Click here to subscribe for free to the best daily news roundup in Florida.

Progress Florida -- Progressive Solutions for Florida

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Daily News Clips for December 6, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

State lawmakers cautious about projected $437 million budget surplus

By Brandon Larrabee
News Service of Florida
Initial, positive indications about Florida’s budget for the coming fiscal year could be overtaken by events if the Florida Supreme Court strikes down changes to state employees or the nation plunges over the fiscal cliff, the state’s top economist warned Wednesday.

Florida university presidents want deal: More state funding in exchange for no tuition hike
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
The presidents of Florida's state universities have an offer for the Legislature: Give us $118 million and we won't raise tuition.

Watchdog groups say transparency program could save millions
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
On the same day Senate leaders announced they would conduct an intensive review of the state budget, two government watchdog groups said a budget transparency program — put on hold by the Senate — could "save Florida millions of dollars” and revolutionize budget accountability.

House Democrats will push election reforms
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
House Democratic leaders expressed optimism Wednesday that Republicans will join in getting Florida elections out of Jay Leno's monologue next year.

Sen. Marco Rubio has safe word for presidential ambitions: 'opportunity'
By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio has found a safe word for discussing his presidential ambitions: opportunity.

Administration takes tough line with GOP on cliff
By David Espo
Associated Press
The administration is taking a tough line on the "fiscal cliff" at the same time President Barack Obama resumes contact with House Speaker John Boehner over ways to avert across-the-board spending cuts and tax increases at the turn of the year.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Florida voting woes land on agenda of U.S. Commission on Civil Rights

By Janelle Irwin
WMNF Tampa
Six members of Florida’s Democratic Congressional delegation sent a letter to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights last week asking them to investigate the state’s voting law.

Fixing Florida's voting system
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
What a difference an election can make.

Can Marco Rubio win back the middle class for Republicans? And does he need to?
Posted by Chris Cillizza and Aaron Blake
Washington Post
Sen. Marco Rubio offered a clear break from the prevailing caricature of Republicans as a party for and of the wealthy in a speech Tuesday night in Washington.

Marco Rubio Believes in Science
By Andrew Rosenthal
New York Times
A lot of people thought Senator Marco Rubio of Florida was preparing a run for the presidency when he announced in an interview with GQ Magazine that he really could not be sure how old the earth is.

Gaetz’ ‘Shoot and hang the nullifiers’ history lesson riles tea partiers
By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Senate President Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, has raised the hackles of Florida tea party activists on the warpath about Gaetz and other GOP leaders’ apparent willingness to go along with the once-reviled “Obamacare.”

Ethics commission finds probable cause that Fresen failed to report income
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald
The Florida Ethics Commission announced Wednesday it has found probable cause to believe that state Rep. Erik Fresen, R-Miami, failed to properly disclose his net worth, assets, and liabilities every year from 2008 to 2011.

Another Democrat vying for leadership role
Staff Report
Florida Current
House Minority Leader pro tempore Mia Jones declared her candidacy Wednesday to become her party's leader in the chamber in 2014.

POLITICAL RACES

State Election Spending Tops 270 Million

By Mike Vasilinda
Capitol News Service
An analysis of election spending by the Florida Chamber shows that the average cost of winning a state house or senate seat was one point six million dollars.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

South Florida contest: Bag some pythons, win some cash

By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
The battle to control Burmese pythons in the Everglades has employed an array of tactics to date, including snake-sniffing dogs, GPS-equipped “Judas” snakes and teams of state-licensed reptile wranglers.

Wildlife officials hear that an Apalachicola Bay 'disaster is coming'
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
Environmentalists and seafood industry representatives on Wednesday told state wildlife officials that the Apalachicola Bay is at risk of dying as an estuary without fresh water and help in two years.

LGBT

Rubio: I Don’t ‘Pass Judgment’ On The ‘Sin’ Of Homosexuality (Except When I Do)

By Josh Israel
Think Progress
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who has called for the Republican Party to be more inclusive of minorities, said Wednesday that while his faith teaches homosexuality is a sin, he does not judge sinners. But his record on LGBT rights stands in stark contrast to his words.

EDUCATION

State botches release of new data on teacher evaluations

By Curtis Krueger, Marlene Sokol, Jeffrey S. Solochek and Danny Valentine
Tampa Bay Times
Florida's Department of Education on Wednesday rolled out the results of a sweeping new teacher evaluation system that is designed to be a more accurate, helpful and data-driven measure of how well teachers actually get students to learn.

