FLORIDA POLITICS
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Welcome To Florida Politics

Thanks for visiting. On a semi-daily basis we scan Florida's major daily newspapers for significant Florida political news and punditry. We also review the editorial pages and political columnists/pundits for Florida political commentary. The papers we review include: the Miami Herald, Sun-Sentinel, Palm Beach Post, Naples News, Sarasota Herald Tribune, St Pete Times, Tampa Tribune, Orlando Sentinel, the Daytona Beach News-Journal, Tallahassee Democrat, and, occasionally, the Florida Times Union; we also review the political news blogs associated with these newspapers.

For each story, column, article or editorial we deem significant, we post at least the headline and link to the piece; the linked headline always appears in quotes. We quote the headline for two reasons: first, to allow researchers looking for the cited piece to find it (if the link has expired) by searching for the original title/headline via a commercial research service. Second, quotation of the original headline permits readers to appreciate the spin from the original piece, as opposed to our spin.

Not that we don't provide spin; we do, and plenty of it. Our perspective appears in post headlines, the subtitles within the post (in bold), and the excerpts from the linked stories we select to quote; we also occasionally provide other links and commentary about certain stories. While our bias should be immediately apparent to any reader, we nevertheless attempt to link to every article, column or editorial about Florida politics in every major online Florida newspaper.

 

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The Blog for Friday, February 02, 2007

Another Vacancy in the Legislature

    "Rep. John Quinones, the first Puerto Rican Republican in the Florida Legislature [House District 49], said Thursday that he will step down to run for the newly drawn Hispanic-majority Osceola County Commission seat. ... Crist has not scheduled a special election to fill Quinones' seat. A spokesman for the Division of Elections said it would be 'very difficult' to set one before the annual legislative session begins March 6."

    "Though [HD 49] has been represented by a Republican for the past four years, the district is home to about 9,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans. Hispanic voters are the largest single demographic, making up more than 42 percent of registered voters." "State legislator new contender for revamped Osceola district".

    Orlando Sentinel GOPer apologist George Diaz (recently a sports writer) makes an absurd statement about Quinones: "to dismiss him as minority window dressing is myopic, if not absurd."


    Adios Touch Screens?

    "Crist on Thursday moved to delete the controversial touch-screen voting machines from Florida's political memory, as he endorsed a $32.5 million plan to convert all of the state's counties to a paper-based voting system." "Governor's paper-trail plan gets mostly good reviews". "Crist to seek millions for voting machines that leave paper trail". See also "House Speaker backs Crist plan to scrap touch-screen voting", "Goodbye to most touch screens?", "Gov. Crist wants paper trail in time for 2008 presidential vote" and "Crist's paper trail plan draws raves".

    The St. Pete Times joins the Palm Beach Post ("Dump the touch screens? Problems won't go away") in urging caution: "We understand Crist's sense of urgency in getting a recent vote-counting controversy in Sarasota County behind him, and maybe paper ballots are the way to go. But he should have given this matter a little more thought and consulted the experts more thoroughly before sending the state off on another elections adventure." "Crist casts a ballot for trouble".


    Moving on Up?

    "As state lawmakers consider moving up Florida's presidential primary, they have company: Other states are considering earlier primaries, too." "Florida working to move up primary voting".

    "With both parties' nominations in play this year, leaders in Florida -- and many other states -- are eyeing earlier primaries. Their eagerness is understandable. As the fourth-largest state, Florida deserves some say in the selection of nominees. But if Florida, California and Texas push their primaries forward, other states are likely to keep leapfrogging to maintain position. Where does it end, primaries the day after a presidential election?" "Leapfrog primaries conflict with orderly elections".


    FCAT Follies

    "Crist says he wants to look beyond FCAT scores when rewarding Florida's top teachers under a new, controversial merit-pay plan. Some hope he will also look beyond test scores when grading public schools. But those familiar with his thinking say the new governor is most likely to propose tweaks -- not major overhauls -- to Florida's school-accountability system." "Crist likely to tweak FCAT, schools".


    Privatization Scandal

    "Corrections Corporation of America, one of two private prison contractors that state auditors say were overpaid $12.7 million, did nothing wrong, a spokeswoman said a day after Gov. Charlie Crist ordered an investigation." "Private prison firm says it did nothing wrong". See also "Corrections company will cooperate with investigation".

    And isn't this a nice touch:

    Private prisons operating under lease-purchase agreements with the state will remain exempt from paying millions of dollars in local property taxes after the Florida Supreme Court reversed course Thursday and let stand an appellate decision.
    "Supreme Court denies appeal of tax exemption for private prisons".


    Mahoney's Money

    "In the days after Mark Foley resigned from Congress in disgrace, the political money floodgates opened for his challenger, Tim Mahoney." "PACs put big bucks behind Mahoney".


    Don't Get Vern Wrong

    Vern Buchanan has moved quickly to dispel any concern that he was motivated by the plight of low wage workers in voting to increase the minimum wage:

    Although the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups opposed the increase, Buchanan told the pro-business crowd Thursday morning that he voted for it for competitive reasons.

    "If were wearing my chamber hat I probably wouldn’t have" said Buchanan, former president of the Sarasota Chamber of Commerce and of the Florida Chamber.
    Buchanan said since Georgia still has a lower minimum wage, he feared Georgia businesses would have an unfair advantage over Florida businesses that are required already to pay over $6 an hour because of a state constitutional amendment that passed in Florida.

    Over the next few years, the state minimum wage will be close to $7.25 an hour. Buchanan said if Florida is already going to have the higher wage, he wants to make sure surrounding states have the same wage.
    "Buchanan explains early votes". To the extent you are interested in more of Mr. Buchanan's wisdom, see "Buchanan confronts 'perfect economic storm'".


    Property Taxes

    "Lawmakers will gather in Tallahassee on March 6, and reforming the way cities, counties and special districts hit up homeowners is now their top priority." "Property Taxes Targeted".

    Pamela Hasterok writes that the "Tax cuts will hurt cities, you":

    So where else could cities and counties find the money to keep providing services, reporters asked him at a Wednesday press conference.

    Where else? Growth.

    If the other answers were little white lies, the last was a big, fat canard. Crist expanded the growth-will-pay-for-itself mantra to the growth-will-pay-for-everything promise. But it's hard to fathom how cities and counties that don't have enough money to serve current residents will be helped by acquiring new ones.

    Nor does the governor give local governments credit for picking up more of the tab for state programs like public schools, juvenile justice and health care. Much of the gains in education money in recent years came from requiring homeowners to kick in more. The state used to get 30 percent of its school budget from local taxpayers -- now it gets 40 percent.

    So how do you cut property taxes for homeowners, businesses and landlords and not bankrupt cities and counties?
    Hasterok answers her own question: "You can't."


    South Florida Under Water

    If the GOP keeps its head in the sand about global warming, they are definitely going to lose the (South) Florida vote.

    "A much-debated U.N. report on climate change to be released today raises the specter of rising sea levels and hurricanes that could eventually swamp much of South Florida."

    Specifically, experts are looking at predictions of sea level rise over the next 50 years from 2 feet to 10 feet.

    A rise of 10 feet could swamp the state's highly populated coastline and send salt water spilling into the freshwater Everglades, said a leading South Florida-based scientist.

    "It's an outlying estimate, but a 10-foot rise is within the realm of possibility," said Stephen P. Leatherman, director of the International Hurricane Research Center at Florida International University. "If that happens, not only do you have rising water to the east, but you have saltwater encroachment in the Everglades. It essentially becomes part of the ocean to the west of us.

    "At that point, forget about Everglades restoration ... Most of this area is maybe 10 feet above sea level, so if you're talking about a 10-foot rise, and rising tide on top of that, then it's all over."
    "Global warming could swamp Florida, U.N. report suggests". See also "About the report" and "28 South Florida mayors sign pact to reduce greenhouse gases, energy use" (" As world climate experts in Paris worked on a long-awaited report on global warming, South Florida cities were joining a growing national movement to fight climate change at the local level.")


    DCF

    "The situation with mentally incompetent inmates being kept in jail beyond the 15 days allowed by law had reach a crisis level. Under Lucy Hadi, DCF's previous head, there were hundreds of mentally ill inmates being held in local jails for months beyond the legal limit." "From court fight to caring".


    Whatever

    The Díaz-Balarts speak:

    Two of South Florida's Cuban-American members of Congress called on Democrats to push for a comprehensive immigration overhaul and for the Bush administration to grant temporary protected status to Haitians in a program that already benefits people from several Central American countries.

