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Mold Delays Move in For FAMU Freshmen

August 25th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

70 Florida A & M students who showed up to move into a dorm on Tuesday are still without a place to stay tonight.

Another 130 are moving in Friday after a three day delay because of mold.

 

 

When incoming Florida A & M Freshman Marie Ducarme and 200 others showed up to move into this University dorm on Tuesday, they found the building mold invested.

 

“I was kind of embarrassed in a way because my dad just kept talking bad about it. He said we got so many beautiful universities in Miami. Why didn’t you go there? But I actually wanted to come here,” said Ducarme.

At least 45 students were sent to motels at FAMU’s expense.

Others went home or have been staying with friends.

The University has been working feverishly to cure the mold problem since it was discovered.

 

“The first thing is I apologized to them personally, let them know that this wasn’t FAMU’s best day,” said University President, Dr. Larry Robinson.

The dorm hasn’t  been occupied in at least 2 years.

It was brought back online when more freshmen than expected registered.

The university set a goal of getting the dorms ready by Friday at noon.

They met that goal for about 130 students.

 

“They accommodated us like by giving us the hotel rooms and just accommodating us,” said FAMU Freshman, Lencie Sojour.

But an estimated 70 students are still without housing.

The 70 students who still haven’t been able to move in are eligible to stay in hotels at the universities expense. Classes start Monday.

 

“There are no excuses for not being ready. I do think that this is an older facility of course, but we knew that going into this and so what we have done is said what can we do now to ensure that we don’t encounter these kinds of problems in the future,” said Dr. Robinson.

Those remaining students will be moving in to the dorm once the mold is remediated, or they will be going to other dorms with cancelations.

The University says in the long term they hope to replace the 45-year-old dorms with new facilities.

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25 Years After Andrew, Safe Home Advocates Fear For Florida Building Codes

August 24th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

25 years ago today Hurricane Andrew ripped through south Florida destroying more than 25,000 homes.

In the aftermath Florida beefed up its building codes to become the strongest in the nation, but a new law has safe home advocates worried Florida’s building codes are at risk.

Hurricane Andrew hit Florida with winds of 145 miles an hour.

The storm leveled more than 25,000 homes and damaged another 100,000.

Forty people died.

The economic cost? $24.5 billion.

Weak building codes and poor enforcement were blamed for the devastation.

 

“50% of the damage was caused because of the lack of enforcement,” said Rusty Payton, CEO of the Florida Home Builders Association.

Soon Afterwards Florida had the strictest building codes in the nation.

The new standards were put to the test in 2004-05 when eight hurricanes made landfall in the state.

 

“Our hurricane demonstrated that our codes worked beautifully,” said Leslie Chapman-Henderson, President of the Federal Alliance for Safe Homes.

But a recent change in the law allowing building regulators to divert from international standards has safe home advocates worried.

Current standards can’t be rolled back under the new law, but regulators can choose which new standards to adopt.

The Federal Alliance for Safe Homes believes building regulators will choose not to adopt important new standards to cut costs.

 

“The very process that led to the devastation of Hurricane Andrew is exactly the same process that we’ve now embarked upon,” said Chapman-Henderson.

Homebuilders, who pushed the change say the new law allows the state to divert from burdensome and unnecessary changes while still keeping the standards most important to the state.

 

“The building commission will debate what the return on investment is for florida consumers if they want to bring these other products in that have nothing to do with the structural integrity,” said Payton.

Even with stronger homes, more people are living in high risk areas.

If Another storm with Andrew’s wallop were to hit the state, experts predict the damage would be more than ten times what it was in 1992.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts as many as 19 storms could develop by the end of this year’s hurricane season, which ends on November 30th.

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Mark Asay Set to Be Executed, First in Execution in Florida in 19 Months

August 23rd, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

After more than 19 months without an execution in the state, Mark James Asay is scheduled to be put to death at 6 pm Thursday.

It will be the first execution since the US Supreme Court ruled Florida’s death penalty process unconstitutional and anti-death penalty activists say the process remains unfair.

 

 

Mark Asay was convicted and sentenced to death in 1987 for the murders of two people in Jacksonville.