‘Half-baked'
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
How does it happen that Kim Cook, Irby Elementary School's "Teacher of the Year" gets an unsatisfactory evaluation?

Florida's budget surplus may vanish, strapped universities told
By Aaron Deslatte and Kathleen Haughney
Orlando Sentinel
After absorbing $300 million in cuts last spring, university presidents took their case for more state dollars to the Capitol Wednesday, even as lawmakers warned that the state may not be out of its financial pinch.

School Bus Ads Becomes First Bill Filed in Florida House for 2013 Session
By Sascha Cordner      
WFSU Tallahassee
The first bill in the Florida House has been filed for the coming 2013 Legislative Session, and it’s a measure that’s been touted as “family and child friendly.”

The Inconvenient Truth About Florida Education
By Rick Outzen
Florida Voices
Despite what Gov. Rick Scott and his Department of Education may tell you, the Florida public education system isn’t very good, especially when it comes to the percentage of students graduating from high school within four years.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Negron wants to examine contracts, state programs and local projects

By James Call
Florida Current
The Senate’s budget chief on Wednesday told his subcommittee chairs how he wants them to review the state budget.

Governor's Job Czar Disproves Benefit Moocher Stereotypes
By Dennis Maley
Bradenton Times
This week, the man Governor Rick Scott selected as his so-called “Jobs Czar” resigned over revelations that the former banker violated state law while collecting unemployment benefits.

Lawmakers to make another run at shrinking Florida's property insurer of last resort, reducing PIP auto rates
By Michael Peltier
News Service of Florida
Florida's top insurance official was given a January deadline on Wednesday to come up with a series of proposals to reduce the size of the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp. and to further reduce costs in the state's auto-insurance market.

Palm Beach County scraps wage-theft law
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun Sentinel
Palm Beach County commissioners sided with business interests Tuesday in opting for watered-down wage-theft help for local workers.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Florida health administrator denies kids are dumped in nursing homes

By Brittany Alana Davis and Carol Marbin Miller
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Staff Writers
Florida's top health administrator told lawmakers at a Senate committee meeting Wednesday that she was "enraged" by "sensational" reports that her agency was funneling sick and disabled children into nursing homes designed for adults.

Outbreak shows gaps in regulation
By Carol Gentry
Health News Florida
When the nationwide fungal meningitis outbreak exploded into headlines two months ago, Florida health officials responded quickly, tracking the contaminated drug lots and finding potential victims.

Darden backs off on some 'Obamacare' changes
By Sandra Pedicini
Orlando Sentinel
A day after warning its earnings had plummeted, Darden Restaurants on Wednesday said it would back off somewhat from a test limiting employee hours to avoid higher costs for Obamacare in 2014.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

State GOP lawmaker files “Dream” tuition bill

News Service of Florida
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Children of illegal immigrants who graduate from Florida high schools could be eligible for in-state college tuition in Florida, even if they too are undocumented, under a bill filed Wednesday by a South Florida Republican.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

House Judiciary Committee maps out session topics

By Michael Peltier
News Service of Florida
House Judiciary Committee members and the lobbyists and state officials who follow them got a glimpse Wednesday of what the next year will bring as the committee chairman laid out a series of topics from expert witness qualifications to foreclosures that are expected to make up the panel’s work.

Leon County judge accused of using office to promote for-profit religious business
By Lucy Morgan
Tampa Bay Times
Leon County Judge Judith W. Hawkins was charged Wednesday with misconduct, accused of using her office to promote a business that sells Bible study books, souvenirs and other products to attorneys and others who regularly appear in her courtroom.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Daily News Clips for December 5, 2012



PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

Progressives Warn State Lawmakers About ALEC's Influence

By Ashley Lopez          
WLRN – South Florida’s NPR
Progress Florida and Florida Watch Action-- two influential progressive groups in the state-- have launched a preemptive attack on the influence of ALEC in the Florida Legislature.

FEATURED STORIES

Governor’s jobs czar leaves after stir over having taken jobless benefits

By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Related: Debacle of firing state jobs czar could have been prevented with 3 simple questions
Gov. Rick Scott, who has made improving Florida’s economy his signature issue, was dealt a setback Tuesday when his hand-picked jobs czar resigned Tuesday rather than face lingering questions about jobless benefits he received.

State elections officials to investigate voting problems in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties
By Steve Bousquet
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner told a Senate committee Tuesday morning that he plans to dispatch a team of experts to Miami-Dade next week to investigate more fully the “problems” with the recent election, including long lines at the polls and an overwhelming surge of last-minute absentee ballots.

After convention, Obama team went all out to win Florida
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
For Democratic presidential candidates, Florida has long been a risky bet.

