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Scott Recieves Tough Questions at DBPR

February 23rd, 2011 by flanews

There were tough questions today for Governor Rick Scott as he faced people with jobs he’d like to eliminate. Governor Rick Scott toured the Department of Business and Professional Regulation in Tallahassee. Scott has called for the elimination of some of the branches within the department. Employees of those branches asked the Governor why. They also asked Scott why he wants to tool with the state pension plan.

“The question if anybody didn’t hear it in the back–the question is, is it unfair to state employees any of my proposals with regard to changes in health insurance with a pension plan. Here’s what I think about it, step one, everybody here wants a plan that they can rely on, right? Right now your plan is underfunded, whether anybody wants to acknowledge it or not. Pension plans all across this country including Florida are underfunded,” said Scott.

Scott’s not shying away from the people whose jobs he’s recommended eliminating. His tour of state agencies and departments continues.

Posted in Rick Scott, State Budget, State News | 1 Comment »

State Lawmakers Push Sports Safety

February 22nd, 2011 by flanews

Every year, 100-thousand Floridians suffer a traumatic brain Injury. Many of them are high school athletes that feel pressured to get back in the game while still feeling the effects of their injury. As Whitney Ray tells us, state lawmakers want a health official to intervene in cases where high school athletes suffer a blow to the head.

Sixteen year old soccer player David Goldstein is taking his story to the state capitol.

“In January 2010, I had a head to head collision with another soccer player, during the district finals for my school’s soccer team,” said David.

Even though David felt dizzy that day he choose to keep playing; the game was too big, the pressure too great.

“This opportunity comes up and I didn’t want to let it go and I got hurt,” said David.

After collapsing at practice a day later, and passing out at school, David decided to get help. He found out he suffered a brain injury from his injury and his choice to keep playing.

Unfortunately David’s story is all too common. Every year thousands of high school athletes suffer concussions. Many of them never get treated.

The Brain Injury Association of Florida is launching an informational campaign to help parents and athletes better understand the issue. State lawmakers are also pushing guidelines that would leave the decision to get back in the game up to health officials.

“We want to have doctors to be the ones who give the final ok. Not just kind of the coach on the sideline saying go ahead get back in the game. It could be doctors, it could be nurses that are trained in these issues,” said Bill Sponsor Anitere Flores.

The NFL is backing the legislation. The league suffered a loss last week when a former Chicago Bears safety committed suicide. Before he shot himself in the chest he texted loved ones telling them to have his brain examined. He believed his life struggles were brought on by concussions he suffered playing football.

Part of the legislation would require schools to give parents information about traumatic brain injury and have parents give their consent before their children could play high school sports.

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

Scott Responds to Shooting

February 22nd, 2011 by flanews

With the shooting death of a St. Petersburg police officer last night the total number of officers killed this year in Florida has risen to six.

Those deaths have occurred since Governor Rick Scott took office. Scott has attended funerals for all the officers and called last nights shooting tragic, but he’s sticking by his plan to cut the special risk pension plans for Florida law enforcement and firefighters.

“I’m trying to make sure that we have a pension plan that’s fair to taxpayers. It’s a pension plan that people that rely on it in the state know they have a pension plan, so the things that I suggest make all the sense in the world,” said Scott.

The cut would force law enforcement officers to work about 12 years longer to receive the same retirement benefits they receive right now.

Posted in Rick Scott, State News | 1 Comment »

Public Employees Up in Arms

February 22nd, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

State employees across the country are up in arms over proposed changes to their benefits package. A stalemate in Wisconsin was created when democratic state senators left the state to prevent a vote eliminating collective bargaining.  Relations here in Florida are not as heated as in other states, but are reaching the simmering point.

Governor Rick Scott wants state employees to pay 5% of their salaries toward pensions, and he wants them to get only limited payments for health insurance. “If you are taxpayers  in this state, you know, you likely don’t have a pension plan. If you even have a 401k your employer may not contribute”, says Scott.

30 Palm Beach County firemen, including Fred Angelo, were in Tallahassee getting the lay of the land “Every every worker should be concerned about their pensions”, say Angelo.