    ''We're concerned because the Democrats . . . have given no signs of giving any importance or priority to immigration,'' said U.S. Rep. Lincoln Díaz-Balart, a Miami Republican. "It's time for the Democratic leadership to put up or shut up.''
    "Democrats are urged to address immigration".


    Rolling the Dice

    "As bad as Florida's insurance market is, at least one company is willing to enter it." "Regulators approve new insurer".


    Loopholes

    "Crist said Thursday he was concerned about lawbreakers who are licensed to carry guns in Florida and was planning to meet with the commissioner in charge of issuing the licenses to discuss the problem." "Gov. Crist calls for meeting on gun loopholes".


    Barreto

    "Crist has reappointed Miami businessman Rodney Barreto to the state's wildlife commission. Barreto, a real estate investor and founding partner in an influential lobbying firm, was among 283 people whose appointments by former Gov. Jeb Bush to state boards were canceled by Crist when he took his place in office last month." "Crist keeps Bush's pick for wildlife commission".


    Tampa

    "Register By Monday To Vote In March 6 Tampa Election".


    Mel Not Wingnutty Enough?

    Check out this site, brought to our attention via the Q's "Go Home Mel Martinez".


    Butterworth Says

    "Who is the 'Brightest' member of the Legislature?"


    Who You Callin' An "Inept Political Hack"?

    Palm Beach County Property Appraiser Gary Nikolits "accuses commissioners of trying to detract attention from a 'culture of corruption' in their offices, even suggesting some of them would do better to find criminal defense attorneys than 'pick a fight' with him. ... The ugliness didn't end there, either. Nikolits took potshots at Parrish, too, implying she's an inept political hack who's running afoul of the law and the state constitution." "Property Taxes".


    Another "Jeb!" Legacy

    Strange that this Tampa Trib editorial fails to mention who presided over this disaster: "What a shame that Florida will lose out on $20 million from the federal government this year to provide health insurance for children of the working poor."

    Florida doesn't spend enough to earn the full federal match, so Washington sends the money to states more strongly committed to giving low-income children their best shot at a healthy life. Since 1998, Florida has lost out on $140 million in federal money. ...

    [W]ith as many as 750,000 uninsured children in Florida, the state has a moral obligation to enroll as many as possible.
    "Stingy Budget For Health Care Leaves Florida Kids Uncovered".


    "Tallahassee's meddling"

    The Palm Beach Post editorial board remids us that "a new report by the Pappas Consulting Group, part of the Board of Governors' effort to spark a statewide dialogue (www.flbog.org), underscores that the way to make UF a national powerhouse in a strong state university system has been lost on the Legislature. Tallahassee's meddling has contributed to the inefficiency of the system." "Taking care of business".


    Good Bye Miss Ivins

    "She said of a certain beloved former president while he was in office that 'if you put his brains in a bee, it would fly backwards' and that 'if he gets even more sedate, we will have to water him twice a week.'" "She served outrage with a scoop of joy".


    What A Mess

    "Floridians who have received notices that their residential-property insurance policies aren't being renewed have flooded state phone lines and made angry inquiries with insurance agents this week to learn whether a new state-ordered freeze on cancellations applies to them."

    Insurance regulators hope to have the answers as early as today. But it's clear that an emergency order that Gov. Charlie Crist's aides drafted last weekend has created a consumer frenzy.

    The rule that Crist and the Florida Cabinet approved Tuesday, coupled with just-passed insurance legislation, is intended to have the combined effect of preventing insurers from dropping any Florida homeowners until hurricane season ends in November.

    But the rule did not specifically state how to deal with policyholders who were told they wouldn't be renewed before the emergency order was signed. Lawyers for the state are now trying to sort it out.
    "Insurance firms spark fury with cancellations". See also "Insurers ask state to clarify rate ban".


    Bringing RPOF Business Principles to State Government

    This strange case is mentioned in an article today about private prisons avoiding taxation:

    the Supreme Court in November reinstated a suit by the department seeking to overturn the auctioning of the Lake City Correctional Facility for failure to pay property taxes in Columbia County.

    A trial judge had upheld the tax deed sale because the state missed a filing deadline, but the Supreme Court reversed. The justices ruled the state is exempt from a law that requires "taxpayers" to challenge assessments within 60 days after they are certified.

    A couple and their two daughters had paid $132,313 for a tax deed to the multi-million-dollar prison.
    Presumably the prison had possibilities as a condo conversion.



The Blog for Thursday, February 01, 2007

Crist Flip-Flops on Stem Cells

    "Backing away from a stance he took during his campaign for governor,"
    Gov. Charlie Crist said Wednesday that he wants the state to spend $20 million on stem-cell research -- but not on the kind that destroys embryos.

    While campaigning last summer, Crist said he supported embryonic stem-cell research and said he opposed President Bush's veto of federal legislation that would have paid for it. Backers of embryonic stem-cell research contend that it could lead to cures for such diseases as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

    Calling himself ''pragmatic,'' Crist retreated from his campaign position Wednesday, instead proposing a grant program that would offer up money for other types of stem-cell research, including the use of adult, umbilical and amniotic cells. Crist conceded he took his position based on likely opposition to embryonic stem-cell research in the GOP-controlled Legislature.
    "Crist: Study select stem cells". See also "Crist backs limited stem-cell research", "Crist supports limited stem cell research", "Governor occupies stem cell midpoint" and "Crist: Pay for stem cell studies, but not new embryonic research" ("Conservative groups cheered Crist’s announcement.")

    "Crist said he has no philosophical objection to embryonic stem-cell research, but that he appreciates the opposition such a plan would face from conservatives in the legislature." "Crist seeks $20 million for stem-cell research".

    On the flip-flop: "George LeMieux, Crist's chief of staff, denied the governor had retreated from his campaign position. LeMieux said Crist indicated during the campaign that he wanted to be sensitive to the issue of destroying embryos." "Crist seeks funds for stem-cell research".

    LeMieux is rewriting the past: "During his campaign for governor, Charlie Crist made news when he said he disagreed with President Bush's decision to veto federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research." "Crist caves on stem cell research".

    "The reaction was swift and stern from both sides."
    Proponents of embryonic stem-cell research, including leading Democrats in the Legislature and prominent backers of the science, criticized the Republican governor's stand. They said Crist is backing away from a campaign promise to support the most controversial kind of stem-cell research -- the type that involves the destruction of human embryos.

    "This sort of proposal is more political cover by the governor than anything that will really advance medical research," said Bernard Siegel, a Wellington resident and vice president of Floridians for Stem Cell Research and Cures, a group seeking through a constitutional amendment state funding for embryonic stem-cell research.

    These backers say research already under way at the University of Florida, the University of Miami and the University of Central Florida would be given a shot in the arm if embryonic stem-cell research, now restricted from getting federal funds, received state money. They say other venues, such as Scripps Florida Research Institute in Palm Beach County and a Burnham Institute headed to Orlando, also might be able to host the research.
    "Crist backs off on using embryos, wants $20M for stem-cell research".


    VP Crist?

    The Palm Beach Post editors: "Fresh from a special session that brought property insurance relief, the Legislature wants a special statewide election this year to bring property-tax relief. Let's list just a few reasons why that's a bad idea."

    It's a bad idea because it is being rushed for political purposes. Legislators want to campaign in 2008 on the relief they gave, not the relief they are promising. Gov. Crist wants to look as popular as possible to any Republican presidential candidates who might want a running mate capable of delivering Florida's 27 electoral votes.
    "No special tax election".


    Paper Trail

    "Responding to outcry from voters and advocacy groups over the problems associated with touchscreen ballots, Crist is expected today to announce a proposal to spend at least $20 million to make auditable paper trails of votes a standard feature of voting machines across the state." "Move On Paper Trail Expected". See also "Crist: Every county needs paper ballots", "Crist's plan to replace touch-screen voting machines draws some calls for caution", "Crist to detail plan for paper-trail votingCrist to detail plan for future of voting" and "The great debate: To scrap touch-screen machines or not?" ("Crist's move to scrap Florida's controversial touch-screen voting machines won't produce immediate change -- and may produce some political controversy of its own.")

    The Tallahassee Democrat editorial board: "The burning question remains: Why did it take this long?" "Paper chase".

    However, "Crist plan may have role for touch screens": "The paper-trail proposal that Gov. Charlie Crist will unveil today is expected to make optical-scan ballots the Election Day standard across Florida while keeping electronic touch-screen voting machines for early voting and people with disabilities."

