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Tallahassee Tweeting

April 9th, 2009 by flanews

State lawmakers are turning to new online networking sites to get their message out to voters. Twitter is the newest site giving lawmakers a platform straight from their laptops or blackberries. As Whitney Ray tell us, it’s becoming more common to see lawmakers staring at their cell phone screens while state laws are being discussed.

Just minutes after Representative Scott Plakon passed legislation through a House committee he logged onto Twitter to let the world know.

“It’s just a wonderful way to communicate in real time,” said Plakon.

Twitter allows subscribers to send instant messages. The messages are called tweets, and they go out to people who choose to follow your account.

308 people are following State Senator Dave Aronberg. A recent tweet from the senator’s account compares the state’s budget deficit to a popular slasher movie.

“It is the best way to communicate directly to your constituents. They don’t have to fly to Tallahassee. They don’t even have to incur a long distance phone call. They can just turn on their computer or their phone and the direct information goes right to them,” said Aronberg.

The rush to get information out as fast as possible raises questions about etiquette. House leadership is asking members to pocket their blackberries during state business. It isn’t hard to find Representatives texting anyway. Standards are looser in the Senate.

“This is a people oriented business and I keep in touch with my constituents at all times. I want them to know what goes on up here,” said Aronberg.

Media consultants say Florida’s state government is at the forefront of online communicating. Training sessions are underway to teach lobbyists how to join the online discussion.

A recent poll shows people ages 45 to 55 are more like to send out twitter updates than any other age groups.

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

Easter Bunny Spotted at the Gov’s Mansion

April 9th, 2009 by flanews

Governor Charlie Crist is teaming up with the Easter Bunny to make this holiday weekend a little brighter for foster kids. Crist welcomed kids to his mansion this week to hunt Easter eggs. Children as young as two searched the lawn for candy filled eggs. Florida’s First Lady Carole Crist joined in on the activities.

Posted in State News | 4 Comments »

Caylee Anthony Dolls Spur Suit

April 9th, 2009 by flanews

The state is going after a Florida company making money off of people’s good intentions.

Attorney General Bill McCollum is suing Jacksonville based company Showbiz Promotions. The company sold Caylee Anthony dolls and Michael Vick dog chew toys. The company said profits from the sale of the toys went to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and local animal shelters. McCollum says the company was pocketing the cash.

“Taking advantage of people who think they are helping wounded the dogs is bad enough but then to go and take advantage of the death of a child like Caylee Anthony by taking gross profits out of this and making people think they’re giving to some charitable cause to buy the doll. That’s even worse,” said McCollum.

The Attorney Generals Office has received hundreds of complaints about the toys. The company could be ordered to pay 10-thousand dollars for every toy sold.

Posted in Children, McCollum, State News | No Comments »

Keeping State Farm

April 9th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

When state lawmakers return to the Capitol after their Easter and Passover break, they’ll be voting on whether to let State Farm customers decide if they want to pay higher rates to keep the company in Florida. Thousands of customers have written state officials, and as Mike Vasilinda tells us, two bills are quietly making it through the process.

More than two thousand State Farm customers have written the Governor complaining they can’t find homeowners insurance cheaper than they would be paying State Farm, even if the company got a 50 percent rate hike. One of them is Debra Roberts.

“I have [shopped] a little bit,” Roberts said. “I have not chosen a company because all the rates are so high and a lot of companies don’t offer insurance for rental properties.”

Agents have prepared thick books for lawmakers, with quotes from their home districts, proving the point.  Citizens and other options are often higher. Legislation that has cleared two committees and is up for a vote after Easter would let State Farm compete on price without state interference. Lobbyist Mark Delegal is pushing the bill.

“It gives the customer the choice, to decide for themselves, whether they are willing to pay the price that the company offers, the market price and accept it, buy it, pay for it. Or choose not to and go shop elsewhere,” Delegal said.

The bottom line is that the plan gives State Farm Customers a choice that they no longer have.

State regulators say they will carry out whatever the legislature decides, but they caution.

“This particular legislation could certainly lead to higher rates for everyone if the ability of the OIR to regulate the top-end of the process is taken away,” Ed Domansky with the Office of Insurance Regulation said.
   
