May 3, 2024

Monday's Daily Pulse

What You Need to Know About Florida Today

Will Short Gorham | 7/19/2010

Luring Jobs is Worth the Initial Costs

A $26 million nursing operation. A 75,000-square-foot light manufacturing plant. An insurance company headquarters. These are among the job-producing prospects being dangled in Sarasota County these days, prospects that could help tip a troubled and meandering commercial real estate market in a healthy direction. Commercial real estate has a direct benefit from creation of work, but the rest of the economy gains from it, too. [Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune]


Theme Parks Hope to Strike Gold with "Ultra-affluent"

The economy could be teetering on the edge of a double-dip recession, and Orlando's theme parks are still tossing discounts at reluctant travelers. But there are encouraging signs from at least one small segment of consumers: The super rich. New data compiled by credit-card giant American Express Co. suggests that what the company calls "ultra-affluent" consumers are beginning to open their wallets wider when inside theme parks — much more so than everyone else. [Source: Orlando Sentinel]


Aerosonic Poised to Shed bad Karma, Take Flight

Aerosonic Corp., a Clearwater airplane instruments maker, appears to be setting a new course to success, having completed a profitable year not long after a series of setbacks, including a devastating fire that destroyed critical equipment and allegations of executive fraud. [Source: St. Petersburg Times]


Crist, Not Drilling, May Be Target of Special Session

Amid mounting bitterness between the independent governor and Republican legislators, a special session prompted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill will open Tuesday. But rather than focus on a referendum to ban offshore drilling in the Florida Constitution, as the governor wants, the gathering is likely to be a gripe session with most of the rhetoric aimed not at BP or the oil industry, but at Crist himself. Crist might not say so publicly, but that's just fine with him. He wants to use Tallahassee politicians as a foil, and lawmakers appear to be playing into his hands. [Source: Times/Herald]


Oil Disaster Roundup:

» Seepage Detected Near Well [Miami Herald]
» Florida's Point Man Draws Praise [St. Petersburg Times]
» RICO Law Made to Combat Mafia Used in BP Lawsuits [AP]
» Busy Lab Yields Answers to Beach Communities [St. Petersburg Times]
» Flying Over the Leak Site with a Coast Guard Crew [WUSF]


ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Crist Applauds Florida’s Number One Workforce Ranking
Florida has been ranked number one in the nation for its workforce. The ranking came in CNBC’s fourth annual America’s Top States for Business rankings -- a study of all 50 states that examines 10 different categories, including workforce, to measure each state’s ability to attract businesses. Florida moved up from the number three spot in 2009, reclaiming the number-one ranking the state held in 2008.
RELATED:
» Florida's Business Climate Gets Mixed Reviews
» America's Top States for Business 2010 Rankings

› Jackson Lab Could Jolt SW Florida Economy
In the picturesque tourist destination in coastal Maine, lobsters and moose are the town's unofficial mascots. But the mouse may just be king. Bar Harbor, population 4,800, is home to the 81-year-old Jackson Laboratory - a global leader in genetics research, thanks in large part to its specially bred mice, and one of eastern Maine's largest employers. Now, the lab stands to receive $260 million in taxpayer money to build another research campus on 50 acres in eastern Collier County. Supporters say Jackson Lab would be an economic engine in Southwest Florida, just as it has been up north. Opponents complain of the possible tax increases that would bring the lab to Collier County. Not even Maine was willing to do that, they note.

› Employee Theft a Pressing Issue for Businesses
Businesses are getting robbed and the perpetrator is often on the payroll. Businesses are 15 times more likely to be defrauded by employees than non-employees, according to the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB), a small business lobbying group. And, when employees steal, it can be disastrous for the bottom line. In fact, 30 percent of business failures are related to employee theft or fraud, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce.

› Foreclosures Bring Wealth, Rebukes for Fla. Lawyer
You could call him the foreclosure king of Florida. As lawyer for several major banks, David J. Stern handles 20 percent of all foreclosure cases in the nation's fourth most populous state. It is from Stern's law firm that well over 100,000 Floridians have received the dreaded notice to pay up or face losing their homes. The foreclosure business has been good to Stern, who lives in a $15 million Fort Lauderdale mansion and reaped $58.5 million by selling his back-office operations to a new public company in which he is a major shareholder. But as his case load has grown, so have the controversies.

› Biltmore, Gables Wrangle Over Past-due Rent
The Biltmore Hotel, which in its 84-year history has housed kings and queens, movie stars, wounded veterans from World War II and even an occasional gangster or two, is having trouble paying its bills. Its revenues are off by nearly 25 percent, its operating profits are down by more than 50 percent, and it hasn't paid rent to its landlord -- the city of Coral Gables -- since April 2009. Its rent tab: $2.3 million and growing.

› COLUMN: Interesting Companies Lurk Under Radar
CounterBalance Corp., a maker of "modular torsion spring systems," has just entered an exclusive contract with the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive Command, called TACOM, to provide upper rear door torsion bars in M1117 armored security vehicles. The great thing about Southwest Florida's business community is you just never know what interesting companies you're going to find out there.



Go to page 2 for more stories ...

Florida Business News

Florida News Releases

Florida Trend Video Pick

Watch how the climate apprentices protect Miami-Dade's native habitats
Watch how the climate apprentices protect Miami-Dade's native habitats

Between the White House launching the nascent American Climate Corps program and Miami-Dade County seeking $70M to bankroll climate technology careers, the “green jobs” industry in South Florida finally shows signs of taking off.

 

Video Picks | Viewpoints@FloridaTrend

Ballot Box

Do you think recreational marijuana should be legal in Florida?

  • Yes, I'm in favor of legalizing marijuana
  • Absolutely not
  • I'm on the fence
  • Other (share thoughts in the comment section below)

See Results

Florida Trend Media Company
490 1st Ave S
St Petersburg, FL 33701
727.821.5800

© Copyright 2024 Trend Magazines Inc. All rights reserved.