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  • Bear hunt, land swaps, electric rates: Florida’s environmental year in review

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    In Florida, the environmental beat during 2025 featured land purchases and development rights, which tied in to immigration efforts, plus the first bear hunt in a decade and a big electric utility rate increase. 

    Fifty-two black bears were “harvested” during the 2025 Florida black bear hunt, the first of its kind in a decade, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission announced this week.

    Members of the FWC  agreed earlier this year to allow hunters to kill 172 black bears within four “bear hunting zones” — 68 in the East Panhandle; 31 in the North; 18 in Central Florida; and 55 in a South hunting area.

    Bear Warriors United tried unsuccessfully to shut down the 23-day hunt, arguing that the FWC relied on outdated data and that the hunt was politically motivated; agency staff had not initially recommended a hunt during a December 2024 presentation about its Florida Black Bear Management Plan.

    But Leon County Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey denied the organization’s request for an injunction. 

    Hunters were allowed to kill bears at game feeding stations, using food to bait the animals. And in 2027 hunters will be allowed use to use dogs to assist them in the hunt.

    The bear population in Florida is estimated at around 4,050. The 2025 hunt was the first since 2015, when the state shut down that hunt at the end of its second day after nearly 300 bears had been killed.

    In 2024, the DeSantis administration proposed building lodges, pickleball courts, golf courses, and other facilities to state parks. In 2025, he signed a bill to outlaw doing any such things in the parks. 

    What came in between those two events was widespread, bipartisan pushback and protest against the idea of building inside of the state’s natural destinations. 

    Earlier this year, lawmakers unanimously supported the State Park Preservation Act. Rep. Peggy Gossett-Seidman, a Republican from Highland Beach, said she received more than 1,500 emails from members of the public following the initial development plan. 

    The law now requires more transparent notification of meetings; in 2024, the state tried to quietly advance the development proposals. Originally, the state gave the public six days’ warning before simultaneous meetings across the state to discuss the proposals. Those meetings were rescheduled amid widespread public concern.

    The 2024 proposal was one of the Phoenix’s Top 10 political developments of that year. 

    Although the DeSantis administration had pushed for development, the governor claimed — after the public pushback — that he’d never seen the proposal. However, DeSantis’ public schedule showed that earlier that year he’d met with the organization involved in the plans. 

    In 2011, former Gov. Rick Scott had attempted to put golf courses in state parks, but after pushback then, too, it was scrapped.

    Guana River land swap

    It started out quietly but opposition grew quickly and got loud.

    The Upland LLC in May pitched the idea of a land swap in an application to the Acquisition and Restoration Council (ARC), a state panel that, among other things, evaluates, selects, and ranks state land acquisition projects and evaluates proposed uses of state-owned conservation land.

    The state would exchange roughly 600 acres in the Guana River Wildlife Management Area in St. Johns County to the developer. In return, the state would get more than 3,000 acres of land across four parcels scattered across Lafayette, Volusia, Osceola, and St. Johns counties.

    The state parcel, managed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, includes a pedestrian trail and is accessible to the public for waterfowl hunting, fishing, paddling, and wildlife viewing. It contains flatwoods, salt and freshwater marshes, wet flatwoods, wet and dry hammock, and scrub. Threatened gopher tortoises and Eastern indigo snakes inhabit the area, according to the application. 

    The land swap, agreed to by the FWC, was quickly included on the May 21 ARC meeting agenda. That gave the public just one week’s notice to oppose the proposal.

    But it was enough.

    Conservation and environmental groups swung into action and St. Johns County residents who opposed the deal circulated a petition. The proposal transcended local politics though, with state and even national leaders coming out against it.

    “Guana Preserve and its beauty, familiarity and serenity is woven into the fabric of our communities and is, indeed, a treasure in northeast Florida. To allow — even enable — this land grab to occur is outrageous and completely contrary to what our community desires. Elected and appointed leaders should vote against this development wolf in sheep’s clothing and preserve this extraordinary natural bounty,” President Donald Trump’s Chief of Staff Susie Wiles told The Tributary. 

    Florida Republican U.S. and gubernatorial hopeful Byron Donalds posted on X, “I stand with the residents of St. Johns County: Guana Preserve is NOT for sale.”

    One day before the ARC meeting, Upland pulled its proposal from the agenda.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis denied any personal role in the proposed land swap.

    FPL rate increases

    The public community came in high in February, asking for a near-$10 billion rate increase for its customers over the next four years. Critics argue that Florida Power & Light also settled high, getting approval in November from Public Service Commission members to increase rates by about $6.9 billion.

    Opponents claim it’s the largest utility rate hike in U.S. history.

    FPL is the state’s largest utility with approximately six million accounts and about 12 million customers. FPL’s parent company, NextEra Energy, is Florida-based and publicly traded. 

    The five-member PSC holds regulatory authority over rates charged for electric, natural gas, telephone, water, and wastewater. The governor appoints PSC members from a list of candidates recommended by the Public Service Commission Nominating Council.

    The months-long debate over the proposed rate hikes could impel the Legislature to change how the PSC operates. Crestview Republican Sen. Don Gaetz pushed for changes during the 2025 session, filing SB 354, but found no support in the House.

    Not dissuaded, Gaetz in October filed SB 126, which already has been approved by the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government.

    Building back better banned under SB 180

    Pinellas County Republican Sen. Nick DiCeglie says the goal of 2025’s SB 180 was to streamline restoration and improve emergency response coordination following major hurricanes.

    But the controversial legislation is the subject of two lawsuits.

    Twenty-five local governments have filed in Florida’s Second Judicial Circuit in Leon County, arguing the new law unconstitutionally infringes on their authority to govern their day-to-day operations.

    The second suit was filed by 1000 Friends of Florida and east Orange County resident Rachel Hildebrand, also in Florida’s Second Judicial Circuit in Leon County.

    Specifically, SB 180 retroactively prevents cities and counties listed in federal disaster declarations for Hurricanes Debby, Helene, and Milton from adopting tougher development rules until October 2027. 

    The ban could extend beyond 2027, though. Another section of the law allows a similar one-year ban to take effect anytime a local government is listed in a federal disaster declaration and lies within 100 miles of a hurricane’s path.

    Signed into law by Gov Ron DeSantis on June 30, SB 180 gives “any person” standing to sue a local government’s amendment, regulation, or development order and, if successful, to receive their attorney fees.

    Local governments have 14 days to repeal any restriction that draws a legal challenge. If a municipality declines, the lawsuit can be filed.

    DeSantis defended the legislation, telling reporters over the summer that it gives homeowners battered by hurricanes the ability to rebuild their homes according to pre-storm building codes.

    “They want to go out and restore their home to what it was like before the storm hits, and the local governments are telling them, ‘You can’t do it. You gotta do something else,’” DeSantis said. “What right do they have to tell you that you can’t rebuild your home? This isn’t California. This is Florida.”

    Destin land purchase

    A piece of land in Destin made headlines this year after the state paid the landowner, a political donor, 10 times more for it than the owner purchased it for nearly 10 years ago. 

    In September, the governor and Cabinet voted to purchase about four acres in Destin without a state-sponsored assessment. Instead, they relied on an appraisal conducted by the seller. 

    The previous landowner purchased the land for about $8 million in 2016 and 2017. The governor and Cabinet purchased it from the landowner for more than $80 million. 

    The land was previously owned by two LLCs, operated by a Louisiana businessman with a history of contributing to Florida politicians, including those locally in Destin. 

    The Legislature, in a last-second budget proposal, made room for the deal. The language lawmakers approved allowed the state to create a park in Okaloosa County without requiring an appraisal.

    Legislative Democrats, in announcing their 2026 session agenda, included a bill asking the state to investigate the deal. 

    Everglades restoration

    This year, the state completed a reservoir on the Caloosahatchee River, a key prevention measure against toxic algae blooms. The project represented a major milestone in Everglades restoration, something the state has focused on for decades. 

    The state budget for the current fiscal year, DeSantis’ second-to-last before term limiting out of office, provides $1.3 billion for protection and restoration in the Everglades, a major increase from the previous year. Of that, approximately $800 million is for restoration.

    DeSantis asked President Donald Trump early in the year for permission to finish the long-going Everglades restoration project by itself, maintaining federal funding through block grants. 

    In July, DeSantis’ administration signed an agreement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to accelerate restoration efforts. His office says the agreement will accelerate the Everglades Agricultural Area Reservoir construction timeline by five years, putting its completion date in 2029.

    Those are some of the bright points of 2025 when it comes to the Florida Everglades.

    But when the state opened a 3,000-bed immigrant holding facility in the Everglades, environmental groups, worried that state may not have followed federal environmental regulations and concerned that the project could harm the unique ecosystem, sued the state.

    The Everglades facility, built of tents and temporary infrastructure, has been the subject of political debate, the Democrats decrying it and the GOP fundraising off of it. 

    It was built at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, advertised with the promise of using wild alligators as a deterrent to escape.

    A judge called for the facility to close by the time September ended, but a federal appellate panel reversed that.

    “He can’t claim to be the Everglades governor on one hand, and then plunk down this mass facility in the heart of the Everglades on the other hand,” attorney Tania Galloni, representing Friends of the Everglades, said in a phone interview with Florida Phoenix earlier this year.

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    Christine Sexton and Jay Waagmeester, Florida Phoenix

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  • Trump vetoes Miccosukee flood protection, citing tribe’s opposition to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

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    Credit: Dave Decker

    The Miccosukee Tribe’s lawsuit contesting an immigration detention facility in the Everglades cost them federally funded flood protection, at least if President Donald Trump gets his way. 

    President Donald Trump on Tuesday vetoed HR 504, federal legislation intended to provide flood protection to Osceola Camp, a Miccosukee residential area in the Everglades. In his veto letter, the president blamed the tribe for having “actively sought to obstruct reasonable immigration policies that the American people decisively voted for when I was elected.”

    “My Administration is committed to preventing American taxpayers from funding projects for special interests, especially those that are unaligned with my Administration’s policy of removing violent criminal illegal aliens from the country,” Trump wrote. 

    The tribe is part of a lawsuit against the state, claiming planners behind the immigration detention facility, also dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz,” failed to follow federal environmental regulations in constructing the 3,000-bed facility. 

    Rep. Carlos Gimenez, a Republican from Miami, sponsored the bill, the Miccosukee Reserved Area Amendments Act, passed by both chambers of Congress via voice votes. 

    The bill called upon the Secretary of the Interior and the tribe “to take appropriate actions to safeguard structures within the Osceola Camp from flooding events.”

    The Osceola Camp in the Everglades is a residential area for the Miccosukee tribe but not part of the federally reserved area for the tribe.

    The bill, introduced nearly a year ago, four days before Trump’s second term began, also would’ve expanded the Miccosukee Reserved Area to include the Osceola Camp.

    Gimenez’s office said the bill would help with “strengthening the Tribe’s governance and enhancing infrastructure within the community.”

    “This bipartisan legislation ensures that the Miccosukee tribe has the legal authority to manage, protect, and preserve their land, and continue their traditional way of life,” Gimenez said on the House floor in July, going on to say the bill “is about fairness and conservation.”

    Attorney General James Uthmeier, a Republican appointed by Gov. Ron DeSantis and key promoter of the detention facility, welcomed Trump’s veto. 

    “Ending the massive cost of taxpayer handouts and restoring fiscal sanity is vital to economic growth and the fiscal health of the Nation. This principle carries especially heavy weight here; it is not the Federal Government’s responsibility to pay to fix problems in an area that the Tribe has never been authorized to occupy,” Trump wrote. 

    The bill does not have a Congressional Budget Office cost estimate.

    At the same time, Trump announced he had vetoed HR 131, Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act. That measure, sponsored by Rep. Lauren Boebert, a Colorado Republican, addressed federal support for a water pipeline in Colorado.

    Colorado Newsline, a Phoenix affiliate, reported:

    “Trump’s veto, the first of his second term, was roundly criticized by Colorado Democrats as another act of retaliation against the state for its ongoing incarceration of former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, who was convicted on state charges related to breaking into the county’s voting machines to prove unfounded claims of widespread election fraud in 2020.

    “The veto followed the administration’s announcement earlier this month that it would dismantle Boulder’s National Center for Atmospheric Research, and its denial of two disaster declaration requests that would have opened up federal funding to support wildfire and flood recovery in the state.”


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    Fifty-two black bears were “harvested” during the 2025 Florida black bear hunt, the first of its kind in a decade, FWC announced this week.

    He blamed the tribe for having “actively sought to obstruct reasonable immigration policies that the American people decisively voted for when I was elected.”

    According to Travel and Tour World magazine, Miami, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa and the Florida Keys are among the top national destinations.



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    Jay Waagmeester, Florida Phoenix
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  • Canadians are still staying away from Florida, but tourism increased overall

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    Credit: Shutterstock

    Florida posted a slight increase in tourism during the third quarter of 2025 from a year earlier, even as Canadians continued to back off on travel to the U.S.

    Visit Florida estimated 34.339 million people traveled to the state between the start of July and end of September, up from 34.239 million during the same period in 2024, according to figures posted Wednesday on the state tourism-marketing agency’s website.

    “New data just released from @VisitFlorida shows tourism in Florida for Q3 2025 exceeded Q3 2024,” Visit Florida President and CEO Bryan Griffin posted on X. “2024 was a record-breaking year for Florida, & tourism saved each of Florida’s households an estimated $2,000 in taxes that (year). We’re looking forward to a strong 2026. Happy New Year!”

    This year’s total was the most for a third quarter — generally considered one of the slower periods for Florida — since 2022, when the marketing agency was hyper-focused on drawing people from other states because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    People from other states accounted for 31.448 million visitors during this year’s third quarter, up from 31.373 million during the third quarter of 2024.

    According to Travel and Tour World magazine, Miami, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa and the Florida Keys are among the top national destinations, drawing more domestic travelers through “luxury, family-friendly attractions, and year-round appeal.”