Others  have been giving the governor an earful.  Doug Martin is the negotiator for AFSCME, which represents state employees and others. He says “some of the proposals that are out there could get people pretty riled up, particularly on retirement and health benefits.”

But Florida is not likely to be Wisconsin. Just before the turn of the 20th century, a group of Florida lawmakers, like those in Wisconsin, went across the state line to keep the Senate from having a quorum, but that couldn’t happen today.

The reason: Republicans are in such total control, they don’t need a single Democrat vote to do anything they want..as long as they all stick together.

Senator John Thrasher has upped the anger level by introducing legislation to keep the state from payroll deducting union dues.“Government should not be using their resources to collect union dues. Simple as that,” says the Jacksonville Senator.

Florida Education Association President Andy Ford says Thrashers bill is nothing more than payback. The union beat back attempts at Merit Pay sponsored by Thrasher in 2010. “In our mind once the election is over, it’s over and you need to work together and try to bring everybody back together”, says Ford.

While other states are at the boiling point, Florida’s public employees are just starting to plan demonstrations.

State lawmakers worked on reforming local pension plans today. The state pension plan is on the agenda Thursday afternoon.


Posted in State News | No Comments »

Merit Pay and Blood Pressure

February 22nd, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

Seventeen Florida teachers spent 6 months working with the non profit Center for Teaching Quality.

The group is working on ways to best share “best practices” among teachers. It is also recommending that state lawmakers not move forward with a controversial merit pay plan that sets teacher pay based on FCAT scores. Barnett Berry says using the FCAT scores is too volatile.

“Measuring teachers on a value added rating using the FCAT is very similar to measuring  your doctors performance based on your blood pressure rating,”  says Berry. “Blood pressure readings fluctuate, there are many different causes for it, and there are many different sorts of approaches you need to take to modify that blood pressure”.

Florida’s 2010 Teacher of the Year, Megan Allen,  who was part of the workgroup, says teachers know merit pay is in their future.

“We are not afraid of performance pay. We just want to make sure it is done right, with no unintended consequences for our favorite people, our students,” says Allen.

The Merit pay legislation has cleared the first of three legislative committees in the Senate. A House bill is yet to be heard.

Posted in State News | No Comments »

Guns on Campus on Hold

February 22nd, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

A state Senate committee delayed voting on legislation that would allow guns on college campuses in Florida after the father of Ashley Cowie, an FSU coed killed in a January shooting accident in a fraternity asked them to think twice.

Dr. Robert Cowie of Jacksonville says he came to testify for his daughters sake.

“I think there is no logical reason why a student should carry a gun on a college campus” the father told lawmakers. “And I think that if the voters in their home districts understand what the Senators are being faced to vote upon they will  be overwhelmed emails, calls and letters”.

The legislation will likely come before the committee in the near future.

Posted in Business, Children, Criminal Justice, Education, Legislature, Politics, State News | No Comments »

Train Race Speeds Up

February 21st, 2011 by flanews

Supporters of building a high speed rail from Tampa to Orlando have until Friday to convince the feds to fork over 2.4 billion federal dollars Governor Rick Scott turned down last week. As Whitney Ray tells us, the goal is to convince the governor to change his mind or get the feds to give the money to an outside government entity.

The state is speeding toward a deadline to claim 2.4 billion federal dollars for high speed rail. The project was sidetracked last week when Governor Rick Scott told the feds thanks but no thanks.

US Senator Bill Nelson is trying to change Scott’s mind. He spoke with the governor over the weekend and Monday.

“I spoke with Senator Nelson at the Daytona 500 and saw him at the event today. I remain convinced that there is no way that they can do a project that the state taxpayers are not going to be on the hook for,” said Scott.

Now it’s up to rail backers to prove him wrong. Several plans are in the works to circumvent the government. But the clock’s ticking, the US Department of Transportation Secretary has given Florida until Friday to come up with an alternative plan. It’s not a lot of time to come up with a plan.

“Over the next few days it’s critical that the Governor and even state legislative leadership hear from the people of Florida and know how important this rail project is,” said Brad Ashwell with Florida PIRG.

