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400 Jobs Hang in the Balance

May 13th, 2011 by flanews

Thirty employees from the DeSoto Juvenile Correctional Facility and the Dual Diagnosed Correctional Facility are asking Governor Rick Scott to save their jobs.

Budget cuts will close the facilities in July, unless Scott issues a line item veto to save them. The employees traveled to Tallahassee Friday to plea with Scott. They spoke to a representative from his office. Jan Jackson teaches are the facilities and says without the services they provide high risk kids will suffer.

“I feel like it’s a very important facility, that there are services there for the students that they can’t get anywhere else in the State of Florida. A lot of these children are hard to manage and they receive a variety of services there: medical and therapeutic and educational on the whole and a lot of other things there,’ said Jackson.

If Scott signs the budget with out eliminating the spending cut, four hundred people will lose their jobs.

Posted in Criminal Justice, Economy, Rick Scott, State Budget, State News | No Comments »

Ethics Says Scott’s in the Clear

May 13th, 2011 by flanews

The state Ethics Commission says Florida’s multi-millionaire governor is doing no wrong by investing millions in companies that might profit off decisions he makes while in office. The reason; Scott’s investments are in a blind trust, which means brokers handle his investments without consulting him. Scott says he always thought his investments were on the up and up, but it was good to get a second opinion.

“I’m glad that they did that. As you know I’m trying to do everything the right way and organize all my business investments that way; so I’m glad that they did. I believe that was doing the right thing when they did that,” said Scott.

The ethics commission didn’t take into account Scott 60 million dollars investment in Solantic, the health care clinic Scott co-founded. The reason; Scott is selling his shares, after reporters raised concerns over how much the company could profit from the new governor’s policies.

Posted in Economy, Rick Scott, State News | 2 Comments »

Citizens Opponents Pulls Strings for Special Session

May 12th, 2011 by flanews

Citizens Property Insurance is buying reinsurance and bonding so it will have enough cash if a major storm hits Florida this hurricane season. The purchase will allow the state run insurer to absorb more than seven billion dollars in damage, but as Whitney Ray tells us, critics say it’s not enough protection. They want lawmakers to dismantle Citizens in a special session.

Every year Citizens Property Insurance gambles. The board weights its risk, and places its bet on how bad the hurricane season could be.

This year, the board voted to buy 400 million dollars in private reinsurance and issue 900 million dollars in bonds in order to have cash on hand to pay claims.

“The catch 22 is if we buy reinsurance and there is no storm that money that we’ve spent on that reinsurance is not recouped,” said Christine Ashburn, Citizens Director of Legislative and External Affairs.

Christine Ashburn, Citizens Director of Legislative and External Affairs, says the purchase will allow citizens to pay more than seven billion dollars in claims.

“Citizens paid out in all eight storms in 04, 05, about 5.5 billion dollars so this would put us in a much better position,” said Ashburn.

But critics of Citizens aren’t satisfied. They say if one major storm hit a large Florida city, Citizens would be on the hook for more than 15 billion dollars.

“I mean if there is a one-hundred year storm this year, no that’s not going to be enough,” said Sam Miller, Spokesman Florida Insurance Council.

Lawmakers could have passed Citizens reform legislation when they were here last week, but they went home with no reform. Now opponents are working behind the scenes to get Governor Rick Scott to call lawmakers back for another shot at Citizens.

But there are still concerns over how lawmakers would vote, and calling the legislature back to Tallahassee without a deal would be viewed as a waste of money.

Legislation passed in 2010 allows Citizens to raise rates up to 10 percent a year. The legislation that failed this session would have raised the cap to 20 percent and also would have allowed the state run insurer to begin dropping its most expensive policies.

Posted in Insurance, Legislature, State News | 440 Comments »

Insurance Reform Bill on Gov’s Desk

May 12th, 2011 by flanews

A bill drafted to end sinkhole insurance fraud is on Governor Rick Scott’s desk.

