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Florida

We Are Paying the Price for Data Centers. It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way.

December 13, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

data centers cost water electricity

The data centers proliferating across the country drive up energy costs by powering energy-ravenous generative AI, cloud storage, digital networks, and other energy intensive programs — much of it fueled by coal and natural gas that exacerbate climate change. In some cases, data centers consume enough electricity to power the equivalent of a small city. The wholesale price of electricity in areas housing data centers is up a whopping 267 percent from five years ago — and everyday customers are eating those costs.

Doctors Clash with Florida Officials Over Plan to Repeal Meningitis and Chickenpox Vaccine Mandates for Schools

December 12, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

ladapo and desantis

Florida health officials are advancing a proposal to eliminate school entry requirements for vaccines protecting against hepatitis B, chickenpox, and meningitis. While mandates for polio and MMR vaccines remain, officials signaled intent to eventually repeal those laws as well. At a contentious workshop, pediatricians warned the move invites fatal outbreaks and endangers herd immunity, while state officials and supporters defended the rollback as a victory for parental rights and informed consent.

DeSantis Unveils Final $117.4 Billion Budget: Raises for Police and Teachers, New College Takeover of USF-Sarasota

December 11, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

The governor's cameo in Tallahassee Tuesday. (DeSantis Facebook)

Gov. Ron DeSantis unveiled a final $117.36 billion “Floridians First” budget for 2026-2027, proposing raises for teachers and law enforcement, plus $278 million for cancer research. The plan includes a controversial directive for New College to absorb USF’s Sarasota-Manatee campus. While touting record education investments, the proposal drew criticism from the teachers’ union. It also funds conservation, maintains tourism marketing, and supports a future property-tax slash amendment.

Florida Senate Panel Approves Annual ‘Charlie Kirk Day’

December 10, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Controversialist Charlie Kirk at an event in April 2024. (Wikimedia Commons)

Against Democrats’ objections that Charlie Kirk’s often bigoted views do not reflect Florida’s, a Senate committee Tuesday approved creating an annual “day of remembrance” in Florida for slain conservative activist and controversialist Charlie Kirk.

Florida Lawmakers Belatedly Begin to Grapple with Data Centers’ Burdens on Power and Water

December 10, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

The acreage in Palm Coast's Town Center that will be transformed into a data center. (© FlaglerLive)

Adding data centers is one of the biggest issues in the electric industry, with utilities taking steps that include restarting nuclear power plants to try to meet demands. Florida has not seen the type of data-center development that has happened in states such as Virginia. But in recent months, proposals have emerged for data-center projects in areas such as Palm Coast, Palm Beach, St. Lucie and Polk counties and have sparked controversy. Palm Coast is permitting a data center in Town Center, but the city continues to refuse to disclose any regulatory information about it.

Council on American-Islamic Relations Will Sue DeSantis Over ‘Defamatory’ Designation as ‘Terrorist’ Organization

December 9, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 22 Comments

A Council on American-Islamic Relations last October. (Facebook)

The Council on American-Islamic Relations said Tuesday it will go to court to challenge an executive order issued by Gov. Ron DeSantis that designated the group as a “terrorist” organization.

Florida’s New Reporting System Is Shining a Light on Human Trafficking

December 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Human trafficking can be hard to track because it is a crime that hides in plain sight.

The criminologists who research human trafficking and founded the University of South Florida’s Trafficking in Persons Risk to Resilience Lab, known as the TIP lab, study human trafficking in Florida. Labor and sex trafficking hide in plain sight, embedded in ordinary settings such as hotels, restaurants, farms, massage businesses and private homes. Most victims are trafficked by someone they know or trust – a family member, intimate partner or employer. Many continue to go to school or work while being exploited.

Florida Democrats Put Affordability Atop 2026 Legislative Agenda

December 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell stands among the bicameral Democratic caucus, setting forward its agenda for the 2026 legislative session on Dec. 8, 2025. (Photo by Jay Waagmeester/Florida Phoenix)

Florida Democrats have housing affordability and government efficiency on their minds a month out from the start of the 2026 legislative session. “What we have seen is that we have a lame duck governor and I think that the Legislature has taken back some of its co-equal power as a branch of government,” Senate Democratic Leader Lori Berman, of Boca Raton, said during a news conference in the Capitol Monday. “And I’m hopeful that as this session goes on, we in the House and the Senate in both parties are able to work together and do things that really do affect affordability and that affect peoples’ lives.”