State Senator Bill Montford is one of 26 senators that signed a letter asking the US DOT to go around Scott.

“I’m cautiously optimistic, but I also know that we’re fighting an uphill battle with it and we realize that,” said Montford.

But support for the senate plan is waning. Monday one senator asked to have his name removed from the letter. The US Department of Transportation officials are planning a trip to Florida maybe as soon as tomorrow to talk to state officials about taking the money. There are no details on the trip as of yet.

Posted in Rick Scott, State News | 1 Comment »

State Reviewing Child Death Case

February 21st, 2011 by flanews

Two former foster kids, twins, are at the center of a fact finding mission because their cries for help were never answered. 10 year old Nubia Doctor was found dead, wrapped in plastic on Valentine’s Day. Her brother Victor is in the hospital recovering from chemical burns. Four calls were made to the state’s abuse hotline on their behalf. Governor Rick Scott called the situation a tragedy.
“It’s an absolute tragedy and our secretary Wilkins is doing an investigation. He is working with law enforcement to understand exactly what happened and also understand what procedures ought to be changed to make sure this doesn’t happen again. But it’s an absolute tragedy,” said Scott.

It happened in Miami. The man who adopted the twins has been charged with abuse and attempted murder for the burns on Victor. No charges have been brought in Nubia’s case.

Posted in Children, State News | 1 Comment »

Florida and Collective Bargaining

February 21st, 2011 by flanews

It’s no Wisconsin, but there is disagreement in Florida between state lawmakers and the state workers union. The state and AFSME are at an impasse over health care and a plan that would allow agency heads to give 5-thousand dollar bonuses to selected workers. AFSME spokesman Doug Martin says their negotiations have been more civil than what’s going on in Wisconsin.

“It’s a much different situation down in Florida. However, if the Governor really goes after thousands of people and you know goes after making people pay thousands of dollars into their health and retirement plans and really cuts people’s pay by 5, 10 percent then that could upset people but we’re not at that point, these are proposals,” said Martin.

Union leaders meet with state lawmakers this afternoon to try and work out their differences. AFSME will take on other issues like state pensions and layoffs during the regular session in March.

Posted in State Budget, State News | 5 Comments »

Pension Fund Fight Begins

February 18th, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

Florida lawmakers spent more than four hours today listening to testimony on why or why not changes should be made to state and local pension plans. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, lawmakers acknowledge the state retirement system is one of the best, but it is being lumped in with some local plans that are in trouble.

Paul Brewer and his wife both work for the state. After 21 years, he is making about 25 thousand dollars a year. Neither he or his wife will be rich when they retire.

“She’ll be making like 1200 dollars a month,” Brewer said. “Our insurance for the family will probably run 900 dollars a month. So I don’t know how on 10 dollars a day, I guess somehow we’ll survive.”

Proposed changes include ending the defined benefit program and requiring employee contributions. Most employees see it as a pay cut.

This Senate Committee got an earful from firemen…

“We have taken our fair share of salary cuts, benefit cuts,” fireman Omar Blanco said.

…from this Broward county prosecutor.

“I call it what it is. It is a tax,” prosecutor Anita White said.

…and this Tallahassee CPA.

“So I say, take on the hard issue of tax reform and don’t do it on pensioners’ backs,” CPA Michele Ceci said.

Only about half the changes the governor wants are even in the senate bill. That means there is room for a lot of change.

The changes on the table don’t go far enough for this Punta Gorda businessman.

“Support the draconian Governor Scott Bill. Thank you,” Robin Stubbins said.

In the end, lawmakers acknowledged the state pension fund is sound. But some local funds are not. But that won’t stop them from trying to make employees contribute anyway.

“We have a four billion dollar budget hole,” Sen. Jeremy Ring (D-Margate) said.

Committee votes are scheduled for next week.

The state currently pays about ten cents into the pension fund for every dollar it pays in salary. It’s about double that for police, fire and other special risk categories.