    Meanwhile, 2.343 million overseas travelers visited Florida during the quarter, up from 2.27 million in 2024. This year was the best third-quarter for overseas visitors since 2019, the year before the pandemic, when an estimated 2.5 million overseas travelers made their way to Florida.

    Florida, however, continued to struggle to attract Canadian visitors amid tensions between the U.S. and Canada. Visit Florida estimated the state had 507,000 Canadian visitors during the quarter, down from 597,000 in the third quarter of 2024. The total is also the lowest for any quarter since the fourth quarter of 2021, when just 275,000 Canadians made their way to Florida.

    Before the pandemic the third-quarter high for Canadians was 703,000 visitors in 2019.

    During the first nine months of 2025, Florida totaled 109.782 million visitors, 0.1 percent more than in the same period of 2024. Domestic travel was up 0.1 percent, overseas travel increased 4.5 percent, while Canadian travel was down 15.5 percent.

    Canadians have been canceling vacations in the U.S. because of President Donald Trump’s rhetoric and tariffs aimed toward their country, and it didn’t appear the trend was changing as the fourth quarter started.

    Statistic Canada, the nation’s statistical office, said last week that U.S. residents traveling to Canada in October was up 3 percent from a year earlier, yet Canadian-residents crossing the border was down 26.3 percent year over year. Meanwhile, Canada saw overseas visitors increase 11.7 percent in the same month-to-month comparison, with Canadians traveling overseas up 9.1 percent.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis has recommended legislators maintain funding at $80 million for Visit Florida in the 2026-2027 fiscal year, which will start July 1. Lawmakers will consider the request during the legislative session that will start Jan. 13.


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    Fifty-two black bears were “harvested” during the 2025 Florida black bear hunt, the first of its kind in a decade, FWC announced this week.

    He blamed the tribe for having “actively sought to obstruct reasonable immigration policies that the American people decisively voted for when I was elected.”

    According to Travel and Tour World magazine, Miami, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa and the Florida Keys are among the top national destinations.



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    Jim Turner, News Service of Florida
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  • Top Tables: The best new restaurants in Orlando

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    June Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    Let’s face it, after an extraordinary 2024 when tasting menu giants Ômo by Jînt and Sorekara — along with future perennial stalwarts Coro, Smokemade Meats, Mosonori and Mills Market — lent this city a rarefied credibility, living up to last year’s openings was going to be a next-to-impossible task. In fact, 2025 stood out for its numerous, and notable, closures like 310 Park South, Blu on the Avenue, Hanamizuki Japanese Restaurant, Chez Vincent, Little Saigon, Soco and Bar Kada, to name just a few. But the notables that did open wowed, with more than a few firmly ensconcing Orlando as a serious food city of the South. Here, then, are the very best restaurants to have opened in 2025.

    No. 1: June
    Opened July
    The contemporary Yucatecan restaurant in the corazón of Thornton Park is charged with a cosmopolitan CDMX pulse, but it’s the verve of chefs Jason Campbell and Nick Grecco that sustains June’s inimitable energy. The depth of detail and technique the pair exhibit, be it in the sextet of salsas served with a rustic guac finished with herb oil, or drippy-lush, carnitas-style duck confit cooked with condensed milk, Mexican Coke and chilies à la Enrique Olvera then seared and roasted on the wood-fired grill, elevate the duo into the pantheon of Orlando’s most gifted culinarians. Most dishes, in fact, are licked by the flames of Florida oak, notably a fillet of Hawaiian kanpachi set in a pool of blood-red guajillo-tomato butter; chili-buttered lump crab on tostadas slicked with brown butter aioli, and an absolutely bonkers bone-out short rib set in a demi-glace fortified with ancho chiles, black vinegar and more south-of-the-border cola. Veg options like sweet potatoes with miso mole and butter-braised cabbage with onion soubise foam are anything but afterthoughts. When Campbell and Grecco immerse themselves in live-fire cooking at the soon-to-open Eastwood in Mills 50, expect it to be on this list next year. (700 E. Washington St., juneorlando.com; review)

    Sparrow Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 2: Sparrow
    Opened May
    Jason and Sue Chin can do no wrong. The 2025 James Beard Award finalists for Outstanding Restaurateur opened not one but two restaurants this year, both of which made this list. Sparrow places Reyes Mezcaleria executive chef Wendy Lopez and beverage director Lorena Castro front and center in a Euro-inspired wine bar with a mid-mod manner meshed with a sultry, after-dark aesthetic. The menu glitters with dishes drawing on French, Italian, Portuguese and, of course, Spanish influences. Of note: a sole meuniĂšre prepared as Escoffier intended, an earthy mushroom pĂątĂ© splashed with the sweetness of Madeira, and house-made lumache pasta smothered in vodka sauce and spiked with nduja and Calabrian chili. Castro’s curated Spanish-leaning wine and cocktail is just as striking and, much like Sparrow’s fare, gives you wings. (807 N. Orange Ave., sparroworlando.com; review)

    No. 3: Osteria Ester
    Opened December
    Osprey chef Michael Cooper helms this latest concept from Jason and Sue Chin that pays tribute to Cooper’s grandmother with studied and technically proficient riffs on Italian-American comfort fare. His bone-in veal chop parmigiana is the stuff a cheese-filled dream is made of, one that ends with an equally fanciful butterscotch budino. Just as noteworthy as the kitchen’s seductive creations is the alluring interior revamp of the former Soco space. Also attractive: the price point of Italian varietals curated by Lorena Castro. Cocktails, like the cacio e pepe 50/50, are seriously fun. (629 E. Central Blvd., osteriaester.com)

    Nuri’s Tavern Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 4: Nuri’s Tavern
    Opened February
    Chefs Jason Campbell and Nick Grecco, the duo behind the culinary chemistry at June, spent more than two months and many sleepless nights experimenting and tinkering with a recipe to perfect their tavern-style pizza. The result: thin, crackly-crusted pies offered in “party cut” 12-inch rounds — “so that customers can have a beer in one hand and a square in the other without having to put either down,” says Campbell. The vodka pie, as well as the pepperoni and jalapeño with sweet-sticky chili crisp, are can’t-miss, but don’t pass on the incredible wings, chopped salad or crispy eggplant. “It’s modern Pizza Hut for millennials,” says a friend of mine. The place is festooned with knickknacks and memorabilia, so don’t lose sight of the sweet ending — soft serve. (63 E. Pine St., nuristavern.com; review)

    No. 5: Slap! Hand-Ripped Noodles
    Opened November
    Slap! does just that. Orlando’s newest noodle house features a lantern-filled room from whence hand-ripped noodles of the biang biang variety are whacked and thwacked. Noodle bowls are heaped with enough chili crisp to choke David Chang, prior to a pour of hot oil. Whether it’s the signature three-way chili slap noodles with the short rib add-on or the vegetarian option, there are no bad choices here. More good choices: skewers of crispy beef and chicken gizzards; crispy, meat-filled pancakes; and the best chili oil beef and onion dumplings. (6532 Carrier Drive,  instagram.com/slap.noodles.usa)

    Corner Chophouse Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 6: Corner Chophouse
    Opened September
    The most prominent corner in Hannibal Square was snagged by one of the South’s most prominent restaurant groups earlier this year — Indigo Road Hospitality, led by four-time James Beard Award nominee Steve Palmer. This brand-new concept, a Prohibition Era-styled chophouse, fires budget-busting USDA Prime cuts and seafood selections befitting a high-end steakhouse. But sides like bone marrow dusted with Aleppo pepper, smoked beef tartare with black garlic and a beautifully presented bluefin tuna crudo, augment the beefed-up menu. The chocolate cake slice is as scrummy as it is photogenic. (558 W. New England Ave., Winter Park, cornerchophouse.com; review)

    Lima 1535 Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 7: Lima 1535
    Opened August
    That Lima 1535 is the only local restaurant to serve the rarely found rocoto relleno makes it deserving of being on this list alone, but there’s so much more than the stuffed Andean pepper this fetching Lake Underhill Peruvian restaurant brings to the table. For instance: lomo saltado with wok-fired alpaca, herb-marinated grilled octopus served on a tabletop charcoal burner and beefy tostones tarts. The decor has been thoughtfully designed, right down to the gorgeous, and heavy, stone tableware. (7347 Lake Underhill Road, lima1535.com; review)

    Zen Dumpling Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 8: Zen Dumpling
    Opened February
    Given the spate of joints specializing in soup-filled, steamed and pan-fried meat pockets, Orlando may as well just start calling itself Dumpling City. This Jacksonville-based outfit’s show kitchen where dumplings are prepped gives off Din Tai Fung vibes, as do the impeccably crafted xiaolongbao, from their delicate wrappers right down to the burst of flavorful broth. “Tapas” items like beef pancake rolls and wok-fired noodle dishes are also worth exploring. A second location in Altamonte Springs opened in December. (423 N. Alafaya Trail, zendumplings.com; review)

    Talay

    No. 9: Talay
    Opened March
    Riding on the coattails of the highly lauded Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient Isan Zaap, this NoDo looker presents a menu of refined, gorgeously plated, seafood-leaning Thai fare from an equally gorgeous space. It’s a unique take on Thai cuisine not before seen in the city and exemplified by the hor mok talay and its mix of seafood in red curry custard and coconut milk served in a coconut. A corridor projecting holographic waves washing over the floor leads the way to watering hole Noir Bar, a moody speakeasy connected to the restaurant. (861 N. Orange Ave., talayorlando.com; review)

    Rawsha Mediterranean Cuisine Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    No. 10: Rawsha Mediterranean Cuisine
    Opened March
    Orlando’s first Iraqi restaurant has become a draw for its ridiculously succulent “Iraqi kebab” fashioned from lamb, lamb fat and a secret blend of baharat. A mixed grill highlighted by flavor-packed chicken kofta is another must-order, as are the “crispy” shawarma and Baghdadi wings. Hummus here veers toward the creamier side, while baba ghanoush isn’t heavy on the smoke. The beverage of choice with Rawsha’s heady eats: calming cardamom tea. (8956 Turkey Lake Road, rawshamediterraneancuisine.com; review)

    a pizza sits next to a turntable
    Perla’s Pizza Credit: Matt Keller Lehman

    Honorable Mention: Perla’s Pizza
    Opened September
    The second go-round of Michael Collantes’ nonconformist pie house was resuscitated and reanimated in a new location (Winter Park) with a new vibe, but with the same brand of individualist takes on pizza that made Perla’s v.1.0 such a hit. What Collantes calls “Florida Man pizzas” get eccentric combinations of topping like bananas, kimchi, Takis, corn and pineapple jam. Perla’s v2.0 adds the thumping vibe of a vinyl record bar to the pie house experience. (959 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park, perlaspizzafl.com; review)

    Other notable 2025 openings: 

    A Gourmet Chinese Cuisine — renovated interior and revamped “Chuan Lu Garden” fare

    Black Coffee-CafĂ© Negro Bistro — Latin-ish concept by Univision personality Jose “El Negro” Figueroa

    Bourbon Steak — chi-chi chophouse by celebrated celeb chef Michael Mina

    The Burger Vault — superb, flame-broiled, all-halal better burgers

    The Chapman — Florida-centric fare that taps into the history of Winter Park

    Chayhana — bringing the delights of Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to Altamonte

    Cupid’s Hot Dogs — all-beef wieners and arepas in Longwood

    Daniel Gabor’s Alpine Bar & Grill — German and alpine comfort staples in Ocoee

    Grappolo Cucina — fresh-made pastas, Neapolitan pizzas and handmade dolci on Park Avenue

    Gyukatsu Rose — flash-fried beef cutlets self-seared tableside

    Imperial on Park — wine, beer, cocktails and a food menu from the former chef of Dexter’s Thornton Park 

    Jala — Indian fine dining off Park Avenue

    Ji Bei Chuan — rice noodles and ramen in the tourist sector

    H&H Brazilian Steakhouse — churrascaria by way of Beverly Hills

    Leiah — dolled-up tasting menu fare on the ground floor of the Hilton Garden Inn

    Lorelei Wine Bar — Riviera-styled wine bar from the pair behind Death in the Afternoon and Suffering Bastard

    Luca Turci — a credible roster of serious Italian fare

    Mirchi Indian Street Food — a fusion of flamboyance, flavor and straight fire

    Moa Kai Hawaiian Diner — tapping into Hawaiian food and culture

    Outpost Neighborhood Tavern — a fab place for dining, drinks, drag and sports

    Pig Floyd’s Urban BBQ — “Bori-Chino” barbecue comes to Winter Park

    Pho Bar — signature homemade pho with noodles made daily from scratch

    Southern Fowl — breakfast and lunch fare from Va Propst

    Sushi Izuki — a modern meets traditional omakase house

    Tamale Co. Modern Mexican Kitchen — hand-crafted tamales and modern Mexican street fare


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    Faiyaz Kara
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  • 15 new restaurants coming to Orlando in 2026

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    We can’t say we know what to expect out of 2026, but what we can bet on is some new highly anticipated eateries popping up around town. Orlando in the new year will welcome NYC-famous bagel shops, returning Jack in the Box locations, kappo-style dining, pickleball eats and more.

    Here’s a look at 15 of the new restaurants we know are coming to town in the new year.  

