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April 12th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

Wednesday will mark the first time every member of the State House will cast a vote on ending millions in economic incentives sought by the Governor. Rick Scott has made it almost his singular job to save the incentives.

On the opening day of the legislative session, Rick Scott spent most of his State of the State address pleading with lawmakers not to end his jobs incentives agency.

“Ket’s remember, we’re talking about people’s jobs” Scott reminded lawmakers.

In the four weeks since the session began, Scott has made more than two dozen trips, crisscrossing the state talk about jobs. This is what he had to say in Pensacola last Friday.

“And it would be completely shut down. And here’s what’s frustrating, Your House members have done it.”

On the eve of the first vote, Scott was more subdued than usual about the outcome.

“So we’ve got four weeks of session.I’m optimistic that at the end of session when I get the budget it will fully fund Enterprise and Visit Florida” Scott told reporters after the Cabinet meeting.

The Governor’s success is part of his problem.

“Wages are continuing to rise all across the state.”

Florida has crated more than 50 thousand jobs since the year began…all without incentives.

And when the House cases its first votes on Wednesday, we’ll know if the Governor’s frequent trips have had any impact at all.

House Speaker Richard Corcoran has been leading the charge against incentive funding.
“I think where the members are, they’ve researched it, they know exactly what they were voting for, and exactly how they were voting, and I think they are very confident that what we are ding is stopping the waste of taxpayer money and picking winners and losers that don’t deliver on jobs, and don’t deliver on the capital investments” says Corcoran.

The Senate so far has been siding with the Governor, but after this week, the horse trading begins and everything is on the table,

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State of Emergency Declared as Wildfires Burn Tens of Thousands of Acres and Dozens of Homes Across the State

April 11th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

The governor declared a state of emergency Tuesday morning as 107 wildfires burn across the state.

From the everglades to the panhandle, more than one hundred wildfires are raging all across the state, some as large as 5,000 acres.
“We’ve burned almost 70,000 acres so far this year. We’ve lost almost 30 homes. So this is clearly a significant wildfire season,” said Commissioner of Agriculture, Adam Putnam.
2017 has seen three times as much land burned than last year.
So far this year 90% of fires have been caused by humans either intentionally or from carelessness.
Seven counties have implemented burn bans.
“Please comply with the burn bans, burn restrictions. Don’t think that you’re going to be the exception. It only takes one spark to put the woods on fire and put homes and lives at risk,” said Putnam.
With lightening season just around the corner firefighters worry the worst could be on the horizon.
“If it stays dry in the rest of April and May, we’ve got some major problems coming,” said Jaim Karels, Director of the Florida Forrest Service.
Governor Rick Scott’s declaration allows resources to be brought in from the south east to help fight the fires.
“I’m talking to the National Guard as we speak and we’ll be bringing up some of their aviation helicopters,” said Karels, “That’ll help us spread our helicopters around and have better response across the state.”
Fire Fighters have said with help from national guard helicopter support they should have the tools they need to deal with the fires in their current state.
The real test will be this summer during the peak of lightning season.
Governor Rick Scott also declared this week Wildfire Awareness Week.

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Voters Being Snubbed over Amendment One Funding

April 10th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

In 2014 three out of four voters said they wanted increased funding for land and water conservation when they approved Amendment One, but lawmakers and environmentalists have differing ideas about what that means.

Four point two million voters said said they wanted dedicated funding for land and water conservation in 2014. That was more votes than any of the four statewide elected officers up for election that year got, including the Governor,

And for the third session in a row. Aliki Moncrief, one of the organizers behind Amendment is disappointed.

“Florida Forever funding is at zero in the House right now and its at 15 point 2 million in the Senate. 15.2 million is what it got last year and the year before, and its obviously a lot less than the hundreds of millions of dollars it used to get in the past” says Moncrief.

But State Senate Rob Bradley  says lawmakers are moving closer to what environmentalists are seeking.

“We want to have a roust problem for dealing with problems like the Everglades. Like the St. Johns River, like our springs” says Bradley.

Plans for Everglades restoration are taking a big part of the land money, and environmentalists agree.

