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Tag: local-politics

  • Bill to ban sleeping in public parks, streets lands on governor’s desk

    Bill to ban sleeping in public parks, streets lands on governor’s desk

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    PINELLAS COUNTY, Fla. — A bill on Gov. Ron DeSantis’ desk would keep Florida’s cities and counties from allowing people to sleep in public parks and on streets.

    The bill urges municipalities to pick an area of public property and designate it be used for camping and sleeping. That area must have operable restrooms, access to running water, and bans on drug and alcohol use.

    If a county has financial constraints and complying would create financial hardship it is exempt from the requirements, the bill states.


    What You Need To Know

    • Bill would restrict people from sleeping in public parks, streets
    • Municipalities are urged to designate specific area where public camping and sleeping is allowed 
    • Bill outlines that running water, restrooms must be available at the designated camping area 
    • Deadline for governor to sign bill is March 27 
    • CS/HB 1365: Unauthorized Public Camping and Public Sleeping

    The bill clarifies that the location of the designated public property must be approved by the Florida Department of Children and Families and can be used for up to one year.

    DeSantis has publicly stated his support for the bill saying it would make Florida’s streets cleaner and safer.

    Local organizations and volunteers who help those who are homeless worry about the potential influx of those seeking services, should the bill be signed into law.

    “I think it’s pretty obvious that there’s going to be an influx of homeless people needing a place to go,” said Joe Pondolfino, director of Pinellas Hope. “I’m just as curious as anybody else to see what the ramifications are.”

    Pinellas Hope is a program supported by Catholic Charities that provides those who are homeless a place to sleep, as well as meals and multiple services to help get them back on their feet. The Clearwater property has a mix of cottages, small apartments and tents on pallets for people to stay in.

    Pondolfino says they are currently at maximum capacity with 230 people. On Tuesday, they took in 19 new people. That was the same day CS/HB 1365 landed on DeSantis’ desk.

    “There’s going to be more people seeking services, I’m sure of that,” Pondolfino said. “If they are moving people off the streets, if they’re moving people out of the parks, they are going to have to put them somewhere and we’re glad to help, but we need support.”

    Pondolfino says with more funding, there could be help more people.

    “Homelessness is an issue,” he said. “So if this spurs more conversation and more results and more funding, then I’m all for that. I’ll be watching just like everybody else to see how it will be enforced.”

    The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office says while it’s a new bill and has not been signed by the governor, they support the concept of the legislation and look forward to working with the cities and county to make sure that the law is properly followed.

    The deadline for Gov. DeSantis to sign the legislation is March 27.

    If passed, it will take effect on Oct. 1.

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    Angie Angers

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  • New state rules could be coming for short-term vacation rentals

    New state rules could be coming for short-term vacation rentals

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    INDIAN ROCKS BEACH, Fla. — A bill that would provide a standard set of rules for all short-term rentals in the state of Florida passed in both the Florida Senate and House of Representatives and now awaits approval from Gov. Ron DeSantis.


    What You Need To Know

    • Bill includes grandfather clause for local ordinances introduced before 2016
    • Occupancy limits include two people per bedroom and two additional people in one common area with few exceptions
    • Vacation rentals must be registered for “reasonable fee”
    • FULL TEXT: SB 280

    SB 280 passed by a small margin in the House and included a new amendment that grandfathers in local vacation rental ordinances that were made by city governments prior to 2016.

    State Sen. Nick DiCeglie, one of the bill’s sponsors, says a key piece of this version of the bill was it clearly states how many people are allowed to stay at an Airbnb or Vrbo type rental.

    “We talk about these party homes and these folks who are violating local ordinances with parking, noise, and trash and it’s impossible not to correlate that with occupancy,” he said.

    The bill states maximum overnight occupancy is two people per bedroom, plus an additional two people in one common area. The exception is there can be more than two people per bedroom if the rooms are large and there’s at least 50 square feet of space per person.

    It also requires that owners pay a reasonable registration fee, have someone available over the phone at all times to respond to complaints, and lets local governments suspend a rental’s registration for repeatedly breaking city rules.

    “The main goal was to create a uniform set of regulations, some consistency and some predictability,” DiCeglie said. “I think there are ordinances in the state that go too far that have invited dozens of lawsuits and invited Bert Harris claims… tens of million of dollars in taxpayer money goes towards defending these lawsuits.”

    Indian Rocks Beach Mayor Cookie Kennedy has been vocal about the bill as it worked its way through the legislature. Before its approval, she stated it was an overstep and that there shouldn’t be a one size fits all solution given how different Florida’s cities are.

    Communities like Vilano Beach, located near St. Augustine, have residents writing to the governor asking he veto the bill for similar reasons.

    If signed into law, the bill will go into effect on July 1.

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    Angie Angers

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  • Fare-free transportation becomes permanent for Manatee County bus riders

    Fare-free transportation becomes permanent for Manatee County bus riders

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    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — Manatee County commissioners passed an ordinance Tuesday that would make the fare-free pilot program permanent in the county.

    In November 2022, Manatee County commissioners kick-started an 18-month pilot program that allowed residents to take the bus free of charge. It is only for certain bus routes with Manatee County Area Transit.

    “Instead of incurring some additional costs to our fare boxes, which were exorbitant. We decided just take the fare boxes out, put in a pilot program, and see if people would ride the bus, get off the road. And in a time when things are less and less affordable for our residence we were trying to create a little more affordability,” commissioner Kevin Van Ostenbridge said.


    What You Need To Know

    • Manatee County Commissioners voted during their Tuesday meeting to make the free fare pilot program a permanent addition
    • The 18-month free of charge bus rides were to expire in May of this year, but now it’s permanent
    • It’s a free fare for fixed routes, handy bus services, and the Longboat Key shuttle, and the Skyway and Port Manatee ConneXion Shuttle

    With the program ending in May, commissioners decided to keep it permanently due to its success.

    “The program was wildly successful. Within six months ridership was up 28%. Now we are well over a 50% increase in just 18 months,” Ostenbridge said.

    It’s a way for everyone to save money, especially for life long bus rider Eric Williams, who is a Bradenton native.

    “I’ve been catching the bus since I was 13-years-old. I love it,” he said.

    Williams has been an MCAT bus rider since he was a kid. It was a transportation option that allowed his family to save money.

    He has carried that same mentality with him as an adult and continues to save money by riding the bus. Now that the county has announced select bus routes will be free of charge, Williams says he’s thankful.

    “It’s good because I go to dialysis three times a week. I do my shopping,” he said.

    Williams has been going to his weekly appointments for eight months. He says being able to ride for free has been a huge help.

    County commissioners also say traffic has decreased because of more people choosing to take the bus.

    Williams feels that is a good thing that will help other families who can’t afford transportation.

    “It’s really good. There’s going to be a lot of people riding the bus and you don’t have to pay any fare and that’s a good thing,” he said.

    It’s a free fare for fixed route buses, handy bus services, the Longboat Key shuttle, and the Skyway and Port Manatee ConneXion Shuttle.

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    Julia Hazel

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  • Deadline arrives for Pasco County municipal elections voter registration

    Deadline arrives for Pasco County municipal elections voter registration

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    PASCO COUNTY, Fla. — Monday is the deadline to register to vote in the upcoming municipal elections in Pasco County.

    Elections are taking place in the cities of Dade City, New Port Richey, Port Richey, San Antonio, Zephyrhills and the town of St. Leo. 


    Municipal elections are only for voters who reside within the city limits.

    Voter registration can be completed online at PascoVotes.gov/OVR, in person at the elections’ offices, or applications may be mailed to the elections’ office at PO Box 300, Dade City, FL 33526 and must be postmarked no later than March 11.

    All three elections’ offices will be open on book closing day from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    PREVIOUS STORY: Important election deadlines for Florida’s upcoming Presidential Primary

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • 20 years ago, St. Pete changed INDYCAR racing forever

    20 years ago, St. Pete changed INDYCAR racing forever

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — This weekend, when the checkered flag drops for the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, former Mayor Rick Baker will again flash a satisfied smile.

    INDYCAR had never had a street course as part of their circuit before then-Mayor Baker waved the green flag in downtown St. Petersburg in 2005.

    For Baker, the race started as the passion project. 

    Growing up on the west side of Indianapolis, Baker said he starting falling in love with INDYCAR when he was 5 and attended his first Indianapolis 500 at age 9. Since then, he hasn’t missed watching a race.

    “If you grew up in Indianapolis, you’re not allowed to not be an INDYCAR fan,” he said with a smile.

    During his first term in office as St. Petersburg’s mayor, Baker wanted to bring the sport to the city’s waterfront. Some of the framework was already in place, as the city had previously hosted a Champ Car race in 2003 before the sanctioning body went bankrupt.

    “It was a crazy idea at the time because INDYCAR had never done a street race,” Baker said.

    Baker made a cold call to INDYCAR’s CEO in hopes of getting the sanctioning body onboard.

    Honda agreed to take the spot as the title sponsor and the previous circuit from the 2003 race served as a good starting point for the design team. The last piece of the puzzle was getting a promoter, and Andretti Green Promotions agreed to take on the role.

    “We really had to convince a lot of people along the way,” he said. “You had the promoter, INDYCAR, and the city because some people weren’t too wild about having loud race cars next door to their retirement community.”

    Baker’s INDYCAR dreams came to fruition in April 2005 as the first racers sped off from the starting line as he waved the green flag.

    Being INDYCAR’s first street course meant it was also the first right-hand turn in a formal event.

    “2005 … the first right-hand turn ever in INDYCAR history. That’s a big deal!” Baker said while pointing at the turn, located following the straightaway by Albert Whitted Airport.

    A sticking point for Baker happened as promotors for onetime Champ Car race stated they wanted the event to be branded at the Florida Grand Prix.

    “If we’re going to have a race here, then it needs to be named St Petersburg,” Baker said. “The only way for that to happen is it’s got to be the name of the race. You can do anything you want, but the race needs to be after the city. There’s a reason it’s the Indianapolis 500.”

    Now 20 races later, Baker will once again serve as one of the grand marshal’s of the race alongside his predecessors Bill Foster, Rick Kriseman, and Ken Welch.

    Practice and qualifying rounds will take place March 8 & 9 with the final races beginning at noon Sunday, March 10.

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    Angie Angers

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  • Changing voter trends in Seminole County could be seen across Florida

    Changing voter trends in Seminole County could be seen across Florida

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    SEMINOLE COUNTY, Fla. — As the 2024 election cycle rolls on, political leaders on both sides of the aisle will be watching to see if the trends of recent election cycles continue. In suburban areas surrounding cities across Florida, voting trends have been shifting.


    What You Need To Know

    • In 2020 in Seminole County, President Joe Biden got 7,000 more votes than Donald Trump, marking the first time in 75 years the county voted for a Democratic presidential candidate
    • UCF Associate Professor Aubrey Jewett says one of the main reasons for the political shift is new development of apartments and condos popping up all over the county, which he says attract younger residents from more Democratic areas who are typically more progressive
    • Jewett says that’s a trend we could see play out in other areas outside big cities across the state

    In Seminole County, for example, trends took a Democratic shift in 2020. Despite Donald Trump winning the Florida on his way to defeat to Joe Biden, President Biden got 7,000 more votes in Seminole County. It was the first time in 75 years the county voted for a Democratic presidential candidate. 

    Since 2018, according to the Seminole County Supervisor of Elections office, the county has seen a few more Democrats register to vote with 15,185 additional Republicans compared with 17,753 more Democrats. And 16,242 more people have registered as No Party Affiliation. 