    The Reverie
    533 W. New England Ave., Winter Park
    The Reverie will take over both Chez Vincent and Hannibal’s Lounge spaces and present “refined yet approachable” cuisine, along with a curated beverage program highlighting classic cocktails with seasonal variations and a “thoughtful” wine list based on New World and Old World vintages. A “vibrant” dining room and bar will incorporate “warm textures,” courtesy of Michael Wenrich Architects.
    Credit: courtesy image
    Kappo Tsan
    11815 Glass House Lane, Orlando
    For nearly three years, David Tsan has been cutting fine figures at Norigami, his eight-seat sushi counter inside Winter Garden’s Plant Street Market. Now the 36-year-old Taiwan-born chef is partnering with James Beard Award-nominated restaurateurs Johnny and Jimmy Tung to open a full-fledged restaurant specializing in kappo-style dining. It will present sushi and cooked dishes in both multicourse and à la carte formats. Its style will fall somewhere between the formal artistry of kaiseki and the casual spirit of an izakaya, allowing Tsan to showcase his culinary journey to guests. Credit: via Chef David Tsan
    Lake Eola Food Hall
    150 Central Blvd., Orlando
    Eola Food Hall, the two-story venue across the street from the downtown Orlando Public Library, is on target for an April 2026 opening. The 15,000-square-foot space will house 10 vendors, a “small fine dining restaurant,” a wine room/speakeasy and a cocktail bar, not to mention panoramic, floor-to-ceiling views of Lake Eola Park. Credit: Image via Eola Food Hall
    Knights Curry Express
    11565 University Blvd., Orlando
    Knights Curry Express, an all-halal, build-your-own curry bowl joint, will move into the old Hummus House space in the University Plaza in January.
    Jack in the Box
    5324 S. John Young Parkway, Orlando
    California burger chain Jack in the Box announced in 2024 plans for a whopping 10 new locations in Florida, the first time the chain will call the Sunshine State home in more than 30 years. And one of those locations is set to be right here in Orlando. Credit: Shutterstock
    O-Ku Sushi
    1311 Minnesota Ave., Orlando
    On the heels of opening Corner Chophouse in Hannibal Square, Indigo Road Hospitality Group will open its O-Ku Sushi concept in Minnesota Row, a mixed-use development taking over the Winter Park Business Center. Look for it to open next spring.
    Credit: O-Ku Charleston/Facebook
    Terra Modern American
    434 Orange Ave., Orlando
    Look for Terra, a restaurant/lobby bar inside the Society high rise downtown, to open this February. The concept by Thriving Hospitality (Lamp & Shade, Thrive, The Packwoods) will feature composed New American dishes by chef Ryan Stewart. Terra will serve breakfast, lunch and dinner. Credit: Terra Modern American/Facebook
    Pomelo
    1632 N. Mills Ave., Orlando
    Top Chef Season 3 champ Hung Huynh will showcase at his Mills Park venue Pomelo in spring of 2026. It’ll be infused with Southeast Asian flavors and offer a menu of shareable plates and live-fire eats. Credit: Bento Group
    Hamlin House
    231 W. Grant St., Orlando
    Orlando is getting a bougie new pickleball and social club concept in SoDo. Hamlin House, owned by the DeVos family, will be a 28,000-square-foot facility with three indoor courts and four outdoor courts (two covered and two not), in addition to a family room, full-service restaurant, café and outdoor patio. Chef John Fraser and his team curated the menu for the restaurant, which will be open for lunch and dinner. The café will serve all-day bites, smoothies and coffee. Credit: Hamlin House
    Cowboy Curry
    1110 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    After a series of pop-ups and trial runs inside Mills Market, Cowboy Curry, the Japanese beef curry house by Sorekara chef William Shen, is now in soft opening mode and will officially open in 2026. The spot will specialize in scratch-made Japanese curry. Credit: via Mills Market
    Harlow Grove
    186 S. Main St., Winter Garden
    Look for Harlow Grove, a two-story restaurant space billed as Winter Garden’s “premier full-service restaurant and lounge,” to open this fall in the Smith & Main complex. The restaurant will comprise a “dynamic” first-floor lounge, an upstairs dining room and a veranda terrace under the shade of a century-old oak tree. Credit: via Smith & Main/Google Maps
    Jiang’s Kitchen
    27 E. Robinson St., Orlando
    Look for dumpling house Jiang’s Kitchen to open downtown at 27 E. Robinson St. early next year. Owner Eric Jiang will also open Fan Hwa, a Chinese dessert and bao shop, at 709 N. Mills Ave. No opening date has been announced. This summer, Jiang opened Sushi Izuki, an omakase house in O-Town West.
    PopUp Bagels
    646 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park
    Cult-followed bagel chain PopUp Bagels will now find a new home in Central Florida, right around the corner in Winter Park. Touting the mantra “not famous but known,” the Connecticut-based concept began as a humble locals-only project that has launched into a Northeastern metropolitan icon. PopUp Bagels serves its bagels whole, not sliced, and offers a rotating cast of cream cheese flavors for dipping, not spreading.  Credit: via PopUp Bagels/instagram
    Fat Rosie’s Taco and Tequila Bar
    749 N. Alafaya Trail, Orlando
    Look for Chicago chain Fat Rosie’s Taco & Tequila Bar to open an Orlando location at 749 N. Alafaya Trail early next year. The festive restaurant specializes in scratch-made tacos, fajitas and a three-pound “El Patron Gordo” burrito. Credit: Fat Rosie’s Taco and Tequila Bar/Facebook
    Little Sister Dumpling
    713 N. Mills Ave., Orlando
    Little Sister Dumpling, a fast-casual operation offering a wide variety of dumplings from classics to modern twists to vegan options, will open next door to Tiger Sugar in 2026. Credit: Google Maps



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    Faiyaz Kara and Chloe Greenberg
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  • AI ‘Bill of Rights’ filed in the Florida Senate

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    A leading Senate Republican filed a lengthy bill Monday to enact Gov. Ron DeSantis’s proposed “Artificial Intelligence Bill of Rights.”

    Sponsored by Sen. Tom Leek, a Republican from Port Orange, SB 482 would ban minors from access artificial intelligence chatbot accounts. The bill also enumerates Florida residents’ powers when it comes to AI including: 

    Attempts to contact Leek for this story were unsuccessful.

    The bill comes as the governor has made AI policies — from cracking down on its growth to limiting access to sexual AI chatbots to restricting growth of data centers — a priority for the coming 2026 legislative session. 

    “We cannot turn it all over to machines and think it’s going to work out great in the end,” DeSantis said during a press conference earlier this month from The Villages, where he was joined by an Orlando mom who lost her son to suicide after an AI chatbot encouraged him to “come home.”

    “I really fear that if this is not addressed in an intelligent and proper way, it could set off an age of darkness and deceit,” DeSantis added.

    SB 482 bill does not limit new AI centers but it does go beyond establishing basic rights concerning the technology. 

    The legislation would ban government entities, beginning July 1, 2026, from entering into any contract with any entity providing AI unless the company signs an affidavit affirming it is not owned by a “foreign country of concern.” 

    A government entity cannot enter into a contract for artificial intelligence technology, software, or products, if the technology is owned by a government of a “foreign country of concern,” such a country holds a controlling interest in the AI company, or a the provider is organized under the laws of or has its principal place of business in such a country.

    The bill would provide definitions for “artificial intelligence,” “bot,” and “companion chatbot” and make clear that a chatbot used for a video game, or that functions as voice command and speaker, in customer service, or a business’s operational purposes do not qualify as companion chatbots.

    The bill would ban companion chatbox platforms from allowing people under age 18 to enter into contracts and becoming accountholders with the company.

    Parents of minors could consent to their children joining the platform but the legislation requires that the consenting parent receive all copies of interactions between the minor and the companion chatbot. The bill would mandate that consenting parents and guardians be allowed to limit the amount of time spent with the chatbot each day as well as days of the week and the times of the day that interactions could occur.

    Companion chatbot platforms are required to terminate minors’ accounts within 10 days if requested by the consenting parent or guardian or within five days if requested by the minor accountholder.

    The bill changes the rules for accounts owned by minors, too. For instance, with respect to minors’ accounts, SB 248 would require companion chatbot platforms to tell users they are interacting with artificial intelligence.

    Additionally, the platforms must at the start of interactions — and at least once every hour during continuing interactions — remind the minors user that they are interacting with AI and to also take a break.

    The bill would require companion chatbot platforms to “institute reasonable measures” to ensure the AI is not producing or sharing materials harmful to minors.

    A companion chatbot platform that knowingly or recklessly violates the law could be sued. The bill requires that a civil suit be filed within one year after the alleged violation. Injured minors could receive up to $10,000 in damages. The companies could also be required to pay court fees and the minor’s attorney’s fees.

    The Department of Legal Affairs, led by Attorney General James Uthmeier, would hold enforcement authority and collect civil penalties of up to $50,000 per violation if the department deems the chatbot platform’s failure to comply reflects a consistent pattern of reckless behavior.

    The bill would provide protection for residents of all ages, though, and not just minors, requiring that all users be told at the beginning of an interaction and at least every hour that they are not interacting with a person. 

    The department would gain authority to take action against platforms for deceptive or unfair trade practices or acts and collect civil penalties of $50,000 per violation.  

    And chatbot platforms that don’t de-identify users’ personal information and then sell the data could also be hit for deceptive or unfair trade practices or acts and face $50,000 civil penalties per violation.

    There was no House sponsor as of this publication and the freshly filed bill still had not been referred to any Senate committees for hearings. 

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    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix

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  • The most bizarre things that happened in Orlando this year

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    This year was one filled with puzzling headlines both on big and small scales, and Orlando was definitely not exempt. Ranging from silly animal sightings to downright egregious political attacks, Central Florida contributed its fair share of unhinged news.

    From alligator wrestling to flying cars to scuba diver robbers, here are the most bizarre stories that Orlando Weekly published this year. 

    Credit: Shutterstock

    A woman drowned her dog in Orlando airport bathroom, and then the police lost her
    An arrest affidavit said Alison Lawrence “is believed to have taken extreme and tragic action by killing the dog” after she was denied boarding her 9-year-old miniature schnauzer named Tywinn because she lacked the proper paperwork. When deputies later went to Lawrence’s home to arrest her, she was not there. A neighbor told them she no longer lives at the location.

    Credit: J.D. Casto

    DeSantis erased “LGBTQ and Hispanic communities” from Pulse remembrance statement
    One day before the nine-year anniversary of the Pulse Nightclub shooting, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis directed flags to be flown at half-staff in remembrance. His statement, however, omitted mention of LGBTQ and Hispanic communities, two groups that made up most of the victims.

    Credit: Orange County Comptroller’s Office

    Visit Orlando spent $75K of taxpayer funds on lavish NYC dinner
    The dinner, hosted at New York restaurant The Musket Room, took place in May 2023, according to a
    blog post published by the Michelin Guide. Forty guests, including Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, were invited to attend a dinner featuring chefs from Capa, a Michelin-starred steakhouse located in the Disney-adjacent Four Seasons hotel.

    Credit: via Gov. Ron DeSantis/X

    DeSantis said he wants to test flying cars in Central Florida
    After recently admitting he was “mildly excited” about the effort to reduce congestion along the I-4 corridor, the governor said Florida will first try to attract the growing technology to Polk County.
    While few details were released, DeSantis in October announced plans for an aerial test bed at the SunTrax facility.

    Credit: New College of Florida/X

    New College launched effort to erect a bronze statue of Charlie Kirk
    In a move to honor the late right-wing conservative activist Charlie Kirk, New College of Florida announced plans in September to commission a bronze statue for its Sarasota campus. Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, was shot and killed during a speaking event at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10.

    The initial design, depicted in an AI-generated image shared on social media, shows Kirk seated at a table with a microphone in hand, gesturing while “speaking” to three empty chairs. What could possibly go wrong at this prank photo-op setup?

    Credit: Photo by J.D. Casto

    Florida Highway Patrol arrested people for “aggressively chalking” over Pulse crosswalk
    A Florida Highway Patrol officer arrested two people in November for allegedly “defacing” the formerly rainbow-colored crosswalk outside Orlando’s Pulse nightclub — the latest in a string of questionable arrests at the time.

    According to court records, on Nov. 23, 28-year-old James Houchins and 29-year-old Austin “Bubba” Trahan were caught on video “aggressively” chalking the word “Resist” onto the crosswalk, which is owned and maintained by the state Department of Transportation. 

    Credit: Orlando Police Department/X

    A swan stopped traffic, then waddled across a busy Orlando highway
    If you honked your car horn on the 408 on this March Friday, you might have gotten an especially wild honk back.

    Credit: SpaceX/X

    Debris from Elon Musk’s SpaceX launch grounded Orlando flights
    MCO issued a ground stop declaration just after SpaceX launched its largest rocket, Starship, on its eighth test flight from its base in Boca Chica, Texas.

    Just minutes after launch, the ship spun out of control, exploded and lost contact with SpaceX mission control. Debris from the rocket landed in the Atlantic Ocean.

    Credit: J.D. Casto

    DeSantis called a crosswalk outside a mass shooting memorial “political”
    A day after the state quietly removed a rainbow crosswalk outside of the site of a gay nightclub mass shooting that killed 49 people, DeSantis in August took to his X account to call the strip of road “political.”

    “We will not allow our state roads to be commandeered for political purposes,” the governor wrote.

    Credit: Shutterstock

    UCF received threats that “directly targeted” Black students
    Several Historically Black Colleges and Universities, plus UCF, said in September they received threats targeting Black students and went under lockdown. 

    An email sent to students from UCF said “threats of violence like this seek to create fear and division, and they have no place at UCF. But let us be clear: Violence and threats of violence are never tolerated.”

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Man in scuba gear robbed Disney restaurant, then swam away
    Disney Springs restaurant Paddlefish, which is shaped like a steamboat, was robbed in September by someone who swam up dressed in goggles and a wetsuit.

    He swam to the restaurant, stole thousands of dollars, put his gear back on, jumped into the lake again and swam away, OCSO reported.

    Credit: via Lake County Sheriff’s Office/Facebook

    A cop wrestled an alligator in someone’s backyard
    Two deputies followed a trespassing alligator from a home’s front porch to the backyard, which the gator got into by ramming open a fence attached to the house. 

    The officers are seen in a video securing the alligator with rope before one wrestles the animal down and mounts it. Submission!

