Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
First Shot
The new trend in Florida schools: “à la carte education” — or “have-it-your-way” for the non-francophones.
Loosely, à la carte education encompasses all approaches to K-12 education outside full-time schools. While the method isn’t new, its popularity has exploded since Florida opened ESAs to all comers.
According to Step Up For Students, the primary organization administering Florida’s school voucher programs, about 8,500 students took the à la carte route five years ago. The number grew to 108,850 students last school year, with Step Up projecting another 30,000-plus will make the jump for 2025-26.
Family spending has grown even faster, leaping from $320.9 million two years ago to $824.1 million last year, and the $1 billion mark is within arm’s reach for the current school year.
The trend isn’t happening in a vacuum. Lawmakers expanded the original Family Empowerment Scholarship for Students with Unique Abilities. They created the Personalized Education Program (PEP) in 2023, opening ESA access to more families and requiring students to be outside a full-time public or private school to qualify.
With a $10,000 annual allocation for UA students and roughly $8,000 for PEP students, parents effectively have publicly funded education accounts to assemble learning from a menu of options. The report frames this as a structural shift — not a momentary spike — engineered in part by policy changes that incentivize unbundled learning.
That raises the question: where is the money going?
Step Up’s analysis shows spending is being spread across instructional materials (by far the biggest category), part-time tutoring, hybrid or home-education instructional programs such as learning pods and microschools, and therapies for students with special needs.
Education startups — everything from traditional tutors and speech therapists to outdoor “forest schools” — are sprouting to accommodate the surge in demand, with their ranks more than doubling from 1,900 to 4,300 year-over-year.
As for the “who,” 56% of à la carte ESA students are white, 28% are Black and 10% are Hispanic. That split is less diverse than Florida’s public school population overall, but significantly more diverse than homeschool populations nationally.
The report stops short of predicting the long-term impact on Florida’s traditional school systems, but the numbers indicate à la carte isn’t a fad and, if the trendlines hold, it could very well become “la nouvelle donne.”
Evening Reads
—“How Donald Trump lost control of the Jeffrey Epstein spin cycle” via David Gilbert of WIRED
—“The MAGA internet meltdown down over Epstein” via Taylor Lorenz of User Mag
—”The 50-year mortgage is a terrible deal. Here’s why.” via Michelle Singletary of The Washington Post
—“Venezuela doesn’t produce fentanyl. Trump is targeting it anyway.” via Julian E. Barnes of The New York Times
—“How the Trump administration sparked a health crisis for ICE detainees” via Judd Legum and Noel Sims of Popular Information
—”What Marjorie Taylor Greene’s feud with Trump is really about” via Christian Paz of Vox
—”Trump’s $2,000 tariff check idea draws Republican resistance” via Alicia Diaz, Steven T. Dennis, Caitlin Reilly and Josh Wingrove
—”He was ready for surgery with Miami’s top surgeon. Here’s how it went wrong” via Jay Weaver and Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald
—”The O1 visa is for ‘extraordinary’ talent: Among its users? Influencers and OnlyFans models” via Liv Caputo of the Florida Phoenix
—”Leading students into Florida’s cybersecurity frontier” via Manny Diaz and Madeline Pumariega for Florida Politics
Quote of the Day
“I’m not thinking about anything because I think we have a President now who’s not even been in for a year. We’ve got a lot that we’ve got to accomplish.”
— Gov. Ron DeSantis, on his post-Governor plans.
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.
The latest edition of INFLUENCE Magazine is hot off the presses … well, digital presses, at least. While you peruse, the FlaPol team will be celebrating with a taste test of all 11 Historic Newspaper Cocktails.
It’s not the seven-figure announcement Gators fans have been yearning for since week two of football season, but a $5.5 million donation to UF’s Hamilton School is more than worthy of a Steve’s Aloha.
Tell the barkeep to press pause on the Mind Eraser — Gov. Ron DeSantis is already “not thinking about anything.”

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In
Heat host Warriors with former Miami stars returning to town
The Miami Heat try to keep momentum as they host the Golden State Warriors tonight (7:30 p.m. ET, FanDuel Sports Network – Sun).
Miami (8-6) sits in seventh place in the NBA’s Eastern Conference standings but is only a game and a half out of second place. The Heat beat the New York Knicks on Monday, 115-113, surviving a wild rally at the buzzer. In the game, Miami took the lead with six minutes and built a 10-point lead with three minutes to play before the Knicks scored 11 of the final 14 points of the game, but could not score a game-tying basket in the final seconds.
Golden State (9-7) is in a similar position in the Western Conference. Coming into tonight’s game, the Warriors are in eighth place but only two and a half games out of second in the conference standings.
As usual, Steph Curry leads the Warriors, averaging 27.9 points per game. Two former Miami Heat players are also key contributors. Jimmy Butler averages 20.1 points per game, second best on the team. Center Al Horford provides depth off the bench and leads Golden State in blocks.
After tonight’s game, the Heat hit the road for games in Chicago on Friday and Philadelphia on Sunday before returning home for a Nov. 24 matchup with the Dallas Mavericks.
___
Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.