News from the South - Florida News Feed
Last-second bartering yielded two education omnibus bills
by Jay Waagmeester, Florida Phoenix
May 5, 2025
Two bills contained the bulk of education policy that passed through both legislative chambers, negotiated until the final hours of the scheduled regular session on Friday.
Lawmakers couldn’t agree to lift the secrecy of university presidential searches, lift labor restrictions for minors, or to implement a full ban on cellphones in high schools, although they did find common ground on requiring parental consent for corporal punishment.
HB 1255 and HB 1105 served as the main vehicles for education policy, combining several shorter proposals from throughout the session.
Florida made headlines as the first state to ban cellphone use during instructional time in 2023. The Legislature extended that policy this session, banning cellphone use for elementary and middle school students from the beginning of the school day to the end. Lawmakers approved a state pilot study in six counties to evaluate a bell-to-bell ban in high schools.
Graduation-relation
Pending the governor’s signature, students would no longer be allowed to earn certificates of completion. These state certificates are for students who earn the credits to graduate but too low a grade point average or fail required math and reading assessments. Lawmakers applauded junking these certificates through legislation filed by Rep. Susan Valdes for raising the bar for student achievement.
The certificate of completion is less prestigious than a diploma and can carry little, if any, weight in landing a student a job, lawmakers said.
Students with autism may have a better chance to secure work if the governor signs the bill, too.
HB 1105 would create a workforce credential for students with autism to prove to employers they are proficient in certain skills, particularly workplace safety.
“Persons with autism are on time, they have a great work ethic, and they can perform work requirements proficiently, especially repetitive skills,” Sen. Don Gaetz said in February. “There’s a place for employees with autism in the workforce in productive jobs, but a major stumbling block is safety.”
The program would task the Department of Education to create badges, which would be verified by special education staff, to document a student’s abilities.
HB 1105, which passed the Senate 26-5 and the House 85-14, would also allow students who participate in two years of marching band to count them toward the one-credit physical education requirement. Existing law allows two full seasons of varsity or junior varsity sports to count toward the physical education requirement.
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More K-12 measures
Lawmakers agreed to require parental consent for corporal punishment, a practice that some lawmakers said they were not aware still existed in Florida but, during the 2023-2024 school year, 17 school districts reported 516 instances of corporal punishment, according to Department of Education data.
Principals are responsible for developing corporal punishment policy. State law does require that more than one adult be present when corporal punishment is being inflicted.
HB 1255 would allow law enforcement officers to arrest someone for trespassing on a school bus, a measure aiming to protect not just students but bus drivers, too.
Charter schools
Democrats often pushed back against GOP bills addressing how charter schools function, leading to some of the most heated debates of the legislative session.
In the final packages were provisions lowering the threshold needed to turn a low-performing traditional public school into a “job-engine” charter school — one meant to attract jobs to a community— and another that includes charter schools as recipients of local government infrastructure surtaxes.
Existing law requires more than 50% of teachers and parents both to vote to convert a traditional public school into a job-engine charter school. The Legislature voted, over Democrats’ protests, to eliminate the need teacher approval and rely on parent approval instead.
The legislation renames Hillsborough Community College as Hillsborough College; requires high schoolers to learn about the costs of postsecondary education and how to complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, plus how to apply for scholarships, grants, and student loans; and makes charter school teachers eligible for teacher of the year awards, a proposal Gov. Ron DeSantis made.
HB 1225 would have lifted several state laws protecting minors in the workplace. That bill passed the House but died in the Senate after it received just one committee hearing.
SB 1692 would have revised the state definition of material that can be considered harmful to minors. Its companion HB 1539 passed the House but, like lifting labor restrictions, made little progress in the Senate.
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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.
The post Last-second bartering yielded two education omnibus bills appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content presents education policy decisions primarily aligned with conservative or center-right legislative priorities, such as stricter controls on schools, parental consent requirements for corporal punishment, and expanding charter school powers while limiting certain labor protections for minors. The article covers these policies in a factual tone without overt criticism or praise, but the focus on GOP-led legislative actions and the presence of Governor DeSantis’s initiatives underscores a center-right political leaning in the framing of education reforms in Florida.
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Slovakia’s leader rejects an EU plan to halt Russian natural gas imports by the end of 2027
SUMMARY: Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico criticized the EU’s plan to end Russian natural gas imports by 2027, calling it “absolutely unacceptable” and threatening a veto. The European Commission aims to ban new Russian gas contracts by the end of 2024 and phase out existing ones by 2027 to cut revenue for Putin’s war in Ukraine. Slovakia, which has a gas deal with Russia until 2034, warns this will raise gas prices and seeks compensation if the plan proceeds. Fico, known for his pro-Russia stance, also opposes halting oil and nuclear fuel imports from Russia and supports close ties with Moscow despite domestic protests.
The post Slovakia’s leader rejects an EU plan to halt Russian natural gas imports by the end of 2027 appeared first on www.news4jax.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
DeSantis derides House panel studying a property tax cut as ‘dog & pony show’
by Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
May 6, 2025
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis spoke out during a press availability in Miami on Tuesday to take more verbal shots at Florida House Republicans — this time regarding the select committee studying a potential cut in property taxes formed by House Speaker Daniel Perez, which convened for the first time on Friday.
