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Milton — shutdown — FEMA — NASA — wage gap

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Milton’s other aftermath

An internal investigation published last week by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shows Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) workers violated Floridians’ privacy while politically discriminating against them during the response to Hurricane Milton.

A political firestorm developed last year after an initial discovery that workers passed over several Lake Placid homes because signs supporting Donald Trump’s presidential campaign appeared in their yards. But Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the investigation showed similar issues in disaster response dating back to 2021, the start of President Joe Biden’s administration.

FEMA probe finds political bias in Hurricane Milton aid — Floridians with Trump signs denied help.

“The federal government was withholding aid against Americans in crisis based on their political beliefs — this should horrify every American, regardless of political persuasion,” Noem said.

“For years, FEMA employees under the Biden administration intentionally delayed much-needed aid to Americans suffering from natural disasters on purely political grounds. They deliberately avoided houses displaying support for President Trump and the Second Amendment, illegally collected and stored information about survivors’ political beliefs, and failed to report their malicious behavior. We will not let this stand.”

Rep. Vern Buchanan, GOP co-Chair of the Florida congressional delegation, had called for the investigation in a letter last November. He applauded the agency for publicizing the findings.

“Under the Biden administration, FEMA officials engaged in blatant political discrimination by refusing aid to Floridians displaying Trump signs following last year’s back-to-back hurricanes,” the Longboat Key Republican said.

“This was a disgraceful abuse of power that put lives and property at risk for purely partisan reasons. I was proud to lead a letter last year demanding answers, and now that the truth is coming to light, those responsible must be held fully accountable. If criminal conduct occurred, they should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. No American should be denied emergency assistance because of their political beliefs.”

Notably, former FEMA Administrator DeAnne Criswell, who led the agency under Biden, denied in congressional testimony last year that the discrimination was common practice. She said after reports first emerged of the Lake Placid homes being passed over, the field director in charge of response was fired.

“More than 22,000 FEMA employees every day adhere to FEMA’s core values and are dedicated to helping people before, during and after disasters, often sacrificing time with their own families to help disaster survivors,” Criswell posted on social media at the time.

“Recently, a FEMA employee departed from these values to advise her survivor assistance team not to go to homes with yard signs supporting President-elect Trump. This is a clear violation of FEMA’s core values and principles to help people regardless of their political affiliation. This was reprehensible.”

Criswell hasn’t addressed the latest report, but Michael Cohen, a FEMA Chief of Staff during Criswell’s tenure, told The Hill that the report could spotlight only a handful of instances in which FEMA workers took notes on individuals’ political affiliations. And he said those notes were just part of a file with no indication they impacted the aid ultimately administered.

“This is notes about why they maybe didn’t go to a house,” he said. “There’s no findings about discriminating against people because of their political beliefs or any other protected class that I can see. DHS said it is referring concerns about Privacy Act violations to the Justice Department, though it did not make clear whether any individuals could face charges.”

Stopping shutdowns?

Sen. Ashley Moody questions why Congress’ failure to reach a budget agreement means the federal government must stop serving the people.

The Plant City Republican this week announced she will co-sponsor the Eliminate Shutdowns Act (S 2806), which would prevent a shutdown such as the one now in its 28th day, even if Congress hasn’t enacted a new budget before the end of the fiscal year.

Ashley Moody backs bill to end government shutdowns — automatic funding extensions until Congress acts.

Instead, the bill, as written, would trigger an automatic 14-day continuing resolution to keep the government funded using the previous year’s appropriations. Every two weeks, a similar extension would automatically go into effect, but Congress still could not pass its own funding legislation.

“The Democrats have been holding the American people hostage for more than 20 days now — and each day the Schumer Shutdown continues is another day that our troops, law enforcement officers, federal and essential workers go without pay,” Moody said.

“As one of the country’s newest Senators, I’m working hard to bring sanity to D.C., and that’s why I’m cosponsoring the Eliminate Shutdowns Act so our government can remain open and working for the American people.”

Independent oversight?

Is the ethics watchdog at the Federal Reserve just carrying water for the agency’s leadership? It’s a concern for Sen. Rick Scott, and one he shares with colleagues on both sides of the aisle.

Scott sent a letter with Sens. Cynthia Lummis, a Mississippi Republican, and Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat, to Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell, demanding to know why current Fed Inspector General Michael Horowitz has lobbied Senators against legislation that could make his post more independent.

