Category: florida

  • A buoy positioned roughly 40 miles south of Miami recorded a sea surface temperature of 101.1°F earlier this week, stunning scientists who say the reading could mark the latest in a string of global records as fossil fuel-driven extreme weather around the world brings unprecedented heat. Meteorologist Jeff Masters wrote that the temperature in Florida’s Manatee Bay reached hot tub levels on Monday…

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  • PragerU, a far right organization that purports to create educational content, has been approved to provide Florida classrooms with “learning materials” next year, despite not being accredited. The company, which was founded in 2009 by right-wing radio host Dennis Prager, has pushed anti-immigrant theories, downplayed the role of racism in U.S. history and modern society…

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  • A group of people hold signs and banners. One sign reads, “Wake up,” and includes a drawing of the Earth in flames.

    Every day, thousands of tons of trash – rotten food, takeout containers, diapers, old shoes, construction debris, tires, plastic bags, soiled carpet and lawn clippings – burst into flame and turn to ash and energy at an incinerator in Palm Beach County, Florida. 

    “Right there is probably about 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit,” said Ray Schauer, the facility operations director, looking at the incinerator’s combustion chamber during a tour in May. “Most people say, ‘If I could see hell, this is what it would look like.’ ”

    As the trash burns, the municipal incinerator produces enough electricity to power about 45,000 homes and businesses. It also pumps out some of the same kinds of greenhouse gases and other pollutants as power plants that use fossil fuels. But because there’s always more garbage to feed the plant, the electricity it produces can be considered renewable.

    The combustion chamber at the Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County’s trash incinerator in West Palm Beach, Fla. Credit: Najib Aminy/Reveal

    That means the incinerator can also sell something more theoretical: renewable energy certificates, or RECs. 

    A REC represents a megawatt hour of renewable energy – enough electricity to power the average U.S. home for a little over a month. But the energy itself isn’t what’s being bought and sold. Instead, REC purchasers – usually companies – buy the right to take credit for green power they’re not actually using. As a result, they lower their carbon emissions – at least on paper – and can keep using the same old fossil fuel-powered electricity.

    In 2021, a New York City-based REC seller named Joe Barclay offered to buy the trash incinerator’s certificates for about 30 cents each.

    Companies showcasing their green credentials usually wanted to buy Green-e certified RECs from wind turbines, which generate power without emissions, and could cost up to 20 times as much. But the trash incinerator RECs don’t meet any certification standard, Barclay told Schauer in an email, and hardly anyone wanted to buy them. 

    Barclay happened to know some buyers who would accept incinerator RECs, “and they are the only buyers that I’m aware of that can,” he wrote.

    It wasn’t much, but it was easy money, so the Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County, which runs the incinerator, took the deal, and Barclay bought the RECs in bulk. Last year, he sold them for four times the original cost to his willing buyer: the United States government.

    As the world teeters on the edge of climate calamity, this is how the federal government – the biggest energy consumer in the country – has been meeting its mandate to move away from fossil fuels.

    Under the green veneer of the government’s renewable energy claims lie controversial, polluting power generators that expose the flaws and folly of the government’s reliance on RECs to pad its environmental stats.

    Despite years of mounting evidence that RECs don’t help fight climate change, federal agencies have kept buying their way into compliance without changing the way they get the vast majority of their electricity.

    As the Florida incinerator RECs demonstrate, it looks on paper like a win-win. Federal agencies can say they’ve gotten greener, and renewable energy producers get a bit of extra money for energy they were already producing. But with no change to the amount of greenhouse gases warming the Earth, the only loser in the transaction is the climate.

    Modest goals met with questionable RECs

    The federal government has enough buying power that it could lead the way to a broader, national transition to clean energy. 

    Instead, it has been leaning on RECs to meet modest environmental goals since a 2005 law signed by President George W. Bush required federal agencies to use 3% renewable energy. That figure rose to 7.5% in 2013 and hasn’t changed since. Any renewable electricity produced on federal land counts twice, as an incentive. But the law doesn’t mandate that agencies actually use renewable energy directly. So the government has relied for more than a decade on cheaper “unbundled” RECs that are sold separately from the electricity. 

    A hand-painted sign reads: “Biden, declare climate emergency.” The time on “The Climate Clock” in the background is 6 years, 364 days, 23 hours, 43 minutes, 21 seconds.
    An activist holds a sign beneath “The Climate Clock​” in New York City in July 2022. The clock shows how much time is left to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Credit: Michael Nigro/Sipa USA via Associated Press

    The Department of Energy said that in 2021, the most recent year for which data is available, the federal government outperformed the law, with 10% renewable electricity. But that number has little to do with how government buildings were actually powered. 

    Take out RECs, and that number goes down to 6%. And without the double-counting bonus, the total shrinks even more. 

    The actual renewable electricity the government bought or generated that year amounted to just 3%.

    In fact, RECs accounted for more than half of all the renewable energy the government claimed from 2010 to 2021, federal data shows. The government wouldn’t have met its mandate without RECs in any single year. 

    While most were from wind power, more than a quarter of RECs purchased came from biomass – energy produced by burning natural materials like wood and mulch, which can pollute the air in nearby communities. Another 2% came from trash incinerators. Fewer than 1% were from solar energy. 