Governor Charlie Crist has not weighed in on the legislative plan to keep State Farm, and some letters to his office do say good riddance.

Posted in Business, Charlie Crist, Insurance, Legislature, State News | No Comments »

Sink Embracing State Farm

April 9th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

Legislation to allow State Farm and other Insurance companies to bid on homeowners policies will be voted on next week. Two bills are moving through the legislature. The idea surfaced as many State Farm customers found they would be paying more for replacement insurance if State Farm leaves Florida as planned. The legislation has the apparent support of CFO Alex Sink.

“So the question that is coming up, and I think it’s a legitimate one, the state farm policy holders say, wait a minute, given the 50 percent rate increase, I’ll still be better off,” Sink said. “So I think those are all issues that ought to be addressed by the Insurance Commissioner and the Legislature as well.”

Thousands of State Farm customers have written the Governor and state lawmakers, asking to keep State Farm. Many of the customers say even if State Farm got a 50 percent rate hike, their bills would still be lower than any replacement they can find.

Posted in Business, Cabinet, Insurance, Legislature, State News | No Comments »

Foreclosure Negotiations Difficult

April 8th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

25 thousand people have called a Florida Bar Foundation hotline seeking foreclosure help since it was set up last June.  Volunteer attorneys have helped several thousand people, but as Mike Vasilinda tells us, one of the biggest problems has been finding someone who can negotiate on behalf of the lender.

Daniel will be 83 in July is facing foreclosure, and doesn’t want to be identified.  He refinanced in 2006, got into an adjustable loan he didn’t understand and he couldn’t afford. His legal aid lawyer says he is a victim of predatory lending.

“I have always been able to take care of myself,” Daniel said. “I don’t know what it is to sit down and have people give me anything.”

When they started fighting back, Daniel and his lawyers found what thousands of others have discovered.

Because Daniel’s loan was sold and then turned into a security, figuring out who to talk to has been a nightmare for the lawyer.

The mortgage holder is so far removed from the originator, tracking down who can negotiate is almost impossible.  Jamie Ito is Daniel’s lawyer.

“It’s hard to find somebody there that has the authority to get a modification,” Ito said. “They request documentation, which we send. They say they didn’t receive it, we have to send it again.”

Florida Chief Financial Office Alex Sink is calling for a summit with lenders.

“So that we can sit down together and discuss the best way to keep Floridians in there homes,” Sink said.

For now Daniel is just hoping for the best.

“I’m not thinking about leaving,” Daniel said. “I don’t know where I’d go. I have nowhere to go.”

Banks have long said they are willing to talk with homeowners before going to court. But complicated financial transactions are making their promises near impossible to keep.

The state’s twelve largest lenders have been called to summit to work out contract problems. The summit is set for April 20th in Tampa.

Posted in Economy, Housing, State News | No Comments »

Floridians Willing To Pay Higher Taxes?

April 8th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

A new Mason Dixon poll found most Floridians are willing to pay higher taxes if they know how the money is going to be spent. 63 percent agree that it is more important for lawmakers to fund schools and heath care than to remain faithful to a pledge not to raise taxes. Virginia Wetherell of the Florida Alliance of Concerned Taxpayers also says voters want the state to do business with Florida companies.

“People would obviously like to have no new taxes, but they think it’s more important to have a state that takes care of its vital needs, like education and healthcare,” Wetherell said. “They think its more important that policy makers look at the smartest way to spend their tax dollars rather than just stick to a pledge that maybe doesn’t make sense.”

The group says voters support a dollar hike in the cigarette tax, allowing the state to collect money from Indian gambling and would like to sales tax loopholes closed.

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

Foreclosure Summit

April 8th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

Florida CFO Alex Sink is calling the state’s twelve largest mortgage lenders to a summit in Tampa on April 20th. Sink and legal aid lawyers have found it impossible to negotiate with lenders because loans are often sold and resold. The CFO says the goal is to keep people in their homes.

“What we found in this initial process, is that even the lawyers are having a hard time finding who to talk to,” Sink said. “What we have asked each of the dozen lenders is to identify an ombudsman or point person who can be that one single point of contact for our lawyers. And to come together in this meeting in Tampa that we’re going to have in a couple weeks and discuss how we can work more cooperatively and better together so that we can achieve our goal, which is to help Florida families.”