    This the Palm Beach Post editorial Board:

    Crist thinks that changing from electronic voting machines to optical scan systems will assure mistake-free elections, he's wrong. ...

    as a candidate last year, Gov. Crist showed that he didn't understand how touch-screen printers work. They wouldn't deliver a receipt to voters, like an automated teller machine or a gas pump. They would let voters confirm their choices, but the paper would remain untouched, to be available to decide close races.
    "And optical-scan machines don't guarantee a fail-safe election."
    The blank ballots cast in Sarasota County in the close District 13 House race have galvanized the touch-screen opposition. But not only are undervotes possible with optical-scan ballots, so are overvotes, the ballot-disqualifying choice of more than one candidate that cannot be made on touch screens.

    Optical-scan ballots don't eliminate fears of hacking. The results are tabulated electronically and, at least in St. Lucie County, transmitted to central election headquarters by modem. Touch-screen results in Palm Beach County never are sent over phone lines.

    While optical-scan systems are considered safer because ballots can be reviewed later, they also can raise questions of voter intent, which, the Supreme Court ruled in Bush vs. Gore, must be judged in a uniform way. If someone circles the candidate's name, does that count? How about scratching out a candidate's name? Does that indicate support for the opponent? Touch-screens don't allow those mistakes.
    "Dump the touch screens? Problems won't go away".


    Just Like "Jeb!"

    "Crist on Wednesday reappointed Debbie Sembler, co-chairman of his inaugural committee and the wife of Brent Sembler, Crist's finance chairman, to the University of South Florida board of trustees. Crist also reappointed Miami lobbyist Rodney Barreto to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission." "Crist reappoints two Bush picks".


    "Lock'em up, let counties sort out costs"

    "There may not be a satisfactory explanation [for the decline in the murder rate], but there's a politically opportunistic solution: Get even tougher with offenders. That's just what Gov. Charlie Crist is pushing to do, with his strikingly well-named -- but quite possibly ineffective and definitely costly -- "Anti-Murder" proposal." "Crist vs. crime".


    Big of Him

    "The new head of Florida's Department of Children & Families told a judge Wednesday his agency will stop fighting and start cooperating with advocates trying to end the practice of allowing mentally ill inmates to languish in jail in violation of state law." "State declares truce in battle over mentally ill inmates". See also "Judge drops charges, fine in DCF deal".


    Confederate License Tags

    "The Sons of Confederate Veterans wants to immortalize the flag on a Florida speciality license plate." "Confederate group seeks flag on tag".


    Jebbie Let the State "Get Played"

    The St. Pete Times editorial board thinks "Florida taxpayers and small businesses that compete with Office Depot should be ticked."

    This sweet deal is not unique. It's part of a pattern that began to emerge in our state in the mid 1990s and grew markedly while Jeb Bush was governor, in which a select group of mostly large companies won hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks and other incentives to create or maintain jobs in the state. Often the awards were given to businesses that undoubtedly would have chosen to operate in Florida anyway. In some cases, the added jobs were so low-paying that the employees qualified for government health care. And sometimes there was little net job creation at all, with companies adding jobs in one place while cutting them in another. ...

    Our former governor seemed to believe that the state's largest corporate interests should go to the front of the welfare line. Gov. Charlie Crist should take a closer look at these cozy arrangements. If nothing else, loopholes should be closed so that a company cannot claim job growth when it's cutting jobs in another location in the state. And the entire process should be open to the public so it is possible to check whether a business has made a legitimate case for the incentives.

    These deals inevitably have more costs than the state is willing to let on, and the benefits seem to accrue largely to the biggest corporate players. From more than one vantage point, it seems that the state is getting played.
    "Businesses play Florida for a sap".


    Gun Nuts

    "Absurd, yes. That's the law in Florida. However, the absurdity shouldn't surprise anyone. This is the state where the Legislature approved a bill that makes it a crime for state agencies to sue gun-range owners to enforce environmental laws, and bars law enforcement agencies from keeping electronic databases on firearms and gun owners." "Firearms".


    Chavez

    "Chavez's sweeping new powers resonate in S. Florida".


    Sleepy Gets Endorsements

    "In the first big endorsement from the nation's biggest battleground state, Florida's three Cuban-American members of Congress announced Wednesday that they will back Republican Sen. John McCain for president."

    U.S. Reps. Lincoln and Mario Díaz-Balart and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, all Miami Republicans, are taking sides at least one year before Florida's presidential primary. A fast-tracked bill in the state Legislature would bump the primary from March to the last Tuesday in January, possibly making Florida the first state in the South to vote.
    "Three Miami representatives back McCain".


    Property Taxes

    "Crist’s plan isn’t exactly a tax cut".


    Who You Callin' an Idiot

    "The 2007 Florida legislative session is still more than a month away, but insults already are flying between Collier commissioners and a state lawmaker." "Bennett calls Coyle 'idiot' over impact fees".


    Tampa

    Follow Tampa's mayoral election with the Trib's "Road to City Hall" blog.


    Cuban Exodus?

    "The federal government is prepared to stop a mass exodus from Cuba that could follow the death of Fidel Castro, two Florida congressmen said Wednesday after reviewing emergency plans." "Feds: U.S. Is Prepared to Stop Mass Exodus From Cuba". See also "Mica: U.S. ready for Cuban exodus".


    Out In The Fields

    "More than 170 farmworkers have sued Ag-Mart Produce Inc., one of the state’s largest vegetable growers, claiming the company altered records to avoid paying them for the hours they worked." "Farmworkers sue major Florida tomato producer for back wages".


    The Pundits Heart Charlie

    "Crist has done more good in a month than Bush did in eight years." "'Common Sense Charlie' puts people above party". See also "Crist a breath of fresh air for skeptical Florida voters".


    Alternative Energy

    "Crist pushing more alternative energy". See also "Crist ignites energy push".


    The Baseball Owners Governor

    "After seven years of last-minute political defeats, the plan to help the Florida Marlins build a new ballpark with the help of state funds got a major boost Wednesday when Gov. Charlie Crist announced he is a fan of using taxpayer money to subsidize sports stadiums." "Governor boosts ballpark funding formula". See also "Governor is a fan of pro sports tax break".


    Privatization Scandal

    "Crist ordered the Florida Department of Law Enforcement on Wednesday to conduct a preliminary investigation into more than $4.5 million in alleged overpayments to two companies that operate private prisons for the state." "Crist orders investigation of prison contract settlement". See also "Governor orders investigation into prison contracts".

    Funny how Attorney General Crist never found the time to look into the many privatization scams underway while Jebbie was Governor.


    "Sink off to a strong start"

    Alex Sink "has the opportunity to take the notion of a healthy, adversarial relationship and kick it up a notch. That ought to be her priority. It will make her a household name too."

    She has already scored a victory for the people by beating back a Republican effort to put the appointed position of insurance commissioner — formerly an elected post — under the control of the governor. She somehow successfully argued that the position should be accountable to the CFO. Going further, she avows that the insurance commissioner will be an advocate for the public — so much so that the man or woman hired would become a household name.

    That’s refreshing. An insurance commissioner who doesn’t work for the insurance companies.
    "Editorial: Florida CFO".


    Secret Court Records

    "Secret court records are not pervasive around the state but appear isolated to certain areas, Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice R. Fred Lewis said Wednesday." "Chief Justice says secret court records not pervasive".


    Its A Jungle Out There

    "The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission this month will consider rule changes that will make it tougher to buy and own pythons and other large exotic reptiles. The changes will effectively create a 'reptile registry' that requires owners to get permits to keep animals and have veterinarians insert a microchip in the animal so that its whereabouts can be tracked." "It doesn't have to be a jungle out there".


    How to Get Ahead in Tally

    "Gleason was a life long Democrat who switched parties last summer so she could vote for Crist in the Republican Primary." "Open Government Guru = Republican".


The Blog for Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Crist Calls for a Property Tax Special Election

    "Calling soaring property taxes one of the most crippling challenges facing Floridians, Gov. Charlie Crist proposed a constitutional amendment Tuesday that would cut property taxes by as much as $4.7 billion a year and urged legislators to put it on the ballot in a special election."
    The key aspects of the governor's proposal: allowing homeowners to take their property tax savings with them when they move to another home anywhere in the state; doubling the homestead exemption for homeowners, and capping taxes on businesses and non-homestead residential property such as rentals.
    "Property tax rollbacks are proposed". See also "Gov. Crist proposes overhaul of property taxes", "Crist offers salve for tax pain", "Crist unveils plan to overhaul property taxes" and "Crist's next battle: Property tax reform".


