TALLAHASSEE – At the direction of Governor Ron DeSantis, the Department of Education released the proposed Florida B.E.S.T. (Benchmarks for Excellent Student Thinking) Standards for English Language Arts (ELA) and Mathematics, and announced that Common Core has been officially eradicated from Florida classrooms. The Commissioner is recommending that the State Board of Education formally adopt these standards February 12.
“Florida has officially eliminated Common Core. I truly think this is a great next step for students, teachers, and parents,” said Governor Ron DeSantis. “We’ve developed clear and concise expectations for students at every grade level and allow teachers the opportunity to do what they love most – inspire young Floridians to achieve their greatest potential. These standards create pathways for students that lead to great college and professional outcomes and parents will now be able to reinforce what their children are learn in the classroom every day. Florida’s B.E.S.T. Standards were made by Florida teachers for Florida students, and I know they will be a model for the rest of the nation.”
“Governor DeSantis made it very clear that we had to reimagine the pathway to young Floridians becoming great citizens, and we’ve done exactly that with the B.E.S.T. Standards,” said Commissioner of Education Richard Corcoran. “Florida will be the first state in the nation with an ELA booklist that spans grades K-12, the first state in the nation with a civics booklist embedded in its ELA standards, and a state that has dropped the crazy math. Florida has completely removed ourselves from the confines of Common Core.”
The Florida B.E.S.T. Standards are posted at http://www.fldoe.org/standardsreview.
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2025 ELECTION RESULTS
City Commission Seat 3:
Tristan Grunder (Incumbent): 587
Julie Ann Tapia-Ruano: 279
Questions on the Ballot:
No. 1
Charter Amendment
Updating Commission Seat Information
Shall the Charter be amended to remove the names of former commissioners that previously held the seats and designate when the current term ends for each Commission seat?
Yes: 615
No: 182
No. 2
Charter Amendment
Updating Commission Salaries
Shall the City’s Charter be updated to allow for the salary of commissioners to continue at the same rate for the subsequent fiscal year in the event the commission does not act to change or continue their salaries?
Yes: 647
No: 172
No. 3
Charter Amendment
Updating Term Limits for the Mayor
Shall the City’s Charter be updated to limit the Mayor’s term to one year or until such time that a successor is elected and that no commissioner shall hold the position of Mayor for consecutive terms unless by a supermajority vote of the then-sitting commission?
Yes: 576
No: 244
No. 4
Charter Amendment
Updating Notice for Special Called Meetings and Definition of Special and Emergency Meetings
Shall the City’s Charter be updated to require not less than three days’ notice for special meetings and define special meetings and emergency meetings?
Yes: 717
No: 101
No. 5
Charter Amendment
Disallowing Single Individual from Holding the Position of City Manager and City Clerk
Shall the City’s Charter be amended to delete the provision that allows a single individual from serving as both the City Manager and the City Clerk?
Yes: 659
No: 154
No. 1
Code Amendment
Amending On-Premises Alcoholic Consumption Hours and Business Classifications
Shall Sections 10-2(c)-(e) of the City’s Code of Ordinances be amended to permit businesses that derive 51 percent of its gross revenue from the sale of food and nonalcoholic beverages, and breweries, businesses that manufacture malt beverages on site, with a beverage license to sell alcoholic beverages and malt beverages, respectively, for on-premises consumption Monday through Saturday from 7:00 a.m. to 12:00 a.m., and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.?
Yes: 622
No: 206


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