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Progress Florida -- Progressive Solutions for Florida

Friday, August 24, 2012

Daily News Clips for August 24, 2012


RNC Guide
PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

The Progressive's Guide to the Republican National Convention

By Adam Weinstein
Mother Jones
All storm-watching aside, if you're a non-conservative heading to the Republican National Convention in Tampa, you may feel a bit intimidated…Fear not: Nonprofit Progress Florida has assembled an online "Progressive Guide to the RNC." From the "Patients Over Politics" bus-tour kickoff to a plug for Cafe Hey, "Tampa's official oasis of chill," the site offers progressives a host of activities and safe spaces during Romneypalooza.

The liberals' guide to the GOP convention
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Here is the definitive guide for progressives who want to stand up for the middle class, oppose the Republican Party’s extremist agenda, and get the unscripted, behind the scenes play-by-play.

The BluVu: Week of August 20th
By Gayle Andrews
The BluVu
Damien Filer discusses the Governor's latest effort to keep Democrats from the polls, and Progress Florida gives us the Progressive’s Guide to the Republican National Convention...if it happens. All this and more as political reality comes your way!

FEATURED STORIES

As Isaac trends west, RNC plans proceed

By Michael Van Sickler and Jessica Vander Velde
Tampa Bay Times
With the projected path of Tropical Storm Isaac trending to the west, officials sounded increasingly confident Thursday that the storm wouldn't disrupt the Republican National Convention.

Will RNC protests in Tampa be peaceful?
By Zac Anderson
Gainesville Sun
Modern political conventions are often described as political theater because the outcome is predetermined.

Over objections, state asks court to approve early voting plan
By Steve Bousquet
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Florida is asking a federal court to approve eight 12-hour days of early voting in five counties, saying it would not suppress African-American votes in November.

Florida lawmakers seek to block redistricting testimony
Staff Report
Palm Beach Post
Republican leaders have quietly asked a Leon County judge to shield lawmakers and their aides from having to testify during a trial to determine whether the state’s congressional redistricting plan runs afoul of new standards for drawing the state’s political maps.

Facing FBI scrutiny, former Democratic candidate files amended campaign finance report
By Marc Caputo and Manny Garcia
Miami Herald
A failed Democratic congressional candidate whose campaign is under federal grand jury investigation abruptly amended his financial disclosures to show he loaned himself nearly $53,000 more than he originally reported.

WEEKLY BEST OF THE BLOGS

Mack Cosponsored "Forcible Rape" Bill With Akin, Who He Now Criticizes

By Inkberries
Beach Peanuts
Unless you were under a rock this weekend, you probably heard about this comment on rape and abortions when a rape results in a pregnancy:

Bush Wonk Patricia Levesque Signs Parent Trigger Petition Twice
By Bob Sikes
Scathing Purple Musings
You couldn’t make this up in a parody. Jeb Bush’ attempts to build momentum for his Foundation for Florida’s Future for a second run at Parent Trigger in Florida prompted  the Foundation’s director, Patricia Levesque, to post an online petition.

Paul Ryan hunts for votes in Republican utopia (or dystopia)
By David Jarman
Daily Kos
The selection of Republican Rep. Paul Ryan as vice-presidential nominee has left behind-the-scenes Republicans concerned that he and his budget open up new vulnerabilities for the GOP on Medicare.

Cliff Notes On Cliff Stearns
By Jake
Rantings From Florida
The news that Cliff Stearns could be unseated in a Republican primary is something difficult to fathom for those who have watched Central Florida politics in the last few decades, but that indeed happened this week when an unknown tossed the incumbent by less than 1,000 votes.

Because I Still Believe
By Brughart
Hrrumph
I have written a great deal about judicial merit retention over the past several months.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Charlie Crist Will Switch to Democrat, According To Rumors

By Chris Joseph
Broward New Times
In probably what is the least-shocking news ever, former Governor Charlie Crist might be switching over to Democrat this week.