    By filing dozens of Freedom of Information Act requests with federal agencies, Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting obtained many of the certificates the government uses to make its renewable energy claims, with details about the facilities where the RECs were produced.

    In recent years, numerous federal agencies bought RECs from wood-burning biomass plants in rural Georgia communities, where residents complained of toxic pollution. They also bought RECs from a mill run by International Paper in Campti, Louisiana, that burns its own industrial byproduct to power the mill – in effect, subsidizing one of the world’s largest paper companies for something it was doing anyway.

    But it was in 2022 that agencies invested more heavily in incinerator RECs, which are less reputable than even controversial biomass RECs and are considered too dirty by the Environmental Protection Agency to be “green power.” The EPA spurns them in a program to encourage green initiatives at private companies because of the environmental impacts of burning non-natural materials like plastics.  

    Claws grab garbage from a giant pit to transfer it to boilers.
    At the trash incinerator in Palm Beach County, Fla., claws grab garbage from a giant pit and transfer it to boilers, where it will be burned to generate electricity. Credit: Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County

    Reveal requested detailed information from every federal agency that bought at least 10,000 RECs in 2021, including how much the RECs cost and where they came from. We received price details for a quarter of the government’s REC purchases, showing an average cost of just under $2 per REC. At that price, it would cost about $22 to cover the annual power use from the average U.S. home.

    President Joe Biden has ordered a dramatic change to how the government buys power, mandating 100% clean electricity by 2030 and making it harder for agencies to meet the target without meaningfully changing their practices. But as a far-off goal without congressional approval, it could fall apart if Biden is not reelected next year.

    Crucially, the government would have to break its longstanding, frequent habit of choosing the cheapest way to look good on paper. That hasn’t happened yet. In fall 2022, nine months after Biden laid out his carbon-pollution-free plan, the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce and Energy, as well as NASA, the U.S. Air Force and the National Institutes of Health, spent at least $372,000 on hundreds of thousands of incinerator RECs.

    The NIH spent almost $100,000 on RECS to call its North Carolina environmental health laboratory a “net-zero energy” campus, to show its “long-standing commitment to promote the health of the community and the planet.” More than two-thirds came from the paper mill and incinerator. 

    A spokesperson said the agency complies with government mandates and does not choose what kind of REC to purchase, though records show it had a variety of choices. 

    Representatives for the Department of Agriculture and NASA told Reveal their purchases met government standards. The U.S. Air Force says it purchases “the most cost-effective RECs.” A Department of Energy spokesperson said RECs purchased before Biden’s order were chosen under an old policy that’s “no longer operative,” but wouldn’t comment on why it bought incinerator RECs after the order. The Department of Commerce didn’t answer questions. 

    Market to incentivize renewable energy doesn’t live up to promise

    Tradable renewable energy certificates were first invented in the 1990s to put a price tag on greenness. Compared to fossil fuels, it was more expensive and less profitable for energy companies to build new wind and solar projects then. Selling certificates would bring in an extra revenue stream.

    Plus, for other companies that wanted to go green, buying certificates was a much easier, more accessible way to get renewable energy. Corporate buyers could cut their carbon footprints without changing how they got electricity. 

    So in theory, the REC market would fund energy producers, signal demand for green power and incentivize the creation of more renewable energy. 

    The Environmental Protection Agency boosted the REC market by giving it the government’s stamp of approval and lavishing positive publicity and awards on companies that bought lots of RECs. The EPA even bought enough RECs in 2006 to call itself “the first federal agency to be powered 100% green.” 

    “At EPA, we don’t just talk the talk, we walk the walk,” said then-Administrator Stephen Johnson.

    The idea behind RECs, though, was deflated years ago. The sales of cheap, unbundled RECs weren’t enough to stimulate investment in new renewable energy. News stories and academics blasted the concept as ineffective, creating a misleading sense of progress in cutting emissions and potentially distracting from more effective measures to fight climate change.

    Major corporations like Google and Walmart decided against purchasing them. “RECs were cheap, and I think the adage ‘you get what you pay for’ applied,” Bill Weihl, the former green energy czar at Google, said in an email. 

    And yet despite the burgeoning noise of critics, the EPA remained a strong proponent of RECs, and federal agencies kept gobbling them up. 

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency promotes renewable energy certificates.

    Meanwhile, scientists have been warning that the world is running out of time to avoid the worst ravages of climate change. Greenhouse gas emissions need to be cut nearly in half by 2030 in order to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Every fraction of a degree above that brings increasingly severe suffering: worsening heatwaves, fires, floods, storms, drought and hunger.

    Government-purchased RECs tied to pollution, community uproar

    In Florida, the Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County brought its new $672 million incinerator online in 2015, over the objections of some residents, who worried about toxic pollution, and local environmentalists, who argued against burning trash at all. 

    The waste agency called it the cleanest, greenest, most advanced waste-to-energy facility in the world, with state-of-the-art pollution control technology that keeps emissions below EPA limits. Agency officials pointed to research that argues incinerators are better for the climate than landfills and had a study prepared that predicted no significant health effects to the local community. 