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Woman sues SeaWorld Orlando after she says a duck hit her in the face on ride
    According to the lawsuit, filed Monday, the duck struck Martin in the face, “causing loss of consciousness and personal injury.”

    The suit alleges that SeaWorld failed to “maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition by negligently failing to correct a dangerous situation” that the park “either knew or should have known about.” Martin’s attorney also argues the park did not warn her about the potential risk of bird strikes before riding.

    Credit: Google Maps

    Orlando bar owner and his partner indicted on multiple child pornography charges
    Richard Kowalczyk, former owner of Southern Nights Orlando and Tampa, and his partner, Eric Patrick, were indicted on charges of conspiracy to entice a minor, attempted coercion and enticement of a minor, attempted coercion and enticement of a minor, two counts of receipt of child pornography and possession of child pornography. Patrick has been charged with coercion and enticement of a minor and distribution of child pornography. Both men are awaiting trial, and are living in separate residences with third-party custodians under pretrial release.

    The January indictment said Kowalczyk participated in conversations on private messaging platform Telegram that went back as far as 2019. The “graphic exchanges” found on Kowalczyk’s phone during the investigation reportedly included images and videos featuring minors suspected to be as young as 7 years old.

    Ownership was quickly transferred and the bars no longer have ties to the couple. 

    Credit: Shutterstock

    Campbell’s VP was exposed for saying soup is bioengineered ‘sh-t for poor people’ — and then James Uthmeier got involved
    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said Tuesday the state’s Consumer Protection division is launching an investigation into canned soup company Campbell’s use of lab-grown meat. 

    The announcement comes as a former Campbell’s employee launches legal action against the company following a meeting with the vice president that turned into an hour-long rant mocking “poor people,” calling Indian employees “idiots,” admitting to working while high on edibles, and claiming Campbell’s uses bioengineered meat.

    Credit: Screenshot via DeSantis Facebook

    Florida announced plans to gut vaccine mandates for kids
    Florida’s anti-vax surgeon general Joseph Ladapo in September announced plans to get rid of the state’s vaccine requirements, earning swift criticism from the statewide teachers union, public health experts and Democratic lawmakers.

    The Florida Education Association warned that eliminating vaccine mandates would make public schools less safe for students and teachers and worsen student absenteeism. According to the New York Times, Florida would be the first state in the U.S. to end all vaccine mandates, if the proposal moves forward.

    Credit: FloridaGOP/X

    DeSantis opened insultingly named immigration detention camps; the RPOF made merch
    The Republican Party of Florida began selling merchandise themed after the immigrant detention camp dubbed the “Deportation Depot.” The hats, shirts and coffee mugs ripped off Home Depot’s logo and colors — and they didn’t last long. The line was pulled just days later, when Home Depot objected to the use of its brand’s likeness.

    Credit: Screenshot via Zoom

    A Hope Florida meeting was derailed by racial slurs, porn and swastikas
    Amid the fiasco that was Hope Florida — in which the DeSantis administration was accused of diverting millions of dollars in healthcare and child welfare funds toward political attack ads — one meeting went even worse than anyone thought it would. The highly anticipated Zoom call was canceled after a short time due to hackers screen-sharing offensive images and language including racial slurs, pornography and Nazi symbols.



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  • SeaWorld’s 50-year-old killer whale Katina has died

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    Credit: SeaWorld Orlando/Facebook

    SeaWorld Orlando on Monday announced the death of one of its last killer whales, Katina.

    The 50-year-old orca had been at SeaWorld Orlando for nearly 40 years and was one of just five killer whales at the park, which halted its orca breeding program in 2016. 

    “Her health had begun to significantly decline as she entered her geriatric years,” a statement from the park reads. “Over the last several weeks, our animal care and medical teams have worked around the clock to closely monitor her declining health and as her condition worsened, the decision was made to prioritize her comfort and welfare.”

    She was known for “her tendency to stick her tongue out and enjoying the ‘speed swim’ to create a cyclone of water,” SeaWorld said. She mothered seven calves while at the park.

    Animal rights and anti-captivity organization PETA said in a statement Katina was removed from waters off the coast of Iceland in 1978. The group says she was one of just three remaining orcas at SeaWorld that were captured from the wild, and the 46th orca to die at the park. 

    SeaWorld Orlando this spring faced a fine after a September 2024 incident in which a trainer was injured while interacting with a killer whale, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

    The department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration launched an investigation of the aquatic theme park that revealed the trainer was not properly protected while working with the whale, and that trainers were exposed to the “potential for bites, struck-by, and drowning hazards.”

    That investigation followed the park’s most notable OSHA investigation in 2010 that took place after park trainer Dawn Brancheau died after being dragged into a water enclosure by male orca Tilikum, the park’s largest whale at the time, during a “Dine With Shamu” show.

    Just four human deaths caused by captive orcas have been recorded — and three of those attacks were by Tilikum.

    Tilikum was later the subject of a 2013 documentary film, Blackfish, which aimed to inform viewers about the controversy surrounding keeping orcas in captivity. After the film’s release, SeaWorld stopped allowing trainers in the water with animals and later announced in 2016 that it would end its orca breeding program.


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    From Disney prison labor allegations to union-busting side gigs to crosswalks that make people bad drivers

    A portion of West South Street has been renamed to honor the late Orlando-area Sen. Geraldine Thompson

    “I believe that the appropriate venue for those types of complaints is either with the federal government, with the state or the courts,” Mayor Demings said when pressed



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    Chloe Greenberg
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  • Here are the Orlando restaurants closed in 2025 we’ll miss the most

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    While a new year is kicking off, we can’t help but linger on some of Orlando’s hardest goodbyes of 2025. Financial struggles, city regulations and overall drops in business have led to the loss of some greats: The Hammered Lamb, Soco Restaurant, Nick’s Family Diner, Little Saigon, Shƍgun Japanese Steakhouse and Chez Vincent are no more. 

    Here are the 2025 closures we’ll miss the most. 

    Soco Restaurant
    629 E. Central Blvd., Orlando
    After 11 years of serving its contemporary brand of Southern fare, Soco closed permanently in late May this year. The concept by real estate developer Craig Ustler and chef Greg Richie matched the lifespan of the space’s predecessor, Hue. In food and dining critic Faiyaz Kara’s 2015 review, he said the restaurant’s “imaginative, sometimes fanciful, takes on classic Southern staples are of the sort one would see on East Bay Street in Charleston, South Carolina, not East Central Boulevard in Orlando.” Credit: Photo via Soco Restaurant/Instagram
    Bar Kada
    957 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park
    Bar Kada, a Top Table of 2024 and winner of Best Windowless Restaurant honors, has closed. Chef-owner Michael Collantes, whose Michelin-starred tasting menu concept, Soseki, and recently opened pie house, Perla’s Pizza, straddle the venue, said it was a struggle for Bar Kada to catch on from the get-go. Credit: Matt Keller Lehman
    Hammered Lamb
    1235 N. Orange Ave., Orlando
    After one last tumultuous year of business struggles, Ivanhoe Village’s popular eatery and catering company Hammered Lamb announced in January it would close its doors for good. The closure came after the eatery pleaded for community support amid financial hardship months earlier. The beloved spot known for its loaded brunch dishes, drink deals and regular drag brunch shows opened its doors in Ivanhoe Park in 2013. Credit: Photo via Hammered Lamb/Facebook
    Hummus House
    862 Orlando Ave., Winter Park
    Hummus House in Winter Park closed its doors after nearly a decade of serving its brand of fast-casual Mediterranean fare along Orlando Avenue. Credit: Photo via Google Maps
    Leguminati
    2401 Curry Ford Road, Orlando
    Vegan eatery Leguminati has shuttered inside the Hourglass Market after 10 years. The spot served up decadent vegan fare, including wraps — with the glittering crown jewel being their much-healthier-than-Taco-Bell take on the iconic crunchwrap — burgers, sandwiches, bagels and beer to wash it all down. It closed in late August. Credit: Photo via Leguminati Vegan Eatery/Facebook
    Daybreak Diner
    3335 Curry Ford Road, Orlando
    Daybreak Diner abruptly closed its doors in late June, marking a jarring end to 27 years in business. This left a big void in both locals’ stomachs and the Dover Shores Shopping Center — which is expected to be filled by the upcoming Johnny’s Diner. Credit: Photo via Curry Ford West/Facebook
    Chicken Guy!
    818 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park
    Chicken Guy!, the fried chicken chain restaurant from celebrity chef and Food Network star Guy Fieri and Planet Hollywood CEO and restaurateur Robert Earl, officially closed its Winter Park location. Last year, the franchise faced eviction over unpaid rent of more than $38,000. A three-day notice was issued twice before the eviction notice was filed in Orange County court in March. The 818 S. Orlando Ave. location first opened in 2021, following the chain’s first Central Florida location opening at Walt Disney World’s Disney Springs in 2018. Credit: Photo via Google Maps
    College Park Diner
    2304 Edgewater Drive, Orlando
    College Park Diner — one of the oldest eateries in Orlando at the time of shuttering — permanently closed in June. The diner was ordered to close temporarily due to health code violations, according to state inspection records, and they ultimately decided to close permanently, as reported by Bungalower. Credit: Photo via College Park CafĂ©/Facebook
    Mr. J Hand-Pulled Noodle
    1688 E. Silver Star Road, Ocoee
    Mr. J Hand-Pulled Noodle has served its last bowl in Ocoee. It opened back in 2023 and was the subject of a favorable and flavorful OW restaurant review. Credit: Photo by Rob Bartlett
    Shƍgun Japanese Steakhouse
    6327 International Drive, Orlando
    Orlando’s oldest teppanyaki restaurant, Shƍgun Japanese Steakhouse, closed in August inside the Rosen Inn on I-Drive. Credit: Google Maps
    Soho Juice Co. 
    646 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park
    Soho Juice Co., on the corner of Fairbanks and South Orlando avenues, has closed after serving Winter Park for eight years. Credit: Google Maps
    Hanamizuki
    8255 International Drive, Orlando
    Hanamizuki Japanese Restaurant, known for its strict adherence to Japanese cooking techniques, closed this spring after nearly 30 years of serving the community an abundance of sushi and ramen, grilled entrees, onigiri and more. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Nick’s Family Diner
    1235 N. Orange Ave., Orlando
    Orange Blossom Trail breakfast spot Nick’s Family Diner closed its doors after its 15-year run in Orlando. It had long been known for its cozy, casual environment, all-day breakfast and years of serving the community. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    HighT
    8255 International Drive, Orlando
    The Alice in Wonderland-themed cocktail bar HighT opened downtown in spring 2024, and its owners announced it would be closing permanently in early April due to “overwhelming financial strain” from recent restrictions placed on nightlife in downtown.
    Park Avenue Tavern
    558 W. New England Ave., Winter Park
    Park Avenue Tavern, the Winter Park outpost of the NYC original, shuttered two years after opening in the old Dexter’s space. It’s set to be replaced by the Charleston-based firm Oak Steakhouse. Credit: Faiyaz Kara
    Oviedo Brewing Co.
    1280 Oviedo Mall Boulevard, Oviedo
    The popular brewery located in the Oviedo mall announced early this year that after five years in business, the location would close for good. The announcement explained that lasting economic impacts from the pandemic and rising costs have made it difficult for the brewery to continue business. Oviedo Brewing Co. described the effort to push through these challenges as “mentally draining.” Credit: Photo via Oviedo Brewing Company/Facebook
    The Aardvark
    2610 S. Ferncreek Ave., Orlando
    Restaurant, bar and bottle shop The Aardvark closed in January. On social media, the owners blamed their lawyers for the closure. Credit: Photo by Rob Bartlett
    Broken Strings Brewery
    1012 W. Church St., Orlando
    Broken Strings Brewery, formerly located in Parramore, announced its closure in January. Owner Charles Frizzell said that changes to the downtown Orlando business landscape have turned the area into a “ghost town.” The business saw no way it could remain open throughout the new year, he said. Frizzell also attributed the closure to other factors like business cost increases and declines in craft beer enthusiasts. Credit: Photo via Broken Strings Brewery/Facebook
    310 Park South
    310 S. Park Ave., Winter Park
    After 26 years, 310 Park South closed its doors in Winter Park, and the space is now making way for thin-crust, coal-fired pizza joint Oak & Stone. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Nagoya
    7600 Dr. Phillips Boulevard, Orlando
    After 23 years, Dr. Phillips culinary institution Nagoya Sushi, shut its doors. It was a longtime award-winning sushi bar and Japanese dining destination. Credit: Photo via Nagoya/Facebook
    Chez Vincent
    533 W. New England Ave., Winter Park
    After 28 years of serving Hannibal Square, Chez Vincent closed Dec. 21. Owners Vincent and Teri Gagliano, who also run Hannibal’s Lounge, are retiring and have sold both businesses to a “respected local chef and restaurateur.” Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Pho Ga Hien Vuong
    5282 W. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    The owners of Z Asian Vietnamese Kitchen opened their appropriately named chicken pho concept, Pho Ga Hien Vuong, Sept. 9 at 5282 W. Colonial Drive. In addition to the eponymous Vietnamese chicken soup, com ga hai nam (Hainanese-style chicken and rice), goi ga (chicken salad) and other chicken dishes are offered. Credit: Screengrab via Google Maps
    Little Saigon Vietnamese Restaurant
    1106 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
     the venerable Vietnamese restaurant will serve its final bowl of soup Dec. 27. Siblings Vu Nguyen and Mai Huynh are hanging up their aprons after nearly 40 years of serving the Mills 50 community, a community they’re ever so grateful for. The restaurant has seen Mills 50 flourish into a culinary, cultural and historical hub for food lovers, a rise spawned by Vietnamese refugees who turned the neighborhood into the destination it is today. In fact, Hung Kim, widely considered to be Orlando’s first Vietnamese restaurant, occupied the Little Saigon space in 1983 before Nguyen and Huynh moved in a few years later in 1987. Credit: courtesy image
    Armando’s College Park
    2305 Edgewater Drive, Orlando
    It’s been a mainstay on Edgewater Drive since opening back in April of 2016, but Armando’s in College Park is now closed. A note posted on the door of the Italian restaurant announced the Nov. 3 closure after 10 years of serving the strip engorged with Italian restaurants.
    Credit: image via Armando’s/Facebook



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    Chloe Greenberg
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  • Tanqueray’s to close New Year’s Eve with farewell events

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    Credit: Tanqueray’s/Instagram

    After nearly four decades dishing out drinks and live music in its dimly lit basement-ish digs, Tanqueray’s is set to shut its doors Dec. 31. 