Florida Will Help Homeland Security Obtain Your Driver’s License Records

December 7, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

florida hunting for DHS drivers licxenses

Florida and three other Republican states have agreed to help the Trump administration gain access to state driver’s license data through a nationwide law enforcement computer network as part of the administration’s hunt for alleged noncitizen voters. The Trump administration said as recently as October that federal officials wanted to obtain driver’s license records through the network.

Unless You’re a Developer, a Lobbyist, or a Fetus, Your Florida Lawmakers Don’t Care for You

December 7, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

florida legislature lawmakers talahassee

Ever get the feeling the Florida Legislature hates you? It does. Unless you’re a developer, a lobbyist, or a fetus. Members are filing hell-born bills for the 2026 session, many apparently designed to torment you, rob your children of their futures, and reduce this state to an ICE-filled, disease ridden, constantly flooding, unaffordable autocracy.

Florida Property Insurance Costs Are Stabilizing, Commissioner Says

December 6, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

At least the insurance is a bit more affordable. (© FlaglerLive)

Florida Insurance Commissioner Michael Yaworsky said he believes the state’s insurance industry has stabilized, adding consumers “are finding relief” and have more options “than we’ve had in decades.”

UF Adopts Strict ‘Neutrality’ Policy Forbidding Leaders’ Social Commentary Under Threat of Firing

December 5, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

UF neutrality

To prevent alleged “ideological takeover,” UF Interim President Donald Landry and trustees adopted a strict “institutional neutrality” policy Friday forbidding leaders from commenting on social or political issues under threat of firing. Landry argued leadership silence is actually required to protect open discourse. The board also unanimously reelected Mori Hosseini—a major Ron DeSantis donor—as chair, solidifying his influence just months after the state rejected the trustees’ previous pick for president. Landry indicated he may seek the permanent post.

The Phoenix Declaration’s Serenade of Dog Whistles

December 5, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 19 Comments

The Phoenix Declaration's first edition. (U.S. National Archives)

The Heritage Foundation’s “Phoenix” doctrine, recently adopted by Florida, is a Christian nationalist manifesto designed to eradicate educational dissent. It prioritizes “parental omnipotence” over children’s intellectual freedom. By diverting public funds to private vouchers and sanitizing history, the doctrine cements a decades-long conservative war against public education and enforces a “pinched, angry” monoculture that suppresses critical thinking in favor of dogmatic, exclusionary patriotism.

Court Invalidates City Ordinance Banning Anti-Abortion Activists from Clinic’s Driveway

December 4, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Protesters gather at an anti-abortion rally on the steps of the Historic Florida Capitol building on May 24, 2022. (Photo by Danielle J. Brown/Florida Phoenix)

Anti-abortion activists have the right to hand leaflets to women in the driveway of a Clearwater abortion clinic, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday. In a 2-to-1 decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit tossed a trial judge’s decision preventing the Florida Preborn Rescue organization from entering within five feet of the Bread and Roses Women’s Health Center’s driveway. The clinic’s “buffer zone” was a 38-foot stretch of public sidewalk, 28 feet of which cross the clinic’s driveway.

Citing ‘Age of Darkness and Deceit,’ DeSantis Moves to Curb AI Growth and Data Centers

December 4, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

ron desantis artificial intelligence data centers

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday proposed an artificial intelligence “bill of rights” to stymie unfettered AI growth, crack down on sexual AI chatbots, and restrict AI data centers in Florida. Hinted at for months, these legislative proposals come in sharp contrast to pro-tech push marking President Donald Trump’s second term in office. Trump — allied with technology titans like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg — toyed with an executive order to thwart state-level AI regulations earlier this month.

DeSantis Makes Dubious Claims About Florida Being ‘Forced’ To Redistrict

December 3, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaking at the Hula Bay Club in Tampa on Dec. 3, 2025. (Photo by Mitch Perry/Florida Phoenix)

Democrats and voting rights advocates this week voiced vehement opposition to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ call to redistrict Florida’s congressional map in a special session next year, calling it an “illegal” gerrymander in violation of the Florida Constitution. Not surprisingly, DeSantis disagrees.

4-Day School Weeks Winning Popularity But Fail Data Test

December 1, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

schools short week

Four-day school weeks come down to staff recruitment and retention, fewer discipline problems and improved attendance, while they also help stretch tight school budgets. But the promised benefits have not shown up in the data as longer school days can harm academic performance. Such concerns might not matter as four-day school weeks become more popular nationwide.

