Ah, Florida - words fail me II

Huckleberry

All-American
Nov 9, 2004
4,586
10,533
187
Jacksonville, FL
Washington Post gift link

A tale of two states: Arizona and Florida diverge on expanding kids’ health insurance
Both want to expand Children’s Health Insurance Program eligibility, but their approaches to charging low-income families premiums showcase an ideological divide.
 

Huckleberry

All-American
Nov 9, 2004
4,586
10,533
187
Jacksonville, FL

Citizens insurance hike reveals Florida's needless cruelty to those in need

In just about 26 minutes on Wednesday, the well-to-do group of political appointees who oversee Citizens Property Insurance Corp., Florida's state-backed insurer of last resort, approved drastic rate increases for policyholders who renew next year, equating to hundreds of dollars in extra premium costs for most of the insurer's 1.2 million customers.

That short meeting perfectly encapsulated the corporate cruelty of Florida government: That Citizens is inflicting pain on its customers is no accident. Judged by the prevailing mood during Wednesday's board of governors meeting, it was a reason to celebrate.

And that's because the state's elected leaders don't see Citizens, Florida's largest insurer, as a powerful tool to help floundering homeowners in Florida's failed insurance market but as an albatross, and they don't view its customers as people in need but as numbers on a spreadsheet they'd rather delete. Instead of leveraging a viable public insurance option to help homeowners who are drowning in skyrocketing costs, state officials are myopically focused on kicking them off it. The result is "depopulation," a clinical euphemism that in practice means coercing Citizens customers into entering a chaotic private marketplace that has failed Floridians for years, and in which they may well end up paying even higher rates.
 
  • Crying
Reactions: Maudiemae

Huckleberry

All-American
Nov 9, 2004
4,586
10,533
187
Jacksonville, FL
We can only guess at DeSantis' strange hostility toward arts and culture funding, but it's difficult to avoid concluding he must view Florida's cultural institutions as a threat to the peculiar political culture he is trying to cultivate instead.

Some of the larger line items Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed last week out of the $116 billion budget were about $32 million for arts, culture and museum grants and related projects, a stunning blow to hundreds of organizations across the sprawling state: children's choruses, opera houses, symphonies, theatres, zoological societies, cultural councils. This was a cruel, crude and first-of-its-kind across-the-board gutting the governor didn't even try to justify. We can only guess at DeSantis' strange hostility toward arts and culture funding, but it's difficult to avoid concluding from this blackout that DeSantis must view Florida's cultural institutions as a threat to the peculiar political culture he is trying to cultivate instead — a reactionary and spartan one.

The governor bragged about his nearly $1 billion in vetoes, which he said helped keep the budget for the next fiscal year below this year's spending. That eye-rolling technicality — cheap, talking-point gimmickry — came with an enormous cost in a state chock-full of needs. It's also bad fiscal management and self-sabotage: arts and culture spending has a meaningful return on investment. “The state has an overall nine-to-one return on investment from these grants that generate hundreds of millions in tax revenue and fuel our local economy,” Carlos Guillermo Smith, who just won a Central Florida state Senate seat, told USA Today Network reporter John Kennedy.

Beyond the erasure of arts and culture spending, the larger list of vetoes is a curious hodgepodge of cuts. There is no discernible logic to them, save for the logic of selfishness. Why veto money for a 911 console replacement project for Nassau County? Or funds for a new fire station in Deltona and Clay County? Could the budget not sustain a mere $500,000 outlay for a public-safety complex in Brevard? What would he say about having vetoed $250,000 for mental-health services for firefighters and police?

What was it about a Black history month 5k in Orlando, or a veterans wall in Newberry, that drew his red ink?

It can't all be attributed to fiscal prudence because the budget is still crammed with largesse, expensive giveaways, and dubious vanity projects, like $75 million for a UF campus in Jacksonville, a passion of DeSantis ally and megadeveloper Mori Hosseini.

Why allow for the inclusion of $6 million to help a Jacksonville charter school build a gym, but nix $305,000 for a reading and math program for the Gulf County Schools, or a meager $172,000 to help the Suwanee School District pay for barricades for doors? (Well, that charter school was founded by a prolific Republican donor.)
 

Huckleberry

All-American
Nov 9, 2004
4,586
10,533
187
Jacksonville, FL

During press conference Gov Ron DeSantis was asked about veto of $26m in cultural/arts grants. He said he did it because some money would have gone to "inappropriate" outfits such as the "Fringe Festival" & the Legislature needs to "reevaluate" how's that done ...

Here are the details:

The Legislature sets aside money for projects that go through a process that includes evaluation by a council appointed by the governor/Legislature. The Sec. of State - also appointed by governor - also reviews list before it goes to Legislature

Lastly, the list of recommended projects is usually longer than what the Legislature winds up funding. This year's list had 630 projects and a total ask of $54.5 million. But the Legislature only funded $26 million

The list of projects is funded in the budget as a lump sum and does not break out individual items. So the governor cannot single out one project and veto funding for that. ...

That said the spreadsheet on Dept of State website indicates that $ for Fringe Festival in Orlando and Tampa were ranked 314 & 473 on list. The spreadsheet indicates that the first 257 projects would have exhausted the $26m allocated by lawmakers

DeSantis in his remarks where he mentioned Fringe Festival, which he said had inappropriate sexual content, said "How many of you think your tax dollars should go to fund that? When I see money spent that way I have to be the one to stand up for taxpayers."
 

Crimson1967

Hall of Fame
Nov 22, 2011
19,135
10,586
187
So when a kid lets go of a balloon their parents spent $20 on at Disney World, will the cops be there to write a ticket?
 

Bazza

TideFans Legend
Oct 1, 2011
37,258
23,946
187
New Smyrna Beach, Florida
I don't believe in the death penalty....but would be in favor of some way of prohibiting certain nutjobs from having children - or at least leaving children in their care...... :rolleyes:

 

N.al-tider

3rd Team
Mar 18, 2024
286
309
72
It's no different than an anti-littering law, IMO.
One can be written a citation for throwing out a cigarette butt or even a candy wrapper. I doubt any LEO would write a ticket for releasing a balloon even though it is probably more damaging to the environment.
 

New Posts

TideFans.shop - NEW Stuff!


Purchases made through our TideFans.shop and Amazon.com links may result in a commission being paid to TideFans.