Florida News Connection
January 31, 2020
TALLAHASSEE - This week, Florida's Capitol was jam-packed with the sticky hands of children to force policymakers to take note of their needs.
The annual "Children's Week" kicked off last Sunday, with an event known as the "hanging of the hands" in the Capitol Rotunda. Tens of thousands of pieces of colorful "hand art" decorated by children and their teachers became the center of attention.Speaking on The Rotunda Podcast, Alan Abramowitz - executive director of Florida's Guardian ad Litem program - says the artwork and having kids barnstorm the Capitol is an effective strategy.
"Every legislator, every policymaker will see those and know that our priority are children," says Abramowitz. "And it just so happens that this week is budget week, the budgets are coming out."
The Florida Senate released its initial budget of almost $93 billion yesterday. It includes across-the-board pay raises for state employees and more money for teacher salaries. The House is expected to release its full budget, as Abramowitz advocates for full funding for the state's children's programs.
To cap off Children's Week, First Lady Casey DeSantis announced the formation of a "Children's Corner" in the library of the governor's mansion on Thursday. Abramowitz says he sees a coordinated effort by the governor and the Florida Department of Children and Families' secretary to keep kids out of the foster-care system.
"The governor and Secretary Poppell have put together a package that doesn't just focus on foster care," says Abramowitz. "Because if a child enters foster care, they've already been abused, abandoned and neglected. They're looking at prevention. How do we keep families together?"
The governor's proposed budget provides more than $1.2 billion dollars in funding, an increase of just over $132 million over Fiscal Year 2018-19 for early childhood education. The budget plan released Thursday is a first step. Senate and House negotiators will hammer out a final budget before the session ends March 13
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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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