Eliminating Property Taxes in These Florida Counties Means ‘Dismemberment of Vital Services’

November 29, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 48 Comments

florida property taxes elimination

Local government officials statewide are wary of plans by Gov. Ron DeSantis and the state Legislature to slash or abolish homestead property taxes, but one group of counties is particularly worried. They are Florida’s “fiscally constrained” counties: 29 mostly rural counties with small populations, few industries and lots of agricultural or conservation land — and therefore small tax bases. Without property tax revenue, there would be very little left for roadwork, emergency services, fire protection, libraries, parks” or cultural  efforts such as historic preservation and festivals.

Bear Hunt Is a Go as Florida Judge Rejects Nonprofit’s Claim It’s ‘Needless Destruction’

November 26, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

A Florida black bear. (FWC)

A Leon County circuit judge on Monday rejected a group’s request for a temporary injunction to halt the state’s first black bear hunt in a decade. With the three-week hunt set to begin Dec. 6, Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey said Bear Warriors United, a Central Florida-based nonprofit, was unable to show “substantial likelihood of success on the merits” in its lawsuit challenging the hunt.

Bill Cotterell, an ‘Institution’ in Political Coverage and a Long-Time Columnist, Dies

November 24, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Bill Cotterell in 2009. (Florida Memory)

Bill Cotterell, a reporter and columnist who covered Florida government and politics for more than four decades with a blend of doggedness and humor, died Monday as he tried to recover at a rehabilitation center from norovirus and a bleeding ulcer. Cotterell, 82, who for the past two years wrote a once-a-week column for The News Service of Florida that was distributed statewide, was a newshound. He could be curmudgeonly and sometimes wasn’t politically correct. But he also stood behind the First Amendment and tried to tell the truth about what was happening in government.

Senate Proposes Clean-Up of Florida’s School Voucher Shortfalls

November 23, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Senators gather in their chamber for the opening day of session on March 4, 2025. (Photo by Jay Waagmeester/Florida Phoenix)

The proposal to clean-up Florida’s school voucher system establishes a categorical fund for the scholarship programs as opposed to the existing practice of lumping those funds together with all school funding; requires a minimum of $250 million in a fund that offsets unexpected budgetary costs related to school choice scholarships; and “clears up the timing confusion in the present system and establishes clear application and scholarship acceptance deadlines that occur prior to the funding of scholarships.”

How DeSantis Demolished Florida’s New College

November 23, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

New College's new course on wokism in tghe United States compares the social justice movement to a cult. (Facebook)

New College of Florida is on its intellectual deathbed. Once an authority-challenging, free-thinking institution for students passionate about learning, a place where difference was celebrated and creativity encouraged. Now, it is becoming a third-rate jock school with over-paid administrators and under-achieving freshmen, a casualty of Ron DeSantis’ culture wars.

Audit of State Funding Of School Vouchers Reveals ‘Myriad of Accountability Problems’

November 22, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

The state house's legislative tower is in the center, the white Turlington Building, to the right, houses the Florida Department of Education. (© FlaglerLive)

The state’s school voucher program has exhibited “a myriad of accountability problems” and caused a funding shortfall for public schools, a state audit released this week shows. The audit, encompassing the 2024-2025 school year, was presented this week to lawmakers, who are spending the weeks leading up to the legislative session learning the woes of […]

FPL Customers Face $6.9 Billion Rate Increase in 4 Years as Regulators Approve Controversial ‘Settlement’

November 20, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

Florida PSC commissioners Andrew Giles Fay, Art Graham, Mike La Rosa, Gary Clark, and Gabriella Passidomo Smith. (Photo from the PSC website)

The Florida Public Service Commission approved a four-year settlement with Florida Power & Light Thursday for about $6.9 billion, which opponents claim is the largest rate hike in U.S. history. FPL says that in 2026, its “typical” 1,000-kWh residential customer bill in most of Florida will increase by $2.50 a month, or about 2%, from the existing $134.14 to $136.64. There would be additional increases in 2027, 2028 and 2029.

Paul Renner Would Rollback Property Taxes and Impose Hurdles On Governments Seeking More Revenue

November 20, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

To Renner, who’s campaigning for governor, the Legislature should cap future taxes to ensure local government cannot grow faster than Floridians’ incomes and require a 2/3 supermajority vote of local government for any new or increased tax or fee subject to a subsequent referendum, for voters to approve or reject.