And the question environmentalists are asking lawmakers: What part of Land Acquisition Trust Fund don’t you get?

Cash that used to come from General revenue but now comes from the trust fund is now being used for law enforcement efforts at the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and at the Forestry Service.

“They didn’t say compliance assistance for polluting entities. They said Land Acquisition trust Fund” emphasizes Moncrief.

On the bright side, Amendment One organizer Moncrief says their are signs lawmakers are slowly paying more attention but at the current rate, it could take decades before voters intentions are fully honored.

Environmentalists are working on several amendments they hope will be offered whenThe House and Senate will discuss the budget on Wednesday.

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Pigman DUI Arrest Video Released

April 10th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

Avon Park State Representative Cary Pigman was charged with DUI back on March 21st as he headed home from a week of legislating. Today the Highway Patrol released video from two dash cams. Pigman can be seen weaving on the turnpike, crossing over the white line on the right side of the road and then over correcting by moving into the left lane. Once stopped, the lawmaker denied drinking, even though an open bottle of wine was found on his front seat.

Pigman did agree to breathalyzer tests and blew 1.4 and one point 5. A point 08 is the legal limit. Following the arrest, Pigman resigned his committee chairmanship but remains a member of the state House.

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Biker Rally for Safety Legislation at the State Capitol

April 10th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

One hundred motorcyclists revved their engines in the State Capitol plaza to remember their fallen and lobby legislators. As Jake Stofan tells us, safety legislation is at the heart of the annual tradition.

Bikers roll up each year looking for resolutions to problems they consider unjust.

Above all else they want to see stricter penalties for drivers that injure or kill bikers on the road.

 

“It’s not just an accident. You’re killing somebody that has a family,” said James “Doc” Reichenbach, President of  American Bikers Aiming Towards Education (ABATE), “It may be the bread winner of the family, it may be one of the kids.”

As it stands now, motorists often are only issued traffic tickets for fatal accidents.

 

“What’s a human life worth to you… it”s hard to say, but at least more than like a $98 ticket,” said ABATE member, Roy Steel.

To put a spotlight on the issue each year,  the names of fallen bikers are read aloud on the Old Capitol steps.

A bell is struck for each name called.

This year, 54 bikers were recognized.

According to a 2016 survey published by AAA, Florida leads the nations with the highest number of traffic fatalities involving motorcycles.

Along with stricter penalties, ABATE is also asking lawmakers to ramp up public information campaigns on motorcycle awareness.

“It’s important to be aware, be around of your surroundings and let other people, motorists know that we’re out here and to be careful,” said Steel.

Bikes say progress on their agenda has been slow, they believe their voices are being heard, but not soon enough for the 54 bikers who died this past year.

There are  currently bills in both the House and the Senate that would give motorcyclists a protected status on the road.

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Florida Community Colleges Facing Huge Cuts in Proposed Budgets

April 7th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

The House and Senate budget proposals include some major cuts to state colleges aimed at remedial education and performance funds.

State colleges are facing over 50 million in cuts currently proposed by state lawmakers.

College presidents estimate tens of thousands of students state wide could be impacted.

 

“It’s not that the services will go away,” said President of Florida State College at Jacksonville Dr. Cynthia Bioteau, “They just won’t be as readily available and in fact they will be group services as opposed to individual services.”

The cut could reduce the amount and quality of remedial education services like tutoring, a service some students need to succeed.

“It just wouldn’t set people up well and people might get overwhelmed and a lot of people do use the tutoring recourses that are here at TCC,” said Delaney Stoner, a student at Tallahassee Community College.

The reason the colleges say they need so much to bring incoming students up to speed academically, is because many of them are coming back to class after years of working.

“It’s important to be able to provide that hope and reach out to these people and tell them, we can help them get up to speed so they can compete and perform at the college level,” said President of State College of Florida, Manatee-Sarasota, Dr. Carol F. Probstfeld

Some state colleges are facing the reality they might have to make cuts to their top programs.

 

“The ones that put folks right to work, the ones where we have 100% job placement, those are the ones that are going to be impacted,” said President of Palm Beach State College, Dr. Ava L. Parker.

As it stands now, community colleges service three times as many students as universities in the state and have only a quarter of the amount of funding.

