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Fellow POW Speaks Out

September 5th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Tallahassee resident Dale Doss spent 5 years in the same Vietnamese prison camp where John McCain was held. Doss spent his first two years in solitary, but was in a cell directly behind the GOP Presidential hopeful. They communicated by tapping on cement walls and Doss says his experience gave him an appreciation for how much a man could endure.

“They knew who they had AND he was a marked man, you might say, If they could convert him to …  for him to make tapes against the war say that the war was bad to make this propaganda because that’s what they wanted us to do. That’s why they captured us. So they worked on him hard for that kind of propaganda, if they could do that it would be a real coup for them… and he denied them that, he’s a tough cookie, he was in pain”, says Doss.

Before retiring, Doss spent 17 years working on veterans programs for Leon County.

Posted in State News | 1 Comment »

“Everybody’s Friend” Dies

September 5th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Jim Krog, a former chief of staff for Gov. Lawton Chiles, and a respected lobbyist, died of a heart attack Thursday. Krog was instrumental in persuading Chiles to seek the Governor’s job after he retired from the US Senate, then helped him win a tough re election fight against Jeb Bush. He also squared off against Charlie Crist when he was a State Senator. Today the Governor told reporters his passing is a tragedy.

“I was very saddened to see Jim’s passing. I had enormous respect for him. I can remember, actually, during my first session as governor having him over at the mansion and seeking his council about how we ought to proceed. He was very generous with his time and was really a fun guy. He had a great attitude, very bright. He will be sorely missed.” said Crist.

Krog was 60 and died of heart failure. Funeral arrangements are pending.

Posted in State News | 1 Comment »

After Amendment 5

September 4th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

The Supreme Court’s decision to kick the tax swap amendment off the ballot leaves nothing for property owners to do but complain. As Mike Vasilinda tells us the next move with be up to state lawmakers.

TRIM notices or truth and millage statements, have been showing up in mailboxes. Telling property owners what to expect when their property tax bills arrive later this year. One thing is for certain, the governor’s oft repeated “we’ve got to drop property taxes like a rock,” is not reality.

In most cases, if property taxes are falling at all, it is more like a pebble.

Charlie Crist was ready to campaign for the tax swap amendment before it was kicked off the ballot for being misleading. At a hurricane briefing, he tried not to react.

“I’m concerned with Hanna and Ike right now,” Crist said. “That’s where I go from here.”

But afterward, reporters persisted: would he call lawmakers into a special session to deal with property taxes?

“We’ll get back to you on that,” he said.

A special session is exactly what the Florida Chamber is calling for.

“Well, we would hope that the governor and the legislature would convene as soon as possible to look at solutions,” Dan Krassner with the Florida Chamber said.

The Florida Education isn’t going that far, but it is suggesting something needs to be done for schools.

“We have to figure out a way that we can fairly tax everyone in the state and also maintain the services we need, like investing in public education,” FEA spokesman Mark Pudlow said.

So far there are lots of ideas about what’s wrong with the state’s tax system, but no concrete ideas for making it better.

Since lawmakers and the Tax and Budget Reform Commission started tinkering with the tax system last year, two of their three proposals have been knocked off the ballot because they were not clear.

Posted in Amendments, Charlie Crist, Property Taxes | No Comments »

Justice Retires

September 4th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Justice Raoul Cantero is leaving the Florida Supreme Court. Appointed by Jeb Bush, he is the first Cuban born justice on the states high court. Cantero is leaving the court to practice law in Miami. Today, the court and Governor paid tribute to the retiring justice.

“You have served with incredible distinction and honor,” Governor Crist said. “And what you have done for the people, along with your wonderful, esteemed colleagues, is extraordinary. Public service is a calling. And you have another calling now, and we all appreciate that.”

Cantero was part of the seven-nothing majority that yesterday took the tax swap and two school voucher amendments off the November ballot. Charlie Crist has already named Appeals Court Judge Charles Canady to replace Cantero. Canady takes over the job next week.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Delta Abandons Capital

September 4th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Catching a flight to and from the Capital City is going to be more difficult and time consuming after October 1st. That’s when Delta ends non stop flights from Tallahassee to Tampa, Orlando, and Ft. Lauderdale. Governor Charlie Crist says he has been trying to change the airlines mind, but is also exploring other options.

“I’ve been calling the president of Delta for four days and I was finally able to chat with him yesterday and he was very gracious,” Crist said. “And I said, you know, we really would like to continue to have this service, to support our state, to support our economy. But you know, I think it’s good to have a couple plays, so I called Southwest too. And I’m exchanging phone calls with the president of Southwest airlines to see if we can’t reverse what Delta has decided to do, to maybe move Southwest into our market.”

Delta will still service the Capitol, but only through Atlanta.

