Senator Gary Siplin’s (D-Orlando) SB 98, having passed the full Senate, was brought over to the House and referenced to only two committees, a rare parliamentary move usually reserved for leadership priorities. At Monday’s hearing of the House Education Committee, Democrats raised concerns that the vagueness of the bill authorizing school districts to adopt policies allowing for an “inspirational” message to be given by K-12 students at school events may have unintended consequences. Since school personnel cannot review the message but are involved in disciplining students if the message turns out to be anything other than inspirational as they define it, the bill raises constitutional issues. Nevertheless, the bill passed the committee along party lines and has one committee stop left before reaching the House floor.
SB 2038 authorizing the Department of Corrections to privatize 28 public prisons throughout the State hit a major roadblock this week when it failed to garner enough support on final passage. With several Republicans joining Democrats, the measure failed on a 19 to 21 vote of the full Senate. The measure has a similar companion in the House that has yet to be heard but with two weeks left in session, advocates are warned not to let up until the final bell is rung on sine die*.
Representative Betty Reed’s (D-Tampa) bill to end the cruel and inhumane practice of shackling pregnant inmates during labor, delivery, and post-partum recovery cleared its third committee in the House unanimously despite concerns raised by the Department of Corrections. The bill has one final committee stop in the House before heading to the floor. It already has passed the full Senate unanimously.
A bill by Representative Jimmie Smith (R-Lecanto) that would require state employees to submit to random, suspicionless drug tests on a rotating basis every three months hit a snag when it failed to garner enough votes to pass the House Appropriations committee this week. The ACLU of Florida led the opposition asking members to consider waiting until the constitutionality of Governor Scott’s 2011 Executive Order mandating state agencies’ drug testing of their employees is decided in order to avoid subjecting the state to more costly litigation. Several Republican members expressed similar concerns and in a close vote, initially killed the bill. However, a motion to reconsider revived the bill and then temporarily postponed it. In these cases, a bill is often dead for the current session, but nothing is certain until sine die*.
SB 234 (Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey) is a bill that would revise the definition of “viable fetus” to “unborn child,” defined as “the unborn offspring of a human being at any stage of gestation from fertilization until birth” in cases of vehicular homicide and other crimes. Several members of the Senate Criminal Justice Committee, including Sen. Mike Bennett (R-Bradenton) raised concerns that the change in definition may actually affect cases relating to abortion and could limit a woman’s right to choose. Amidst these concerns, the committee temporarily postponed the bill. SB 290 (Sen. Anitere Flores, R-Miami) would require abortion clinics to be wholly owned and operated by a doctor or group of doctors and would require abortion care providers to comply with a host of intrusive and burdensome regulations not imposed on other health care providers. It also would impose a 24 hour waiting period before a woman can get an abortion. This bill was also temporarily postponed by the Senate Health Regulation Committee.
The ACLU-FL teamed up with members of the Florida Immigrant Coalition to support a measure to allow undocumented students who have attended high school in Florida for at least three years to attend Florida colleges and universities at resident tuition rates. The measure garnered support from both Democrats and one Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, but four Republican votes in opposition were enough to defeat the measure for the 2012 session.
*Sine die: The last day of the Florida legislative session, this year March 9. Latin for: without day, meaning the session adjourns without a future day for reconvening, at least for the rest of this year.
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