April 26, 2024

Thursday's Daily Pulse

What You Need to Know About Florida Today

Will Short Gorham | 3/10/2011

Quiet on the Foreclosure Front . . . for Now

None of Florida's metro areas made it into the country's Top 20 list for foreclosure activity in February, according to a new report by RealtyTrac Inc.

A Gallery of Visions

Ocala's Appleton Museum of Art is currently showcasing "Visions of the Gulf," a joint exhibition of paintings by Christopher Still and photographs by Carlton Ward Jr, through March 20. The artists' focus on environmentalism and the unaltered beauty of Florida's natural visual majesty.

Take a brief tour with our photo gallery.

"For the second month in a row, no Florida cities posted foreclosure rates in the top 20 among U.S. metropolitan areas with a population of 200,000 or more," stated the report by the California-based real-estate research firm. "That was in contrast to 2010, when the state accounted for nine of the top 20 metro foreclosure rates." Some of the metro areas filling the spots vacated by Florida cities include: Racine, Wis.; Salt Lake City, Utah; Atlanta; and Detroit. Long positioned in the top three or four states in the country for foreclosures, Florida was in eighth place during February. Nevada, Arizona and California continued to dominate in terms of the number of foreclosure documents filed in their court systems last month, but the Sunshine State also trailed Utah, Idaho, Georgia and Michigan. RealtyTrac spokesman Daren Blomquist said the slowdown in Florida is primarily the result of fallout from recent foreclosure-processing controversies, which led to servicers scrutinizing and resubmitting paperwork and hiring new foreclosure lawyers. [Source: Orlando Sentinel]


Fla. Senate Set for Vote Thursday on Teacher Bill

The Republican-controlled Florida Senate set the stage for a vote on teacher merit pay and tenure by rejecting a proposal to soften the measure Wednesday. What's expected to be a partisan roll call on a modified version of the previously vetoed bill is scheduled Thursday. In Wednesday's debate, Democratic Sen. Bill Montford of Tallahassee tried to amend a ban on tenure for teachers hired after July 1. The amendment would have allowed a series of three-year contracts for highly rated teachers after their third year in the classroom, but it failed on a voice vote. "To me this was a good compromise that allowed those teachers who have been highly effective to be given a sense of job security over a three-year period," said Montford, also CEO of the Florida Association of District School Superintendents. It would give them enough job security to get mortgages and keep them from leaving for other jobs, Montford said. Republicans said it would just be another form of tenure broken into three-year pieces. [Source: AP]

Legislative Roundup:
» Education and Unemployment Top Today's Tallahassee Agenda
» Proposal to Allow Guns on University Campuses Shot Down
» Legislature Takes Aim at Sharia Law
» Space Coast Priorities for Florida Legislature
» Senate Panel Adopts McDonald's-backed Provision Preventing Toy Bans


U.S. Sugar Land Could Be Leased to Another Grower

Citrus growers, not the Everglades, may get some of the earliest benefits from farmland acquired in an environmental restoration deal that cost South Florida taxpayers $197 million. The South Florida Water Management District in October bought 26,800 acres from U.S. Sugar Corp. with plans to eventually put the mix of citrus and sugar cane land to use storing and cleaning stormwater that could help replenish the Everglades. Now the district faces budget cutbacks that threaten to delay the agency's construction projects longer than expected. On Wednesday, the district's board agreed to explore leasing out an almost 18,000-acre chunk of the land it bought to citrus growers or another agricultural operation. The citrus land in Hendry County was supposed to be some of the first of the U.S. Sugar property that the district put to use for Everglades restoration. When the land deal was approved in October, early estimates projected that Everglades restoration work could start on some of the property within two to five years. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]


Barbecue Is a Smokin' Hot Trend

The Great Recession has been a blessing for Tampa Bay barbecue lovers. While other restaurants closed or struggled to keep the doors open, barbecue flourished. It makes sense: Barbecue is casual, comforting, all-American and affordable.

PICNICS & MORE
Picnics & More has a unique BBQ offering: mullet.
So many places opened in the last year or so that the Times recruited a couple of certified experts to help investigate. Ray "Dr. BBQ" Lampe is the author of Dr. BBQ's Big-Time Barbecue Cookbook and was a judge on the Food Network show Tailgate Warriors with Guy Fieri. John "Ribdog'' Verville teaches barbecue classes at the Rolling Pin in Brandon and has been judging barbecue contests for more than 12 years. Both cook competitively and are master judges certified by the Kansas City Barbecue Society. "To me, BBQ is primal,'' Verville says. "It appeals to our inner primal desires, which is why so many diners consider it their comfort food.'' And, he points out, it's indigenous to North America. Barbecue is not complicated: It's meat (or fish) slow-cooked over smoke. The differences can be subtle and depend on the type of wood, cut of meat, sauce and geography. [Source: St. Petersburg Times]


Drugmaker Offers Florida $1M for Pill Mill Database

The manufacturer of the pain drug OxyContin on Wednesday offered Florida $1 million to set up a controversial computer system that would help crack down on pill mills. Purdue Pharma's offer did not appear to sway Florida Gov. Rick Scott and Republican legislators who are moving to kill the database. Scott and allies said they still oppose the system because there's no long-term funding source and they fear it would intrude on medical privacy. The company has lobbied lawmakers in many states to start databases to monitor pain-pill prescriptions. But Florida is the only place the company has offered money, officials said, partly because the state has a deep problem with rogue pain clinics supplying millions of narcotic pills to dealers and addicts across the South. "We understand that the governor of Florida is facing difficult choices and financial constraints that may prevent the state from implementing its prescription drug monitoring program," said John H. Stewart, the company's president and chief executive. "We appreciate the financial position, but at the same time, believe that a prescription drug monitoring program in Florida can help curb prescription drug abuse in that state and in other states as well," Stewart said. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]


ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Miami No. 1 in Healthcare Costs
Once again a new survey shows Miami has by far the highest healthcare costs in the nation. A study by Kaiser Health News of the latest available Medicare data shows that the costs of the average Miami senior's healthcare beats out any area of the country. The Miami senior averaged $18,199 in 2008, according to the report. That's twice the national average. Adjusted for higher local wages and other factors, the Miami cost is $10,145 — 35 percent higher than the national average. McAllen, Texas, which has occasionally rivaled Miami in high costs, showed an average of $14,940 in actual costs in the latest survey. Fort Lauderdale came in at $11,677 (128 percent of national average) for actual costs and $9,016 (120 percent) for adjusted costs.

› Carnival Bringing Third Ship to Port Canaveral
Carnival Cruise Lines, the world's largest cruise company, will base a third ship at Port Canaveral. Miami-based Carnival will bring its ship, the Ecstasy, to Port Canaveral and begin cruises possibly as early as this November, officials said today. The ship, currently based in Galveston, Texas, has a 2,056-guest capacity and a crew of 920. Initially the ship will go to cruise terminal No. 3 and then later be moved to cruise terminal No. 6, which should be completed by June 2012. The Ecstasy would be Carnival's third home-ported ship at Port Canaveral, joining the Sensation and the Dream. "It has the potential of generating between $4 million to $5 million in annual revenues for the port," said J. Stanley Payne, the chief executive of the Canaveral Port Authority. Port Canaveral, which bills itself as the world's second busiest cruise port, has spent the last few years burnishing its cruise operations and making capital improvements to accommodate larger vessels.

› No Ann Scott First Lady Doll in Pasco's Pioneer Florida Museum
The dolls are decked out in period dress, from bonnets and hoopskirts to slender black gowns, with every detail authentic down to the fabrics and the corsets.

Florida's Finances
Pipes Florida's Budget: An Interactive Flash presentation - Find out where Florida's money comes from, where it goes and learn about the state's cash cows.
» The State's Budget
For years the one-of-a-kind collection of Florida first lady dolls has delighted schoolchildren and others who visit the Pioneer Florida Museum north of Dade City. Only now, one thing is missing: Florida's newest first lady, Ann Scott.

› Disney Will End Grad Nite for High Schoolers
This spring will see the last Grad Nite celebrations at Magic Kingdom, Walt Disney World announced Wednesday. Disney World says the increase in theme park attendance in the spring has made scheduling the after-hours, separate-ticket event for high school seniors increasingly difficult. As an alternative, Disney will offer Florida school groups a special one-day, one-park ticket for $55 valid any time during the year. "Over the years, we've signficantly increased the frequency and types of programming offered specifically for students," Walt Disney World spokeswoman Andrea Finger said. Sports competitions, performing art workshops, festivals and educational programs give students access to Disney "virtually any time of the year," she said. Live performances have been a hallmark of the event. Musical acts have included Britney Spears, Miami Sound Machine, Katy Perry, Oingo Boingo, Ne-Yo, New Kids on the Block, Backstreet Boys, Paramore and Boys Like Girls.

› Expert: Miami-Dade Might Get Nothing for Jackson Health
One of Miami-Dade's top financial minds is warning that the Boston healthcare company that has expressed interest in buying Jackson Health System may be offering to take over the public hospitals without paying the county anything. In its letters to Miami-Dade leaders, Steward Health Care Systems of Boston has said the deal would yield an investment by the company of "over $1 billion directly to the communities of Miami-Dade County." But Leo Guzman, head of Coral Gables-based Guzman & Co., points out that "nowhere in the 'proposal' does it spell out that Steward intends to pay for these assets." Guzman & Co. specializes in institutional brokerage and investment banking and is a member of the New York Stock Exchange. Steward spokesman Bruce Rubin characterized the talks differently: "Steward's latter of interest proposed, subject to due diligence, putting a total of $1.1 billion into the hospital, which is losing hundreds of millions of dollars every year and is a growing burden on the residents and taxpayers of Miami-Dade County." Specifically, Steward's letters says it might "absorb" Jackson's debt — about $500 million — and invest $600 million in capital improvements.

› Georgia Asks Appeals Court to Overturn Water Ruling
A long-running dispute threatening metro Atlanta's main water supply for 3 million people went before appellate judges Wednesday who suggested they could revise or overturn a looming order that would severely restrict the city's use of water from Lake Lanier. Georgia wants the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a lower court ruling that would restrict metro Atlanta's access to water drawn from the dammed lake on the Chattahoochee River to levels last seen in the 1970s, when the city was far smaller. That order from U.S. District Court Judge Paul Magnuson takes effect in July 2012 unless Georgia reaches a settlement with neighboring Alabama and Florida. Georgia's neighbors argue that metro Atlanta takes too much water upstream, leaving too little for people and businesses farther south and harming shellfish beds fed by Florida's Apalachicola River, which is formed by the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers.


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