    University of Central Florida Associate Professor Aubrey Jewett says one of the main reasons for the political shift is a recent development of apartments and condos popping up all over the county, which he says attract younger residents from more Democratic areas, who are typically more progressive. And Jewett says that’s a trend we could see play out in other areas outside big cities across the state.

    “You’re seeing more African American and Hispanic people moving into Seminole County,” said Jewett. “And so, it’s gotten more diverse and our politics have changed. That could certainly be happening in some other areas of the state, certainly Tampa, South Florida, even some places in North Florida, although maybe not quite as much there because the population growth in North Florida tends to be more from other southern states.”

    Hailey Donahue and her boyfriend, Nathan Lax, have spent time going door-to-door in the county, encouraging people to get registered to vote.

    “We want to make sure people are up to date on their registration. We have these buttons right here,” said Donahue.

    They say the focus is making sure people are engaged in the political process.

    “We’re making sure they’re up to date, and that everybody that is registered to vote is able to vote in the general since we have a major election coming up,” said Donahue.

    They also know the political makeup of the county is changing.

    “You’re seeing a lot of people moving into Seminole that are Democrat, you have a lot of families that are updating registration to be more Democrat, and especially with college students from the UCF area coming into Seminole, again you’re seeing more people come out and vote blue,” said Donahue.

    Bruce Cherry is the chairman of the Seminole County Republican Party. He is skeptical of the idea that the political tides are turning for good.

    “Because I live in a condo development myself — I’m a renter — and a lot of folks are relocating here from New York and California and places like that, and many of them are thankfully not bringing their politics with them,” said Cherry. “They have come to Florida because they realized this is a great place to live, and Seminole County is a great place to live. And so, it’s not necessarily true that people who live in apartments are Democrat, that those numbers are going to skew more liberal.”

    Cherry says the Seminole GOP will be shoring up the county’s Republican vote, looking to turn those registered as No Party Affiliation to their side. And he believes some Democrats will swing back their way this election cycle.

    “When you’re constantly being approached by people out at events and they go ‘Well, I’m a Democrat, but I’ve got to vote for,’ that tells us something,” said Cherry. “So no, we’re not feeling threatened or anything like that by the number of people moving to Seminole County,or whether or not the numbers tend to trend upward for Democrats, because we’re finding that a lot of them are not voting Democrat, or intend to.”

    When Lax enrolled at UCF, he moved from a very Democratic area of South Florida and now lives in an apartment in Oviedo. He believes the changing political tides of the county are more than just more democrats moving to town.

    “While we are seeing some change with the short-term people coming in and leaving, I think what we’re seeing in Seminole County is really for the long haul, and we’re going to see it move further blue as people come to understand just what’s going on out there,” said Lax.

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    Jeff Allen

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  • Orange County’s TDT collections rise in January from a year ago

    Orange County’s TDT collections rise in January from a year ago

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    ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. — Tourist Development Tax collections in Orange County reached $30,493,100 during January and marked the first monthly year-over-year increase since September 2023, Comptroller Phil Diamond announced Wednesday. 

    Collections in January 2024 were up 5%, or $1.4 million, from January 2023, Diamond said. They were up $647,000 from December 2023.

    The TDT, also referred to as a resort tax or bed tax, is an extra fee added to stays of less than six months at hotels and other lodgings. Funds from the tax have been used to partially fund projects such as the construction of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts and the Kia Center and for renovations to Camping World Stadium — where major events such as the Citrus Bowl, NFL Pro Bowl games, concerts and Monster Jam are held. 

    Major sporting events helped boost tourism during the month. The 2024 Citrus Bowl at Camping World Stadium featured a matchup between Iowa and Tennessee on Jan. 1. In addition, athletes started coming to town to prepare for the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials that were run in downtown Orlando on Feb. 3.  According to Visit Orlando, the Orange County Convention Center also hosted several major events, such as the PGA Show and the Veterinary Meeting and Expo.

    TDT Renewal and Replacement Reserves, however, declined by $740,304 in January to $62.7 million. Those funds are used to offset the costs associated with recently approved projects, such as the convention center’s 5A expansion, Camping World Stadium renovations, the UCF football stadium tower project and some additional arts funding.

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • No phones? Pinellas schools to discuss changing cell phone policy

    No phones? Pinellas schools to discuss changing cell phone policy

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    PINELLAS COUNTY, Fla. — Pinellas County students may have to have their phones silenced and out of sight when they return to school in August, should the school board approve proposed changes to district policy.

    During a workshop Tuesday, school board members are set to discuss updating the district’s Code of Student Conduct to include stricter rules for cell phone use. The proposed policy states phones, smart watches and earbuds must be turned off or silenced and put away throughout the duration of the school day.


    What You Need To Know

    • Proposed changes to Code of Student Conduct would require phones to be off or silenced during classes 
    • Middle school students could have phones during lunch 
    • High school students could have phones during lunch, classroom transitions 
    • SURVEY: How do students, teachers and parents feel?

    The proposal is the most strict for elementary school students, but allows middle school students to have phones during lunch and high school students to use phones while transitioning from class to class.

    In early February, the Pinellas County School District polled parents, students, school employees and community members to see where they stood on the issue.

    A total of 8,255 responses were received for the survey regarding high school cell phone use

    Twenty percent said they wanted to see phones banned for the entire school day, 34% felt phones should be used before and after school and during lunch, while 38% said students should be free to use phones anywhere but in the classroom during instructional time. Eight percent responded they didn’t agree with any of the options presented.

    Reagan Miller has both a middle and high school student enrolled in Pinellas County Schools. She says she’s seen firsthand how attached students can be to their phones and has mixed feelings about the proposed guidelines.

    “With the issues we’ve had with school safety, I want to be able to find my kids,” she said. “As far as available during the school day, I would love them to put them away more often and interact with their teachers and their classmates.”

    During a Tiger Bay Club forum late last year, Pinellas County Superintendent Kevin Hendrick said he doesn’t believe phones belong in the classroom because being a 1-to-1 district, each student has a laptop assigned to them.

    Hendrick stated it’s a discussion about how far the school district is willing to go to police cell phone use. Parents in some cases, he described, are as passionate about phone use as their teenage students.

    “I think the challenge is when we call you and say we just took your child’s phone and we’re not giving it back and you have to come pick it up, and you yell at us and scream at us and curse at us… and then what?” he said.

    During Tuesday’s discussion, school board members are set to discuss the proposed policy and what consequences should be put in place if enacted.

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    Angie Angers

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  • Early voting kicks off in Hillsborough, Polk counties

    Early voting kicks off in Hillsborough, Polk counties

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Early voting begins Monday in two Bay area counties.

    Voters in Hillsborough and Polk counties can head to the polls starting today.


    Other Bay area counties are set to follow, with early voting beginning Tuesday in Polk County. Citrus County residents can begin voting March 8 and Pinellas, Hernando and Manatee will follow on March 9.

    All counties in Florida must begin early voting by the 9th.

    Election Day for Floridians is Tuesday, March 19. 

    MAIL-IN VOTING 

    there is a rules change for mail-in voting: Residents now have to request a mail-in ballot for every election in Florida.

    Previously, residents were able to check a box on your current mail-in ballot to continue voting by mail.

    Voters now have to make a request for every election and you can do that online or at any local supervisor of elections office.

    The General Election will take place on Nov. 5 this year, with a voter registration deadline of Oct. 7.

    Early voting dates for the primary and general elections have yet to be confirmed.

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Here’s all of the ballot questions for Central Florida voters to decide

    Here’s all of the ballot questions for Central Florida voters to decide

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    FLORIDA — The 2024 presidential race is well underway, with several states already holding their primary elections to decide who will top the Republican and Democratic tickets in November. Floridians across the state will have a chance to make their voice heard on Tuesday, March 19. Many municipalities will hold their local elections, with some charter amendments and ballot questions thrown in. 


    Before that can happen, there are some important dates for voters in Central Florida to be aware of.

    Both Orange and Flagler counties will hold municipal elections in addition to the Presidential Preference Primary election for Republicans on March 19.

    Voters looking to vote by mail should make sure to get their applications in before Thursday, March 7.

    Residents of Central Florida looking to avoid potentially long lines at their polling places can take part in early voting, which will be open from March 9 through March 16. Voters in Orange and Osceola counties will be able to vote early on March 17 as well.

    Here are the municipal elections taking place in Orange County on March 19:

    Municipal Candidates / Amendments:

    • City of Apopka – (City Council Seats 3, 4) 
    • City of Eatonville – (Council Seats 4, 5 and 5 Charter questions)
    • City of Edgewood – (9 Charter questions)
    • City of Maitland – (1 question)
    • City of Ocoee – (City Comm. Dist. 4 and 13 Charter questions)
    • City of Winter Garden – (City Comm. Dist. 2, 3) 
    • City of Winter Park – (Mayor and City Comm. Seat 2) 
    • Town of Oakland – (Mayor) 

    Voters in Flagler County can vote for the City of Flagler Beach Mayor, and 1 City Commissioner.

    After the Presidential Preference Primary, there’s the statewide primary election, which will host other local offices across the state on Aug. 20. Voters will need to adjust or confirm their registration by July 22 in order to vote in that election.

    The General Election will take place on Nov. 5 this year, with a voter registration deadline of Oct. 7.

    Early voting dates for the primary and general elections have yet to be confirmed.

    Here is a full list of the proposed charter amendments or ballot questions, according to the Orange County Supervisor of Elections office.

    OCOEE

    Question #1

    Amendment of § C-8, City of Ocoee Charter, to Liberally Construe the City’s Powers

    Section C-8 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the City of Ocoee’s powers be liberally construed in favor of the city to effect their intended purposes.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #2

    Amendment of § C-8, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for the Exchange of Property

    Section C-8 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the City’s enumerated powers shall include the right to acquire or dispose of property, including real property, by exchange.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #3

    Amendment of § C-11, City of Ocoee Charter, to Establish One (1) Year Residency Requirements

    Section C-11 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that candidates for Mayor shall reside in the City of Ocoee for at least one (1) year before qualifying as a candidate and to require candidates for City Commissioner to reside in the district they seek to represent for at least one (1) year before qualifying as a candidate; candidates shall provide such proof of residency as may be prescribed by ordinance.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #4

    Amendment of § C-11, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide Consent to a Background Check

    Section C-11 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that each candidate for Mayor and City Commissioner shall consent to a background check to verify the candidate’s qualifications to hold office; and no candidate shall be barred from running for office without notice, a hearing, and clear and convincing evidence that the candidate is not qualified to hold office.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #5

    Amendment of § C-16, City of Ocoee Charter, to Limit Salaries to Part-Time Compensation

    Section C-16 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the salaries of the Mayor, Mayor Pro Tem, and Commissioners shall be commensurate with the part-time nature of the duties of the office.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #6

    Amendment of § C-17, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for Election of Successors

    Section C-17 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the successor to the office of Mayor or City Commissioner shall be elected at the next regular or general city election, if held within twelve (12) months of the vacancy.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #7

    Amendment of § C-18, City of Ocoee Charter, to Authorize Designation of an Accountant

    Section C-18 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to designate an accountant or accounting firm in accordance with the procedures set forth in Florida Statutes §

    218.391 annually or for a period not to exceed five (5) years.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #8

    Amendment of § C-21, City of Ocoee Charter, to Authorize Commencement of City Manager Residency