    Back to Optical-Scan?

    "Gov. Charlie Crist wants to spend nearly $33 million to replace Florida's maligned ATM-style voting machines with systems that provide a clear paper trail."

    The decision, if approved by state lawmakers, would end one of the most bitter election debates in Florida: whether the electronic touch-screen machines have bugs in their secret software that could make votes disappear.

    Crist plans to make his announcement Thursday in Palm Beach County, home of the 2000 butterfly-ballot meltdown that led to the rise of the touch-screen machines in South Florida and other urban areas.

    The governor wants to replace them with the optical-scan voting machines used in most areas of the state -- including Tallahassee's Leon County, where Elections Supervisor Ion Sancho has been a harsh critic of the touch-screen systems, used in 15 counties.
    "Crist wants voting paper trail". See also "Wexler: Crist will push for paper trail", "Crist seeks to create paper trail for elections", "Voting machines on way out?", "Congressman says Crist to seek money for optical voting machines", "Crist expected to back voting switch" and "Crist is said to back paper trail for electronic voting".


    Running Government Like a Business

    "In the latest lurid revelation about the state prison system, a jury has awarded nearly $1-million in damages to nurses who said a sexually hostile workplace violated their civil rights." "Prison nurses who sued get $1-million".

    Speaking of "business principles", Howard Troxler weighs in on the DOC privatization scandal:

    Last week, we learned that the state has negotiated a repayment from one of the companies involved, the GEO Group. (We're still negotiating with the other company.)

    Here is the amount of the repayment: $402,501.

    Let's review.

    Overpayments, $13-million.

    Settlement, $402,501.

    That isn't a repayment. It's a tip.

    To his limited credit, one of our state senators, Victor Crist, R-Tampa, asked for an investigation.

    I give "limited" credit to Crist, because this was the fault of the Legislature in the first place.
    And here's an idea the RPOF has had a hard time grasping:
    we don't need to "run the government like a business." That is far too low a standard. We need to run the government like, you know, the government.
    "At least they ran it like a business".


    Housing

    "The new problem for Florida is the cost of staying in a home, meaning property taxes and insurance. But counties and cities still haven't solved the old problem - the cost of getting into a home." "Match housing demand to the housing market".


    Brilliant

    "Florida will forfeit $20 million of federal money this fall that could have expanded a health insurance program for children, and if it does not increase spending at the state level, it could lose millions more." "Fla. To Forfeit KidCare Funds".


    "Now Bush is gone"

    "Though Republicans remain firmly in charge of education committees, it appears from early meetings that Democratic lawmakers will shape and shepherd major legislation, including a teacher-incentive package in the Senate."

    For eight years, Bush, a policy wonk with attitude, set the state's education agenda. He pushed through a school grading system, private school vouchers and performance pay for teachers. He showed little tolerance for opposition, as evidenced by his successful drive to abolish the state Board of Regents, which for decades had operated as an independent voice on higher education.

    Now Bush is gone. And so are key allies.

    Phil Handy, a Bush confidante made chairman of the Board of Education, had his appointment for a second term recalled by Crist. And Education Commissioner John Winn, who Bush picked to run the Department of Education, is retiring Feb. 28, six days before the start of the legislative session.

    In education circles, the collective changes have some people giddy.
    "Educators get foot in door at state Capitol". See also "School board to present to-do list to lawmakers".


    Surprise!

    "Florida on Tuesday ordered home insurance companies to temporarily freeze rates and halt policy cancellations, catching the state's largest private insurer in the act of shedding some 40,000 customers." "Order surprises insurers, Cabinet alike". See also "Cabinet Freezes Home Insurance Policies", "State calls for 90-day insurance rate freeze" and "Crist, Cabinet to stop insurers from leaving state".


    Fraud Allegations

    "State officials have accused a water quality lab manager of fraud in his tests of years of samples and are investigating whether to invalidate all his work, a move that could set back pollution cleanup efforts." "Water quality lab manager accused of fraud". Se also "State investigates water quality data, scientist accused of fraud".


    Negron

    "Despite published reports over the weekend that he’s preparing to run again for Congress again in 2008, former state Rep. Joe Negron, R-Stuart, just told [Jeremy Wallace] he hasn’t decided if he will." "Not ready to run yet".


    Inequality

    Brad DeLong in the Miami Herald today: "How much should we worry about inequality?"

    Answering that question requires that we first answer another question: ''Compared to what?'' What is the alternative against which to judge the degree of inequality that we see?

    Florida is a much more materially unequal society than Cuba. But the right way to look at the situation -- if Florida and Cuba are our alternatives -- is not to say that Florida has too much inequality, but that Cuba has much too much poverty.
    "Rich get richer -- that's not good".


    Brown-Waite

    "Madam Ranking Member".


    McCain

    "U.S. Sen. John McCain has tapped Gov. Charlie Crist's campaign coordinators in South Florida to lay the groundwork for his presidential campaign in the state. Carlos Curbelo and Danny Lopez are the managing partners of a Coral Gables-based political consulting firm shrewdly named Capitol Gains. They helped Crist gain Florida's capitol; now they are going to help McCain take the nation's. The two also have also worked for U.S. Reps. Lincoln and Mario Diaz-Balart." "Crist's Miami peeps sign with McCain".


    Bad Timing

    "On the same day that state Sen. Steve Oelrich voted in favor of overhauling the insurance industry, he wrote a letter announcing that he had a new job as an insurance agent."

    Oelrich, 61, a Gainesville Republican, sent the letter to several hundred people, saying he is "eager to discuss your members' or clients' insurance needs." Some of those letters went to state lobbyists, whose job it is to persuade him to vote a certain way.

    Oelrich, the former sheriff of Alachua County, just started working for Hunt Insurance Group, a Tallahassee company that, among other things, administers the Florida Sheriffs Association's self-insurance fund, which defends state sheriffs in liability cases. The insurance group didn't return calls for comment. ...

    Oelrich said the letter was not intended to pressure anybody.
    "Letter by senator raises concern".

The Blog for Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The Stem Cell Debate is Joined

    "House Republicans, who may face pressure from Gov. Charlie Crist this spring to spend money on embryonic stem-cell research, have countered with their own stem-cell plan." "Stem Cell Battle Brews".

    "Setting up a legislative debate over whether stem cell research can be realized without the destruction of human embryos, a state lawmaker said Monday she will file a bill to call for increased spending on other, less controversial types of stem cell research."
    Rep. Anitere Flores, R-Miami, proposed spending $20-million on biomedical research projects that don't require the destruction of embryos.

    Researchers hoping to treat or cure a wide array of diseases and injuries are working in several types of stem cell research. The use of stem cells culled from adults, from umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid aren't very controversial.

    But many researchers say the most promising type of stem cell research involves the use of cells harvested from embryos, because they have the ability to become any tissue in the body.

    Opponents say it is wrong to destroy embryos, which they consider human beings.

    Last week, another Florida lawmaker, Rep. Franklin Sands, filed a bill that would earmark $20-million in state money for research on all kinds of stem cell research, including embryonic research. Sands, D-Weston, argues that other types of research won't produce as many results as could be realized with more embryonic research.
    "Stem-cell funding proposed".


    Charlie's DNA

    Daniel Ruth writes that "there are few other Florida politicians whose sex lives so preoccupy the curiosity of the glad-handing/Bible-thumping/chattering classes."

    Oddly enough, early in his first term of office, Jeb Bush also had to deal with libido politics, calling a press conference to deny he was fooling around.

    But the very idea of Jeb Bush in flagrante dilecto was so boring, nobody much cared about the governor's sex life and the story pretty much died from disinterest.

    In a sort of perverse way, you might think Gov. Crist welcomed the re-introduction of accusations a few days ago alleging he is the father of a child born out of wedlock 17 years ago.

    After all, through most of his political career, Crist has had to fend off not too subtle whispering campaigns that he is gay, which the governor has steadfastly denied.
    "Where Does Rumor End And Privacy Begin?"


    Open Seat?

    "Quinones, the first Puerto Rican ever elected to the Florida Legislature, has for weeks been thinking about stepping down in order to run for a new seat on the Osceola County Commission. But the Kissimmee lawmaker said this morning that he still hasn’t decided what he’ll do. ... He said he wants to make up his mind by Wednesday."

