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Tag: DeSantis

  • DeSantis asks Legislature to punish inhumane dog breeders



    Credit: Ron DeSantis/Facebook

    Gov. Ron DeSantis proposed new penalties against certain dog breeders and animal abusers on Tuesday, hoping to pass more anti-animal cruelty legislation before his term is through.

    He spoke at Big Dog Ranch Rescue in Loxahatchee early Tuesday, the same site where he signed two other anti-animal cruelty measures into law earlier this year. For the 2026 session, DeSantis wants the Legislature to impose a statewide dog breeder license, target unethical dog breeding, and tighten penalties for Floridians who abuse animals in front of children.

    According to its website, Big Dog Ranch Rescue is the largest cage-free, no-kill animal rescue organization in the nation.

    “There are some bad actors who keep these animals in inhumane conditions and we want to put an end to that type of practice in the state of Florida,” DeSantis said, joined by Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson and a host of Republican lawmakers eager to sponsor the proposed legislation.

    “It’s been a long-time coming,” he added.

    According to the governor, the measure would require the Department of Business and Professional Regulation to issue statewide dog breeder licenses to better “hold them accountable” for abusive conditions. This could include overbreeding female dogs, overcrowding breeding areas, a lack of veterinary care, or exposure to harsh environments.

    The proposal asks pet stores to offer local shelters spaces to put dogs up for adoption before the space is used to sell dogs from “puppy mills,” which are large, for-profit centers designed for quick breeding under poor conditions. In 2023, the Humane Society of the U.S. ranked Miami-Dade County as the highest area in the country for pet stores peddling puppy-mill dogs.

    Other suggestions include establishing a hotline to crack down on unethical breeding practices, ensuring veterinarians give consumers accurate information about dogs, and increased penalties for those who abuse animals in front of a minor.

    Not the first animal legislation…

    Republican Rep. Meg Weinberger, a leading animal-rights activist representing Palm Beach, sponsored similar legislation in the 2025 session. Republican Sen. Jonathan Martin filed the companion bill in the Senate. Their bills required breeders to register with the state, undergo inspections, and be listed in a public database.

    Violators would face hefty fines. However, neither bill was ever voted in either a House nor a Senate committee.

    This isn’t DeSantis’ first venture to Big Dog Ranch Rescue. At the end of the 2025 legislative session, he signed “Trooper’s Law” and “Dexter’s Law” at the South Florida venue. On Tuesday, he vowed to do so with his new proposals if the Legislature agrees.

    “The mission is, you legislators, churn this out and then we’ll set a date to come back here and … then we’ll do an even bigger celebration,” he said.

    Trooper’s Law, named after a Bull Terrier nicknamed “Trooper” by Florida Highway Patrol, makes it a third-degree felony to restrain and abandon a dog outside during a natural disaster. Trooper was found tied to a Tampa fence ahead of Hurricane Milton as floods rushed in. Animal cruelty charges were dropped against his former owner for lack of evidence of intent.

    Dexter’s Law lengthens prison sentences for Floridians who torture, mutilate, or kill pets. This came after Dexter, a bulldog mix, was found decapitated and dumped in St. Petersburg.

    The 2026 legislative session begins Jan. 13.


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    He wants to impose a dog breeder license, target unethical breeding, and tighten penalties for abusing animals in front of children

    Despite a legal setback, Smart & Safe Florida insists they still can qualify for the 2026 ballot

    Florida’s AG said his office is investigating allegations that Campbell’s uses bioengineered meat in their soups





    Livia Caputo, Florida Phoenix
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  • Florida Representative charged with stealing $5M in FEMA funds



    Credit: Congresswoman Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick/Facebook

    U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick was indicted this week by a grand jury in Miami for allegedly stealing $5 million in federal disaster funds and laundering them toward her 2021 congressional campaign.

    Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Miramar, according to a news release from the U.S. Department of Justice, laundered funds from an overpayment from a contract between her family’s health care company and FEMA for COVID-19 vaccination staffing.

    According to the indictment, Cherflius-McCormick and other defendants routed the money through several accounts, as well as to friends and relatives, who then donated to her campaign.

    “Using disaster relief funds for self-enrichment is a particularly selfish, cynical crime,” said U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi in the news release. “No one is above the law, least of all powerful people who rob taxpayers for personal gain. We will follow the facts in this case and deliver justice.”

    The DOJ says the representative could face up to 53 years in prison if convicted.

    The case is being investigated by the FBI Miami office and the IRS-Criminal Investigation Florida Field Office.

    She also, and her tax preparer, were charged with conspiring to file a false federal tax return.

    Among the defendants is the representative’s brother, Edwin Cherfilus.

    In a social media post, Cherfilus-McCormick called it “an unjust, baseless, sham indictment — and I am innocent. The timing alone is curious and clearly meant to distract from far more pressing national issues.”

    Cherfilus-McCormick stepped down from leadership on the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee Thursday.

    U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, R-Sarasota, called the alleged behavior “one of the most egregious abuses of public trust I have ever seen.”

    “Stealing $5 million in taxpayer disaster funds from FEMA of all places is beyond indefensible. Millions of Floridians have relied on FEMA after devastating hurricanes, and that money was supposed to help real disaster victims,” Steube wrote on social media.


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    This is one of the rarer instances of DeSantis breaking with Trump since the 2024 elections

    In Florida, maliciously disturbing a religious gathering is a first-degree misdemeanor, or a third-degree felony with hate crime enhancement

    Whether the GOP-controlled Legislature will act on the request is questionable





    Florida Phoenix
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  • DeSantis says Trump’s oil drilling could ‘weaken’ environment, military training



    Credit: Shutterstock

    Gov. Ron DeSantis warned Friday that President Donald Trump’s push to drill off the Florida coast could “weaken” environmental protections and interfere with military training.

    DeSantis referred to the U.S. Department of the Interior’s plan to reinvigorate oil drilling off of Florida and Southern California for the first time in decades. The federal government has not allowed drilling in federal waters in the eastern Gulf since 1995 because of oil spill concerns, the AP reported.

    “We supported the 2020 decision that the Trump administration made at the time, we worked very closely with them. I thought it was very thoughtful policy in 2020,” DeSantis said during an unrelated Crystal River press conference Friday morning.

    “Now what the Interior Department is proposing to do is really to go back off that policy, and I think that would weaken protections that we worked very hard to establish offshore.”

    Those protections reflect environmental fears of damaging Florida’s coastlines and marine life and the military’s ability to train in the Panhandle. Florida has multiple military bases in Panama City and Pensacola.

    “[The military says] it’s really important to be able to have that access to be able to do key training,” the governor continued. “We hope that they double down on the 2020 policy and not push ahead with what Interior wants to do now.”

    This is one of the rarer instances of DeSantis breaking with Trump since the 2024 elections. The tension between the two ahead of and throughout the presidential primary had been replaced with a quieter complacency. Both Trump and DeSantis have been tightly aligned on most conservative issues, especially immigration, while public disagreement has stayed at a muted minimum.

    ‘Dead on arrival’

    According to the Associated Press, the proposal targets six offshore lease sales between 2027 and 2030 along the California coast. It would also spur drilling at least 100 miles offshore of Florida in South-Central Gulf region and compel more than 20 lease sales off the Alaskan coast.

    Backlash has been swift in all targeted states. In Florida, DeSantis became the latest Republican to add his voice to join a bipartisan outcry at the plan, joining lawmakers like U.S. Sen. Ashley Moody and U.S. Rep. Jimmy Patronis. U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, a leading Trump ally, helped persuade the president in 2018 to drop a similar offshore plan when he served as governor.

    Trump agreed at the time to maintain a drilling moratorium until 2032. Earlier this month, Scott and Moody co-sponsored legislation to codify that moratorium.

    In 2010, the Gulf was rocked by a massive oil spill caused by an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform. Eleven men were killed, the rig began to sink, and a catastrophic oil leak sprouted from the well, NOAA reported. It would take three months to cap the spill, allowing roughly 134 million gallons of oil to seep into the ocean in the largest such spill in the nation’s history.

    Politicos aren’t the only ones concerned about the new proposal.

    Sierra Club Florida called the plan “unacceptable” and potentially detrimental to both the state’s environment and the economy.

    “President Trump and his administration may be eager to hand out blank checks to oil and gas companies, but it will not be at Florida’s expense,” Javier Estevez, the group’s political and legislative director, said in a written statement. “We refuse to allow our coastal economies, quality of life, and irreplaceable natural resources to be sacrificed for corporate profit.

    “Any such proposal is dead on arrival, and we will work tirelessly to ensure our coasts are protected.”

    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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    U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick was indicted for allegedly stealing $5M and laundering it toward her 2021 congressional campaign

    This is one of the rarer instances of DeSantis breaking with Trump since the 2024 elections

    In Florida, maliciously disturbing a religious gathering is a first-degree misdemeanor, or a third-degree felony with hate crime enhancement





    Livia Caputo, Florida Phoenix
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  • ‘Drag Race’ star claps back at Florida AG ‘Mister Urethra’ for targeting Christmas show



    The cast of “A Drag Queen Christmas” 2024. Credit: Nina West/Facebook

    Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration this week continued its holiday tradition of targeting Christmas drag shows.

    In a letter to Pensacola City Council, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier called “A Drag Queen Christmas,” the touring show of RuPaul’s Drag Race stars, “openly anti-Christian,” expressing his concern it would result in religious discrimination.

    The show, he said, “openly mocks one of the most sacred holidays in the Christian faith.”

    No word on if he’s coming after Orlando resident The Grinch, who’s never been criticized in his 68 years and three remakes for mocking Christmas.

    Uthmeier also claimed the queens are attempting to “expose themselves to the kids innocently enjoying Christmas festivities” at a nearby winter festival, despite the event being a ticketed 18-and-up show. He’s still trying to reignite the blocked 2023 law restricting drag shows.

    It’s not the first time the DeSantis administration has come after this drag show specifically. In 2022, the administration targeted liquor licenses at the Hyatt Regency Miami and Orlando’s Plaza Live for hosting a “Drag Queen Christmas.” That same year, Proud Boys and evangelists protested outside its Clearwater appearance at Ruth Eckerd Hall.

