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Florida & Beyond, and All Opinions

Assisted Living Facilities Beware: State Looking to Shut Down Unlicensed Operations

October 9, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

A Florida Senate panel Tuesday instructed the Agency for Health Care Administration to draft legislation — fast — that would allow the state to shut down unlicensed assisted-living facilities as quickly as possible.

Bank of America Robber Kevin Cotterman Is Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison, No Parole

October 8, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 22 Comments

Kevin Cotterman, the 42-year-old serial bank robber who stole $805 from the Palm Coast Bank of America branch on Palm Coast Parkway in May 2012, was sentenced today (Oct. 8) to 15 years in prison, with no possibility of parole, by Flagler County Circuit Judge J. David Walsh.

Should Cops Have Power to Track You in Real Time Through Cell Phones? Court Will Decide.

October 7, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

Grappling with privacy rights amid fast-changing technology, the Florida Supreme Court on Monday heard arguments in a challenge to police using “real-time” cell-phone information to track a suspect in a drug case.

Fast-Tracking Executions Proves Slower than Expected Under “Timely Justice Act”

October 7, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

The new law designed to fast-track executions in Florida, called the Timely Justice Act, will not spark a flurry of executions after all even as 132 convicts have been certified as being partially “warrant ready” to be killed, perhaps dashing some lawmakers’ expectations.

A Confederacy of Choices: Marketplace Plans Vary Widely In Costs, In Counties And Across U.S.

October 5, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Consumers shopping in the new health insurance marketplaces will face a bewildering array of competing plans in some counties and sparse options in other places, with people in some areas of the country having to pay much more for the identical level of coverage than consumers elsewhere.

Shutdown Geezers: The Medicare
Generation’s Immoral War on Obamacare

October 4, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 56 Comments

Opponents of Obamacare think that by doubling down on hurting Americans through a shut-down, they might stun them into submission. They must be stupider than they let on. The Affordable Care Act has its issues. Lacking for moral high ground isn’t among them.

Florida Voter Purge 2.0: More Complicated and Cautious, Less Brazenly Discriminatory

October 4, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The complicated new voter-purge process comes after supervisors scrapped last year’s non-citizen purge — the brainchild of Gov. Scott — after learning that many of the voters flagged by matching the state’s voter registration database and driver’s license records were naturalized citizens. More than half of the voters on the list were minorities.

The GOP’s Shutdown Zealotry: What John Boehner and Yasser Arafat Have In Common

October 3, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

Republicans’ reincarnation of Know-Nothings have let their tea party zealots control them at the expense of the nation’s welfare, and of their own party, argues Steve Robinson, consigning themselves to the dustbin of political hacks.

Bill Filed to Give Henry Flagler His Own Bronze Statue near State Capitol in Tallahassee

October 3, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

State Rep. Bill Hager, R-Boca Raton, wants a bronze sculpture of Henry Morrison Flagler, who was integral in the development of Miami and Palm Beach–and gave Flagler County its name–to go up in the courtyard between the state Capitol and the Historic Capitol in Tallahassee.

FPL Customers in Flagler Will Again Pay Nuke Surcharge for Plants at Least 10 Years Off

October 2, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

A residential customer who uses 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity a month will pay about $5.5 extra a year, but the cost is part of a broader controversy over a law that allows utility companies to charge customers for power-plant construction that hasn’t even begun yet, and may never be completed.

Shutdown Hits Home: Castillo de San Marcos and Ft. Matanzas Among Parks Off Limits

October 2, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

Starting Tuesday, the National Park Service closed all 401 national parks, including Castillo de San Marcos and Fort Matanzas National Monuments in St. Augustine, affecting the local tourism economy. Potential foreign visitors’ visas are facing processing delays.

State’s Claim of $40 Million “Potential” Fraud in Early Learning Programs Proves Groundless

October 1, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

A December 2011 report by the state Office of the Auditor General projected that parents with children in school-readiness programs could have used as much as $40 million worth of public-assistance benefits for which they weren’t eligible over a three-year period–a claim that proved wildly inaccurate, but needlessly panicked lawmakers.

Texting-While-Driving Ban Goes in Effect as Do Food Stamps Limits and Other New Laws

September 30, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

An attempt to curb motorists from texting while driving goes into effect Tuesday, along with laws that put limits on funeral protests, late-night massages and the use of tax dollars at strip joints and liquor stores.