Ryan, Rubio plot party future as 2016 talk starts
By Philip Elliott
Associated Press
Paul Ryan and Marco Rubio, two potential 2016 presidential candidates, laid out policy prescriptions for their Republican Party on Tuesday night, nudging a party still smarting from Mitt Romney's loss to President Barack Obama to reach out to a broader audience.

Rubio votes against U.N. disabilities treaty
By Alex Leary
Tampa Bay Times
The treaty calls for equal rights for disabled people and is modeled after the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990.

Gov. Rick Scott, other GOP governors want health care meeting with Obama
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Florida Gov. Rick Scott and 10 other Republican governors are asking to meet with President Barack Obama to discuss the impacts of the new health care law.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Florida judge hearing 6 election fraud cases

Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
A judge is hearing motions to dismiss election fraud charges against six defendants, including a suspended school board member in a rural north Florida county.

Gaetz briefs Senate committee chairs on his plans
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
Senate President Don Gaetz told committee chieftains to run their own committees Tuesday -- after routinely checking with him to weed out "bad bills" and those that have no realistic prospects of passage.

Another embarrassment for Gov. Rick Scott
By Wayne Ezell
Florida Times-Union
Gov. Rick Scott's "jobs czar" is out of that job after admitting that he drew unemployment benefits for nearly two years during which he and his wife took several trips to Europe.

The 2012 Lie of the Year Finalists
By Angie Drobnic Holan
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald PolitiFact
PolitiFact will soon announce our Lie of the Year -- the most significant falsehood of 2012, as chosen by our editors and reporters.

Change voting laws
Editorial
Pensacola News Journal
We hope the state Legislature seriously considers changes to our voting laws.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Questions about fertilizer legislation raised in opening House committee meeting

By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
The chairman of the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee said Tuesday he expects fertilizer legislation to come up again this year but added that he'd prefer that the parties involved work out the issues among themselves. 

EDUCATION

Against tuition debate, Florida universities plan funding announcement

By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
University presidents and student leaders will convene at the Capitol this morning to roll out their new funding campaign.

Jeb Bush makes case for more online university courses
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times
Last year, House Speaker Will Weatherford said the state should create an online university and a Board of Governors task force recently released a report on the state's opinions.

Florida Board of Education to consider new FCAT, EOC passing scores
By Jeff Solochek
Tampa Bay Times
The Florida Board of Education ran into some major opposition in 2011 when setting higher passing scores for the state's revised FCAT exams.

School officials concerned about costs, funding for state-mandated e-learning transition
By Brittany Shammas
Naples Daily News
Lee County School Board members understand the need to expand digital learning opportunities for students.

Teachers upset with newly released appraisals
By Joey Flechas
Gainesville Sun
Kelly Moore has students from all grades pass through her library.

Wild spending at charter school warrants probe
Editorial
Orlando Sentinel
In June, NorthStar High closed after a sorry, years-long stretch of poor performance.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Citizens loan deal draws criticism at House panel hearing in Tallahassee

By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
A controversial program to shrink the size of the Citizens Property Insurance Corp. by spending $350 million to encourage private companies to take over business came under fire from all sides on Tuesday as the state-run insurer made its first appearance before a House committee.

Florida highway agency may be headed to court over license plates
By Brittany Alana Davis
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles may be on the road to court after failed attempts Tuesday to settle a dispute over who will make and distribute the state’s new license tags.

The insane position on 'never, ever' raising tax rates
By Martin Dyckman
Florida Voices
The current battle of the deficit owes to waging two wars on credit cards while simultaneously cutting taxes to reward special constituencies.

Boeher, Republicans must give on income tax rates
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, still won’t acknowledge what happened on Nov. 6.

Florida workplace fatalities near record low in 2011
By Jeff Harrington
Tampa Bay Times
Workplace fatalities in Florida remained near a record low in 2011, with construction once again accounting for the highest number of deaths, according to a government report released Tuesday.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Florida Tea Party Still Fighting Obamacare

By Stephanie Mencimer
Mother Jones
Ever since Congress passed the Affordable Care Act in 2010, the state of Florida has done everything it can to fight the law.

DCF wants its kids out of nursing homes
By Carol Marbin Miller
Miami Herald
With Florida under heavy fire for funneling sick and disabled children into nursing homes designed for elders, child welfare administrators have quietly enacted a new policy aimed at keeping sick foster kids in community settings.

State seeks decision on Medicaid managed care
News Service of Florida
Saint Petersblog
The federal government is expected to make a decision by the end of February about a key part of Florida’s proposal to transform its Medicaid program into a statewide managed-care system.

