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Gov. Scott Visits Best Home Services on “Fighting for Florida’s Future” Tour

Posted on May 4, 2017


Governor Rick Scott today visited Best Home Services during his “Fighting for Florida’s Future” tour. Best Home Services is a family owned and operated air conditioning, electrical, plumbing, and drains company headquartered in Naples. Governor Scott is traveling the state to encourage Floridians to contact members of the Florida Legislature and urge them to invest in key priorities- funding for tourism and economic development and the Herbert Hoover Dike at Lake Okeechobee.

WATCH: Remarks by Keegan Hodges, Co-owner of Best Home Services

WATCH: Remarks by Collier County Commissioner Penny Taylor

WATCH: Remarks by Jose Fernandez, Founder of All Access Multimedia

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Best Home Services, Fighting for Florida’s Future Tour, Governor Rick Scott

Florida PSC Approves TECO’s EV Education Plan for Drivers-Ed

Posted on May 4, 2017

The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) today approved Tampa Electric Company’s (TECO) new energy education program, giving high school students a unique hands-on opportunity to use Electric Vehicles (EVs) while learning how to drive.
TECO will partner with the driver’s education programs in five area high schools to teach high school students about energy efficiency and the operation, maintenance, and ownership considerations of EVs. Beginning in the 2017 fall semester, TECO will start the program in one school and expand it to a maximum of five schools through 2020.
“EVs will continue to be a driver in innovation,” said PSC Chairman Julie Brown. “Introducing EV use through driver’s education programs in schools is a great way to teach future ratepayers the importance of EV ownership while learning the basic rules of the road.”
According to TECO’s petition, students will have the opportunity to learn:

  • Proper driving skills needed to maximize energy efficient driving with EVs,
  • Types, characteristics, and operations of different EV charging technologies,
  • How electric rates are set and when EV charging is the least expensive,
  • Future considerations of EV ownership.

Part of TECO’s curriculum will include surveys of both teachers and students to make program improvements as needed. The utility expects 350 program participants the first year, with total student driver participation expected to reach 5,600 over the program’s three years.
For additional information, visit www.floridapsc.com.
Follow the PSC on Twitter, @floridapsc.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Drivers-Ed, EV Education Plan, Florida Public Service Commission, TECO

Nelson says flyers often treated like 'self-loading cargo'

Posted on May 4, 2017



 
 
 
Associated Press
Thursday, May 4, 2017 at 10:22 a.m.
WASHINGTON (AP) – A senator says he thinks the airline industry has become anti-competitive and is hurting the flying public.
Florida Sen. Bill Nelson says air travelers often tell him they “feel like they’re being treated as self-loading cargo rather than as valued consumers.”
Nelson is the top Democrat on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee — which is holding a hearing Thursday on airline travel.
He says people are so fed up that they’re using their cellphones to hold airlines accountable by recording incidents that show travelers being treated unfairly.
Last month, a passenger was dragged off a United Airlines flight, and on an American Airlines plane, a mother with a stroller was bullied by a flight attendant.
Videos of both incidents were widely circulated on social media.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: associated press, flyers, self-loading cargo, Senator Bill Nelson

