 applications for Florida education commissioner have come in since the State Board of Education extended its search for two more months.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

State pension's assumptions may change

By James Call
Florida Current
Florida has an adequate amount of money in its public workers' pension fund, but state economists are not comfortable with the assumptions that determine the fund’s solvency.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Florida Misses Target To Outline Benefits Under Healthcare Overhaul Law

By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
The target date for states to spell out what benefits health insurance companies have to offer under the healthcare overhaul law was Monday.

Hospital pay changing
By Carol Gentry
Health News Florida
Today, Medicare launches a double-barreled effort to get more for its money from hospitals.

Florida to Close Controversial Juvenile Detention Center
By Susan Ferriss
Center for Public Integrity
The state of Florida plans to close a large privately-run juvenile offender home that a group of public defenders alleged was rife with problems.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

How the DREAM Act Will Grow Our Economy, Create Jobs

The Progress Report
Think Progress
Even though President Obama’s administration has used executive authority to implement deferred action for DREAM-eligible youth, up to 2.1 MILLION young Americans still lack a path to citizenship and the sure footing they need to make the maximum contribution to our society.

‘Penn State’ abuse-reporting law takes effect in Florida
By Margie Menzel
News Service of Florida
A Florida law that some call the toughest in the nation for reporting child abuse took effect Monday, a result of the scandal that rocked Penn State University and college football last year.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Aging Supreme Court justices may open seats for next president

By Michael Doyle
Miami Herald
Senior citizens dominate the Supreme Court. Some will leave in the next four years, and this year’s election for president will determine who’ll fill any vacancies on the court, President Barack Obama or President Mitt Romney.

Keep politics out of justices’ retention
By Fred Grimm
Miami Herald
David Lucius McCain died of cancer in 1986, a fugitive three years on the run who had skipped out on a million-dollar bond rather than face trial on dope-smuggling charges.

Florida's Independent Judiciary at Stake
By Martin Dyckman
Florida Voices
This has become one of the most important elections in Florida's history, but many of those who vote for president or U.S. senator may overlook the campaigns that make it so.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Daily News Clips for October 1, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Firm fired over Palm Beach voter registrations had issues in other counties, states

By Michael Van Sickler, Tia Mitchell and Toluse Olorunnipa
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Republicans play defense over voter registration fraud
Related: State Republicans find fraud close to home
A vendor fired by the Republican Party of Florida for submitting questionable voter registrations forms in Palm Beach County is also responsible for filing flawed applications in other counties and states, election officials confirmed Friday.

Battlegrounds for voting laws besides Florida: Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado
By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Strict new photo ID laws for Wisconsin and Pennsylvania voters.

With Obama ahead in polls, Romney advised to focus on economy in debates
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Related: As race stands, Obama within reach of second term
Heeding the advice of strategist James Carville and focusing on “the economy, stupid” helped Democrats unseat a Republican president during an economic downturn in 1992.

Billionaire Koch brothers try to buy state’s court
By Carl Hiaasen
Miami Herald
The new stealth campaign against three Florida Supreme Court justices is being backed by those meddling right-wing billionaires from Wichita, Charles and David Koch.

RPOF's former director: 'Presumed' prostitutes attended GOP fundraiser
By Rene Stutzman
Orlando Sentinel
Delmar Johnson, the state's star witness in the fraud and theft trial of former Florida Republican Chairman Jim Greer, told attorneys in a sworn statement that he saw a golf cart full of women — he presumed they were prostitutes — at a party fund-raiser in the Bahamas in 2008.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK

Editorial cartoon of the week

By Jeff Parker
Florida Today

FLORIDA POLITICS

More Suspicious Voter Forms Are Found

By Lizette Alvarez
New York Times
The number of Florida counties reporting suspicious voter registration forms connected to Strategic Allied Consulting, the firm hired by the state Republican Party to sign up new voters, has grown to 10, officials said, as local election supervisors continue to search their forms for questionable signatures, addresses or other identifiers.

Florida's non-citizen voter purge is much ado about little
By Michael Mayo
South Florida Sun Sentinel
To hear some alarmists explain it, you'd think armies of illegal immigrants are about to swarm Florida's voting booths and tilt the upcoming election, diluting the votes of U.S. citizens.