Harry Sawyer: Early Voting Warrior
By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
Governor Rick Scott’s entire plan for early voting could be foiled by one headstrong election supervisor.

Democratic House candidates make their Tallahassee debut
By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
The Florida Democratic Party displayed its new line of state House candidates for Tallahassee lobbyists this week in a sedate little reception in the Governors Club, the private redoubt of corporate deal-making a block from the state Capitol.

POLITICAL RACES

Q poll: Romney edges up in Florida, Nelson leads Mack

By William March
Tampa Tribune
The latest installment of the Quinnipiac University/CBS/New York Times swing state poll finds Mitt Romney edging up against President Barack Obama in Florida, and Sen. Bill Nelson holding his lead over Rep. Connie Mack in the Florida Senate race.

Florida's 'Fab 5' land coveted RNC speaking slots
By William March
Tampa Tribune
For Florida political leaders, the Republican convention in Tampa is a rare chance to shine in front of a crowd of the most influential, wealthiest and most active party members in the nation, people who can make or break a political career.

RNC security zones set around Tampa Bay bridges as feds warn of threats
By Richard Danielson
Tampa Bay Times
Related: Agencies share Republican National Convention communications center
The Coast Guard says it will ban loitering, stopping, mooring or anchoring boats within 50 yards of 15 Tampa Bay-area bridges during the Republican National Convention.

Romney could be nominated early in convention week
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Republican delegates will begin the roll call vote to officially nominate Mitt Romney for president on Monday at the national convention in Tampa, which could allow Romney to accept the GOP nomination earlier in the week than has occurred at previous conventions.

Obama campaign first to accept donation by text message
By Matea Gold
Orlando Sentinel
Nine years ago, then-Vermont Gov. Howard Dean broke new ground when his campaign used the Internet to help raise what were then record sums for his insurgent White House bid.

Stearns, Haridopolos, LeMieux have campaign cash but no campaign
By Brittany Alana Davis
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Twelve-term U.S. Rep. Cliff Stearns lost his Republican primary to a little known tea party opponent last week with as much as $2 million still sitting in his campaign account.

Crossroads launches new Senate offensive, with Florida on target list
By Alexander Burns
Politico
The conservative outside-spending group Crossroads GPS is launching a fresh wave of ads in four Senate races, including one state that hasn’t been on the organization’s target list all year: Florida.

Tentative agreement for congressional debate between Murphy, West
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
U.S. Rep. Allen West, R-Palm Beach Gardens, and Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy have set aside Oct. 19 for a one-hour debate on WPTV Channel 5 if their campaigns can agree on the format for the showdown.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Romney energy plan: More drilling

By The New York Times
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Mitt Romney plans to unveil an energy plan Thursday morning in Hobbs, N.M., that would allow states more control over the development of energy resources on federal lands within their borders, as well as aggressively expand offshore oil and gas drilling — including along the coasts of Virginia and the Carolinas — as part of a broader effort to reach energy independence.

The rains came
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
Yes, it's been raining an awful lot lately.

LGBT

Logo survey: Mainstream voters have increased support for issues important to LGBT people

By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Logo TV on Thursday released a survey that shows issues important to LGBT voters this year are also important to much of the general population.

EDUCATION

Teachers union, district officials see judge’s ruling as chance to get new merit pay system ‘right’

By Jason Schultz
Palm Beach Post
Palm Beach County School District and teachers union officials Thursday applauded a judge’s decision striking down the state’s rules putting a merit pay system in place, but their enthusiasm was tempered by the fact the law tying their salaries to evaluations and test scores was still intact.

Voucher students make academic gains similar to other students
By Cara Fitzpatrick
Tampa Bay Times
The latest report about Florida's corporate tax credit scholarships came out a week ago, saying that students in the program maintained their academic progress and made the same kind of gains as eligible students in the state's public schools.

Florida’s ACT scores lag nation
By Michael Vasquez
Miami Herald
Florida’s ACT scores are inching upward, but the state still lags significantly behind the nation as a whole, according to class of 2012 score results released Wednesday.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Rep. Mack’s ‘Penny Plan’ Disguises Painful Choices

By Scott Lilly
Center For American Progress
Budgets are about choices. Families must decide whether to replace the car or cut back on meals out and entertainment.