Mast statement on American Health Care Act

Posted on May 4, 2017


U.S. Congressman Brian Mast (FL-18) released the following statement:
“The Affordable Care Act has failed its promises to lower costs, to let people keep their doctor and to let people keep their plans.  As a result, Martin and St. Lucie counties have only one insurer on the individual exchange.  Premiums and deductibles have become beyond unaffordable for people throughout our community, and I’ve heard from countless families just like Debbie’s from Jensen Beach who saw their premiums double and their deductible balloon to more than $12,000 under the Affordable Care Act.
“The American Health Care Act delivers relief for families by ensuring that you get to choose your coverage and the federal government can’t tax you based on what you think is best for your family. The bill returns control of health care from Washington back to you and restores access to quality, affordable options that are tailored to your individual needs.  The bill does all this while also increasing Medicaid funding for Florida by $400 to $500 million dollars that will go to help the most at-risk people in our community get potentially life-saving coverage and treatment.
“Like millions of Americans, I have a pre-existing condition.  As a result of my time in the military, I lost both of my legs and sustained other internal injuries that continue to impact my health care to this day.  I care about this issue.  I believe it is my responsibility to be the staunchest advocate for people out there that also have pre-existing conditions, and I will be.  This bill mandates that people cannot be denied coverage because of pre-existing conditions and allocates almost $140 billion in additional funding that will subsidize coverage for people with pre-existing conditions to ensure their costs are low, while driving down costs for everybody else as well.  Those claiming otherwise are the same people who said ‘if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor’ and they’re putting partisan politics ahead of the people in our community.”
BACKGROUND
In conjunction with passage of the American Health Care Act, Congress passed a bill co-sponsored by Rep. Mast, H.R. 2192, to prevent Members of Congress from exempting themselves from the American Health Care Act.  The bill enjoyed broad bipartisan support and was passed unanimously.
The Affordable Care Act has caused premiums to skyrocket across the nation, up about 25 percent on average this year. Enormous increases have left many families paying for insurance that they cannot afford to use.  According to the Congressional Budget Office, the American Health Care Act will lower premiums over time by an average of 10% and potentially more as further reforms are made to lower premiums.
The American Health Care Act explicitly maintains protections for pre-existing conditions in three ways:

  1. Guaranteed issue of coverage, guaranteed renewability of coverage and the prohibition on insurance companies denying coverage due to pre-existing conditions are all maintained.  States cannot opt-out of these requirements.
  2. The AHCA as amended specifically clarifies that its provisions cannot be construed as allowing insurers to limit coverage for those with pre-existing conditions. All of these protections will remain the law.
  3. The bill sets aside $138 billion to ensure that people with pre-existing conditions who might slip through the cracks still have access to affordable coverage.  In comparison, the Affordable Care Act provided only $5 billion.

The American Health Care Act provides a five-year, $10 billion pool of Medicaid funding for non-expansion states, proportional to the population.  Florida is estimated to receive an additional $450 million in Medicaid funding from the American Health Care Act as compared to current law.
This bill would repeal the penalties associated with the individual mandate, ensuring that individuals are not forced by the government to purchase a product that they do not want.  The Congressional Budget Office report states that “Most of that increase [in uninsured individuals] would stem from repealing the penalties associated with the individual mandate…because they chose to be covered by insurance under current law only to avoid paying the penalties.”  The government should not be able to force somebody to purchase something that they do not want.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: American Health Care Act, U.S. Congressman Brian Mast

Gov. Scott Visits PropLogix During “Fighting for Florida’s Future” Tour

Posted on May 4, 2017


Governor Rick Scott today visited PropLogix during his “Fighting for Florida’s Future” tour. PropLogix is a Florida-based company that does business with home buyers across the nation. Over the past two years, the company has grown from eight to more than 90 employees.


Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Fighting for Florida’s Future Tour, Governor Rick Scott, PropLogix