    Portrait of Andrew Byrd
    Andrew Byrd of Riviera Beach, Fla., says he worries about the fumes from burning garbage. Credit: Najib Aminy/Reveal

    Andrew Byrd lives nearby in Riviera Beach, a historically Black city in Palm Beach County. He said he remembers sand dunes there when he was in elementary school. Now, there’s an industrial park, a power plant and, a short drive away, the incinerator. He worries about the fumes from burning garbage.

    “It’s affecting the health of everyone,” Byrd said. “I could tell you a thousand ways you could have generated the same amount of power (other) than burning trash.”

    He thinks the government buying RECs from the incinerator isn’t helping the environment.

    “The notion of selling RECs is a false economy,” Byrd said.

    The Palm Beach incinerator emits hundreds of thousands of tons of carbon dioxide a year, and the synthetic materials in the trash alone release carbon at a similar rate to the national electric grid. Its rate of releasing other harmful gases – nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide – is even worse than an average gas-fueled power plant, though the waste agency argues this isn’t a fair comparison. 

    The incinerator was the latest, but not the only controversial plant where the federal government bought renewable energy certificates. In 2021, a half-dozen agencies purchased RECs from a pair of biomass plants owned by Georgia Renewable Power in neighboring rural counties in northeastern Georgia. The plants produced energy by burning wood chips, construction debris and, for a while, old railroad ties laced with the toxic chemical creosote.

    After the plants started up in 2019, neighbors complained of stinging eyes, burning lungs and the noxious smell of chemical fumes. Officials in Franklin County called it a public health emergency.

    Georgia Renewable Power denied causing any harm. 

    “We’re not emitting anything into the atmosphere that harms anyone,” President and Chief Operating Officer Steve Dailey told a local TV station in 2020.

    But state environmental regulators fined the company in 2020 for air pollution violations in Madison and Franklin counties and a toxic runoff into Indian Creek that potentially killed thousands of fish by one state estimate. 

    Dark water pools at the base of a stormwater outlet.
    A stormwater retention pond outlet at the biomass plant in Franklin County, Ga., releases “black effluent” into a tributary of Indian Creek in 2019, according to state regulators. Credit: Georgia Department of Natural Resources

    Federal agencies, including many that bought incinerator certificates, spent more than $700,000 on more than 400,000 of these RECs in 2021. They were generated in 2020, the same year local residents mounted a campaign that eventually won a state ban on burning railroad ties treated with creosote, which has been linked to cancer

    RECs from burning creosote-contaminated wood couldn’t be certified. Sonny Murphy, CEO of Sterling Planet, the company that sold the RECs, said the plants made assurances that the certificates were not tainted by creosote, but by then, they were too old to be certified. Luckily, the government didn’t mind. 

    “Most everybody would require certified,” Murphy said, “but the government does not.”

    Another popular source of government-purchased RECs is called “black liquor,” a toxic byproduct of papermaking that mills have burned for decades to power their own operations. In 2020, federal agencies bought nearly 258,000 paper mill RECs – 15% of all RECs for that year. 

    The agencies received certificates noting that for each black liquor REC, the facility produced about 4 pounds of smog-producing nitrogen oxide gas – a higher rate than an average coal plant. An International Paper spokesperson said in an email that the number on its certificates is an upper limit and its actual emissions are lower. 

    Biden plan more strict, less certain

    As scientists raise alarms that drastic action is necessary to avoid widespread climate disaster, Congress hasn’t raised the Bush-era requirement that federal agencies use 7.5% renewable energy.

    Over the years, though, the government’s overall energy use has declined and direct renewable energy use has increased, including from solar arrays on military bases. Governmentwide, from 2010 to 2021, direct renewable use increased from 1% to 3% of the government’s electricity demands.

    Biden campaigned on a vow to eventually eliminate carbon emissions from the country’s power grid. But one of his most powerful proposals to do so – rewarding utilities if they phased out fossil fuels and penalizing them if they didn’t – died in Congress. 

    Democrats eventually pushed through the Inflation Reduction Act, which uses billions of dollars in tax incentives to stimulate green energy and is expected to dramatically cut emissions over time. But it won’t be enough by itself to meet Biden’s pledge under the Paris Agreement to cut U.S. emissions in half by 2030. 

    President Joe Biden signs a bill while seated at a desk.
    President Joe Biden signs the Inflation Reduction Act, Democrats’ landmark climate change and health care bill, at the White House in August 2022. From left are Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.; Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.; House Majority Whip Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C.; Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J.; and Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Fla. Credit: Susan Walsh/Associated Press

    Biden bypassed Congress when it came to the government’s own emissions with his 2021 executive order that federal agencies must use 100% carbon-free electricity by 2030.

    Agencies will still be able to use RECs, but under new restrictions. The order doesn’t include trash incinerators or biomass plants in its definition of carbon-pollution-free electricity. Half of the clean energy is supposed to be produced at the same time of day the federal government uses it – a strategy to push the grid to run cleanly at all hours. And the RECs have to come from the same region as the government agencies using electricity.

    “This new requirement has accelerated the need for purchasing additional RECs,” said a spokesperson for the Department of Agriculture, adding that it will buy wind and solar RECs now.

    There are some signs of progress. The Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, which purchased the cheapest RECs available in past years, is planning to install a solar array at one of its sites and expects to hit the 100% clean energy mark early, without RECs, according to a spokesperson.