GOP, Dems Voter Registration Numbers Lag, Mad Dash Now Across Fla To Sign People Up
By Sascha Cordner      
WFSU Tallahassee
Florida’s voter registration numbers for both Republicans and Democrats stagnated over the course of about a year, and political experts say it’s mainly because of a law passed last year that put limits on third party voter registration.

Woman who dropped off questionable ballots did political work on county time
By Melissa Sanchez and Enrique Flor
Miami Herald
Like many Hialeah ballot-brokers, 25-year-old Anamary Pedrosa began collecting absentee ballots this summer from those close to her, including her mother and a cousin’s boyfriend.

More Dorworth embarrassments for GOP -- time for a new speaker
By Scott Maxwell
Orlando Sentinel
Four years ago, two freshman lawmakers were engaged in a heated — if premature — battle to decide who would be speaker of the House in 2014.

GOP names new candidate after Horner prostitution scandal
By Toluse Olorunnipa
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The Republican Party of Florida on Saturday chose Michael LaRosa, R-Celebration, as a replacement candidate for House District 42, which became enmeshed in scandal this week.

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz celebrates birthday, steers clear of campaigning at Nova
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz celebrated at a major wing-ding on her 46th birthday — but the party wasn’t for her.

Is the tea party’s influence slipping?
By Tom McNiff
Ocala Star-Banner
They still draw 80 or so people to their weekly meetings at Berean Baptist Church, and they can still marshal volunteers to picket against President Barack Obama and the “liberal left” on Wednesdays on the downtown square in Ocala.

POLITICAL RACES

Biden, in Boca’s Century Village, says Romney view of “dependent” Americans is skewed

Staff Report
Palm Beach Post
Two miles and a few economic strata from the site of Mitt Romney‘s “47 percent” remarks, Vice President Joe Biden told a retiree crowd Friday that Romney and running mate Paul Ryan don’t understand America and have “bet against the American people.”

Hey, this is Florida, so be skeptical of big poll leads for Obama
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
The latest New York Times/CBS/Quinnipiac Poll shows Barack Obama trouncing Mitt Romney by 9 percentage points in Florida — 53 percent to 44 percent.

Democrats launch Florida voter sign-up effort in Tampa
By William March
Tampa Tribune
The Obama campaign began a 10-day voter registration drive in Florida today, kicking it off in Tampa with visits from San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, a star of the party's Charlotte convention, and Jamal Simmons, a former Florida Democratic political strategist and now a CNN commentator.

Conspiracies aren't enough to defeat Barack Obama
By Tad Delegal
Florida Times-Union
Lt. Col. Orson Swindle III’s recent letter urging readers to vote against President Barack Obama reinforces the very reasons why Obama will be re-elected in November.

Connie Mack battles polls, voter lack of interest in quest to unseat Sen. Bill Nelson
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
Related: GOP hopes of a Senate takeover fade
If Republican Connie Mack IV is shouldering the burden of his party’s control of the U.S. Senate, you wouldn’t know it last week as he finished a six-day bus tour of 17 cities in north and central Florida.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

Critics say amendment veiled try to get public money to private schools

By Rob Saw
Tampa Tribune
The ballot title says it's an issue about religious freedom.

Amendment Three Would Limit Florida's State Revenues
By Tom Flanigan          
WFSU Tallahassee
Amendment Number Three is an idea that's already been tried in the state of Colorado with not-so-great results.

Groups opposed to proposed amendment limiting state revenue more active than those supporting it
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Depending on who’s doing the analysis, a proposed amendment that would change the formula for limiting the amount of revenue Florida can collect each year from taxes and fees would either rein in willy-nilly government spending or cause Draconian cutbacks to education, roads and schools.

Amendments might need warning label
By Jerome R. Stockfisch
Tampa Tribune
Not everyone will be scratching their heads over the 11 constitutional amendments tacked onto the end of this November's general election ballot.

Sentinel Exclusive: Jacobs' texts show coordinated campaign with foes of sick time
By David Damron
Orlando Sentinel
Related: Orange leaders, stop texting while governing
Thousands of cellphone text messages accidentally released by Mayor Teresa Jacobs paint the clearest picture yet of how the sick-time ballot initiative was kept off the Nov. 6 Orange County ballot.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Rising lake water: Breach unlikely but dike around Lake Okeechobee still unsafe

By Christine Stapleton
Palm Beach Post
A month after Tropical Storm Isaac flooded the region with more than a foot of rain, Lake Okeechobee continues to rise and now stands at its highest level since 2006, when a highly critical report found that the dike posed a “grave and imminent danger.”