Florida PSC Approves RFP for Florida Relay Service

Posted on May 4, 2017

The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) today approved a Request for Proposals (RFP) to provide a telecommunications relay service system in Florida. The RFP will be issued no later than May 11, 2017, and bidders are invited to submit proposals to the PSC through June 16, 2017. Florida’s Relay Service provides access to basic telecommunications services for more than 2.5 million Floridians who are deaf, hard-of-hearing, deaf/blind, or speech-impaired.
“FRS provides the vital communication link to keep those who need to use specialized telephones connected to their family and community,” said PSC Chairman Julie Brown. “We look forward to reviewing the RFPs and selecting the best provider to continue offering this essential service.”
Sprint, the current FRS provider, notified the PSC in February that it would not exercise its options to extend the existing contract, which expires February 28, 2018. To ensure a seamless transition, the PSC is expected to select a provider in September 2017, with new service beginning on March 1, 2018.
Florida Telecommunications Relay, Inc. (FTRI), a non-profit corporation, administers the statewide FRS system with PSC oversight. FRS is available 24 hours a day and 365 days a year to facilitates telephone calls between people with hearing loss or speech disabilities and other individuals by using special equipment and a communications assistance operator to relay information. A monthly surcharge of $.11 per landline funds the distribution of specialized telecommunications devices and interstate relay service. For information on how to obtain the special equipment, call FTRI at 1-800-222-3448 (Voice) or 1-888-447-5620 (Text Telephone/TTY) or visit http://www.ftri.org.
For additional information, visit www.floridapsc.com.
Follow the PSC on Twitter, @floridapsc.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Florida Public Service Commission, florida relay service, Request for Proposals

NASA gets funding bump in budget deal

Posted on May 4, 2017


The Senate today, by a vote of 79 – 18, approved a $1.1 trillion spending bill to fund the federal government through September.
The measure includes $19.65 billion for NASA, which is $368 million more than the space agency received last year and $145 million more than Congress had approved for the agency earlier this year.
Today, congressional leaders credited U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) for getting the additional funding included in the bill.
“NASA had actually been targeted for certain cuts … but thanks to the advocacy of Senator Nelson, NASA will get an increase of $368 million,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said on the Senate floor this morning. “There is no one in the Senate who has done more for our [space program] than Bill Nelson.”
Nelson, the top Democrat on the Senate Commerce Committee which oversees NASA, says the additional funding will help expand commercial space activity along Florida’s Space Coast and keep NASA on track to put humans on Mars within the next quarter-century.
“The space program creates thousands and thousands and thousands of jobs for skilled workers to build the machines that help us explore the heavens,” Nelson said on the Senate floor today. “The funding included in this budget deal moves us ever closer to answering that burning question: are we alone in the universe?”
Nelson, who spent six days orbiting the planet aboard the space shuttle Columbia, co-authored the current blueprint from which NASA is operating. That bill – the NASA Transition Authorization Act of 2017 – requires NASA to establish a human settlement on Mars and continue the commercial space industry’s development of a new American-made rocket to once again send American astronauts to and from the International Space Station without having to rely on Russia.
“In this time when we find ourselves far too divided in our politics, the exploration of space continues to be a powerful force that brings us together,” Nelson said today.
Below is a rush transcript of Schumer and Nelson’s remarks on the floor this morning, and video of their remarks is available here.