Rick Scott questions Fed ethics watchdog’s independence — joins Elizabeth Warren, Christine Lummis seeking tougher oversight legislation.

“It is concerning and perplexing that some of your employees of the Federal Reserve would devote significant time and energy advocating against legislation that would implement healthy oversight and ensure the Fed and its employees are held accountable,” the letter reads.

“It is also concerning that the Fed’s inspector general, who is meant to serve as an ethics watchdog at the agency on behalf of the American people, would advocate against this legislation, which aims to fix the existing reporting structure that currently incentivizes him to overlook violations, do the bidding of you and the Federal Reserve Board, and shield bad actors.”

Scott has been a fierce critic of Powell, who was appointed in Trump’s first term but has increasingly been at odds with the administration over interest rates and agency spending.

The Naples Republican filed a bill with Lummis and Warren earlier this year that would make the Inspector General a Senate-confirmed position rather than an appointment by the Federal Reserve Chair.

Requiring reconstruction

Every woman faced with breast cancer should have access to the same health care options, regardless of what insurance carrier they use, according to Rep. Kat Cammack.

The Gainesville Republican filed the Advancing Women’s Health Coverage Act, a bipartisan bill she introduced with Rep. Debbie Dingell, a Michigan Democrat. That legislation would require insurance companies to cover reconstructive options for patients, including implant-based procedures and advanced microsurgical and combination techniques. That coverage would be guaranteed under the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System.

Kat Cammack, Debbie Dingell file bipartisan bill mandating full insurance coverage for breast reconstruction.

“Women should be fighting cancer rather than insurance companies. Every woman battling breast cancer deserves access to the best care modern medicine can offer — not limits based on outdated insurance codes & bureaucratic red tape,” Cammack said.

“For too long, survivors have been denied coverage for proven reconstructive options that restore confidence, dignity, and quality of life. This bill puts patients back in charge, ensuring their recovery, health and confidence aren’t dictated by a system stuck in the 1990s.”

Dingell said it was wrong for some carriers to treat reconstruction as a cosmetic luxury.

“Reconstructive surgery is not just about appearance — it’s a part of the healing process that helps patients recover both physically and emotionally,” she said.

Plastic surgery physicians across the country hailed the legislation.

“The updates are not just about procedures, but about patient autonomy and choice,” said Dr. Babak Mehrara, president of The Plastic Surgery Foundation. “Modernization ensures breast cancer patients are fully supported with care from diagnosis through recovery.”

FEMA still helping

Massive flooding in Central Florida, where some parts of Eustis saw 19 inches of rainfall on Sunday evening, has local lawmakers working with FEMA even amid a shutdown.

Rep. Randy Fine, an Atlantic Coast Republican, spoke to the press at the scene of some of the washed-out roads.

Despite the shutdown, Randy Fine praises FEMA’s unpaid staff assisting flood-stricken Central Florida communities.

“I heard about the issues here in my district. I wanted to come over and see them, and I wanted to tell everyone here that we will be committed to do what we can, at the federal level, to help with the infrastructure issues,” Fine said.

“And I’m grateful not only to my staff that is here, but to the FEMA staff that we have coordinated with, all of whom are working unpaid thanks to the Democrats’ decision to shut down the government.”

FEMA disaster relief has been deemed an essential service and remains open. Workers are required to come in and will eventually receive back pay, but checks are not being issued now. Services for individuals impacted by disasters will continue to be paid from the Disaster Relief Fund as long as funds are available.

NASA on track

Rep. Mike Haridopolos said a federal shutdown hasn’t impacted the timeline for major NASA missions to date. But he worries that the longer workers go without pay, the more the U.S. could be slowed down in the modern space race.

The Indian Harbour Beach Republican told Florida Politics he feels confident efforts like the current moon mission remain on track.

Mike Haridopolos says Artemis II mission continues despite shutdown — warns worker furloughs risk delays.

“The good news is that Artemis II is still on track and people are still working on these programs,” Haridopolos said. “Unfortunately, I think some of the other issues that might come up along the line could be delayed.”

Haridopolos said NASA, like many federal agencies, has seen many workers decline to come into work without a paycheck. Oct. 24 marked the first day workers missed out on an entire pay period.

“The practical matter is, when you shut down the government, you’re having a lot of people stay home,” Haridopolos said. “Now, fortunately, these people, in their case, will be paid despite not working. But you’re still running into just a challenge. Every time you have to stop and start, we all know in any business, you’re going to run into problems.”