Customers should not pay costs of FPL’s nuclear plant expansion
By Stephen A. Smith
Palm Beach Post
A misguided state law that allows large utilities to charge consumers for new nuclear reactors before delivering any power is making things more difficult for Floridians trying to recover from the worst recession in recent memory.

LGBT

For Elderly Gay Widow Edith Windsor, The GOP Is All For High Taxes

By Steven Thrasher
The Daily Beast
When Barack Obama proved unwilling to hound an octogenarian widow for a tax bill she never should have been charged, House Speaker John Boehner proved more than willing to take up the task—even at a cost to taxpayers of far more than the money she owed.

EDUCATION

Florida Districts Fight K12′s Plan for Virtual Charter Schools

By John O’Connor and Trevor Aaronson
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting/StateImpact Florida
Thousands of Florida students already are taking classes from Virginia-based K12, Inc., the nation’s largest online education company.

In case Scott didn't hear it all . . .
By Gary Stein
South Florida Sun Sentinel
I'm not saying Florida Gov. Rick Scott has an image problem, but in the latest poll I saw, his popularity rankings are actually a few steps below NFL replacement officials.

DOE's Stewart Gets Praise From Governor And Teachers Union As Ed Commissioner Search
By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
A national search for Florida’s next Education Commissioner continues after the state board extended the deadline for applicants.

Gov. Rick Scott calls for 'top-down' review of leadership at FSCJ
By Kate Howard Perry  
Florida Times-Union
Gov. Rick Scott called on Sunday for a review of leadership “from the top down” at Florida State College at Jacksonville.

The Bright Futures quandary persists
By Nathan Crabbe
Gainesville Sun
It's a debate as old as the program itself: whether the state's Bright Futures scholarships should be based on merit or need.

Mum's the word
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
The cat's out of the bag. University of Florida President Bernie Machen is expected to announce this week that UF has exceeded its $1.5 billion, five-year, Florida Tomorrow fundraising goal.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Suggestions for how Disney World can align more with its GOP dollars

By Frank Cerabino
Palm Beach Post
Dear Walt Disney World: As a Floridian who has spent many a day traipsing through your theme parks, I thought I was an expert on all things Disney.

Florida banking on the mend
By John Hielscher
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
In his 40 years in the banking business, 1st Manatee Bank president and chief executive Thomas Hodgson has weathered some difficult years.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Can Florida’s Medicaid reform plan be the model for the nation?

By John Dorschner
Miami Herald
Quietly, over the past six years, an experiment in providing healthcare for the poor has been playing out in Broward and four other counties around the state. Its basic goal is to relieve the financial pressures of Medicaid on Florida’s taxpayers by turning over poor and disabled patients to private companies, a move lawmakers believe will cut costs.

Another active TB case found in Duval County
By James Call
Florida Current
The Florida Department of Health reports it has found another active case of tuberculosis.

Funding for drug-abuse database is in doubt
By Kathleen Haughney
South Florida Sun Sentinel
Backers of a year-old drug database widely heralded as a key to stopping the state's prescription-drug-abuse problems said the project has nearly run out of money, triggering concerns about the survival of a program that Gov. Rick Scott and House lawmakers once tried to kill.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Florida justices under attack for ruling that turned on defense attorney's tactics

By Curtis Krueger
Tampa Bay Times
Related editorial: In court threat, GOP hides behind silence
The Republican Party of Florida says it is working to unseat three Florida Supreme Court justices partly because of one "egregious" opinion that said a murderer on death row should get a new trial.

'This Is Supposed To Be A Non-Partisan Race': Judges Face Republican Party, Super PAC
By Jessica Palombo    
WFSU Tallahassee
Media campaigns against three Florida Supreme Court justices are accusing them of making decisions based on political leanings.

Cops, firefighters to formally oppose "political attacks on the Florida Supreme Court”
By Matt Dixon
Florida Times-Union
The Florida State Fraternal Order of Police and Florida Professional Fire Fighters are holding a conference call Monday to officially oppose “political attacks on the Florida Supreme Court.”

Stop assault on the courts
Editorial
Tampa Tribune
Floridians have many important races to decide in November, including the presidency and a U.S. senate seat.