U.S. Sens. Bill Nelson and Chuck Schumer
Remarks on the Senate Floor
May 4, 2017
Sen. Schumer: […] One final issue, seeing my friend from Florida about to take the floor, I would like to yield to him for a moment.
But before I do, I want to recognize his outstanding efforts in securing additional funding in the appropriations bill for NASA.
NASA had actually been targeted for certain cuts by the Trump administration in their budget that would have nixed the program to send a mission to a moon of Jupiter, but thanks to the advocacy of Senator Nelson, NASA will get an increase of $368 million, enough to fund the mission.
I know this is dear to his heart. He was the first member of the thousands to serve on a NASA mission aboard the space shuttle Columbia. He has a passion for and deep knowledge of our space program. There is no one in the Senate who has done more for it than Bill Nelson. He’s worked hard ever since he’s gotten to the Senate and has had great, great success.
Once again he’s had a success here today. His constituents in Florida and all Americans should be grateful that Bill is a real leader on both these issues, in our caucus and in the whole Senate.
With that I yield to my friend, the senator from Florida.
Sen. Nelson: Many, many thanks to the leader for his kind remarks, but also since the final bill was negotiated by the big four, the two leaders in the Senate and the two leaders in the House, and it wasn’t going to happen this way unless the leaders all agreed so my thanks, my profound thanks on behalf of the explorers and the adventurers of the United States, the can-do little agency NASA that is now on the way to Mars on behalf of all of that NASA family, I want to thank the leaders and especially the Democratic leader and thanks personally for his very kind comments.
Now, I want to say that we have approached the NASA bill in a bipartisan way. As a matter of fact, I give great credit to both the chairs and the ranking members in the House Science Committee as well as the subcommittee in appropriations in the House that handles NASA appropriations.
All of those leaders were absolutely key, and of course the same thing is true here in the Senate. I have the privilege of sharing the leadership as the ranking member with our chairman John Thune of the commerce committee. It was the subcommittee of which that subcommittee chairman and ranking member as well as the subcommittee in the appropriations committee, the chairman and the ranking who we will hear from momentarily. And all of them, I am very grateful.
And what it says is that NASA, America’s civilian space program, should not be a partisan subject. What it says is that the leaders of NASA should not be partisans. As a matter of fact, they should even be more than bipartisan. They should be nonpartisans. And that has been their tradition of NASA, so like the secretary of defense, you consider that appointment a nonpartisan. So, too, we consider the administrator of NASA a nonpartisan.
I think in this interim with the acting administrator of NASA, that they’re conducting themselves in a very significant way keeping all of the advancements that they have done now to be accelerated with this appropriations bill.
I want to congratulate the whole NASA team. And it has been my argument to the vice president and to the president that in the selection of the next leader of NASA, that they need to again do it in a nonpartisan way so that we can keep us going for this human mission that is going to the planet Mars in the decade of the 2030’s.
Now, with the increase in NASA funding, we now stand on the precipice of a new golden age of exploration and discovery.
In March of this year, several of us were at the White House when the president signed the NASA reauthorization bill. And what we had worked on for the better part of two years keeps NASA on a steady course with a balanced and ambitious mix of science, technology, and exploration initiatives and let’s don’t forget that the first “A” in NASA is aeronautics. It keeps all of that moving forward.
So this additional $368 million of funding for NASA gives that little agency the ability to build off of the momentum that is already there.
So, for example, one of the things in the White House, and I have commended him both privately and publicly, the vice president, he is bringing about the reestablishment of the National Space Council. I shared with him that all of us look forward to working with him and the Council to develop and carry out the ambitious civil, commercial and national security space agenda for this country.
So the $19.65 billion appropriation for NASA coupled with the NASA authorization bill that we already passed a month or two ago demonstrates our firm commitment to one day putting humans on Mars and permanently expanding our civilization out into the cosmos.
We will soon have a regular cadence of missions that are launching to deep space using the Space Launch System, the largest rocket ever, a third more powerful than the Saturn V rocket that took us to the moon. Its spacecraft, Orion, and other systems that will be assembled and launched and a lot of that being done at Florida’s Space Coast.
The first rockets and spacecraft that will start the journey are being assembled right now at various sites across the country. And right now the Space Launch System, the SLS rocket, the Orion spacecraft that sits on top of it, and the launch infrastructure at Cape Canaveral or more specifically the Kennedy Space Center are all in the most challenging stage of their development. These complex systems are all very intertwined and it’s vital that we make sure that NASA has the funding flexibility it needs to address issues as they come up so they can bring about these systems together for the launch in early 2019 of the largest rocket ever.
We’ve asked NASA to look for new ways to expand commercial space activities in earth orbit, and we’re providing NASA the tools and direction it needs to expand our commercial space activity. And we’re on a track to begin launching astronauts to the International Space Station on American rockets commercially made and that’s going to start next year. People don’t realize they thought the space shuttle was being shut down in 2011. They thought that was the end of the space program. No, no. All of is being developed aside from the robotic missions that have been “gee whiz,” the rovers on Mars, all the pictures of the cosmos, I mean, it’s just unbelievable.
Next year we’re going to launch the Hubble to replace the Hubble space telescope which has peered back into the beginning of time. We are going to look back almost to the beginning of time with the James Webb telescope, and all of this is strengthening a flourishing U.S. space industry, especially in the areas where NASA centers are located around the country.
And what’s happening at the Kennedy Space Center is it’s being transformed into a commercial as well as government space port into a busy, busy civil, military, and commercial space port.
So this appropriations budget allows us to continue all of this going on at the same time. We’re going to put up “gee whiz” things like the Wide Field Infrared Survey telescope and also additional Mars rovers, the rovers that are up there show that Mars at one point was warm and wet, and we’re going to find out was there life there and if it was, was it developed and if it was, was it civilized, and if it was, what happened. These are lingering questions as we peer up into the night sky that we wonder.
The funding included in this budget deal moves us ever closer to answering that burning question: are we alone in the universe? And this budget better helps us understand our own planet by funding NASA’s Earth science program as well as funding aeronautics and education programs for our youth. And so the investments that we as a country make in our space program pay immediate dividends in our quality of life right here on earth.
And, of course, the space program creates thousands and thousands and thousands of jobs for skilled workers to build the machines that help us explore the heavens. And jobs for the researchers to understand and interpret what we discover, and jobs for the engineers and the entrepreneurs to develop the new technologies so these public investments also stimulate complimentary investments of private capital and the thousands of jobs that follow from that. And those are companies that will partner with NASA.
So, again, I want to thank our colleagues in both the House and the Senate for their continued support of our space program. In this time when we find ourselves far too divided in our politics, the exploration of space continues to be a powerful force that brings us together into our search as we explore the universe.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: budget deal, funding bump, NASA, Senator Bill Nelson