The bill would require claimants to prove they were using their insurance money to fix their homes, before the full payment was made. Florida Insurance Council Spokesman Sam Miller says the bill is in response to more than 1.6 billion dollars in sinkhole claims paid out over the last five years.

“There should be mechanisms in the insurance payment system to encourage, if not in some cases require, that the repairs be made. It should not take money from what you claim as “sinkhole” and then pay-off your mortgage,” said Miller.

Scott is expected to sign the bill. Opponents of the legislation say if he does it would be harder for lower income families to get their houses fixed because the claims money would be awarded in phases.

Posted in Insurance, State News | 8 Comments »

Turn Your Stereo Up

May 12th, 2011 by flanews

Drivers in 14 Florida counties can now blast their stereos as loud as they want and not worry about being fined.

The 2nd District Court of Appeal ruled the state’s noise law passed in 2007 unconstitutional. The law says drivers can be fined if their stereos are heard from 25 feet away. The first and fifth DCAs have already upheld the law in previous rulings. Jennifer Meale, a spokeswoman with the Florida Attorney General’s office says the Attorney General may go to the state supreme court to put the issue to rest.

“The attorney general’s office is reviewing the ruling we have approximately a month to bring it before the Florida Supreme Court,” said Meale.

If the Attorney Generals Office does appeal, the Supreme Court will have to take on the case because it deals with a state statute.

Posted in Legislature, State News, Supreme Court | No Comments »

Septic Tanks Inspections Delayed

May 11th, 2011 by flanews

A bill to repeal mandatory septic tank inspections died in the Florida legislature, but some last minute maneuvering by legislative leaders froze the inspections for one more year. The calls to end the inspections are coming from tank owners who say the cost is too high. As Whitney Ray tells us, water quality expects say the longer the state puts off the inspections the more sever the impact to our environment.

Septic tank inspectors say it’s common sense to pump and test a tank at least once every five years, but once the state mandated inspections the backlash was swift.

A bill repealing the inspections died in the legislative process, so influential lawmakers stuck language in the budget delaying inspections for another year. Former septic tank inspector, turned water quality expert Anthony Guido says the delay puts Florida’s waterways at risk.

“Postponing for another year taking this action which will improve environmental quality and public health,” said Guido.

There are an estimated 2.7 million septic tanks in Florida, many are more than 30 years old. And no one knows how many have been inspected.

Water Resources Engineer John Buss says faulty tanks can pose a major risk to Florida’s waterways, because they leak nitrates into rivers and kill sensitive plant and animal life.

“Nitrate is an active fertilizer and as it comes out of the spring, the water is rich in nutrients and you get a lot of growth of aquatic weeds which can chock the spring,” said Buss.

To pump and inspect a septic tank costs about six hundred dollars. Opponents of the mandatory inspections, mainly septic tank owners, say the mandate is a tax.

Faulty septic tanks can also harm drinking water, especially water from wells. It’s very rare, but when the concentration of nitrates gets too high babies can get what’s known as blue baby syndrome, which can be fatal.

Posted in Legislature, State News | No Comments »

Housing Sales Up 1Q in Florida

May 11th, 2011 by flanews

Home sales in Florida increased 13 percent during the first quarter of 2011.

45-thousand homes were sold in Florida from January through March of this year. That’s up by nearly six thousand houses. At the same time, the median price fell from 130-thousand to 123-thousand. Realtors say if you’re in the market now is a great time to buy.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

TaxWatch Impact

May 11th, 2011 by flanews

One of the victors of the 2011 legislative session is the nonpartisan research group Florida TaxWatch.

Every year TaxWatch submits more than a hundred cost saving tips to the state legislature. This session lawmakers adopted more than a dozen of the group’s policy and budget ideas for a savings of more than a billion dollars. Vice President of Research Rob Weissert says the TaxWatch cost saving ideas help government run more efficiently.

“There are ways in our procurement system, in our prison system that we’re looking to modernize. We are looking to public, private partnerships to focus more on results to achieve cost savings by better outcomes, not by just slashing budgets,” said Weissert.