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

Fienberg Promises Change, Few Believe Him

February 18th, 2011 by flanews

More promises tonight from the man in charge of making whole the victims of the BP oil spill. State lawmakers called claims Czar Ken Feinberg to Tallahassee today to answer question about ongoing problems in the claims process. As Whitney Ray tells us, Feinberg says a final revamp of the system will resolve most of the problems, but those still seeking claims have heard that line before.

Dozens of fishermen, hoteliers and tourism shop owners poured into the state capitol Friday to see the man they say owes them money.
Fisherman Jack Ritchie’s life was turned upside down last summer when the BP oil spill stopped him from casting his nets.

“People are getting there homes foreclosed on and losing their cars. Which is…I’m in that situation right now,” said Ritchie.

BP Claims Czar Ken Feinberg faced a panel of frustrated lawmakers searching for answers about claims denied without explanation and a lack of transparency.

From the onset Feinberg told lawmakers things were going to change, but few in the audience were buying it. A group of hotel owners left the meeting angry. They say Feinberg was giving lawmakers the same runaround they’ve been hearing for six months.

“Just like a broken record…same answers. Same answers, and were tired of it,” said Nash Patel, a spokesman for the hotel owners.

While the group demonstrated outside the meeting, back inside Kathryn Birren tried to find out why her claim was paid, but her husband’s identical claim was denied.

“In the last two months we’ve lost over 450 thousand dollars on the west coast of Florida,” Birren told Feinberg.

“Ma’am. I can’t here and now review that claim. I think it is unfortunate if what you say is true,” said Feinberg.

During his two hours of testimony Fienberg promised to revamp the claims process, with changes in place by mid-March. Throughout the committee meeting Feinberg reassured lawmakers that a final rule he plans to implement over the next three weeks will bring Washington accountants and staff to Florida’s 32 claims offices to meet with claimants one-on-one about their cases.

Posted in Gulf Oil Spill, State News | 5 Comments »

Building a Track Around the Governor

February 17th, 2011 by flanews

The race is on to claim the high speed rail money Governor Rick Scott told the Federal government the state didn’t want. Now Florida’s congressional delegation is working with cities in counties in Central Florida to come up with a plan to secure the 2.4 billion dollars. As Whitney Ray tells us, the legislature could snub Scott and put rail in their budget, but that’s not likely to happen.

State lawmakers say Governor Rick Scott is overstepping his authority by turning down federal money for high speed rail.

“There’s a proper process that stays within the constitution that I think is important,” said State Senator JD Alexander.

They wanted a say so, and could in fact fund rail in their budget, but for now they’re standing down because a veto would be a certainty.

“I don’t believe the votes are in the Florida legislature to override the governor,” said State Senator Mike Fasano.

With this announcement Wednesday…

“Today I’m announcing my decision to reject the Obama’s Administration’s plan to partially fund the costly Tampa to Orlando high speed rail project,” said Rick Scott Wednesday.

The money grab began. Now California and New York want the 2.4 Billion dollars the feds wanted to give to Florida for a rail system from Orlando to Tampa… but other Florida officials say not so fast.

Some members of Florida’s Congressional Delegation say the governor is on the wrong side of the tracks. They’re working with the US Department of Transportation to see if they can go around the governor. Sen. Bill Nelson is leading the charge.

“We can not afford to let this opportunity pass us by,” said Nelson.

Tampa and South Florida government organizations are willing to oversee the project. Consumer Groups are supporting his efforts.

“It was a good deal. The federal government was going to cover 90 percent of the cost. Other states that turned away the federal money didn’t’ have that same deal,” said Brad Ashwell with Florida PIRG.

If an agreement isn’t reached soon, the train will leave the tracks without Florida… and the 2.4 billion federal dollars will create thousand of jobs in another state.

This afternoon a letter signed by 26 Florida Senators was sent to US DOT Secretary Ray LaHood. The letter asks him to work with the Florida Statewide Passenger Rail Commission to bring the project to Florida. The commission was created by the legislature in 2009.