    Section C-21 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to reasonably extend the requirement for the City Manager to reside in the City of Ocoee within one (1) year of beginning employment upon the Commission’s unanimous approval.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #9

    Amendment of § C-28, City of Ocoee Charter, for Budget Approval of City Clerk’s Salary

    Section C-28 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to clarify that the City Manager shall determine the City Clerk’s salary, subject to budget approval by the City Commission.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #10

    Amendment of § C-45, City of Ocoee Charter, to Define “Regular,” “Special,” and “General City Elections”

    Section C-45 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to define “regular elections” as those held at regular intervals for the election of Mayor and City Commissioner, “special elections” as those held to fill a vacancy in the office of Mayor or City Commissioner, for a citizen initiative to approve of an ordinance, or a referendum to repeal an ordinance, and “general elections” as any other municipal election.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #11

    Amendment of § C-45, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for Swearing-In to Office

    Section C-45 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that any person elected to the office of Mayor or City Commissioner shall be sworn into office immediately prior to commencement of the next regularly scheduled City Commission meeting held after the Canvassing Board declares the election results.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #12

    Amendment of § C-49, City of Ocoee Charter, to Set Elections by Resolution or Ordinance

    Section C-49 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to set the dates of elections and dates of qualifying periods for candidates by either resolution or ordinance.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #13

    Amendment of § C-50, City of Ocoee Charter, to Appoint City Clerk to Canvassing Board

    Section C-50 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to appoint the City Clerk to the City of Ocoee’s election Canvassing Board in addition to two (2) citizens and two

    (2) citizen alternates appointed by the City Commission.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    MAITLAND

    Question 1

    City of Maitland General Obligation Bonds for a New Public Library and Park Project

    Shall the City issue bonds to finance the construction and equipping of a new public library and improving its location at Quinn Strong Park in the principal amount not to exceed $14,000,000, bearing interest not exceeding the legal rate, maturing not later than thirty (30) years from the date of issuance, payable from ad valorem taxes to be levied in the City on all taxable property?

    EDGEWOOD

    Question 1

    Removal of Unnecessary Transition Schedule Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to delete the now unnecessary transition schedule used to phase in the adjustment to the current staggered three year terms for Council members?

    Question 2

    Mayoral Stipend Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to increase the maximum monthly stipend amount the City Council is authorized to approve for payment to a mayor from the current $1,000 to $3,000?

    Question 3

    Adoption of Emergency Ordinances Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to delete local provisions regarding emergency ordinances and to provide that emergency ordinances may be adopted in the manner set forth in Florida state law?

    Question 4

    Electronic Distribution of City Code Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to provide an option for electronic distribution of the City Code?

    Question 5

    Grammatical Correction Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to make non-substantive corrections in Article 4?

    Question 6

    Timing of Budget Message Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to change the timing of the Mayor’s annual budget message?

    Question 7

    Reserves Savings Cap Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to change terminology related to reserves allowed to be saved by the City to provide for a cap on “uncommitted reserves” rather than the current terminology used of “unrestricted reserves”?

    Question 8

    Procurement Threshold Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to provide that for any procurement between $10,000 and $25,000, the City shall obtain at least three quotes and that for any procurement over $25,000, the City shall utilize a competitive bidding method?

    Question 9

    Resolution of Tie Votes in City Elections Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood City Charter be amended to provide that in the event of a tie in a city council election result, the winner shall be determined between the two tied candidates by a coin flip?

    EATONVILLE

    Question 1

    Providing a Defined Qualifying Period and Methods of Qualifying for Office

    Amending the Charter to provide a defined qualifying period for candidates for Mayor or Council and providing alternative methods of qualifying to run for office.

    Question 2

    Amending the Method for Confirming Mayoral Appointments to Avoid Deadlock

    Amending confirmation of Mayoral appointments providing interim appointees not confirmed by Council within 120 days, may continue to serve no more than 180 days, during which time the Mayor shall propose 3 candidates, one of which may be the interim appointee, for confirmation by Council. If no candidate is confirmed within the 180-day period, the Mayor may appoint a candidate from among the 3 who will fill the position on a permanent basis.

    Question 3

    Amending the Method for Selecting the Vice Mayor

    Amending the method for the selection of the Vice Mayor to provide for election by the Town Council.

    Question 4

    Allowing Council to Establish the Effective Date of Any Mayoral or Council Salary Increase

    Amending the Charter by allowing the Town Council to establish the effective date of any Mayoral or Council salary increases in the ordinance adopting such increases.

    Question 5

    Relocating Section Providing Right to Hearing Before Forfeiture of Office

    Relocating from Section 2.08 to Section 2.07 of the Charter the right to a hearing for elected officials charged with an offense that could result in forfeiture of office.

    Question 6

    Clarifying and Supplementing the Powers and Duties of the Town Clerk

    Amending the Charter by clarifying the duties of the Town Clerk and adding certain responsibilities to the position.

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    Gary Darling

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  • DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

    DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions

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    Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed a social media restriction bill, and lawmakers in Washington tackle microplastics.


    Gov. DeSantis vetoes social media restrictions bill

    Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed the social media restrictions bill, House Bill 1, on Friday.

    In a statement on X, DeSantis said that he expected the Florida Legislature to approve a new bill that he feels would be superior.

    “Protecting children from harms associated with social media is important, as is supporting parents’ rights and maintaining the ability of adults to engage in anonymous speech,” DeSantis said.

    After days of backdoor negotiations, lawmakers are set to reveal the new and improved social media bill to replace the recently vetoed HB 1. The legislative session is scheduled to end March 8.

    The original bill would have prevented anyone under 16 from using social media, but DeSantis was a skeptic of the plan.

    Members of the House, the Senate and the governor’s office all made compromises to get to this point.

    “We’re happy. We believe we started out with a very good bill, and this bill is even better,” Florida House Speaker Paul Renner said.

    The bill still bans those 15 and younger from social media. However, it now allows parents to opt in, a point that was a major concern for DeSantis.

    “Parents need to have a role in this, so we’re working to make sure there’s a role for parents,” DeSantis said. “You can say it’s disfavored or not allowed for a 14-, 15-year-old, but a parent has the right to opt in.”

    Still, there are constitutional concerns. Social media bans have failed in other states, but Florida leaders said they believe this one is different.

    “I think ya’ll know me,” Rep. Michele Rayner said. “You know I’m a lawyer. You know that I’m not putting my name on something that I feel would not survive any constitutional scrutiny, and I think the product we’re going to end up with actually does that.”

    In his veto letter, the governor made two main points:

    • He believed parents deserve the right to allow their children to use social media.
    • He had concerns about data privacy and the process of verifying a user’s age.

    Judge to set court date in Trump records trial

    A federal judge in Florida heard arguments on when to hold former President Donald Trump’s trial on charges of mishandling classified documents.

    The decision, which is expected soon, could have enormous consequences for the case, and the presidential race.

    Judge Aileen Cannon is deciding when to re-schedule Trump’s May 20 trial on charges of keeping classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate, and hiding them from government investigators.

    Special Counsel Jack Smith requested a July 8 start, but Trump’s legal team pushed for a later date as part of a delay strategy his lawyers have employed in the four criminal cases against him.

    Some polling suggests that one or more guilty verdicts could damage Trump with voters. Delaying the trials puts off such a possibility. And if Trump wins the Republican nomination and defeats President Joe Biden, he could force the Justice Department to drop its two cases against him altogether.

    Trump has so far used the 91 total felony charges against him as a rallying cry for supporters.

    Lawmakers consider limiting microplastics

    Science and sustainability experts are sounding the alarm on micro and nano plastics found in drinking water, urging lawmakers on Capitol Hill to take action to limit their prevalence.

    A Senate Environment and Public Works Joint Subcommittee hearing on Tuesday comes after a recent study by Rutgers and Columbia University researchers found 240,000 pieces of microplastic in an average liter of bottled water.

    “Those invisible plastics are why we’re here today. Like people shed skin cells, plastics shed particles of plastics. These can be big micro plastics, which range from half a centimeter down to a micrometer, a micrometer being less than 170th the size of human hair, or they can be as small as nanoplastics, which are even smaller than a micrometer,” Sen. Jeff Merkley said. 

    Experts warn the tiny plastics may have harmful health effects.

    “There are about 13,000 different chemicals used during the manufacture of various plastic products,” said Penn State Behrend Director of Sustainability, Dr. Sherri Mason. “Many of these are known to be carcinogens or endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which means that they mimic hormones and the chemical messengers of the body by affecting the endocrine system,.” 

    Experts also say the tiny particles are pervasive, and many come from an unexpected source, the clothes we wear.

    “Potential solutions include requiring microfiber filters on washing machines, as has been bill has been introduced in Oregon and in California as well,”  Oregon State University Professor Susanne Brander said. “Also, catches for rain gardens can significantly reduce plastic pollution from stormwater runoff.”

    The last major federal initiative against micro plastics was in 2015, when then-President Barack Obama signed a ban on microbead plastics in personal care and cosmetic products.

    This October, Democrats introduced legislation called the Break Free from Plastic Pollution Act to encourage corporations to shift away from plastic use.

    But, in a divided Congress with Democrats controlling the Senate, and Republicans controlling the House, it’s not likely to get through.

    Republicans on the committee thanked the witnesses for their research, but cautioned about placing regulatory burdens.

    “As we’re moving forward looking at microplastics, we have to be careful that we’re not getting ahead of, as we would say, the science and do an undue burden or burdens,” Sen. Markwayne Mullin said. 

    Senate Democrats have also sponsored legislation to research the effects of microplastics in farming. 

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    Gary Darling

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  • Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

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    Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump visited the border on Thursday, and lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a bill to combat antisemitism. 


    Trump and Biden visit the border

    Former President Donald Trump spoke alongside Texas and border patrol officials near the U.S.-Mexico border on Thursday, describing the humanitarian crisis there as a “war” and spouted false conspiracy theories that the flow of migrants into the country was an “invasion” orchestrated by President Joe Biden to import “entire columns of fighting-age men.”

    Biden is “allowing thousands and thousands of people to come in from China, Iran, Yemen, the Congo, Syria and a lot of other nations. Many that nations are not very friendly to us,” Trump baselessly charged. “He’s transported the entire columns of fighting-age men and they’re all at a certain age and you look at them, and I said, ‘They look like warriors to me, something’s going on.’ It’s bad.”

    The baseless claims and insinuations echo the white supremacist conspiracy theory known as “The Great Replacement.” The theory, which posits Democrats and other elites are intentionally bringing nonwhite migrants into the country to “replace” white Americans and sow chaos, has inspired racist mass shootings with death tolls in the hundreds in the U.S. and across the world in the last decade.

    “I think they’re looking for votes, they’re looking for something, nobody’s really been able to tell me how anybody could want it,” Trump charged, before stumbling through a commentary on non-English speaking migrants. “Allowing millions of people from places unknown, from countries unknown, who don’t speak languages — we have languages coming into our country, we have nobody that even speaks those languages. They’re, they’re truly foreign languages. Nobody speaks them.”

    Trump and his campaign have pledged that his second administration will orchestrate the largest deportation operations in U.S. history, attempt to end the constitutional right to birthright citizenship and bring troops home from abroad to be deployed at the southern border — including using the U.S. Navy to “impose a full naval embargo on the cartels,” as his campaign said this week.