He expressed hope that most NASA workers will stay on the job even as Congress remains at a stalemate on a budget resolution.

“If we’re going to win this space race, we need all hands on deck, especially since they’re going to be paid one way or another, even if it’s a delayed payment,” he said.

Haridopolos noted that private contractors are involved in the Artemis II mission, which helps preserve the Kennedy Space Center’s timetable. NASA has said workers on Artemis missions working with SpaceX and Blue Origin, private space companies, must continue work through the shutdown, as reported by CNBC.

Ruthless efficiency

Rep Byron Donalds is calling for property tax reform and improvements to Florida’s infrastructure as he also weighed in on the federal government shutdown at Monday’s Future of Florida Forum.

Donalds, widely considered a leading candidate for Governor in 2026, addressed the crowd for about 20 minutes on a variety of subjects at the Florida Chamber of Commerce’s annual meeting in Orlando.

Donalds said he favors repealing homestead property taxes, though he warned that critical public services, like police and fire, or road work, must be funded.

Byron Donalds calls for ‘ruthless efficiency’ in government spending — urges repeal of the property tax and infrastructure reform.

“Local governments, state government, we have a responsibility to be ruthlessly efficient with the people’s money,” he said.

One important issue facing the Sunshine State is improving infrastructure — including wastewater treatment, Donalds said.

“This is a tough subject. Nobody wants to be engaged in it except, frankly, people who sit on City Councils and County Commissions,” Donalds said. “I believe that you have to have a sound plan, a strategy, of how you address these things going into the future. We cannot put our heads in the sand and ignore it because that crappy issue will back up, and I’m not joking.”

Meanwhile, Donalds predicted the federal shutdown would last one or two more weeks because of growing pressure points, including federal workers — like Transportation Security Administration agents — not getting paid and Americans’ emergency food benefits running out.

“How long is the shutdown going to last?” Donalds said at the JW Marriott Orlando Bonnet Creek Resort and Spa during the conference. “The truth of the matter is the person who truly knows is the Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.”

Wage gap awareness

Wage gaps exist between men and women and between the disabled and able-bodied. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick hopes to draw attention to those inequities with a resolution marking Oct. 23 as Disabled Women’s Equal Pay Day.

“Our workforce deserves equity and respect. The fact that disabled women veterans earned, on average, just 62 cents for every dollar paid to non-disabled male veterans in 2022 is unacceptable,” the Miramar Democrat said.

“Equal pay is not only a matter of fairness, but also a matter of dignity and justice. Disabled women contribute to every sector of our economy, and their work must be valued and compensated accordingly.”

Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick spotlights pay gap for disabled women veterans — resolution marks Equal Pay Day.

It’s also a matter of law. Cherfilus-McCormick noted that the Equal Pay Act has outlawed pay discrimination since 1963, yet the wage gap persists. Most disabled women with four years of college education make just $55,000, less than most non-disabled men who never finished a degree, the resolution states.

The Florida lawmaker filed the resolution with Rep. Ayanna Pressley, a Massachusetts Democrat, and with women’s groups and disabled advocates, who are backing the proposal.

“Unequal pay and inaccessible workplaces aren’t just unfair, they’re disabling,” said Kenrya Rankin, managing director at Disability Culture Lab.

“Black disabled women are in a particularly difficult place right now, as we face record job losses and juggle caregiving for our children, our parents, and ourselves. And capitalism — plus the current administration — demand that we do it all without accommodations. We need to invest in Black women, but this administration would rather implement policies that further disable us.”

China negotiation

China entered a trade agreement during Trump’s first term to purchase at least $200 million in U.S. goods in 2020 and 2021. But to date, imports have never come close.

As Trump travels in Asia, the new administration wants answers as to why. House Foreign Affairs Chair Brian Mast said he does as well.

Brian Mast backs Trump probe into China trade deal shortfalls — vows accountability for broken commitments.

“China reneged on their 2020 agreement with President Trump to buy $200 billion worth of American goods,” the Stuart Republican said. “They had the audacity to cite the COVID-19 pandemic — which they literally started — as their reason. This is unacceptable, and we thank President Trump for holding them to the deal they made.”

United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer last week announced an investigation into whether China held up its end of any agreement and what consequences should follow.

“The initiation of this investigation underscores the Trump administration’s resolve to hold China to its Phase One Agreement commitments, protect American farmers, ranchers, workers, and innovators, and establish a more reciprocal trade relationship with China for the benefit of the American people,” Greer said.