    This year, Uthmeier attacked specific queens.

    In his letter, the Attorney General specifically denounced Suzie Toot (calling her  “demonic Betty Bop,” a misspelled reference to her Vogue photoshoot); Bosco, AKA “the Demon Queen of Seattle”; and Crystal Methyd, for her “glamorous and beautiful” satanic imagery.

    Trinity “The Tuck” also got a shoutout for her role in previous versions of the show. And since Uthmeier opened the library, Trinity read him back.

    In a video addressing “James Urethra,” Trinity clarified that the show is not anti-Christian.

    “’A Drag Queen Christmas’ is mostly about stupid Christmas numbers, not necessarily about the birth of Jesus. Regardless of that, drag is an art form that is free speech, and we are allowed to do that by law.”

    Trinity encouraged Floridians to sell out every “A Drag Queen Christmas” show in the state as an act of resistance.

    “Show them the support so we can show this administration … drag is fun, drag is art, and it’s not hurting anybody,” Trinity said. “If you’re worried about children, worry about gun control and feeding them instead of worrying about drag queens.”

    A Drag Queen Christmas” returns to Clearwater’s Ruth Eckerd Hall on Dec. 22, the day before it’s slated for Pensacola. Tickets start at $49.

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


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    Two ‘Daily Show’ alums dispense with the niceties

    Uthmeier called the touring show “openly anti-Christian,” expressing his concern it would result in religious discrimination.

    The three-day event is aimed to help raise awareness of and prevent diabetes, in recognition of National Diabetes Month





    Selene San Felice
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  • ‘Nonsensical’: Pro-marijuana group sues DeSantis administration, again



    Credit: Shutterstock

    The group behind a statewide push to legalize recreational marijuana filed suit against the DeSantis administration Friday for allegedly slow-walking the process to put its proposed amendment on the Florida ballot.

    Smart & Safe Florida is hoping the Florida Supreme Court will force the Secretary of State and Director of the Division of Elections to complete the next step in the amendment process: issuing a letter acknowledging that Smart & Safe has enough support for the marijuana amendment to advance.

    This is its second lawsuit this month against the election officials.

    “It is nonsensical, and contrary to the express constitutional and statutory mandates, to allow the Secretary and Director to indefinitely refuse to issue the…Letter and frustrate the constitutional order,” wrote Tallahassee attorney Glenn Burhans, Jr. in his 25-page request for a writ of mandamus.

    He pointed out that Smart & Safe has secured more than three times the number of verified petitions (over 660,000) needed to make it to the ballot, and in August asked Secretary of State Cord Byrd and Division of Elections Director Maria Matthews to issue a letter to the Florida Attorney General confirming that the group has enough verified forms to continue.

    But three months later, in an unusual move, the department still hasn’t issued the required letter. This throws the fate of the proposed amendment into a dubious light due to a state law requiring the Florida Supreme Court to sign off on the amendment before April 1, for clarity’s sake. The court can’t do that if Byrd doesn’t submit his letter to the AG, who then can’t ask the court to offer an opinion.

    Byrd’s office declined to comment on “pending litigation” to the Phoenix.

    ‘Withholding the letter’

    DeSantis and his allies, including DeSantis-appointed Byrd, have been vehemently opposed to legalizing recreational marijuana in Florida. During the 2024 cycle when Smart & Safe first attempted to legalize the drug with Amendment 3, DeSantis encouraged a multi-million dollar campaign against the proposal.

    Alongside his wife, First Lady Casey DeSantis, the two toured the state decrying the drug’s smell and insisting big corporations were trying to write themselves into the constitution. Attorney General James Uthmeier, the governor’s former chief of staff, has come under fire after his political committee to defeat the amendment received millions that originated from a Medicaid settlement doled out to Casey DeSantis’ charity, Hope Florida.

    Separate grand juries are now allegedly investigating the DeSantis administration’s role in defeating the 2024 measure and Hope Florida’s shadowy financials.

    In his petition, Burhans suggested that Byrd and Matthews may be purposely roadblocking the marijuana amendment by attempting to stall out Smart & Safe’s proposal by both waiting out the clock and ordering county supervisors on Oct. 3 to trash as many as 200,000 signatures — nearly one-quarter of what’s needed to qualify for next year’s ballot — because organizers failed to provide the entire amendment to people it reached out to by mail.

    This allegedly “unlawful” move was the basis of Smart & Safe’s Oct. 19 suit against the administration in Circuit Court. Now it’s saying this is part of a larger push to smother the amendment before it gets to the ballot.

    “Respondents appear to be withholding the…Letter on the hopes that the county supervisors’ compliance with the Secretary’s Directive might result in the Petition falling below the statutory threshold,” Burhans wrote. “There is no source of law that grants Respondents this authority.”

    This is Smart & Safe’s second attempt to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida. Although its amendment received 56% support in 2024 among Floridians, it wasn’t enough to reach the 60% threshold needed to amend the state constitution.

    “The Director did not respond to Smart & Safe’s August 12 letter requesting issuance of the…Letter or explain why the letter had not been issued,” the petition says. “As of the date of this filing…Smart & Safe’s Petition has met the threshold for issuance of the…Letter. The Respondents must therefore be compelled to perform their indisputable legal duty.”

    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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    The debt relief initiative, made possible through funds from the Biden administration, has relieved medical debt for 302,000 people.

    The lawsuit claims the ride’s speed, location and design together created a ‘zone of danger for bird strikes’

    From Orlando to Tokyo in one flight? Pinch me (Actually, don’t)





    Livia Caputo, Florida Phoenix
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  • DeSantis says he wants just one constitutional amendment on property taxes in 2026



    Credit: via Shutterstock

    Gov. Ron DeSantis continued to jab at House Republicans over property taxes on Wednesday and insisted that voters should be given just one proposed constitutional amendment to overhaul the system instead of multiple proposals.

    House Speaker Daniel Perez earlier this month said that voters should decide what type of property tax cuts should be enacted and rolled out seven potential amendments that could be placed on the 2026 ballot.

    But this is a no-go with DeSantis who has suggested that Perez is doing this to undermine any effort to cut property taxes.

    “It’s got to be very clearly written and give people a chance to vote for it,” he said while speaking on the University of South Florida campus in Tampa. “What you don’t do is put five [constitutional amendments] on there…because they’re going to be written in ways that are not going to be clear – and so there’s going to create confusion on the ballot.”

    The governor has made clear for months that he wants to provide property tax relief for those with homestead properties and that can only be achieved by placing such a measure on the ballot via a constitutional amendment. The most likely way that will happen is by having the Legislature create and approve a proposal that gets three-fifths support from both the House and Senate to be placed on the November 2026 ballot. Then 60% of the public must vote for it to become law.

    This marks the second time that DeSantis has zinged House Republicans. After they  offered seven separate proposed constitutional amendments  to reduce property taxes earlier this month, DeSantis dismissed their offers as “not serious.” He doubled down on those comments on Wednesday.

    “Total half measures”

    “Just understand what they’re trying to do in the Florida House – they put out a bunch of proposals,” he said. “They’re all milquetoast. There’s not one proposal that would get people excited about. Not one. So they’re total half measures. Which is not what people are asking for. People want to be bold. So just right there’s a problem. But they say, ‘No, we’re just going to put it all out to let the people decide. We’ll put five on the ballot and let the people decide.’ First of all, the Senate’s not going to do that. But if that were to be done, that is a way to kill any type of getting property tax reform. Because different voters are going to read different things and none of them are going to end up getting 60%.”

    One big potential problem for DeSantis, however, is that he has no veto power over what the Legislature eventually draws up and places on the ballot.

    Perez responded to DeSantis’ initial criticisms of the House’s proposals last week by pointing out that the governor has not yet released his own proposal to address the issue. He added that he had personally reached out to the governor to share the House’s offers and had never heard back.

    (One Democrat, Sen. Mack Bernard from Palm Beach County, filed four proposed constitutional amendments on property taxes as well last week).

    DeSantis confirmed at the press conference that he hasn’t spoken with Perez regarding property taxes, and didn’t sound like he intended to anytime soon.

    The pair began feuding over various issues during the 2025 legislative session. When DeSantis first brought up the issue of providing property tax relief during the legislative session earlier this year, Perez countered by proposing a $5 billion plan to reduce sales taxes in Florida, which the governor derided again on Wednesday as “a tax cut for tourists and Canadians.”

    Shortly after this story was published, Speaker Perez responded to the governor’s comments.

    “The governor’s comments can only be interpreted in two ways,” Perez said in a statement sent to the Phoenix. “Either he’s being small and petty, or he has just revealed something significant today about his mysterious property tax plan. The House has proposed eliminating all non-school homestead property taxes. The Governor weirdly called that ‘milquetoast.’ That can only mean the Governor has just announced that he will be proposing to abolish all property taxes including school taxes. I look forward to seeing the Governor’s proposed budget where he makes up for the $21 billion for schools that he plans to cut.”

    DeSantis said that with the 2026 election still a year away, there was no urgency to release his own proposed amendment right now, but said that he was working “with folks” to get the language right so that it can ultimately get the support it needs to pass.

     

    The measure will require 60% approval from the voters

     

    Public opinion polls show Floridians are generally supportive of eliminating or reducing property taxes. A University of North Florida Public Opinion Research Lab survey released on Tuesday of 728 likely voters showed 49% of Floridians supporting the elimination of property taxes for homeowners, with 43% against. While the survey shows a plurality of voters support the idea, it’s far from the 60% support required for passage.

    DeSantis emphasized that whatever proposed constitutional amendment on property taxes appears on the ballot it must be clear and concisely written. The governor claimed that two constitutional amendments passed by the Legislature that appeared on the 2024 ballot failed because they were poorly written: Amendment 1 to  make school board races partisan, and Amendment to repeal the state’s public campaign financing programs for statewide candidates.

    Critics say whatever is ultimately proposed regarding a significant reduction if not outright repeal of property taxes on homestead properties will result in a significant cost shift – whether in taxes, fees or inadequate services. “That’s a reality if we’re going to be clear about what this does,”  Florida Policy Institute director of research Esteban Leonardo Santis said Wednesday during an online discussion on property taxes.