    The 2024 GOP frontrunner’s visit to the border came simultaneously to Biden’s visit to Brownsville, Texas, where he also addressed border and immigration issues and appealed to Republicans — including Trump — to embrace bipartisan solutions. Trump opposed a bipartisan border deal and helped convince Republicans, including some negotiators, to abandon it earlier this month.

    “Here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump: Instead of playing politics with this issue, instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I’ll join you, in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill,” Biden said Thursday. “We can do it together.”

    “Let’s remember who the heck we work for. We work for the American people. Not the Democratic Party, the Republican Party. The American people,” the president added.

    The proposed deal would have given Biden the authority to shut down the border if the number of migrant crossings in a given day crossed 8,500, or an average of 5,000 over a seven-day period. It also would have provided $20 billion in funding to facilitate the hiring of an additional 1,500 border patrol personnel, 4,300 asylum officers and 100 immigration judges, as well as allocated funds for 100 machines to help detect fentanyl and around $1.4 billion for cities and municipalities struggling to address their community’s ballooning migrant populations, per the White House.

    “Trump said, ‘Blame it on me.’ And so I will. Trump’s need to boost his own fragile political ego has gotten us here with another manufactured logjam,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on a press call organized by the Biden campaign on Wednesday, quoting Trump directly. “A few weeks ago, there was a chance for a real breakthrough on immigration policy. President Biden and congressional Democrats did what voters say they want from leaders: They sat down at a table with Republicans and negotiated a bipartisan compromise.”

    “But the same Republicans who helped write and were prepared to vote for it suddenly opposed it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to because Donald Trump doesn’t want a solution,” Pritzker continued.

    Trump spoke at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, a park on the Rio Grande where migrants — including children — have died attempting to reach since Gov. Greg Abbott seized it, kicked out U.S. Border Patrol and set up miles of razor wire. The federal government successfully sued to regain access and cut the wire, but Abbott’s administration has continued to defy the Supreme Court order and challenge Biden’s authority. While in Eagle Pass, Trump met with Abbott, border patrol agents and state and local law enforcement officials.

    “Biden is using every tool that he can to tear down the borders that Texas is putting up in our state,” Abbott said on Thursday. “What our National Guard has done, they have sealed off this entire park and taken it over, because this area was being used by the Biden administration to violate the laws of the United States of America.”

    Abbott, Texas National Guard Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer and border patrol union president Brandon Judd spoke alongside Trump when he addressed the media after touring the heavily fortified park. Judd described his members, federal employees who answer to Biden administration appointees, as “your agents” to Trump, who has not been president for over three years.

    “Your agents, Mr. President, are pissed. Border Patrol agents are upset that we cannot get the proper policy,” Judd said. “Thank goodness we have a governor like Gov. Abbott. Thank goodness we have somebody that’s willing to run for president of the United States, forgo everything else that he’s been doing to serve the American people.”

    Abbott and Trump both played up the menace of crime from migrants, with the Texas Republican also claiming his state was the subject of an “invasion.” Both referenced rapes, assaults and murders by undocumented immigrants, though the high-profile cases do not reflect years of data and analyses that conclude migrants, regardless of their legal status, commit less crimes than natural-born U.S. citizens.

    “Immigrants are 30% less likely to be incarcerated than are U.S.-born individuals who are white,” a Stanford University report from last year found. The right-wing Cato Institute reported in 2020 that immigrants, regardless of their legal status, were less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans.

    “This immigrant crime narrative is racist. It’s not true,” California Rep. Robert Garcia said on the Wednesday press call. “Trump is out here saying that we’re poisoning the blood of this country. And the facts actually don’t bear that out.”

    Trump directly addressed the murder of University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley last week. Police have arrested a Venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally, but was allowed to stay as his immigration case was processed. Trump and other Republicans have seized on the case as an example of the dangers migrants pose to U.S. citizens. 

    On Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Riley’s parents.

    “She was a beautiful young woman. She was a great person, best nursing student there was. I spoke to her parents yesterday. They’re incredible people that are devastated beyond belief,” Trump said. “The monster that was charged in the death is an illegal alien migrant who was let into our country and released into our communities by crooked Joe Biden. He’s crooked — I took the name away from Hillary [Clinton]. Because she’s no longer relevant, I guess.”

    According to an AP-NORC poll in January, the share of voters concerned about immigration rose to 35% from 27% last year. Fifty-five percent of Republicans say the government needs to focus on immigration in 2024, while 22% of Democrats listed immigration as a priority. That’s up from 45% and 14%, respectively, from December 2022.

    The number of people who are illegally crossing the U.S. border has been rising for years for complicated reasons that include climate change, war and unrest in other nations, the economy, and cartels that see migration as a cash cow.

    The administration’s approach has been to pair crackdowns at the border with increasing legal pathways for migrants designed to steer people into arriving by plane with sponsors, not illegally on foot to the border.

    Arrests for illegal crossings fell by half in January, but there were record highs in December. The numbers of migrants flowing across the U.S-Mexico border have far outpaced the capacity of an immigration system that has not been substantially updated in decades. Trump and Republicans claim Biden is refusing to act, but absent a law change from Congress, any major policies are likely to be challenged or held up in court.

    “I am an immigrant myself, I came to the U.S. when I was a young kid. I know how difficult it is to go through the immigration process, to become a citizen, to to struggle with poverty and to struggle through the process,” said Garcia, the California Democrat who came to the U.S. from Peru as a young child. “We actually could fix our system, but Donald Trump is not interested in it, so I personally take great offense to the way he characterizes people like myself and my family. And the way he is essentially characterizing essentially going back to a system where he would forcibly remove people like me, like my family from our homes and neighborhoods into detention or to be deported.”

    “It is sick,” Garcia added. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Lawmakers pass antisemitism bill in Tallahassee

    The Florida Legislature unanimously approved legislation Thursday adopting a new definition of antisemitism. 

    The final version of the bill was passed by the House during the first-ever “Israel Day” at the Florida Capitol. The Senate passed its version of the bill on Wednesday.

    The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance drafted the definition Florida is adopting. If approved, Florida would become the 13th state to do so.

    The legislation’s definition of antisemitism is as follows:

    “Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”

    More information on the IHRA definition is available online.

    Supporters say Florida’s legislation empowers prosecutors and police to address hate crimes more effectively.

    The bill, House Bill 148, now awaits Gov. Ron DeSantis’ consideration. 

    “We will continue this fight to tempt down inequality in the State of Florida and raise up those who need to be raised,” said the bill sponsor, Democratic State Rep. Mike Gotlieb.

    Antisemitism nationwide is on the rise, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

    “When conflict erupts in Israel, antisemitic incidents soon follow in the U.S. and globally,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.

    “You can use the definition when there is a hate crime,” said Boynton Beach Democratic State Sen. Lori Berman. “You can use the definition when there’s discrimination.” 

    Despite bipartisan support, at least one lawmaker voiced concern.

    Palm Bay Republican Rep. Randy Fine said he supports the bill, but fears that some local leaders may not utilize it.

    “It will not matter if we don’t demand that they act on these laws as we pass them,” said Fine, a Jewish lawmaker. 

    DeSantis often touts Florida as the “most pro-Israel state” in the nation. 

    To date, he’s embarked upon two Israeli trade missions and provided logistical support to Israel after the Oct. 7 attack. 

    “Florida is doing everything right, and it should be done across the country and across the world,” said Consul General of Israel to Florida, Maor Elbaz-Starinsky. 

    Other pro-Israel legislation this session includes policy boosting security at Jewish schools and a new state holiday — Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    The 2024 Legislative Session ends March 8.

    Short-term spending bill passes both chambers of Congress

    The Senate and the House have both passed another short-term spending measure Thursday that would keep one set of federal agencies operating through March 8 and another set through March 22, narrowly avoiding a shutdown for parts of the federal government that would otherwise kick in Saturday.

    The measure now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk, where he is expected to sign it quickly.

    In a 320 to 99 vote, the House passed a short-term funding agreement to avoid a partial government shutdown Friday. Florida Republicans were divided on the measure. 

    Twelve of the 20 Florida Republicans in the House voted against the short-term spending bill, including Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Matt Gaetz.

    “If it were up to me, if I was a speaker, I’d say look, we need those 12 standalone appropriations bills, we need to determine exactly where we can make some of those cuts,” Luna said. “And frankly, remember, it’s been a really long time since we’ve balanced the budget.”

    The short-term deal followed a meeting between congressional leaders of both parties with President Joe Biden at the White House earlier this week. It sets new funding deadlines for March 8 and March 22.

    It does not include the $95 billion foreign aid package for wartime funding to Ukraine and Israel that passed the Senate earlier this month.

    The funding agreement also does not include any new border provisions as both Biden and former President Donald Trump took dueling visits to the U.S. Southern Border Thursday.

    House Freedom Caucus members, including Luna, had sought a 1% across the board cut to discretionary spending.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the deal opposed by many in his own party Thursday.

    “The appropriations process is ugly. Democracy is ugly. This is the way it works every year, always has, except that we’ve instituted some new innovations,” Johnson said. “We broke the omnibus fever, right? That’s how Washington has been run for years. We’re trying to turn the aircraft carrier back to real budgeting and spending reform. This was an important thing to break it up into smaller pieces.”

    This is the fourth extension of the government funding deadline since September. Lawmakers say they are hopeful a fifth won’t be needed, and that funding for the full budget year that began five months ago will soon be approved.

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    Joseph Konig

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  • McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

    McConnell to step down; gender bill dies in Senate

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    Lawmakers in Tallahassee work on final bills to leave committee, and few surprises expected in Michigan primary.


    McConnell announces he’ll step down as Senate leader

    Mitch McConnell announced Wednesday that he will step down in November as the leader of the Senate Republican conference, capping off his tenure as the longest-serving Senate party leader in U.S. history.

    McConnell’s announcement not only marks a milestone for the Kentucky Republican, but also signals a changing of the guard in the Senate Republican caucus — a departure from the brand of conservatism founded by Ronald Reagan in favor of the populism of Donald Trump.

    It was a point that he acknowledged in his remarks on Wednesday afternoon as he prepared to bid farewell to the power he’s wielded for nearly two decades. He reflected on his early time in the Senate, which “helped shape my view of the world,” particularly noting “the irreplaceable role we play as the leader of the free world.”

    “It’s why I worked so hard to get the national security package passed earlier this month — Believe me, I know the politics within my party at this particular moment in time. I have many faults. Misunderstanding politics is not one of them,” he joked. “That said, I believe more strongly than ever that America’s global leadership is a central to preserving the shining city on a hill that Ronald Reagan discussed. As long as I’m drawing breath on this earth, I will defend American exceptionalism.”

    McConnell, who turned 82 last week, acknowledged that a recent family tragedy — the recent death of his wife Elaine Chao’s younger sister, Angela — offered him a moment of introspection.

    “When you lose a loved one, particularly at a young age, there’s a certain introspection that accompanies the grieving process,” he said. “Perhaps it is God’s way of reminding you of your own life’s journey, to reprioritize the impact of the world that we will all inevitably leave behind. I turned 82 last week. The end of my contributions are closer than I prefer.”

    He also expressed his gratitude toward his wife, who served in the last two Republican administrations as labor secretary under George W. Bush and transportation secretary under Trump, as well as to Reagan, whose virtues and leadership he extolled.

    “For 31 years, Elaine has been the love of my life,” he said. “And I’m eternally grateful to have her by my side.”