“It’s obvious that the Florida college system is the back bone of our education and training in the state of Florida,” said Dr. Ed Meadows, President of Pensacola State College.

If these cuts become law, College Presidents worry it will be Florida’s work force that will pay the ultimate price.

The most severe budget cuts would result in a 5% total reduction in funding for state colleges.

 

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Cell tower controversy highlights local control debate

April 7th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

A bill moving through the legislature limits local government interference with the installation of next generation wireless technology, but  a company trying to pull a fast one in rural Jefferson County east of the Capital, picked a fight with the wrong homeowner.

It was dusk on St. Patricks Day when Nikki Little saw a work crew pull up in front of her 250 acre spread in rural Jefferson county, The crew dug what was to be a base for a 75 foot cell tower.

“And I said, I’m not gonna have a pole here” Nikki told us.

The next day when Nikki saw the tower delivered, she took matters into her own hands, blocking the crew from installing it with her car.

“And he said, Mam, do you realize that this wheel on this will crush you and your vehicle? I said not me cause I’ll get out on the side and I need a new vehicle anyway” says Little.

Frantic, Nikki called city and county officials, In the end building officials say the company was not clear what it was building and the planning department dropped the ball, believing it was permitted a utility poll, not a cell tower.

Monticello Vice ViceMayor Troy Avera says the company jumped the gun by not giving residents  a thirty day notice to protest.

“It was March the tenth they pulled the original permit for the utility poll, and on March 17th they started riffing” says Avera, a family friend.

A Stop order was issued and a county truck replaced Nikki’s vehicle to keep the work from being completed. Nikki says that didn’t stop the company.

“They were still trying two days later to unload more equipment. so I came out and blocked them again.”

On Thursday, the County Commission killed the tower.

Not only is the cell tower dead, the County wants the shaft removed.

And had the tower been installed, it would have been  so close to the road it could have been a safety hazard. Nikki believes she not only saved the view from her House,  but maybe even a life.

While the wireless bill moving through the legislature doesn’t deal exactly with what happened to Nikki Little, County officials say it is the reason they, not the legislature, need the final say on what is built where. We reached out to Mobillitie, which bills itself as the largest privately held telecommunications infrastructure company in the US. They provided the following statement:

”Transport poles are the future for communities that seek intelligent ways to increase coverage and capacity quickly and efficiently for citizens. This approach delivers high-bandwidth connectivity without digging up roadways and laying costly fiber optic lines. Furthermore, transport pole deployments are essential for next-generation services like 5G; and as urbanization continues to trend, transport pole deployment is essential for delivering advanced connectivity services in environments where dense populations amplify network congestion issues.”

 

Advancing 5G infrastructure will usher in the next wave of technology such as self-driving cars, drones, sensor networks, IoT and more. Here, and elsewhere, Mobilitie is committed to working closely with local jurisdictions to obtain the appropriate permits and entitlements for our technology deployments. These solutions not only deliver the connectivity needed today, but also anticipate the needs of the ever increasingly connected communities of tomorrow.” – Mobilitie

 

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Local Officials Fight for Home Rule

April 6th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

County Commissioners from across the state were in the state Capitol today speaking out against legislation they believe will erode local control.

House bill 17 has county commissioners worried.

The legislation would strip local governments of their ability to regulate business.

Commissioners think the effects would be far reaching, devastating, and jeopardize the uniqueness of each county.

“We are extremely different and extremely diverse. To think that there is a one size fits all bill, just totally would limit the advantages,” said Escambia County Commissioner, Grover Robinson.

Sponsor, Representative Randy Fine argues the differences in regulations between counties have become too extreme.

“We are not the United Counties of Florida. We are not the United Towns of Florida,” said Fine, “I understand that local politicians want to run their areas like little empires, but that’s not how the framers intended things to operate.”

But Commissioners believe it’s local government, not the state that knows what’s best for individual communities.

 

“We work closely with the people. That’s who we’re here to serve and all of a sudden we wont be able to serve our people and more,” said Donna Fiala, a City Commissioner in Collier County.