ICYMI: 100 Floridians Attend CRC Public Hearing in Panama City

Posted on May 4, 2017

Floridians make their voices heard at Gulf Coast State College (GCSC) in Panama City.

Approximately 100 Floridians attended a public hearing held by the Constitution Revision Commission (CRC) on May 3 in Panama City at Gulf Coast State College (GCSC) as part of its, “Floridians Speak, We Listen” statewide tour. At GCSC, more than 50 individual Floridians requested to speak before the CRC. All Floridians who attended the public hearing and wanted to speak were given an opportunity to be heard.
To watch the public hearing held in Panama City, visit the Florida Channel’s website which has a page dedicated to all CRC public hearings and meetings. A complete transcript of the public hearing and appearance forms will be available online at flcrc.gov as soon as possible. The next public hearing held by the CRC will be on Wednesday, May 10, at Florida SouthWestern State College (FSW) in Fort Myers beginning at 5:00 PM ET. Visit flcrc.gov/Meetings/PublicHearings for the schedule of confirmed public hearings and full event details.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Florida Constitution Revision Commission, ICYMI, Panama City, Public Hearing

Florida Supreme Court: Regular Weekly Opinion Release

Posted on May 4, 2017

Filings for the Florida Supreme Court
May 4, 2017

  • SC14-2499 – The Florida Bar v. Phillip J. Brutus
  • SC15-1360 & SC16-6 – John Lee Hampton v. State of Florida and John Lee Hampton v. Julie L. Jones, etc.
  • SC15-1449 – Frank A. Walls v. State of Florida – Corrected Opinion and Notice of Correction
  • SC15-1746 – Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 14-488 Re: Kimberly Michele Shepard
  • SC16-779 – Matthew Marshall v. Julie L. Jones, etc.
  • SC16-899 – Troy Merck, Jr. v. State of Florida
  • SC17-259 – In Re: Amendments to Florida Rule for Certified and Court-Appointed Mediators 10.900
  • SC17-453 – James Armando Card, Sr. v. Julie L. Jones, etc.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Florida Supreme Court, Regular Weekly Opinion Release

ICYMI: WCTV: Gov. Scott Issues Statewide Public Health Emergency Targeting Opioid Crisis

Posted on May 4, 2017

“Gov. Scott Issues Statewide Public Health Emergency Targeting Opioid Crisis”
WCTV (CBS) – Tallahassee, FL
May 3, 2017
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, opioid crisis, statewide public health emergency, WCTV

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