Bankers have said they want to talk with people before going to foreclosure, but the sale and resale of mortgages is making the goal almost impossible. Sink hopes the summit will solve part of the problem.

Posted in Business, Economy, Housing, State News | No Comments »

Flooding Could Close I-10

April 8th, 2009 by flanews

Drivers in North Florida may find east-west travel difficult. Rising water from last weeks record rain is threatening to close Interstate 10 and US Highway 90, severing the panhandle from the rest of the state. As Whitney ray tells us, people traveling for Easter may want to prepare an alternate route or stay home.

Even though the rain has stopped, rising water could force Interstate 10 to be closed for the weekend. More than 250 roads and 25 bridges are already closed. The Department of Transportation is asking people not to drive in flooded areas.

“We are working with our local law enforcement partners and our emergency responders to look at alternative routes should the road or bridges have to be closed due to flood waters,” said Kevin Thibault the Deputy Secretary of DOT.

“At this point along Highway 90, the water is just 10 feet from the road. And it continues to rise. Emergency crews fear, by Thursday, parts of Highway 90 and Interstate 10 will be under water.”

Larry Kidd has lived near the Suwannee River thirty years and he’s never seen the water this high.

“I’ve never had waterfront property, so I hope I don’t,” joked Kidd.

Melinda Gray’s two kids are on spring break near Panama City. She planned to pick them up Saturday. Her plans have changed.

“We said we were going to do it Friday, and now the sheriff is coming saying it could be flooded by Friday; now we are going to have to do it tomorrow instead,” said Gray.

While Melinda wants her kids home, emergency mangers say it you don’t have to travel north Florida this weekend, don’t. The Governor has declared a state of emergency for 26 counties. Water flowing into the effected area is expected to continue for at least the next 10 days.

Posted in State News | 14 Comments »

Letters to Crist: Fund Education

April 7th, 2009 by flanews

Parents, teachers and students have sent Governor Charlie Crist more than a thousand letters and emails. The message is clear: no more education cuts. As Whitney Ray tells us, the writers may soon be asked to put their money where their mouth is, as support for a penny sales tax increase to fund schools gains ground.

Education funding in Florida is down four billion dollars since 2007. The cuts are so deep Washington is withholding federal stimulus dollars. The Florida Education Association is pushing a temporary penny sales tax increase to solve the problem.

“This buys us some time so we can have true and meaningful tax reform, so that we can develop a fair tax system for all Floridians,” said FEA President Andy Ford.

The association released a poll claiming 72 percent of registered voters in the state support the increase. House Education Appropriations Chairwoman Anitere Flores says that’s not what she’s hearing in her district.

“My constituents are telling me, we are hurting and when we are hurting, don’t ask us for more money for something as general as a sales tax,” Flores said.

But supporters of the increase have written the governor. Crist’s office has received more than a thousand letters and five hundred emails.

Some of the letters are from students as young as nine. They tell the stories of school closings, honor programs being eliminated and teachers being let go.

Senator Dave Aronberg said the state can do better.

“We need to close some of the tax loopholes and we need to continue looking at the cigarette tax and those are the ways to fund education properly,” said Aronberg.

Budgets from both chambers rely on economic stimulus dollars to fund education with no money coming for the proposed penny increase.

While the Florida Education Association Poll shows 72 percent of voters support a penny sales tax increase, only one in two offer ‘strongly support’ for the measure. 56 percent of people polled rated their local schools as good or excellent.

Posted in Charlie Crist, Children, Education, Legislature, State Budget, State News, Taxes | No Comments »

A Cabinet Divided

April 7th, 2009 by flanews

Every member of the State Cabinet is considering running for Governor in 2010.

Florida’s Commissioner of Agriculture Charles Bronson announced his intentions Tuesday. Bronson says he’ll run if Governor Charlie Crist steps down to campaign for the US Senate. Florida’s Chief Financial Officer and Attorney General both say they will wait and see what Crist does before they make any announcements. Bronson said he has the experience needed to lead the state.