The verdict was handed out after jury voted 9-3 in favor of death.

Years after Asay’s conviction Florida’s death penalty was ruled unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court for allowing judges the final say in whether a person would receive capital punishment.

Lawmakers then approved a 10-2 jury requirement ,which was then overturned by the Florida Supreme Court.

The Court ruled a unanimous jury would be required.

Asay’s execution will serve as a test to whether Florida’s new death penalty laws satisfy the US Supreme Court’s ruling.

The Florida Supreme Court says Asay can die because his 9-3 verdict was decided before 2002.

Anti-death advocates say the partial retroactivity of the ruling is cause for concern.

 

“That law has only been held to be partially retroactive, which just reminds us how arbitrary and inconsistent the application of the death penalty is,” said Ingrid Delgado with the Catholic Commission.

Multiple appeals by Asay’s lawyers have failed, but Mark Schlakman, an attorney well versed in issues surrounding Florida’s death penalty says the US Supreme Court will review the case before the execution.

 

“The extent to which the US Supreme Court decides to weigh in remains to be seen, but I would not say that it’s highly likely that it will, but it’s possible,” said Attorney Mark Schlackman.

The American and Florida BAR Associations has been asking for a complete review of Florida’s death penalty by all three governmental branches since 2006, citing concerns over fairness, impartiality and accuracy.

No such review has yet been conducted.

Asay’s execution will be the 24th under Governor Rick Scott’s watch. The Governor has signed off on more executions than any other Governor since the death penalty was brought back in 1979.

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Proposed Legislation Would Protect Law Enforcement Under Hate Crime Laws

August 22nd, 2017 by Jake Stofan

08/22/2017

If a person is targeted because of of their sexual orientation, race or religion in Florida they can be charged with a hate crime, which carries increased penalties.

The deaths of two police officers over the weekend and the shooting of two others, has lawmakers looking to add law enforcement and emergency service personnel to those protected groups.

 

 

Hate crime laws are designed  protect vulnerable minority groups.

Proposed legislation would extend the protection to police and emergency workers.

When a person is charged with a hate crime they face increased penalties.

What would normally be a first degree misdemeanor would instead become a third degree felony.

The Florida Police Benevolence Association says recent animosity towards police has created a need for additional protections.

 

“There seems to be a tension across the United States. So again, if we can have somebody think twice about doing something whether it’s assaulting an officer or stealing something or whatever, we think it’s a good idea,” said Ken Kopczynski with FPBA.

The Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers says enhanced penalties already exist for those who commit crimes against on duty police officers.

 

“For your more common crimes like batteries and assaults there is a reclassification statute that basically moves the seriousness of the offense up one level,” said Legislative Chair of FACD, Luke Newman.

If passed the legislation would expand protections to include off duty officers as well, or anyone the perpetrator perceives to be law enforcement

By expanding hate crime protection to law enforcement and emergency service personnel criminal defense lawyers say it could open the doors for other occupations to also ask for the same protections.

 

“Are construction workers next? You know depending on your point of view, you start adding occupations. I think there could be a criticism made that there’s a slippery slope involved,” said Newman.

The Florida Sheriffs Association supported similar legislation last year, but says it has not yet taken a position on the bill filed Monday.

The bill was filed four days after four Florida police offers were shot in the line of duty.

When similar legislation was proposed in 2017 no committee heard it

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Bill Filed to End Child Marriage in Florida

August 21st, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

Between 2000 and 2015 16,417 children under the age of 18 were married in the state of Florida.

It’s a practice allowed under Florida law, but a group of activists and Florida Lawmakers are looking to change that.

Florida law says 16 year olds can be married with parental consent and exceptions can be made for children of any age if pregnancy is involved.

46 years ago one such exception was made for then eleven year old Sherry Johnson.

She had been impregnated by a man who had raped her.

 

“I was actually raped at eight years of age, got pregnant at nine, gave birth to may daughter at ten years,” said Johnson.

Her strict religious parents forced her to become his bride.

With a judges signature the two were husband and wife.

Johnson says she was completely unprepared.