    “My career in the United States Senate began amidst the Reagan Revolution,” he said. “Truth is when I got here, I was just happy everybody remembered my name. President Reagan called me Mitch O’Donnell. Close enough, I thought. My wife Elaine and I got married on President Reagan’s birthday, Feb. 6. It’s probably not the most romantic thing to admit, but Reagan meant a lot to both of us.”

    Gender ID bill dies in Senate

    HB 1639 is a bill that would have required that someone’s biological sex, not gender, be listed on state IDs and health insurance plans. But the head of the Florida’s Department of Motor Vehicles beat lawmakers by sending out a memo that says Florida residents can only identify by their sex at birth on their driver’s license. 

    The LGBTQ community calls these moves discriminatory, and they were out in full force today to make their voices heard. 

    They say the move is unfriendly to the LGBTQ community.

    “We’re in a really volatile time and a really unstable time so it’s just really hard to exist as a trans person in Florida,” Ame Leon said.

    Several Democrats joined Leon on the capitol steps. Together they’re raising issue with several Republican-led bills.

    “It’s not just an issue of equality. It’s also in issue of economics. If we want to attract talent to this state, then we have to be welcoming to every type of family,” Rep. Anna Eskamani said.

    Wednesday’s rally happened in the closing days of legislative session.

    “We’ve noticed that there’s a lot of confusion in the land apparently of what is a woman and what is a man,” Rep. Dean Black said.

    There is good news for advocates. After weeks of debate in the House and Senate, Senate President Kathleen Passidomo confirmed Wednesday that the bill is dead in her chamber.

    “That bill is still stuck in committee. Per Senate rules, we don’t take bills out of committee,” she said.

    The session is slated to end on March 8.

    Lawmakers address the short-term rental industry in Florida

    Visit Florida estimates that the vacation rental market in Florida is worth more than $1 billion per year. It’s an industry that affects many in our communities, either as a property owner, or a vacationer, perhaps staying at a gulf coast beach.

    But a bill passed by the state Senate this legislative session is focused on giving more regulatory power to the state when it comes to vacation rentals.

    The bill’s sponsor says it will help cut down on rowdy renters, while local leaders say it’s simply government overreach, and that the cities can regulate themselves.

    “The reason why this place is so fantastic is that we have a solid 5 blocks of main street with parks all around it. The main street is full of bars, restaurants, all kinds of offerings,” Jason Patino said.

    He like to talk up the city of Gulf Port   

    “Where else in Florida do you have a beautiful downtown strip and a beautiful beach right next to it?” He asked.

    He’s a real estate agent, and it’s part of his job. But he’s also heavily invested in short-term rentals of his own.

    “All of the people here, they aren’t residents. This money that’s transacting right now, that couldn’t be happening without a vacation rental market.

    He says the city is changing all the time. He’s starting to see younger families move in or rent here for a vacation.  

    Short-term rentals are regulated by the city they are in, but SB 280 would push regulating short-term rentals like Airbnb and VRBO to the state level.  

    It could regulate how many people can stay in a property, rental registration and impose fines if an owner is in violation.  

    Patino sees this as the state government overstepping its power.  

    “So you have to ask yourself, is the state going to identify what best for this vacation home market? Do you think anyone in Tallahassee knows what’s happening here right now?” He said.

    Republican Sen. Nick Diceglie is a sponsor of the bill.  

    “When our founding fathers enshrined these ideals in our form of government almost 250 years ago, they couldn’t possibly have imagined how innovations like VRBO or Airbnb would lead modern day communities to question the proper role of government in regulating the use of private property. I doubt they envisioned endless streams of drug and alcohol-infused ragers, loud music, and trash disturbing quaint beachfront streets, either. So here we are,” he said.

    Indian Rocks Beach Mayor Joanne Kennedy said several cities are concerned about the bill.  

    “We don’t think this is a one size fits all issue. And we do have designations in all of the communities. For example, in Indian Rock Springs, we have commercial tourism, we have mixed use,” Kennedy said.

    Patino said the bill favors the hotel industry, and this is state government overreach.

    “Why do they want to take over something they couldn’t understand? Tallahassee has no idea what the local populace of Gulf Port Beach needs, but the council here does,” he said.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Artificial Intelligence bill in Tallahassee

    Artificial Intelligence bill in Tallahassee

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    Lawmakers in Tallahassee work on final bills to leave committee, and few surprises expected in Michigan primary.


    Lawmakers address AI in political campaigns

    More than 1,800 bills were filed for consideration during this year’s legislative session. In the seven weeks since, some of those bills are on the cusp of becoming laws.

    Others hit stumbling blocks.

    Today was the final day of scheduled committee meetings, giving lawmakers one last chance to move legislation for a potential floor vote.

    Any bills unable to garner approval are now all but doomed for this year.

    One proposal set for a house vote is HB 919, which would regulate the use of artificial intelligence in political ads.

    With election season already picking up, lawmakers are working to put guard rails on artificial intelligence.

    This legislation is the first of its kind and it comes just months before the next election cycle.

    House Bill 919 focuses on emerging AI technology. The bill would require political ads generated by AI to come with a public notice.

    “The increasing access to sophisticated AI-generated content threatens the integrity of elections by facilitating the dissemination of misleading or completely fabricated information that appears more realistic than ever,” Rep. Alex Rizzo said.

    The Florida house is expected to deliver a final vote on the bill Tuesday. The goal, supporters say, is to make political ads more honest

    “Cs for HB 919 seeks to address the rising concern of deceptive campaign advertising by mandating disclaimers on political ads that contain certain content generated by artificial intelligence,” Rizzo said.

    Democrats are on the board with the bill. The measure thus far is advancing with bipartisan support.

    But even then, there are some lingering questions.

    “If someone manipulates their own picture to make them have no wrinkles and that type of stuff using AI, you know, I’m 40. I got I got a little line right there. I don’t want it in my pictures. So I would have to use that disclaimer?” Rep. Angie Nixon said.

    Biden and Trump expected to win Michigan primary

    With the South Carolina Republican primary in the rearview mirror, the race for the Democratic and GOP presidential nominations now heads to the first battleground state in November’s election: Michigan.

    The Wolverine State is a crucial one for both parties. Narrowly winning the reliably blue state helped give Donald Trump the presidency in 2016, the first Republican to do so since 1988, but Joe Biden won it back in 2020 by more than 150,000 votes.

    While both Biden and Trump lead in recent polling, both frontrunners face major questions in Michigan’s primary, which is the last before Super Tuesday on March 5, when more than a dozen states — accounting for roughly a third of all delegates to the nominating conventions — are up for grabs.

    For Trump, it will be another test of the strength of his last remaining challenger, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley — and if a power struggle between competing factions of the state’s Republican Party will have any impact.

    On the other side of the spectrum, Biden faces a challenge not from a particular candidate — though his last remaining challenger for the Democratic nomination, Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips will be on the ballot — but from a push by progressive activists to get voters to pick “uncommitted” as a form of protest to push the incumbent to back a permanent cease-fire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

    As of Monday, more than 1 million people have already voted in the primary — 927,000 by mail and 78,000 in person early — a 13% higher pre-Election Day turnout than the state saw in 2020, according to Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson.

    Marijuana bill leaves hemp shop owner uncertain about future

    Senate Bill 1698 would limit THC and other cannabinoids recently passed and a similar House Bill is expected to do the same. Some hemp shop owners say it could spell disaster for their industry in Florida.

    In Clearwater Beach, Matthew Wetzel has run LGH Dispensary for the past four years. He has worked in the industry for longer and says hemp shops bring billions in revenue to the Sunshine State. However, as he looks over all the products in his display case, he doesn’t have a rosy outlook on the future.

    “Everything is going to be above the 2-milligram mark or 10-milligrams per package and we’re definitely going to be losing the flower as well,” Wetzel said.

    Senate Bill 1698 would prohibit businesses from manufacturing or selling products that contain more than .3% Delta-9 and limit other cannabinoids. Senate Health Policy Chair Republican Colleen Burton sponsored the bill. She wants to cap the levels of THC and change packaging that she says is geared towards kids.

    “I have a real concern for the health and safety for Floridians with these items on the market,” Burton said.

    For Wetzel, it’s about more than just keeping his doors open for him. He’s worried about his 12-year-old son who uses CBD for seizures. He said once his son started using CBD, it was life changing. He says he worries about others who use it as a medication.

    “You may have some family members that have debilitative issues, whether they are children or not (…) that have chosen this holistic plant. Think about them,” Wetzel said.

    He is not sure what the future might bring if the bills are put into law. If passed, the law would be implemented in October. However, Wetzel said he plans to fight the legislation and possibly file a lawsuit against the state.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Palmetto city commission hears public concerns over man’s death

    Palmetto city commission hears public concerns over man’s death

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    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — Palmetto city commissioners heard from about a dozen people at Monday night’s meeting calling for justice for Breonte Johnson-Davis.

    The 36-year-old Johnson-Davis died in police custody in November. He was shot with a taser multiple times.


    On Monday night, commissioners heard from speakers, including Johnson-Davis’s mother, about changes they want to see.

    Speakers also told commissioners Johnson-Davis’s death could’ve been prevented and that they’re frustrated with city officials’ response.

    Palmetto Police Chief Scott Tyler told reporters last week officers responded to reports of someone acting aggressively at a convenience store on Nov. 1.

    Tyler said Johnson-Davis ran onto a cruiser and kept acting aggressively, leading to officers shooting him with a taser.

    The chief said toxicology reports and an FDLE investigation found Johnson-Davis was on drugs and suffered a medical emergency.

    Johnson-Davis died in the hospital a day later.

    His death was ruled accidental, and FDLE found officers acted reasonably.

    Speakers at the meeting disagreed, saying this was a mental health call and officers used unnecessary force. 

    Johnson-Davis’s mother said she’s unhappy Palmetto’s mayor has been silent on her son’s death and she wants to see Tyler fired.

    “No matter what Breonte was going through, he did not deserve to die,” said Tracey Washington, Breonte Johnson-Davis’ mother. “He was not armed. He was not combative or aggressive. See, right now, the community is going on a narrative that the chief painted and we’re supposed to abide by that. Not me. Not his mother.”

    A number of speakers said they want to see Palmetto police adopt a program similar to St. Pete police’s “call program.”

    It stands for “community assistance and life liaison.”

    “The State Attorney’s office reviewed everything. Reviewed the medical examiner’s report, reviewed the toxicology reports,” said Tyler. “Reviewed the FDLE investigation and they have concluded that our officers acted reasonably, and their actions were justified that night. And they have concluded that our officers’ actions had nothing to do with his death.”

    Dispatchers will send social workers to some calls to improve responses to some situations, including those involving a mental health crisis.

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Haley stays in GOP race; civil liablities bill pulled

    Haley stays in GOP race; civil liablities bill pulled

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    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is staying in the Republican primary for president, and lawmakers debate a bill that would increase civil liabilities in Florida.


    Haley stays in race ahead of Michigan’s primary

    There’s been a number of developments on the presidential campaign trail.

    Starting with a shakeup at the Republican National Committee. The party’s chair, Ronna McDaniel, announced she will officially relinquish that role next month.

    She said she will allow the party to select a new chair of their choosing, following the tradition of letting a party’s presidential nominee pick a new chair.

    Former President Donald Trump has already suggested North Carolina GOP chair Michael Whatley for the job.

    Meanwhile, Trump is leading the Republican primary field, with 110 bound delegates compared to former Gov. Nikki Haley’s 20.