    “Ultimately if we were to just eliminate property taxes – non-school property taxes for homesteads – that would cost $11 billion statewide,” Santis added. “This would be $7.8 billion for counties. It would also be $3 billion for municipalities.”

    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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    The lawsuit accuses the DeSantis administration of slow-walking the process to put its proposed amendment on the Florida ballot.

    They want Florida to require nursing homes and assisted-living facilities to allow residents to install video monitoring devices in rooms

    ‘[There’s] a clinical assistant professor from supposed Palestine. Why are they—is that just social justice that they’re doing?’





    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
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  • Democrats urge DeSantis to declare emergency, fill Florida food pantries



    Credit: Shutterstock

    Florida Democrats in the Legislature are imploring Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency and use state money to buy food and direct it to food pantries as nearly 3 million people lose access to a federal food assistance program.

    Led by Senate Democratic Leader Lori Berman, D-Boynton Beach, and her House counterpart Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, legislative Democrats sent DeSantis a letter Tuesday asking him to use his emergency powers to ensure the millions of Floridians who rely on the Supplemental Assistance Nutrition Program don’t go hungry when their benefits expire Saturday as a result of the federal government shutdown.

    The letter also asks DeSantis to direct the Department of Children and Families, which administers the SNAP program, to coordinate with local food banks and their community partners to distribute the food immediately.

    “For families already struggling under record food and housing costs, the loss of this critical support would be catastrophic,” the letter reads. “Local food banks and pantries have already reported overwhelming demand and depleted supplies. … We are days away from a full-blown hunger emergency that will leave families without food during the holiday season. The state cannot stand by.”

    Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried added in a separate written statement: “This moment is bigger than politics. This is about showing up for our fellow Americans and keeping Floridians safe and fed.”

    SNAP provides nutritional support for low-income seniors, people with disabilities living on fixed incomes, and other individuals and families with low incomes. Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for their food security, behind California, Texas, and New York. Nationwide, 41.7 million people rely on SNAP benefits, August 2025 data show.

    The governor’s office didn’t immediately respond to Florida Phoenix’s request for comment.

    The Democrats’ letter comes after the DeSantis administration posted a notice that SNAP benefits are about to expire.

    The state notice was put up after the U.S. Department of Agriculture posted Friday that it would not tap into $6 billion in contingency funds to keep benefits intact for the coming month. It would take $9 billion to cover the costs of the SNAP program through November. But the federal memo, first reported by Axios, claims that SNAP contingency funds cannot be used to float the program during the shutdown, an assertion that has been disputed.

    Contingency funds “are only available to supplement regular monthly benefits when amounts have been appropriated for, but are insufficient to cover, benefits. The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” the memo says.

    The partisan impasse has resulted in a 28-day government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year.

    “SNAP is one of the most effective programs for addressing hunger and food insecurity in the state,” the letter from the Democrats stated.

    “Especially after the recent cuts stemming from President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, Floridians cannot afford another day without action by the state. Florida has the fiscal strength to respond. What’s needed now is the moral will to act. No parent should have to choose between paying rent and feeding their kids. No child should go hungry because politicians in Washington can’t agree. We urge you to act immediately.”

    Florida’s Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier, meanwhile, joined 18 GOP state Attorney Generals on Tuesday in signing onto their own letter urging Senate Democrats to concede to Republicans and prevent disruptions to SNAP.

    “This does not need to happen,” the letter, led by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, reads. “Congress can stop the threat right now by passing a clean continuing resolution that keeps essential services funded and protects those who rely on them. You have the power to prevent a crisis that is entirely avoidable.”

    “Heartless”

    Berman said in prepared remarks that Florida has $5 billion in its “rainy day” fund that DeSantis could use to avert the food cliff  low-income families face.

    “The sudden loss of those benefits would be an economic and humanitarian nightmare,” she said. “With the stroke of a pen, the Governor can keep food on peoples’ tables. He has a responsibility to the people of this state to put partisanship aside and lead. Refusing to act would be truly heartless.”

    Driskell said in her prepared remarks that the governor “brags” about “maxing out” the amount of savings in the state’s “rainy day” fund.

    “If millions of hungry Floridians isn’t an economic storm, I don’t know what is,” she said, adding, “This is a crisis but an entirely solvable one. We can make sure Floridians do not go hungry. It costs a little more than $6 a day to feed someone. Isn’t every Floridian worth that?”

    The letter also asks the governor to request the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to implement the universal school meals programs for the duration of the emergency.

    Orlando Weekly reporter McKenna Schueler contributed to this story.

    This story has been updated to include comment from FDP Chair Nikki Fried.

    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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    ‘[There’s] a clinical assistant professor from supposed Palestine. Why are they—is that just social justice that they’re doing?’

    He insisted that voters should be given just one proposed constitutional amendment to overhaul the system instead of multiple proposals.

    Nearly 3 million people are expected to lose access to the federal food assistance program





    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix and McKenna Schueler
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  • Nearly 3 million Floridians set to lose SNAP benefits Saturday



    Credit: Shutterstock

    The DeSantis administration is warning nearly 3 million Floridians who rely on federal food assistance that their benefits won’t be available in November due to the federal government shutdown. 

    “If the federal government shutdown continues into November, (supplemental nutrition assistance program) SNAP benefits for the month of November will not be issued until federal funding is restored,” the Florida Department of Children Families (DCF) posted on its webpage.

    “You may receive notices about your eligible benefit amount, but you will not receive any benefits deposited to your (electronic benefit transfer) EBT card during this time.”

    DCF posted its notice in close proximity to the U.S. Department of Agriculture declaring in a memo that it would not tap into a $6 billion emergency fund to temporarily finance the program. 

    Florida has the fourth largest SNAP enrollment nationwide with 2.94 million relying on the assistance for their food security, behind California, Texas, and New York.  Nationwide, 41.7 million people rely on SNAP benefits, August 2025 data show.

    SNAP provides nutritional support for low-income seniors, people with disabilities living on fixed incomes, and other individuals and families with low incomes. Although funded by the federal government, SNAP in Florida is administered by DCF’s Office of Economic Self-Sufficiency, which is responsible for determining eligibility.

    USDA —  in a notice it posted Friday — put the blame on Democrats for not agreeing to pass a continuing resolution to keep the government funded. Democrats are against passing a funding plan that doesn’t extend the enhanced premiums tax credits that lower the costs of so-called Obamacare plans purchased through the federal health exchange (healthcare.gov).

    The partisan impasse has resulted in a 27-day government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year.

    “The best way for SNAP to continue is for the shutdown to end. If not for Congressional Democrats blocking government funding, November SNAP benefits would be paid on-time,” the memo, first reported by Axios, notes.

    SNAP has about $6 billion in contingency funds; $9 billion is needed to cover the costs of the program through November. But the federal memo says that SNAP contingency funds cannot be used to float the program during the shutdown.

    Contingency funds “are only available to supplement regular monthly benefits when amounts have been appropriated for, but are insufficient to cover, benefits. The contingency fund is not available to support FY 2026 regular benefits, because the appropriation for regular benefits no longer exists,” the memo says.

    Center on Budget and Policy Priorities President Sharon Parrott, a former official with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), says that’s not the case.

    “Speaking as a former OMB official, I know from experience that the federal government has the authority and the tools it needs during a shutdown to get these SNAP funds to families. Even at this late date, the professionals at the Department of Agriculture and in states can make this happen. And, to state the obvious, benefits that are a couple of days delayed are far more help to families than going without any help at all,” Parrott said in a written statement.

    “It would be unconscionable for the Administration to go out of its way to threaten millions of children, seniors, veterans, people with disabilities, parents, and workers with hunger, rather than taking all legal steps available to provide food assistance to people who need it.”

    Florida Policy Institute senior policy analyst Cindy Huddleston told the Florida Phoenix that more than 70% of Florida SNAP beneficiaries are children, seniors, and people with disabilities. But the cuts impact more than families in need.

    “But it also affects the bottom line of thousands of small businesses in Florida where SNAP participants shop. USDA, which already has the money to provide assistance to every family participating in SNAP for almost all of November, should release those funds immediately and also transfer other available funds so that those in need do not go hungry and local businesses can stay afloat,”  she said in an email to the Phoenix.

    The elimination of SNAP dovetails with the start of 2026 enrollment in the federal health exchange.

    Florida leads the nation in Obamacare enrollment with more than 4.6 million residents.

    Due to the elimination of the enhanced premium tax credits (and the damage that is expected to cause to enrollment) and increases in costs of prescription drugs, health insurance overall costs are going to increase.

    Florida Office of Insurance Regulation Deputy Commissioner for Life and Health Alexis Bakofsy said earlier this month there would be an average 34% increase in premiums effective effect Jan. 1.


    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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    The judge ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights

    The court agreed with the Department of Homeland Security that the case should be paused until government attorneys can work again.

    ‘We must call it what it truly is: the documentation of the sexual abuse of children’





    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix
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  • New law aimed at Trump protesters being used against fans who ran onto UF football field



    John Paul Schmidt, 27, of Greensboro, N.C., is taken in to custody by Alachua County Sheriff’s Deputies following Florida’s 29 – 21 win over Texas on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025. Credit: Screengrab via Tiktok/@sidehustlehustle

    Four exuberant football fans who rushed the field after the University of Florida’s upset win over Texas are facing first-of-their-kind, felony trespass charges under a new law a Republican senator said was intended to punish protesters of President Donald Trump during his appearances in the state.

    Lawmakers in Tallahassee said they never intended the new law to be used against fans storming football fields after a huge victory. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed it in May.

    And famed former UF head coach Steve Spurrier said in a new interview he thinks such fan actions at college games energize players and make a lifetime memory for students.

    Two UF students and two older men were handcuffed and arrested Oct. 4 after police said they ran onto Steve Spurrier-Florida Field after the team’s 29-21 victory over the then-No. 9 Longhorns. It was a rare moment of exhilaration so far this season for UF, whose record fell to 2-4 after Saturday’s loss to No. 5 Texas A&M. 