    Nevertheless, "Democrat Bill McManus, a former Massachusetts legislator with a home in Winter Garden, announced this morning that he will run in a special election to replace Republican Rep. John Quinones. ... Democratic insiders are privately touting another candidate should Quinones actually step down -- Darren Soto, a local attorney who unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Andy Gardiner, R-Orlando, last year." "Waiting for Quinones".

    Rumour has it that former state rep and party-switcher Tony Suarez will jump in on the GOP side. For more on Suarez see "Allegations Of Voter Fraud Surface In Orange County".


    Audit

    "Officials for the Florida Department of Education failed to maintain a master list of state-issued cellphones, submitted inaccurate and incomplete travel reports and did not update certain financial records for several years, according to a report from the state auditor general. Education Commissioner John Winn, who will leave office Feb. 28, disputed some of the findings but agreed with others in the report, which was released Wednesday." "Education records lack information, report finds".


    What If?

    "A few worst-case scenarios are tempering some of the enthusiasm over what Crist and others bill as a bipartisan triumph:"

    - What if Florida gets hit by a costly storm before it can build up a bigger, new public catastrophe fund, designed to lower premiums by relieving insurers of some risk?

    - What if new rules against "cherry picking," the practice of offering the most profitable types of insurance but not property insurance, send automobile insurers packing from Florida?

    - What if a bulked-up Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the public insurer of last resort that's now empowered to offer other types of insurance, steals customers from private businesses?
    "Insurance What-Ifs Sinking In"


    FCAT Follies

    "Test scores of several thousand Florida kids who are taking part in the federal reading, writing and math exams that are under way in selected schools will show how the state's students stack up against others in the nation."

    Florida had little improvement in reading when the tests were given two years ago, and officials hope to see better results this time. Only 30 percent of fourth-graders and a quarter of eighth-graders were proficient readers in 2005, the tests showed. ...

    While the state's exam -- the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test -- has shown dramatic improvements, the federal test has not backed up the state's claims.

    Based on state FCAT scores, 71 percent of fourth-graders were proficient readers in 2005, though the national test that year indicated only 30 percent of Florida's fourth-graders were proficient readers.
    "State hopes kids can make grade".


    Tampa

    "Mayor's Priorities Faulted In Debate".


    "Clueless" Floridians

    "It might cost $7 million to elevate and improve the teaching of civics in Florida, a small price to pay considering the cost of being clueless." "Educate Floridians To Be Better Citizens". See also "Missing lessons".

    Speaking of "clueless", this Randy Schultz column the other day suggests that some angry e-mailers could have used a civics class or two. Shultz writes that "after the Legislature passed the insurance bill, it didn't take long to get the first angry e-mail complaining that the state has 'socialized' insurance."

    "Socialized?" Well, yeah. As if "privatized" was working so well. ...

    last week, the Legislature finally stopped placing its undying faith in a failed private market. Previously, the Legislature had bought the industry's argument that ever-higher rates - rates that even people within the industry agree are "unaffordable" for many people - eventually would bring back competition in hurricane insurance. If the industry won't look after Floridians, Floridians will have to look after Floridians. One might call it socialism. I'd call it cooperation.
    "Good hands belong to Floridians".


    Help From Washington

    "Ultimately, though, the best way to spread risk and thus reduce rates would be for Congress to create a national disaster fund. That issue explains in part the eagerness of Republicans in the Legislature to move up the state's presidential primary. If political leaders in Florida make national disaster insurance a priority, the theory goes, so will presidential candidates. Rep. Adam Hasner, R-Delray Beach, recently told The Miami Herald that all state politicians should withhold any endorsement until a candidate supports such a program." "Insurance relief tour has a chance to go national".


    Premium Freeze

    "Newly elected Gov. Charlie Crist has submitted an emergency order that would prevent homeowners insurance companies from seeking new premium hikes for as much as five months. ... The emergency rule would prevent insurers from instituting premium increases before the rate rollback deadline of June 1. It would not affect more than 40 companies with pending rate-change requests. The reductions are the centerpiece of the legislature's plan, which coalesced during a special session this month, to cut premiums by an average of 22 percent statewide, except for customers of Citizens and State Farm, who will receive smaller cuts." "Crist offers freeze of new rate hikes". See also "Crist wants emergency insurance-rate freeze", "Crist proposes emergency rule so that insurance rates don't rise".


    Obama Rising

    "Barack Obama has tapped Teddy Johnston as his Florida Finance director. And with John Kerry opting out of the contest, one of Kerry's top Florida money-raisers, Miami lawyer Kirk Wagar, has jumped onto the Obama campaign." "Obama's Florida fundraising".


    Lethal Injection

    "Execution put under microscope". See also "State Senator May Request Audiotaping Of Executions".

    At least one person doesn't see what the fuss is all about: "Warden: Inmate showed no signs of pain in botched execution".


    Ghouls

    "Miami is planning a big party at the Orange Bowl Stadium with a theme, T-shirts and music. No date has been set. Reason being, everybody is still waiting ... on Cuban President Fidel Castro to die. When he does, Miami will get its party on." "Ghoul Bowl". See also "Miami planning Orange Bowl party after Castro's death".


    Smathers Tribute

    "Former Democratic Sen. George Smathers, who served in the Senate from 1951 to 1969, was remembered as a diplomat and a family man." "300 pay tribute to U.S. senator". See also "Ex-senator's contributions recalled".


    Concealed Weapons

    "Florida allows 410,000 people to conceal weapons in public, but the guns themselves may not be the worst of the state's secrets. The other hidden outrage, now revealed by reporters from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, is that criminals are on the list." "Florida neglects gun threat".


    "Shooting the Messenger"?

    "State officials are questioning the credibility of figures documenting water pollution in South Florida for the past five years, saying that omissions in the way the data was recorded amounted to fraud."

    The state investigation leading to accusations against lab manager Tom White began after a Department of Environmental Protection audit noted that codes giving additional information on data were used rarely. The codes' information could include that numbers were estimated or resulted from outdated samples.

    White, though, has insisted that the data is accurate and legitimate, and shows unacceptably high levels of pollutants in rivers, canals and lakes in South Florida, said Jerry Phillips, a former DEP attorney who now directs the Florida Chapter of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

    The organization, which criticized the DEP in recent years for what it has called lax efforts to enforce environmental laws, is helping White defend himself against charges of fraud and negligence.

    "They're shooting the messenger," Phillips said. "They're saying that the numbers are too awful to be true."
    "State probe imperils lab manager's job".


    Some Call It Terrorism

    "They may be only a few hundred people in a city of almost 400,000, but they give Miami a bad name. They're the Castro-obsessed hard core of the Cuban exile community, and recently they rallied to demand the release of an anti-Castro terrorism suspect."

    The object of their devotion, Luis Posada Carriles, has been accused by Cuban and Venezuelan authorities of conspiring to bomb a Cuban jetliner in Venezuela three decades ago. He has been in U.S. custody for two years on suspicion of illegally entering the country, and is now charged with naturalization fraud and six counts of lying to authorities.

    Scores of people died in the bombing Posada is suspected of plotting. The U.S. government has strong evidence linking Posada to the bombing. That alone should keep him in U.S. custody even if he weren't charged with immigration violations.

    The government has shown a tendency to bow to political pressure from the Cuban exile community, but why should it? Supporters of Posada and his ilk are fringe groups that operate on the margins and usually end up disgracing themselves, as they did recently. The victims of their attack should consider coming forward to press charges.
    "Posada".

    For more about Posada, "convicted terrorist Orlando Bosch" and their ties to BushCo, see this lengthy St. Pete Times piece: "Cuban 'terrorist' arrested in Miami".


    Weasels

    "For years, Florida has prohibited automobile insurance companies from discriminating on the basis of race, income or other factors that have no bearing on a person's trustworthiness. For years, insurance companies have tried to weasel around those restrictions. And they've been successful -- astonishingly so, given the straightforward nature of the anti-discrimination rules." "A logical leap".


    Foley Fallout

    The Miami Herald editorial board: "In refusing last summer to investigate the e-mails that former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley sent to a former congressional page, the FBI ignored its own child-safety guidelines, says a report from the Justice Department's inspector general." "A missed warning".


    Charlie is "Anti-Murder"

    "'As the people's governor, it is my job to keep Floridians safe, and I take that responsibility very seriously,' Crist said."

    The legislation would require offenders convicted of violent felonies who violate terms of their probation to return to jail until a court determines whether they pose a danger to the community.