Mar-a-Lago skies

Safety concerns arise when a President lives in the neighborhood, and the Secret Service has just implemented new year-round flight restrictions, including a 1-mile-radius no-fly zone around Palm Beach.

It’s something city officials want reconsidered, while Rep. Lois Frankel, a West Palm Beach Democrat, seeks more details on the reasoning.

Lois Frankel seeks Secret Service briefing on new Palm Beach no-fly zone around Mar-a-Lago.

“I hope we can find solutions that are compatible with the safety of the President, neighborhood quality of life, and traveler efficiency,” Frankel said. “That’s why I’ve requested a detailed briefing from the Secret Service to better understand these new restrictions and explore practical alternatives.”

The new rules also require pilots to move in a single direction, rather than allowing planes to scatter along multiple paths, but that has raised noise concerns for those in the flight path.

The Secret Service has agreed to discuss regulations with Frankel, but only after the federal shutdown ends.

Scorn for socialism

As members of the Democratic Socialists of America, most notably New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, have enjoyed political success, Florida Republicans are decrying socialism as a “failed ideology.”

Scott and Rep. María Elvira Salazar, a Coral Gables Republican, filed resolutions in both chambers of Congress that assert socialist policies lead to collective tyranny. The bill name-checks such infamous historical dictators as Cuba’s Fidel Castro and Russia’s Josef Stalin, as well as sitting world leaders like Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

Rick Scott, María Elvira Salazar file resolutions condemning socialism’s failures — warn against far-left ideology.

“History is clear: from Stalin’s gulags and Cambodia’s killing fields to Castro’s firing squads in Havana, socialism has always ended in misery, suffering, and death. Entire nations have been destroyed and millions of lives shattered, including many in my own community in Miami who fled its brutality,” Salazar said.

“I am proud to introduce this concurrent resolution denouncing the horrors of socialism in the House, alongside Sen. Rick Scott, to ensure Congress speaks with one voice in condemning socialism in all its forms, wherever it rears its ugly head. America must always stand as the light of liberty against the darkness of socialism and its false promises of equality.”

Scott said the threat isn’t just historical.

“Just look at Cuba and Venezuela, or talk to any of the thousands of families in my state of Florida who fled those regimes after evil dictators stripped them of every opportunity,” he said.

“Time and time again, socialism has led to the same, inevitable outcomes: misery, poverty, and oppression. It’s despicable to see far-left radicals villainizing capitalism — a system that has helped billions of Americans achieve their dreams — and try to tear down our country and rebuild it in their woke, radical image through socialist policies. The United States was built on individual freedoms and opportunities, and the right of every individual to pursue the American Dream despite coming from nothing, just like I did.”

On this day

Oct. 28, 1962 — “Russia orders withdrawal of missiles from Cuba” via History.com — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s orders ended the Cuban missile crisis. U.S. spy planes flying over Cuba had photographed construction work on missile facilities. President John Kennedy announced a naval blockade to prevent the arrival of missiles and demanded that the Soviets dismantle and remove weapons already in Cuba. The situation was extremely tense and could have resulted in war between the United States and the Soviet Union. Still, at the last minute, Khrushchev turned the Soviet ships and agreed to dismantle and remove the weapons already there. Kennedy and his advisers had stared down the Soviets. The apparent capitulation was instrumental in Khrushchev’s being deposed in 1964.

Oct. 28, 1998 — “Bill Clinton signs digital copyright law” via The New York Times — President Clinton signed a key component of his agenda for fostering electronic commerce, but one that also changes traditional premises of copyright law. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act makes it illegal to circumvent digital rights management systems or encryption technologies that protect intellectual property on the internet. It also outlaws the manufacture and sale of devices used to crack those wrappers. Hailed as a compromise in one of the first complex battles to transfer rules from the physical world into cyberspace, the law’s enactment marks a victory for the entertainment and software industries, which want to begin selling more goods online.

Happy birthday

Best wishes to Donalds, who turns 47 today, Oct. 28.

___

Peter Schorsch publishes Delegation, compiled by Jacob Ogles, edited and assembled by Phil Ammann and Ryan Nicol, with contributions by Gabrielle Russon.



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Senate committee willing to test the waters on expanding swim lesson vouchers

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The Senate Health Policy Committee plunged into a proposal to expand the Florida swim lesson voucher program that provides financial help for teaching kids how to handle water.