Some of the proposals backed by TaxWatch this session include pension reform, Medicaid reform, privatizing state prisons, increasing the use of drug courts, and more civil penalties for juvenile offenders instead of criminal charges.

Posted in Legislature, State News | No Comments »

Jobs and the New State Spending Plan

May 10th, 2011 by flanews

A spending plan full of spending cuts and tax breaks is awaiting the governor’s approval. The state legislature didn’t give Governor Rick Scott his entire jobs budget, but many are still hopeful the new budget will spur economic growth. But as Whitney Ray tells us, before jobs are created… jobs will be eliminated.

In the waning hours of the 2011 legislative session, state lawmakers had a hard time pinpointing the jobs. Lawmakers passed a budget that cuts taxes by three-hundred million dollars. Governor Rick Scott had asked for two billion.

Rob Weissert with Florida TaxWatch says even though the cuts were smaller, they will have an impact.

“A number of businesses won’t be paying corporate income tax, again they’ll have more money in their pocket to invest in their business which will create jobs in Florida,” said Weissert.

But before this budget creates any economic growth there’s going to be some pain. 45-hundred state positions will be eliminated and state workers will be forced to contribute three percent of their salaries to their retirement plans.

The Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy says businesses will suffer once the 650-thousand state workers start seeing smaller pay checks.

“That’s more than a billion dollars a year that has been spend at the grocery stores, the convenient store to buy clothes that will no longer be available to be spent,” said Alan Stonecipher, a spokesman with the center.

But Dr. Bob McClure at the James Madison Institute say the message being sent is more important than the lost sales.

“I think both the legislature and the governor understand that there are more things that can be done in tax policy to create jobs, but more importantly what it does is it says to everyone across the country Florida is ready to do business,” said McClure.

The state jobs will be eliminated in July, but it’s still unclear when any jobs created by the budget cuts will emerge. Lowering taxes and cutting state spending are key components of the governor’s plan to create 700-thousand jobs in seven years, but it will likely be a year before there’s a mechanism in place to keep track of the job creation.

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

Mail Order Mandate to Cost Florida Jobs

May 10th, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

Tucked inside the 400 page state budget is a provision requiring more than a hundred thousand state employees and retirees to order their prescriptions by mail from out of state. The provision has more than 900 locally owned drug stores crying foul.

There are fewer calls these days to this family owned Pharmacy. That’s because a little debated provision in the state budget requires the 3 thousand state employees  to order their prescriptions 3 months at a time from a national mail order supplier. The change is putting a pinch on small neighborhood pharmacies like the one Lynn Massey has operated for more than 25 years.

“I’ve not laid anyone off, but I’ve had to cut hours” says Massey.

Mail order contractor CVS’s website shows one facility in South Florida, but the pharmacists say it is just as likely the prescriptions are being filled in Rhode Island or Illinois, sending jobs out of state.

Representative Jimmy Patronis has taken concerns about the plan to the highest levels. “It’s a fine line between the fiduciary responsibility of getting the best bang for our buck, for those resources, and challenging somebody’s ability to make a living,” says Patronis.

The nine hundred locally owned pharmacies in Florida say they weren’t even given a chance to compete on price

Missing from the budget language is the phrase “any willing Provider.” Had those words been in the bill, Massey says she and the 900 other local pharmacists could have competed on price. “Potentially even cheaper” she says, adding,  “I don’t know what the state is sending out of state as far as the money goes.”

While Massey has cut employees hours, others pharmacies have left staff go. With the mail order requirement in the budget for the second year in a row, the lost business is likely to have a cumulative negative effect on locally owned drug stores.

The Department of Management Services, which administers the program, says it does not have actual cost savings, but provided a CVS Caremark estimate of four point one million in 2010.The mail order mandate has been in effect since January 2011 and will run through June 2012. (Read more on the DMS website:  http://www.myflorida.com/mybenefits/Tools/FAQs_PPO.htm


Posted in State News | 2 Comments »

Scott’s Session Victories

May 9th, 2011 by flanews

Governor Rick Scott is walking away from his first legislative session with big victories. The session got off to a shaky start for the rookie governor, with legislative leaders refusing to take up tax breaks and two senators suing Scott for single-handedly killing high speed rail. As Whitney Ray tells us, Scott never blinked and lawmakers caved.