    The measure, which also gives judges more authority to impose maximum prison sentences for violators considered dangerous, is projected to require prison space for an additional 1,352 inmates and cost $161.8 million during the next three years, with the bulk of that coming in later years.

    Critics said it might impose overly harsh sentences on probationers for minor violations.
    "Crist pushes tougher plan for parole violators". See also "Crist urges funds for act", "Governor pushing murder bill" and "Crist wants his Anti-Murder Act passed and $21.8M to start it.


    Frankness

    "Americans are so jaded about honesty in government that it's easy to forget that some officials still embody the ideal of public service. Hillsborough Clerk of Court Pat Frank called the media Thursday not to ballyhoo an honor or unveil a tax cut but to announce she had found a problem in her office. Clerks had fallen behind in processing real estate records and other civil deeds and the backlog had grown to 12 business days." "True public servant".


    Granholm in Tampa

    The Buzz: "Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is coming to Tampa Feb. 17 for - a city council candidate? Turns out Granholm is sister-in-law of Mary Mulhern, the Democrat running against well-funded Republican Shawn Harrison." "Granholm and Mulhern".


    GOPers "Gone Wild"

    Sorry we missed this Tom Tryon column last week: "Shocking footage from Republican Governors Gone Wild!™".


    "Florida an 'early primary state.'"

    "The Florida Legislature won't convene for another five weeks to consider a bill moving up the state's presidential primary, but Republican contender Sam Brownback is already calling Florida an 'early primary state.'" "Florida in the same breath as Iowa". See also "Hopefuls race for Florida cash faster than ever".

    The Orlando Sentinel thinks the early primary proposal is "A bad idea".

    Meanwhile, "Sen. Clinton expects many return trips to Florida, campaign official says".


    KidCare

    "Lawmakers should put more money into the state's KidCare subsidized health insurance program to get more children signed up, says Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, who plans to make the program one of her priorities in her new job." "Debate begins again over money for KidCare, Sink to push outreach".


The Blog for Monday, January 29, 2007

Is Crist's Simple Denial Enough?

    "Gov. Charlie Crist denied he fathered a child 17 years ago. But some wonder whether he has an ethical duty to prove it." "Is paternity denial by Crist really enough?".


    Early Primary a Bad Idea?

    The Miami Herald editorial board: "Would you be ready to vote for president one year from today? If some Florida lawmakers have their way, the state's presidential primary will be moved up -- way up -- to a date that is seven days after the New Hampshire primary, which currently is scheduled for Jan. 22, 2008. Yet, if those crafty New Englanders see anyone getting ahead of them, they will hold theirs even earlier, which could cause Florida to move up, too." "Bad idea: Moving primary to January".

    Meanwhile, "an unprecedented amount of early organizing has begun in Florida as candidates from both parties try to line up major money brokers such as Republican developer Al Austin of Tampa and Democratic trial lawyer Kirk Wagar of Coconut Grove." "Preparations for Florida's primary already begin".

    Jeremy Wallace points out that "moving the primary could put it on Jan. 29, one year from today."

    The Florida Legislature hasn't voted to move up the state's presidential primary yet, but Republican candidates for the White House are already spending a lot of time in the Sunshine State.

    In the past week, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani was in Sarasota; former New York Gov. George Pataki was in Fort Myers; and U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney both announced they are hiring more Florida supporters for their staffs.

    Florida's swing state appeal in general elections would normally be enough to draw serious interest from the candidates.

    But with the Legislature vowing to move Florida's primary to within seven days of the New Hampshire primary, the candidates are making an even stronger push here.
    "GOP hopefuls keep visiting Florida".


    No Free-Market Solutions This Time

    "Lawmakers say the expansion of Citizens is an aberration, born of the insurance crisis. Lawmakers veered from free-market solutions." "Crisis put GOP out of its element".


    FCAT Follies

    The Daytona Beach News-Journal editorial board: "No standardized test ever satisfies everyone's expectations. Quibbles aside, what those tests do provide is a solid diagnostic tool that allows parents and educators objectively to know where students stand in relation to expectations, and how they could improve. So the problem with the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test isn't the test itself. It's how the test is being used -- not as a diagnostic tool designed primarily to help the student, but as a measure of school and school district performance, and as a tool to punish, reward, humiliate and threaten those schools and districts with ultimatums." "FCAT's failing grade".


    Vision for Central Florida

    "The region's population is projected to double by 2050. Developing the vision and then a blueprint for growth can, even with 7 million residents, make this a place where we and our children still would want to live." "Important next steps".


    Hispanic Turnout in Osceola

    "Orlando Sentinel analysis showed that regionwide, three in 10 Hispanic voters participated in the 2006 election compared with five in 10 non-Hispanic voters." "Turnout is vital".


    "Off with their policies"

    The Palm Beach Post editorial board: "There are two ways of looking at the decision last week by Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio, R-West Miami, to punish the only two - out of 160 - legislators who voted against the insurance bill."

    The first is that Rep. Rubio is a hypocrite. He made a big deal during the special session of saying that he wanted ideas from everyone, including Democrats. Then he bumps Reps. Don Brown, R-Defuniak Springs, and Dennis Ross, R-Lakeland, from leadership positions just because they disagreed.

    The second is: Good riddance. We'll go with that view.

    Last year, under a different speaker, Rep. Brown was the House point man on insurance. He is an insurance agent, but his defenders argued that he brought expertise to the issue. In fact, he brought excessive fondness for the industry that provides his living. Under Rep. Brown's expert "leadership," the Legislature produced a bill designed to push rates higher. Consumers got next to nothing. Rep. Ross, who chaired the Insurance Committee, defended the bill as "a positive first step in providing the incentives and assurance needed by private insurance companies to reenter the state and bring back a competitive, affordable marketplace."
    "Off with their policies".


    No Embargo

    The Tampa Trib argues that "the long, tight embargo of Cuba makes less and less sense with each step Fidel Castro takes toward his grave." "U.S. Must Engage Cuba Today To Foil Tomorrow's Dictator".


    Hill to Visit UFCW in Naples

    "The New York Democrat is trying to gain the support of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, which is holding a breakfast at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Naples Grande hotel, formerly the Registry" "Sen. Clinton to make Naples campaign stop".


    Gun Nuts

    "Paper: Fla. gives gun permits to felons": "Hundreds of criminals were able to obtain concealed weapons permits in Florida because of loopholes, errors and miscommunication, a newspaper reported Sunday.".


    "Florida's Failures" In Higher Education

    The Daytona Beach News-Journal editorial board:

    Ten years ago, when former University Chancellor Charles Reed left Florida to head up California's college system, he warned of a "train wreck" unless state leaders stepped up support for higher education and the then Board of Regents steered universities toward greater collaboration.

    Instead, Florida went in the other direction. Former Gov. Jeb Bush dismantled the Board of Regents and gave university oversight to the State Board of Education. That board, which focused on kindergarten-through-12th grade education, promptly pushed higher-education duties to the side. The result: Legislators were in charge -- and competition reached new levels. Ten universities sought to become top research institutions, with funding based on who won the Legislature's ear. And a new university was added. Not surprisingly, no Florida university has achieved high national distinction as a research institution.

    So give credit to voters, who in 2002, had the wisdom to create a new university oversight board, the Board of Governors.
    "Florida's failures". The Miami Herald editorial board: "The future of higher education in Florida is at a crossroads. Will our children inherit a scattered system of mediocre state universities? Or might they choose from a variety of excellent undergraduate colleges and a few top-notch research institutions? The answers will be shaped by a planning initiative undertaken by the state university system and its board of governors. Florida can't afford to continue the historical pattern of piecemeal growth in an educational system that is vital to the state's future." "Planning for Florida's education future".


    Cotterell

    Bill Cotterell writes that "the just-released annual report of the Department of Corrections is an interesting model of restraint, considering the year Secretary Jim McDonough has experienced." "DOC report packs more of a punch this year".


    Green

    "The first statewide restrictions on fertilizing yards, parks, golf courses, sports fields, cemeteries, subdivision common areas and other nonagricultural grass areas could be adopted by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services in April." "State hopes rules keep lawns, not lakes, green".


    Homeless

    "If nothing else, a census of homeless people living on South Florida streets has for the moment brought needed attention to their plight." "Homeless".