20 years later, Andrew's wake still felt in Florida's property insurance market
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
On Aug. 24, 1992, Hurricane Andrew slammed into Homestead as a Category 5 storm with top winds of 165 mph.

At $125 billion, costliest U.S. hurricane was unnamed Miami storm from 1926
By Eliot Kleinberg
Palm Beach Post
The costliest hurricane in U.S. history certainly won’t be current tropical storm Isaac, barring some monstrous intensification.

Prices and sales of Florida homes, condos jump in July
Staff Report
Florida Current
Sales of existing single-family homes in Florida rose 9.8 percent last month compared with July 2011, according to a report from Florida Realtors.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Debate over Medicare is confusing some

By Mary Shedden
Tampa Tribune
Local health and senior advocates are growing frustrated by misconceptions and rancor over Medicare in the presidential race.

Poll: Floridians Not Down With Paul Ryan's Medicare Plan
By Chris Joseph
Broward New Times
He trotted out his mom like Sebastian the Ibis last week in front of thousands of retirees to tell them his Medicare plan is going to be a good thing, and that President Obama's plan will turn you over to a panel of bureaucrats who will then determine whether or not a person deserves to live.

CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Listen to Todd Akin and you hear Paul Ryan

By Margaret Carlson
Palm Beach Post
U.S. Rep. Todd Akin’s remarks about some rapes being “legitimate,” and the ability of a woman to miraculously self-abort in those instances, have many of his fellow Republicans desperate to distinguish him from others in their party.

GOP platform takes a hard line on immigration
By The New York Times
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Republicans have adopted a party platform on immigration that would require employers nationwide to verify workers’ legal status and deny federal financing to universities that allow illegal immigrant students to enroll at lower in-state tuition rates.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Daily News Clips for August 23, 2012


FEATURED STORIES

Gov. Scott says no to more days for early voting in Florida

Staff Report
Palm Beach Post
Democrats accused Republican Gov. Rick Scott of bullying the supervisor of elections in Monroe County on Wednesday, the latest salvo in the high-stakes battle over early voting in the November elections in Florida.

First lady to 2,500 in Fort Lauderdale: Obamacare has helped Medicare
By Ana M. Valdes
Palm Beach Post
First Lady Michelle Obama today told thousands of South Floridians — many of them senior citizens — that President Obama’s health care law has kept Medicare going, saved elderly patients hundreds of dollars in prescription drug costs and insured people with pre-existing conditions.

Who invited Isaac? Leaders weighing risks to RNC
By Ray Reyes and Kevin Wiatrowski
Tampa Tribune
Tropical Storm Isaac could crash the biggest party this town has ever thrown.

Organizers say 5,000-person march set for Republican National Convention's first day
By Richard Danielson
Tampa Bay Times
An alliance of more than 60 labor, peace, student, immigrant rights, gay and lesbian and other groups says it's ready for a 5,000-person march on the first day of the Republican National Convention.

State Officials Still Turning Down Federal Money for At-Risk Families
By Ashley Lopez
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Even after Florida lost its legal challenge to the Affordable Care Act, state officials are turning down federal health care grants connected to the law.

FBI, Miami-Dade police target Democratic primary candidate with possible ties to Congressman David Rivera
By Marc Caputo and Manny Garcia
Miami Herald
The FBI and Miami-Dade police have opened separate criminal investigations into the campaign of a Democratic congressional candidate who, vendors say, was aided by GOP Rep. David Rivera.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Floridians still don't embrace Gov. Rick Scott

Associated Press
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
A new poll says Florida Gov. Rick Scott's approval rating has climbed to 41 percent.

Joyner, Gelber tell Scott to end early-voting confusion
By James Call
Florida Current
State Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, and former state Sen. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach, are calling on Gov. Rick Scott to end the confusion surrounding early voting and revert back to the procedures used in 2010.

