April 29, 2024

Monday's Daily Pulse

What you need to know about Florida today

| 2/5/2024

Florida Retail Federation urges shoppers to show Florida love for Valentine’s Day

There are many reasons to love Florida, and the Florida Retail Federation (FRF) has launched a campaign to remind Sunshine State residents that when it comes to buying Valentine’s Day gifts, they should stick to Florida businesses. The National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates at least 53% of consumers across America plan to buy gifts for their loved ones for the unofficial holiday on Feb. 14. On average, those customers will likely spend $181.81 each on Valentine’s Day goodies. The organization projects this year’s Feb. 14 will see some $14.2 billion spent on those gifts across the country. [Source: Florida Politics]

It may surprise you where Florida ranks on a recent study of best states to retire

The Sunshine State has long had a reputation as being a Mecca for retirees. According to one recent study, that’s not the case anymore. States like Delaware, Mississippi and Iowa ranked higher than Florida on Retirement Living’s list of 2024 best states for retirement. In fact, Florida barely made the top 10 coming in at No. 8. [Source: Florida Today]

After two years of hefty increases, will auto insurance rates in Florida stabilize in 2024?

Florida motorists are hoping that auto insurance rates in 2024 follow the old adage that what goes up must surely come down. Of course, the term “down” is subjective when it comes to insurance costs, with the most optimistic definition meaning a lower rate of increase this year compared to the past two years. And has it ever increased. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]

Commentary: Here’s how Florida can help U.S. weather the ‘trilemma’

Part of the reconceptualization of U.S. policy is an overdue shift away from thinking along an east-west axis in favor of southern engagement, especially toward the Caribbean and Latin America. Florida, which serves as America’s business gateway to the rest of the hemisphere, is poised to play an important role. [Source: Tampa Bay Times]

Will immigration crackdown in Texas cause Florida businesses to struggle?

El Mariachi restaurant is now back on its feet. "We have new people working here," El Mariachi co-owner Stefany Delgado said. "We have more new customers." The restaurant worried it would be losing customers last year. That’s when many kitchen workers fled Florida in the wake of a comprehensive immigration law calling on penalties for businesses who hired the undocumented. Months later, Stefany Delgado worries about how her new workers see Florida's role in the latest immigration crackdown at the Texas border. More from  WFLXand WPTV.

ALSO AROUND FLORIDA:

› Businesses see more customers as families visit Orlando for Olympic Marathon trials
Central Floridians and people from across the country came to Orlando, also known as "The City Beautiful," to show their support for Team USA. People in the Milk District cheered from the sidelines as the nation's top runners competed for the Summer 2024 Olympics.

› Tampa International Airport CEO emphasizes regionalism as he prepares for retirement
When Joe Lopano was promoted from mail room clerk to a management position at the beginning of his aviation career, his colleagues threw a big party at an Irish pub. Decades later, another celebration is in order. The 69-year-old Lopano announced Thursday he would be retiring as the CEO of Tampa International Airport when his contract ends in April 2025. He was one of the highest-paid airport CEOs in the country.

› Hallowed ground: Lost Apollo 1 astronauts memorialized at long-abandoned Launch Complex 34
Officials mothballed LC-34 in November 1971. Today, the few surviving structures bear the strange geometric symmetry of a lost civilization, including the domed blockhouse measuring 120 feet in diameter. Astronauts Memorial Foundation officials hope to expand the annual Apollo 1 memorial service — traditionally limited to invitation-only small groups — to include more people at this site considered hallowed ground by many NASA supporters.

› An Orange County neighborhood ripped out its septic tanks to protect Wekiwa Springs. Now it’s sorry.
Mike King helped persuade skeptical neighbors in Sweetwater West five years ago to sign onto a mammoth sewer project — at their personal expense — to protect the delicate Wekiwa Springs from septic-system pollution. The gated community of more than 180 homes was the first of 17 neighborhoods in Orange County near the springs to buy into a septic-to-sewer conversion, a multiphase project originally estimated to cost $123 million. But now, more than two years after bulldozers rolled in, King and many other residents have regrets.

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