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UF and FSU Receive Grants to Train Math and Science Teachers

November 14th, 2007 by flanews

The University of Florida and Florida State University have received $5 million each to help train more math and science teachers. The money is coming from a combination of grants from ExxonMobil’s National Math and Science Institute and the Helios Foundation and state matching funds. FSU and UF and 10 other universities beat out 40 other universities for the NMSI money. The money will help with degree programs and scholarships.

“We see science and math education as critical to our national competitiveness,” said University of Florida Provost Janie Fouke. “And our competitiveness of our high school graduates, compared to those of other industrialized nations, has been falling for several years. I think this is one of the most urgent in the United States right now

At Florida State, the new initiative will be called FSU Teach. At the University of Florida, it will be known as Florida Teach.

Posted in Education, State News | 232 Comments »

Mental Health and Criminal Justice

November 14th, 2007 by flanews

Representatives from all three branches of Florida government attended a mental health summit at the Florida Supreme Court. A 200-page report was released. It recommends that the state spend more money on community based mental health programs for prisoners, rather than keep them in the criminal justice system. Judge Steven Leifman helped author the report. The special advisor the Florida Supreme Court says the move will save the state money in the long run.

“We’re going to have a much larger deficit over the next few years if they don’t address these problems,” Leifman said. “We’ve come up a way for them, and with them, really, that will helps them save hundreds of millions in general revenue dollars by using this federal money and by earmarking the money we’ve already put out there.”

Leifman says Florida can serve as a model for other states in moving the mentally ill out of prisons and into community-based programs.

Posted in Criminal Justice, State News | No Comments »

Governor Signs Gambling Pact

November 14th, 2007 by Mike Vasilinda

Governor Charlie Crist today gave the Seminole Tribe of Florida the rights to offer high stakes Black Jack and Poker at their casinos in exchange for a cut of the take. The deal comes one day before the Federal government threatened give the Indians more gambling with nothing for the state. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, the deal has state lawmakers seeing red.

Hear it here: Governor Signs Gambling Pact

governor-with-natives-2.gif

With the stroke of his pen, Governor Charlie Crist ended 16 years of negotiations with the Seminole tribe of Florida over gambling on reservations.

The tribe gets blackjack backgammon, full blown slots and card games for 25 years at 7 locations. In return the Governor says the state gets anywhere from 10 to 25 percent of their revenue. “It is likely for the first five years of this compact, it is expected to generate over a billion dollars, and as much as a half a billion dollars every year after”
Tribal Chairman Mitchell Cypress says everyone wins “It is a good for everybody…in our neighborhood as well.”

Barry Richard, the attorney who negotiated on behalf of the Seminoles says the only reason they are willing to share at all, is that they are getting something they would otherwise not have gotten “There will be no gaming outside of these particular areas…Miami and Broward; Miami Dade and Broward. That’s what is being paid for.”

The deal is already generating friction with the House Speaker who doesn’t think the governor has the authority to cut the deal without lawmakers. The questions is..will he go to court to try and stop it.”

George Lemieux, the chief negotiator for the governor, says the deal is crafted to avoid any need for legislative approval “there is no provision in our constitution for ratification of this compact.”

But should lawmakers, or voters, expand gambling in the state over the life of the deal, the Seminoles won’t have to pay the state a dime.

Posted in Charlie Crist, Education, Gambling, Legislature, Politics, State Budget | 1 Comment »

Crist Morning Availability

November 14th, 2007 by Mike Vasilinda

The Governor talked about everything but gambling, and dodged questions on state revenue. He did talk about Brazil, the Apalachicola water flow, a Rays stadium and the Everglades. The audio clip is here: 

charliecristrawcabinetaudio1114.mp3

Posted in State News | No Comments »

FAMU’s Fiscal House in Order?

November 13th, 2007 by flanews

It has been five months since James Ammons took over the presidency at troubled Florida A&M University, but as Mike Vasilinda tells us, the school appears to be on the road to recovery.

 Hear it here: FAMU’s Fiscal House in Order?

For three years, Florida A&M University was embroiled in controversy. Financial aid payments and paychecks were late, the books didn’t balance. In the middle of it all, Jeremie Johnson made the decision to go to FAMU anyway, and has never looked back.

“Here it’s not like you’re a number,” Johnson said. “It’s more like you’re part of the family so they want to ensure that you’re successful and you graduate.”

On Tuesday, officials cut a ribbon celebrating the opening of a tutoring center at FAMU’s nationally acclaimed School of Pharmacy. Provost Barbara Barnes says the expansion is a signal FAMU is back on track.