Just minutes after releasing his first budget plan in early February, Governor Rick Scott began to hear from the critics.

“The notion that somehow we can cut five billion dollars out of this budget is just very unreasonable,” said Karen Woodall, the Director of the Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy on February 7th, 2011.

Lawmakers told Scott they couldn’t cut property taxes or corporate income taxes, but in the end he got some of what he asked for: a 30 million dollar break for corporations and two-hundred million dollars for property owners.

After session ended, Scott gloated on an online political talk show.

“We’re on the path to 700-thousand jobs and we are on the path to turning the economy around,” aid Scott on SayviewReviewTV.

Lawmakers also sent him bills to end teacher tenure, expand school vouchers, drug test welfare recipients and force state workers to contribute to their retirement.

Scott had asked for a five percent contribution he got three. He also asked lawmakers to eliminate 85-hundred state jobs, lawmakers settled on 45-hundred.

Still, Scott’s mark on the 2011 legislative session is undeniable.

“He’s been incredible. He’s quietly, but very effectively, moved a number of pieces of legislation through the process, but I think the biggest thing he’s done is the budget,” said Thrasher.

The real proof of the Governor’s success will be determined over the next year, as everyone watches to see if his legislative victories create jobs. Scott’s impact on the session is still a little up in the air. There are 3-thousand spending items in the budget that Scott can veto. There are also more than 2-hundred bills he has yet to take action on.

Session Losers

While Governor Rick Scott may have been the biggest winner of the 2011 legislative session, opponents say the public is losing. Thousands of state workers will be laid off, insurance rates will likely go up, and telephone companies will be able raise rates on landline customers. Democrat House Member Evan Jenne says the rich are the only winners.

“I don’t even think this stuff going on here is conservative. I think it’s elitist. I think it pits the richest five to three percent in our state against the other 97 and 95 percent of the people out there,” said Jenne.

Brad Ashwell with Florida Public Interest Research Groups says property owners and landline customers lost.

“The industry definitely didn’t get everything it wanted, but the industry, whether it is the insurance industry, the telecom industry, you name it, they largely won out big time this session and largely at the expense of the public,” said Ashwell.

Immigrants and their supporters walked away from the session as winners. At the start of the session, lawmakers were poised to pass an Arizona style immigration bill. After a full two months of lobbying by Hispanics, the bill died.

Posted in Legislature, Rick Scott, State Budget, State News | No Comments »

Summer Literacy Adventure

May 9th, 2011 by flanews

School’s out for summer, but that doesn’t mean the learning has to stop.

Today, Florida’s first lady Ann Scott gave all students a homework assignment. Scott spoke to a group of middle school students at the Governor’s Mansion and challenged them to read over the summer. Scott says she spent hours at the library during her summer breaks as a kid and it helped her achieve throughout her life.

“I was a veracious reader in elementary school and it helped me in other areas of my life. It helped me with my comprehension, my reading skills and also with my vocabulary,” said Scott.

Ann Scott is challenging all students to take an online pledge to read over the summer. The state has set up a website at www.justreadflorida.com. The school with the most students pledging to read will receive a special visit from Scott at the start of the next school year.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

DOT Awards Rail Money to 15 Other States

May 9th, 2011 by flanews

Florida turned down so much money for high speed rail that the Feds had to spread it out among 15 states.

Governor Rick Scott turned down the 2.4 billion dollars earlier this year over the objections of lawmakers. Today the Federal Department of Transportation divided up the money to states ready to build rail systems. Brad Ashwell with Florida Public Interest Research Group, fought to try and save the state’s high speed rail project. He says without rail, gas prices will keep raising.