    Michigan’s primary election takes place Tuesday, where Trump and Haley remain on the Republican ballot alongside several candidates who have dropped out, including Gov. Ron DeSantis

    Michigan has been a crucial battleground state in the last two presidential elections and candidates will be looking not just to win the primary, but to see where they stand for the November general election as well.

    After Saturday’s loss in her home state of South Carolina, Haley is facing growing calls from fellow Republicans to end her presidential candidacy.

    “The sooner we come together, the better. There’s really no pathway for her after tonight,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said.

    Haley trails in the delegate count and in the polls, and late Sunday, Americans for Prosperity announced it will no longer spend money on behalf of her campaign.

    But Haley is vowing to stay in the race, both in Michigan on Tuesday and through March 5, Super Tuesday.

    She says her ability to win four out of 10 voters in the South Carolina primary Saturday is a danger sign for Trump’s campaign.

    “You can’t win a general election if you don’t acknowledge the 40% of Republicans who are saying we don’t want Donald Trump,” Haley said.

    There are 874 delegates at stake on Super Tuesday, when 15 states and one U.S. territory hold primaries, but experts say it will be nearly impossible for Haley to catch up.

    “They’ve redesigned the rules in a lot of these states. Trump and his team have been working on this for a couple of years. Most of them are now winner-take-all, or winner-take almost all, delegates,” University of Virginia professor Larry Sabato said.

    President Joe Biden is expected to easily win Michigan’s Democratic primary, but some left-wing Democrats are urging votes for uncommitted delegates, to protest Biden not being more critical of Israel’s tactics in its war against Hamas. Because Michigan has a large concentration of Arab-American voters, the protest vote could be significant. Some of Biden’s supporters are pushing back.

    “I think the progressives always had trouble with the perfect being the enemy of the good,” former DNC charman Howard Dean said.

    The results on Tuesday will be closely watched for any clues about where Michigan is trending before the November election. The state was critical to Trump winning the White House in 2016 and then Biden winning it in 2020. 

    Civil liabilities bill gets pulled from Committee

    A controversial bill concerning wrongful death lawsuits and the unborn could see big changes before it reaches the Senate floor, if it gets there at all.

    Lawmakers in Tallahassee Monday are busy renegotiating a bill that would give liability protections to Florida’s unborn with only one day left to advance bills in committee.

    Senate bill 476 would empower parents sue over the wrongful death of their unborn child. 

    For Florida Democrats, though, this is a veiled threat against access to abortion. 

    “We’ve been working with the sponsor but she doesn’t seem interested in taking some of the suggestions we have so again it begs the question… what are you actually doing?” Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book said.

    Under the bill, pregnant mothers would get immunity against civil lawsuits. Plus, a proposed amendment seemed to offer at least some protections to abortion providers too. 

    But after some outspoken skepticism, the bill sponsor pulled the bill out of committee.

    “Although I have worked diligently to respond to questions and concerns, I understand there is still work that needs to be done,” State. Sen. Erin Grall said.

    Meanwhile, in the house, Republicans are dismissive about those concerns.

    “This bill is narrowly tailored. It only applies to the wrongful death statute so while I’m happen to discuss personhood and whether a child should be a person, this is not that bigger conversation,” State Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka said.

    It’s unclear as of now what changes could be on the horizon for this bill, if any.

    New bill would increase penalties for youth gun crimes

    A bill that would toughen penalties for kids caught with guns is one step closer to becoming law.

    The Florida House of Representatives approved HB 1181 Thursday with a vote of 83-29. Under the bill, minors who illegally possess guns would be charged with a third-degree felony.

    That’s up from a first-degree misdemeanor. They’d also be detained longer — five days for a first offense and 21 days for a second offense. For third and subsequent offenses, they could be adjudicated delinquent and committed to a residential program. 

    Florida Rep. Berny Jacques sponsors the bill. He pointed to a Christmas Eve shooting in Pinellas County as an example of why it’s needed. A 14-year-old boy shot and killed his sister after an argument with his 15-year-old brother about Christmas presents. That 15-year-old then shot the 14-year-old.

    “It’s tragic, because now a young man is charged with first degree murder and the other is charged with attempted first degree murder, and it’s tragic because this could have been prevented,” Jacques said during debate. “It could have been prevented because these youth were known not only to carry their firearms, but they had multiple run-ins with the law, including on firearm offenses — one of them at 12 years old. Had a charge with minor in possession of a firearm, but at the time and at this current time, it’s only a misdemeanor, and there was no real mechanism to hold that child accountable. And who knows, if there were mechanisms in place, who knows what could have been prevented?”

    Those against the bill said they’re concerned the extended time teens can be detained is too harsh. According to the bill, if an adjudicatory hearing doesn’t take place after a young person has been detained for 60 days, the court must hold a review hearing within each successive seven-day review period until the hearing is held or the child is placed on supervised release.

    “If law enforcement is investigating what has happened in a matter, we get to hold a child basically until law enforcement and the state attorney can make a charging decision,” said Florida Rep. Michele Rayner. “That flies in the face of the Constitution, that flies in the face of human decency, that flies in the face of protecting our children.”

    Freddy Barton, executive director of Safe & Sound Hillsborough, said he and his team reviewed the bill Thursday with teens in its youth gun offender program.

    “I think that the bill does give a little bit more teeth to the existing language that’s out there, but I don’t think that it answers all of the concerns,” Barton said. “We still need to have parents to come to the forefront and make sure that they have a role and responsibility in keeping guns out of the hands of kids, and we need to look at more prevention-based programming.”

    Safe and Sound works with young people facing charges to help get them back on the right track.

    “Here in the pink and in the blue, those are kids that either are on probation or they’ve got some type of gun charge,” Barton said, referring to a map of Hillsborough County with colored stickers on it, representing teens currently taking part in the group’s programming.

    According to Barton, they were all court-ordered to work with Safe and Sound in the last month.

    “Unfortunately, the numbers are growing, and so we’re trying to do as much as we can early because we’re getting ready to go into spring break. We already know if we don’t have active programming in place for kids and they’re out of school, we see the numbers increase,” Barton said.

    He said it was important to talk with teens in the youth gun offender program about the bill to give them a better idea of the impact their actions today could have on their lives going forward.

    “You need to understand there are going to be deeper consequences for making some of these choices. So, let’s make better choices now so you don’t find yourself on the other end of that,” Barton said.

    Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said that’s the point of the bill — toughening consequences to stop kids from committing gun crimes.

    “It’s probably the worst that it’s ever been,” Gualtieri said of gun-related crime involving teens. “I think what it’s being caused by is all these kids are out in the middle of the night, breaking into all these cars, and there’s a lot more guns out there. There’s a lot more guns in cars.”

    Gualtieri helped work on the bill and said it’s about making sure the consequences match the crime.

    “Everything in 1181 focuses on gun crimes and also being reasonable about it and making sure that we give kids the opportunity to get on the right side of it. We’re using detention centers as a place those kids would be incarcerated for a minimum period of time to get the message across,” Gualtieri said. “Kids at 14, 15, 16 years old, 2 to 3 in the morning, standing on the street corner, should not have a gun sitting in their waistband.”

    Barton said he does share the concerns of critics about the length of time teens could be detained, saying it could set them far back when it comes to school.

    “If you can imagine when you were in high school and you were sick two, three days, you were already behind when you went back to school. Now, you’re being securely confined for 21, 30 days for the state to come back or someone to come back and say that, ‘Hey, this kid needs to be detained for another 21 days,’” said Barton. “Well, it’s almost a death sentence for the kids when we try to get them back in their school environment.”

    Gualtieri said the proposed new detention times are reasonable.

    “At the end of the day, there’s an easy solution to the problem for young kids: don’t commit gun crimes. If you don’t commit gun crimes, you don’t have to worry about it,” Gualtieri said. 

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    Gary Darling

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  • Financial literacy expanding into Manatee county thanks to nonprofit

    Financial literacy expanding into Manatee county thanks to nonprofit

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    TAMPA, Fla. — According to the latest U.S. Census Data, Florida’s total population has reached more than 22 million, ranking number two in international migration.

    With more people moving to the state, it also means there’s a need for more resources to help immigrants adjust.


    What You Need To Know

    • Project Prosper is a non-profit based out of Clearwater helping asylum seekers and immigrants adjust to the U.S. financial system
    • The nonprofit has focused its services in Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties, but it is now expanding into Manatee County
    • Maria Luciana Jones is a past participant in the program and now volunteers to help people on their financial literacy journey

    That’s what the organization Project Prosper does, having helped hundreds of people adjust in sectors like finance and language.

    Now they’re expanding the help outside of Pinellas County to Manatee County.

    Faye Steinhauser is the Executive Director of the organization.

    “Our main contact down there is Haitian connections,” she said. “We’re also working with Lutheran services of Florida and an organization called spark growth in the area, so all these organizations are coming together to connect us to clients and give us a space to provide our first classes.”

    For native Argentinian Maria Luciana Jones, food remains a large part of her culture, as well as her assimilation in America.

    “It (cooking) reminds me of my childhood because I remember when I would go to my grandparents’ home,” she said. “It’s kind of a treat for the kids, they would make Milanesas.”

    It’s a lengthy process to make Milanesas, the preparation begins the night before. Jones said it’s a recipe that’s been passed down from generation to generation.

    She learned how to make this meal from her mother, who still lives in Argentina, which is also where Jones got married.

    Her wedding was an unforgettable night,“my mother she bought this cake for us the wedding cake and it was the Argentinian flag and the American flag.”

    The photos serve as reminders of that day. They’re photos she looks at quite often since moving to the U.S. a few years ago.

    “Argentinians are very warm and friendly, and sometimes I miss that, going home and they’re warmth,” she says.

    She said moving to Florida as an adult had some challenges.

    “It was very difficult to learn the financial system,” she said. “Compared to how the system works in Argentina because you had to learn about taxes about your credit score and that’s something you don’t have in Argentina.”

    But thanks to the help of Project Prosper she received one-on-one help from a coach, learning what a 401k is and what taxes were.

    The organization has 13 programs, which range from beginner to intermediate. Once a course is completed, participants receive certificates.

    She’s taking what she’s learned and putting it to use.

    “Every time I get paid, I make sure I transfer a percentage of my salary to these services,” Jones said.

    Jones said the program has been a big help in making her transition easier.

    Just like this meal connects maria to her Argentinian roots she’s hoping to connect with others now by giving back as a volunteer with the organization. 

    The organization says as they continue to expand into other counties, they’re also looking for volunteers to help in coaching.

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    Lizbeth Gutierrez

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  • DeSantis sends more troops to border; GOP primary heats up

    DeSantis sends more troops to border; GOP primary heats up

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    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has started to send additional troops to the Texas border, with the offer of a thousand more, and Republicans in South Carolina prepare for the state presidential primary. 


    DeSantis begins to send additional Florida troops to Texas border

    It’s been an eventful week for Gov. Ron DeSantis. Several bills are now on his desk, and despite broad support from the legislature, the governor’s recent comments have cast doubt whether he’ll actually sign them.

    While they wait for a signature or a veto, DeSantis is sending more troops and troopers to the southern border.

    As many as 50 Florida National Guard members will leave from Plant City Friday and dozens of state troopers from Pensacola are going with them.

    “This is part of a years-long effort for us to help do what the federal government has refused to do, which is to actually defend this country’s borders,” DeSantis said.

    In February, DeSantis said Florida will help Texas build barricades or lay down more border wire.