    A review of statewide criminal records across Florida shows that the felony charges recommended by law enforcement in their cases would be the first filed under the new law, which took effect May 16. It bans anyone from entering an area secured by law enforcement or a large, ticketed sports or entertainment event without a ticket – with penalties up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

    Such cases were previously handled as misdemeanors. The new law, which two Democratic state lawmakers voted against, puts running past police onto a football field after a big game on the same criminal level as aggravated assault, bribery, drug possession or child abuse.

    When the bill was making its way through the Legislature earlier this year, even lawmakers who wrote it said it wasn’t intended to punish what has been an occasional college tradition at some schools for decades.

    At a hearing of the Senate Criminal Justice Committee in March, Sen. Joe Gruters, R-Sarasota, asked, “So, just to be crystal clear, if somebody goes onto the field, they won’t be charged with a felony?”

    “That’s not the intent, and they can quote me in the case law if that becomes an issue,” said the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Jonathan Martin, R-Fort Myers. 

    Martin, the chairman of the criminal justice committee, said during the hearing that the bill was meant to provide tougher penalties against Trump protesters.

    “This is specifically intended to address the Secret Service efforts to keep our president safe while he’s in the State of Florida,” Martin said. “Currently people who are trespassing at those events or locations where the president is located are only committing a misdemeanor. This keeps happening very frequently.”

    At the Senate floor vote, Martin said law enforcement “were the large drivers of this bill.”

    The bill passed unanimously in the House. In the Senate, Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, voted against it, and Tracie Davis, D-Jacksonville, recorded a “no” after the official vote.

    Martin, a civil and personal injury lawyer, didn’t have time last week to discuss the bill he wrote or its application in the case of the four UF football fans, his aides said.

    House lawmakers said the new law was also motivated by chaos at the Copa América international soccer match at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami in July 2024, when thousands of fans – many without tickets – rushed the gates. Police ejected 54 people from the stadium and arrested 26. 

    “This would give them a mechanism to go after those folks,” said Rep. Mike Giallombardo, R-Cape Coral, who wrote the House version of the bill.

    At UF, the criminal charges contrast with other universities where similar scenes sometimes end in celebration. In August, after Florida State beat Alabama, FSU fans flooded the field but no trespassing arrests were made, according to court records. The ACC fined the university $50,000.

    In Gainesville, the State Attorney’s Office hasn’t yet formally charged the four fans in their criminal cases, according to court records. The four were arrested on the felony charges at the stadium, booked into the jail across town then released without having to pay bail.

    They include UF students Landon Beckham Kingsle Kefford, 21, of Parkland, Florida, and Danek Everett Blalock Cirafesi, 19, of Somerville, New Jersey. They were banned from the stadium for three years. The others were Kevin Wilcox Joy, 35, of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, and John Paul Schmidt, 27, of Greensboro, North Carolina. The latter two were banned from the university’s campus for three years, not just the stadium.

    None of the four returned emails or text messages to discuss their arrests. Cirafesi and Schmidt pleaded not guilty last week.

    There are no records of UF fans as a crowd ever rushing the field, one of the only schools in the SEC with that distinction. Spurrier – who coached UF from 1990 to 2001, won Florida’s first Heisman in 1966 as a player and runs a popular steakhouse in Gainesville – said wistfully he has seen that kind of exuberance at other schools. 

    “When I watch these other schools do it, that’s a memory of a lifetime for those students,” Spurrier told Fresh Take Florida, a news service at the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications.

    Spurrier famously encouraged fans last year to rush the field if the Gators beat LSU under Coach Billy Napier. UF won 27-16, but the fans stayed in their seats.

    “I was hoping it would put a little incentive into our team,” Spurrier said. “According to Coach Napier, they had a little extra juice thinking the students were going to swarm out there if we beat LSU that night.”

    Bennett Hutson, the defense lawyer for Joy and Kefford, said he believes authorities recommended the felony charges to deter future incidents. The university openly discourages fans from running onto the field after games, with announcements during the game and messages displayed on the scoreboard.

    “They want to get the message out that they don’t want people to do this,” Hutson said. “They want people to respect their integrity, the integrity of the stadium and the safety of the student athletes and all the staff.”

    In Florida, there were two earlier misdemeanor arrests under the new law, both in Miami. A 19-year-old was accused of interfering with a sporting or entertainment event after police said he jumped the turnstile at a music concert at the Hard Rock Stadium in August. A judge offered to sentence him to 25 hours of community service and keep the arrest off his record.

    The other misdemeanor arrest involved Alejandro Antonio Alvarez Narvaez, 27, of Key Biscayne, who police said ran onto the field last month after the University of Miami’s 49-12 victory over the University of South Florida. Police arrested him under a different provision of the same law, which carries a misdemeanor penalty of up to one year in jail and a $2,500 fine. His arraignment was scheduled for Oct. 27.

    The defense lawyer for the other two men in Gainesville, Dean Galigani, did not immediately return phone messages.

    Hutson predicted the case will end up without his clients facing a felony record or years in prison.

    “If it’s a kid doing something dumb and he doesn’t hurt somebody … they’re not trying to change that kid’s future,” Hutson said. “So, the case will get handled in a way that meshes with that.”

    ___
    This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. The reporter can be reached at oliviaevans@freshtakeflorida.com. You can donate to support our students here.


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    The language is similar to oaths taken by lawyers, doctors, and public officials

    The legislation would reduce the minimum to buy a firearm in the state from 21 to 18 years of age

    The Rev. Jack Martin insists politics won’t interfere with his volunteer school service





    Olivia Evans Fresh Take Florida
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  • Leadership shakeup at Hope Florida Foundation follows scrutiny of $10M grants

    Joshua Hay, the now-former chairman of the Hope Florida Foundation, testifies before the House Health Care Budget Subcommittee on April 15, 2025.

    Joshua Hay, the now-former chairman of the Hope Florida Foundation, testifies before the House Health Care Budget Subcommittee on April 15, 2025.

    Miami

    Three board members have left the Hope Florida Foundation, including the president and public face of the charity, amid questions over its transfer of $10 million from a Medicaid settlement for Gov. Ron DeSantis’ political purposes last year.

    The Department of Children and Families chose not to reappoint board president Joshua Hay, the president of a technology company that contracts with the state.

    The department also didn’t reappoint board members Stephanie White, a Pensacola adoption attorney, and Tina Vidal-Duart, executive vice president of major state contractor CDR Maguire.

    Both had asked for more information on the legality of the $10 million transfer during an April board meeting.

    The announcement, made during the organization’s board meeting Monday, came as a surprise to observers and wasn’t mentioned in its agenda. But the foundation’s lawyer, Jeff Aaron, said the board members were originally appointed to serve two-year terms, which recently expired.

    “Three of the board members had completed their full two-year term, and they rolled off the board onto other things,” Aaron said.

    “They all completed their term, and obviously grateful for their service,” he added.

    Hay did not respond to a request for comment from the Herald/Times. White declined to comment.

    “My term expired beginning of September,” Vidal-Duart said in a text message.

    The Department of Children and Families, which oversees the state-created charity, did not say why the three weren’t reappointed. The organization’s bylaws state board members “may be appointed to successive terms without limit.”

    “As is common among non-profit boards, Mr. Hay, Ms. Vidal-Duart and Ms. White left their appointments following their respective two-year terms, and the Department remains grateful for their service to support the mission of the Foundation and the Department,” department spokesperson Morgan Jones said in a statement.

    The department chose three replacements:

    • Bradford Smithy, a partner at Minneapolis-based wealth management firm Elevation Point

    • Elizabeth Butler, who told the board her background was in “engineering and management consulting”

    • Yaffa Popack, a DeSantis fundraiser and Miami Beach real estate investor whom he appointed to the Florida International University board of trustees in 2023.

    “Hope Florida is an amazing, amazing foundation,” Popack told board members Monday.

    Smithy did not attend Monday’s meeting.

    The foundation was created by the Legislature in 2023 to help the Department of Children and Families carry out its mission for Hope Florida, a state program championed by first lady Casey DeSantis and intended to steer Floridians off of government assistance and toward aid provided by charities and nonprofits.

    The Hope Florida Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, is supposed to take in donations and distribute the money to churches and nonprofits that help people.

    It fell under scrutiny this year when the Herald/Times began questioning why it held a secret board meeting last year in which it accepted $10 million from a state legal settlement with the Medicaid contractor Centene.

    The foundation quickly gave $5 million each to two organizations, one of which was controlled by the Florida Chamber of Commerce.

    The two organizations then gave nearly all of the money to a political committee controlled by DeSantis’ chief of staff that was dedicated to defeating last year’s recreational marijuana ballot initiative. DeSantis later appointed his chief of staff, James Uthmeier, as Florida’s attorney general.

    Four former federal prosecutors told the Herald/Times that the use of money from a Medicaid settlement for political purposes could amount to a theft of government funds or other potential crimes. The state attorney in Leon County has an open criminal investigation relating to it.

    DeSantis has said the state did nothing wrong.

    The $10 million transfer could jeopardize the foundation’s nonprofit status because it could be construed as lobbying under IRS regulations. The foundation’s board has never directly addressed the issue.

    Amid the scrutiny over the transfer, the charity was found to have been operating without a budget or approved bylaws in violation of state law, had not filed its taxes and wasn’t holding public meetings or keeping minutes of those meetings.

    “Mistakes were made,” Hay told a House committee in April.

    On Monday, the board approved the first budget and grant policy in its history, requiring grants of more than $50,000 be approved by a majority of the board. Hay approved one of the $5 million grants on his own.

    The budget includes approval to hire a new executive director at up to $175,000 per year and to spend up to $120,000 for a general counsel. Aaron, the current general counsel, told the Herald/Times that his contract is capped at $60,000 and that the additional $60,000 would be for any additional legal work.

    It projects to raise $700,000 in donations and give away $250,000 in grants.

    The organization’s new president, Bob Schafer, said it was a “conservative” budget that will help the organization move forward.

    “This is by no means carved in stone,” Schafer said. Schafer’s background has not been released or mentioned by the organization.

    State Rep. Alex Andrade, a Pensacola Republican who has led the House’s probe into the $10 million transfer, watched Monday’s meeting.

