Category Archives: Florida

Elections Have Consequences: Florida’s Helpless Elderly Lose Their Advocate

Florida Governor Voldemort just fired Brian Lee, the director of the Florida Long-term Care Ombudsman Program, after seven years of holding nursing home operators’ feet to the fire.

What did Brian Lee do to deserve summary dismissal?  Here are some hints from the Herald article:

  • He recently requested “that the state’s 677 nursing homes reveal detailed information on ownership stakes. The request, authorized under new federal healthcare legislation, was designed to provide greater transparency and accountability.”
  • “At a meeting less than two weeks ago with [the Florida Assisted Living Association] FALA, industry leaders wagged their fingers at him and screamed, he said, saying he lacked the authority to insist on sweeping improvements of retirement homes during his group’s inspections of the facilities. Specifically, [Lee] said, FALA officials were upset he was asking owners to prove they had enough food and water on hand in case of an emergency, such as a hurricane.”

via Miami Herald, State’s top elderly advocate removed from job.

This comes on the same day that Gov. Scott announced that public schools — which have been facing cut after cut for years now — will just have to do with $4 billion less. But have no fear, Gov. Voldemort plans to cut corporate taxes, so everything will be fine soon.

Posted in Florida | 1 Comment

This Takes the Cake (Updated)

A fertilizer company just bid (and paid) $10,000 for a cake baked by the 9-year-old daughter of the Florida State Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam (R).

The second-highest bid at the Polk County Youth Fair Auction was $600.

I can’t imagine why they would do that.

The Putnams donated $9,000 of their windfall from The Mosaic Co. to the State Fair.  And kept $1,000.

Via Adam Putnam’s daughter bakes a $10,000 cake via Mosaic Pays Big for Young Putnam’s Cake.

UPDATE (1/28 5:30pm): There’s a whole new version of the story today:

Abigail wanted to give the county fair $9,000, her 4-H Club $500 and keep $500 for herself, the usual going rate for auction cakes. But the award would have violated the state’s gift ban.

And so, Putnam negotiated with Abigail, offering to buy her an iPod instead. She countered that she wanted three iPods, so her sisters, including 7-year-old Emma, could have them as well.

“It’s been extremely awkward and embarrassing,” Putnam said. “And it’s gone viral.”

Meanwhile Mosaic is saying it was all the act of an unauthorized employee, but despite having figured that out, they are “investigating”.

Posted in Florida | Comments Off on This Takes the Cake (Updated)

Is the Florida State Legislature in the Grip of “Nutbags”?

Gimleteye over at Eye on Miami sounds like he is losing it in Nutbags Running The Florida State Legislature: The Cuckoos Nest:

Is the Florida Legislature an insane asylum run by high functioning mentally ill, or, is it a barely legal, criminal syndicate protected by corporate-run political action committees? Whatever, legislators and lobbyists are baying at the moon– these are the business interests– the Florida Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries and jack-ass-in-chief Barney Bishop, Big Ag ie. Big Sugar– promoting legislation that says, in fact, Florida has to live in the stinking mess it created; this sea of pollution that rings the state.

What’s driven Gimleteye so berserk is that the legislature is considering HB 239 which reads in part in section 55(1):

The department, water management districts, and all other state, regional, and local governmental entities may not implement or give any effect to the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s nutrient water quality criteria rules for the state’s lakes and flowing waters, finalized on December 6, 2010, and published in Volume 75, No. 233 of the Federal Register, in any program administered by the department, water management district, or governmental entity.

In other words, the author of this bill, and what Eye on Miami tells us are its powerful supporters, seem to be in the grip of willful ignorance of the Supremacy Clause, Article 6, Sec. 2, of the US Constitution. Or they are just ignoring it. Isn’t this in fact either insanity or insurrection (which is also probably insane, especially in order to help polluters)?

No doubt someone will respond that what we have here is symbolic resistance, and not to get too fussed about it. That the legislators thus violate their oath to “support, protect, and defend the Constitution and Government of the United States” is, this view suggests, a fusty 19th-century view of public obligation and civic rectitude.

I disagree. I think that this sort of unprincipled proposal is enough to drive anyone who cares about this country — or this state — ’round the bend.

