April 20, 2024

Wednesday's Daily Pulse

What you need to know about Florida today

| 11/14/2018

Florida tried to fix its elections after 2000. Why are today’s recounts so messy?

After the presidential recount in 2000 that helped launch the nickname “Flori-duh” into the nation’s vernacular, state lawmakers passed a sweeping set of election reforms. Yet Florida is once again mired in all the familiar trappings of recount chaos – multiple lawsuits, allegations of fraud lobbed without any evidence and crowds of lawyers and political operatives stationed at supervisors of elections offices. [Source: Orlando Sentinel]

Recount roundup:
» Florida recount: What's true and what's false
» Florida recount chugs along as more irregularities surface
» ‘It is time to move on’: Brenda Snipes talks leaving elections post in Broward County
» New lawsuits may extend recount deadline as Broward finally begins process
» Here’s a handy guide to all those Florida 2018 recount lawsuits
» Palm Beach County’s voting machines overheat and force recount of more than 170,000 votes

Florida Trend Exclusive
Coaching cops: Profile of Lorie Fridell

Ten years ago, Lorie A. Fridell was a University of South Florida professor who was researching bias in policing when she founded a small business that has grown into the biggest provider of bias awareness training for law enforcement officers in North America. [Source: Florida Trend]

See also:
» Next in line? Profile of Kathleen Plinske

Theme park industry has smallest growth in 5 years

An industry group says the global theme park market grew 5 percent last year, but it was the smallest growth in the past five years. The report was released at the trade group's annual convention in Orlando, Florida. It started Monday. [Source: AP]

How is Hurricane Michael recovery affecting Florida's construction industry? Views differ

The post-Andrew rebuilding effort sparked a construction boom and skyrocketing demand for workers in a wide range of trades, including general construction, furniture making, air-conditioning repair, plumbers, electricians, and roofers. Workers from across the nation trekked to South Florida, while prices increased for labor and building materials. The recovery from Hurricane Michael will likely be different. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]

Florida growers anticipate good fall produce deal

Although Hurricane Michael caused major damage to crops in the Florida Panhandle, the central and southern parts of Florida, where the vast majority of the state’s fall produce is grown, were not directly affected by the storm, and growers there anticipated a bountiful fall harvest, barring weather disruptions. [Source: The Packer]

ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Casselberry company hopes to sell sense of touch to theme-park rides
An Orlando tech company that working in haptics will show off some of the work it has done for the amusement park industry at the megashow IAAPA. EAI CEO Gary Zets said his company has already landed its technology in a major theme park ride, though he would not say which one.

› Port Tampa Bay raises CEO Paul Anderson's salary 4.5 percent to $436,720
Port Tampa Bay CEO Paul Anderson on Tuesday got a 4.5 percent raise, taking his salary to $436,720 a year, plus a two-year extension of his contract to the end of 2023. The votes followed an annual review in which the board's six members gave Anderson outstanding job performance ratings, averaging 4.7 on a scale where 5 was the top score.

› No more games: Jacksonville poised for adult arcade moratorium
The Jacksonville City Council is poised to impose a six-month moratorium on adult arcades. Ordinance 2018-680 would ban permitting for so-called internet cafes, a bane to the existence of Jacksonville lawmakers.

› He made Miami love ‘pinchos.’ Now he’s a Forbes 30 under 30
Burger and kebabs aren’t just tasty — they’re the stuff of business prosperity. Nizar Ahmad, 27, co-founder of the Miami-based burger chain Pincho Factory, has been named to Forbes Magazine’s 30 Under 30, an annual list of the country’s top young entrepreneurs.

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About one thousand cereal boxes were lined up by Achieva Credit Union employees in honor of the donations.

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