    “We wanna be a part of that,” he said. “We think this is an American issue — partially because we should have a secure country, and partially the effects of this border invasion go to all 50 states.”

    The governor is offering Texas up to 1,000 troops. The offer comes as border crossings in the U.S. near a record high. Border Patrol in December reported roughly 250,000 migrant encounters.

    But back in Florida, Democrats are calling the move a wasteful political stunt.

    This mission, they say, is all about DeSantis and his dream of running for the White House.

    “There’s so much to focus on here at home,” Florida House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell said. “We don’t need a governor who is continuing to focus on his own ambitions and just leaving Floridians behind.”

    Not only that, Florida Democrats say no state should send their troops down south. The border, they say, is federal business. 

    South Carolina GOP primary could reveal clear winner

    Saturday is the Republican Presidential Primary in South Carolina.

    And even though Nikki Haley is a former governor of the state, she is not expected to beat former President Donald Trump.

    Nevertheless, she is pledging to stay in the race for the foreseeable future.

    Hundreds of people lined up for hours in Rock Hill to hear Trump speak. Even as the former president faces a laundry list of legal troubles, his support remains strong going into the primary.

    “He’s been through a lot and he keeps going,” South Carolina resident Joe Kilpatrick said. “He’s a true patriot. Best president in my lifetime.” 

    “When he was president in 2020, he made everything better,” resident Katie Henson claimed. “And now, Biden, it’s going down the toilet.”

    Haley has been criss-crossing the state, arguing Trump and Biden are too old and that Trump is too chaotic to run the country, but Trump fans disagree.

    “I’ve always known the older, the wiser,” Latosha Parker said. “Age is nothing but a number. We need Nikki Haley to say what she’s going to bring,” 

    Something Haley does have is a pitch that is appealing to former Trump supporters who are exhausted by his unending legal troubles.

    In a call with reporters Friday, Haley’s campaign manager Betsy Ankney cited a Marquette Law School poll that found Haley would beat Biden by 16 percentage points but Trump would beat him by 2 points, within the margin of error. Ankney also rattled off the lengthy list of Republican election defeats since, she said, the “luster wore off” of Trump following his 2016 victory.

    “We know that the math is challenging,” Ankney said. “This has never just been about who can win a Republican primary. This battle is about who can win in November, defeat the Democrats and finally get our country back on track. And the reality is, no matter what all-caps rants Trump goes on on Twitter about the polls, he will not defeat Joe Biden in November, and he will drag the entire Republican ticket down with him.”

    Haley has shown no sign of being on the verge of bowing out. This week, her campaign announced its leadership teams in Super Tuesday primary states Michigan and Texas, and Ankney announced Friday a seven-figure TV and digital ad buy leading up to Super Tuesday, which is March 5.

    Haley and the super PAC supporting her had $15 million cash on hand at the end of January, according to Federal Election Commission.

    The former South Carolina governor has been attacking Trump on a number of fronts, including his court trials, his comments that he would encourage Russia to attack NATO countries that do not meet their financial obligations and his refusal to condemn Russia for the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

    The Trump campaign, meanwhile, has been trying to paint Haley as someone who is weak on immigration and relations with China, and who would raise taxes.

    Republican strategist Rina Shah said it’s important for Haley to avoid an ugly blowout Saturday.

    “The delta can’t be so vast,” Shah said. “Because if it is, then it’s almost like a repudiation of her candidacy.”

    Shah added that Haley has “had her eye on the long game for months now” after receiving an influx of support from big-money donors and Americans for Prosperity Action, the political network founded by the influential billionaire Koch Brothers.

    USF students volunteer in South Carolina primary

    Students at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg headed to South Carolina this week to volunteer ahead of the Republican presidential primary.

    The trip is part of a course called “The Road to the White House 2024.” The students applied to be in the class. Each student chose to intern with Republican candidates Donald Trump, Nikki Haley or with the South Carolina Democratic Party.

    “The Democrats had their election, but now what?” asked USF St. Pete professor Judithanne McLauchlan. “They’re going to be doing their delegate selections, so these students will get the behind the scenes look at all of that process.”

    The students left for South Carolina on Friday and will stay for 10 days.

    “I really have no idea what the campaign is going to look like,” said student Dante Rubino, who will intern with former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign.

    “I’m looking at getting on the inside track and furthering my career,” said student and veteran Steven Brown. Brown, who already works with veterans, said he plans to intern with Trump’s campaign.

    While they’re in South Carolina, each student will blog about their experience.

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    Ryan Chatelain

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  • Here’s all of the ballot questions for Central Florida voters to decide

    Here’s all of the ballot questions for Central Florida voters to decide

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    FLORIDA — The 2024 presidential race is well underway, with several states already holding their primary elections to decide who will top the Republican and Democratic tickets in November. Floridians across the state will have a chance to make their voice heard on Tuesday, March 19. Many municipalities will hold their local elections, with some charter amendments and ballot questions thrown in. 


    Before that can happen, there are some important dates for voters in Central Florida to be aware of.

    Both Orange and Flagler counties will hold municipal elections in addition to the Presidential Preference Primary election for Republicans on March 19.

    Voters looking to vote by mail should make sure to get their applications in before Thursday, March 7.

    Residents of Central Florida looking to avoid potentially long lines at their polling places can take part in early voting, which will be open from March 9 through March 16. Voters in Orange and Osceola counties will be able to vote early on March 17 as well.

    Here are the municipal elections taking place in Orange County on March 19:

    Municipal Candidates / Amendments:

    • City of Apopka – (City Council Seats 3, 4) 
    • City of Eatonville – (Council Seats 4, 5 and 5 Charter questions)
    • City of Edgewood – (9 Charter questions)
    • City of Maitland – (1 question)
    • City of Ocoee – (City Comm. Dist. 4 and 13 Charter questions)
    • City of Winter Garden – (City Comm. Dist. 2, 3) 
    • City of Winter Park – (Mayor and City Comm. Seat 2) 
    • Town of Oakland – (Mayor) 

    Voters in Flagler County can vote for the City of Flagler Beach Mayor, and 1 City Commissioner.

    After the Presidential Preference Primary, there’s the statewide primary election, which will host other local offices across the state on Aug. 20. Voters will need to adjust or confirm their registration by July 22 in order to vote in that election.

    The General Election will take place on Nov. 5 this year, with a voter registration deadline of Oct. 7.

    Early voting dates for the primary and general elections have yet to be confirmed.

    Here is a full list of the proposed charter amendments or ballot questions, according to the Orange County Supervisor of Elections office.

    OCOEE

    Question #1

    Amendment of § C-8, City of Ocoee Charter, to Liberally Construe the City’s Powers

    Section C-8 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the City of Ocoee’s powers be liberally construed in favor of the city to effect their intended purposes.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #2

    Amendment of § C-8, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for the Exchange of Property

    Section C-8 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the City’s enumerated powers shall include the right to acquire or dispose of property, including real property, by exchange.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #3

    Amendment of § C-11, City of Ocoee Charter, to Establish One (1) Year Residency Requirements

    Section C-11 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that candidates for Mayor shall reside in the City of Ocoee for at least one (1) year before qualifying as a candidate and to require candidates for City Commissioner to reside in the district they seek to represent for at least one (1) year before qualifying as a candidate; candidates shall provide such proof of residency as may be prescribed by ordinance.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #4

    Amendment of § C-11, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide Consent to a Background Check

    Section C-11 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that each candidate for Mayor and City Commissioner shall consent to a background check to verify the candidate’s qualifications to hold office; and no candidate shall be barred from running for office without notice, a hearing, and clear and convincing evidence that the candidate is not qualified to hold office.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #5

    Amendment of § C-16, City of Ocoee Charter, to Limit Salaries to Part-Time Compensation

    Section C-16 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the salaries of the Mayor, Mayor Pro Tem, and Commissioners shall be commensurate with the part-time nature of the duties of the office.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #6

    Amendment of § C-17, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for Election of Successors

    Section C-17 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that the successor to the office of Mayor or City Commissioner shall be elected at the next regular or general city election, if held within twelve (12) months of the vacancy.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #7

    Amendment of § C-18, City of Ocoee Charter, to Authorize Designation of an Accountant

    Section C-18 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to designate an accountant or accounting firm in accordance with the procedures set forth in Florida Statutes §

    218.391 annually or for a period not to exceed five (5) years.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #8

    Amendment of § C-21, City of Ocoee Charter, to Authorize Commencement of City Manager Residency

    Section C-21 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to reasonably extend the requirement for the City Manager to reside in the City of Ocoee within one (1) year of beginning employment upon the Commission’s unanimous approval.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #9

    Amendment of § C-28, City of Ocoee Charter, for Budget Approval of City Clerk’s Salary

    Section C-28 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to clarify that the City Manager shall determine the City Clerk’s salary, subject to budget approval by the City Commission.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #10

    Amendment of § C-45, City of Ocoee Charter, to Define “Regular,” “Special,” and “General City Elections”

    Section C-45 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to define “regular elections” as those held at regular intervals for the election of Mayor and City Commissioner, “special elections” as those held to fill a vacancy in the office of Mayor or City Commissioner, for a citizen initiative to approve of an ordinance, or a referendum to repeal an ordinance, and “general elections” as any other municipal election.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #11

    Amendment of § C-45, City of Ocoee Charter, to Provide for Swearing-In to Office

    Section C-45 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to provide that any person elected to the office of Mayor or City Commissioner shall be sworn into office immediately prior to commencement of the next regularly scheduled City Commission meeting held after the Canvassing Board declares the election results.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #12

    Amendment of § C-49, City of Ocoee Charter, to Set Elections by Resolution or Ordinance

    Section C-49 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to authorize the City Commission to set the dates of elections and dates of qualifying periods for candidates by either resolution or ordinance.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    Question #13

    Amendment of § C-50, City of Ocoee Charter, to Appoint City Clerk to Canvassing Board

    Section C-50 of the City of Ocoee’s Charter shall be amended to appoint the City Clerk to the City of Ocoee’s election Canvassing Board in addition to two (2) citizens and two

    (2) citizen alternates appointed by the City Commission.

    Shall the above-described amendment be adopted?

    MAITLAND

    Question 1

    City of Maitland General Obligation Bonds for a New Public Library and Park Project

    Shall the City issue bonds to finance the construction and equipping of a new public library and improving its location at Quinn Strong Park in the principal amount not to exceed $14,000,000, bearing interest not exceeding the legal rate, maturing not later than thirty (30) years from the date of issuance, payable from ad valorem taxes to be levied in the City on all taxable property?

    EDGEWOOD

    Question 1

    Removal of Unnecessary Transition Schedule Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to delete the now unnecessary transition schedule used to phase in the adjustment to the current staggered three year terms for Council members?

    Question 2

    Mayoral Stipend Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to increase the maximum monthly stipend amount the City Council is authorized to approve for payment to a mayor from the current $1,000 to $3,000?

    Question 3

    Adoption of Emergency Ordinances Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to delete local provisions regarding emergency ordinances and to provide that emergency ordinances may be adopted in the manner set forth in Florida state law?

    Question 4

    Electronic Distribution of City Code Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to provide an option for electronic distribution of the City Code?

    Question 5

    Grammatical Correction Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to make non-substantive corrections in Article 4?

    Question 6

    Timing of Budget Message Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to change the timing of the Mayor’s annual budget message?

    Question 7

    Reserves Savings Cap Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to change terminology related to reserves allowed to be saved by the City to provide for a cap on “uncommitted reserves” rather than the current terminology used of “unrestricted reserves”?