    “It was bizarre to see board members replaced without notice and for this brand new board to immediately approve a budget that anticipates spending far more on overhead than on issuing grants,” Andrade said.

    Herald/Times staff writer Alexandra Glorioso contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published September 29, 2025 at 7:23 PM.

    Lawrence Mower

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  • No, school vaccine mandates are not like slavery

    Florida’s Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo said the state’s health department will end “every single” school vaccine mandate, which includes many routine children’s immunizations.

    Ladapo, who has a history of spreading inaccurate vaccine claims, equated the state’s vaccine requirements with slavery. 

    “Every last one of them is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery,” Ladapo said during a Sept. 3 press conference in Valrico with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. “Who am I as a man standing here right now to tell you what you should put in your body? Who am I to tell you what your child should put in their body? I don’t have that right.”

    Ladapo mentioned enslavement again moments later: “If we want to move toward a perfect world, a better world, we can’t do it by enslaving people in terrible philosophies and taking away people’s freedoms. That’s not the path … we have to find alternative pathways.” 

    Florida has exemptions from vaccine participation; enslaved people had no exemptions or options. (Some slaves were able to self-emancipate but this was rare. Self-emancipation was extremely difficult and dangerous; people who attempted risked severe punishment, enslavement or death.)

    Experts in public health called Ladapo’s statement false and inflammatory.

    “Slavery is the violent ownership of people,” Tony Yang, a George Washington University health policy professor, said. “School-entry vaccination rules are safety conditions for participating in shared spaces — and they include due-process protections and exemptions.” 

    Dorit Reiss, a University of California-San Francisco law professor who studies vaccine policy issues, including mandates, agreed.

    “Regulation in public health is not akin to slavery,” Reiss said. “The opposite of slavery is not ‘you can do whatever you want in a state regardless of the risk you pose to others.’ Free societies have many regulations to protect others — for example, we require people to drive on one side of the street; we regulate to keep our water clean. Both of these limit liberty — without being slavery.” 

    Sign up for PolitiFact texts

    Most public health experts agree that vaccines are most effective at halting disease spread when there is widespread uptake. Vaccines also have been used to eradicate or significantly reduce deadly and debilitating diseases, such as smallpox and polio.

    Pediatricians told us that states have school vaccine requirements because they help maintain high coverage in places where contagious diseases spread easily, protecting those who are too young, or medically unable to be vaccinated.

    The Florida Department of Health did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for comment.

    Florida law on school vaccine requirements

    State law currently requires students in public and private schools from daycare through 12th grade to have specific immunizations, unless they obtain a valid exemption. The list includes routine childhood immunizations such as DTaP, polio, measles-mumps-rubella, chickenpox and hepatitis B. 

    Parents can obtain religious exemptions from their county health department if vaccination conflicts with their religious beliefs or practices.

    They can also obtain medical exemptions from health providers who have to state that a child cannot be fully immunized with “valid clinical reasoning or evidence, according to the state’s health department website. This exemption can be temporary or permanent.

    Around 89% of students entering kindergarten in the state are immunized, according to Florida health data, a decline from 94% in 2017. 

    History and science of U.S. school vaccine requirements

    Massachusetts required smallpox vaccines in 1855, becoming the first state to mandate vaccines.

    Vaccine requirements for school admission have varied among states, but all now have policies requiring some vaccinations. By the early 1980s, most states, including Florida, had adopted more universal school vaccine mandates.

    Florida’s Department of Education website says high immunization rates “increase the herd immunity of school populations in order to decrease the occurrence of vaccine-preventable diseases and to protect those at risk because of age, immunodeficiency or lack of vaccination.

    Public health experts said school vaccines are aimed at reducing overall risk and disease outbreaks, affecting everyone. “People can choose not to vaccinate themselves or their children, but the mandate reduces their ability to force that risk on others — co-workers, other people’s children, teachers,” Reiss said. 

    In a Sept. 3 emailed statement, the American Academy of Pediatrics Florida chapter said ending vaccine requirements will put children in Florida schools at higher risk.

    Our ruling

    Ladapo said every school vaccine requirement “drips” with “slavery.”

    Parents, including in Florida, can choose not to vaccinate their children by applying for exemptions. About 11% of Florida kindergarteners are not immunized, recent data shows.

    People who were enslaved did not have other options or exemptions.  

    The statement is not only wrong but ridiculous. We rate it Pants on Fire!

    PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

    RELATED: Do pediatricians recommend vaccines to make a profit? There’s not much money there.

    RELATED: DNA fragments in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines won’t harm you, as Florida surgeon general suggests 

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  • Does Marijuana Have Any Sway In The Election

    Does Marijuana Have Any Sway In The Election

    Since 2016 cannabis has began slowly legalizing across Canada and the US. Recent research says almost 90% believe it should be legalized.  Additionally, California Sober has become a thing, beer sales have flattened and even AARP has joined esteemed medical organizations saying cannabis should be recognized for the health benefits. States are reaping huge tax revenue, but the industry is still struggling without some type of federal recognization. But does marijuana have any sway in the election?

    RELATED: Red States Lean Green This Election

    Top concerns of voters include the economy, healthcare, the Supreme Court and abortion, with over 60% of voters considering them very important. And although cannabis consumers use is generally seen more of a democrat habit than republicans, a number of repubicans are fans. Some larger influencers in the industry have been staunch supporter of the GOP nominee.  A recent poll found 42% of Republicans and GOP-leaning independent favor legalizing marijuana for both recreational and medical compared with 72% of Democrats.  Florida governor Ron DeSantis is struggling to prevent an expanded cannabis ballot initiative passing in Florida.  But do voters really consider marijuana when choosing?

    Photo by Lingbeek/Getty Images

    While the industry is full of bros who believe they have influence over the election and congress, the numbers don’t add up. It isn’t a make or break issue for most voters. Biden delayed any action on marijuana, despite his promise in 2020, until the last part of this term.  Because of this, even if he manages to push things through with the Drug Enforcement Administration, it will be 2025 before any help comes. The GOP nominee’s has come out in support of the Florida initiative against his old foe DeSantis, but leaders in his party are against any legal form of marijuana. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has made it very clear cannabis is a no go.

    A recent YouGov poll revealed , voters trust the Democratic nominee to handle cannabis laws (27 percent), compared to the GOP candidate (20 percent). But more Trump supporters say marijuana issues are important them (17 percent) than Harris supporters (11 percent).  It could mean older conservative believe the GOP will reverse marijuana trends.

    RELATED: Musk Supports DeSantis Blocking Marijuana Legalization

    The good news is alcohol is a major partner of cannabis having invested over $13 billion in the industry, and they have a longer term relationship with Congress.  Constellation, one of the largest players of spirits, wine and beer, made $22 billion in revenue last year compared to the $33 billon the entire marijuana raked in.

    Does the industry have a say in the election, absolutely via support, donation and campaigns.  But on average, marijuana is not a major issue for most voters.

    Terry Hacienda

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  • Can An Air Purifier Get Rid Of The Marijuana Smell

    Can An Air Purifier Get Rid Of The Marijuana Smell

    Cannabis is legal to more than 50% of the population and more people are consuming. As additional states consider legalizing, what about the famous smell? Governor Ron DeSantis has made it a point talking about how cities will stink if weed is legal. Well, marijuana does have some stink, but most smoke outside or in their own home. And Florida is a state of cars and indoor spaces. Smoking cannabis, like tobacco, will be not be allowed indoors except in homes. But occasionally, you are in someone else’s space and, well, things happen.  What to do? Can an air purifier get rid of the marijuana smell?

    RELATED: Red States Lean Green This Election

    Additionally, lots of people are traveling and being in mew spaces, especially in legal states. Friends, guests, clients all have different habits.  In fact, Gen Z and millennials took, on average, nearly five trips in 2023. Gen Xers and Boomers to four. Millennials and Gen Zers also say they devote, on average, 29 percent of their incomes to travel, compared with 26 percent for Gen Zers and 25 percent for baby boomers. So this a variety of AirBnBs, friend’s couches, and more. Air purifiers can be highly effective at eliminating cannabis odors from indoor spaces. The key to success lies in choosing the right type of air purifier withappropriate filtration technology.

    Photo by Flickr user boviate

    The most effective air purifiers for cannabis odor utilize a combination of HEPA filtration and activated carbon filters. Here’s how they work.

    HEPA Filtration: High-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters remove tiny particles from the air, including smoke particles that carry odor molecules. This helps reduce the overall concentration of cannabis smoke in the air.

    Activated Carbon: The real workhorse for odor elimination is activated carbon. These filters are highly porous and adsorb odor-causing volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and gases, effectively trapping the molecules responsible for cannabis smell.

    When selecting an air purifier for cannabis odor, here is what to consider. Look for units with large activated carbon filters, ideally containing several pounds of carbon for maximum odor absorption. Choose a purifier powerful enough to cycle the air in your space multiple times per hour for best results. And ensure the purifier is rated for the size of the room where it will be used.

    RELATED: What’s That Smell? Why Your Marijuana Smells Skunky

    While air purifiers are effective, combining them with other strategies can enhance odor elimination. Designate a specific smoking area to contain odors. Smoke near an open window when possible. Use lower-odor cannabis strains. And lastly clean surfaces regularly to prevent odor buildup.

    By using a high-quality air purifier with both HEPA and activated carbon filtration, along with these additional measures,

    Sarah Johns

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  • Will DeSantis Let Floridians Vote On Marijuana

    Will DeSantis Let Floridians Vote On Marijuana

    In his quest as a foe of legal cannabis and for running a nanny state, will DeSantis allow Floridians to vote for marijuana? 

    DeSantis is recovering from his failed presidential bid and is working to shore up his reputation in Florida. He is known for being tough, driven and getting things his way. His historic fight with Disney has drawn national attention, but hasn’t fully gone as DeSantis planned. His reputation is bruised and he is stepping up his tactics. He has opposed legal cannabis from the beginning, so will DeSantis let Floridians vote on marijuana?

    RELATED: Looks Like Virginia Is The Newest Marijuana Nanny State

    Currently, DeSantis is using state resources to try to block the Sunshine State citizens from voting on another issues, but what about marijuana? DeSantis, despite receiving campaign donations from a few large cannabis operators, has been adamantly opposed.

    Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

    When medical marijuana was first put on the ballot, citizens were supportive. It was reasonable considering the amount of veterans and senior citizens in the state. PTSD and chronic pain are two of the ways the American Medical Association, Health and Human Services and science acknowledge cannabis has medical benefits. In general, Florida is in the top 3 states with retirees, a group the Governor thought he can rely on for support, but the state supported medical marijuana by 61%.  The governor said it wasn’t enough support, and made them vote again, clearly sharing he did not want it passed. It passed with 71%.  Now the state wants to pass recreational marijuana via a ballot initiative and the governor is unhappy.

    The pro-marijuana group gained enough signatures and has out raised the opposition $75 million to $14 million. In different current ballot initiative, DeSantis has taken another tack.  The other group also gained enough signatures and traction. But in an unprecedented move, the Governor has used state resource to go door to door to ask people if they signed the petition. Also, the governor has also allowed a state agency’s seal to be used in ads against a ballot initiative, a highly usual move.

    RELATED: Player Says 9 Out Of 10 NFL Athletes Use Marijuana

    The GOP Presidential candidate has come out in support of recreational cannabis in Florida, but, so far, it has not swayed DeSantis in his stance.  The GOP leader and the governor have a fraught relationship, so it is unclear if it will make a difference in campaign.

    Terry Hacienda

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  • Florida abandoned workplace safety for its public employees and attacked their unions instead

    Florida abandoned workplace safety for its public employees and attacked their unions instead

    Tens of thousands of state and municipal employees in Florida have lost their union representation — and their union contracts — this year, due to consequences of a  “reform” law approved in 2023.  And while the issue is little-discussed, one clear example of the law’s impact is its potential to undermine the few workplace health and safety protections that Florida’s public sector has in large part historically been excluded from.

    It started 50 years ago.

    Under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, millions of workers in Florida’s private sector — which make up the majority of the state’s workforce — are covered by basic health and safety regulations that are meant to help protect people from injury, illness, and death on the job.

    Thanks to OSHA, workers have a right to protections such as the information and training for chemical hazards in the workplace, safety equipment like respirators, and a workplace that is “free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm.”

    But there’s a glaring loophole baked into the law that has never been fixed: It doesn’t cover state, city or county employees.

    In Florida, that means the federal government doesn’t have authority to require or enforce basic workplace safety protections for the more than 900,000 employees in local and state government, including the public employees who fix malfunctioning traffic lights, pick up your trash, drive your kids to school, and clear debris and fix power lines after major storms.

    Labor unions, for their part, can negotiate protective language into union contracts for public employees who are exempted from OSHA’s federal protections, and many— including the Laborers’ International Union of North America and the Service Employees International Union — have.

    The federal government’s landmark workplace safety law has a glaring loophole that excludes Florida’s state and municipal workers.

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    According to Ronnie Burris, a former wastewater treatment employee of 25 years and union official for LiUNA Local 630 in Jacksonville, all of his local’s municipal contracts — covering certain groups of workers employed by Orlando, Jacksonville, Cocoa Beach and other cities — contain explicit requirements for the public employer to “comply with federal, state, and local legislation concerning safety, health, sanitation, and working conditions.”

    “That’s been negotiated in all the contracts,” Burris told Orlando Weekly in a phone call.

    In practice, he explained, this means if an employer did violate federal OSHA regulations, the affected employee wouldn’t be able to go to OSHA, since the federal agency doesn’t have jurisdiction. But they would have the right to file a grievance through their union over a breach of their union contract.

    That, Burris confirmed, is the union difference. “If they’re non-union, then I’m not sure that [the employer] have to follow anything.”

    As of last year, less than one-third of Florida’s public sector had union representation according to federal data, and even that low number has taken a drastic nosedive.

    In the wake of a union “reform” law approved by the GOP-controlled state Legislature and Florida Gov. DeSantis last year, more than 68,000 public employees in Florida — including thousands represented by LiUNA — have so far lost their union contracts, as well as the certification from the state that would allow their unions to negotiate new ones. Cops and firefighters were excluded from the new law, so their unions weren’t decertified.

    Burris’s Local 630 recently lost certification (and contracts) for 11 public sector unions, as a result of the law, covering over 1,700 employees in Florida altogether.

    These now-dissolved unions provided negotiating power for mechanics and other trades workers at the Orlando International Airport, as well as certain groups of workers employed by the cities of Melbourne, Atlantic Beach, Jacksonville Beach, Edgewater, and employees of Levy, Breward, Columbia, Alachua and Nassau counties.

    Some of these unions were established decades ago. The union at Orlando International Airport, governed by the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority, was first certified in 1977. The now-defunct union in Alachua County — formerly representing over 200 employees, from janitors to tax clerks and equipment operators — was certified the same year.

    “Most municipalities want to keep their employees safe,” Burris allowed. But without any sort of mandate or regulation in place, he said, there is no authority forcing employers to abide by or respect the same rules afforded to private sector employees under OSHA, and the state government doesn’t require similar protections either.

    Deadly consequences

    Even union representation has its limitations, however. The general lack of OSHA coverage for Florida’s public sector laid the groundwork for a deadly explosion in Daytona Beach back in 2006, which eventually led to a federal investigation.
    Three union-represented city employees were working on the roof of the Bethune Wastewater Treatment Plant in Daytona, damaged from recent hurricanes, unaware that they were working above a massive methanol tank.

    Sparks from a cutting torch the men used to remove parts of the damaged roof ignited methanol vapors from the tank, creating an explosion and a “fireball on top of the tank,” according to the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board’s report.

    All three employees were swallowed by flames. One worker, 43-year-old Michael Martin, managed to survive with severe injuries, while the two others — 59-year old Eric Johnson and 40-year-old Clyde Jones — died from the devastating incident, later deemed preventable.

    The federal board noted in its investigative findings that Daytona Beach had “no program to evaluate the safety of non-routine tasks” and there was “no evidence” to suggest the employees who died that day had received any methanol hazard training in the past 10 years. Jones’ family later filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city, and his widow called on state leaders and Congress to establish greater protections.

    Florida abandoned workplace safety for its public employees and attacked their unions instead (3)

    Courtesy of Daytona Beach via Chemical Safety Board

    But it was clear this wasn’t just a city of Daytona Beach problem. “No state or federal oversight of public employee safety exists in the State of Florida,” the federal board noted, bluntly, in its findings.

    The investigation board recommended in its 2007 report that Florida lawmakers and the governor (then-Republican Charlie Crist) enact legislation to implement policies “covering the workplace health and safety of Florida public employees that are at least as effective as OSHA.”

    Nearly 20 years later, this has not happened.

    Some municipal governments — including Orange County — have voluntarily adopted health and safety programs that follow OSHA standards. But some safety officials have admitted that simply adopting these programs may not be enough.

    During that investigation into the 2006 wastewater treatment plant incident, Brian Berke, an employee safety manager for Palm Beach County at the time, testified that his county’s voluntarily created health and safety program reflected its “strong responsibility” to provide a safe work environment for county employees.

    “Extreme pressures,” however — such as “cost-cutting” — “could be brought to bear on even our program in the future,” Berke admitted. “It is my belief that only mandatory regulatory requirements, whether coming from a state or federal level, are needed to support and nurture safety efforts within the public sector.”

    Marc Brody, then a union official for AFSCME Council 79 — which represented the workers at the treatment plant — agreed. Brody, the union’s director of education, described OSHA’s public sector loophole as “scandalous” in his own testimony.

    “Many public-sector unions, including ours, have tried to include safety language in our contracts,” Brody said. But the problem, he added, was that in many cases, this language “has really no teeth, and you have no way to back it with administrative criminal sanctions and violations.”

    A failure to opt in

    The public sector “loophole” has been around since OSHA was first established half a century ago, and efforts to close it (dating back decades) have so far been unsuccessful.

    The 50-year-old law does offer the option for states like Florida to opt in their public sector workers, by creating a state OSHA plan with standards that are at least as effective as federal standards. Adopting a state plan, a move that can also serve to bolster compliance for the private sector, was another recommendation of the federal board that investigated the deadly 2006 accident in Daytona Beach.

    Only about half of states in the U.S. have created their own state OSHA plans, however, excluding an estimated 7.9 million public employees in the country from OSHA’s protections.

    Florida, a state that’s home to the third-largest workforce in the U.S., has never created a comprehensive state OSHA program.

    In Florida, the lack of a state program leaves enforcement for the state’s much larger private sector fully up to a very limited number of federal OSHA investigators. As of 2021, Florida had only 53 federal OSHA compliance regulators to enforce protections for over 8.4 million workers in Florida’s private sector.

    According to federal data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, analyzed by the AFL-CIO, however, public employers have in recent years reported higher injury rates. In 2022, state and local public sector employers reported a combined injury rate of 4.9 per 100 workers, compared to a reported rate of 2.7 per 100 workers in the private sector. 

    “No state or federal oversight of public employee safety exists in the State of Florida”

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    Florida’s Republican leaders, believe it or not, briefly flirted with the idea of creating a state plan in 2021. But the proposal to explore this option ultimately led nowhere and has seemingly been abandoned.

    During a brief state legislative special session that fall, the Republican-controlled Legislature passed a controversial bill (HB 5-B) that was pitched as an effort to withdraw from federal OSHA oversight and establish a state plan to alternatively enforce workplace regulations for Floridians in the public and private sectors.

    The proposal, approved by state lawmakers along party lines with Republicans in favor, emerged only after OSHA had issued a rule — later blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court — that would have placed a COVID-19 vaccination requirement on workers at large employers.

    The Florida bill — later described as “theater” by lone GOP dissenter Jeff Brandes — gave the Governor’s Office $1 million to come up with a proposal for state OSHA plan, and to provide a status report to leaders of the Florida House and Senate by January 17, 2022.

    The report released that January ultimately estimated that the process of taking over federal oversight would take up to nine years, and would require the state to establish a new state agency. Such an endeavor would be costly, and would still have required the state to offer the bare minimum oversight that OSHA does (and enforce the same rules).

    click to enlarge LiUNA Local 630 members - Courtesty of LiUNA Local 630

    Courtesty of LiUNA Local 630

    LiUNA Local 630 members

    The January 2022 status report, signed by a DeSantis staffer, added that it’s “too early” to definitively determine if the plan would be prudent. Despite a vague commitment to provide a “detailed timeline” and an estimation of required resources, there is no evidence of such a plan actually moving forward.