Posted in Business, Charlie Crist, Transportation | No Comments »

Hurricane Recovery Ready

September 4th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Hanna, Ike and Josephine continue to churn in the Atlantic. It is still unclear if any of the storms will make landfall in Florida, but the state emergency operations center says people need a plan and one they have it, to go about business as usual. Since 2006, the state has stockpiled goods in Orlando, and State Emergency Director Craig Fugate says if a storm should hit, the state is in a better position than ever to respond.

“That warehouse in Orlando has the capacity right now, about two hundred truck loads of water. About 10 million dollars worth of meals-ready-to-eat,” Fugate said. “So it gives us a much quicker reaction to these storms. It gives us the ability to start much quicker getting things out the door than we’ve ever had before.”

Ike continues to pose the biggest threat to the state and forecasters say it will be the weekend before they have a better idea of where it will go.

Posted in Hurricane Season, State News | No Comments »

Rip Tides

September 4th, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

At least two tourists died in rip tides as Fay moved across Florida. Hanna is expected to stay off the east coast of the state, but the Governor is warning tourists and residents alike to heed the lessons learned in Fay.

“Floridians and visitors to our Atlantic and Gulf beaches must stay out of the surf,” Crist said. “The rip currents from these storms are dangerous and even deadly.”

Hanna is expected to be off the east coast later tonight.

Posted in Hurricane Season, Weather | No Comments »

Court Axes Amendment 5

September 3rd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

The Florida Supreme Court today asked tough questions about whether the ballot title and summary for the tax swap amendment were misleading. A lower court had already ruled the amendments promise to replace lost school funding was misleading because voters aren’t told the promise is good for only one year. As Mike Vasilinda tells us the court agreed.

Amendment 5 eliminates most school property taxes. Its title and summary tells voters it will be replaced with “equivalent state revenues”.

Justice Peggy Quince and others at the Supreme Court asked tough and pointed questions.

“It eliminates for all time correct?
“Correct” said Attorney Mark Herron
“And replaces for one year?” asked Quince.
“It replaces in the year in which the elimination occurs” responded Herron.

Justice Fred Lewis offered that it was time to stop playing games.

“That it not engage in all these catchy phrases and political jargon, if you will, that’s popular of the day, so that the people of Florida will know what they are voting on” says the judge.

Afterwards Heron indicated he had seen the writing on the wall.

“I’ve done this before a lot of times. I’ve gotten beat up a lot of times. Some times you win, some times you lose” says Herron.

This was one of those times. Barry Richard represented a coalition that wanted the amendment off the ballot. He felt good at the conclusion of the arguments.

“It’s a very fundamental principle of democratic society in that people need to know what they are voting for”.

We asked Roberta Burton if she knew what she thought the language meant.
She responded “And that they are going to replace it with other revenue”.
Do you think it means forever?
“Probably as long as it’s going to last”.

And based on at least this one voter’s reading…the court was correct. The amendment was misleading. The court took a little over 4 hours to rule. A speedy ruling was necessary because the state needed to know what to print on the November ballots by Friday.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Court Axes Religious Freedom and Voucher Amendments

September 3rd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

The Florida Supreme Court also took 2 education related amendments off the November ballot today. Amendment 7 would have ended the state prohibition of public monies being spent at religious institutions. Amendment 9 would have re-instituted vouchers for private schools. Both were found to be misleading because, like the tax swap amendment, the amendments did not give voters a clear picture of what the ultimate impact of the amendments would be. Andy Ford of the Florida Education Association says the court made the right decision.

“This is a voucher issue. This has nothing to do with taxation or budget processes. This is purely vouchers and it is deceptive because it never uses the word”.

Both amendments were offered by the Taxation and Budget Reform Commission, making it 0 for 3 before the Supreme Court. The teachers union says the court has sent a clear statement that drafters can not mask the clear intent of their proposals.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Fake Fish Settlement

September 3rd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

After a slew of restaurants were discovered substituting other, less expensive white fish for Grouper, the Attorney General’s office began investigating. Today they reached a settlement with food supplier Sysco. The Attorney General’s investigation revealed that Sysco West Coast supplied grouper products to 14 of the 17 restaurants under investigation for serving alternate species of fish. Attorney General Spokesperson Sandi Coates says in the settlement, the giant company has promised to start randomly testing grouper samples.

“As part of the settlement, Sysco will be taking different steps to ensure that when they market fish items as grouper, they are taking steps to ensure there is commercial responsibility, and that they are actually sending grouper to the restaurant”  Says Copes.

If the company determines through testing that what it is marketing as Grouper is not Grouper, the company has promised to donate the food to area food banks and soup kitchens. The company will also pay the state $200,000 in investigative costs.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Staying Alert

September 3rd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Officials at the State Emergency Operations Center are breathing a sigh of relief tonight, at least temporarily. Tropical Storm Hanna is now forecast to skirt the state but not make direct impact. The Governor calls that good news but with the storm set to follow the coastline this weekend, Charlie Crist says not to forget it is there.