DeSantis Signs 19th Death Warrant of the Year, for 1987 Double-Murderer Frank Walls, 58

November 19, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Frank Walls.

In what could be Florida’s record 19th execution this year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday signed a death warrant for an inmate convicted in the 1987 murders of two people in a home in Okaloosa County. Frank Walls, 58, is scheduled to be executed Dec. 18 in the murders of Edward Alger and Ann Peterson. The warrant came as the state prepares to execute Richard Barry Randolph on Thursday and is slated to execute Mark Allen Geralds on Dec. 9.

Ban on Loudspeaker Prayers at School Games Survives as U.S. Supreme Court Declines Appeal

November 18, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

public address prayers

The U.S. Supreme Court will not take up a long-litigated case about the Florida High School Athletic Association’s refusal to let two private religious schools pray over the PA system before a 2015 game. On Monday, the top court denied Cambridge Christian School’s appeal, more than a year after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit sided with the association.

Judge Rejects City’s Challenge to Controversial Home-Rule-Smothering Law Known as SB180

November 18, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Ocoee has a little less to celebrate this Christmas. 9Facebook)

An administrative law judge Tuesday rejected Ocoee’s challenge to a decision by the Florida Department of Commerce that changes to a city comprehensive plan were “null and void” because of a controversial new state law. The law, passed during this spring’s legislative session, has drawn criticism from cities and counties throughout Florida and two constitutional challenges in Leon County circuit court.

Justice Charles Canady Resigning Florida Supreme Court Seat for UF Civics Post

November 17, 2025 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

The Supreme Court sides with Gov. DeSantis. (© FlaglerLive)

The longest-serving current member of the Florida Supreme Court, Justice Charles Canady, is leaving the bench to join the University of Florida as director of the Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education. Canady — whose wife, state Rep. Jennifer Canady, is in line to become state House speaker in 2028 — announced his departure Monday, calling it a “great privilege to serve the people of Florida as a justice” for the past 17 years.

For 4th Year, Florida Republicans Try to Ban Pride and Political Flags from Public Buildings

November 16, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The target, of course, is pride flags. (© FlaglerLive)

Florida Republicans are trying for the fourth year in a row to ban political flags atop government buildings, including Pride, MAGA, or Black Lives Matter banners.

Florid Republican Re-Files Bill To Punish Local Governments Removing Confederate Monuments

November 15, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

The top iof the Confederate memorial in front of the state Capitol in Tallahassee. (© FlaglerLive)

A Florida Republican has re-filed a measure to penalize local governments attempting to remove or destroy Confederate monuments and other historic memorials. HB 496 by Sen. Stan McClain, an Ocala Republican, demands the state protect “each historic Florida monument or memorial from removal, damage, or destruction.” It’s the fourth time this bill has been introduced in successive legislative sessions as part of a broader conservative response to the nationwide movement to down or rename Confederate statues.

Federal Judge Denies Reinstatement of FWC Biologist Fired Over Charlie Kirk Post

November 15, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

holland park splash pad

U.S. District Judge Mark Walker’s ruling Thursday came in a lawsuit filed by biologist Brittney Brown, who worked for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, alleging that her Sept. 15 firing — five days after Kirk was shot during an appearance at a Utah university — violated her First Amendment rights. Brown sought a preliminary injunction to require the commission to reinstate her. While Walker’s order sided with state officials in denying a preliminary injunction, he also indicated that a decision about reinstating the fired employee could change if more information is provided to bolster Brown’s arguments.

State Kills Bryan Jennings, 66, For Kidnapping, Rape and Murder of Rebecca Kunash, 6, in 1979

November 14, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

Bryan F. Jennings.

More than 46 years after he kidnapped, raped and murdered a 6-year-old girl in Brevard County, Bryan Frederick Jennings was put to death by lethal injection Thursday evening at Florida State Prison. Jennings was convicted of murdering Rebecca Kunash on May 11, 1979, in Merritt Island. A 1986 sentencing order said Jennings in the early morning hours went to the window of the child’s bedroom and saw her asleep.