    Dr. Rich Templin, chief lobbyist for Florida’s largest federation of labor unions — the Florida AFL-CIO — said the GOP’s plan was insincere from the start.

    “Our position was, if you guys want to do this, we’re not opposed to it, but bring everybody to the table,” Templin told Orlando Weekly. “But that’s not what they wanted. They just wanted headlines.”

    “Did they just abandon it? Yes,” he shared bluntly. “They just let it go. They got their headlines, and they just let it go.”

    A request for an update sent by Orlando Weekly to the Governor’s Office has been unreturned as of publication.

    A pattern of deregulation

    Beyond basic safety regulation, Florida has lacked a state Department of Labor entirely since 2002, after the Florida legislature approved a plan at the behest of then-Gov. Jeb Bush to abolish it.

    Most programs and services in that department were passed off to other departments or agencies, but some — including minimum wage enforcement and a now-defunct workplace safety division — were not.

    Before Florida’s elected leaders dissolved the labor department, that department had for a time housed a Division of Safety, created under the Florida Occupational Safety and Health Act.

    The division offered more protections afforded to state and municipal employees today, both establishing and enforcing state standards on workplace health and safety from at least 1993 to 2000. Violations of these standards were subject to a penalty of up to $50,000 per violation, according to state records.

    Motivated by a national move by conservative leaders toward cost reduction and decentralization, however, Florida’s state leaders decided to repeal the Florida OSH Act in 1999, effectively dissolving the division and laying off nearly 100 staff in the process, according to former union official Brody.

    Jeb Bush deregulates workplace safety regulations (please clap) - University of Arkansas at Little Rock

    University of Arkansas at Little Rock

    Jeb Bush deregulates workplace safety regulations (please clap)

    Just a few years later, state leaders got rid of the state labor department altogether, following a years-long push by Jeb Bush, who directed the state to identify workforce programs that could be “eliminated, consolidated, or privatized.”

    Today, labor unions in Florida can help fill some gaps in protection, but limitations in enforcement and a lack of resources persist.

    Business lobbyists for major employers of largely private sector workers in the tourism industry and construction trades have pushed state leaders in Florida to deregulate child labor and to prevent local governments from guaranteeing workers access to certain workplace protections — including protection from extreme heat on the job.

    AFSCME, one of the largest public sector unions in the state, recently adopted a resolution at its national convention that represents a commitment to try and negotiate contracts that offer protections from exposure to extreme heat, specifically.

    As temperatures in some of the hottest states and communities in the U.S. surge, the Biden administration recently released a proposed federal standard to help protect workers from extreme heat, mandating certain rights for workers once temperatures on the job exceed 80 degrees.

    But even if the administration does manage to finalize and implement that rule — the process is expected to take years, and could be scrapped under a Trump administration — that standard still wouldn’t cover state and municipal workers in states like Florida and Texas that don’t have state OSHA plans.

    Bipartisan legislation recently introduced at the federal level in June — sponsored by Congressman Chris Deluzio (D-PA) and Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) — could change that, but it’s unclear if there will be enough political will to push it near or past the finish line.

    “Our dedicated public sector workers throughout our country deserve to be safe at work and the robust level of protection that OSHA coverage provides,” said U.S. Rep. Fitzpatrick in a news release.

    “Congressman Deluzio and I are committed to protecting hardworking public servants throughout our nation’s communities, and I implore my colleagues to join us in this vital effort to safeguard workers.”

    This story has been updated to clarify the use of the term “withdraw” in regards to HB 5-B (2021).

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • DeSantis appoints ‘pro-life’ radiologist to the Florida Board of Medicine

    DeSantis appoints ‘pro-life’ radiologist to the Florida Board of Medicine

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    photo via the Governor’s Office

    As abortion rights advocates in Florida step up their campaign for a November ballot measure that would strengthen abortion rights in Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis once again on Friday showed residents exactly which side he’s on.

    Gov. DeSantis, who launched his own political committee this year in part to help defeat the abortion rights ballot measure, appointed to the Florida Board of Medicine on Friday Steven Christie, a local radiologist, attorney and author of a book titled Speaking for the Unborn: 30-Second Pro-Life Rebuttals to Pro-Life Arguments.

    The Florida Board of Medicine is a 15-member board of Governor appointees established to “ensure that every physician practicing in this state meets minimum requirements for safe practice,” according to its website. Twelve of the members must be licensed physicians in good standing, while the other three must be state residents who have never been licensed as a healthcare practitioner. All appointments are subject to approval by the Florida Senate, which is dominated by Republican lawmakers who approved the state’s six-week abortion ban before it was signed into law.

    Christie, the local radiologist newly appointed by DeSantis, is also scheduled as a featured speaker at the upcoming “Culture of Life Conference” being presented by the Catholic Charities of Central Florida in October. The CCCF is a ministry of the Diocese of Orlando that, according to state campaign finance records, has donated at least $50,000 to a political committee created to advocate against Florida’s abortion rights measure, which will appear on the ballot this fall as Amendment 4.

    If approved by more than 60 percent of Florida voters, the measure would add to the Florida Constitution that “no law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.” Viability is generally interpreted by medical practitioners as roughly 24 weeks of gestation, or pregnancy.

    The political committee funded in part by Catholic Charities, dubbed Florida Voters Against Extremism, is one of four political committees that have been created in an effort to defeat Amendment 4, which is being led by a political committee bankrolled by liberal organizations that support abortion access, including reproductive healthcare provider Planned Parenthood, the Tides Foundation (a progressive nonprofit), the American Civil Liberties Union and wealthy philanthropists, as well as an extensive list of individual donors who have contributed anywhere from $5 to $25.

    Catholic Charities is a faith-based nonprofit organization that, granted, does more than explicitly oppose abortion rights and offer “post-abortive healing.” The nonprofit also runs community-based housing, health and social assistance programs that are often funded in part by state or local government money.

    Some of the local chapters in the state, including chapters in St. Petersburg, Boynton Beach and Palm Beach, also run state-funded anti-abortion programs that aim to convince pregnant people not to seek out abortion services, luring pregnant people into their “clinics” with free pregnancy tests, sonograms or free items for babies like diapers.

    The Florida Pregnancy Care Network, a state-funded “alternatives to abortion” program, gave Catholic Charities-run programs a total of $410,000 in 2022, according to the nonprofit’s latest tax filing. Altogether, the state allocates millions of taxpayer dollars to such programs each year. Many don’t even have medical professionals on staff. Most, if not all, do not have a state medical license, meaning they are not bound by HIPAA privacy laws. 

    Dr. Steven Christie specializes in oncology and body imaging, according to Catholic Charities, and claims to be “pro-science.” “There is overwhelming scientific consensus that life begins at conception,” Dr. Christie wrote, in a blog post for the St. Paul Center, a faith-based nonprofit research and educational institute, even though the concept of “life at conception” is largely viewed as a philosophical or religious concept rather than one based in scientific fact.

    “The court said that when life begins is up to whoever is running your state — whether they are wrong or not, or you agree with them or not,” Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California-Davis, told NPR after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.

    Christie was appointed to the board Friday along with Dr. “J” Matthew Knight, a dermatologist and founder of the Knight Dermatology Institute; Dr. Scot Ackerman, medical director of the Ackerman Cancer; and Dr. Hector Vila, the managing partner and anesthesiologist at Pediatric Dental Anesthesia Associates.

    Vila formerly served on the Board of Medicine under former Gov. Rick Scott’s administration, and was reappointed by DeSantis to the board in 2019. Ahead of his reappointment that year, Vila argued in support of a restrictive abortion-related law in an appeals court case between the state and a Gainesville abortion clinic. The latter challenged the state over a law that requires patients obtaining an abortion procedure to schedule two separate appointments with an abortion provider that includes a minimum 24-hour waiting period between appointments.

    Vila argued at the same that a less-than-24-hour waiting period between appointments for an abortion procedure “would fall below the acceptable medical standard of care.” Critics of the law have described it as unnecessarily restrictive and a barrier to care, especially as the state further limits abortion access.

    The Florida Board of Medicine has been criticized in the recent past for advancing rules on prohibiting gender-affirming care for transgender youth, which state lawmakers and DeSantis later codified into law before a federal judge struck the ban down as unconstitutional. In 2022, the board and DeSantis faced criticism after DeSantis was caught appointing two new members to the board who support conversion therapy for trans and gender-nonconforming children and oppose gender-affirming care.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Gov. DeSantis to hold news conference from convention center in Orlando

    Gov. DeSantis to hold news conference from convention center in Orlando

    Gov. Ron DeSantis addressed home-schooling parents on Thursday in Osceola County.The governor spoke during the Florida Parent Educators Association annual convention, which started today at the Gaylord Palms.The FPEA exists solely to serve home-schooling families in Florida.This marks the second year in a row that the governor has addressed the crowd.DeSantis said he supports parents’ rights, both as governor and as a father, to ensure children get a strong and solid education.”Aren’t you happy that Florida is the number one state for home schools in all of the United States?” DeSantis asked the crowd. “And in the state of Florida, whether it’s kindergarten or whether it’s eighth grade, or 12th grade, whether it’s in our universities, we don’t want any of the indoctrination in the state of Florida, I’m sorry.”The Florida Parent Educator Association is celebrating 40 years of supporting families.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis addressed home-schooling parents on Thursday in Osceola County.

    The governor spoke during the Florida Parent Educators Association annual convention, which started today at the Gaylord Palms.

    The FPEA exists solely to serve home-schooling families in Florida.

    This marks the second year in a row that the governor has addressed the crowd.

    DeSantis said he supports parents’ rights, both as governor and as a father, to ensure children get a strong and solid education.

    “Aren’t you happy that Florida is the number one state for home schools in all of the United States?” DeSantis asked the crowd. “And in the state of Florida, whether it’s kindergarten or whether it’s eighth grade, or 12th grade, whether it’s in our universities, we don’t want any of the indoctrination in the state of Florida, I’m sorry.”