    But previous sustainability mandates have failed from lack of funding, ineffective enforcement or leadership changes. Former President Barack Obama had ordered 30% renewable energy by 2025, but former President Donald Trump killed it and many other climate regulations when he came into office.

    Andrew Mayock, Biden’s chief federal sustainability officer, is in charge of implementing the plan. In an interview, Mayock acknowledged that changes to the government’s renewable energy approach were necessary.

    “We’ve made a number of pivots from a policy perspective from what was done under previous administrations, so that the federal government gets to a place of legitimately running on clean energy not solely from an accounting perspective,” he said. “The world was in a different place at that time as to the urgency and the need to get to carbon-free electricity.”  

    As for his progress, Mayock’s office pointed to a few agreements with utilities, to work on providing the required clean energy eventually.

    “The shift to 100% carbon pollution-free electricity is already underway, and will continue to advance incrementally over the coming years through 2030,” his office said in a statement.

    But a year and a half since the order was issued, the Biden administration hasn’t yet required agencies to set annual targets. Mayock’s office said it is working closely with agencies to help them develop plans.

    U.S. Rep. Julia Brownley, D-Calif., is pushing a bill that would codify a requirement for federal agencies to use 100% renewable energy, but not until 2050 – 20 years after Biden’s target. The 7.5% target in existing law is antiquated, and legislation is needed so that future presidents “do not backslide on this critical issue,” Brownley said in a statement. 

    Her bill, which has failed to advance in previous years, directs the government to use renewable energy produced on-site as much as possible. But it still allows agencies to rely on buying even more of the same kinds of cheap RECs.

    “The government has a responsibility to the taxpayer to use federal funds wisely, but we also have responsibilities to future generations to fully and immediately address the climate impacts of our energy usage,” Brownley said.

    Government REC purchases highlight market’s flaws 

    Government agencies acknowledged often opting for whatever is cheapest. 

    The Defense Logistics Agency, which facilitates buying RECs for many federal agencies, picks contractors based on “Lowest Price Technically Acceptable,” according to a spokesperson. Federal agencies then chose that contractor’s cheapest option in 90% of the purchases coordinated by the logistics agency last year.

    The Indian Health Service told Reveal that it purchases the cheapest RECs – including Georgia biomass and Louisiana paper mill RECs – to minimize the cost. Still, an agency spokesperson said: “The purchase of RECs incentivizes private industry to strive to create renewable/clean forms of electricity which is beneficial for the Earth’s environment.”

    Some renewable energy certificates can come with laudatory titles like “Certificate of Environmental Leadership.” Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

    Some agencies – such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – do prefer slightly costlier, certified RECs from solar energy or, more commonly, wind farms. Those certificates can come with laudatory titles like “Certificate of Environmental Leadership” or “Carbon Champion.” But compared to tax incentives and the revenue that energy companies get from selling the actual electricity, those RECs are also generally too cheap to have an impact, said Michael Gillenwater, executive director of the Greenhouse Gas Management Institute, who has published multiple studies critical of RECs. 

    In that sense, Gillenwater said, it doesn’t matter whether the REC comes from a wind farm or a trash incinerator.

    “It’s hard to have less effect than no effect,” he said.

    Murphy, who runs Sterling Planet, the company that sold the Georgia biomass RECs to the government, said a more sophisticated way to support renewable energy is to invest early in a specific project to help it get off the ground. Buying whatever RECs are available on the open market, like the government does, is “easier to critique,” he said.

    Alden Hathaway, a consultant and former executive for Sterling Planet, maintains that all RECs are beneficial, but in terms of creating new renewable energy, he said they “never made a huge difference.” 

    “We’ve always been talking about the value of the REC as something like the icing on the cake,” he said. 

    Buying the Florida incinerator RECs didn’t end up mattering much for the environment or the plant that produced them. 

    Portrait of Ray Schauer
    Ray Schauer is the director of facility operations at the Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County, Fla. Credit: Najib Aminy/Reveal

    The Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County had been going about its business, turning garbage into energy for years without bothering with RECs. It only started selling them last year after being approached by REC sellers.

    So far, the waste agency is bringing in about $175,000 per year in extra revenue from the certificates. That amounts to less than 1% of the operating budget for the incinerator, said Schauer, the director of facility contract operations. 

    The money federal agencies spent on the incinerator RECs isn’t going to bankroll any new renewable energy. Most of it went to a middleman, the REC seller. What’s left helps make the trash bills a tiny bit cheaper for county residents. 

    By Schauer’s calculation, that $175,000 in revenue could save each homeowner about 18 cents on a nearly $180 annual trash bill. “It’s better than nothing,” he said.

    This story was supported by Emerson Collective.

    Data reporter Melissa Lewis contributed to this story. It was edited by Kate Howard and copy edited by Nikki Frick.

    Will Evans can be reached at wevans@revealnews.org, and Najib Aminy can be reached at naminy@revealnews.org. Follow them on Twitter: @willCIR and @Jib821.