Note: I am aware that sec. 55(2) of HB 239 purports to restore a degree of regulatory authority to the state regulatory authorities:

Notwithstanding subsection (1), the department may adopt numeric nutrient water quality criteria for a particular surface water or class of surface waters if the department  determines that such criteria are necessary based on historic and projected nutrient loading trends, existing and forthcoming technology-based nutrient reduction measures, and existing and forthcoming water quality restoration and protection programs applicable to the surface water or class of surface waters.

And that it further qualifies it in 55(3):

(b) The site specific numeric nutrient water quality criteria established pursuant to this subsection are:
1. Not effective if the United States Environmental Protection Agency disapproves, approves in part, or conditions its approval of the criteria.

You could, I suppose, read these qualifications as an invitation to the agency to employ a back door to spontaneously come up with its own standards that ‘just happen’ to track what the EPA wants, or can be persuaded to accept, thus avoiding the constitutional problem. And perhaps it will be sold to legislators that way (although I think other readings are possible too). But that sure isn’t how it would be sold to the public.  And frankly, I think this would be an invitation for a Catch-22 legal challenge claiming, likely plausibly, that the agency had secretly and illegitimately considered the very EPA criteria it was forbidden to enact. Thus, even if the agency were to open the back door it would just reap a long court challenge and garner a likely loss at the end — thus, bottom line, no regulation at all.

Gimleteye may be on to something here, at least if this thing passes.

Posted in Florida, Law: Constitutional Law | 1 Comment

Could Be a Long Four Years

Random Pixels humbly suggests…. a new State Motto:

crEEPY.jpg

Posted in Florida | 16 Comments

Petition for New Leadership of Florida Democratic Party

I know that after a big loss the circular firing squad is not usually the best response.

But here in Florida the leadership of the state party is — based on what it actually does — pretty darn awful.

For now, I'll leave it to others to detail how the party has lost touch with the majority of its core voters, to give detailed thoughts on a future direction, and make five-point arguments why the current state party leadership must go.

My beef is much simpler: a state party that can't be bothered to field a full slate is run by incompetents. Many federal and state offices were not contested by Florida Democrats, leaving the GOP free to spend its money elsewhere. Gov. Dean's “50 state strategy” understood how destructive this preemptive surrender is and also understood that unexpected things happen, making unlikely wins almost inevitable — if you have a candidate. The Florida Democratic party doesn't understand this.

Sign the petition to FIRE KAREN THURMAN NOW and get a new head of the state Democratic party.

Posted in Florida | 4 Comments

Beware of the Dog-Napper

Every political candidate knows not to upset cat-lovers. Now we get a chance to find out how powerful dog-lovers are. It seems that GOP Attorney General candidate Pam Bondi, recent recipient of the coveted Sarah Palin primary endorsement, has a dog problem:

As Bondi runs for attorney general, bitterness over dog lingers:

… Bondi may be best known for a custody battle over a St. Bernard.

Her 16-month fight with the Louisiana family that lost the dog after Hurricane Katrina played out on CNN, Fox News and the pages of People magazine. Then a Hillsborough prosecutor, she accused the family of neglecting the dog. Steve and Dorreen Couture and their two grandchildren wanted their dog back and resented Bondi for keeping him.

Ultimately, the Coutures had to file a lawsuit to get their dog back, and the case settled only just before it went to trial. The terms of the deal were confidential, but Bondi agreed to give the St. Bernard back to the Coutures, and supposedly offered to provide the dog with food and medication for life. Plus she was said to have promised to visit the dog occasionally. The Coutures said they would keep in touch with Bondi and send her dog photos.

But three years later, the Coutures have little good to say about their former foe. Moreover, they say, she never kept her promise.

“She was going to take care of him for the rest of his life and supply him with food and medicine,” Dorreen Couture said recently from her rebuilt home in New Orleans. “She did for the first few months. After that, she was supposed to have her first visitation that September and she canceled.”

Contact dwindled after that, Couture said. And the Coutures didn't reach out to Bondi, either.

“Why should I?” Couture said. “She stole my dog.”

This is the sort of anecdote that can define a candidate. Remember Mitt Romeny's Cruel Canine Vacation? Now the meme may be Pam Bondi 'stole my dog'.

What I want to know is whether people in dog suits will dog her campaign appearances…

Posted in Florida, Politics: 2010 Election | Comments Off on Beware of the Dog-Napper