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Ocoee, Satellite Beach look to enter into agreements with ICE

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www.clickorlando.com – Catherine Silver – 2025-03-19 14:38:00

SUMMARY: The city of Ocoee, Florida, has approved an agreement allowing selected law enforcement personnel to be trained by ICE under the 287(g) program, enabling them to enforce immigration laws. While there was minimal discussion during the vote, documents outline their new powers, including questioning individuals about immigration status and making arrests related to immigration violations. Meanwhile, the city of Satellite Beach will also consider a similar agreement. Critics, including the Florida Immigrant Coalition, argue that such programs have led to racial profiling and impose financial burdens on taxpayers, emphasizing local officials should reflect community values in their decisions.

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News from the South - Florida News Feed

Senate unanimously approves rural Florida schools, roads, business package

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floridaphoenix.com – Jay Waagmeester – 2025-03-19 17:42:00

Senate unanimously approves rural Florida schools, roads, business package

by Jay Waagmeester, Florida Phoenix
March 19, 2025

Rural communities are a step closer to a “buffet” of grants, loans, and administrative support for roads, schools, and businesses.

SB 110, dubbed by Senate President Ben Albritton as the Rural Renaissance, received unanimous support on the Senate floor Wednesday. It now heads to the House. 

The measure would create the Office of Rural Prosperity within the Department of Commerce and provide grants focused on infrastructure, housing, and incentives to teachers, doctors, and nurses to practice in rural areas.

The package has a $200.8 million price tag. 

Albritton, of Wauchula, said the bill is not a mandate for rural areas but instead a “buffet” of opportunities for communities to “be able to grow the way they want to.”

Albritton said the bill is meant to be a “hand up, not a handout,” calling it “quintessential” in what government is meant to do.

Sen. Corey Simon, who represents several rural counties in North Florida, sponsored the legislation.

“I can tell you, driving around my district in the 12 counties that are impacted by it, this is a real game changer, this is really taking a sledgehammer to a lack of prosperity in some of these communities,” Simon said. 

The bill would redirect about $51 million to fiscally constrained counties in general revenue funding. 

“These are the communities that do not come and ask for everything,” Sen. Don Gaetz said. “These are the communities who do not expect everything. They don’t think they’re entitled. They still have that ethic that says, ‘We ought to be able to take care of ourselves as much as possible. And while we’re at it, maybe we’ll take care of our neighbors too.’ 

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The Office of Rural Prosperity would provide planning assistance for local governments and operate liaison centers for locals to connect to state and federal grants and resources. 

The bill would provide $1 million annual block grants focused on population growth for each of the eight counties in the state that have lost population in the last 10 years — Gadsden, Hardee, Taylor, Jackson, Calhoun, Liberty, Madison, and Lafayette — until their population increases for three consecutive years. 

The bill would boost the State Housing Initiative Partnership minimum distribution to counties to $1 million from $350,000, totaling a nearly $19 million increase, according to Albritton’s office

The bill redirects a portion of vehicle licensing fees to small county road assistance and aids in funding roads commonly used to carry goods to market, redirecting more than $65 million of general revenue to rural roads.

Teachers would be eligible for a student loan repayment program under the bill, up to $15,000 if they teach for five years. 

The bill aims to increase medical services offered in rural areas including mobile units for primary care, behavioral health, obstetric, and gynecological services. 

Sen. Kathleen Passidomo called it an “amazing, amazing bill.”

“This is going to create the framework for our rural communities to grow and thrive their way. We’re not telling them what we want them to do. We’re saying, ‘Here are the tools, … here’s what you can do, decide what you want to do,’” Passidomo said, adding that the legislation “is a legacy that will stand forever.”

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Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.

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Florida lawmakers consider no fault auto insurance

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www.youtube.com – ABC Action News – 2025-03-19 14:00:34

SUMMARY: Florida lawmakers are considering repealing the state’s no fault auto insurance system to potentially reduce rising premiums for drivers. Currently, Florida requires minimal property and personal injury protection, which limits lawsuit claims when accidents occur. Advocates argue that a switch to a fault-based system, as proposed in HB 1181, would improve benefits and reduce costs over time by decreasing fraud. However, opposition from Governor Ron DeSantis, who vetoed a similar repeal in 2021, raises concerns about potential rate increases due to mandated coverage. Lawmakers remain divided, with some pushing for further discussion on the proposed changes.

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Poll finds 82% of Florida voters want to stop foreign donations | Florida

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-19 13:16:00

(The Center Square) – A new poll by Honest Elections Project Action found that 82% of Florida voters want foreign contributions toward ballot initiatives to stop.

The nonprofit surveyed 800 likely voters in the Sunshine State on March 9-11, with half of those on phone and the other online and a margin of error of 3.46%.

While state law bans campaign contributions for candidates running for office, there is no prohibition on them providing money for ballot initiatives. 

Honest Elections Project Action cited an example of the Sixteen Thirty Fund, a progressive group funded by Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss that it says has spent $130 million in offshore funds in 26 states, with more than $18.4 million spent on Amendment 3. 

“The threat of foreign funding in ballot issue campaigns is real, particularly in Florida,” Jason Snead, the executive director of Honest Elections Project Action, told The Center Square. “States across the country are taking action to close the foreign influence loophole, and it’s clear Florida voters believe they should as well.”

A ban on foreign participation in ballot initiatives crosses party lines. Agreement on a moratorium includes 85% of Republicans, 83% of independents, and 78% of Democrats. 

Not surprisingly, the poll says 76% of Floridians would be less likely to vote for a ballot initiative if it was supported by overseas cash. 

More than half (51%) of respondents said they were concerned that foreign adversaries such as China and Russia could exploit the loophole and amend Florida’s constitution. 

“Just like everywhere across the country, the idea of closing the foreign influence loophole is incredibly popular in Florida,” Americans for Public Trust Executive Director Caitlin Sutherland told The Center Square. “This isn’t hypothetical: Foreign-backed money flowed to a major ballot measure campaign in Florida just last year. Sunshine State legislators should move quickly to close this foreign influence loophole, as have many other states across the country.”

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has called on lawmakers to reform the state’s ballot initiative process after two political organizations raised hundreds of millions for their causes. 

There are several bills in the process aiming to reform the state’s ballot initiative process.

Two of those measures, House Bill 1381 and Senate Bill 1414 sponsored respectively by Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka, R-Fort Myers, and Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, R-Spring Hill, would close the foreign contribution loophole for ballot initiatives among other changes. 

Hundreds of millions of dollars were spent to support two unsuccessful ballot measures that would have enshrined recreational marijuana and abortion rights into the state’s constitution. 

As previously reported, Safe & Smart Florida raised $153 million for Amendment 3, most of it (nearly $145 million) coming from cannabis retailer Trulieve, according to data from the secretary of state’s office.

Floridians Protecting Freedom put Amendment 4 on the ballot and the group received $108 million in contributions, according to state data, with most of those funds coming from the Service Employees International Union and the American Civil Liberties Union.

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