Florida docs to see higher Medicaid payment rates
News Service of Florida
Saint Petersblog
While Florida Republican leaders grapple with carrying out the federal Affordable Care Act, the state’s primary-care physicians are poised to get a raise Jan. 1 if they treat Medicaid patients.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

About 15,000 young immigrants in Florida apply to avoid deportation

By Eloísa Ruano González
Orlando Sentinel
About 15,000 young illegal immigrants in Florida have stepped out of the shadows to apply for protection against deportation since federal officials started accepting applications in August.

Jeb Bush Jr. and conservatives lead push for immigration overhaul
By William E. Gibson
South Florida Sun Sentinel
Jeb Bush Jr. and like-minded moderate-to-conservative activists from across the country say the time has finally come to transform the nation's immigration system and legalize millions of undocumented immigrants in Florida and around the nation.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Judge mostly rejects Fla. prison medical outsourcing

By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
For the second time in over a year, a state judge has ruled that the Florida Legislature violated the law when it tried to privatize the state’s role in operating prisons.

CFO Jeff Atwater, Gov. Rick Scott settle 'Taj Mahal' art case
By Lucy Morgan
Tampa Bay Times
After two years, two lawsuits and seven appeals, Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater and Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday agreed to pay Signature Art Gallery for framed photos ordered by judges at the 1st District Court of Appeal.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Daily News Clips for December 4, 2012



FEATURED STORIES

Early voting limits motivated Democrats, minorities to turn out

By Dara Kam
Palm Beach Post
Related editorial: Feds should investigate Florida’s 2011 election law
Pizza, popsicles and port-a-potties may have helped secure the decisive win for President Barack Obama and other Democrats in Florida.

Full menu of issues awaits Legislature
By Lloyd Dunkelberger
Ocala Star-Banner
A new budget, coping with federal health care reform and the cost of a college education in Florida are among the issues Florida lawmakers will be dealing with as they return to Tallahassee this week to begin preparing for their 2013 session.

Fiscal cliff poses hazards for Florida
By William E. Gibson
Orlando Sentinel
For Florida, falling off the "fiscal cliff" would wipe out more than 130,000 jobs, stifle consumer spending and raise taxes for just about everyone who pays them.

Gov. Rick Scott's panel goes soft on ALF industry, critics say
By Brittany Alana Davis
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Gov. Rick Scott used tough language in the summer of 2011 when he created a panel to help fix the deadly abuse and neglect in Florida assisted living facilities.

Court blocks release of 'salacious' report in Jim Greer case
By Lucy Morgan
Tampa Bay Times
Floridians will have to wait a little longer for details of that golf cart full of prostitutes.

To win in 2014, Florida Democrats must build on momentum
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Democrats just concluded their most successful Florida election cycle in more than three decades, not just delivering the state to President Barack Obama and re-electing Sen. Bill Nelson, but also picking up state House, state Senate and congressional seats.

EDITORIAL CARTOON OF THE WEEK
Editorial cartoon of the week
By Dana Summers
Orlando Sentinel

FLORIDA POLITICS

Who is the real Charlie Crist?

By William March
Tampa Tribune
Now that he seems likely to seek office as a Democrat, former Republican Gov. Charlie Crist is being accused by Republicans — and some Democrats — of hypocrisy and political opportunism.

Legislative bipartisanship may not last through the holidays
By Aaron Deslatte
Orlando Sentinel
Drink up, wayward partisans. Florida lawmakers may be striking a bipartisan tone as of late, but there are too many points of ideological contention for this camaraderie to survive intact beyond the holidays.

Ethics Commission- Tiger or Paper Tiger
By Mike Vasilinda
Capitol News Service
Stiffer ethical standards for elected officials are on the front burner for both new legislative leaders in the state capitol.

New Senate Gaming Committee plays the long game
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
A bill to bring large casinos to South Florida drew the glitzy and glamorous headlines this year, but ultimately went bust under the weight of heavy lobbying by entrenched and competing interests.

POLITICAL RACES

Rick Scott-Charlie Crist race already under way

By Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Two years before he’s even on the ballot, Rick Scott is already the $5 million candidate. 

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Florida water rule a split decision for both sides

By Bill Kaczor
Associated Press
The federal Environmental Protection Agency's split decision on new water pollution rules for Florida gives both sides in the contentious debate over the issue something to cheer and jeer about.

