April 28, 2024

Monday's Daily Pulse

What you need to know about Florida today

| 1/22/2024

Florida’s governor ends his presidential campaign

Ron DeSantis ended his 2024 presidential campaign on Sunday, less than 48 hours before the New Hampshire primary, a contest that he had virtually no chance of winning. The decision comes less than a week after DeSantis finished in a distant second-place in the Iowa caucuses. In a video posted online just two hours before a scheduled campaign stop in Manchester, N.H., DeSantis acknowledged that he had no path forward in the 2024 presidential race. More from the Tampa Bay Times, the Miami Herald, the Tallahassee Democrat, and the Gainesville Sun.

The drug shortages Floridians will face in 2024. Here’s what you should know

The pandemic may be over, but drug shortages are not. From cancer drugs to ADHD medications, drug shortages threaten to disrupt treatment for short-term diseases and chronic illness, and potentially threaten people’s health. In South Florida, the shortages have some people going from pharmacy to pharmacy to get their prescription filled. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]

Thanks to eased restrictions, craft distilleries on rise in Florida

David Cohen has watched the number of licensed distilleries in Florida roughly triple since he opened Jacksonville-based Manifest Distilling in 2016, growing from about 30 to more nearly 100 today. Cohen is the president of the Florida Craft Spirits Association, a group of 50-plus distillers supporting development of the industry statewide. [Source: Jacksonville Daily Record]

A Miccosukee-led plan could finally end new oil drilling efforts in the Everglades

A new plan, hatched by the Miccosukee tribe and a nonprofit, might mean the end of future prospecting and drilling on hundreds of thousands of acres of land within Big Cypress, a crucial part of Florida’s Everglades. The deal, which has been quietly in the works for nearly two years, includes an inked agreement with the politically powerful family that holds all the rights to hunt for oil and gas within the preserve’s boundaries. And this time, the Miccosukee feel like success is in sight. [Source: Miami Herald]

They studied, passed the exam but were denied nursing licenses. Is Florida at fault?

A number of Florida nursing candidates have been burned after attending private, for-profit schools, which, in some cases, can have shaky accreditations and disappear overnight. It’s happening at a time when nurses are in short supply. According to Nurses.org, a clearing house for those in the profession, Florida is in the top five states projected to have the largest shortage of nurses. [Source: Miami Herald]

ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Metro Jacksonville unemployment falls to 2.9% in December, the lowest since May
Jacksonville’s unemployment rate fell slightly in December to its lowest level since May, the Florida Department of Commerce reported Jan. 19. However, job growth slowed in Northeast Florida. The jobless rate in the Jacksonville metropolitan area of Baker, Clay, Duval, Nassau and St. Johns counties fell from 3% in November to 2.9% in December, the lowest since it was 2.7% in May.

› What’s next for ousted Tampa state attorney after favorable court ruling?
Earlier this month, two bombshells dropped in the case of Hillsborough County State Attorney Andrew Warren, who was booted from office by Gov. Ron DeSantis and has been battling in the courts to win his job back. Warren announced Jan. 8 he wouldn’t run in November because, he said, DeSantis would likely suspend him again if he won. It sounded like farewell. But two days later, a federal appeals court ruled in Warren’s favor.

› Investigators are looking into Miami Mayor Francis Suarez’s lucrative side jobs
County investigators are making inquiries into a wide array of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez’s private business relationships, according to new records that highlight the broad scope of an ongoing probe into the mayor’s work outside City Hall. Now, a public records request filed this month with the city indicates that investigators are casting a much wider net than previously known, and looking into at least 11 of Suarez’s other side jobs.

› Birds and their fest flock back to Space Coast, a sign of a healing lagoon
As the seagrass that is the foundation of the lagoon's ecosystem died off in recent years, the migratory birds that had been calling Brevard home stopped coming. COVID-19 seemed to put a final nail in the coffin of the festival, which had been one of the world's premier birding events. But a boost in birds, thanks to seagrass and other signs of renewed lagoon life, means a return of the birders and the festival, along with flutters of their much-coveted "eco-cash."

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