Alimony Reform Returns
January 10th, 2014 by flanewsAlimony reform was one of the hottest topics of last year’s legislative session. Governor Rick Scott vetoed the bill sent to his desk but sponsors are ready to try again this spring.
Sometime after the wedding day toast, the glass becomes empty for half of all marriages. Legislation passed last year made sweeping changes to alimony, including ending permanent alimony. But The bill was vetoed because it would have allowed disgruntled spouses to change their existing settlements based on the new law. Sponsor Rich Workman has a scaled back bill for this spring. ” Let’s make sure that if you lie about cohabitation, that you have to pay back the alimony that you received once you lied about living with your new spouse,” says Rep. Rich Workman, R-Brevard County.
National Organization for Women lobbyist Barbara DeVane worked night and day to successfully get last year’s bill vetoed. “Every case is different, it’s very personal, they’re very different and we shouldn’t just trade what he calls, cookie cutter approach for another bad cookie cutter approach,” says Barbara DeVane, NOW Lobbyist.
But Workman says he’s paid attention to what the Governor said last year. “I still believe that we should be able to fix mistakes in the past. But that is not something that we will be able to pass again this year,” says Rep. Workman.
Even a scaled down version may be a tough sell.
What’s different in 2014 from last year is that this is election year and the last thing that Rick Scott needs is to make woman angry.
Rick Scott is in a fierce re-election battle. DeVane says Scott has made his position clear. “I understand that the Governor didn’t want any alimony bill on his desk this election year,” says DeVane.
The scaled down legislation is expected to be filed next week.
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