    "It's pretty bad"

    "It's pretty bad when Florida, the fourth-largest state in America, ranks 39th in average voter turnout for the 2002 and 2004 general elections. Likewise when Florida ranks 49th in rates of volunteerism. It's pretty bad when in Florida, according to a poll conducted last year for the Florida Bar, only 59 percent of adults know the three branches of government, and only 46 percent know the meaning of the phrase 'separation of powers.' It's even worse among young people." "Civics".


    "One race per touch-screen page"

    I think lawyers call this a "subsequent remedial repair":

    Voters will get printed-out screen shots in the mail before heading to the polls in March, and will see one race per touch-screen page.

    The changes are in response to problems reported in the November general election, when about 18,000 voters did not register a choice in the 13th Congressional District race, and many voters said they left the polls unsure whether their votes had been counted.
    "One race per page".


    The Insurance Bill

    The Sarasota Herald-Tribune editors: "The reforms, however, don't overcome the conditions that have driven rates upward. Coastal development, escalating property values and vulnerability to a hyperactive pattern of hurricane activity have increased Floridians' -- and their insurers' -- exposure to damage. Building stronger and smarter needs to become part of a long-term strategy to reduce rates and risk. Nevertheless, the actions by the Legislature and Crist were warranted because Florida was spared from hurricanes last year and insurers made record profits following huge increases in premiums." "Rates lower, but risk is high". See also "More insurance reform is still needed".


    Public Records Act

    "Six weeks before the start of another legislative session, a state lawmaker has done the predictable: File an onerous exemption to the state's open records and public meetings law." "Public Records".


    Citizens

    "New Citizens bent on fixing service flaws".


    Changing Direction

    On the education front the Tallahassee Democrat editorial board, in "E for 'edify'", notes the following:

    - "Professional educators around the state have long been urging Florida to move the pendulum back toward education's center, however - toward finding a leader who is more of a visionary and champion of teachers, students and their parents; less of a bureaucratic administrator."

    - The editors "urge the Board of Education to hire a less doctrinaire education commissioner to oversee pre-K through grade 12 only, and Mr. Crist to ensure that higher-education governance is exclusive to the Board of Governors and 11 university boards of trustees."


    Alvarez

    "Blacks voted overwhelmingly against the strong-mayor referendum in Miami-Dade County, while Hispanics strongly supported it. White non-Hispanic voters were divide."

    A Miami Herald analysis showed that heavily Democratic precincts strongly opposed the measure boosting the Republican mayor, while Republican-majority precincts favored it.

    Another interesting factoid: early and absentee voters mostly favored the referendum, while the Election Day vote was split.
    "Political beat".

The Blog for Sunday, January 28, 2007

"Turning Florida Blue" On-line Magazine

    Check out the inaugural issue: "Turning Florida Blue - Crashing the Gate"


    Let the Flip-flopping Begin

    Now that the election is over, "campaign issues have dropped off the table, edited out as the 'Charlie Crist Vision' is rewritten into the 'Vision Document for Governing.' Not on the immediate agenda:"

    The limiting of abortion to cases of rape, incest or to save the mother's life.

    A crackdown on illegal immigration.

    And every pledge to ''emulate Governor Bush.''

    As the new governor prepares to present his first state budget this week, interviews from within and outside the new administration and documents that map Crist's transition from campaign to Capitol show a narrowed vision.
    "Crist keeps a tight agenda (document)". I look forward to seeing Charlie get these promises through the Florida House:
    - Felon rights: Seeks to amend state clemency rules to restore civil rights to felons who complete probation and restitution requirements.

    - Funds $5 million for stem-cell research.

    - Funds $25 million for voting-machine paper trails.
    "Crist plans to roll out his new agenda".


    Exposing the "Jeb!" Spin Machine (2 Months Late)

    "When Office Depot broke ground on a new headquarters complex in November, outgoing Gov. Jeb Bush issued a news release praising the company for creating hundreds of jobs." What Jebbie failed to

    say was perhaps more noteworthy, however:

    - Office Depot was moving less than 5 miles, from Delray Beach to Boca Raton.

    - Florida and Palm Beach County had promised a $15-million incentive package to help pay for the expansion.

    - A real estate firm run by Bush's former business partner, Armando Codina, stands to benefit. That firm is part owner of the land, and it will develop the 28-acre corporate campus and lease it to Office Depot.

    - Office Depot threatened to move its headquarters with 1,750 jobs out of Florida if it didn't get incentives. Yet evidence suggests the company might have chosen Boca Raton anyway.

    - While Office Depot was promising to create headquarters jobs, it eliminated 350 jobs elsewhere in the county. And this month it announced that 75 headquarters jobs will be cut.
    "How business works the system".


    RPOF Split

    "Gov. Charlie Crist scored a win, but a surprisingly narrow one, when his choice for state Republican Party chairman, Jim Greer, won the post in a party meeting Saturday."

    Outgoing Chairwoman Carole Jean Jordan was nominated for re-election, even though Crist had made it clear that Greer, vice mayor of Oviedo in Seminole County and a top supporter of Crist's campaign, was his choice.

    Greer won the post by a 102-89 vote of the Republican Party state executive committee, which includes three delegates from each of Florida's 67 counties. The committee met for a quarterly conference in Orlando this weekend. ...

    Recently, Jordan supporters circulated material attacking Greer among members of the executive committee.
    "Crist's Pick Squeaks By To Lead State GOP". See also "Crist's party choice beats incumbent", "Newcomer wins state GOP chair", "Greer Turns Back Unexpectedly Strong Challenge", "Crist's nominee wins top GOP seat", "He's the GOP king, thankyouverymuch", "GOP elects Crist ally as leader" and "She's Out" ("From the “What was she thinking” department comes Carole Jean Jordan who refused to take a hint Saturday when Gov. ... Jordan wanted another term but Crist wanted Greer and went as far as standing up and making the nomination himself").

    Adam Smith points out that Crist barely avoided a fiasco: "Nearly 300 state Republican activists on Saturday elected Orlando area businessman Jim Greer the new state GOP chairman - but just barely and not without some political intrigue." "7 voters save Crist from political embarrassment".


    Rubio Takes Another Hit

    "Rubio's move stunned many people in the Capitol, especially because it came from someone who says, as Rubio so often does, that the Florida House should be an open and uninhibited forum for ideas and debate." "Speaker's moves leave a bad taste".


    Miami's Poverty in the Spotlight

    The Super Bowl is "offering an opportunity to shine a laser beam on the other Miami: the third-poorest city in the nation, where living wages and affordable housing are out of the reach of many of the residents helping to foot the Super Bowl tab." "Miami's poverty a grim backdrop to Super Bowl glitz".


    Property Taxes

    "Now, after passing a measure last week to overhaul the insurance system, lawmakers say they want to move quickly to stem the growth of property taxes. Lawmakers plan to take up the issue during the legislative session that starts in March and could call a special election this year to ask voters to make tax changes in Florida's Constitution." "State seeks property tax relief for homeowners, businesses".

    Not everyone agrees that the solution lies with modifications of "the Save Our Homes tax break, which caps annual increases in the taxable value of a homesteaded property to 3 percent or the rate of inflation, whichever is less. It’s 'unfair to everyone,' Volusia County Property Appraiser Morgan Gilreath told the committee. 'It doesn’t matter if you’re a homeowner. You’re discriminated against from when you buy your home. If you come in from another state, you’re only equal to someone who comes into the state the same day you did.'" "Home Tax Break Unfair?"

    More: "Begin property tax fight with a salvo of honesty".


    Election Reform?

    "When Florida voters go to the polls in 2008, they could be casting ballots on new machines designed to boost their confidence." "Legislators plan a fresh look at election reform".


    "Jeb Bush is probably not a happy camper right now,"

    Beth Reinhard this morning:

    Democrats are still shellshocked by the way Crist included them in the recent negotiations on insurance reform and adopted some of their big-government solutions. He invited two Democratic lawmakers to join him in a statewide tour Friday when he signed the bill.

    ''It's harder for us to be the opposition party when he keeps doing things we like,'' said state Rep. Dan Gelber of Miami Beach, who attended the bill-signing ceremonies.

    Even Republicans admit that Crist's insistence on lowering insurance rates forced them to become more consumer-friendly and turn away from the business interests favored by the former governor. Many of Bush's recommendations were rejected.
    "'Jeb Bush is probably not a happy camper right now,' said state Rep. David Rivera of Miami."


    Early Chaos

    Frank Cerabino has a point:

    Florida has done enough damage in national elections for one state, and it's borderline pathological to wish that we could do more.