Although commissioners believe the bill would strip them of their ability to pass new business regulations, Fine Disagrees.

 

“The bill does not limit the ability of local government to pass regulation,” said Fine, “What it does is it limits the fields upon which they can make regulations.”

But opponents insist it would harm, not help local business.

 

“They certainly don’t like it when the Federal Government intrudes on State issues and we certainly don’t need the state to intrude on local issues,” said Pinellas County Commissioner, Kenneth T Welch.

The legislation has cleared one committee and has one more stop before a vote in the full House.

Along with house bill 17 they oppose five other bills that strip their authority.

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Former Turtles band members suing Sirius XM over copyright

April 6th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

Sirius XM and other digital streaming services charge a fee to listen, but should they be required to pay artists who recorded music before 1972. That’s the question that was before the Florida Supreme Court today,  brought byformer members of the band The turtles.

This 1967 performance by the Turtles has garnered over six and a half million views on YouTube. Not a dime has gone to the artists.

Now, two of the founding band members, know as Flo and Eddie, are suing Sirius XM for not paying a royalty every time they play one of the turtles songs.

“This is simply high tech piracy. the fact thats now copied in bits, there’s no license for that” Flo and Eddies attorney, Henry Gradstein told the justices.

Sirius told the states high court that since the recording was made before current Federal copyright laws, the mere purchase of a record entitled them to play it for others for free,

“When this state said by statute, when you sell a record, you’re giving up all your rights”explained Sirius Attorney John Hacker.

The suit was originally filed in Federal court, the State was asked to sort out what common law had to say about ownership.

At one point during the argument, the court asked Do people even know what these are today?”

Justice Fred Lewis questioned whether the law has kept up with these digital times.

“That audio can be used for profit, just as though it were copied. Just as though that record were reproduced” said the Justice.

Afterwards both attorneys rushed to catch a plane.

Gradstein had these parting words:  “Everyone who has a financial stake, except of the composers, in the record is not getting paid.”

Hanging in the balance could be tens of millions due virtually every artist who recorded before 1972 .Making all of them  “So Happy together”

Several justices were critical of the Turtles claims, suggesting no court has every upheld their position.

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Families of children killed by texting drivers call for action

April 6th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

A half dozen families who lost someone to a tragic traffic week were in the state Capitol today, pushing for tougher texting legislation. The bill has been stymied by legislative leaders. Gwendolyn Reese lost her niece, Devon in 2015. She came from St. Petersburg to work in Devon’s memory.

“Someone described driving while texting or distracted by using your phone like having two to three drinks of alcohol. You can’t drive under the influence. You can’t drive while drinking, so why should you be able to drive while texting when the degree of distraction i is equal” said Reese.

Reese says she doesn’t know for sure if tougher texting penalties would have saved her niece, but says they would have improved her chances.

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Suicide Prevention Spotlighted at the State Capitol

April 6th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

The Centers for Disease Control says suicide is the tenth leading cause of death in the United States.

Today was Suicide awareness day at the State Capitol. Advocates, mental health professionals, and people who have been impacted by the suicide of a loved one spoke to lawmakers to raise awareness for the issue and help drive policy.

UF Psychiatry Professor and suicide prevention advocate Dr. Rajiv Tandon says succeed is especially preventable here in the sunshine state.

“Any given day on average, nine people in Florida die of suicide. Twice as many people die because of suicide as because of homicide and suicide is the second leading cause of death in the second decade of life” says Tandon.

Advocates say Florida does not spend enough on mental health for college aged students, but noted there are some improvements proposed in the Governor Rick Scott’s 2017 budget plan.

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Crime Victims Honored, Share Stories

April 5th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

The mood was somber in the State Capitol today as the Governor and Attorney General honored victims of crime and those who rushed to help them.