“We have the people in place. The morale is up. The positive thinking is up,” Barnes said.

Last spring, FAMU nearly lost control of the engineering school it shares with Florida State.

Now, State Senator Al Lawson says rumors of the schools demise were greatly exaggerated.

“With a permanent president, I’ve been able to see the university accomplish some of the financial goals within 60 days where before it took about 3 ½ years,” Lawson said.

FAMU must still prove to lawmakers and outside auditors that it can manage its own affairs, but 5 months into a new administration the historically black college is making progress.

More than 11,000 students attend Florida A&M University. The school is the state’s only public historically black college or university.

Posted in Education, Legislature, Politics, State News | 2 Comments »

Florida Attorney General Finishes Review of Anderson Case

November 13th, 2007 by flanews

The state attorney general says his office cannot bring any more criminal or civil charges in the case of 7 boot camp guards and nurse in the death of a 14-year-old at the now-closed Bay County Boot Camp.  Last month, a jury acquitted all 8 defendants in the January 2006 death of Martin Lee Anderson.  But Bill McCollum says he’s committed to helping Anderson’s family.  In a statement, the attorney general said he’ll help the family go after the professional licenses of the former guards and nurse.

“The individuals who killed their child just go back to their normal lives as law enforcement officers and medical professionals and there’s nothing happening to them, said Ben Crump,” the Anderson family’s attorney.  “They wiped the death off their shoulders as you saw in the videotape.  It’s business as usual.  They’re saying that we want to try to make sure that they’re affected in a way that it would be a situation where you’re not allowed to be a law enforcement officer to go and do something like this again.”

Thousands of students are expected to march in Washington D.C. on Friday to put pressure on the U.S. Justice Department to bring federal civil rights charges against the former guards and nurse in the Anderson case.

Posted in Criminal Justice, McCollum, Politics, State News | No Comments »

Iraqi Interpreter Shares Story

November 12th, 2007 by flanews

Veterans Day has a special meaning for an Iraqi man.  Ahmed worked as an interpreter for American soldiers in Baghdad.  He arrived in Florida last month on a special immigrant visa from the Pentagon.  As Chris Casquejo tells us, Ahmed and his young family never plan to go back to Iraq.

Hear it here: Iraqi Interpreter Shares Story

6 month old Dhia’a will never remember his time in Iraq.  His father Ahmed’s stories, pictures and letters will serve as his only links to his birthplace.  Nicknamed Jimmy by U.S troops, Ahmed worked as an interpreter for the U.S. from the fall of Baghdad until this summer.

“We have to be ready when something bad could happen,” Ahmed said.

Ahmed survived 7 improvised explosive device attacks.  He suffered only minor injuries.  Helping Americans made him a target.

“You can’t even talk to your relative or cousin about your job,” he said. “You never know what’s going to happen to you in the future.”

Ahmed and his wife No’or decided to leave their parents behind.  He doesn’t reveal much about them for fear they’ll be targeted.

With all the things Ahmed had to adjust to coming to America, one of his biggest adjustments might surprise you.

“It’s kind of like heaven,” Ahmed said.  “there are a lot of trees around here.  And I would never see green trees in Baghdad.”

Ahmed hopes to work for the U.S. government as an interpreter, or maybe go to graduate school.  If he returns home, it will be as a visitor.

“I don’t want to go as an Iraqi, but as an American,” he said.

Ahmed will no doubt tell his son about the soldiers serving in Iraq, men and women to whom he’ll be forever indebted.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Florida’s Doctor Shortage

November 9th, 2007 by flanews

Florida has a doctor shortage.  Previous estimates pegged the number of doctors practicing in the state at 50-thousand.  But the number is actually closer to 34-thousand, according to a new study.  As Chris Casquejo tells us, medical professionals point to high malpractice insurance one reason why Florida isn’t doctor-friendly.

Hear it here: Florida’s Doctor Shortage

Grace Williams divides her time among California, Washington state and Florida.  She sees a doctor every other month, but she often has to wait longer in Florida for test results.

“If you have to get a CAT scan or a PET scan.  Those are the doctors you don’t get to communicate with.  The special doctors,” Williams said.

A study from Florida State University found 16,000 fewer doctors practicing medicine than previously thought.  The average age of a Florida doctor is 51, and a quarter of physicians are older than 60.

Doctors consider medical malpractice insurance rates when deciding where to practice.  For most specialties, Florida physicians pay higher premiums than the national average.

