May 5, 2024

Monday's Daily Pulse

What you need to know about Florida today

| 2/10/2020

Florida Trend Exclusive
Florida millennials are moving back to the burbs

Mirroring a national shift to the suburbs, growth in most of Florida’s largest cities and urban counties has slowed. For the subset of buyers in Florida who are Millennials, the Census evidence of a similar shift is inconclusive, but builders have sensed opportunity in a massive generation forming households and having children. [Source: Florida Trend]

Space Coast has once-in-a-generation opportunity to support new type of commercial space business

Fifty years ago, an exceptional generation of men and women helped launch Americans into space and land NASA astronauts on the Moon. Today, the next generation of space travel is increasing the launch tempo on Florida’s Space Coast and creating new business opportunities for launch support services that have not been seen before. [Source: Space Coast Daily]

Iowa debacle could make Florida primary more important

The Democratic presidential nominating contest got off to a disastrous start last week when the Iowa caucus experienced a complete meltdown, but the candidates don’t have time to dwell on what happened in the caucus calamity. New Hampshire votes Tuesday, and Democrats in other states — including Florida — already are casting early ballots. Florida elections supervisors sent vote-by-mail ballots to military and overseas presidential primary voters at the beginning of February, and domestic ballots started going out last week. [Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune]

Miami is the “most vulnerable” coastal city worldwide

Florida’s next two decades could be more disruptive than any period in its history as climate change threatens the state’s 8,500-mile coastline and chews away at its $1 trillion economy. New modeling by Resources for the Future, a nonpartisan economic think tank, reveals that “100-year floods” could occur every few years rather than once a century in many locations, endangering an additional 300,000 homes, 2,500 miles of roadways, 30 schools and four hospitals. [Source: Scientific American]

Tricky questions emerge for employers over medical marijuana in the workplace

A rapidly evolving set of state and local laws have reshaped the legal landscape concerning the use of marijuana. Once prohibited in all 50 states, marijuana has now gained some form of legality in all but three states. Yet the drug remains illegal under federal law. Because of these disparities, tricky questions have emerged for employers. [Source: Miami Herald]

ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Miami’s Chinese New Year festival has been canceled. Coronavirus fears are to blame
The popular Chinese New Year Festival event that traditionally draws thousands to the Miami Dade College campus in Kendall for 32 years has been canceled. Officially the reasoning for the cancellation of the festival that was planned for Feb. 16 was given in vague fashion in a statement issued Friday: “In order to stand with the global family of Asia — especially China, the Asian-American Advisory Board regrets to announce the Chinese Cultural Foundation has decided to cancel the 2020 Chinese New Year Festival.”

› Facebook sued by Tampa workers who say they suffered trauma from watching videos
Content moderators view the worst of the internet. In a new lawsuit, they say the job damaged their mental health and blame Facebook and subcontractor Cognizant for not following safety standards

› Double-digit profit gains at three Southwest Florida banks
Southwest Florida’s three established community banks posted higher profits in 2019, while the region’s newest lender reported the expected loss. Sabal Palm Bank of Sarasota, Charlotte State Bank & Trust and Englewood Bank & Trust each put up double-digit earnings gains for the year, according to newly filed reports with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

› Florida travelers may get free orange juice again, thanks to Senate’s proposed budget
Travelers might again get a free cup of Florida’s homegrown beverage when they cross the state line, through funding tucked in the Senate’s proposed budget. But helping the Department of Citrus bring back free orange juice could hinge on a bigger debate, as the operations of state welcome centers remain locked in a legislative battle about the fate of the tourism-marketing agency Visit Florida.

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