    As Climate Clock Ticks, US Government Has Been Using Burning Trash to Look Green is a story from Reveal. Reveal is a registered trademark of The Center for Investigative Reporting and is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • Four Black Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday joined the growing chorus of critics opposing “racist tropes” in Florida’s new K-12 history curriculum, which includes teaching middle school students “the resurrection of one of the greatest lies America has ever told itself, that slavery benefited the enslaved.” “Your decision to rewrite history to ingrain white supremacy into…

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  • A federal judge has rebuked efforts by the state of Florida to block an injunction on the state’s ban on drag show performances. The order from U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell on Wednesday means Florida officials are now barred from enforcing a ban on venues that host drag shows in places where children may be present or nearby, pending the outcome of a lawsuit from one restaurant in the…

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  • The Florida Board of Education has approved new curriculum standards for lessons on Black history that racial justice advocates and educators say will whitewash the brutality of white supremacy and slavery in the U.S. The board will now require teachers to tell middle school students that enslaved people gained a “personal benefit” from the skills they learned under slavery before the Civil War.

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    This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on July 19, 2023. It is shared here with permission under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.

    A voting rights group on Wednesday sued Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other officials for what it called “illegal intimidation” of voters by intentionally making it difficult for former felons to determine their voting eligibility and using “election police” to “mount an aggressive campaign” against people who did not know they were ineligible to cast ballots.

    The lawsuit—filed in Miami federal court by Free and Fair Litigation Group, Arnold & Porter, and Weil Gotshal & Manges working pro bono on behalf of the Florida Rights Restoration Committee (FRRC) and individual voters—alleges that state election officials “have created such a bureaucratic system around the implementation of Amendment 4 that it prevents Florida citizens from voting.”

    “Florida’s failure to accept responsibility in determining voter eligibility hurts every Florida citizen.”

    Amendment 4 is an FFRC-led 2018 referendum approved by nearly two-thirds of Florida voters reenfranchising 1.4 million people with past felony convictions. The stakes transcended Florida and criminal justice reform, as a botched state voter purge of purported former felons played what one federal civil rights commissioner called an “outcome determinative” role in the 2000 U.S. presidential election.

    “Ever since the people of Florida passed a constitutional amendment to grant people with felony convictions a new right to vote, the governor and the state have done everything in their power to prevent those 1.4 million new voters from actually voting,” Carey Dunne of the Free and Fair Litigation Group said in a statement.

    Additionally, FFRC alleges that DeSantis’ deployment of statewide “election police” constitutes illegal voter intimidation under the federal Voting Rights Act.

    DeSantis—who is seeking the 2024 GOP presidential nomination—has faced widespread criticism for using Florida’s Office of Election Crimes and Security to arrest 20 formerly incarcerated people who believed they were eligible to vote under Amendment 4 for alleged “voter fraud.” Most of those arrested were Black and almost all were Democrats.

    The new lawsuit alleges that DeSantis and Florida election officials failed to uphold their legal responsibilities by:

    • Providing inaccurate, incomplete, or misleading information to potential voters who try to determine their voting eligibility;
    • Creating a byzantine process in which voter eligibility is determined by varying local practices depending on where the potential voter lives; and
    • Creating, publicizing, and deploying an “election police” unit designed to arrest people for having voted, including some people encouraged to register to vote and provided a voter ID by Florida election officials.

    “Florida’s failure to accept responsibility in determining voter eligibility hurts every Florida citizen,” said FFRC executive director Desmond Meade.

    “This is not a Black, white, Latino, Native American, Asian, or multiracial issue or a Republican or Democrat issue; this is an everybody issue,” Meade added. “If Floridians cannot rely on the state to determine voter eligibility, then who can we rely on?”

    The plaintiffs in the suit are seeking a declaration that “Florida’s implementation of Amendment 4 is unconstitutional and illegal under the Voting Rights Act.”

    FRRC also requests the creation of a statewide database for prospective voters in order to determine their eligibility under Amendment 4, as well as the appointment of a federal compliance monitor.

    “From the governor on down, state of Florida and local officials at every level have failed to reintegrate returning citizens who have served their time back into our democracy,” Arnold & Porter pro bono counsel John A. Freedman said in a statement. “We are proud to stand with our clients and our co-counsel in this important fight.”

    This post was originally published on The Real News Network.

  • Presidential hopeful Gov. Ron DeSantis frequently pitches his response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Florida as a top reason why Republican primary voters should choose him over Donald Trump and other candidates. DeSantis fought off local mask mandates, questioned the safety of vaccines, and reopened schools, businesses and beaches before much of the country, policies he claims saved Florida’s…

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  • Protests against Florida bill SB 1718 have erupted across the state after the bill went into effect on Saturday. Under the law, Florida no longer recognizes driver’s licenses issued to undocumented immigrants from other states, and criminalizes the transportation of undocumented workers. Since Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed the bill into law in May, Latinx activists have organized labor strikes…

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  • Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’s administration is planning to use $92 million of leftover COVID-19 federal relief funds to help pay for a highway interchange, a project that directly benefits one of his major donors, a new report finds. According to The Washington Post, which filed an open records request to uncover much of the information in its reporting, an interchange project near…

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  • In a Twitter video message he posted on Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Florida) advised people who are socialist or communist, or even supportive of left-leaning views, not to consider moving or traveling to the Sunshine State. “‍‍Let me give you a travel warning: if you’re socialist, ‍communist, ‍somebody that believes in big government, ‍I would think twice ‍if you’re thinking about taking a…