 

“You don’t know how to be a wife. You have no idea what you’re really getting into,” Johnson said. “All you can try to do is what I did and that’s mimic those I had seen and watched.”

Now 57 Johnson has written a book about her experiences.

She’s on a mission to spread awareness and change a loophole she says is still victimizing children.

About 40 minors aged 15 and under are married each year in the State of Florida according to the latest statistics gathered by the organization, “Unchained at Last”.

In 2014 Legislation passed the House that would have banned marriage under the age of 16, but it didn’t have any traction in the Senate.

This year however, a bill has been filed that would ban marriage for anyone under the age of 18.

 

“People are learning more [about] what actually happens here in the state of Florida. They’re hearing about it. Where before it was not something that was talked about. It was all so to speak pushed under the rug,” said Johnson.

If approved the the legislation would make Florida’s marriage law the strictest in the nation.

Sherry Johnson runs the TaMar Foundation, which is dedicated to fighting sex abuse.

You can learn more about it by going to following this link.

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FSU Gives Students 4,000 Pairs of Solar Eclipse Glasses

August 18th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

It’s been 47 years since a solar eclipse was visible from Florida State University and students at the school didn’t hesitate to make the best of their experience when offered free solar eclipse glasses.

The University gave out 4,000 free eclipse viewing glasses to students over the past few weeks.

This morning they gave out the last 500.

Officials at the school say students came out in mass to grab their pair.

 

“We gave out between four hundred fifty or five hundred glasses in thirty minutes this morning, and hopefully we’ll get all those coming back this afternoon, because we’re trying to do a photo for the archives of everybody that is looking at the sun and watching the eclipse going on,” said Todd Shaver, Program Director for Oglesby Union at FSU.

During the eclipse students gathered at the Oglesby Union Green to pose in the photo for the schools archives.

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Florida Pediatricians Worried GOP Donors Want Special Needs Children Off Medicaid Program

August 18th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

Florida pediatricians are concerned of a possible concerted effort by GOP political donors to keep low income special needs children off of a Medicaid Program known as Children’s Medical Services.

In 2015, more than 13,000 children were removed from the program as a result of a survey that was introduced to deem if a child qualified for the program or not.

The survey was later found to be misleading and is no longer used.

After extraneous efforts the Florida Department of Health sent 6,081 parents whose children were removed from CMS and put on 11 other Medicaid plans owned by private companies a letter telling them they could reapply.

An extensive report by CNN found the companies that owned the private plans the children were switched to, made significant donations to the Florida Republican Party.

Pediatricians like Dr. Louis St. Petery say the Department of Health has still been reluctant to share how many of those children actually made it back on to CMS plans.

Which, he says suggests there still might be an effort to keep some of the kids off CMS.

 

“They did send out a letter to about six thousand kids, whom in their opinion, were the only ones who didn’t make it back to CMS. We’ve asked, ‘So, you’ve sent out the letter, how many of them got back on CMS?’ No answer. There still seems to be a reluctance to actually openly discuss the issues,” said Dr. Petery.

The 11 companies cited in the CNN article contributed $8.6 million to Florida Republican Party committees from 2010 to 2014

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Governor Reassigns 27th Case From State Attorney Aramis Ayala

August 18th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

Governor Rick Scott has once again reassigned a case from Orange-Osceola State Attorney Aramis Ayala citing her opposition to the death penalty as the reason.

The latest case is that of Everett Glenn Miller.

Miller is accused of murdering two Kissimmee police officers during a routine traffic stop Friday night. The case falls under the jurisdiction of State Attorney Aramis Ayala who announced in March she would not seek the death penalty in any case. Ayala believes Florida’s death penalty laws are unconstitutional.

Governor Scott has since removed 27 cases from Ayala’s jurisdiction and handed them over to State Attorney Brad King.

Ayala has sued Governor Scott in the Florida Supreme Court claiming he over stepped his authority by interfering with the will of a publicly elected official.

 

“By taking 24 cases away from State Attorney Aramis Ayala Governor Scott violated the constitution and the law,” Ayala’s lawyer Roy Austin Jr. said in court earlier this month.