But Florida State’s Dr. Robert Brooks points to medical schools planned in Orlando and Miami as one positive sign.

“Actually training students here in the state of Florida, such as at FSU College of Medicine, is likely to increase the number of doctors,” Dr. Brooks said.

The medical schools are a long-term solution, because students won’t be practicing medicine for about a decade.  In the short-term, the Florida Hospital Association says the state can’t just find more doctors, nurses and other care provider, it needs to keep them working instead of retiring.

“We’ve relied on our weather to attract them after they’ve been trained in other states,” said Bill Bell, of the Florida Hospital Association.

The doctor shortage will get worse before it gets better.  Florida has more than 18 million people and the population is growing by 300,000 each year.

The Florida State University study also found that 13 percent of Florida’s doctors plan to leave or significantly reduce their practice within the next five years.

Posted in Education, Health, State News | 1 Comment »

Fair Ride Safety

November 9th, 2007 by flanews

Rides and amusements at Florida fairs and festivals are in the spotlight again with fall underway.  Nearly one in four ride failures are mechanical in nature, but the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services says the majority of accidents happen because riders don’t follow the rules.

“Follow the rules.  They’re posted in front of all of the rides,” said Liz Compton with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.  “You’ve got height restrictions, too short and too tall for kiddie rides.  You also have rules that say keep your arms in.  Don’t stand up when you’re not supposed to.  Rules like that, that are very obvious.”

Each ride is inspected before it is set up and opened to the public.  The state has 15 ride inspectors.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Holiday Shopping Forecast

November 8th, 2007 by flanews

Florida retailers are expecting a 3 percent increase in holiday sales this year.  But that number isn’t good news.  The forecast is down from the 6 percent increase last year.  As Chris Casquejo tells us, shoppers are seeing deals now that they wouldn’t normally see until after Thanksgiving.

Hear it here: Holiday Shopping Forecast

Florida shoppers will spend an average of 13-hundred dollars this holiday season.
But the state has seen a decrease in the amount of sales tax collected for 12 straight months.  So retailers are offering early deals to get shoppers in the door.  Cathy McCarty has almost completed her list.

“I just watch for sales, early sales and things that I like for people,” McCarty said.  “So if I see something I like, I’ll go ahead and buy it.”

Stores know that you’ll usually buy everything on your holiday shopping list and maybe pick up something for yourself.  But their real concern this year is that you’ll just stick to your list.

The Florida Retail Federation says a tough real estate market has consumers spending less on home furnishing and repairs.  The tough times are making shoppers like Brittany Morhne more cautious this year.

“Have a budget. Stick to it.  That’s it,” Mohrne said.

Clothing store manager Bill Abeln is urging shoppers to buy early.   One reason, more choices.

“Whether it’s a size, whether it’s a color, whether it’s just something very specific,” Abeln said.  “Closer to the holiday, each and every person’s, I guess, pickiness goes down because we’re usually running out of a few things.”

Retailers won’t be the only ones watching the bottom line.  State lawmakers have already cut the budget once.  A slow holiday shopping season could have them sharpening the budget ax again.

The Florida Retail Federation says the number one item to give and receive is a gift card.

Posted in Business, State News | 1 Comment »

Online Shopping Costing Florida Billions

November 8th, 2007 by flanews

The Electronic Retailing Association estimates that shoppers will spend $24.6 billion online this holiday season.  The Florida Retail Federation says online shopping continues to grow, but federation president Rick McAllister says the state is losing out on several billion dollars in sales taxes that aren’t rightfully being collected. 

“Over the past three years, probably 6 or 7 billion dollars in lawfully owed sales taxes were not collected and used in the state of Florida because of this internet issue,” McAllister said.  “So it is a very important issue, not only to Florida, but to every state that we get this fixed.  The only people who can fix it is Congress.”

A recent Forrester Research survey found that 80 percent of consumers plan to purchase at least one item online this year.

Posted in Business, State News | No Comments »

Teen Pregnancies Up: Just Say No

November 8th, 2007 by Mike Vasilinda

Jessica Harris with son LoganA University of Florida Study says Florida has the 6th highest rate of teen pregnancy and the 2nd highest rate of HIV infection for teens. Planned Parenthood blames poor sex ed in schools, but as Mike Vasilinda tells us, opponents say the problem is too much sex education.

Hear it here: Teen Pregnancies Up

Jessica Harris loves six-week-old Logan, but says he has turned her life upside down.

