Florida Trend | Florida's Business Authority

Monday's Daily Pulse

Florida has had a makeover since last convention in ‘72

When Republicans hold their national convention in Tampa next week, it will be on completely different political terrain than in 1972, when both the GOP and Democrats nominated their presidential candidates in Miami Beach. But one thing hasn't changed over the past four decades: Florida remains the largest state never to have had a presidential or vice presidential nominee for a major party. [Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune]

Related:
» GOP convention shines spotlight on Fla.
» RNC officials: Convention stage will "blow people's minds"
» Officials, media starting to arrive
» RNC protesters have to sleep sometime, but where?
» Online media will star at the conventions


New state standards for students begin

Florida students may not even realize it, but when 2.6 million of them return to school, they will venture into what is sure to be a landmark year in American public education. Beginning with kindergarten and first-grade students this year, Florida over the next three years will transition to tougher new education standards that will change teaching in the classroom, bring an end to the FCAT and, for the first time, allow parents and politicians to measure how well Florida students stack up against those in other states. [Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune]


'Brownfield' companies get tax break without proof of pollution

A state program created to redevelop polluted areas is doling out tax breaks for companies that lease offices in downtown high-rises, build on pastureland and open restaurants on busy highways, even when there is no proof they are on contaminated land. [Source: Orlando Sentinel]


Why businesses move into -- and out of -- Florida

Figuring out why companies move to, or from, Florida has obvious value to those in the economic development business. And so last month the Florida Chamber of Commerce released the results of a new survey that measures opinions about the state's business environment. The survey's respondents were 19 business organizations that either moved to Florida or left the state in the first half of 2011. Read more from the Lakeland Ledger and see the study results from the Florida Chamber of Commerce.


Florida's fastest growing firms shine in new 2012 Inc. 500 rankings

Entrepreneurial grit and small-business smarts were alive and well in Florida during the meanest years of this deep recession. Young companies most likely to prosper and grow quickly in such economic times concentrated on IT services, online services (including cloud computing and Web applications), tech support for the military, medical services, HR services and staffing services. [Source: Tampa Bay Times]


ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Colleges offer more courses aimed at job market
High unemployment and battered household finances have colleges working harder to tie their classroom offerings to job offers. From creating courses to accommodate a new industry to customizing a curriculum to a specific employer’s hiring criteria, schools are pushing to narrow the gap between academia and the real world.

› Fort Myers business consultants help local firms grow
Approximately 90 businesses have received in-depth, confidential business assistance and strategic planning at no cost to the business through the Growth Acceleration Program, a counseling program the Small Business Development Center at FGCU launched in January 2011.

› Jacksonville company in the middle of a project to bring natural gas to vehicles
The plan is nothing if not ambitious: Build 1,000 compressed natural gas fueling stations across the United States. That’s $1 million each for a total cost of $1 billion. Keystone Consulting Group of Jacksonville is part of that partnership dedicated to compressed natural gas, known as CNG, the fuel that many are counting on to help ease U.S. dependence on foreign oil.
» Related: Natural Compressed Gas stations on edge of ‘fuel revolution’

› iDevices inspire inventors
Though it has no official presence — yet — on the Space Coast, Apple Inc. is creating jobs there and stirring up the economy nonetheless. Same with Android. Samsung, too. If these names sound familiar, they are. Just check your smart phone or tablet computer.

Go to page 2 for more stories ...

› Florida highway offers clues to presidential race
Beyond the theme park billboards that promise worlds of fantasy and adventure there is reality along Florida's I-4 corridor that ripples across the state, small measures of struggle and survival in today's sputtering economy.

› Maritime scion to help chart new course for Port of Tampa
The story of Arthur R. Savage's family encompasses the entire history of maritime Tampa. Now Savage is about to play an unprecedented role in charting its future. For the first time, and during a six-year decline in tonnage, key port tenants will have a say in selecting candidates to be port director. The hope is that Savage can help bridge the us-versus-them mentality between port leaders and tenants.

› Population growth key to Gainesville economic fortunes
The key to Gainesville's fortunes will be for the population to grow faster than projected over the next 30 years, according to economist David Denslow.

› Consumer spending rises in Southwest Florida
Southwest Florida’s economic recovery appeared to slow in the second quarter as business and consumer spending fell off the pace set earlier this year.