Florida to face stiffer RNC penalties if it moves up primary date again
By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times
If Florida Republicans think they were treated harshly for moving up their 2012 presidential primary to January, wait until they try something like that in 2016.

POLITICAL RACES

Akin fallout could stick to GOP ticket

By Maggie Haberman
Politico
In the shadow of Todd Akin, the “Mediscare” battle suddenly seems like old news for Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan.

Florida RNC delegates named—finally
By William March
Tampa Tribune
With only five days to go before the RNC convention opens in Tampa, the state Republican Party finally has named the appointed delegates and alternates to the convention.

Reports: Feds warn of possible anarchist attacks, attempts to tie up Tampa Bay area bridges during RNC
By Richard Danielson
Tampa Bay Times
Two television news networks are reporting that federal agencies Wednesday warned state and local law enforcement officials about violent threats believed posed by anarchist extremists and possible plans to tie up the Tampa Bay area’s bridges during next week’s Republican National Convention.

Sen. Marco Rubio to West Palm Beach crowd: Leaving Medicare as is will bankrupt it
By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Eight days before he addresses a national TV audience at the Republican convention, Sen. Marco Rubio previewed the GOP’s pitch on Medicare today by telling a nonpartisan audience that preserving the program for current beneficiaries means it must “look different” in future decades. 

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Groups contend regulator has conflict of interest

By James Call
Florida Current
Two environmental groups filed a complaint Wednesday charging a top state regulator with a conflict of interest.

1 incumbent, 3 others are finalists for PSC
Associated Press
Tampa Tribune
Incumbent Lisa Edgar and three others were selected as finalists for a vacancy on Florida Public Service Commission, the five-member panel responsible for setting electricity and water rates for millions of Florida residents.

EDUCATION

Judge strikes down state merit pay rules as 'invalid'

By Leslie Postal
Orlando Sentinel
A judge Wednesday struck down as "wholly invalid" the state's rules governing Florida's new teacher merit-pay system.

No More Teaching to the Test
By Mike Vasilinda
Capitol News Service
Governor Rick Scott and the Republican Party of Florida have a new TV commercial touting increased funding for schools and a pledge to stop teaching to the FCAT, but even educators are unsure what the Governor means.

Florida ACT scores inch upward but still lag nation's
By Leslie Postal
Orlando Sentinel
Florida's class of 2012 did better on the ACT college-admission test than previous classes but still lagged the nation, exam results released Wednesday morning showed.

Fla. Students Struggle Without Summer School
By Sarah Gonzalez
NPR
The school year has begun for most Florida students, but some are still trying to finish summer school.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Federal budget 'sequestration' threatens Florida military bases

By Bill Cotterell
Florida Current
The pending "sequestration" of a half-trillion dollars in Pentagon spending poses a peculiar quandary for defense contractors and state officials trying to make Florida the nation's most military-friendly state: Everybody knows it won't really happen, but nobody knows how to avoid it.

Lt Gov Carroll Recommends Task Force Develop Guidelines For Awarding Grants
By Sascha Cordner      
WFSU Tallahassee
The Florida Defense Support Task Force is looking to create an application process for those seeking military-related grants from the panel.

Scott catches shrimp during his Florida work day
Associated Press
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Gov. Rick Scott has gotten a taste of shrimping.

One nip is enough for state workers
Editorial
Naples Daily News
Use it or lose it. That is the mantra in much of the private sector when dealing with employees' vacation or sick time.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Poll: Majority Of Voters Say Medicare Needs Only Minor Changes Or None At All

Staff Report
Kaiser Health News
A new round of polls finds that although voters have a slightly favorable view of GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney's pick for vice president, running mate Paul Ryan's Medicare plans are viewed with a greater degree of skepticism.

Report examines Medicare billing at mental health centers
By Kelly Kennedy
USA Today
At least 90% of more than $200 million in "questionable billing" issues found at Medicare outpatient community mental health centers occurred in states with little or no oversight, according to a federal report to be released today.

