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Tuesday's Daily Pulse

Shoppers getting an early start on holidays

Florida residents may be starting their holiday shopping earlier than ever. Typically, about 40 percent of consumers nationwide start holiday shopping before Halloween, said Kathy Grannis, spokeswoman for the National Retail Federation. "There is some reason to believe that shoppers are getting started earlier this year than last," Grannis said. Some Florida stores are already feeling an increase in traffic and seeing people making big purchases. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]


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Training Camp

The Jacksonville Regional Political Leadership Institute is the brainchild of Mark Mills and John McReynolds, two former aides to U.S. Sen. Connie Mack. As Mills tells it, the two old friends were bemoaning the declining quality of public leaders and the challenges created by term limits and decided "there had to be a candidate-focused program" that could help prepare business-minded candidates for the rigors of campaigning and elected office. Read more...

Jacksonville Regional Political Leadership Institute
Politics 101 at the Jacksonville Regional Political Leadership Institute. Participants learn how to file for office and are briefed on public budgeting, economic development and strategies for balancing public and personal life, among other topics. [Photo: Ken McCray]


International tide lifts South Florida real estate market

South Florida is already the nation's epicenter for residential real estate sales to foreign buyers, and experts said Monday that they expect those international sales to be even stronger in 2012. "You have a unique opportunity for the next few years,'' Moe Veissi, the president-elect of the National Association of Realtors, told more than 200 people gathered for the 17th Miami International Real Estate Conference at The Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables. "You are at the juxtaposition of the best global real estate market we've ever seen in this country.'' [Source: Miami Herald]


Fake weed and fake cocaine makers skirt Florida bans

Florida's fight against fake marijuana and fake cocaine is heating up. Yet as police try to put the drug makers and sellers behind bars, most are slipping through their fingers, skirting state and federal bans of their products and still raking in the money.

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Interactive Map
Earlier this year, alarming reports of overdoses from the products led the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and Florida legislators to outlaw a long list of chemicals found in fake weed and fake cocaine. But drug manufacturers are one step ahead of police, changing the chemical compounds just enough to beat the bans. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]


Florida private prison fight puts state on defense

The state has twice squared off in court with a union for prison workers. Twice the union has won and the state has lost. Is the state prepared to lose a third time? The Florida Police Benevolent Association is trying to prevent the state from hiring a private vendor to run 29 South Florida prisons, an idea hatched by the Legislature and approved by Gov. Rick Scott. [Source: St. Petersburg Times]


ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Disney track to feature exotic sports cars you can drive
There will be a brand-new thrill ride at Walt Disney World beginning in mid-January, but it won't be what you'd expect. The Richard Petty Driving Experience, which already offers stock car drives at the Disney World Speedway, will begin offering rides in exotic cars such as Ferraris and Lamborghinis. The new option is coming, in part, because the stock car business, including NASCAR, has contracted in the tough economy.

› USF Poly spends $10,000 on sci-fi figures
USF Polytechnic was looking for a way to make its business incubators "something different, innovative, progressive and creative." They found Captain James T. Kirk, with his confident gaze and slicked-back 1960s hair. And much more: ET, an Imperial Storm Trooper and Darth Vader, complete with cape and attached light saber. Polytechnic, it turns out, spent $10,000 to buy life-size "museum quality" recreations of the four sci-fi characters earlier this year.

› To keep young talent, Tampa Bay needs to get 'cool' before economy rebounds
What Tampa Bay needs are more ways to be "cool" to young, talented adults, says Nielsen Co. executive vice president Bob McCann, who runs the 3,000-plus employee media rating/consumer research business in Oldsmar. Sound familiar? It's the mantra muttered in every aspiring metro area in the United States. And despite some positive strides, Tampa Bay — like most metro areas across the eastern U.S. (exception: Washington, D.C.) — remains a follower, not a leader when it comes to conjuring ways to attract and keep young adult talent.

› New Florida bill would end NFL blackouts
A bill introduced by a Florida legislator would end NFL television blackouts in the state. Republican State Sen. Mike Fasano of New Port Richey filed a bill (SB 836) Friday requiring Florida's three National Football League teams to televise all home games whether they're sold out or not. The NFL franchises are in Jacksonville, Miami and Tampa. The proposal applies to any teams using facilities that receive tax dollars.



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› Baptist announces $60 million expansion
Baptist Cardiac and Vascular Institute announced Monday it is planning a campaign to raise $60 million for a new capital expansion campaign to expand its facilities at the Baptist Hospital campus in Kendall. The 10-year plan includes new spaces to integrate spaces interventional cardiology, vascular surgery, heart surgery and interventional radiology to prepare for future innovations. In most hospitals, these disciplines are set apart. The project will include developing a Center for Aneurysm Therapy.

› Bergeron lawyer applies for jai-alai in Weston
A lawyer for developer Ron Bergeron wants to bring jai-alai — and maybe slots and poker — to Weston. David Romanik filed a 42-page application with the Florida Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering on Friday, listing Bergeron as the majority owner. It also included a description of where a fronton would be built: on 65 acres near U.S. 27 in Weston. "I happen to think the Weston market is probably the last untapped market for gambling, at least in Broward," Romanik said. "So it's worth a shot."

› Carnival Ecstacy cruises into Port Canaveral
The Carnival Ecstasy arrived at Port Canaveral Monday evening, becoming the third Carnival cruise ship to be based here, joining the Dream and the Sensation. Canaveral Port Authority Chief Executive Officer J. Stanley Payne said the Ecstasy being based at Port Canaveral will create a more than $50 million-a-year economic impact for the Space Coast.

› Fresh rival for Chick-fil-A
Short for "pretty darned quick," PDQ is a new fast-food chain specializing in Chick-fil-A staples like chicken tenders, chicken salads and chicken sandwiches cooked up by an Outback Steakhouse co-founder. "We bring good-tasting food made from scratch to the quick serve chicken arena," said Bob Basham, who spent a year and $3 million creating the startup. "The only freezers on premises are icemakers for drinks." After a week, the first PDQ is off to quick start.

› Prison Book Project ministry faces last chapter
If a local mall closes, an established ministry aimed at getting books in the hands of jail prisoners may also have to shut its doors. "That's my biggest worry," said Ray Hall, founder of the Prison Book Project — an outreach that began 18 years ago with the goal of delivering 1,000 books to the Brevard County Jail. When Titusville resident Hall first started delivering wholesome books and Bibles to the local jail, he never thought his efforts would eventually grow into a full-time endeavor reaching all 50 states and even to soldiers stationed in the Middle East.

› Forum held to debate merits of casino gambling in South Florida
Key lawmakers and gaming executives discussed bringing casino gambling to South Florida during a forum Monday at Jungle Island. The event, hosted by the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, allowed participants to ask questions and vote in a straw poll.