    For some reason, there's a push in Tallahassee to give Florida a bigger role in the upcoming presidential election cycle. Legislators want to move the Florida primary up from March to possibly January, making the state a key prize for any candidate looking to get an early lead in the nomination sweepstakes.

    This is crazy.

    What America needs is a lot less of Florida, perhaps even a bye in 2008, a wise preventive measure worth considering.
    "Push for earlier Florida voting hints primarily at chaos in '08".


    Blue Dogs

    "Q&A with Rep. Allen Boyd: Blue Dog Democrats preach fiscal responsibility".


    Drinkin' the Kool-aid

    Mary Ann Lindley: "Charlie: This governor is the real thing".


    "Save our Ship!"

    "Cloaked in the formality of a government work document, the Century Commission report is actually sending this message to Gov. Charlie Crist, the Legislature and the citizens of Florida: SAVE OUR SHIP! ... The report describes a 'confluence of crises' for Florida unless growth is managed more wisely: much more sprawl, traffic congestion and wildlife habitat destruction, and much less farmland. Combined with the potential impacts of climate change, including a rise in sea level, the consequences of doing little or nothing are almost beyond the imagination - which is why the commission is trying hard not to be ignored." "Call to action".


    "Politics drives Florida's approach to higher education"

    "A landmark assessment of Florida universities released this month characterizes the state's higher education system as mediocre, at best." "A Call To Action To Improve Florida's Higher Education System". See also "Degree of chaos" ("With higher education, Florida is cheap, overwhelmed and discombobulated.")

    Diane Roberts, a former St. Pete Times editorial writer, who teaches English and writing at FSU, writes that although

    Jeb Bush may have finally left Tallahassee, but his education "legacy" (many teachers and students think "curse" would be a better word) lives on in the new rule that high schoolers must choose majors. The FCAT still rules our schools, trampling imagination under its Godzillan tread, though Gov. Charlie Crist has indicated he might make some welcome changes in it. Still, the former governor's constant exhortations to universities that they should shape their curricula to the current "needs" of business has created a climate in which learning is ancillary to commerce. You pay the money, pass the exams and get the degree. Your education is only as good as the market says it is.

    "It's not about liberal education and critical thinking," says Dennis Baron, a former columnist for the Chronicle of Higher Education and commentator on education policy. "It's about training a docile work force."
    "The liberal art of pricing an education".

    On a related note, see yesterday's post "'Free-enterprise' Safe in our Schools".


    Civics

    There is a reason for things like this: a poll showed outgoing Governor "Jeb Bush was showered with a favorable rating by 63 percent of respondents" while at the same time nearly "half of Floridians polled said things were heading in the wrong direction in the state."

    Perhaps there's a solution for disconnects like that: "Put civics back in the classroom". See also "Good citizens know their civics" ("Florida is abysmally failing to educate a ready and motivated citizenry.")

    The Palm Beach Post editors put it this way:

    Besides being a ploy to institute vouchers, overemphasis on the high-stakes test has driven electives and phys ed from the curriculum. Art, foreign languages and history aren't included on the test, yet the state claims that the FCAT can measure overall school quality.

    Sen. Graham probably is right that, under these conditions, civics won't get taught unless civics is on the FCAT. So add it. Then, just maybe, Floridians might learn enough about government and society to elect people who will end FCAT abuse. The sooner civics is on the test, the sooner it won't need to be.
    "Learning from the FCAT".


    Sink Warning

    "Sink warned that homeowners might be shocked when they receive renewal notices because assessments stemming from the 2005 hurricanes could offset the anticipated relief lawmakers tried to provide in the special session that ended last week." "New Insurance Law Has Risks, Sink Warns".


    A Florida Thing

    "Florida has given concealed weapon licenses to hundreds of people who wouldn't have a chance of getting them in most other states because of their criminal histories. Courts have found them responsible for assaults, burglaries, sexual battery, drug possession, child molestation -- even homicide." "In Florida, it's easy to get license to carry gun". See also "Investigation reveals criminal pasts of those toting guns".


    Immigration Reform

    In "Martinez is open to options for illegals" we get a review of where Florida GOPers stand on immigration reform.


    McCain's Florida Folks Outmanuvered

    "The jockeying between supporters of presidential contenders former Gov. Mitt Romney and U.S. Sen. John McCain nearly overshadowed the rivalry between the Greer and Jordan camps in Orlando. "

    Romney's tall, handsome son stunned some top party officials when he showed up and addressed hundreds of activists, vexing McCain supporters who were told presidential campaigns would not have a speaking platform.

    The Romney team held a full-court press. They invited activists to a hospitality suite and brought the son to meetings with party leaders from every county -- all of whom would vote in a straw poll. At the Friday night reception, former party chairman Al Cardenas and U.S. Rep. Tom Feeney walked hin on stage.

    ''My family recognizes the importance of Florida,'' said younger Romney, who spoke even longer than Gov. Crist. "We are excited to spend a lot of time here.''

    McCain supporters fumed. They were told that Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman could not speak on the senator's behalf.

    ''They decided to come whether they were invited or not, and we didn't want to come uninvited,'' said Lew Oliver, chairman of McCain's campaign in Orange County.

    The former Massachusetts governor, who is not as well known as McCain, was determined to have a presence at the gathering. The campaign said it was not promised speaking opportunities but took the initiative.

    ''We were organized, and we brought the son of a presidential candidate, so people let him speak,'' said Sally Bradshaw, a former Bush aide who is advising Romney. ``If you're going to run an effective campaign, you can't take no for an answer.''
    "GOP elects Crist ally as leader".


    See 'Ya

    "Nine days ago, West Palm Beach City Commissioner Jim Exline resigned because he will plead guilty to income tax evasion."

    Exline claims that his resignation is a relief. Yet in March, he was so desperate to keep the $30,000-per-year commission seat - with gold-plated health plan - that he turned over his campaign to Mayor Lois Frankel. Even with the mayor's help, Exline nearly lost to a political unknown.

    Some ex-federal lawmakers express similar feigned liberation. After 13 terms, Republican Clay Shaw lost his Palm Beach-Broward County House seat to Democrat Ron Klein. Bad news? Hardly. As Bloomberg News reported, the 67-year-old Rep. Shaw is itching to pursue his dream of serving on corporate boards. The hours are easy, he said, and you can live anywhere.

    Similarly, other Republicans whose defeats cost their party control of Congress are preparing for a lucrative afterlife. After years of getting by on $166,200 a year - the median wage in the United States is about $34,000 - some will teach, but others will go through the Washington revolving door and become lobbyists. Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, who rarely saw a special interest he couldn't help, told Bloomberg, "I know of only a few cases where members failed to make more than they did as members of Congress."

    How lucky for Exline and Rep. Shaw that they are free from the limitations of the public service jobs they tried so hard to keep. How much luckier for the public.
    "Sour grapes; spoiled whine".


    Greenspace

    "If St. Pete will cooperate, Lake Rogers, once a source of bitter conflict between Hillsborough and Pinellas County, could be transformed into a symbol of inter-county cooperation that preserves open land for the public good." "St. Pete Could Help Hillsborough Complete Unique Natural Corridor".


    Silly

    "The high school class of 2011 must select a subject as a major, but it's unclear whether the state rule will be meaningful." "Key test: Choosing a major".


    Laff Riot

    "Bush spoke for about 25 minutes about what he described as his successes in Florida, including changes in education and healthcare policy and his practice of vetoing 'turkeys' or legislators' pet projects."

    The crowd adored Bush, applauding often and giving him a standing ovation. Afterward, he was mobbed by people who wanted his autograph or to pose for a photograph with him.
    "Jeb makes an appearance in DC".

    "At a time when the conservative movement is looking bereft, humbled by midterm-election defeats and hungering for a presidential candidate to rally around, Jeb Bush delivered yesterday in Washington a resounding endorsement of conservative principles, bringing his audience repeatedly to its feet."
    In his lunchtime remarks to the Conservative Summit, Bush struck every conservative chord, blaming Republicans' defeat in November on the party's abandonment of tenets including limited government and fiscal restraint.

    "Don't take offense personally if I get mad at Congress," the Republican former Florida governor began. "It's important for us to realize we lost, and there are significant reasons that happened, but it isn't because conservatives were rejected. But it's because we rejected the conservative philosophy in this country."

    He added, "If the promise of pork and more programs is the way Republicans think they'll regain the majority, then they've got a problem."
    "Jeb Bush Rallies Conservatives"