Posted in Legislature, Rick Scott, State News, Transportation | No Comments »

NO Fasano Zone

February 17th, 2011 by flanews

Governor Rick Scott is boycotting the Senate Criminal Justice Appropriations Committee because of the committee’s chairman. State Senator Mike Fasano chairs that committee. Earlier this week Fasano scared off Scott’s budget writers when he pressed hard for answers about the governor’s plan to eliminate 600 prison guard positions. Fasano says he was simply doing his job.

“He has ordered them not to come before our committee because our committee and I ask tough questions. I have a responsibility to my constituents back home to ask those tough questions when we are trying to balance our budget. I would hope they would reconsider come, work with us as we try to develop the state’s budget,” said Fasano.

State Senator JD Alexander has asked Fasano to apologize to Scott’s staff. Fasano has asked Scott’s staff to toughen up.

Posted in Legislature, Rick Scott, State Budget, State News | No Comments »

Scott Kills Highspeed Rail

February 16th, 2011 by Mike Vasilinda

Governor Rick Scott says he will return more than 2 billion dollars the Federal government was giving Florida for a high speed rail line. As Mike Vasilinda tells us, reaction has been swift and angry.

Florida has flirted with high speed rail since 1983 when then-Governor Bob Graham traveled to Japan.

The latest plan wold have built a system between Tampa and Orlando, with federal and private money. Referring to taxpayers as investors, Governor Rick Scott says the plan  is just too risky.

“The truth is, this plan would be far too costly to taxpayers. And I believe the risks far outweigh the benefits,” Scott said.

Scott questioned ridership studies and accused the Obama administration of reckless spending. But unions, who supported the plan, say Florida’s jobs governor is anything but.

“There is a total of 48,000 jobs anticipated to have been created as spin-off from all the different economic activity that would take place whenever you create some type of new infrastructure like high-speed rail,” Rich Templin with the Florida AFL-CIO said.

Scott’s decision leaves in limbo a commuter rail system in Central Florida. That system was supposed to be a feeder for high-speed rail.

Scott put the commuter rail contracts on hold shortly after taking office.

Republican and Democratic legislators who represent both ends of the proposed line are criticizing the decision.

“Oh, I’m very concerned,” Rep. Dwayne Taylor (D-Volusia County) said. “Because we worked very hard to try to secure those dollars because we knew that this would mean jobs for the citizens of our state.”

Legislative leadership was publicly muted on the give back, but privately unhappy. They were given only 5 minutes advance notice of the decision.

Posted in Business, Legislature, Rick Scott, State Budget, State News, Transportation | No Comments »

Medicaid Reform In the Works

February 16th, 2011 by flanews

Florida could become the first state to drop Medicaid coverage. The rising cost of the entitlement program costs Florida taxpayers 21 billion dollars a year. As Whitney Ray tells lawmakers are proposing changes to lower the cost and they plan to tell the feds take it or leave it.

Nearly three million Floridians rely on Medicaid for their health care at a cost of 21 billion dollars to Florida taxpayers. A little more than half comes from the feds, but in order to receive the matching dollars the state has to follow some rules.

Rules Republican lawmakers say cost the state too much money.

“The current system is unsustainable. We have a situation where Washington has really commandeered our state budget,” said Senator Joe Negron, the lawmakers in charge of the reform legislation.

Lawmakers will release a plan to reform Medicaid Thursday. It will force some recipients into managed care programs, eliminate some optional benefits and provide incentives to stop drinking and smoking.

“We say in the bill that we expect them to be engaged in a smoking sensation program that’s medically directed,” said Senator Don Gaetz, a Republican from Niceville.

Advocates for low income families support some of the changes, but fear reform will mean a major reduction in benefits.

“I’m not sure how you get to the reduction if you’re not cutting services,” said Karen Woodall, the Director of the Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy.

Looming are changes brought on by the new federal health care laws that will require Florida to allow another two million people onto it’s Medicaid rolls.

Lawmakers fear that would ruin the budget. If the feds don’t like their plan for reform, lawmakers are prepared to tell Washington they no longer want to offer the entitlement program. Only some of the details about the reform legislation are known right now. The entire plan will be unveiled tomorrow in Tallahassee. It’s expected to cut Medicaid costs by a billion dollars next year.

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

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