    Question 8

    Procurement Threshold Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood Charter be amended to provide that for any procurement between $10,000 and $25,000, the City shall obtain at least three quotes and that for any procurement over $25,000, the City shall utilize a competitive bidding method?

    Question 9

    Resolution of Tie Votes in City Elections Amendment

    Shall the Edgewood City Charter be amended to provide that in the event of a tie in a city council election result, the winner shall be determined between the two tied candidates by a coin flip?

    EATONVILLE

    Question 1

    Providing a Defined Qualifying Period and Methods of Qualifying for Office

    Amending the Charter to provide a defined qualifying period for candidates for Mayor or Council and providing alternative methods of qualifying to run for office.

    Question 2

    Amending the Method for Confirming Mayoral Appointments to Avoid Deadlock

    Amending confirmation of Mayoral appointments providing interim appointees not confirmed by Council within 120 days, may continue to serve no more than 180 days, during which time the Mayor shall propose 3 candidates, one of which may be the interim appointee, for confirmation by Council. If no candidate is confirmed within the 180-day period, the Mayor may appoint a candidate from among the 3 who will fill the position on a permanent basis.

    Question 3

    Amending the Method for Selecting the Vice Mayor

    Amending the method for the selection of the Vice Mayor to provide for election by the Town Council.

    Question 4

    Allowing Council to Establish the Effective Date of Any Mayoral or Council Salary Increase

    Amending the Charter by allowing the Town Council to establish the effective date of any Mayoral or Council salary increases in the ordinance adopting such increases.

    Question 5

    Relocating Section Providing Right to Hearing Before Forfeiture of Office

    Relocating from Section 2.08 to Section 2.07 of the Charter the right to a hearing for elected officials charged with an offense that could result in forfeiture of office.

    Question 6

    Clarifying and Supplementing the Powers and Duties of the Town Clerk

    Amending the Charter by clarifying the duties of the Town Clerk and adding certain responsibilities to the position.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Florida social media restrictions passed; vape shops on bill

    Florida social media restrictions passed; vape shops on bill

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    Lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a revised version of the social media restriction bill. President Joe Biden reacts to the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision that frozen embryos are babies. 


    Social media restriction bill passes both chambers

    Both chambers in the Florida legislature passed a bill Thursday that would keep children under the age of 16 off popular platforms regardless of parental approval.

    The measure passed 108-7 in the House and 23-14 in the Senate.

    The measure will now go to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has expressed displeasure in the wording of the bill.

    In Orlando, DeSantis told reporters the proposal still needed work. The bill would ban minors younger than 16 from social media with no parental exception to the rule.

    “I’m a critic of social media, but I have to look at this from a parent’s perspective, so we’re working through this,” DeSantis said. “I don’t think it’s there yet. Hopefully, we’ll be able to get there in a way that I think answers a lot of the concerns that a lot of folks have.”

    That warning came just hours after House Bill 1 passed in the Senate.

    The bill targets any social media site that tracks user activity, allows children to upload material and interact with others, and uses addictive features designed to cause excessive or compulsive use. Supporters point to rising suicide rates among children, cyberbullying and predators using social media to prey on kids.

    “We’re talking about businesses that are using addictive features to engage in mass manipulation of our children to cause them harm,” said the bill’s sponsor, Republican state Sen. Erin Grall.

    Other states have considered similar legislation, but most have not proposed a total ban. In Arkansas, a federal judge blocked enforcement of a law in August that required parental consent for minors to create new social media accounts.

    Supporters in Florida hope that if the bill becomes law, it would withstand legal challenges because it would ban social media formats based on addictive features such as notification alerts and auto-play videos, rather than the content on their sites.

    But opponents say it blatantly violates the First Amendment and that it should be left to parents, not the government, to monitor children’s social media use.

    “This isn’t 1850,” said Democratic state Sen. Jason Pizzo. “While parents show up at school board meetings to ban books, their kids are on their iPads looking at really bad stuff.”

    Some parents also have mixed feelings.

    Central Florida mother Angela Perry said she understands the rationale behind the bill, and noted that she and her husband didn’t let their daughter onto any major platforms until she turned 15. But Perry said she believes it should be up to every parent to make that decision based on the maturity of their children.

    “Whatever happened to parental rights?” Perry asked. “You are already selecting books my child can read at school. That is fine to a certain extent. But now you are also moving into their private life as well. It’s becoming intrusive.”

    The Florida bill would require social media companies to close any accounts it believes to be used by minors and to cancel accounts at the request of a minor or parents. Per the bill, any information pertaining to the account must also be deleted.

    Biden reacts to Alabama Supreme Court decision

    The Alabama Supreme Court’s recent decision that frozen embryos can be considered children is beginning to enter the fracas of the 2024 presidential campaign, becoming another flashpoint in the battle over reproductive health with the issue of abortion likely to remain a salient issue in November. 

    In an interview released Wednesday afternoon, Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley responded to the ruling in an interview with NBC News, saying “Embryos, to me, are babies.”

    “When you talk about an embryo, you are talking about, to me — that’s a life, and so I do see where that’s coming from when they talk about that,” she added later in the interview. 

    Haley herself used artificial insemination to have her son, which is a different procedure from IVF. 

    By nightfall, the former U.N. Ambassador sought to clarify that her comment about considering embryos babies was not an endorsement of the Alabama Supreme Court’s controversial ruling. 

    “I didn’t say that I agreed with the Alabama ruling,” Haley said in a CNN interview on Wednesday night. “The question that I was asked is: do I believe an embryo is a baby? I do think that if you look in the definition an embryo is considered an unborn baby.”

    The former United Nations ambassador and South Carolina governor went on to emphasize that the “goal” when it comes to frozen embryos should be to “always do what parents want.”

    “So any physician that is in control of those embryos, they owe it to those people to make sure they protect that embryo,” she added. 

    The former South Carolina governor’s comments came as Haley has sought to position herself as more realistic than her former GOP rivals when it comes to abortion, arguing for a “consensus” on the issue that can get enough support in Congress to actually pass. Haley, however, has said she would sign a national abortion ban as president

    The Alabama Supreme Court – which is completely Republican-dominated – sparked attention around the country when it ruled that a state law giving parents the ability to sue over the death of a child “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their location.” That, according to the court, included embryos. 

    “Unborn children are ‘children,’” one justice wrote in the unanimous ruling. 

    Experts are now warning the decision could have major implications for in-vitro fertilization as Alabama’s largest hospital on Wednesday said it is halting the practice for now as it looks into the legal implications. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), roughly 4 million births annually in the U.S., or 1-2%, are from IVF. The treatment can be a costly one, with the average cost of a single IVF cycle costing between $10,000-15,000, per Penn Medicine, and experts are concerned that the Alabama ruling could raise those costs further.  

    Democrats have sought to tie the Alabama high court’s ruling to the Supreme Court’s decision in 2022 to overturn the nearly 50-year-old decision in Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed the right to an abortion.

    In a statement on Thursday, President Joe Biden made it clear that he thinks the two issues are connected: “Make no mistake: this is a direct result of the overturning of Roe v. Wade.”

    “Today, in 2024 in America, women are being turned away from emergency rooms and forced to travel hundreds of miles for health care, while doctors fear prosecution for providing an abortion,” Biden said. “And now, a court in Alabama put access to some fertility treatments at risk for families who are desperately trying to get pregnant. The disregard for women’s ability to make these decisions for themselves and their families is outrageous and unacceptable.”

    “I know that folks are worried about what they’re seeing happening to women all across America,” he added. “I am too. I hear about it everywhere I go. My message is: The Vice President and I are fighting for your rights. We’re fighting for the freedom of women, for families, and for doctors who care for these women. And we won’t stop until we restore the protections of Roe v. Wade in federal law for all women in every state.”

    Since the decision in the summer of 2022, abortion rights advocates have seen major wins in states nationwide, including traditionally red ones like Kansas, Kentucky and Montana. 

    Democrats, who have credited their full-throated defense of abortion for helping the party have strong showings in the 2022 midterm and 2023 off-year elections, have shown no signs of easing up on highlighting the issue on the trail. 

    Biden held a major reelection rally with all four White House principals last month focused specifically on the topic and “restoring Roe.” 

    Biden’s reelection team also seized on Alabama’s ruling, calling it “MAGA” Republicans’ “latest attack on reproductive freedom” and seeking to put the blame directly on Biden’s potential 2024 opponent former President Donald Trump. 

    The campaign responded to reports that the University of Alabama at Birmingham health system, which includes the state’s largest hospital, was pausing IVF treatments as it figured out how to respond to the ruling.

    “What is happening in Alabama right now is only possible because Donald Trump’s Supreme Court justices overturned Roe v. Wade. Across the nation, MAGA Republicans are inserting themselves into the most personal decisions a family can make, from contraception to IVF,” Biden-Harris 2024 Campaign Manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement. 

    “If Donald Trump is elected, there is no question that he will impose his extreme anti-freedom agenda on the entire country,” she added. 

    Trump appointed three of the Supreme Court justices who were in the majority that overturned Roe. 

    Despite often boasting about his role in Roe’s end, for his part, publicly, Trump has not given details about what he would support if elected in terms of a national abortion ban. Instead, he has held that he would “sit down with both sides and negotiate a deal,” as Trump campaign National Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reiterated in a statement last week. 

    However, a report from the New York Times sparked headlines last week after the outlet reported Trump privately supports a ban on abortion after 16 weeks of pregnancy. 

    When asked about the ruling on Thursday, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, a former GOP candidate for president-turned-Trump booster, declined to address it, saying instead: “I haven’t studied the issue so I’m going to let Nikki Haley continue to go back and forth on that issue.”

    While polling has shown abortion is extremely popular in the United States, there is less data surveying IVF specifically. The Pew Research Center found 61% of adults say health insurance should cover fertility treatments and 42% say someone they know or they themselves have received such treatments.

    Spectrum News’ Justin Tasolides contributed to this report

    Vape shop owners concerned over new proposal

    Florida Senate Bill 1006 and its counterpart House Bill 1007 are heading toward a floor vote. The bills would limit all vape shops to only carry FDA approved products.

    Florida State Sen. Keith Perry is a sponsor of SB 1006 and says the move is meant to protect children and consumers from unsafe products.

    “Florida now has the dubious distinction of being the number one state in the country for illegal and illicit vapes,” Perry said.

    Perry says illegal vape product sales are more than 360 million a year in Florida alone. The Bill would create a state registry and only FDA products will be eligible.

    Some vape shop owners oppose the legislation, including Nick Orlando. He owns four different stores, including Vapors Depot in Largo. Orlando is also President of Florida Smoke Free Association, and advocates for the vape industry at the state capital. He says the proposals will hurt shop owners.

    “Over 10,000 mom and pop businesses would shut down. Over 50,000 Floridians would lose their jobs and we would have a huge gap in our economy of $1.2 billion,” Orlando said.

    Orlando says the Food and Drug Administration is very tough when it comes to approving products.

    “What I mean is these people in our industry that have been around for years helping people get off combustible tobacco, who have filed these applications with our FDA, 99% of those companies have been denied market orders and cannot sell their product if this bill goes into effect,” Orlando said.

    He has been traveling to the state capital and trying to work with lawmakers to produce a compromise.

    SB 1006 now will head to the Senate Fiscal Policy Committee, then off to a floor vote. Its counterpart, HB 1007, is also heading toward a full vote.

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    Gary Darling

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