Florida Board Approves Hard-Right Heritage Foundation’s Sweepingly Ideological Education Manifesto

November 13, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

florida education manifesto

Florida education leaders on Thursday approved a set of principles that would teach a conservative-backed vision of the United States. The State Board of Education, which also approved social-studies changes intended to highlight ideological evils of communism, signed off on Florida becoming the first state to adopt the Heritage Foundation’s “Phoenix Declaration: An American Vision for Education.”

Millions Are Losing Food Aid Even with Shutdown Ending

November 12, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

food stamps

The roughly 42 million Americans who rely on food stamps did not receive their November 1 SNAP benefits as the government shutdown dragged on. Lawmakers have now negotiated an end to the shutdown. But the threat to the nation’s primary nutrition assistance program is far from over. As the government reopens, millions will still lose access to food assistance starting almost immediately.

Marineland Survives! Judge Approves Sale to Dolphin Group and Singles Out FPC Student Voices for Praise

November 12, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Marineland's dolphins have reason to jump for joy. (© FlaglerLive)

Ending a cascade of events that saw Marineland Dolphin Adventure all but sold to a commercial developer, a federal bankruptcy judge in Wilmington, Del., this morning approved the sale of Marineland Dolphin Adventure for $7.135 million to Apex Associates, a Green Cove Springs company owned by a philanthropic couple who pledge to preserve and broaden Marineland’s mission as an oceanarium. The bidders, Barbara and Jon Rubel, are backing Jack Kassewitz, a dolphin expert who is returning Felicia Cook to her former role as the general manager at Marineland.

How Ron DeSantis Made Florida #1 in State-Sponsored Killing

November 11, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

ron desantis secrecy

Florida has executed 15 prisoners in 2025 – the most ever in a single year since 1976, when a brief national moratorium on the death penalty was lifted. Two of the five remaining executions scheduled for 2025 are set to happen in Florida. Texas and Alabama are tied for a distant second, with five executions each.

Federal Judge Skeptical of Florida Agency’s Case for Firing Biologist Over Charlie Kirk Sarcasm

November 11, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The reactionary agitator Charlie Kirk, who was open racist, homophobic, misogynistic, and indifferent to occasional acts of mass violence if it protected the Second Amendment, at the University of Alabama in 2021. (Wikimedia Commons)

Attorneys for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said the agency fired biologist Brittney Brown to “prevent foreseeable disruption” after Brown reposted a sarcastic social media post about Charlie Kirk’s endorsement of occasional mass shootings if it’s the price of protecting the Second Amendment. U.S. District Judge Mark Walker was skeptical of the state’s defense: “Just because something’s inappropriate or controversial, how is it not covered by the First Amendment?” Walker asked.

Chaining Record, DeSantis Signs Another Death Warrant: Mark Geralds, Who Murdered Tressa Pettibone in 1989

November 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Mark Geralds.

Expanding a modern-era record for executions in a year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday signed a death warrant for a man convicted of murdering a Bay County woman in 1989. Mark Allen Geralds is scheduled to be executed Dec. 9 for the murder of Tressa Lynn Pettibone, a 33-year-old Panama City Beach mother who was beaten and stabbed to death in her home. Pettibone’s body was discovered on the kitchen floor by her 8-year-old son, Bart, when he returned from school on Feb. 1, 1989, according to court records. Tressa Lynn Pettibone was stabbed three times in her neck.

Bill Would Require Professors to Sign Oath

November 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

A museum piece on Ellis Island. (© FlaglerLive)

State college and university administrators and instructors would have to take an oath to the nation and Florida, under a proposal filed Friday by Sen. Clay Yarborough, R-Jacksonville. The measure (SB 430) also calls for public school administrators and instructional personnel, including prekindergarten instructors, to perform a similar oath.

Paul Renner’s ‘Health’ Plan: Kill Obamacare, Kill Vaccine Mandates

November 7, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

Rep. Paul Renner, who represents Flagler County, is looking for economies of scale in the judicial system. (© FlaglerLive)

Former House Speaker and Republican gubernatorial hopeful Paul Renner is calling for Congress to eliminate the Affordable Care Act and for the Florida Legislature to nix “medical vaccine mandates” and prohibit patients who refuse to be vaccinated from being excluded or segregated  from others. While Florida leads the nation in enrollment in the federal health exchange with more than 4.6 million residents relying on the marketplace (healthcare.gov) for their insurance, Renner, called the law a failure and said its caused the costs of health care to skyrocket.