“Go about your lives, do what you normally do, but its very important to stay in tune, stay in touch” Crist says. “Listen to your local weather advisories, and make sure you have a NOAA band weather radio, get extra batteries. In other words, just be smart. Utilize common sense and make sure you keep you eye on the weather. ..because even though Florida is outside this cone of error as it relates to Hanna, they call it a cone of error. That means it can change”.

Ike and Josephine are behind Hanna. Only Ike appears to be a threat to the state.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Voucher Amendment: Crafty or Sneaky?

September 2nd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

The fate of two constitutional amendments dealing with education will be decided by the state Supreme Court this week. One repeals a century old ban on state money going to religious institutions, the other re-institutes vouchers. As Mike Vasilinda tells us the voucher amendment is cloaked in what opponents are calling misleading language.

If Amendment 9 stays on the ballot, Voters in November will see some feel good language about requiring 65 percent of money given to schools be spent in the classroom. Even opponents realize it sounds good.

“That’s like saying, ‘do you really believe you should stop kicking your dog?’ Well of course you should stop kicking your dog,” Bill Montford with the School Superintendents Association. “I don’t even have a dog, but if I had one, I should not kick him.”

The ballot summary says the amendment also “Revises legal precedent prohibiting public funding of private school alternatives.”

The Supreme Court ruled two years ago that vouchers were unconstitutional. This amendment would change that.

Tying the two measures together has been described as crafty…or worse.

“It is a sneaky way to do it. It’s not telling the truth to the public of Florida,” Wayne Blanton with the Florida School Boards Association said. “Sixty-five percent, most of my districts are already over sixty-five percent. And they attach the vouchers to it without ever mentioning the word vouchers.”

Supporters say linking the two together just made sense since they both deal with public education.

“Hopefully more will be spent on teachers,” Former Tax and Budget Commission member Greg Turberville said. “Secondly, it guarantees other options like charter schools or virtual schools for future years, that they can’t be challenged in a court.”

Opponents are asking the Supreme Court to take the Amendment off the ballot because they say it is misleading.

A second education amendment being heard Wednesday would lift the ban on state money going to religious organizations. Opponents say it could end up requiring the state to fund private religious schools, but supporters say it only gives the state more options.

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

Tax Swap Arguments

September 2nd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

At 9 am tomorrow, the Florida Supreme Court will hear arguments on why it should or shouldn’t allow a controversial tax swap back on the ballot. Amendment 5 would eliminate a large portion of the taxes you pay for schools. The language suggests school budgets won’t suffer and the money will be made up from other tax sources. A circuit court judge took the amendment off the ballot because it only promises to hold schools harmless for a year, even though the summary doesn’t say that to voters.  Today, two groups of retirees today came out against the amendment. 87 year old Ben Colmery says it will hurt seniors the most.

“Every one of us developed a long-term plan to ensure we’d have enough money throughout our retirement,” Colmery said. “We want people to understand that major, new, unexpected costs from a state sales tax and/or service tax jeopardizes these financial plans.”

Posted in Amendments, State News, Taxes | No Comments »

No Convention for Governor

September 2nd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Governor Charlie Crist was to be a major speaker at the Republican National Convention in Minnesota this week, but the governor is still here in Florida. The reason: three tropical storms potentially taking aim on the state. Crist says he may address the convention via satellite, but that is still up in the air.

“We’ve got a lot coming at us and I think it’s important to be here,” Crist said. “You know, I understand why people are up there and I appreciate that. Electing the next president is an important mission, but protecting Florida is mission number one for me.”

Crist has already sent video messages to Florida’s delegation, telling them why he isn’t there and how they can monitor the threat to the state.

Posted in Charlie Crist, Elections, Hurricane Season | No Comments »

Florida: Perpetual State of Emergency

September 2nd, 2008 by Mike Vasilinda

Governor Charlie Crist has declared a state of emergency for tropical storm and likely hurricane Hanna. The order allows the state to make preparations and assist other states if the storm causes damage elsewhere. Christ issued the order this morning after the Nation Hurricane Center indicated the storm was picking up speed and intensifying.

“This morning I have issued an executive order, declaring a state of emergency due to the threat of Hanna to the state of Florida. This order will ensure that timely precautions are taken to protect communities and the general welfare of our state, as well as to initiate measures to provide assistance to other states in need.”
says Crist.

Hanna is expected to be a minimal hurricane off the coast of Jacksonville on Friday.

The order can be seen here: hanna-emergency-order

Posted in Charlie Crist, Environment, Health, Hurricane Season, Insurance, State News, Weather | No Comments »

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