    The Florida Parent Educator Association is celebrating 40 years of supporting families.

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  • Florida Bans Local Heat Protections For Outdoor Workers

    Florida Bans Local Heat Protections For Outdoor Workers

    Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a bill preventing local Florida governments from requiring heat protection for people working outdoors, such as in construction or agriculture, becoming the second state to adopt such a law after Texas. What do you think?

    “They’re welcome to bring their own clouds from home.”

    Alyssa Lindestaf, Chief Extortionist

    “Will nothing stop DeSantis’s unquenchable thirst for human sweat?”

    Prakhar Sabbat, Gym Attendant

    “Skin is protection enough.”

    Ray DeMartino, unemployed

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  • ‘It’s unjust’: Florida Gov. DeSantis signs bill banning local heat safety and wage laws

    ‘It’s unjust’: Florida Gov. DeSantis signs bill banning local heat safety and wage laws

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    Photo via Ron DeSantis/Twitter

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Thursday quietly signed into law one of the business lobby’s top priorities this year, preempting local governments from passing laws on workplace heat safety measures to protect outdoor workers from heat exhaustion.

    The bill, HB 433, also preempts the regulation of employer scheduling practices to the state, and — effective Sept. 30, 2026 — will strip local “living wage” laws passed in some Florida cities and counties that require their contractors to pay employees a wage that’s higher than the state’s minimum. A earlier version of the bill would have preempted all local mandates affecting the terms and conditions of employment.

    DeSantis signed the bill in its final version Thursday night, after hours, with no statement or fanfare.

    Florida Democrats on Friday criticized the move.

    “Outdoor workers are all around us – working on construction sites, repairing and paving roads, picking fruit and vegetables on farms and more,” said Florida Sen. Victor Torres, D-Orlando, in a statement.

    “They’re just trying to make a living for their families – and instead of putting protections in place to ensure businesses are prioritizing their workers’ health and well-being from record-setting temperatures, we tied the hands of proactive local governments to do so,” Torres continued. “This bill is an attack on our outdoor workers – the rent is too damn high and the sun is too damn hot!”

    Sponsored by Republican Tiffany Esposito, a first-term member of the Florida House, the bill was a priority of the Florida Chamber of Commerce — a deep-pocketed business lobbying group that represents the interests of companies like Publix, AT&T, restaurant chains, and U.S. Sugar, which fork over tens of thousands of dollars to help fund their political operations.

    Records obtained by the investigative newsletter Seeking Rents show the Chamber was also directly involved in drafting the language of the legislation, along with a conservative think-tank that was behind a new law rolling back certain child labor protections.

    The bill was a priority of the Florida Chamber of Commerce — a business lobbying group that represents the interests of companies like Publix, AT&T, restaurant chains, and U.S. Sugar

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    Esposito herself, who argued the bill was in the best interest of taxpayers, is herself the president of a regional chamber of commerce in Southwest Florida.

    Thousands of working Floridians could be affected by the preemption of local living wage laws alone, which have been implemented over the years in expensive areas of the state, like St. Petersburg and Miami, in order to lift wages for workers on contracted public projects — like building and road construction — as well as airport workers.

    Local governments in Florida have been barred from requiring private employers to pay above minimum wage for more than 20 years.

    The idea of the so-called “living wage” laws is that if you’re an employer who wants to enter into a government, taxpayer-funded contract, you have to pay your workers at least something closer to a living wage — which, generally, under these laws is somewhere between at least $15 to $20 minimum depending on the city or county.

    Ideally, workers covered by these contracts are locals — friends and neighbors of these communities who contribute to the local economy and who may not be able to live comfortably on less.

    The Chamber of Commerce has been trying to gut these living wage laws in Florida for years, framing wage and benefit mandates as “unnecessary government interference.”

    “Lawmakers in other parts of the country are passing job killing mandates at the local level,” reads a legislative agenda released by the Chamber for the 2024 session. “We need to keep Florida, Florida by allowing employers to flourish free of unnecessary governmental interference and inconsistencies.”

    For workers who benefit from these local laws, however, the new bill could create confusion and inconsistency. It also could result in cuts to pay once that portion of the bill goes into effect on Sept. 30, 2026 — the day Florida’s $15 minimum wage also fully goes into effect.

    The statewide minimum wage is currently $12 an hour, or $7.98 for tipped workers, and will rise $1 each year on Sept. 30 before reaching $15 by Sept. 30, 2026 under a ballot initiative approved by 61% of Florida voters in 2020.

    Rep. Esposito, the GOP House sponsor of the bill, admitted during session that employers could decide to reduce pay — the income that supports Florida’s working families — once this is effective.

    “Could wages go down? Maybe,” she said during the bill’s first committee hearing. “It’s up to the prerogative of the employer.” The chair of that committee cut the public off from providing personal testimony. Dozens had signed up to speak.

    Esposito herself could not say how many workers across the state would be affected by the preemption, which broadly ties the hands of local government leaders. So the full scope of the preemption, while standing to affect thousands of airport workers and other contracted workers in South Florida alone, is still unclear.

    The preemption of heat safety mandates for working Floridians, on the other hand, was a direct attack on a local ordinance being considered in Miami-Dade County last year.

    That ordinance sought to require construction and agriculture companies, specifically, to take steps to protect their employees from heat exhaustion. For instance, ensuring they have access to water and giving them 10-minute, shaded breaks every couple of hours when the heat index is at least 95 degrees.

    Following industry backlash, that ordinance was delayed for a vote last fall until mid-March — after session had already ended and House Bill 433 passed the state legislature. The bill was filed for consideration by lawmakers this year just a week after the vote on that local ordinance was delayed last fall.

    Miami-Dade County was the only municipality in Florida considering such an ordinance, which has been proposed at the state level by Democrats but has failed to garner enough interest from the Republican majority to make much progress.

    As it is, there is no federal or state standard in Florida for heat exposure protections in the workplace. Just a few states — California, Washington, and Oregon — have their own state laws requiring certain workplace heat safety measures.

    Colorado also regulates heat exposure requirements for farmworkers, while Minnesota has heat standards for workers indoors. As any warehouse worker can tell you (we heard this from UPS workers here in Orlando, for instance) — it’s not just those laboring outside who stand to suffer from Florida’s scorching heat.

    And it’s only getting hotter in Florida. Opponents of the bill argued that failing to act on workplace heat safety protections could be costly due to lost productivity. An agricultural worker in Apopka told us the bill is “unjust” and “unfair.”

    “This cruel and shameful action by Governor DeSantis, our Republican-led Legislature, and a small group of powerful industry lobbyists will endanger the lives of our working families and cause preventable deaths,” Oscar Londoño, co-executive director of the immigrant advocacy group WeCount! Shared in an email newsletter on Friday.

    The bill passed the Republican-dominated state legislature on the final day of Florida’s legislative session last month, largely along party lines. Four Republicans joined Florida Democrats in opposing the bill in the state Senate, while four Republicans similarly crossed party lines to vote it down in the Florida House.

    GOP House member Mike Beltran, who voted in opposition to the bill, explained his vote by stating he only opposed the heat safety preemption provision.

    “Due to Florida’s unusually hot climate, the variation thereof throughout the state, and the diverse economy, I believe that local regulation may be appropriate,” he said.

    The preemption on regulating workplace heat exposure and scheduling goes into effect July 1, while the preemption on wage and benefit mandates will go into effect Sept. 30, 2026.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Something’s Smelly About DeSantis’s Weed Statement

    Something’s Smelly About DeSantis’s Weed Statement

    Facts and history seems to be short in the Florida Governor’s campaign against marijuana

    For those who love exploring and have visited Hershey, Pennsylvania, you know it has a unique smell. Built to produce the famous candy bar, the area smells like chocolate. It is a factory town pumping out the order all day long.  Few places in the country has issues with smells like Hersey.  But if you listen to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, you would think over half the country has to deal certain odors.

    DeSantis has called recreational cannabis a problem and lamented marijuana’s “stench”. This is in response to the state’s Supreme Court allowing recreational marijuana be put on the November ballot. It seems something’s smelly about DeSantis weed statement.  He seems to not understand science or history. And with over 50% of the country population having access to legal marijuana, you think there might have been a bigger stink if his statement was correct.

    RELATED: Looks Like Virginia Is The Newest Marijuana Nanny State

    Now those over 40 can remember when it was legal to smoke inside, meaning in restaurants, groceries stores and other public spaces. You did get a whiff of stale tobacco.  But smoking outside is now required by law.  And while Florida is not in top 10 states which smoke, an estimated 2.2+ million of its citizens (not counting tourists) still light up.  Yet, he has not made a comment of being near a beach or roaming the street of the state capital and smelling a Marlboro.

    Near Tallahassee, where the Governor sits, he is near the Florida Panhandle. For generations, its economy was driven by paper mills.  Living in this panhandle puts you near some of hte most beautiful beaches, but will also, in some areas, assult your sense of smell. RockTenn, one of the areas larger paper mills, produces some particularly odorous fragrances when they “cook” paper. A strong sulfuric smell occasionally wafts across the region, and though harmless, it’s certainly unmistakeable.  An economic lifeline paper mills are a part of the fabric of North Florida. When the Foley Cellulose Mill in Perry closes, economist at the university of Florida predict havoc. It will cost Florida nearly 2,000 jobs and $9.9 million in state and local taxes.  This is much less than the almost zero smell of gummies and vapes which will be part of the $1+ billion plus industry in the Sunshine State alone.

    There are now 24 states (plus the District of Columbia) with legalized recreational marijuana as of February 2024.  Some including California, New York and DC have high visitor counts, and yet no one complains of a long or even mid term cannabis odor over the city.  Yes, like cigarettes, when you walk by someone smoking you can smell it, but as you pass, it goes away.

    RELATED: Science Says Medical Marijuana Improves Quality Of Life

    The Governor seems dismayed the Florida State Supreme Court advanced a proposed adult-use cannabis legalization initiative, by a 5-2 ruling, to the November 5, 2024, ballot.  Florida voters again will be able to express their opinion.

     

    Anthony Washington

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