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Friday's Daily Pulse
What you need to know about Florida today
Nearly a million Floridians enroll in Obamacare plans
Insurance enrollment in Florida under Obamacare more than doubled in March to reach 983,775, federal officials disclosed on Thursday. Nearly a third, 31 percent, are under age 35, a sign that younger and healthier patients joined the rush to get insurance, a major goal of the Obama administration. More from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and the AP.
See also:
» Almost 13 million insured under health law
Historic vote in House clears way for noncitizen to practice law
In a historic decision, both houses of the Florida Legislature agreed Thursday that the state Supreme Court should allow a noncitizen to practice law in the state for the first time. Prodded by the court itself, the House voted 79-37 to let Largo resident Jose Manuel Godinez-Samperio practice law. [Source: Tampa Bay Times]
Florida World Trade Month begins
In proclaiming Florida World Trade Month during May, Gov. Rick Scott noted that international business accounts for 17 percent of Florida’s economy and 60,000 businesses located in the state export goods or services. “The impact of international commerce on Florida’s economy cannot be overstated,” the governor said in his proclamation. [Source: Miami Herald]
The best entrepreneurs are masters of cutting to the chase. Entrepreneurs have to be on-purpose, and on-point, all the time. In this environment, patience isn’t exactly a virtue. And tolerance for time-wasting doofuses is rare. [Source: Inc.]
Florida Panhandle starts cleanup amid receding floodwaters
As Florida Panhandle residents and business owners started the long process Thursday of cleaning up as flood waters receded, a food pantry with no space to store canned goods begged donors to give money instead. [Source: AP]
ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:
› Group sues to strip manatee of endangered label
A non-profit legal organization has filed suit to force the federal government to reclassify the manatee from endangered to threatened, reopening the bitter fight over efforts to protect the species from boats.
› New black business listing launches in Jacksonville
A new effort was launched Thursday to engage more African American businesses in Jacksonville to not only have them network with each other but grow their businesses.
› Army taps Lockheed Orlando for $140 million in contracts
From guided weapons to missile radars, Lockheed Martin Corp.'s Orlando missiles group has received three Army contracts – two of them involving foreign military sales - together worth nearly $140 million, the Pentagon said this week.
› Sewing becomes a cool hobby again
At Once Upon a Quilt, a small shop in Davie, the recession wasn't necessarily a bad thing. During a time when many businesses were struggling, Lisa Stevens doubled the size of her quilt store to offer a wider selection of sewing machines, fabric, instructional books and expanded classroom space to accommodate more customers wanting to learn the ins and outs of sewing.
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