They also declared this  Victims Rights Week in Florida.
Horrific crimes are tragic but not unique.
“What she endured was horrific. Watching a 13-year-old murdered in front of her, watching her friend murdered, shot seven times,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi.
And each violent crime leaves victims to pick up the pieces. Julie Weil was kidnapped, beaten stabbed and raped in front of her two children
“It’s a tragedy that I don’t think anybody ever expects to have happen to them, but these things happen,” said Weil.
When the ordeal  was over Julie had no way of identifying her attacker. Still authorities were able to arrest and convict the perp.
“What I am most proud of in my life is the four years that it took me to get to that finish line,” said Weil.
Stephani  Marion received a Distinguished Service Award from the Attorney General  for her work helping law enforcement and victims in the aftermath of the Pulse Nightclub shooting.
“Organizing all of the donors to include food donations, cleaning supplies,” Marion explained, “All the things you wouldn’t think you would need.”
But Marion pointed out it takes a community to make a difference after a tragedy.
“It really wasn’t just me. It was a communitty effort. Everyone in Orlando came together that week. I just got to play my little part,” Marion said.
Not everyone is as lucky as Julie Weil.
Displays on the top floor of the Capitol Building show the faces and stories of those lost to violent crime.
The Crime Victims Memorial Wall is part of the commemorative week.
It helps people put a face to the persistent issue of violent crime.
Seven individuals were presented with awards for their services at the ceremony.

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New options for failing schools could be available soon

April 5th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

Seventy-seven thousand kids in 115 D or F schools across the state could soon have new options. House Budget writers want to spend 200 million dollars on charter schools they are calling ”Schools of Hope.”

As many as 115 schools in 27 counties could soon face new competition. Legislation creating  Schools of Hope” is a plan moving quickly through the legislature. The House Appropriations committee has set aside Two hundred million to allow the schools to step in where school districts have been unable to turn D and F schools into at least C schools. Rep. Manny Diaz is chair of the Pre K-12 Education Budget.

“These are kids trapped in generational poverty” says Diaz.

Democrats on the committee question the rush, and the bills constitutionality. Rep. Kionee McGhee (D-Miami) thinks the legislation will end up in court.

“But it’s just so much with the unintended consequences we may find ourselves dealing with in the near future when this issue finds itself before the Supreme Court of Florida” says McGhee while voting no.

Sponsor Chris Latvala says the idea is to bring in proven out of state charter school operators who have a history of turning around failing schools.

“70% of those students have to be on free ore reduced lunch. 80% percent of those students have to go on to college” says Latvala.

Rep. Bobby Dubose doubts the program can be successful and voted no.

“To me, its like having a house with a leaky roof and you put a brand new door on it. Well, the roof’s still leaking.”

And school districts say if you are going to give charter school companies additional moneys, give it to us first  to try and fix the problem.

Schools of Hope would have to locate within five miles of a failing school. But There is no requirement they take only students from that failing school.

Anchor Tag: School districts currently have three years to turn around a failing school before facing outside management. The Schools of Hope legislation cuts the time table to two years,

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Black Caucus doubles down on Stand Your Ground

April 5th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

The House and Senate are close to sending legislation to the Governor requiring prosecutors to prove someone was not in fear of their life in stand your ground cases. Right now, the courts require a hearing for people asserting SYG to prove they were in the right. The Florida Black Caucus says homicides are up 32 percent since Stand your ground became law in 2005. Rep. Kamia Brown of Orlando says it puts women abuse victims at a disadvantage.”

“You the victim now have to prove your abuser was the aggressor. this bill gives abusers the leeway to shoot first and ask questions later.  what stops the abuser from using Stand Your Ground as intimidation tactics against their victims” says Brown.

The legislation could go to the Governor by the end of the week.

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House and Senate move to cut SAO Budget

April 5th, 2017 by Mike Vasilinda

House and Senate Budget writers moved today to cut the budget of the Orlando Prosecutor refusing to seek death sentences. The money would be used by other state attorneys who have been given those cases by the Governor. But Chief of Staff Kamilah Perry says the cut will hurt innocent victims.

“The notion to take one point four million dollars from our budget is going to cripple us in addition to the money we have to pay under the statute. And it’s going to impact the prosecution of other cases, namely Human Trafficking” says Perry.

Q:”Do you fell like its political payback?”

“I do. the timing of it appears to be retaliation for her position.

Governor Rick Scott moved 21 additional cases from the Circuit earlier this week. Asked today if he was still considering a suspension, he said he continues to review the situation and how the State Attorney responds to future cas

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