Mitigation bank seeks to turn tables on environmental group challenging its permit
By Bruce Ritchie
Florida Current
A three-day hearing in a legal challenge to a permit for a wetlands mitigation bank in Clay County concluded Friday amid accusations that a statewide environmental group was doing the bidding of a competing wetlands bank in Duval County.

After the latest from Duke Energy, lawmakers need to step up for consumers
By John Romano
Tampa Bay Times
Let me see if I understand this correctly: Nuclear power plants are so danged expensive that utility companies must charge customers more than a decade in advance to pay for them.

Florida must repair its damaged springs
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Florida's Republican leaders are ignoring threats to public health and the state's economic future with their indifference to the rapid deterioration of the state's natural springs.

EDUCATION

Failed charter school paid principal's husband $460K

By Lauren Roth
Orlando Sentinel
The failed Orange County charter school that gave its principal a payout of $519,000 in taxpayer dollars after closing in June also paid her husband more than $460,000 during a five-year period, audits show.

13th Grade: How Florida Schools Are Failing To Prepare Graduates For College
By Mc Nelly Torres and Lynn Waddell
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Florida’s K-12 public education system has graduated hundreds of thousands of students in the past decade who couldn’t read, write or solve math problems well enough to take some college-level courses.

Florida graduation rate jumps to 74.5 percent, dropout rate steady
By Tia Mitchell
Tampa Bay Times
The Florida Department of Education announced this afternoon that the four-year high school graduation rate for the class of 2012 is 74.5, and that the 3.9 percentage point jump was the highest in nearly a decade.

Fairness of teacher evaluation system debated
By Christopher O'Donnell and Gabrielle Russon
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Palmetto Elementary School teacher Sarah Winn was rated a highly effective teacher for 2011-12.

Ex-finalist among Fla. education chief applicants
By Bill Kaczor
Associated Press
A college administrator, professor and businessman who had been a finalist for the job last year was among about 50 applicants for Florida state education commissioner as the deadline approached Friday.

Creativity, flexibility required for Gov. Scott's tuition challenge, SCF officials say
By Katy Bergen
Bradenton Herald
Gov. Rick Scott's challenge to Florida community and state colleges Monday circulated quickly through the education world.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Gov. Rick Scott headed to Colombia with huge delegation to promote Florida business

By Steve Bousquet and Toluse Olorunnipa
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Gov. Rick Scott heads to Colombia today to drum up business with Florida's second-largest trading partner, his seventh overseas trip since taking office.

Gov. Scott visits Airdyne Aerospace to celebrate its success at Hernando County Airport
By Logan Neill
Tampa Bay Times
Three years ago, Ross Neyedly launched Airdyne Aerospace Inc., in a leased, 6,000-square-foot hangar at the Hernando County Airport.

State wants local jobs agencies under one brand
By Jim Stratton
Orlando Sentinel
State labor officials want to unify Florida's regional jobs agencies under a single brand to reduce confusion and raise the profile of the federally funded system.

Feds deny Sandy disaster aid to Florida
By John Kennedy
Palm Beach Post
Federal officials have denied Gov. Rick Scott’s request for financial help to repair damage from Hurricane Sandy, including $9.1 million for eroded beaches in Palm Beach County.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Graham tells state to hop on health act

By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
The governor and legislative leaders may be uncertain about whether Florida should embrace the Affordable Care Act and its expanded insurance coverage, but Bob Graham says it's a no-brainer.

Marie: a little girl’s death by bureaucratic callousness, medical neglect
By Carol Marbin Miller
Miami Herald
Even after Marie Freyre died alone in a nursing home 250 miles from the family that loved her, Marie’s mother had to fight to bring her home.

Hospitals: The cost of admission
By Steve Kroft
60 Minutes
If you want to know why health care costs so much in this country, consider this, it's estimated that $210 billion a year -- about 10 percent of all health expenditures -- goes towards unnecessary tests and treatments and a big chunk of that comes right out of the pockets of American taxpayers in the form of Medicare and Medicaid payments.

Not-for-profit hospitals win court fight over trauma centers
Staff Report
Florida Current
Judges with the 1st District Court of Appeal ruled Friday in favor of four urban not-for-profit hospitals that challenged how the state approves new trauma centers.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Even with bipartisan support, immigration overhaul won’t be easy

By John Lantigua
Palm Beach Post
U.S. Rep Alcee Hastings, a Democrat, isn’t worried Republicans will reject a comprehensive overhaul of immigration law in the next Congress. In fact, his fear is just the opposite.

More attention, resources focusing on homeless college students as numbers rise
By Allison Ross
Palm Beach Post
Over the summer, Nikki Maclaren sat down at her computer and opened a browser.