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  • In a Twitter video message he posted on Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Florida) advised people who are socialist or communist, or even supportive of left-leaning views, not to consider moving or traveling to the Sunshine State. “‍‍Let me give you a travel warning: if you’re socialist, ‍communist, ‍somebody that believes in big government, ‍I would think twice ‍if you’re thinking about taking a…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • A federal judge in Florida has overturned a state law and executive branch administrative action that barred the use of Medicaid funds to pay for gender-affirming health care for transgender residents. The ruling, issued by U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle on Wednesday, was largely expected, given that Hinkle had ruled similarly in a case earlier this month that focused on gender-affirming health…

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  • An effort to enshrine abortion rights in the Florida state constitution is gaining steam, and will likely be included on the 2024 general election ballot if current trends hold steady. However, the proposed amendment faces some hurdles before it can be accepted on the ballot, including passing muster in the state’s conservative Supreme Court. For the petition to be considered…

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  • Concern about rising fascism and hate-fueled violence is now widespread in queer communities across the country. Sixty-one percent of LGBTQ+ people in the United States say they have avoided public spaces or a public event due to fear of discrimination or violence, according to a new survey of 1,000 adults by the nonprofit group SafeHome.org. That means an alarming majority of LGBTQ+ people say…

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  • Thousands of dead fish washed up on the gulf coast of Texas over the weekend, and massive globs of seaweed carrying plastic pollution infested with flesh-eating bacteria are raising public health concerns at Florida’s famous beaches. Like a cat leaving a mangled rat on the doorstep, the oceans seem to be trying to get our attention. A large school of Gulf menhaden died over the weekend and left…

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  • It’s been nearly one year since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that protected abortion rights for half a century. Many states have passed laws severely restricting or banning abortion. And in states like Texas, pregnant patients are being put in peril. 

    Freelance journalist Sophie Novack reports on the hard decisions Texas doctors and nurses are making in the aftermath of the state’s ban. Providers are facing impossible choices when it comes to caring for pregnant patients with medical complications. Some fear that performing an abortion, even to save the life of a mother, could lead to criminal prosecution. 

    Reveal reporter Laura C. Morel has spent the last year investigating anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers. Now that abortions are severely restricted or banned in much of the country, these centers are trying to fill some of the health care gap that’s emerged in conservative areas. In states that continue to allow abortions, crisis pregnancy centers have doubled down on their mission to discourage patients from terminating their pregnancies – often using deceptive practices to lure them into their facilities. Morel talks to a Florida woman who describes her experience at a Jacksonville crisis pregnancy center, where a volunteer deceived her into thinking it was an abortion clinic. As Morel and episode host Nadia Hamdan discover, deceiving pregnant women is part of these centers’ long history. 

    Finally, we explore how a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision has made it harder to regulate anti-abortion centers – and how the lack of regulation harms clients. Morel tells the story of an anti-abortion nurse in Kentucky who reported infection control problems at the crisis pregnancy center where she volunteered, only to find that the facility is allowed to operate in a regulatory gray zone.

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    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • A federal judge has placed a preliminary injunction on Florida’s recently passed ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth in the state, a ruling that places a partial block on the state law that legal experts say, in practice, may allow such treatments to resume for children in the state who need or may benefit from them. The injunction by U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle technically…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Far right Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) has signed an industry-backed bill that will allow Florida landlords to charge renters a monthly nonrefundable fee in lieu of a deposit that opponents of the bill say is predatory and meant to exploit renters. The bill, H.B. 133, places no cap on the fee — which critics have compared to junk fees — meaning that landlords could charge as much as they choose.

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  • Hundreds of thousands of poor Floridians have been kicked off Medicaid in recent weeks as their Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, travels the country for his 2024 presidential bid and rakes in campaign cash from big donors. Florida is one of more than a dozen states that have begun unwinding pandemic-era rules barring states from removing people from Medicaid during the public health emergency.

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  • Sirota desantis split 1

    David Sirota of The Lever talks about how Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s fundraising for his 2024 presidential bid could be hindered by a federal pay-to-play rule that restricts campaign contributions from financial executives to state officials who control pension investment decisions.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Scrolling through my social media feeds, I’m always taken aback when I see posts from LGBTQ+ people sharing their plans to flee conservative states. I find myself clenching my jaw, and my heart skips a beat as I watch videos with a familiar story of a queer person facing social and political repression. I recall my own journey of relocating from Florida in response to homophobia in my own…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Over 100 people registered to give public comment at a Hernando County School District board meeting on Tuesday to discuss a teacher in the district showing her fifth-grade class a Disney film that featured a gay character in it. A single complaint by a parent against the teacher, Jenna Barbee, led to two investigations into her actions, due to that parent, who also serves on the school board…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • On a Sunday afternoon in late May 2022, Zander Moricz, then class president of Sarasota County’s Pine View School, spent the moments before his graduation speech sitting outside the auditorium, on the phone with his lawyers. Over the previous month, the question of what he’d say when he stepped to the podium had become national news. That March, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis had signed the…

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  • A Florida school district has restricted student access to a poem written by a Black poet for the inauguration of President Joe Biden in January 2021. Amanda Gorman recited her poem, “The Hill We Climb,” two years ago at the most recent presidential inauguration. Gorman’s poem largely centered on the work yet to be done in the United States to achieve equity and justice for all.