In Wake of 9th Death in Florida, Flagler Health Department Cautions Against Seawater Bacteria

September 30, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Vibrio vulnificus is a cholera-like bacteria that lurks in warm Intracoastal waters and infects people through raw shellfish or oysters or through open lesions, and causes death 50 percent of the time. Henry Konietzky, 59, is the latest victim to die from exposure to the bacteria as he crabbed in Ormond Beach’s section of the Intracoastal this weekend.

When Southern Heritage Is a Lost Cause

September 29, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 28 Comments

As surely as their chosen symbols profess a sentimental attachment to an era of racist brutality, Confederate nostalgists insist that what they really pine for is the Old South of country roads, shady front porches and long, lazy afternoons at the fishing hole. Steve Robinson doesn’t buy it.

A Republican Abandons Rick Scott: Paula Dockery and Florida’s Fraying GOP

September 28, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Democrats now look like a party united compared to the Republicans, Cary McMullen argues, as Paula Docker, one of Florida’s increasingly endangered moderate Republicans, announces her desertion of Gov. Rick Scott’s campaign for re-election.

Bill Would Grant Immunity From Harsh Sentences for Firing Warning Shots

September 27, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

A bill filed by a Polk County lawmaker is intended to address what he called “the negative, unintended consequences” of Florida’s 10-20-Life sentencing law by granting immunity to people who fire warning shots to protect themselves and others. The new bill was filed on the same day that the 1st District Court of Appeal ordered a new trial for Marissa Alexander, a Jacksonville woman sentenced to a mandatory 20 years in prison for a shot fired during a domestic dispute in her home.

Palm Coast’s City Repertory Theatre Opens 3rd Season With Webber’s Amazing Technicolor

September 27, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

City Repertory Theatre in Palm Coast launches its third season–seven plays this year–with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” a musical very loosely based on the story of Joseph and his brothers from the Book of Genesis.

Appeal Court Orders New Trial for Marissa Alexander, But No Redo on Stand Your Ground

September 26, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Marissa Alexander, a 32-year-old mother of three, was convicted on improper self-defense instructions to the jury, the court ruled. Alexander was serving a 20-year sentence for shooting a gun during an argument with her abusive husband, against whom she had a restraining order.

Florida Prisoners Will Wash Dishes and Sew Their Own Clothes in Bid to Save Money

September 26, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Florida’s prisons have a $45.5 million deficit despite shuttering 10 prisons in recent years, so department head Mike Crews is finding new ways to save money, including refusing to replace broken dishwashers and making inmates do the work instead.

Gov. Scott Defends Exiting Common Core Testing In Face of Criticism and Fact-Checks

September 25, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Scott did not say specifically how he thought tests developed through a state-led initiative could be an instrument of federal intrusion, or cite an example of federal intrusion, as he defended his order to move Florida away from the Common Core testing consortium.

Should Jacksonville’s Nathan Bedford Forrest High Be Named for KKK’s Grand Wizard?

September 24, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

Never apologize for what? Secession? Slavery? How about white supremacy and the KKK? The fight to rename Jacksonville’s Nathan Bedford Forrest High School raises the question, argues Julie Delegal.

Legislature Considering Tougher Crackdowns on Sexual Predators in Wake of New Findings

September 24, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

DCF has been recommending fewer and fewer sex offenders for confinement, with the number falling from a high of 228 in 2000 — two years after the law went into effect — to a low of 19 in 2012.

In Political Balancing Act, Scott Pulls Out of Testing Group But Preserves Common Core

September 23, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

By withdrawing from just the testing partnership, Scott’s decision Monday was more of a political balancing act than either a radical departure from Florida’s Common Core policy adopted in 2010 or a repudiation of the tougher standards that have been rolling out in schools through FCAT 2.0 for the past three years, in preparation for Common Core.

Death Toll From Preventable Hospital Mistakes Ranges Between 210,000 and 440,000

September 23, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

A new study finds that preventable hospital mistakes that lead to patients’ death are far higher than previous estimates, making medical errors the third-leading cause of death in America, behind heart disease, which is the first, and cancer, which is second.