“The only way to really lower gas prices it to decrease our fuel consumption and the best way to do that is through public transit. It’s expensive, but it’s a worthwhile investment and we need to do it,” said Ashwell.

The rail would have run from Tampa to Orlando. Some studies claim it would have created 40-thousands jobs. Scott says most of those jobs would have been temporary and he says he killed the project because the state would have been on the hook to pay for the rail if it didn’t generate enough customers to pay for itself.

Posted in State News, Transportation | 2 Comments »

Budget Winners and Losers

May 6th, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

Hospitals and schools are the biggest losers in this year’s 69 billion dollar state budget.The state will also privatize about a fourth of the state prison system. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, public employees will begin contributing to their pensions for the first time in more than forty years.

School funding is being cut by 1.3 billion. The eight percent cut means that school districts will have about 500 dollars less per student than they did last year. Rep. Seth McKeel of Lakeland says there was no other alternative in a no new tax year.

“Reducing school funding is a challenge. It’s one of the challenges in a budget. We had to cut 4.5 billion dollars out of the state budget, and reducing school funding is a challenge,” Rep. McKeel said. “Hopefully, what the budget makes up with the pension contributions will be helpful to them. But there’s no question that reductions are going to be made in school districts, just like they’re being made in school government.”

Hospitals are the second biggest loser. They are taking a 12 percent cut in the money they get for treating the poor.  Nursing homes will see 8 percent less. That will result in smaller staffing levels. Teachers, firefighters, police and state employees will all start chipping in three percent of their salaries toward their pensions. That will dampen purchasing power.

Overall, state government will shed 4500 positions, although some of them are already vacant. Budget negotiator Sen. Alan Hays says government will be smaller.

“Government is going to look leaner and more efficient,” Sen. Hayes said.

Thousands of other jobs are also on the line as the state seeks bids to privatize prisons in 18 counties. Corporations will get a small tax break, averaging just over a thousand dollars. There will be a 30 million dollar back-to-school sales tax holiday.

There is just over 150 million dollars in the budget for hometown projects often referred to as  “Turkeys”. Governor Rick Scott promised to sign the budget when he got his corporate tax cuts, but he made no promise on whether he would cancel some of the special projects.

Posted in Business, Education, Health, Legislature, State Budget, State News | No Comments »

Database Deal

May 6th, 2011 by flanews

Controversy over a prescription drug database is being put to rest tonight. The Florida House and Senate have reach a deal that keeps the prescription drug database in place and stiffens penalties for doctors and pharmacists that prescribe large qualities of painkillers to people who don’t need them. As Whitney Ray tells us, lawmakers say the changes will save hundreds of lives.

In Florida seven people a day overdose on prescriptions drugs and die. The source of the drugs is often a pain clinic where doctors liberally dispense power painkillers.

On the last day of session the Senate voted to start keeping tabs on what prescriptions people are buying in hopes of saving lives. In debate senators told sad stories from their districts.

“I have constituents and friends in Naples that have cried, who have cried countless times because of the sad experiences that they’ve had,” said State Senator Garrett Richter.

Attorney General Pam Bondi watched from above. Bondi stayed up until three AM working with lawmakers on the legislation aimed at changing Florida’s image.

“We are the epicenter of drug abuse for the country and that’s ridiculous and I think we are very blessed that we have a house and a senate and a governor who now agree with that,” said Bondi.

The Senate agreed to keep most doctors from selling prescription drugs. In exchange the House let them keep the database.

State Senator Mike Fasano brokered the deal.

“We are going to be able to stop the doctor shopping. Stop the overprescribing. Go after the unscrupulous characters who go from doctor to doctor and pharmacy to pharmacy,” said Fasano.

The database will be up and running in August. Increased penalties for doctors and pharmacists liberally dispensing drugs, will be enhanced later this year. Lawmakers hope the changes will save lives and help the state shed its image as the pill mill capital of the country.

The database will cost nearly two million dollars to set up and operate. Private donors have offered to pay for the system for the first few years of its existence.

Posted in Legislature, State News | No Comments »

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