Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
First Shot
Sen. Clay Yarborough’s proposal to fix a long-standing gap in state law that penalizes certain survivors of deaths at the hands of negligent doctors continues to move.
The Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services is the latest panel to advance SB 734, which Yarborough calls a “clean repeal” of a state statute prohibiting adult children and their parents from collecting negligence and non-economic “pain and suffering” damages for medical malpractice.
Yarborough says the current state of play “singled out a narrow group of survivors who cannot recover non-economic damages in the case of a wrongful death due to medical negligence, even though the same damages can be recovered by survivors for a wrongful death that is caused by all other forms of negligence.”
Florida is the only state in the nation with the restriction on its books. Lawmakers passed it in 1990 when the state was trying to rein in increasing medical malpractice costs and attract more doctors to the state.
More than two dozen speakers showed up with passionate cases for or against the legislation.
Opponents argued that medical malpractice insurance has become more expensive and difficult to procure in recent years, so the pool of claimants should not be expanded.
Andy Bolin of the Florida Justice Reform Institute said his clients “face the highest medical malpractice premiums” in the U.S. He argued that “infusing” new cases into the system would make that problem worse and suggested that if the bill goes forward, damages must be capped.
Proponents argued that survivors need the opportunity for compensation without caps. Some told their personal stories of treatment deferred with horrible consequences and no recourse, while their advocates made the larger case for change.
Read more on Florida Politics.
Evening Reads
—”‘Move fast’: Inside team Donald Trump’s furious defiance of the courts” via Andrew Perez and Asawin Suebsaeng of Rolling Stone
—”Trump discussion with Vladimir Putin to focus on what Ukraine will lose” via David E. Sanger of The New York Times
—”IRS retreats from some audits as agency slashes workforce” via Richard Rubin and Ashlea Ebeling of The Wall Street Journal
—”Democrats had a chance to take a stand here. What went wrong?” via Mary Harris of Slate
—“The growing legend of the missing Oval Office ivy” via Maura Judkis of The Washington Post
—”The political fight of the century” via Derek Thompson of The Atlantic
—“‘Fearless conservative’: Florida delegation leader Vern Buchanan backs Byron Donalds for Governor” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics
—“Were companies ever serious about DEI?” via Jonquilyn Hill of Vox
—”Want to buy the Tampa Bay Rays? Get in line” via Colleen Wright, Rebecca Liebson, Juan Carlos Chavez and Jack Prator of the Tampa Bay Times
—”A Gators 1st, Walter Clayton becomes No. 1 seed Florida’s 1st AP 1st-team All-American” via Edgar Thompson of the Orlando Sentinel
Quote of the Day
“They simply need to be removed from office. They’re not going to follow the law. It’s that simple.”
— U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, accusing Fort Myers officials of “dereliction of duty” for failing to ratify an agreement between local police and ICE.
Put it on the Tab
Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.
Out-of-state military kids could enjoy Sol y Sombra in a few years if Sen. Danny Burgess’ Bright Futures expansion keeps moving forward.
Order a Remote Control for your favorite circuit court judge, who would be able to hold outside-of-chamber meetings under a bill championed by Sen. Jennifer Bradley.
Sen. Anna Maria Rodriguez gets a Flying Dutchman for shepherding a bill that would crack down on derelict vessels in Florida waters through the Senate Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment and General Government.

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In
Seminoles tune-up for Miami with Mercer
After losing for the first time this season, Florida State looks for a second straight victory as the Seminoles host Mercer this evening (6 p.m. ET, ACC Network X).
The Seminoles (18-1) are ranked fifth in the most recent D1Baseball.com Top 25 poll. The only remaining undefeated major conference team in the country, Tennessee, is ranked atop the polls. After tonight’s game, FSU will travel to South Florida to face Miami in a three-game series beginning Thursday.
FSU’s offense has been led by the quintet of Alex Lodise, Gage Harrelson, Myles Bailey, Drew Faurot, and Max Williams, who have combined for 27 home runs and 87 runs batted in through 19 games.
The starting pitching trio of Wes Mendes, Jamie Arnold, and Joey Volini has a combined record of 12-0 and an ERA of 0.82. They are scheduled to face Miami later in the week, so they will not appear against Mercer.
The Bears (14-7) feature a pair of sluggers in the lineup. Shortstop Bradley Frye is batting .409 with six home runs and 24 RBI, while first baseman Ty Dalley has hit as many home runs and leads the team with 25 RBI.
The Seminoles have won 76 of 86 games all-time against Mercer but have only faced the Bears 10 times in Tallahassee. Last year, Mercer beat FSU 13-6, the first time Mercer had won in Tallahassee.
___
Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.
Post Views: 0