“I’m handling the same issues the governor has, in most cases cabinet issues. I handled a lot of the issues he handled differently in the Florida Senate whether it is health care, education, those types of things so I’m very familiar with those issues and I think I bring something to the table and that is experience and a desire to make sure Florida remains one of the top state in the country and that means jobs, jobs, jobs,” said Bronson.

Crist says he’ll wait until the end of the legislative session before making any decisions about his political future.

Posted in Cabinet, Charlie Crist, Politics, State News | No Comments »

Birds vs. Planes

April 7th, 2009 by flanews

Airplane collisions with birds are up 62 percent from the mid 90’s.

Monday a flight leaving the Orlando airport made an emergency landing after it struck an eagle. In January a plane landed in the Hudson River after slamming into a flock of geese. Representative Scott Plankon is sponsoring legislation to give airport ground crews legal protection when clearing birds from runways. Plankon’s says his bill would protect airline employees from prosecution if they accidently harm a protected species.

“Some of the depredation methods that they use involve dangerous devices in some ways. They use sound cannons, paintball guns, pole shockers and if they accidentally harm certain types of wildlife they can potentially be prosecuted. So this legislation basically protects the airport personnel while they try to keep the flying public safe,” said Plankon.

The legislation passed its committee stops and is headed to the House floor for a final vote.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Byrd Alzheimer’s Institute on Chopping Block

April 7th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

Florida’s only Alzheimer Research Institute is facing closure. The Bryd Institute in Tampa is on the budget chopping block, but as Mike Vasilinda tells us, the lack of funding has as much to do with politics as it does tight budgets.

The Byrd Alzheimer Research Center in Tampa has cost Florida taxpayers over one hundred million dollars in the last 5 years. Last year, it got nothing.  And not a dime is in this year’s budget. Without a minimum 5 million, former State Senator and now lobbyist John Grant says the institute will close.

“We have the largest population ratio of Alzheimer’s of any state in the nation and of 17major research institutes that are credited, only 17 of them in the country, one of them is here,” Grant said.

Part of the problem is politics.

Ninety percent of the institute’s problems have to do with the man who pushed it through. During the two years he was Speaker, Johnny Byrd managed to make everybody mad at him.

Jim King was Senate President at the time and says bad memories die hard.

“In normal life, friends ebb and flow,” King said. “In politics, enemies accumulate. And in this situation, there were just a lot of people who got their feelings hurt.”

Almost half a million Floridians have Alzheimer. They also  have a powerful advocate. Former US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, whose husband has dementia, says losing the Institute would be a crime.

“If we really focused on it, for 15, maybe 20 years, we may have a solution,” O’Connor said.

Last minute maneuvering may save the Center. But because he rubbed so many people the wrong way, Johnny Byrd may find that the institute no longer carries his father’s name.

Also on the line is more than 100 high paying jobs.

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

Congressman Meek Aims to Qualify By Petition

April 7th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

US Congressman Kendrick Meek has his sights on the US Senate, and he’s asking average Floridians to get him there.

Meek is the first major candidate to try and qualify for a statewide race by collecting petitions. To get on the ballot, Meek will need more than 112,000 valid signatures. He says it can be done.

“[It is] very doable,” Meek said. “We know our volunteer base is out there. We feel very good about making history. And we feel that the people in the state of Florida are going to participate in it.”

Meek is also a top fundraiser in the race. With the help of former President Bill Clinton, Meek raised a million and a half dollars in the first three months of 2009.

Posted in Elections, State News, Voting | No Comments »

Former Justice Wants More Civics in Schools

April 7th, 2009 by Mike Vasilinda

Former US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor was at the state capitol Tuesday.

Addressing a rare joint session of the legislature, the first woman to serve on the nation’s highest court recounted statistics that show most people can’t name the three branches of government, but can name at least one of the three stooges. The justice is pushing for more civics education in schools.

“Statistics show there’s a very strong correlation between ignorance and distrust of our government,” O’Connor said. “We must take action to reverse the trend of removing civics from our schools before the cynicism begins to suffocate our democracy.”

The Justice did note Florida is one of the few states that instituted increased civic’s education in middle schools. Since 2006 students must take at least three hours of civics education.

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

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