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  • The killing of Trayvon Martin in 2012 marked the beginning of a new chapter of the struggle for civil rights in America. A mostly White jury acquitted George Zimmerman of the teen’s murder, in part because Florida’s stand your ground law permits a person to use deadly force in self-defense – even if that person could have safely retreated. Nationwide protests after the trial called for stand your ground laws to be repealed and reformed. But instead, stand your ground laws have expanded to 38 states. 

    Reveal reporter Jonathan Jones talks with Byron Castillo, a maintenance worker in North Carolina who was shot in the chest after mistakenly trying to get into the wrong apartment for a repair. While Castillo wound up out of work and deep in debt, police and prosecutors declined to pursue charges against the shooter, who said he was afraid someone was trying to break into his apartment. Researchers have found that states that enacted stand your ground laws have seen an increase in homicides – one study estimated that roughly 700 more people die in the U.S. every year because of stand your ground laws. 

    Opponents of stand your ground laws call them by a different name: “kill at will” laws. Jones speaks to lawmakers like Stephanie Howse, who fought against stand your ground legislation as an Ohio state representative, saying such laws put Black people’s lives at risk. Howse and other Democratic lawmakers faced off against Republican politicians, backed by pro-gun lobbyists, intent on passing a stand your ground bill despite widespread opposition from civil rights groups and law enforcement.

    Modern-day stand your ground laws started in Florida. Reveal reporter Nadia Hamdan explores a 2011 road rage incident that wound up leading to an expansion of the law. She looks at how one case led Florida lawmakers, backed by the National Rifle Association, to enact a law that spells out that prosecutors, not defendants, have the burden of proof when claiming someone was not acting in self-defense when committing an act of violence against another individual. 

    This episode originally aired in July 2022.

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    This post was originally published on Reveal.



  • Faced with persistent attacks from Florida Republicans, including presumed 2024 presidential candidate Gov. Ron DeSantis, immigrant and LGBTQ+ rights groups on Wednesday issued advisories for traveling to the southeastern U.S. state.

    The moves by the Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC) and Equality Florida follow the NAACP Florida State Conference voting unanimously last month to ask the national group’s board of directors to issue a travel advisory for the Black community.

    FLIC’s advisory—issued as a website—comes as DeSantis pressures the GOP-controlled state Legislature to pass measures that would threaten Florida residents with felony charges if they provide undocumented immigrants with shelter, transportation, or work while also requiring publicly funded schools and hospitals to participate in the crackdown.

    “Travel to all areas of Florida should be done with extreme caution as it can be unsafe for people of color, individuals who speak with an accent, and international travelers,” the website warns. “Due to unconstitutional legislation supported by Gov. Ron DeSantis and introduced by legislative leadership, every county in Florida poses a heightened risk of harassment, possible detainment, and potential family separation based on racial profiling.”

    The coalition’s site also notes that “naturalized and U.S. citizens of African, Latin American, Central American, Native American, Asian, and Pacific Islander descent are not immune from racial profiling, heightened scrutiny, and false arrest.”

    Additionally, as the site explains:

    Florida is poised to pass laws creating criminal penalties for medical providers who provide medically necessary care for transgender youth, weaponizing the courts to shred existing child custody agreements and reassign transgender youth to an unsupportive parent, and severely restricting access to prescribed medical care for transgender adults.

    Florida has passed or is poised to pass bills that restrict access to reproductive healthcare, including a near-total abortion ban, which threatens to force people to travel out of state or seek unsafe, illegal abortions.

    Equality Florida similarly pointed to the “passage of laws that are hostile to the LGBTQ+ community, restrict access to reproductive healthcare, repeal gun safety laws and allow untrained, unpermitted carry, and foment racial prejudice” when warning that the Sunshine State “may not be a safe place to visit or take up residence.”

    Equality Florida executive Director Nadine Smith said in a statement that “as an organization that has spent decades working to improve Florida’s reputation as a welcoming and inclusive place to live, work, and visit, it is with great sadness that we must respond to those asking if it is safe to travel to Florida or remain in the state as the laws strip away basic rights and freedoms.”

    “While losing conferences and top students who have written off Florida threatens lasting damage to our state, it is most heartbreaking to hear from parents who are selling their homes and moving because school censorship, book bans, and healthcare restrictions have made their home state less safe for their children,” Smith continued.

    “We understand everyone must weigh the risks and decide what is best for their safety, but whether you stay away, leave, or remain we ask that you join us in countering these relentless attacks,” she added. “Help reimagine and build a Florida that is truly safe for and open to all, and where freedom is a reality, not a hollow campaign slogan.”

    Bryan Griffin, a spokesperson for DeSantis, told The Florida Times-Union that the new advisories were a “political stunt” and “we aren’t going to waste time worrying about political stunts but will continue doing what is right for Floridians.”

    DeSantis had responded similarly to the NAACP’s move last month, saying, “what a joke” and “I’m not wasting my time on your stunts.”

    The NAACP request came not only amid battles over various laws but also after DeSantis rejected the new Advanced Placement African-American Studies course for high school students.

    “Our question to Gov. DeSantis is, ‘What sort of future are you fostering for Black Americans throughout Florida while eradicating our historical contributions to this nation?’” said NAACP Florida State Conference chair Adora Obi Nweze. “There is no ‘feel-good’ version of the horrors and inequalities that Black Americans have faced or continue to face.”