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

North Florida state attorney drops out of race after crime database accusations

By Lucy Morgan
Tampa Bay Times
A North Florida state attorney has reached an agreement that will allow him to avoid prosecution for using law enforcement databases to research his political opponents and others.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Daily News Clips for August 22, 2012


FEATURED STORIES

Gov. Rick Scott pressures Florida Keys elections chief on early voting

By Steve Bousquet and Mary Ellen Klas
Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Gov. Rick Scott delivered an ultimatum Tuesday to the election supervisor in the Florida Keys, who is refusing to limit early voting to eight days for the November election.

Scott Says FCAT Overemphasized; Critics Say He Is Late to The Party
By David Royse
News Service of Florida
As students return to school in many parts of the state this week, some will no doubt already be thinking about tests.

Medicaid plan would transform health care in Florida
By William E. Gibson
Orlando Sentinel
Florida's fast-growing Medicaid program -- which cares for the state's impoverished children and for most senior citizens in nursing homes -- would lose roughly a third of its federal money under budget plans embraced by Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and his running mate Paul Ryan.

Scott picks ideology over residents' health
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
Gov. Rick Scott and his right-wing extremists in the Legislature are putting their hatred of President Barack Obama and health care reform ahead of Florida's poor children.

Campaign vendors say Republican Congressman David Rivera funded Democrat’s failed primary bid
By Manny Garcia and Marc Caputo
Miami Herald
Fueled with $43,000 in secret money, Republican Rep. David Rivera helped run a shadow campaign that might have broken federal laws in last week’s Democratic primary against his political nemesis Joe Garcia, according to campaign sources and finance records.

FLORIDA POLITICS

Scott Attempts to Reduce Early Voting in All Counties

By Ashley Lopez
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Despite a federal court decision striking down the state’s reduction of early voting days in five counties, Gov. Rick Scott is asking all 67 counties in the state to cut them anyway.

GOP congressman’s apology to women about rape akin to overdue apology from Florida lawmakers
By Frank Cerabino
Palm Beach Post
The six-term congressman has been apologizing since he told an interviewer Sunday that victims of “legitimate rape” rarely get pregnant.

Buchanan deposition could come a month before election
Staff Report
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
A month before Election Day, U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan could be put under oath for a deposition as part of a 4-year-old lawsuit involving a former business partner.

Unfunded email consolidation puts some state agencies in spam folder
By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
A plan to move all state agencies onto one email system was halted last week, and seven state agencies and more than 5,400 employees are caught in limbo as they transition back to their old systems.

Why is Marco Rubio shutting out the press from West Palm Beach speech?
Editorial
Palm Beach Post
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who often speaks passionately about government oppression in his parents’ native Cuba, will practice a form of censorship today when he speaks to the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches.

POLITICAL RACES

Michelle Obama to visit Fort Lauderdale today

Associated Press
South Florida Sun Sentinel
First Lady Michelle Obama will be speaking in Fort Lauderdale later today in an effort to help her husband's re-election bid.

RNC strips VIP passes from Florida GOP delegation, but lets all delegates on floor
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Florida's delegates to the Republican National Convention already knew they were being housed about as far away from the Tampa Bay Times Forum as possible, at Innisbrook Resort in Palm Harbor, as punishment for scheduling an early presidential primary in violation of national party rules.

Immigration one of the few sticking points in GOP platform
By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times
Immigration is one of the toughest issues for the Republican Party to navigate.

RNC windfall questioned by economy experts
By Keith Morelli
Tampa Tribune
Organizers of the Republican National Convention tout the event as a windfall for the city of Tampa, saying tens of thousands of people will shovel cash into the local economy, as much as $200 million, for the benefit of everyone left when the throng leaves.

Tropical Storm Isaac moving westward toward Cuba; threat to Florida, GOP convention unclear
By Julius Whigham II
Palm Beach Post
Tropical Storm Isaac has formed in the Atlantic and could threaten South Florida and the Republican National Convention in Tampa next week, forecasters said Tuesday evening.