“I wish I would have waited,” Harris said. “About ten years down the road, it would have been perfect. I’d be established, out of school. That’s what I wanted.”

The 21 year old unemployed high school graduate says a lot of her friends also got pregnant..none of them trusted birth control. She says what sex education she got at home or school was useless.

“They don’t really get into it and tell you the consequences,” Harris said.

When asked whether she was told to abstain from sex entirely, she replied,

“Yes, of Course. It doesn’t work.”

But a lot of teens are interested.

There are 50 thousand podcast subscribers to something called the Midwest Teen Sex show. It features risqué sketches, explicit language and hard facts.

But abstinence advocates blame planned parenthood and videos like the teen sex show for increases in pregnancy and disease.

“Their job right now is learning in school,” Carole Griffin with the Eagle Forum said. “It’s not learning more about sex. They get enough of that through television.”

“You’re gonna need diapers,” Harris said.

And Jessica says her life would be better if she knew then what she knows now.

Jessica is taking two college courses online, but longs for the life of a coed. Instead, she lives with her father and is looking for work.

Posted in Children, Education, Health, State News | No Comments »

FCAT Changes?

November 7th, 2007 by flanews

State lawmakers met to look at possible changes to the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test, or FCAT.  Issues related to class size were also talked during the legislative committee meeting.  Some lawmakers say they’re not looking to overhaul the current system, but make some minor changes.
 
“It’s good for what its intended use is to be,” said Rep. Bill Heller, a St. Petersburg Democrat.  “Can it be improved?  Yes.  But is there something else that should replace it, for the purpose it is?  I would say probably not.  You know, I’m not one who wants to do away with the FCAT.”

Last school year’s FCAT exams were made available to the public Tuesday to help students study for the exams. 

Posted in Education, Legislature, State News | No Comments »

Feds Give Governor and Seminoles Nov. 15 Deadline for Gambling Compact

November 7th, 2007 by flanews

The federal government has told Governor Charlie Crist that he and the Seminole Tribe have until November 15th to negotiate a gambling compact.  If that deadline passes without an agreement, the U.S. Department of the Interior says it will take steps to allow Las Vegas style slot machines at Indian casinos.  The state would get no money if the feds step in.  Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum says he’s prepared to sue if that happens.

 “Because Indian gaming laws say that the governor of a state has a strict responsibility to negotiate compacts with Indians,” McCollum said.  “It doesn’t say that the Department of Interior has that responsibility.  It says if there is a situation like we have here in Florida, it’s up to the governor of the state to negotiate that compact.”

The lawyer representing the tribe says the major points of a compact have already been worked out.  In addition to slots, tt would grant the Seminoles limited table games, but not roulette or craps.

Posted in Charlie Crist, Gambling, State News | No Comments »

National Cat Fund Gaining Momentum

November 7th, 2007 by Mike Vasilinda

The California fires that destroyed thousands of homes may end up providing some lower cost insurance against hurricanes for Florida homeowners. The fires have spurred new interest in the creation of a national fund to help cover losses from catastrophic events. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, the idea of a national cat fund has been on Florida’s front burner for some time.

Hear it here: National Cat Fund Gaining Momentum

The Florida Catastrophic Fund was created to keep private insurers writing coverage in Florida. It was created after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and provides low cost back up wind insurance when there are big losses from a storm.

Insurers see movement toward a national fund in Washington, and for the first time concede there may be a need for a limited Federal role.

“If you’re going to put the federal government into this arena, you also need to make sure that the states are acting responsibly, that the states are not repressing rates,”  William Stander with Property and Casualty Insurance Association said.

Losses to Florida’s Cat fund from the busy 2004-2005 storm season are still being passed on to people who are buy insurance today through assessments on their renewals.

In an attempt to keep private insurers writing here, the state has assumed a whopping 28 billion dollars in risks. State CFO Alex Sink thinks that’s is too high. She is in London meeting with Lloyds, looking for alternatives.

A national fund to share the risk would minimize the costs to Florida homeowners in the event of a big storm season.

“We haven’t been able to spread the risk sufficiently enough in order for companies to be able to lower those rates,” Rep. Curtis Richardson said. “And if we can do that nationally, I think it would benefit all of us.”

But Richardson believes the insurance industry has been blocking real reform. He says it’s time for them to come up with solutions, not higher costs.

Several Presidential candidates have been supportive of a national fund to share large risks, or as an alternative, a consortium of states who would voluntarily promise to cover losses.

Posted in Hurricane Season, Insurance, State News | No Comments »

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