Uthmeier Sues Planned Parenthood Over Abortion Claim

November 6, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Attorney General James Uthmeier on Thursday filed a lawsuit accusing Planned Parenthood of falsely advertising that abortion medication is “safer than Tylenol.”

St. Johns County Will Give $200,000 to Food Pantries for Food Stamps Emergency and Suspend Utility Disconnections

November 6, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

St. Johns County knows an emergency when it sees one. (© FlaglerLive)

The St. Johns County Commissioners on Tuesday unanimously supported County Administrator Joy Andrews’s recommendation to appropriate $200,000 from the county’s emergency reserves to local food pantries through its Health and Human Services Department. The commission also supported suspending water utility disconnections for non-payment through the end of November. No similar plans have been discussed at any of Flagler County’s local governments.

Only Reduced Food Stamps Benefits Will Be Issued, and May Take Months to Get To You

November 3, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

The U.S. Department of Agriculture will pay about half of November benefits for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, though benefits could take months to flow to recipients, the department said Monday in a brief to a federal court in Rhode Island, despite a court order to tap the necessary money to distribute them.

Florida Education Is a Model of Regression

November 2, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

florida model regression

The DeSantis administration seems happy to trash that pesky First Amendment whenever they feel like it, forbidding educators to discuss systemic racism — no learning about redlining, unequal access to justice, Jim Crow, habitual dumping of toxic waste in minority communities, or denying Black veterans access to GI Bill benefits — policing college course descriptions for naughty words such as “gender” and “decolonize,” or hyperventilating over the possibility sex might be mentioned in the classroom.

Florida Lawmakers File Bill for Stricter E-Bike Rules and Reporting

November 1, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

e-bikes florida law

Naples Rep. Yvette Benarroch and St. Johns Rep. Kim Kendall have introduced a measure (HB 243) that seeks to strengthen Florida’s traffic safety laws by integrating electric bicycles, motorized scooters and electric motorcycles into the state’s regulatory framework. Under the legislation, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV) would be required to maintain a separate database of crash statistics involving tandem-trailer trucks, motorized scooters, electric bicycles, and electric motorcycles to support future policy development and public safety initiatives.

State Defends Firing Employee Over Charlie Kirk Social Media Post

October 31, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 27 Comments

It'll be the Charlie Kirk trophy. (Wikimedia Commons)

Disputing allegations that they violated First Amendment rights, Florida wildlife officials Thursday argued that a federal judge should reject a request to reinstate a biologist who was fired because of a social-media post after the murder of conservative and openly racist, misogynistic and homophobic activist Charlie Kirk.

Overruling Judge, Attorney General Says Prosecutors and Staff May Bring Guns into Courtrooms

October 30, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

The better prosecutors pack lethal arguments, not guns. Above, Assistant State Attorney Jason Lewis, left, and Assistant State Attorney Mark Johnson during a February trial at the Flagler County courthouse before Circuit Judge Dawn Nichols. (© FlaglerLive)

In an Oct. 20 letter posted to the attorney general’s website, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier told Sarasota’s Republican State Attorney, Ed Brodsky, that he and his staff should be allowed to bring their guns into courtrooms — even though the Chief Judge of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit decreed otherwise in a September order.

Sen. Tom Leek Again Files Bill to Create Museum of Black History Board in St. Johns, After Setback Earlier This Year

October 30, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Sen. Tom Leek is trying again. (© FlaglerLive)

Sen. Tom Leek of Ormond Beach introduced Senate Bill 308, which would create an Administrative Board that must be formed by July 31, 2026. The panel will oversee the museum’s construction, operation, and administration — a key step in fulfilling the vision outlined in legislation authorizing the museum’s development. Leek had filed a similar bill last year. It cleared every committee unanimously. It cleared the House and Senate unanimously, along $750,000 for actual construction. Gov. DeSantis vetoed the funding, and Leek’s bill died.

4.7 Million Floridians Have Obamacare. Here’s What Happens If They Lose Their Subsidies.

October 29, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 21 Comments

4.7 million Floridians use health insurance plans obtained from the ACA marketplace. Joe Raedle/Getty Images News

The number of people insured under the ACA in each state varies. But the state with the largest number of residents on marketplace insurance plans is Florida. About 4.7 million Florida residents are covered through these plans, representing 27% of the state’s under-65 population, compared to the national average of 8.8%. Of those on marketplace plans, 98% receive a subsidy at some level. There are several reasons why this rate is so much higher in Florida than elsewhere.

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