    The long-loved bar’s owners announced on social media the building owner will not renew the lease for the downtown space — 100 S. Orange Ave. — that Tanqueray’s has called home for almost 37 years. 

    They also cited ongoing challenges that downtown bars have faced in recent years.

    “The city has not been kind to the local bars in the downtown entertainment district since 2023, that have been in existence for a very long time,” the post reads. 

    Owner Dan Charles says that after his 49 years in the hospitality industry, he’ll retire alongside the closure. 

    Marking the end of Tanqueray’s reign in downtown will be a “final New Years Event” and special happy hour jam Tuesday, Dec. 23, from 5 to 8 p.m. Expect live music courtesy of Chuck Magid, Daniel Heitz and more.

    Tanqueray’s is the latest in a string of downtown-adjacent establishments that have seen their final days in the recent past. Increased nightlife regulations from the city, dips in foot traffic and overall financial struggles have shuttered several longstanding spots, like Dapper Duck Bar, HighT, 1Up, Ember and more. 


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    The new spots waiting for a hungry, warm welcome to the city

    Whether you’re looking for a decades-old classic, a glitzy Michelin-starred eatery, a cozy breakfast spot or even something with live entertainment, Orlando’s got it.

    The chef’s modern German cuisine gets more comfy in Ocoee than it was in downtown Orlando



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    Chloe Greenberg
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  • Groups call on Ben Albritton to block bill lowering gun-buying age to 18

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    A dozen gun-violence prevention groups are calling upon Florida Senate President Ben Albritton to once again reject a proposal from the Florida House to lower the age to purchase a long gun from 21 to 18 years old.

    A measure (HB 133) that would repeal the 2018 law that raised the legal age for such purchases to 21 has already passed two committees in the Florida House and is now up for a vote in the full House of Representatives when the Legislature kicks off the 2026 session next month.

    That regulation is part of a package of gun safety reforms enacted by the GOP-controlled Legislature and signed into law by then-Gov. Rick Scott in 2018. The bipartisan vote approving those measures came just weeks after a 19-year-old legally purchased an AR-15 and murdered 17 students and teachers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

    The Florida House has passed similars measures over the past three legislative sessions, but each time they have died in the Florida Senate. And with four weeks left before the 2026 legislative session commences, no Senate companion measure has yet been filed.

    “President Albritton, we urge you to use your authority as Senate President to prevent HB 133 from becoming law,” reads a portion of the letter. “Remember the priorities made after our state’s darkest day. Remember those who buried their loved ones because a teenager could access a gun. Honor the bipartisan commitment lawmakers made in 2018: never again. Refuse to file a companion bill to HB 133, as you have done in previous years.”

    Among the groups signing the letter are March For Our Lives, Brady Florida, the League of Women Voters Florida, and the Campaign to Keep Guns Off Campus.

    “Young people in Florida deserve to grow up without wondering whether the teenager sitting next to them can legally buy a weapon of war,” said March for Our Lives executive director and Parkland survivor Jackie Corin in a statement. “We call on state leaders to block HB 133 and to honor the promises they made to our communities and to the lives already lost.”

    Although the Senate has shown no inclination in the past to approve the measure, gun-safety advocates are concerned right now that the Senate might swallow the idea in a tradeoff with the House that to curb the open carrying of firearms.

    A three-judge panel of the Florida First District Court of Appeal ruled in September that the state’s 1987 law banning open carry in Florida was unconstitutional. Attorney General James Uthmeier immediately declared that open carry was now the law in the state, but that change hasn’t been put into statute yet. Second Amendment groups have warned that the Legislature should not add any restrictive regulations on open carry when and if they enact a bill implementing the policy change.

    “Interesting question,” Albritton responded on Dec. 8 when asked by a reporter if there were negotiations between the House and Senate about such a trade-off. “Not that I’m aware of.”

    Albritton is an NRA member who has disclosed that he has a concealed-weapons licence, but he has also said that he has been “profoundly” affected by getting to know the parents of one of the teenage victims of the Parkland shooting massacre.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.

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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix

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  • News you missed: 15 Orlando stories that flew under the radar in 2025

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    Credit: J.D. Casto

    We’re closing in on the end of a year filled with big changes, big headlines and a whole lot of news that might have gotten left in the dust. From prison labor allegations at Disney to union-busting side hustles to crosswalks that make people bad drivers (and maybe gay), here are 15 Orlando news stories that may have flew under your radar in 2025. 

    Child labor: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed for child labor rollbacks behind the scenes

    Less than one year after approving a state law that loosened child labor restrictions for minors 16 and older, records first obtained by Orlando Weekly showed the Florida governor’s office pushed for additional rollbacks behind the scenes that could allow employers to schedule workers as young as 14 to work an unlimited number of hours per week, including overnight shifts.

    Baristas on strike: Starbucks workers in Oviedo joined 4,000 unionized workers on strike

    After voting overwhelmingly to go on strike if needed to secure a fair union contract, baristas at one of Central Florida’s only unionized Starbucks locations joined a national strike that began in November, as part of a pressure campaign to get Starbucks to agree to their demands.

    Medical debt: Orange County wiped out more than a half-billion dollars in medical debt

    Through a partnership with the nonprofit Undue Medical Debt, Orange County announced this fall it managed to relieve a total $515 million in medical debt held by more than 300,000 residents. The county announced an initial round of $472.5 million in debt relief back in May, and the second round of $42.9 million in relief was announced in October.

    Win for the little guy: Group managed to kill Florida bill that would have gutted labor protections for temp workers

    In a rare win for the little guy in state politics, Florida lawmakers temporarily postponed and effectively killed a measure that sought to gut labor protections for nearly 1 million temporary workers in the state who do odd jobs in construction, janitorial services, and other industries with a low bar to entry.

    The bill (HB 6033) sought to repeal Florida’s Labor Pool Act, a law approved in 1995 that established more than a dozen protections for temp workers that weren’t covered by any other state or federal law at the time.

    Self-help: Orange County Clerk of Courts expanded affordable legal aid program

    To help level the playing field for people who don’t have the means to hire a private attorney, the Orange County Clerk of Courts expanded its “self help” legal assistance program to its courthouse in Winter Park. The program offers professional attorney consultations and other legal assistance services for $1 a minute.

    BHM at UCF: Students organized Black History Month events because university won’t acknowledge it

    The University of Central Florida typically recognizes Black History Month, but some students this year noticed that UCF had remained suspiciously quiet on the topic, despite publicly uplifting it in the past. So, the UCF chapter of the Young Democratic Socialists of America took matters into its own hands and organized a Black History Month event of its own: an “African Americans and Labor” faculty-student panel.

    Pulse: Gov. DeSantis implied a rainbow sidewalk could cause reckless driving

    DeSantis in September defended arrests at the Pulse crosswalk and insinuated the rainbow paint was an incentive for drivers who “disagree with the message” to drive recklessly. “It’s too much to have this,” DeSantis said of the only standing memorial site for the 49 people killed.

    $14: Florida AG candidate vowed to actually enforce state minimum wage if elected

    Florida’s minimum wage rose to $14 per hour in September, thanks to a ballot initiative approved by Florida voters in 2020.  And yet, the state has no state agency or division authorized to actually enforce Florida’s wage laws. Jose Javier Rodriguez, a workers’ rights lawyer and former Democratic state senator who’s running in 2026 to replace Uthmeier, wants to change that.

    Union on track: Onboard attendants voted to form first Brightline union
    Roughly 100 Brightline attendants voted to unionize with the Transport Workers Union earlier this year. It was a push to address safety issues and fight for higher pay and better job benefits, including improved sick leave.

    It’s the first union formed by Brightline workers in the state of Florida, and the largest newly organized group of railroad workers nationwide in over 20 years, according to TWU.

    Uncertain future: Hospitality union gained job protections for immigrant hotel workers 

    Hundreds of employees at Hilton’s Buena Vista Palace hotel approved a new union contract that will deliver increased job protections as well as immediate pay raises. According to the union, the new four-year contract includes increased protections for immigrant workers who face an uncertain future under the Trump administration.

    Unite Here Local 737 represents over 300 housekeepers, bartenders, pool attendants, food service workers and other employees of Hilton Buena Vista Palace near Disney Springs and the Hilton-owned DoubleTree Universal near the Universal Orlando resort.

    Side hustle: South Florida city councilman had side gig as Amazon union-buster

    Just a few months before being appointed to city council in the Florida Keys’ tiniest city, former Michigander Jared Rodriguez had a different kind of job up in New Jersey. Federal records show Rodriguez, a longtime anti-union advocate in Michigan state politics, was hired last November as a “union avoidance” consultant for Amazon. 

    Prison labor-assembled balloons: Advocates urged Disney to investigate alleged use of prison labor

    A jumbo Mickey Mouse-shaped balloon will cost you $45 plus a delivery fee. But what isn’t disclosed, neither by Disney nor its third-party vendor, is the manufacturer who produces those balloons — and how much workers are paid to fold and package them. 

    Anagram International, a licensed manufacturer of decorative Disney balloons, is one of the Minnesota Department of Corrections’ largest contractors for prison labor. Its contract with the state’s corrections system allows Anagram to use prison labor to fold, add ribbons to, and package their products. According to prisoners, this includes some Disney character balloons.

    Budget: Florida’s proposed $117B budget bans “social justice”

    The governor’s budget bill would amend a 2023 statute that made it illegal for a governmental entity, the state group health insurance plan, or a state-contracted health care provider to spend state dollars on gender-affirming or -conforming care.

    The bill would expand that law to ban all governmental entities from spending tax dollars on “efforts which advance, promote, entertain, or support fundamental considerations of social justice, including those focused on critical race theory; diversity, equity, and inclusion; or that otherwise defend the concept that mankind is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously, solely by virtue of his or her race or sex.” 

    Oh, SNAP: Florida on the hook for extra $50M in SNAP costs thanks to Trump

    Florida needs to pony up another $50.6 million to help administer the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, members of a House health care spending panel were told in early December.

    The additional money is needed as a result of the One Big Beautiful Bill and Congress’ decision to reduce spending on the SNAP program by $156 billion over a decade.

    Flyers to rehire: Union staged action at Morimoto Asia to rehire fired worker

    Disney Springs guests and Morimoto Asia diners were met with a spontaneous flyering event by labor union Unite Here Local 737 in January. The goal? To inform patrons about their efforts to get Julie Ruiz rehired after they said she was wrongfully fired by the restaurant’s parent company after speaking up about alleged sexual harassment by a supervisor. 


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    There’s still more than 10 months until Floridians elect a successor to DeSantis

    The troubling statistics continue despite lawmakers’ efforts to increase road safety for cyclists

    Ingoglia’s proposed legislation includes a provision that would allow removal of local officials found to have committed ‘financial abuse’



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    McKenna Schueler and Chloe Greenberg
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  • 27 essential Orlando restaurants to take out-of-town visitors to

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    Hosting family, visitors or out-of-towners who just want to escape much colder climates is the harsh reality for many Floridians this time of year, and impressing them with local eats is no small feat. Whether you’re looking for a decades-old classic, a glitzy Michelin-starred eatery, a cozy breakfast spot or even something with live entertainment, Orlando’s got it.

    Here’s a mix of some of the oldest, most iconic restaurants in town plus newer highlights that make Orlando the hungry city it is. 