The Governor’s attorneys argue the Governor has the authority to transfer cases in the interest of justice.

 

“If petitioner’s policy is allowed to stand we’re going to have a situation where you have law free zones with respect to some statues in some parts of the state,” said Soliciter General Amit Agarwal.

In a statement, Governor Scott justified his decision in the most recent transfer by saying, “In Florida we have zero tolerance for violence and those who attack law enforcement.”

The Florida Police Chiefs Association agrees.

The organization says death needs to be on the table when a cop is killed.

 

“We appreciate the support that they give to law enforcement. We also believe that every option should be on the table when trying to work through the justice system with a cop killer,” said Amy Mercer, the Executive Director of the Association.

There is no time table for the Supreme Court to Release it’s decision.

The Court its normal opinion releases on August 31st.

We reached out to Aramis Ayala’s office for comment on this story, did not receive a response in time.

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Florida Realtors Push For Property Tax Cap

August 17th, 2017 by Jake Stofan

 

Since 2008, annual increases on property taxes for businesses and rental properties have been capped at 10%.

Previously taxes were left to the will of the market meaning property owners were vulnerable to extreme tax spikes.

 

“Well I think it’s just the fear that it could happen I think that’s more than anything. Rents do go up and property taxes do go up,” said James Miller, Communications Director with the Florida Retail Federation.

The cap goes away in 2019.

But support is growing for a proposed constitutional amendment that would make the 10% cap permanent.

The Florida Retail Federation says permanent caps will benefit Florida’s businesses and renters.

 

“It enables the state to remain strong and vibrant and get people their business here and move their business here and that’s really ultimately what you want,” said Miller.

Some organizations like the AFLCIO say the state can’t afford the loss of revenue a permanent cap would create.

Rich Templin, Legislative Director for the organization says Florida is the 49th in support for public services.

With most of the cost picked up by lower income groups.

 

“We have relied over the last decade on bumper sticker type polices which just isn’t sound financial policy.,” said Templin.

Tempin says although the tax cut may sound good on paper, Floridian’s will pay the price if services are cut.

 

“Florida does not generate the revenue that it could easily generate because our revenue policy is a hodgepodge of exemptions, loopholes, caps and what that’s done is it’s essentially starving the programming that Floridians really need,” said Templin.

Supporters of the amendment say the state has nothing to lose, as the caps have already been in place for 8 years.

The cap on residential homeowners is already set 3%.

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DHSMV to Retrain Supervisors on Quota Laws

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
A North Florida highway patrol supervisor told troopers last week to step up their ticket writing from 1.3 tickets an hour to 2 tickets an hour.
Citation quotas are illegal in Florida.
“We will immediately designate that quotas are prohibited by Florida law in our FHP policy,” said Executive Director of the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
Rhodes appeared before her bosses, the Governor and Cabinet to explain how the department is responding to the controversial memo sent by Major Mark Welch.
“Stupid statement. That’s the only way to describe what that person said,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi.
To prevent future mishaps the Florida Highway Patrol will be putting their supervisors through online training courses.
“To ensure that they know what the Florida law is and what the quotas means by statute,” said Rhodes.
Florida Highway Patrol Director Gene Spaulding says despite Major Welches memo, FHP troopers never felt they were expected to meet quotas.
“They have never been disciplined they have never been evaluated. There’s been no punitive damages. They’ve never been rewarded strictly for writing citations,” said FHP Director, Colonel Gene Spaulding.
The Florida Highway Patrol is currently reviewing its options for disciplinary action against Major Welch.
For now, Rhodes believes the department has done enough.
“We feel like there’s going to be no other type of mistake that was made like that and that there are no quotas within the highway patrol,” said Rhodes.
Department officials say although quotas are not enforced at FHP they still expect their troops to be productive and actively issue tickets when appropriate.
In addition to the online training course FHP supervisory positions will now include language specifying quotas are not permitted in their job descriptions.