The panel approved a measure (SB 428) by Sen. Clay Yarborough, a Jacksonville Republican, to allow older kids to qualify for the voucher program. The current program, originally enacted in 2024, provides vouchers for families of children aged 0 to 4 years old. Yarborough’s bill would allow kids 1 to 7 to qualify for vouchers.

Yarborough told the committee that in the first year of life for infants, they don’t really “learn” how to swim as much as they act instinctively in the water. Furthermore, he said, adding additional years will help ensure lessons for children who didn’t get around to learning how to swim earlier.

Corrine Bria, a pediatric emergency medical physician at Nemours Children’s Health facility in Orlando, spoke at the hearing and said the rise in young drownings is heartbreaking. Nemours has handled 35 drownings of children in the past three years, and 90% of those are under the age of 7, Bria said.

“As a physician in a pediatric emergency department I see firsthand what it looks like when a child gets carried into the ED (emergency department) by a parent or brought in on a stretcher after drowning,” Bria said. “We know that a child can drown in a matter of seconds and this happens too frequently in Florida.”

Jason Hagensick, President and CEO of the YMCA of South Palm Beach County, also addressed the committee on behalf of the Florida State Alliance of YMCAs and said the revision to the swimming lesson voucher program would be a big improvement.

“Drowning remains a leading cause of unintentional injury (and) death in the United States,” Hagensick said, adding that early swim lessons reduce the risk of drowning by 88%.

“Expanding the swim voucher program to include children up to the age of 7 will dramatically increase access to essential swim instruction at a time when those skills are most impactful,” Hagensick continued. “It will deepen water competency and strengthen confidence for kids and parents alike and help prevent needless tragedies that devastate families and communities.”

A similar bill (HB 85) is working its way through the House. The House Health Care Budget Subcommittee approved that measure last week. Rep. Kim Kendall, a St. Augustine Republican, is sponsoring the House version.



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Senate advances Jason Pizzo bill extending PTSD workers’ comp coverage to 911 dispatchers

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Legislation that would narrowly recategorize 911 dispatchers as first responders so they can receive workers’ compensation for work-related psychological injuries is one step closer to passing in the Legislature’s upper chamber.

Members of the Government Oversight and Accountability Committee voted unanimously to advance the bill (SB 774), which would eliminate a barrier that today denies aid to people who are often the first to respond to a crime.

The measure’s sponsor, Hollywood Sen. Jason Pizzo, noted that during his time as a prosecutor, playing a 911 call would often be the most effective thing to do to sway a jury.

“911, what’s your emergency? He’s going to kill me! He’s going to kill me! Now, imagine hearing that 12 times a day, 15 times a day,” he said.

“Two years ago, you all voted to require these 911 operators to be proficient in CPR so they could administer (it) over the phone. And they’re not considered first responders? They are first responders, and they’ve been grossly overlooked and screwed, and this brings some remedy.”

SB 774 would add 911 dispatchers to the group of “first responders” covered by Florida’s special workers’-compensation rules for employment-related mental or nervous injuries. It would apply the same framework to them as other first responders for mental health claims.

Essentially, if you’re a 911 dispatcher and develop post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety or similar mental health injuries from traumatic calls, SB 774 would make it so you can get workers’ comp-covered treatment and that your claim is handled under the same special rules lawmakers already set for other first responders — without certain time-limit restrictions that typically apply to mental injury benefits.

Several dispatchers signaled or spoke in favor of the bill, as did representatives from the Florida Police Chiefs Association, Florida Sheriffs Association and Consolidated Dispatch Agency.

Jennifer Dana, a dispatcher with the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office, noted that in a Senate analysis of SB 774, there’s a list of disturbing things first responders see and do on the job, from seeing dead children and witnessing murders to helping severely injured people, including those who commit suicide.

What it doesn’t include, she said, is that 911 dispatchers also witness those things.

“We’re seeing and hearing it,” she said. “We have the technology for people to livestream it now, so it’s a double-whammy for us, and we want to make sure we have the protections.”

Kim Powell, a licensed and clinical mental health counselor who oversees an employee behavioral health program at a 911 communications center in Leon County, detailed several examples of what dispatchers experience: a woman struggling to breathe while dying from a gunshot wound inflicted by her child’s father; an officer’s final words moments before his murder; the sound of a mother discovering her deceased infant; the 800 or so calls received in the wake of the Florida State University shooting last April.