    The Ravenous Pig
    565 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park
    The Ravenous Pig offers inventive New American eats, an in-house taproom and hand-crafted cocktails. The stylish gastropub (with adjoining beer garden) asks that you make reservations because there’s often a wait to get into this foodie heaven — definitely worth the splurge. Credit: Ravenous Pig/Facebook
    Maxine’s on Shine
    337 Shine Ave., Orlando
    Maxine’s on Shine offers regular live music, a hefty comfort food-filled menu, and weekend brunch perfect for a relaxing meal after the Thanksgiving chaos. Credit: Photo via Maxine’s on Shine/Facebook
    Kaya
    618 N. Thornton Ave., Orlando
    At Kaya, a modern Filipino restaurant, there’s a homey feel and a menu that deliberately tests any preconceived notions people may have of Filipino fare. Credit: Kaya/Facebook
    Briarpatch
    252 N. Park Ave., Winter Park
    One of Winter Park’s most iconic and long-standing breakfast joints serves up contemporary American cuisine and brunch daily (and recently added dinner hours!). With breakfast goodies like blueberry-stuffed pancakes and raspberry-and-brie stuffed brioche french toast, it’s not hard to find a reason to bring the family here. Credit: via Google Maps
    Enzo’s on the Lake
    1130 S. U.S. Highway 17-92, Longwood
    Enzo’s on the Lake got its start in a small Central Florida home in 1980. Over the years, the restaurant has become the area’s go-to scenic dining destination, serving Italian cuisine with a chic spin. Credit: Enzo’s on the Lake/Facebook
    H Mart (and all its eateries)
    7501 W. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    Newly opened and the very first location of the mega-popular Asian market and food hall, H Mart is sure to have something for even the pickiest of out-of-towners. There are Asian (and Asian-fusion) vendors like U Chun, Jaws Tapokki, Chidon, Myung Ga, Paik’s Noodle and Oh K-Dog & Egg Toast, plus additional restaurants onsite like Coffee & Co, Dabang, Kung Fu Tea and an outpost of international bakery Paris Baguette. Credit: H Mart
    Kres Chophouse
    17 W. Church St., Orlando
    The focus on bringing in a ritzy clientele gives the interior of this downtown Orlando restaurant the feeling of a time warp — back to when going to get a nice steak was the finest thing a discerning eater could do for themselves. But you might be surprised by the healthy selection of vegan choices on the menu as well. 
    Credit: Photo via Kres Chophouse
    Susuru
    8548 Palm Parkway, Orlando
    Chef Lewis Lin and managing partner Kenny Ly came together to create this “retro-themed izakaya” offering exquisite ramen, yakitori and takoyaki. Stuffed with Showa-era collectibles, vintage ads and decorations, Susuru is an overall experience for all the senses.  Credit: Photo via Susuru/Facebook
    Beefy King
    424 N. Bumby Ave., Orlando
    This Central Florida meaty institution has been filling hungry Orlandoans’ stomachs with the best roast beef (and turkey, ham or pastrami) sandwiches since 1968. Beefy King also offers milkshakes and their own spin on the classic tater tot, Beefy Spuds. You wouldn’t want to deny this City Beautiful classic to the out-of-towners. Credit: Google Maps
    Domu
    3201 Corrine Drive, Orlando, and 7600 Dr. Phillips Blvd., Orlando
    With two locations in town, Domu offers double the opportunity to relish their delectable noodles and Asian fusion treats. Credit: Photo via Domu/Facebook
    Zaru
    1114 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    The concept is by James Beard Award-nominated restaurateurs Johnny and Jimmy Tung. Zaru’s intimate and striking 25-seat dining room features udon noodles made from Japanese flour sourced from Kagawa Prefecture, the birthplace of udon, and offered in both hot and cold options, with and without broths, along with freshly fried tempura and a host of add-ons for a custom-built bowl. Credit: Photo via Zaru/Instagram
    Tori Tori
    720 N. Mills Ave., Orlando
    Tori Tori is both a modern cocktail bar and a hotspot to grab traditional Japanese pub food in Orlando’s Mills 50 district. From the mind of Domu’s Sean “Sonny” Nguyen, the spot offers classic and creative cocktails, sake, beer and wine, and eats like scallop crudo and wagyu gyoza. Credit: Photo via Tori Tori/Facebook
    High Tide Harry’s
    4645 S. Semoran Blvd., Orlando
    This decked-out fish spot boasts longtime local ties, fervent fans and a laid-back, “no frills” approach to seafood. Since 1995, High Tide Harry’s has been serving burgers, ribs, shrimp, lobster, fresh fish and more. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    The Stubborn Mule
    100 S. Eola Drive, Orlando
    The Stubborn Mule is in high demand for its creative twists on American cuisine. Locally sourced food options and craft cocktails, beer and wine makes this eatery a popular stop for local and tourist foodies alike. Credit: Photo via Stubborn Mule/Facebook
    Kappy’s Subs
    501 N. Orlando Ave., Maitland
    Family-owned since 1967, Kappy’s Subs offers a little glimpse into Orlando’s restaurant history (and is newly celebrating its return from the dead after a closure scare earlier this year). The spot serves classic American fare (like subs, burgers and dogs) across a good old-fashioned all-American diner counter. If you’re a big group, you might want to plan to pick up your sandwiches to go. Credit: Kappy’s/Facebook
    Cafe Tu Tu Tango
    8625 International Drive, Orlando
    If dinner and a show is what you’re looking for, this funky tapas spot is the place to go. Cafe Tu Tu Tango has been serving the Orlando community for more than 30 years, offering creative food and drink specials every weekday, plus live music and relaxed patio seating, too. With tons of sharable plates to choose from, signature cocktails, and artists who paint while you eat, Cafe Tu Tu Tango is an attraction in itself. Credit: Photo via CafĂ© Tu Tu Tango/Facebook
    Stasio’s Italian Deli and Market
    2320 E. Robinson St., Orlando
    This Milk District Italian staple offers an abundance of hearty sandwiches under $14, coffees and plenty of sweet dessert options. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Hot Dog Heaven 
    5355 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando 
    An Orlando staple, Hot Dog Heaven has been slinging authentic Chicago dogs since 1987, with an unwavering community following for this classic bite. A hot dog costs $4.99; a super dog or a specialty dog of your choice runs $5.99. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Kabooki Sushi
    Multiple locations
    7705 Turkey Lake Road, Orlando
     
    Chef Henry Moso is what makes the sushi game so strong at this high-end spot. There are a handful of rolls, none of which you’ll find at your average sushi joint, but it’s mostly sashimi and nigiri.  Credit: Photo via Kabooki Sandlake/Facebook
    Lee and Rick’s Oyster Bar
    5621 Old Winter Garden Road, Orlando
    You can’t get more Florida than a seafood spot shaped like a boat and covered in taxidermy fish. Located right here in Orlando, Lee and Rick’s Oyster Bar first opened back in 1950 with just nine seats and an oysters-only menu. Now the family-run local favorite offers plenty of seafood and ample seating to enjoy it in. Credit: Photo via LeeandRicksOysterBar.com
    Linda’s La Cantina
    4721 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    This award-winning old-school eatery has been serving steaks since 1947. Decked out in classic checkered tablecloths and complete with a fireplace-adorned lounge, Linda’s La Cantina is Orlando staple. It’s not a stuffy place, but it’s so popular that reservations are a must. Credit: Image via Google Maps
    Lam’s Garden
    2505 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    Family-owned Lam’s Garden has been offering straightforward, traditional Chinese cuisine and dim sum service since it was opened in 1989. It’s packed out on holidays with Chinese families and college kids catching up on their holiday break. Credit: Photo via Lam’s Garden/Facebook
    Se7en Bites
    617 S. Primrose Drive, Orlando
    A frequent Best of Orlando contender and winner and Guy Fieri favorite, Se7en Bites is known for its pies and a menu full of Southern classics. Guests will find chicken pot pie, heaping breakfast sandwiches, biscuits and fried green tomatoes in addition to all its options for folks with a sweet tooth. Credit: Photo by Chloe Greenberg
    Chatham’s Place
    7575 Dr. Phillips Blvd., Orlando
    Chatham’s Place has been part of the Orlando community for more than 30 years. Chef Tony Lopez, creator and owner of the restaurant, showcases locally grown produce and fresh ingredients in the eatery’s dishes. Credit: Photo via Chatham’s Place/Yelp
    Art’s Sandwich Shop
    1018 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando
    This family-owned sandwich shop has been supplying Orlando with hearty and tasty subs since 1972. The spot offers stacked sandwiches, hot dogs and sides all under $10. (Plus some signature sammies and hot subs that climb to a close $11.40.) Credit: Photo via Art’s Sandwich Shop/Instagram
    Mills Market
    1110 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando
    This new Colonial Drive-based Asian eats hub has captured the tastebuds of Orlando, and offers several options for budget-friendly bites. Unigirl, BĂĄnh MĂŹ Boy, and Kai Kai BBQ and Dumplings are three of the outposts offering big flavors for under $15. Credit: via Mills Market
    Smokemade Meats and Eats
    1400 S. Crystal Lake Drive, Orlando
    Newly appointed a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant, Smokemade Meats and Eats brings Central Texas-style barbecue to the old Italian House Restaurant space. The brisket might be one of the best in the city, but other items like cheddar-jalapeño sausage, ribs, smoked turkey and bangin’ sides and desserts will set barbecue fiends afire. Credit: Photo via Smokemade Meats and Eats/Facebook



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    Orlando Weekly Staff
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  • Florida remains the most dangerous state in the nation for bicyclists, report says

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    Credit: Shutterstock

    Niki Isaak was approximately 33 miles into the Central Florida Classic bike ride near Brooksville in October when a group of motorcyclists entered the bike path and began riding dangerously close to her.

    Despite there being a wide-open road, one motorcyclist narrowly passed Isaak on the right shoulder, another pinned her in on the left, and a third finally hit her from behind.

    The sudden impact smashed her body to the ground, puncturing her anal canal and fracturing her tailbone, among other injuries. She was immediately rushed to HCA Florida Bayonet Point Hospital, where she remained in the trauma center for three days before being released to return to her home in Fort Myers.

    Two months later, she is still doing physical therapy and has created a GoFundMe page to help with the medical bills now totaling more than $400,000 as she tries to pick up the pieces in her life.

    “The impact is so big,” she said in a Zoom conversation last month. “It’s ruined our lives in so many ways, and we don’t even know the outcome. I just hope people can see that it’s just getting worse.”

    Despite the seriousness of the accident, the offending motorcyclist was only charged with a citation for careless driving, a moving violation.

    Frustration among cycling advocates 

    “What is the response of the local law enforcement officers? Nothing,” fumes Matt Scarborough, Isaak’s attorney who specializes in defending cyclists involved in accidents. “We’re seeing in my practice that cyclists are just being ignored. If this was a motor vehicle vs. another motor vehicle causing this much damage to somebody, I think it would be a much different story.”

    One of Scarborough’s other cases involves pro triathlete Gabrielle Suver, who was cycling along the side of a county road in Lake County on  Nov. 15 when a driver sideswiped her, resulting in a broken back, a fractured neck, a broken leg, fractured kneecap, liver laceration, scapula and sternum fractures and concussion, according to WESH-TV. She was released from the hospital this past Sunday after 28 days.

    For decades, Florida’s roads have been listed as the most dangerous in the nation for pedestrians and bicyclists, and there has certainly been more awareness regarding safety concerns in the Sunshine State. But observers lament that conditions aren’t getting better.

    A recently released report from the Bicycle Accident Lawyers group concluded that Florida remains the most dangerous state in the nation for bicyclists, looking at combined 2022 and 2023 data. And there were another 207 bicycle fatalities in 2024, according to the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

    These troubling statistics continue despite the fact that Florida lawmakers in 2006 passed a law requiring motorists to give cyclists at least three feet of space when driving along or passing them.

    Cynics question how often that’s being enforced. Just 130 motorists were cited for violating that law in 2024, according to the annual uniform traffic citation report produced by the state.

    Florida’s 3 foot rule

    “The 3-foot rule is not the 3-foot rule,” says Tampa attorney Steele Olmstead, who has represented injured cyclists. “The statute says that the motorist has to pass at a safe distance. Not less than 3 feet? Well, cops fall back on that and go, ‘Oh, well. I can’t get out and measure it. I couldn’t tell whether it was 3 feet or not.”

    Florida statute 316.083 (2) says that that any driver overtaking a bicycle or other nonmotorized vehicle or an electric bicycle occupying the travel lane must pass that vehicle “at a safe distance of not less than 3 feet or, if such movement cannot be safely accomplished, must remain at a safe distance behind the bicycle or other nonmotorized vehicle or electric bicycle until the driver can safely pass at a distance of not less than 3 feet and must safely clear the overtaken bicycle or other nonmotorized vehicle or electric bicycle.”

    Olmstead says he “might have” won one case over the past decade in which a motorist received a ticket for unsafe passing.

    Officials say increasing bicycle deaths is a national problem but note that there is a greater proximity to higher speed roads in Florida.

    “There’s often a transition from a 20-25 miles per hour neighborhood development that’s relatively self-contained or something like a quasi-gated community, and then you’re immediately on a 45 mph road,” said Ken McLeod, policy director for the League of American Bicyclists. “And at 45 mph, any mistake by a driver is more likely to cause a death for a person biking or walking.”

    And while more Florida cities have incorporated separated paths for people to bike and walk, there remain plenty of unprotected bike lanes. “All it takes is driver looking down at their phone and drifting down into the bike lane at 45 mph, and you have a crash that could be a fatality, because you have that high speed and that kinetic energy potential is there to cause the death,” McLeod said. “If it was 35 or 30, you have a lower chance of death when that crash occurred.”

    The League of American Bicyclists “Benchmarking Report” released in December 2024 showed that the percentages of bicyclist deaths have increased in Florida from an average of 143 between 2014 and 2018 to 197 between 2019 and 2023, a 38% increase.

    And, according to preliminary data compiled by the state of Florida, as of Dec. 13, there had been 185 bicycling fatalities this year (along with 9,277 injuries from bicycle crashes).

    (A group called “Ghost Bikes” places white-painted bicycles at sites where someone was hit or killed while riding.)

    Some law enforcement officials say the fault often lies with cyclists. In a YouTube video posted last month, Pinellas County Sheriff Sgt. Jessica Mackesy said that at least four cyclists were critically injured or killed in crashes with vehicles because they didn’t stop at a stop sign or a red light.

    “Physics doesn’t care if you’ve done it 100 times before. A 4,000-pound vehicle versus a bike, there’s only one outcome,” Mackesy said. “And looking both ways isn’t enough when there’s a driver who has the right of way and expects you to stop. Stop means stop — on the road, on the trail — every time.”

    The Florida Department of Transportation last updated its Pedestrian and Bicycle Strategic Safety Plan in October 2021. In it, the agency reported that, between 2016 and 2020, 90% of all pedestrian and bicyclist fatalities and serious injuries on state roadways occurred in just 25 of the state’s 67 counties. (The top five counties for fatalities and serious injuries were Miami-Dade, Broward, Orange, Hillsborough, and Duval).

    Potential solutions?

    Pinellas County Democratic Rep. Lindsay Cross is a cyclist who can be seen riding her bike to the Capitol during the legislative session. She says there are common-sense things that government can do to enhance safety for pedestrians and cyclists, such as creating more protected bike lanes and pedestrian crosswalks, but she believes part of the problem is with how local governments develop communities.

    “They’re all focused on having a car,” she said. “People by and large will choose places that are more walkable, that have mixed uses where you can walk to your grocery store or to a coffee shop. People like that, but a lot of the new development doesn’t have that as an option. You’ve got to drive to get into your community. You probably have to go a couple of miles to get to a grocery store.