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New Florida CFO Attends First Cabinet Meeting

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
New Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis attended his first Cabinet meeting Wednesday.
The meeting began with a prayer written and read by his so,n Johnny Patronis.
At the meeting Patronis introduced his new Chief of Staff, Ryan West.
Patronis says his first meeting was, “fantastic.”
“I was really impressed with the quality of folks that are doing great things in the state of Florida and what can I say. The Governor and Attorney General Pam Bondi and Commissioner Putnam have done a great job showing their stewardship over this state,” said Patronis.
After the meeting when asked if he plans to try and keep his seat as CFO when his term expires next year Patronis answered, it’s a real possibility.

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Governor and Cabinet Vote to Bar State Investments in Venezuela

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
Florida’s $150 billion pension plan doesn’t have any investments in the Venezuela and after action by the Governor and Cabinet today it wont in the future.
The move was an act of protest by the state against the country’s current President, Nicolas Maduro.
“We evaluated a number of opportunities as I said and I thank the trustees for their prudence and thoroughness. We looked at this very carefully. We reconciled essentially the facts, the law and our fiduciary duty and we believe what we did today was prudent and within all of our obligations,” said Ash Williams, Executive Director of the State Board of Administration.
The restrictions have been criticized by Democrats who say they should also apply to companies that invest in Venezuela, like Goldman Sachs.

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Governor and Attorney General Silent on President Trump’s Controversial Comments on Charlottesville Tragedy

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
Governor Rick Scott and Attorney General Pam Bondi reacted to the events that transpired in Charlottesville Virgina over the weekend, when a group of white nationalists protesting the removal of a confederate monument clashed with counter protesters killing one and injuring 19.
Both leaders condemned the racist agenda of the white nationalists.
However they were silent when it came to responding to criticism of President Trump’s recent statements on the tragedy.
In a series of tweets the President claimed the blame for the tragedy was shared between both the white nationalist groups and those protesting their cause.
“I did not see his last press conference, but I think the first statement he gave was three hours after the incident or a few hours after the incident when they didn’t know all the groups involved and some people are saying he said other sides some people are saying he said many sides,” said Bondi. “All I can tell you is how I feel and I will tell him and I think it’s pretty much what Ivanka Trump tweeted as well. The KKK, White Supremacists, Neo Nazis… I’m missing some. There are so many groups out there filled with hatred and violence and they will not be tolerated. Nor [should] they be tolerated in our state and in our country.”
“If you want to ask president Trump what he said you can ask him, said Governor Scott, “I’m telling you right now that I don’t believe in racism, I don’t believe in bigotry . What happened in Charlottesville was evil. There’s no moral equivalency between the two sides. A young lady was murdered. We lost two law enforcement officers. Every elected official needs to figure out how to bring our country together.”
Both Governor Scott and Attorney General Bondi are two of Trumps earliest supporters.

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FPS Considers Utilities Rate Hikes for Proposed Nuclear Plants

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
Florida Power and Light is asking the Florida Public Service Commission for approval to increase their rates to help pay for two proposed nuclear power plants.
The request has upset a number of groups that say the FPL is taking advantage of a 2006 law that allows it to recover costs for nuclear construction early. The critics say FPL wont commit to a price tag or completion date for the project which has already used up 300 million in tax payer dollars.
“And the question is- why should the commission keep all this additional risk and cost on FPL customers if FPL isn’t willing to show that this is a good deal for the families and the businesses that are going to have to pay the bills,” said George Cavros, an Attorney for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
The Public service commission heard arguments from both sides today and will likely come out with a decision within six to eight weeks.

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State Agencies Get Crash Course in Cyber Defense

August 16th, 2017 by Jake Stofan
The Agency for State Technology and the Florida National Guard are teaming up this week to put the cyber security of state agencies to the test.
IT staff from multiple state agencies are undergoing training exercises using real life scenarios of cyber threats. While one team tries to break into a system, the other side tries to defend against it.
“To take systems with vulnerabilities and to have one side of the group exploiting them and the other side trying to mitigate it, eliminate the vulnerabilities and of course get the bad actors out of their system. So it is modeled after real world scenarios and we’re happy to be able to give them practice without it being real,” said Eric Larson, Executive Director of the Agency for State Technology.
The training continues through Wednesday.

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