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JJ Grow seeks road concurrency for small counties

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Rep. JJ Grow has a plan for Session:

Concentrate on the job at hand.

“My approach is to keep my head down and work hard on my bills,” Grow, an Inverness Republican, said.

Grow is starting his second Regular Session after being elected to the open House District 23 seat in 2024.

In his freshman year, Grow helped pass a Citrus County local bill to clarify the sheriff’s oversight of agency employees.

Another bill that would have allowed transportation concurrency for counties with populations under 200,000 passed the House unanimously but never reached the Senate floor for a vote.

That bill is back, and Grow is confident of its success.

“Get it so these developments will share in the cost of transportation,” he said.

Concurrency is designed to ensure roads have sufficient capacity to accommodate the additional traffic from new development.

HB 97 allows small counties to set road levels of service in capital improvement plans, providing a baseline for new developments.

Ocala Republican Sen. Stan McClain, who sponsored the Senate companion last year, is doing the same this year in S 324.

Grow has also joined the chorus calling for property tax reform. He sponsored HJR 903, which would place a constitutional amendment on the November ballot to limit the annual increase in taxable value of non-homestead property to 3%. It’s currently set at 10%.

Grow said he believes some changes are needed.

“I totally understand why people are anxious right now. Affordable has become almost unaffordable,” he said. “Between property tax, home insurance, car insurance, and inflation, it’s gotten to a point where it’s hard to cover your expenses and have a little money to live on.”

Grow’s other bills include HB 95, which allows a pathway for trained volunteers to provide armed security at houses of worship.

“Faith communities across Florida have repeatedly expressed concerns about safety during worship,” he said. “Many congregations — especially small and rural ones — lack the resources to hire licensed security professionals but still face credible risks.”



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House passes Laurel Lee legislation criminalizing ‘sextortion’

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It cleared the chamber on a voice vote with no objections.

The digital age has brought with it new ways to exploit children for sexual reasons. But U.S. Rep. Laurel Lee hopes legislation passed by the House on Monday night will combat the trend of “sextortion.”

The Thonotosassa Republican presented the Combating Online Predators (COP) Act (HR 6719) on the House floor Monday, where it cleared the chamber on a voice vote with no objections.

“The rise of sextortion against our nation’s children is troubling,” Lee said. “Sextortion is a form of exploitation that occurs when someone threatens to distribute another person’s private, sensitive material unless that person complies with demands for additional sexual content, sexual favors or money. Incidents of sextortion have increased dramatically in recent years.”

The legislation now goes to the Senate. If passed and signed, it will for the first time explicitly criminalize threats to distribute child sex abuse materials.

“Sextortion is a devastating crime that preys on fear, shame, and vulnerability — especially among children,” Lee said when she introduced the bill.

“When predators threaten to distribute explicit images of minors, the harm is real and often irreversible. Congress has a duty to ensure our laws keep pace with the tactics used by online predators, and this legislation closes a critical gap to protect children and deliver justice for victims.”

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in 2023 reported a major increase in sextortion instances, with 26,718 reported to the organization that year compared to 10,731 in 2022. The FBI said the threat of sextortion has been particularly troubling with teenage boys.

The issue was highlighted last year after the death by suicide of West Virginia teen Bryce Tate. Investigators learned that hours before his death, he was threatened with the release of intimate images.

While the actual distribution of such images is a federal crime, threats to distribute are not covered under federal law, which has resulted in the dodging of changes for many attempted blackmailers, according to Lee’s office.



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Senate panel advances bill to strengthen Tax Collector oversight of commercial driving schools

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‘We want to make sure that when they’re out on the road, they’re not going to be a menace to society.’

A proposal meant to crack down on fraudulent commercial driver’s license activity at DMV sites zipped through its first Senate committee with unanimous support.

Members of the Senate Transportation Committee advanced the measure (SB 584) by Miami Springs Republican Sen. Bryan Ávila, who said there’s a rising trend in Miami-Dade of people lying about being licensed to drive commercial vehicles.

Ávila said Tax Collector Dariel Fernandez approached him about the problem, which could spread to other parts of the state, if it hasn’t already.

“The goal here, Senators, is to protect the integrity of driver licensing processes, deter fraud and support compliant driving schools without altering curriculum testing standards or a statewide eligibility criteria,” he said.

“This is an effort to make sure we can cover all our bases through cooperation and through collaboration with our Tax Collector.”

If approved, the legislation would authorize the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles to formally delegate enforcement authority over commercial driving schools to county Tax Collectors through interagency agreements.

Under those agreements, Tax Collectors could bar driving school operators from Tax Collector Offices, investigate fraud or practices undermining license integrity, require license verification and inspect driving school premises for legal compliance

“We want to make sure that when they’re out on the road, they’re not going to be a menace to society,” Ávila previously told Florida Politics while discussing his 2026 legislative priorities. “We want everyone that is driving any truck or vehicle on our roadways to be absolutely qualified and licensed to be driving.”

Barney Bishop of the Florida Smart Justice Alliance and Carlos San Jose of Corcoran Partners signaled support for the measure, which will next go to the Appropriations Committee on Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development.

A House twin of the bill (HB 953) by Miami Republican Rep. Omar Blanco awaits committee referrals.



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Jerry Demings trails David Jolly in fundraising out of the gate

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Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings’ fundraising is lagging behind U.S. Rep. David Jolly’s in the race for the Democratic Primary for Governor.

Demings raised about $225,000 in addition to $104,000 from his political committee Moving Florida Forward, campaign finance reports show.

The latest campaign fundraising report covers the fourth quarter of 2025.

In comparison to Demings’ $330,000, Jolly brought in more than $1 million in the final three months of 2025.

Jolly raised about $649,000 in addition to his political committee Florida 2026 collecting about $412,000, records showed. 

Demings officially jumped into the race Nov. 6, a timing he acknowledged as a handicap during the start of the holiday season.

“Despite those challenges, we raised a respectable $330,000. I look forward to expanding our fundraising and support during the first quarter of the year and thereafter,” Demings said in a statement, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Demings said he was “excited about the momentum we’ve achieved.”

Whoever wins the Democratic nod faces a long fight against the better-funded Republicans.

U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who is leading Republicans in polls, raised $13.1 million raised during the fourth quarter of the year between his campaign account and the Friends of Byron Donalds political committee. Donalds amassed a war chest of more than $45 million in 2025.

Demings, the former Orange County Sheriff and Orlando City Police Chief, has led Orange County government since he won election in 2018. 

“This is not a right or left moment, but a right or wrong moment in our history. The power of the people is greater than the people in power,” Demings said during his campaign launch in November in Orlando. “We’re tired of toxic and divisive politics. If you vote for me, it’s a vote for a new style of leadership. It’s a vote for change. It’s a vote for democracy.”



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