    “Maybe there’s sidewalks in your community, but they’re not leading to anywhere. They’re just a loop within the community. So, I think fundamentally, we need to shift the way our development is happening, so it’s geared towards people moving at a slower pace. Cars are also going to have to slow down and make it safer. That also helps to just enhance our quality of life, make it more accessible for people who are aging to have those options.”

    John Sinibaldi Jr. is president of the St. Petersburg Bicycle Club. He has been hit twice by motorists while biking, the last time in 2010 when a collision with a distracted driver led to two lower-back surgeries and two cervical spinal-fusion surgeries. He offers two changes that he thinks could significantly improve bike safety in Florida.

    “I would increase communications dramatically between the state and the people who drive on our roads,” said Sinibaldi, whose late father, John Sinibaldi Sr., was a two-time Olympic cyclist in 1932 and 1936. “That would include visual things like billboards and public service announcements on TV. That would  include better driver education before you get your license, [and] driver education when you renew your licenses.”

    His other idea is less prescriptive, and more philosophical.

    “The second thing is we have to get our local police out of the mindset that if a motorist in a car hits a cyclist, the default option should not be to just assume that the cyclist did something wrong. And yet that’s often the case,” he said.

    The Phoenix reached out to law enforcement agencies in Florida for reaction.

    “Law enforcement works to enforce the law, and they will treat everyone with respect in that process, that includes both motorists and cyclists,” said Logan Lewkow, deputy executive director of operations for the Florida Sheriffs Association. “You can look around the state — sheriffs’ offices have created visibility enforcement programs specifically to make roads safer for pedestrians and cyclists. The safety of pedestrians and cyclists is very important to law enforcement.”

     

    The Florida Highway Patrol did not respond to a request for comment.

    Legislation

    The Florida Bicycle Association says its top legislative goal is for the state to pass a comprehensive “Hands Free” law that would make it illegal to hold a phone while operating a motor vehicle. The group says such legislation must go beyond “texting and driving” to encompass all activities that take a driver’s hands and attention away from the road, including scrolling through social media, streaming videos, and any other non-driving activity requiring manual interaction with a handheld device.

    Sen. Erin Grall, R-Vero Beach, sponsored a bill to do just that during the 2025 session, which passed in the Senate, 37-9. But its House companion never moved at all.

    No similar bill has been filed yet for the 2026 session.

    Bills addressing bike safety have been introduced for the coming Florida legislative session, but only regarding electric or e-bikes, a relatively new phenomenon resulting in a spike in injuries around the state.

    Lots of people — from kids to seniors — began using e-bikes during the COVID pandemic. “A new subculture” of seniors who never rode a bike before are using e-bikes seeking the freedom they’re looking for, Sinibaldi said, adding that he sees younger people who have lost their licenses or can’t drive for whatever reason who are also using these new bikes.

    “They’re terrorizing the Pinellas Trail — there’s no other way to put it — because they don’t know anything about trail etiquette,” he said. The trail occupies old railroad right of way between St. Pete and Tarpon Springs.

    A bill (HB 243) sponsored by Republicans Yvette Benarroch from Collier County and Kim Kendall from St. Johns County would require a person using or renting a class 3 electric bike to hold a driver’s license or learner’s permit. Class 3 electric bikes are the fastest legal bikes with a maximum speed of 28 miles per hour. Anyone caught purposefully modifying an E-bike to boost its motor-powered speed would face a fine up to $100. Subsequent violations could go up to $250.

    And Hillsborough County Republican state Rep. Susan Valdés filed legislation last week (HB 667) that would require anyone under 18 to wear a helmet while operating or riding an e-bike.


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    From Disney prison labor allegations to union-busting side gigs to crosswalks that make people bad drivers

    Whether you’re looking for a decades-old classic, a glitzy Michelin-starred eatery, a cozy breakfast spot or even something with live entertainment, Orlando’s got it.

    A portion of West South Street has been renamed to honor the late Orlando-area Sen. Geraldine Thompson



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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
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  • Nikki Fried slams CFO’s proposal to allow removal of locally elected officials

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    Credit: Blaise Ingoglia @GovGoneWild/X

    Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried is blasting proposed legislation introduced this week by Florida Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Blaise Ingoglia aimed at increasing local government spending transparency — specifically, a provision that would allow removal of local officials found to have committed “financial abuse.”

    The legislation, scheduled to be filed ahead of the coming legislative session in the Florida House by Rep. Monique Miller, R-Palm Bay, and in the Senate by Nick DiCeglie, R-Indian Rocks Beach, would increase local government transparency and formally establish Ingoglia’s Florida Agency for Fiscal Oversight (FAFO) effort into statute.

    The proposal includes a provision that would codify the state’s CFO’s ability to recommend removal of any elected official who is found to have committed “financial abuse, malfeasance or misfeasance.”

    “I have heard zero from our new CFO about what he plans on doing to hold our property insurance companies accountable,” Fried said on a Zoom conference call on Thursday. “Instead, he’s bullying our local governments, creating fictitious formulas, and now he wants to overreach even more by putting a clause in there about removing elected local officials.”

    More than any recent governor, Ron DeSantis has aggressively exercised the power within his office to remove elected officials from office, including school board members, sheriffs, and most controversially, two Democratic state prosecutors, Andrew Warren in Hillsborough County and Monique Worrell in Orange and Osceola counties.

    Worrell rebounded from her 2023 suspension, winning re-election by a large margin in 2024.

    “We see how Ron DeSantis has abused that power throughout his eight years in this administration, and so that is just them bullying our local governments that are the ones who are closest to the people,” Fried added.

    In addition to those above listed suspensions, Attorney General James Uthmeier threatened other local governments officials in Florida earlier this year in Orange County and Key West when they raised objections to signing 287(g) agreements with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    In the case of Orange County, Mayor Jerry Demings said in August that he signed an updated agreement with ICE under “protest and extreme duress” after Uthmeier threatened the mayor and all six county commissioners that their failure to do so would result in their removal from office by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    Other provisions in the legislation introduced by Ingoglia at a press conference in Tampa on Wednesday include allowing the Department of Financial Services to pursue financial penalties from local governments if they don’t respond to inquiries “promptly,” including by withholding any state funds until they do so.

    “If we ask for the information on a Monday, and we’re giving you five days to compile the information — get it in five days; if you don’t, then you face a $1,000 a day penalty,” he said at the press conference.

    The legislation comes as Ingoglia continues to make the case that local governments have been engaged in “excessive and wasteful spending” by comparing their fiscal year 2024-2025 budgets with what they were spending in 2019-2020. So far, after reviewing the budgets of 11 local governments this year, he says they have engaged collectively in $1.86 billion in alleged wasteful and excessive spending.

    Local government officials who have received those FAFO audits have questioned the accuracy of the methodology used by the CFO’s auditors. Ingoglia has called such criticisms “bogus” and “not well thought out.”

    Fried argued that if Ingoglia were serious about cutting excessive government spending, he should look inside the DeSantis administration’s own spending excesses. She referred to a Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald story published last week reporting that the DeSantis administration spent $36.2 million in taxpayer funds last year to purchase ads against the proposed marijuana and abortion ballot measures, both of which were contested by the governor.

    “If [Ingoglia] wants to talk about saving dollars and making sure that the people are getting a return to the taxes they have put into this state, he should be focused on what’s happening in Tallahassee,” she said. “Ron DeSantis stole $38 million from the people of this state, and so that’s really where the attacks should be. That’s where his energy should be.”


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    Gun-violence prevention groups want Florida’s Senate President to reject a proposal to lower the age to purchase guns from 21 to 18

    There’s still more than 10 months until Floridians elect a successor to DeSantis

    The troubling statistics continue despite lawmakers’ efforts to increase road safety for cyclists



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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
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  • Charges dropped against Tampa photojournalist arrested covering ICE protest

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    Dave Decker outside the Krome detention center in Miami, Florida (Nov. 22, 2025)
    Credit: Screengrab via sunrisemvmtgnv / Instagram

    All charges against Creative Loafing Tampa Bay photojournalist Dave Decker were dropped Tuesday, following his arrest last month while covering an anti-ICE protest.

    Decker was among more than 30 people arrested outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Miami on Nov. 22. He was on assignment for three outlets — News2Share, Zuma Newswire and CL — covering a Sunshine Movement protest, where many of its members were arrested after blocking the entrance to the facility on the southeastern edge of the Florida Everglades.

    The 52-year-old photographer was charged with trespassing on property after warning, resisting an officer without violence to his person, unlawful assembly and obstructing a highway, despite wearing visible press credentials and telling officers he was a member of the media.

    Decker released a statement Tuesday after charges were dropped.

    “I am grateful for the outpouring of support from my colleagues, my community and from media organizations following my arrest while documenting an ICE protest,” Decker wrote. “I also want to thank the State Attorney’s Office for recognizing the First Amendment interest at stake and for dismissing the case. I appreciate everyone who stood up for press freedom and the fundamental right to record events in our communities.”

    He is represented by attorney Barbara Llanes.

    Sunshine Movement members stated publicly before the action that they were ready to be detained. Decker was not. He spent two days in jail before being released on bond.

    A GoFundMe set up by Creative Loafing editor-in-chief Ray Roa raised more than $26,000 to support Decker’s family and cover costs associated with the arrest, including recovery of his vehicle and gear.

    “Thanks to my Creative Loafing family and a special thanks to Bobby Block from the First Amendment Foundation and the NPPA (National Press Photographers Association), the Press Freedom Foundation, the Society of Professional Journalists and all the other orgs in my corner,” he told CL.

    Decker is back to covering protests, most recently of striking Starbucks workers in Clearwater.

    A version of this story first appeared in our sibling publication Creative Loafing Tampa Bay.


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    The money was requested for AI language translators, pepper spray, GPS trackers, handcuffs, bonuses, and more

    Two migrant detention centers may have violated international standards by imposing conditions that could amount to torture, the group claims

    Decker, who was on assignment for three news outlets, was covering a protest action by Sunshine Movement, which saw many of its members arrested.



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    Selene San Felice
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  • CFO Ingoglia unveils legislation to make local officials more accountable

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    Credit: Ron DeSantis/X

    Florida Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Blaise Ingoglia previewed legislation Wednesday meant to increase spending accountability and transparency for local government officials, with penalties for noncompliance including fines and removal from office.

    Ingoglia has been crisscrossing the state for months with his FAFO (Florida Agency for Fiscal Oversight) team, auditing spending by some of the state’s largest counties and municipalities. To date they have reviewed spending by 11 local governments and say that they have found more than $1.86 billion in alleged wasteful and excessive spending.

    Ingoglia has been clear that part of the effort is to show taxpayers that extensive wasteful spending is taking place. His assertion of such excesses, he believes, should quell arguments by local government officials that a proposed reduction in property taxes for homestead properties will harm essential local services.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis has said he wants to put a measure on the statewide ballot next November that would eliminate of substantially reduce property taxes on homestead properties but has yet to release his own proposal(s). He has, however, ridiculed the proposals on the issue already moving their way through the Florida House as “milquetoast.”

    Ingoglia introduced his proposal during a press conference in Tampa that featured state Rep. Monique Miller, R-Palm Bay, who said she will sponsor them in the Florida House during the 2026 session.

    “Over the last five years, we have seen property taxes increase by nearly 50%, and this at a time when Florida’s families are being asked to tighten their belts,” she said. “To be direct, tax dollars have become a drug for local governments. And, like any addiction, as long as the supply is unlimited, the behavior will not change.”

    The provisions in the legislation

    The proposals discussed on Wednesday that will be sponsored by Miller in the House and Sen. Nick DiCeglie, R-Indian Rocks Beach, would include:

    • Codifying FAFO into statute to increase accountability and transparency in local government and make this effort a long-term permanent initiative. “Protecting taxpayers should not have an expiration date, and neither should FAFO,” Ingoglia declared.
    • Grant government employees, contractors, subcontractors, and taxpayers whistleblower protections when reporting waste, fraud, and abuse of local tax dollars.
    • Allow the Department of Financial Services to pursue financial penalties from local governments if they do not respond to inquiries in a “timely manner,” including the withholding of state funds until they comply. That office would have the power to issue subpoenas (as Ingoglia’s office did this summer with officials in Orange County).
    • Require local governments to upload all of their contracts into a centralized state financial system.
    • Require local governments to submit annual financial efficiency reports to include information such as cash on hand and how much goes to investment accounts and nonprofit organizations, and to list salaries of every local government employee.
    • Codify that the Florida CFO can recommend to the governor and state Cabinet removal of any elected official found to have committed financial abuse, malfeasance, or misfeasance.

    Miller said that whenever the conversation about cutting back on excessive government spending takes place, she has been “immediately bombarded by naysayers and their supporters with arguments as to why it is impossible. It’s just astounding.”

    Ingoglia spent considerable time during the news conference ridiculing local government officials “and their leftist big-budget apologists” who have questioned the methodology of his team’s audits.

    ‘Fictitious’ claims?

    Last week in Palm Beach County, Ingoglia claimed his team of auditors identified $344 million in “excessive, wasteful spending” in the most recent fiscal year — the highest amount across the 11 local governments his agency has reviewed this year.

    That received strong pushback from Palm Beach County Administrator Joe Abruzzo, who called the claims “fictitious,” and sent Ingoglia a public records request asking for detailed information about how the calculations were made, according to Stet News.

    Local government officials have repeatedly questioned what the CFO is identifying as being “wasteful” and “excessive” in their spending practices. Ingoglia has promised those governments that detailed audits identifying that spending are coming, but they have yet to be released.

    “Will there be specific instances outlining line items in the budget that they are spending? Yes, but that is why this information and this piece of legislation is vital, because it allows us to get more information quicker than we would have before,” he said.