The Florida Legislature extended its regular legislative session that day because the House and Senate have yet to agree on a balanced budget, although the leaders said that they had “reached a framework” for a plan that includes $2.8 billion in tax relief.
DeSantis and Perez have been sniping at each other since before the regular legislative session began in March, a startling development between fellow Republicans that has rocked the political establishment in Tallahassee. Their feud now revolves around a policy dispute about whether Floridians should get a property tax cut or a sales tax reduction.
The 37-member Select Committee on Property Taxes will meet over the next seven months with the goal of crafting a constitutional amendment to place on the November 2026 ballot.
The governor was not impressed.
“What the House Leadership did — the last day of the legislative session, on Friday — convened a committee of 37 people, including some of the most left-wing Democrats in the state of Florida,” he said Tuesday. “You shouldn’t be trying to resurrect the Democratic Party when you have a three-to-one majority. You should be winning and continuing our wins.”
Among those named to the committee were some of the most progressive Democratic members of the Florida House, including Orlando’s Anna Eskamani, as well as Dianne Hart and Michele Rayner from the Tampa Bay area.
“If you have a legislative body who’s creating a 37-member committee, they’re not doing that because they want to give you property tax relief,” DeSantis said.
“They’re doing that to try to kill property tax relief, so this is a total dog-and-pony show. This is not anything that is credible. The fact that you would wait until the last day of the legislative session — that just shows your cards. It shows what you’re trying to. That’s not what the voters sent any of these guys there to do. They want relief from property taxes, and we have an opportunity to do that.”
DeSantis ridiculed both chambers for failing to come up with a budget by last week, in time for the 72-hour “cooling off” period required in state law before voting on it by the end of the regular session, which was supposed to end last Friday but now has been extended until June 6.
“It’s honestly not that hard to do any of this stuff,” DeSantis said dismissively. “You know what you do? You just look back at what’s been done over the last six years. … You just look at that, and you basically copy and paste.”
Soak the snowbirds
Perez offered a $5 billion tax cut earlier this year — a plan that DeSantis has dismissed as giving a tax break for Canadians and other visitors, and not a “Florida-first” plan.
The governor at one point entertained an idea to give property owners a tax break of approximately $1,000 this year, while also maintaining his original desire to completely eliminate property taxes through a constitutional amendment to be decided by the voters in the fall of 2026.
But Perez said last week, “Unfortunately, as the weeks have gone by, the governor has yet to come forward with any specific answers to those questions or with any specific plan or with actual bill language.”
Condo crisis
DeSantis also weighed in on legislation that will soon come to his desk to address rising fees for condominium unit owners.
The bill (HB 913) passed unanimously in both the House and Senate and will allow condominium associations to secure credit lines and invest funds to pay for building repairs instead of immediately raising large amounts of cash from owners.
The governor said he likes the final product, but was still miffed that the Legislature didn’t act when he asked them to deal with the situation in a special session in January.
A Miami reporter asked DeSantis what he made of the decision two weeks ago by then-Democratic Senate Leader Jason Pizzo to leave the party and become a political independent.
The governor took the opportunity to slam the fact that two Democrats (Reps. Susan Valdés and Hillary Cassel) have jettisoned that party and flipped to the GOP in the past six months.
“People realize they can’t get elected unless they have an ‘R’ by their name, so you have people who are smuggling their leftism into the Republican Party,” he said.
“So, they have an ‘R’ by their name, but they’re not governing as Rs, and the fact that you would have an almost 3:1 House majority, and they tried to deep six our immigration enforcement in January, and wanted to do a sanctuary bill with a 3:1 majority, and they brought in Democrats to change party labels but they still vote very liberal, so they haven’t had an epiphany. It’s just more of a pathway to power.”
There are 86 Republicans in the Florida House and 33 Democrats.
DeSantis went on to suggest that some House Republicans are actually “motivated’ by “leftism,” adding, “You can put whatever lipstick you want on that, but leftism is a pig. Putting lipstick on it, it’s still a pig, guys.”
The Phoenix reached out to Speaker Perez’s office for a response, but did not immediately hear back.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
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.
The post DeSantis derides House panel studying a property tax cut as ‘dog & pony show’ appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Right-Leaning
This content presents Governor Ron DeSantis and his political stance in a predominantly positive light while portraying his criticisms of House Republicans and Democrats in a manner consistent with conservative, Republican talking points. The article highlights DeSantis’ emphasis on tax cuts, opposition to perceived left-wing influence in the legislature, and a focus on a limited-government, pro-tax relief agenda. The language and framing lean toward supporting conservative viewpoints, though it retains some balance by quoting other political actors and providing context to the disagreements.
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Trump administration offers $1,000 to self-deport
SUMMARY: The Trump administration is offering $1,000 to undocumented immigrants who self-deport using a new app, the CVP Home app, replacing a previous program. This initiative aims to save the federal government about 70% in costs, as deportation expenses average $17,000 per person, while self-deportation plus travel assistance costs about $4,500. Despite the financial incentive, many, like immigrant Francisco, remain skeptical and unwilling to leave. Around 7,000 people have used the app so far. Critics say the program highlights weak participation, and details about payment methods remain unclear. Immigration experts caution against false hopes of reentry.

The Trump administration announced Monday it will offer free airline tickets and a $1,000 incentive to some unauthorized immigrants if they sign up for self-deportation and return to their home countries voluntarily.
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