“These are not isolated events; they are part of the job,” she said. “The trauma compounds over time with repeat exposure.”

St. Petersburg Republican Sen. Nick DiCeglie thanked Pizzo for carrying the bill and expressed gratitude to the “3,500 dispatchers” across Florida for their work.

“For me personally, (this) could be one of the most important bills that we have this Session because of the importance there is for your well-being and your quality of life,” he said.

Melbourne Republican Sen. Debbie Mayfield, who chairs the committee, echoed DiCeglie’s remarks.

Pizzo reminded the panel that four years ago, during COVID, a $280 million set-aside for payments to first responders and front-line workers did not extend to 911 dispatchers.

“They never stopped working,” he said, adding that Mayfield at the time acknowledged the oversight and pledged that the Legislature would get it right in the future. “So, it’s serendipitous that you were kind and gracious enough to put us on the agenda.”

SB 774 will next go to the Senate Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment and General Government, after which it has one more stop before reaching a floor vote.

An identical bill (HB 451) by Republican Rep. Jeff Holcomb of Spring Hill awaits its first hearing in the House.



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Hillsborough College Trustees OK first step in Tampa Bay Rays stadium talks

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The Tampa Bay Rays’ search for a new home took a tangible step forward as the Hillsborough College Board of Trustees approved a nonbinding agreement that could ultimately shift the franchise away from St. Petersburg under its new ownership.

The Board voted to approve a memorandum of understanding (MOU) authorizing staff to negotiate with the Tampa Bay Rays over a potential stadium and mixed-use redevelopment at the college’s Dale Mabry Campus.

The agreement does not commit the college to the project and can be terminated by the Board at any time. Instead, it outlines key terms the parties would like to see in any future binding agreements, which would require separate Board approval at a later public meeting.

College officials characterized the MOU as the beginning of negotiations. Under the document, staff would begin drafting potential project agreements for Trustees to consider in the future, with an anticipated negotiation timeline of up to 180 days.

Rays CEO Ken Babby addressed Trustees during the meeting, calling the proposal an early milestone. He emphasized that the effort involves the college, the team, the state and local governments. Babby said the Rays are exploring a roughly 130-acre redevelopment anchored by a new stadium and an integrated college campus, alongside residential, commercial and entertainment uses. 

“As we envision this development, together in cooperation and partnership with the community and the college, we’ve been calling the campus portion of this work ‘Innovation Edge’ featuring Hillsborough College,” Babby said.

“It’ll be neighbored by, of course, what we envision to be ‘Champions Corridor,’ which we hope will be the mentioned home of the Tampa Bay Rays. Of course, this will be a mixed-use with residential, with commercial, and, as we’ve said, billions of dollars of economic impact to the region. … This is an incredible moment for our community.”

Public input was split. Supporters recognized the economic impact the project could have, while critics worried about the effect on housing affordability, in particular for college students.

Following the vote, Trustees acknowledged uncertainty among students, faculty and staff, particularly those based at the Dale Mabry campus, but stressed that the approval did not determine final outcomes.

“This is a major decision, and I truly hope that it leads Hillsborough College towards growth and advancement,” Student Trustee Nicolas Castellanos said. 

Trustee Michael Garcia echoed the sentiment.

“It’s a tremendous day for the future of Hillsborough College and for the future of Major League Baseball in the area and also for the future of the city of Tampa,” Garcia said.

Gov. Ron DeSantis publicly expressed support for the concept ahead of Tuesday’s meeting, saying it could benefit both the college and the region, while cautioning that details still need to be resolved.

“It could be very good for HCC, and I’ve met with the President about it. I think he’s excited about the possibility,” DeSantis said in Pinellas Park.

“Obviously, they’ve got to iron out details. But basically, we’re supportive of them pursuing that partnership because I think it could be good for them. I think it could be good for the state. But I definitely think it could be really good for this region.”

Also ahead of Tuesday’s meeting, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor told Florida Politics the city and Hillsborough County have been in ongoing discussions with the Tampa Bay Rays as the team explores long-term stadium options — including the potential Hillsborough College site. She emphasized that any future stadium proposal would require coordination among multiple governments and would be evaluated alongside existing contractual obligations related to other major sports facilities.

No timeline for construction, campus relocation or final land disposition was discussed Tuesday. College officials emphasized that any binding agreements would return to the Board of Trustees for approval at a future public meeting.

___

A.G. Gancarski and Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics contributed to this report.



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