    Among the local governments Ingolia’s team has audited to date, Tampa, the state’s third largest municipality, hasn’t been one of them. But Ingoglia said if he is elected next year and then re-elected in 2030, he’ll eventually get to every local government that draws taxpayer funds.

    “Whether it is a city, a county, a taxing jurisdiction, a school board, a board that has its own millage rate, its own taxing authority, that will not escape my grasp over the next nine years,” he said. “I’m going to be looking at everything.”


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    “I believe that the appropriate venue for those types of complaints is either with the federal government, with the state or the courts,” Mayor Demings said when pressed

    Dave Decker faced charges of trespassing and resisting arrest despite showing press credentials.

    The money was requested for AI language translators, pepper spray, GPS trackers, handcuffs, bonuses, and more



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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
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  • DeSantis’ proposed budget changes how Florida funds cancer programs

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    Credit: Ron DeSantis/X

    Gov. Ron DeSantis’s eighth and final legislative budget makes another run at redirecting cancer funding in Florida, including jettisoning a requirement that funds be awarded only to peer-reviewed projects and empowering an eight-member “collaborative” to direct how the state spends hundreds of millions of dollars on cancer care and research.

    The push by the governor is likely to spark another largely behind-the-scenes battle among those who rely on the state money to help with their research programs.

    Specifically, DeSantis’s proposed budget eliminates a decade-old law that spells out how $127 million should be distributed to four National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated facilities: Moffitt Cancer Center; University of Florida Health Cancer Center; Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center; University of Miami Miller School of Medicine; and Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center.

    Instead, the governor’s budget would empower the Cancer Connect Collaborative to distribute the money to all cancer providers, with a requirement that at least 60% continues to be spent on the four NCI facilities. NCI is the federal government’s principal agency for cancer research and training. There are 72 NCI-designated facilities nationwide.

    The collaborative, established in law in 2024, is a group of eight people — three appointed by the governor, two by the Senate president, and two by the speaker of the House.

    Lobbyists representing the four NCI facilities did not immediately respond to Florida Phoenix’s request for comment on the proposal. But representatives of the four facilities testified against a similar plan in a House Health Care Budget Subcommittee earlier this year.

    John Cleveland, Moffitt’s executive vice president, director, and scientific officer, told members of the House House Health Care Budget Subcommittee in February that NCI facilities have recruited 980 premier investigators since the Legislature created the program in 2014 and has helped changed cancer care in Florida.

    “Florida used to be a state where you flew to New York City or Boston to get your (cancer) care. No longer,” Cleveland said. “So, now they actually want to stay in the state. And I think that’s super important — we have to support our citizens. Having them get on a plane to get their care up in other states is just ridiculous.”

    Florida has the second highest cancer burden in the nation. Between 2021 and 2023, the total number of cancer deaths in Florida was 140,955, according to the Florida Department of Health (DOH).

    Former Gov. Rick Scott championed the NCI program, which was passed by the Legislature in 2014. Lawmakers pumped an additional $37million into the program in 2022 and renamed it the Casey DeSantis Research Funds.

    Cancer innovation and incubator funds

    The DeSantis administration first tried to steer funding away from NCI facilities to additional providers during the 2024 session and again in 2025.

    The DOH issued a long-range report in 2024 noting that restricting the funding to NCI facilities “limits funding accessibility for other cancer facilities and research institutions across Florida, including those in rural or underserved areas.”

    Although the Legislature refused to go along with the changes, lawmakers did agree to create and fund two new cancer grant programs: the Cancer Innovation Fund in 2024 and the Cancer Incubator in 2025.

    There is $60 million available in Cancer Innovation Fund and $30 million in the Cancer Incubator program, which is directed toward research at children’s specialty hospitals

    The cancer collaborative oversees both grant programs and is charged with making recommendations to the DOH, which awards the grants.

    The governor announced in November that four pediatric hospitals were each receiving $7.5 million grants: Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami; John’s Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in Tampa; Wolfson Children’s Hospital in Jacksonville; and Nemours Children’s Hospital in Orlando.

    Statutes require that proposals for both the Innovation Fund and the Cancer Incubator program are “appropriate and are evaluated fairly on the basis of scientific merit.” To that end, the law requires the DOH to appoint peer review panels of independent, scientifically qualified individuals to review and score the merit of each proposal.

    DeSantis’s proposed budget eliminates the requirement that grants for either fund be peer reviewed.


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    Dave Decker faced charges of trespassing and resisting arrest despite showing press credentials.

    The money was requested for AI language translators, pepper spray, GPS trackers, handcuffs, bonuses, and more

    The legislation details penalties for noncompliance including fines and removal from office



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    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix
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  • Florida filmmakers take ‘human-centric’ approach in documentary on workers’ fight for heat protections

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    Six Eye Films, based out of West Palm Beach, produced the documentary Without Shade, Without Rest (2025) Credit: Six Eye Films

    A new documentary from the independent nonprofit Six Eye Films, Without Shade, Without Rest, follows the grueling struggle by agricultural workers in Miami-Dade County to establish the first local ordinance in Florida to guarantee heat safety protections for outdoor workers.

    That fight, years in the making, would have required employers to provide basic protections against extreme heat for agricultural and construction workers, such as guaranteed water breaks and access to shade on the job once the temperature outside reached a certain threshold.

    The ordinance was on its way to passage in 2023 when the effort was stalled by complaints from business owners, who then subsequently lobbied the Florida Legislature to pass a law shortly after that barred any Florida county, including Miami-Dade, from establishing any kind of heat safety mandate.

    Emails and text messages obtained by Orlando Weekly at the time revealed that well-connected lobbyists for business groups like the Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries of Florida pushed Republican state leaders to get the bill across the finish line. “The entire business community is in lock step on this,” one lobbyist wrote in a text to the Florida House speaker’s chief of staff, just a day before the law’s passage. “Thank you for your attention to this concern.” 

    The new 45-minute documentary from Six Eye Films, released this year, focuses less on the government side of the fight, instead zeroing in on the workers themselves. Filmmakers documented the yearslong, worker-led campaign for protections against labor abuses in South Florida’s agricultural industry, primarily organized by members of human rights groups WeCount and the Coalition of Immokalee Workers. 

    The filmmakers organized a screening of the documentary at the Orange County teachers union hall in Orlando last Friday, and hope to screen the documentary at other Central Florida locations in the future.

    Editor and producer Emily Sternlicht, who’s worked on projects for major media outlets such as Vice and Frontline, said that organizations, universities and other institutions are welcome to contact them to request a screening of the film.

    Tracing the roots of a historic campaign

    The battle for heat protections documented in Without Shade, Without Rest was directly led by immigrant workers in South Florida, who dominate the Sunshine State’s agricultural workforce, working through Florida’s scorching summers to support their families, either in the U.S. or back in their home countries.

    The campaign was galvanized by Florida’s rising temperatures and a rise in the numbers of heat-related illnesses and deaths suffered by workers on the job, including agricultural and construction workers, who make up the bulk of Florida’s outdoor workforce.

    But film co-director Max Maldonado — a journalist based in West Palm Beach — said the focus of their film wasn’t on the numbers themselves, but rather the faces and the stories behind them. 

    “We really want to show, instead of tell you the problems,” Maldonado told Orlando Weekly. Maldonado, the son of an Ecuadorian immigrant himself, is a co-founder of Six Eye Films, which fellow co-founder JosĂ© JesĂșs Zaragoza describes as a nonprofit “dedicated to telling human stories shaped by climate, labor, migration, and the rapidly changing American South.”  

    “We’re really focused on observational films where, you know, you don’t hear someone talking about a story. You witness a story,” Zaragoza told the Weekly.

    A clip from Without Shade, Without Rest (2025) courtesy of Six Eye Films.

    A longtime journalist who grew up in a Texas border town, Zaragoza traces the filmmaking process for Without Shade, Without Rest back to a working relationship he developed with the CIW roughly two decades ago, after he moved to Florida and jumped into editing weekly newspapers in the Lake Okeechobee region.

    “Their [the CIW’s] presence was kind of big in the Hispanic television stations that we used to watch back in Texas, so I was familiar with them back then,” Zaragoza explained.

    The CIW, based in South Florida, is a human rights organization formed in the early 1990s by a group of immigrant farmworkers from Mexico, Guatemala and Haiti who united around the common cause of justice on the job. (Links to just some of Orlando Weekly‘s archival coverage of the CIW can be found at the end of this article.)

    They organized hunger strikes over poor labor conditions and later launched a pressure campaign to get big-name corporations like McDonald’s, Taco Bell and Walmart to sign onto the Fair Food Program — a commitment by buyers to only source produce from farmers who pay and treat their workers well.

    Without Shade, Without Rest traces the history of the fight for heat protections in Miami-Dade County back to this decades-old fight against labor abuses in the fields of South Florida.

    According to Zaragoza, workers involved with the Fair Food Program review the principles of their campaign every few years. And in 2021, establishing heat safety on the job became a pillar of the program’s “worker-driven social responsibility model,” a set of human rights standards that advocates seek to incorporate into corporate supply chains.

    Filmmakers Maldonado and Zaragoza embedded themselves in the lives of South Florida farmworkers over the course of filming, earning (not demanding) their trust, in an effort to show — not tell — the dangerous conditions that farmworkers face in extreme heat, and the impacts of that on both the individual human body and communities.

    “When it comes to doing a documentary, you really want to give people that sense of, they know this person, that they’re understanding their struggle in the moment,” said Maldonado.

    Although Florida, like much of the U.S. South, has weak labor protections, low union density, and no state agency to actually enforce worker safety protections, Zaragoza believes there’s still a message that working people in Florida can take from their film, as WeCount’s fight for workplace justice in the agricultural and construction industries continues.

    “I think what people can take away from that is that there’s always different avenues, different pathways, to achieving what they need, what they deserve,” he said. “I’m hoping that’s at least a takeaway.”

    He pointed out that, in the early days of the CIW, it took time for the worker-led movement to grow strong enough to secure meaningful gains for workers on the ground. “It seems like a crazy exercise, an exercise of futility to year in and year out organize these hunger strikes, expecting that something’s going to change,” he recalled. “But then, it did.”

    Without Shade, Without Rest is Six Eye Films’ first full-length film. Follow Six Eye Films on Instagram for updates on future screenings, and to learn more about their current/upcoming projects.


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    McKenna Schueler
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  • DeSantis confident Florida won’t violate Trump’s AI order

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    Gov. Ron DeSantis is confident that his proposed “AI Bill of Rights” to crack down on unfettered artificial intelligence would not violate President Donald Trump’s new executive order invalidating certain state-level AI regulations.

    But if it does draw a lawsuit from the Department of Justice, DeSantis thinks Florida would win.

    “I’m not concerned about the recent executive order, because it doesn’t apply against the states directly,” DeSantis said Monday, speaking during a Jupiter roundtable alongside three parents whose children were harmed by AI chatbots.

    “I don’t think we’re gonna be doing anything that would even give rise to a Dormant Commerce Clause lawsuit from the U.S. DOJ but, to the extent we did, I’m confident that we’d be able to win that because, clearly, we’d be legislating within the confines of our 10th Amendment rights as states,” he continued.

    The anti-AI panel was DeSantis’ latest stab at raising the alarm over unregulated artificial intelligence. For months, he has hinted at proposing legislation — revealing an outline last week — and has long spoken out against the costs of AI data centers, the danger AI presents to children, and the hazard of foreign-owned AI models being adopted by Americans.

    He continued to hammer away at those points Monday, pausing briefly to deride the U.S. House of Representatives for approving a 10-year moratorium on states regulating AI.

    Although the U.S. Senate stripped that provision out of the “Big Beautiful Bill” before Trump signed it into law, the move signaled a deepening split on the right over whether to fan the AI flames or stifle them. This divide became apparent when Trump early in his second term allied himself with tech billionaires like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg.

    “What [Congress said] is, we don’t want California doing things that are woke or all this other stuff. Like, yeah, I mean, I don’t either, but that’s not a reason to take away Florida’s rights,” DeSantis said. “Are you kidding me? And second of all, these [tech] companies, their muscle memory is to be woke. They don’t need California to tell them.”

    Megan Garcia and her husband Sewell Setzter joined DeSantis to tell the story of how their 14-year-old son, Sewell Setzter III, was sexually groomed by an AI chatbot nicknamed “Daenerys Targaryen.” The bot, created through the platform Character.AI, tried to convince Setzter to “come home to her.” He committed suicide in February.

    Another mom, Mandi Furness from Texas, explained how her autistic son was groomed by one of these chatbots. The bot told her son to call child protective services on his parents when they attempted to take his phone away, encouraged him to self-harm, and even claimed that cutting off his access to the app justified killing them.

    The teenager attempted to commit suicide, and only recently was released from a mental institution, Furness said.

    “We lost our son. He’s still alive, but I don’t know if he’ll ever be the same,” she added.

    What’s in Trump’s executive order?

    Trump signed his executive order on AI last week. The document aims to create a federal standard for AI regulation that isn’t undermined by a “patchwork” of varying state laws.

    It directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to create an “AI Litigation Task Force” within 30 days whose “sole responsibility shall be to challenge State AI laws” that run afoul of the order; Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to identify which laws require “AI models to alter their truthful outputs;” and White House AI czar David Sacks and director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy Michael Kratsios to recommend language for a federal statute preempting state laws regulating AI, NBC reported.

    These recommendations won’t touch state AI laws regulating child-safety protections, data center infrastructure, or state procurement of AI — all matters DeSantis has emphasized in his “Bill of Rights.”

    “To win, United States AI companies must be free to innovate without cumbersome regulation.  But excessive State regulation thwarts this imperative,” Trump’s order reads.

    “The resulting framework must forbid State laws that conflict with the policy set forth in this order.  That framework should also ensure that children are protected, censorship is prevented, copyrights are respected, and communities are safeguarded.”

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    Liv Caputo, Florida Phoenix

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