Gubernatorial Crist-al Clearing: There Will Be No Sink-Scott Rematch

September 22, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Ending months of speculation, former Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink said Friday she will not run for governor against incumbent Republican Rick Scott in 2014, further fueling “will he or won’t he” chatter about Democrat Charlie Crist.

Pope Francis’s Sexual Revolution, Banning Child Beauty Pageants, Scott’s Drug-Testing Addiction

September 22, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Pope Francis teaches abortion and anti-gay fanatics a lesson, Rick Scott wants his drug-testing addiction judged by the US Supreme Court, France bans child beauty pageants, racists insult Miss America, and Edward Said and Philip Roth have the last word.

The Trouble With American Exceptionalism

September 21, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Do we have moral authority as a nation, asks Cary McMullen. Do we have the humility Obama spoke of, namely that we are acting not in self-interest but in the interest of justice? Are we exceptional not just in our history but in our standing among nations as an exemplar of righteous ideals?

FDLE Lays Down Florida Capitol Garrison Rule to Avoid Repeat of Summer Protests

September 21, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Under the proposal by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, members of the public would be expected to leave the Capitol building by 5 p.m. each weekday or within 30 minutes of the end of public meetings. Capitol police could arrest for trespassing anyone who didn’t leave when they were told.

Dispute Over Possibly Improper Rate Hikes Pits FPL’s 1% Against 99% of Customers

September 20, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The state Supreme Court took up a challenge Thursday to hundreds of millions of dollars in rate increases approved last year for Florida Power & Light ij an agreement one Justice said reflected the wishes of 1 percent of commercial users against the wishes of 99 percent of FPL’s remaining customers.

Glory Glory Hallelujah: Another Mass Shooting, and the NRA Marches On

September 19, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 29 Comments

To propose reasonable, sane gun laws amid the gun lobby’s arsenal of lies, distortions and demagoguery has become pointless, argues Steve Robinson, as the nation picks up the wreckage of Aaron Alexis and the Navy Yard shooting.

Sen. Dorothy Hukill Proposes Cutting Sales Tax on Commercial Rental Property to 5%

September 19, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Senate Finance and Tax Chairwoman Dorothy Hukill of Port Orange’s proposal could cut $250 million a year from state revenue. Business leaders want the tax, currently at 6%, eliminated altogether as Gov. Rick Scott travels the state on a tax-cutting tour.

As a Cat Lay Dying, He Drove Drunk to a Vet, But Court Finds Him Guilty of DUI Anyway

September 19, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

The cat Christopher Brooks was taking to a vet died at roadside as he was being given field sobriety tests, despite its owners’ please to the cop. But his DUI conviction was upheld by a Hillsborough County appeal court that declared that special circumstances don;t apply to cats as they would to human beings.

Resisting Obamacare, Florida Becomes National Aberration as Scott Battles Sebelius

September 19, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

rick scott obamacare outlier

Florida officials are callous and secretive, willing to keep information from citizens that could save their lives, according to the Obama administration’s top health official., while Gov. Rick Scott and other state officials are ramping up their attack on the federal online Marketplace and the “Navigators” who will help the uninsured use it to enroll in a health plan for 2014.

Where Fast Food Workers Make Twice the US Minimum Wage, and Have Benefits

September 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

Critics say a living wage of around $15 an hour would drive fast-food restaurants and other retail firms out of business — and millions of their employees out of work. Australia’s experience, where workers make $15 an hour, shows why that argument is bunk, argues Salvatore Babones.

ACLU Sues Florida DMV for Suspending Licenses of Those Too Poor to Pay Court Costs

September 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 31 Comments

More than 200,000 Florida drivers have had their licenses suspended for failure to pay legal fees as of the start of 2013–fees that are unrelated to penalties associated with their sentence. The suspensions disproportionately affect poor people, who, without a car, have even fewer means to hold a job and make good on payments.

Pam Stewart Appointed Education Commissioner Amid Common Core Strife

September 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Pam Stewart’s appointment came amid jockeying over the future of education in Florida and rumors that Gov. Rick Scott will soon issue an executive order on schools, possibly dealing with whether the state will go along with a common-core related multi-state test aimed at measuring new, national standards for learning.

Immigration Reform’s Latest Cheering Section: Florida College and University Presidents

September 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Florida college and university presidents are calling on Congress to pass immigration reform this year, saying it would be better for the state’s economy if foreign students could stay after graduation, instead of being forced to take their diplomas and leave.