Workers will have 20 hours to transform Trop for RNC party
By Mark Puente
Tampa Bay Times
More than 1,000 workers will anxiously await the conclusion of the Tampa Bay Rays game on Saturday.

Akin’s comments reverberate in Florida races
By Jeremy Wallace
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
U.S. Senate candidate Todd Akin’s controversial comments about rape not only hurt his chances of winning in Missouri, but could become a problem for Republicans as far away as Florida.

BALLOT INITIATIVES

FCIR Project Tracks Funding Behind Florida’s Proposed Constitutional Amendments

Staff Report
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
Floridians will vote in November on 11 proposed constitutional amendments. These amendments, if passed, will enact sweeping changes to the Florida Constitution.

Change constitution to protect Florida’s natural resources
By Eric Draper
Palm Beach Post
Florida legislators have cut conservation spending more deeply than any other part of government.

ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Controversial wetlands permit wins approval despite expert's objections

By Craig Pittman
Tampa Bay Times
A controversial wetlands project that already has been the focus of two inspector general investigations was granted its permit last week by the state Department of Environmental Protection.

FPL's duty vs. mission under scrutiny at rate hike hearing
By Marcia Heroux Pounds
South Florida Sun Sentinel
FPL president Eric Silagy testified at FPL's rate hike hearing on Tuesday that the utilty's settlement agreement in 2010 provided it with the ability to recover costs for its West County Energy Center and maintain an 11 percent return on equity.

LGBT

Log Cabin Republicans unhappy with 'antigay marriage plank' proposed for GOP convention

By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Log Cabin Republicans are unhappy with what Executive Director R. Clarke Cooper calls "an antigay marriage plank" proposed this week for the upcoming national Republican Party convention in Tampa.

Longtime GOP Congressman C.W. Bill Young chided for role in anti-gay Johns Committee
By Steve Rothaus
Miami Herald
Democrat Jessica Ehrlich is running for U.S. House in Florida's 10th Congressional District (Pinellas County) against longtime incumbent Republican C.W. Bill Young.

EDUCATION

Governor talks up new school testing system in video; teachers unimpressed

By James Call
Florida Current
Florida public school students are heading back to class this week and with the new school year they will discover a new comprehensive testing system.

Florida Education Association: Test tsunami drowns students
By Mike Lafferty and Paul Owens
Orlando Sentinel
Related column: Meet the new Rick Scott -- FCAT foe
Florida is searching for a new education commissioner with the recent resignation of Gerard Robinson, even as the state moves ahead with reforms that will change the ways students are tested, teachers are paid and schools are held accountable.

Florida's high school graduates improved slightly on the ACT
Associated Press
TC Palm
Florida's high school graduates improved slightly this year on the ACT college entrance test, but the state continues to rank near the bottom nationally.

For-profit excesses
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
Escalating costs of attending state universities, and funding state and community colleges, is putting pressure on higher-education students and administrators in Florida.

JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

Getting an unemployment check in Florida is frustrating ordeal for many

By Toluse Olorunnipa
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
When 65-year-old Raymond Togyer isn’t polishing his resume or cold calling potential employers, he’s spending hours trying, unsuccessfully, to navigate Florida’s labyrinthine unemployment compensation system.

Report says Florida no-fault rates will drop, but insurers uncertain
By Kathleen Haughney
Orlando Sentinel
An independent report on changes to the state's no-fault auto insurance concludes that the price should go down for Florida drivers, but the insurance industry, which called for the changes, isn't so sure.

HEALTH AND SENIORS

Medicaid cuts

By Karen M. Clay
Tampa Bay Times
‘Be involved in politics as if your life depends on it … because it does," said the late Justin Dart, who pushed hard for the Americans with Disabilities Act and was a tireless advocate for people with disabilities.

Southwest Florida children's mental health care 'lacking'
By Janine Zeitlin
Ft. Myers News-Press
There is not enough mental health care for the children in Southwest Florida. 

JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Bondi names Osterhaus Fla. solicitor general

Associated Press
Miami Herald
Timothy Osterhaus is Florida's new solicitor general.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Daily News Clips for August 21, 2012


PROGRESS FLORIDA IN THE NEWS

The BluVu: Week of August 13th

By Gayle Andrews
The BluVu
The Democrats are thanking the Republicans for the Romney Ryan Dream Team, Rick Scott is still fighting the Republican Party, Progress Florida’s Damien Filer discusses Amendment 3 and more as political reality comes your way!
FEATURED STORIES

Rick Scott, Democrats fight over Florida early voting

By Steve Bousquet
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
The fight over early voting is escalating in Florida as Gov. Rick Scott seeks agreement among counties for eight days and Democrats demand 12 days.

Florida turns down $4.9 million from federal government designed to strengthen parenting
By Curtis Krueger
Tampa Bay Times
Kimberly Dudley says she is grateful for the agency Healthy Start, which sent an educator into her home to help her get off drugs and prevent her kids from being shipped to foster care.

Tea party influences GOP platform talks in Tampa
By Michael Van Sickler
Tampa Bay Times
When Republicans nominated John McCain for president in 2008, conservative groups associated with the tea party had yet to form.

In Pinellas, Bill Nelson doesn't shy away from health care vote
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson faces one of the toughest re-election fights of his career, with outside groups having already spent roughly $10 million attacking him as a liberal and for supporting the Affordable Care Act.

Tropical depression provides added anxiety as RNC nears
By Jose Patino Girona
Tampa Tribune
It may be about 2,500 miles away, but the National Hurricane Center and local meteorologists are keeping a close watch on a tropical depression that has formed in the Atlantic and threatens to put the Tampa Bay area on hurricane alert in time for the Republican National Convention.
FLORIDA POLITICS

NAACP Demands Early Voting Extension

By Whitney Ray
Capitol News Service
Black leaders are calling on Governor Rick Scott tonight to use his executive powers and extend early voting.

Dems plan counter-convention in Fla
By Adam C. Smith
Tampa Bay Times
Related: Ann Romney to headline Day 1 of RNC in Tampa
Democrats have been pretty tight-lipped about their plans to bracket the Republican National Convention in Tampa, but they have an aggressive program in the works to get their message out from outside the Tampa Bay Times Forum and in battleground states across the country.

Gov. Scott may get primetime slot at GOP convention
Associated Press
Palm Beach Post
Gov. Rick Scott is slated to be among the first speakers on the opening night of next week’s Republican National Convention in Tampa, the party announced Monday.

Billboard reminds GOP Tampa leaders are Democrats
By Kevin Wiatrowski
Tampa Tribune
When GOP delegates make their way downtown each day next week, they'll get a reminder that they're holding their quadrennial convention in a city run by Democrats.

Tampa group says voter rolls rife with felons
By Lauren Mayk
Tampa Tribune
A Tampa group that has been combing through voter rolls says thousands of felons are registered to vote in Florida.

These politicians need to pay up
By Fred Grimm
Miami Herald
As of Monday, 2,313 public officials still haven’t bothered to file the financial disclosure declarations required by Florida law. The forms were due on July 1.
POLITICAL RACES

Ryan the pandering persuader

By Daniel Ruth
Tampa Bay Times
As profiles in courage go, this did not quite measure up to that solitary, lonely Tiananmen Square protester standing in front of a column of tanks.

John Patrick Julien claims electoral fraud in House District 107 race
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
In what is likely to be the closest outcome of any legislative race this season, Miami Gardens Rep. Barbara Watson edged out North Miami Beach Rep. John Patrick Julien in the contest for House District 107 by a narrow 13 votes, according to a manual recount by Miami Dade County officials. 
ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

Audubon opposes state plan to build shooting range in Osceola wildlife area

By David Breen
Orlando Sentinel
Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is planning to build a shooting range at a state wildlife area in Osceola County over the objections of Audubon Florida.