    “Slavery, Jim Crow, and lynchings followed by ongoing school segregation, mass incarceration, police brutality, housing discrimination, healthcare disparities, and [the] wage gap are all tough truths to face,” she argued. “Misrepresenting the reality of our history promotes ignorance and apathy.”

    Although the request for an NAACP travel advisory was submitted as a resolution to the national board last month, review and approval of resolutions won’t begin until May and are expected to go through July. However, board chairman Leon W. Russell has already weighed in, saying that “the recommendation from our Florida State Conference is a clear indication of just how egregious Gov. DeSantis’ actions are.”

    “Any attempt to intentionally erase or misrepresent Black history is a direct attack on the foundation of comprehensive education. Be clear—Black history is American history,” Russell declared. “We are proud of our Florida State Conference for meeting this moment with the equal aggression and intention that is a necessary response to these attacks. Any location in America where our history has been erased does not offer us, or our children, a bright future.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams.



  • The harrowing experiences of two close friends in Florida who experienced serious pregnancy complications days apart are among the latest to show the reality faced by pregnant people in states with forced pregnancy laws—and the future the Republican Party is pushing for across the United States, rights advocates said Monday.

    As The Washington Post reported, two women who had suffered miscarriages and bonded over their mutual experiences with infertility, Anya Cook and Shanae Smith-Cunningham, developed the same complication days apart in December when they were just 16 and 19 weeks pregnant, respectively—weeks before their fetuses were considered viable by doctors.

    The two friends both experienced preterm prelabor rupture of the membranes (PPROM), which affects less than 1% of pregnancies and causes the pregnant person to lose amniotic fluid, making it extremely unlikely that their fetus will survive.

    PPROM can cause hemorrhaging and serious infections, and the standard of care recognized by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) is an induction of labor or a surgical abortion—but with Florida’s 15-week abortion ban in effect since the right-wing majority on the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year, doctors did not offer Cook those options when she went to a hospital in Coral Springs, Florida one night after realizing she has losing amniotic fluid.

    Cook only received antibiotics and was told to wait at home for her symptoms to for her condition to progress. The next day, in the bathroom of a nail salon, she delivered her 16-week-old fetus and immediately began hemorrhaging—eventually losing nearly half the blood in her body.

    The treatment she eventually was given after being rushed to the hospital a second time left her with complications that may make it even more difficult for her to carry a pregnancy to term.

    She narrowly avoided a hysterectomy, which would have made a future pregnancy impossible.

    “In what world is that pro-life?” asked Slate journalist Mark Joseph Stern.

    Florida’s 15-week abortion ban—which Republicans are pushing to make even more extreme by banning abortion care for people who are more than six weeks pregnant—includes so-called “exceptions” only to “save the pregnant woman’s life,” “avert a serious risk of substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function,” or in the case of “fatal fetal anomaly.”

    A study conducted in Texas last year showed that 57% of patients who experienced pre-viability PPROM in the state, where abortion is also banned, faced a “serious maternal morbidity” such as an infection or hemorrhage, putting them at risk for the same outcome Cook experienced. By comparison, 33% of patients with the complication in states without abortions experienced those medical emergencies as a result of PPROM.

    Despite this, the six-week abortion ban proposal that has already passed in the Florida state Senate and is expected to pass in the Republican-controlled state House, does not include an exception for PPROM.

    The devastation Cook and Smith-Cunningham faced as they lost their pregnancies “will only get worse with a six-week ban,” said state Rep. Anna Eskamani (D-42).

    Smith-Cunningham was visiting family in Jamaica when she developed PPROM shortly after her friend did, and quickly traveled back home to Florida to get medical treatment.

    Once she got there, she was sent home from her local hospital twice despite her symptoms, with a doctor “explicitly” mentioning the overturning of Roe v. Wade as the reason “she couldn’t do anything to help.”

    She was told she couldn’t receive the standard of care recognized by doctors across the country unless her cervix dilated further than the four centimeters it already had, or she began having an active miscarriage.

    Instead, she stayed bedridden at home, terrified that she would begin hemorrhaging like her friend just had, until she finally became dilated enough to receive medical care.

    “They are playing with people’s lives with this law,” Smith-Cunningham told the Post.

    The two friends’ experiences, said HuffPost reporter Jonathan Cohn, demonstrate “what a 15-week abortion ban looks like in real life,” with doctors refusing to care for patients out of fear of breaking the law, even if “exceptions” are included.

    “The laws are working as intended,” New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie added.

    State Sen. Lauren Book (D-32), who represents both Smith-Cunningham and Cook, warned that “women will die” if the six-week ban is passed.

    “Despite denials from across the aisle, the truth is clear,” said Book. “Florida mothers who suffer miscarriages are ALREADY being forced to the brink of death before receiving needed abortion care.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams.

  • The relentless state-based attacks on Black people in the U.S. and the war being waged against public and higher education are not unrelated. In the present political and ideological climate, far right political leaders, such as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) have declared a war on institutions of public and higher education…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • A Florida school district has removed a visual adaptation of Anne Frank’s diary, an acclaimed first-person telling of a teenage girl’s life in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II. For decades, students in classrooms across the U.S. have read Frank’s diary, which documents her everyday life as Jewish child forced into hiding during the Holocaust. “Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.