Florida Festivals and Events Association Hosting Workshop at Palm Coast’s Hilton Garden Inn

September 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The Florida Festivals and Events Association (FFEA), the state’s primary professional organization for producers, vendors, and sponsors of festivals, fairs and special events, is hosting a workshop and seminar at the Hilton Garden Inn Palm Coast on Thursday, October 10, for all those interested either in learning the ropes or capitalizing on special events.

Sheriff Manfre Drafts the Press to Fight The Bogus Epidemic of Fake Pot

September 16, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

The bogus drug-bust news conference was a specialty of former Sheriff Don Fleming, as it has been for innumerable police agencies since the dawn of Nixon;s war on drugs since 1971. Last week, Sheriff Jim Manfre unfortunately joined the parade, this time amplifying fears of a fake epidemic of fake pot.

Life Sentence for Rest-Stop Murder That Shattered Florida Tourism Is Reduced

September 16, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Audra Akins was 14 when he murdered British tourist Gary Colley at an I-10 rest stop near Tallahassee 20 years ago. His life sentence was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. He was re-sentenced to 40 years, making him eligible for release in 12 years.

At Public Universities, More Aid Is Going To the Wealthy Than to The Neediest

September 15, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

Attention has long been focused on the lack of economic diversity at private colleges, especially at the most elite schools. What has been little discussed is how public universities, which enroll far more students, have gradually shifted their priorities — and a growing portion of their aid dollars — toward wealthier students.

Banned in Flagler, Welcomed in Prisons: Corrections Reverses Cigarette Prohibition in Work Camps

September 13, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Corrections officials quietly reversed a blanket ban on tobacco at prisons this summer and are now allowing inmates at work release centers to have up to 10 packs of cigarettes each–just as Flagler County readies to ban smoking among new employees.

Thank You For Not Smoking: In Bated Defense of Flagler County’s New Rule

September 12, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

Steve Robinson remembers his days at CNN when Ted Turner’s edict, groundbreaking at the time, forbade smoking in the office–or anywhere. Whether it was enforced or not, it helped workers become healthier, and if people are the sum of their deeds, Robinson argues, then employers should have the right to impose similar restrictions.

Supervisors of Election Weary of State’s Renewed Push for Voter Purges

September 12, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 33 Comments

Secretary of State Ken Detzner will go on the road next month to pitch for a revived voter scrub, but supervisors of elections, caught in the crosshairs of last year’s problematic purge, and voting-rights advocates remain skeptical.

Despite 1,000-Acre Trim, Environmentalists Warn of Too Much State Land for Sale

September 11, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The trim still leaves 4,250 acres at 48 state-held sites, such as parks, trails and management areas, that remain under consideration for sale by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection even though the lands fit criteria for protection.

Only in Florida: Attorney General Bondi Reschedules Execution to Avoid Conflict With Her Fundraiser

September 10, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 23 Comments

Marshall Lee Gore was to be executed the evening of Sept. 10 until Attorney General Bondi rescheduled the killing so it wouldn’t conflict with her “campaign kickoff” fundraiser in Tampa. She now says she shouldn’t have done that.

George Zimmerman in Custody in Lake Mary After Wife Calls 911

September 9, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

George Zimmerman was back in custody Monday afternoon as part of an investigation involving domestic violence, the Orlando Sentinel is reporting. A Lake Mary police officer says a gun may have been involved, but it isn’t clear whether anyone will be arrested.

Florida Groups Helping Uninsured Are Getting “Intimidating” Letters from GOP Lawmakers

September 9, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Eight groups that are hiring and training “navigators” to help uninsured Floridians enroll in Obamacare have been sent letters by 15 GOP members of a U.S. House committee seeking information on their activities — a letter the Obama administration called a “blatant and shameful attempt to intimidate.”

When an F Is an Automatic 50: In Defense Of Matanzas High School’s Grading Policy

September 8, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 43 Comments

Matanzas High School Principal Chris Pryor’s new policy of bottoming out all F’s at 50%–not zero–drew some grumbles, but teacher Jo Ann Nahirny explains why it’s a far more just policy than awarding zeros–and how the same policy may have changed her own life.

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