Is decision bad news for Florida's wetlands?
By Kevin Spear
Orlando Sentinel
Florida environmental officials have approved a controversial "land bank" business that would generate profits by replacing wetlands paved over by developers, even though one of their own experts warned earlier this year that the project's environmental value was inflated and could lead to a net loss of wetlands statewide.

Fla. Counties Urged To Band Together For More Control Over Oil Spill Money
By Jessica Palombo    
WFSU Tallahassee
It’s been more than a month since the passage of the federal RESTORE Act, which will direct penalty money from the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the worst in history, to Florida and other affected states.

PSC won't delay FPL rate hearing
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee Bureau
Florida’s top consumer advocate tried and failed to get state regulators to postpone the hearing on a $690.4 million rate increase request by Florida Power & Light Monday, arguing that a last-minute settlement deal threatens to taint the proceedings.

Lights out
Editorial
Gainesville Sun
If there was ever a question that the Florida Legislature should revisit a 2006 law that allows the state's power companies to charge their customers ahead of time for the costs of planning and designing nuclear power plants, Progress Energy Florida's new CEO's testimony before the Public Service Commission last week certainly removed all doubt.
EDUCATION

FCAT to be retired, replaced by more and tougher exams

By Leslie Postal
Orlando Sentinel
The FCAT, long Florida's most important and sometimes most reviled exam, is headed for a retirement of sorts.

State senator calls for time-out on FCAT
By Dave Heller
First Coast News
As students headed back to school in most school districts Monday, one state lawmaker was calling for a time-out on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.

New School Year Brings Big Changes To School Lunches
By Lynn Hatter 
WFSU Tallahassee
New rules on what can and can’t be served on cafeteria trays are going in effect for the start of a new school year.

Florida's schools get low grade for dealing with poor students
Editorial
Florida Times-Union
Florida is one of the three worst states in the nation for school funding equity.

Princeton Review: Florida schools rank high on sports, beer, diversity
By Scott Travis
South Florida Sun Sentinel
In Florida, you can find colleges with plenty of parties, sports, diversity and even tree huggers, according to the new Princeton Review survey.
JOBS, BUDGET, AND ECONOMY

State economists lower deficit projections for state worker health insurance fund

By Gray Rohrer
Florida Current
The State Employees Group Health Self-Insurance Trust Fund will lose money this fiscal year, state economists predicted Monday, but not as much as their previous June estimate indicated.

Third extension granted for free foreclosure review as few Florida homeowners apply
By Kimberly Miller
Palm Beach Post
Florida residents who believe they have been wrongfully foreclosed on have until the end of the year to ask for a free review of their case after a September deadline was extended.
HEALTH AND SENIORS

Boca Congressman Deutch endorses Obama health plan, provides counterpoint to GOP VP hopeful Ryan

By George Bennett
Palm Beach Post
Paul Ryan’s recent Florida campaign appearance with his mother proves that the Republican plan to overhaul Medicare is a bad deal for future retirees, U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Boca Raton, told a Democrat-leaning seniors group on Monday.

Priority must shift from profit to patient
Editorial
Tampa Bay Times
It will likely be months — if not years — before federal regulators determine if HCA hospitals in Florida endangered patients by performing a higher-than-average number of two popular, high-margin heart procedures.
CIVIL RIGHTS, PEACE AND SOCIAL ISSUES

Out from the shadows — at last

Editorial
Miami Herald
After years of crushing disappointment, young people born elsewhere but raised in this country without benefit of proper documentation have an opportunity to relieve the anxiety and desperation that comes with living with the perpetual fear of deportation.
JUSTICE AND THE COURTS

Florida justices hit the road to make case for retention on bench

By Jacob Carpenter
Naples Daily News
With politics seeping into nonpartisan judge retention votes nationwide, three Florida Supreme Court justices are taking an unusual step this week — hitting the road to inform voters about how appellate judges are kept on the bench.

George Zimmerman fights subpoena asking for release of medical records
By Rene Stutzman
Orlando Sentinel
Prosecutors want more of George Zimmerman's medical records, but he's fighting back.