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Student polling place volunteer bills advance in House, Senate

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Bills from Jacksonville Republicans that would relax rules for students who volunteer at polling places cleared their first committee hurdles by unanimous votes.

The legislation (SB 564, HB 461), sponsored by Sen. Clay Yarborough and Rep. Kiyan Michael, says the ban on privately-funded election-related expenses would not bar high school students who are registered or preregistered to vote from voluntarily helping poll workers in exchange for community service hours that apply to Bright Futures scholarships.

Students can preregister to vote beginning when they turn 16.

The bill would take effect July 1, meaning that eligible students could begin participating in the process during the August Primaries this year if it becomes law.

Yarborough told the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee that this bill, if passed, “will be one of the greatest firsthand civics lessons, which they can experience as they go along, of one of our greatest rights and what it takes to conduct elections.”

Michael told the House Government Operations Subcommittee the bill allowed students to volunteer on weekends, addressing a potential shortage of volunteers, driving engagement and teaching a “civic lesson.”

“We’re always talking about, ‘We need to have our kids doing something positive,’ and this gives them the ability to volunteer at our polling locations,” she said.

Asked about potential dangers to the young volunteers from violence by Republican Rep. Paula Stark, Michael expressed confidence that the lead poll worker and the Supervisor of Elections could handle any issues.

Duval County Supervisor of Elections Jerry Holland spoke on behalf of the bill in both committees.

He said his grandson was looking for community service opportunities, and said volunteering would help students understand the process and get “exposed” to the role and “maybe come back and be part of our team in the future.”

“Maybe in the future, I’ll have a future poll worker,” he said in the House committee.

He also said that in the case of liability issues, the Supervisor of Elections would be responsible, just as with anyone else in a polling location.

The bills, which are identical, each have two committee stops ahead.

The League of Women Voters and the Southern Poverty Law Center support the legislation.



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Triangulation? Ron DeSantis warms to Paul Renner gubernatorial campaign as Jay Collins launches

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Timing is everything, and Gov. Ron DeSantis picked the day after Lt. Gov. Jay Collins entered the race to succeed him to say something nice about a rival.

During an interview Tuesday morning with Jenna Ellis, DeSantis complimented Collins, but also pointed to the legacy of former House Speaker Paul Renner, moving away from a previous brusque dismissal of the Palm Coast Republican’s campaign as an “ill-advised decision” that he wasn’t “supporting.”

“Paul Renner was the Speaker when I was Governor, my first two years of my second term, and I think if you look at that, there’s not a single state in the history of the Republican Party that delivered more meaningful reforms during that period of time, and so he deserves credit for that,” DeSantis said.

Regarding Collins, DeSantis had this to say.

“I think the Lieutenant Governor was a Senator in Florida … had a really strong conservative record, supported us on a lot of key things that were really meaningful. Obviously, has a great history as a green beret and serving in Special Forces, which I know a lot of people in Florida really appreciate,” he said.

DeSantis didn’t sound ready to endorse either man, saying “these guys have got to get out there and make the case.”

“I get involved in primaries when I have someone I believe in, and someone that really reflects what I think the state needs and that is really bold in that and you know that’s just something people have to prove as they announce candidacies and get out there and do it,” DeSantis said.

That “someone” is not Rep. Byron Donalds, however, who DeSantis seems to link with a different brand of politics.

“I do think that there are a lot of insiders, there are a lot of people the voters would never necessarily see that they’re kind of behind the scenes. You know, a lot of them have resisted everything I’ve done at every turn. I mean, they just they haven’t had the popular support to actually win any of those fights. but I do think that there’s kind of an appetite that’s whetted in kind of the internal bowels of Tallahassee and some of the swamp of Florida politics. They want to go back to good old boys and business as usual. There’s no question about that and so I think that’s an underlying thing that the voters are going to have to sort out as this thing starts to move forward.”



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Gov. DeSantis appoints 3 new members and reappoints 2 others to UNF Board of Trustees

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Andrew Hudson, Michael Mayo and Daniel Skinner would be new members on the UNF panel.

The University of North Florida Board of Trustees is getting three new members, while two are returning for another term.

Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the appointments of Andrew Hudson, Michael Mayo and Daniel Skinner to the UNF panel. DeSantis also decided to bring back Christopher Lazzara and Allison Korman Shelton to the Board that oversees policy for the Jacksonville-based school.

Hudson is the Vice President and Special Counsel for corporate affairs for BlinkRX, a prescription drug retail company. He’s also the former Vice President and General Counsel for TechNet, counsel for the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Legal Policy Counsel and was a Legislative Director and General Counsel for U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican.

Mayo is the President and CEO of health care giant Baptist Health. He’s also a community advocate and serves as a member of the American Hospital Association Board of Trustees. He was bestowed an honorary doctorate degree in health care from Jacksonville University.

Skinner is an Assistant State Attorney and Director of Homicide for the 4th Judicial Circuit State Attorney’s Office serving Northeast Florida. He was the former Director of the Special Prosecution Unit.

Lazzara is the co-founder and CEO of MountainStar Capital as well as a co-founder of the Georgia School of Orthodontics. He was also pegged as one of the Top 40 Under 40 business professionals in the Jacksonville area by the Jacksonville Business Journal.

Shelton is the Owner and Mental Health Counselor at San Marco Counseling in the area near downtown Jacksonville off the Southbank of the St. Johns River. She has been active in community involvement in Jacksonville and was a former member of the Bolles School Board of Trustees and is the former President of the Jewish Community Alliance.

The UNF Board of Trustees was established in 2001 and has 13 members that guide the policy for the state school. Six of those members are residents appointed by the Governor’s Office, while five are appointed by the Florida Board of Governors, which oversees the state’s public university system.

The appointments and reappointments by DeSantis still need to be approved by the Florida Senate.



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Bill requiring George Washington, Abraham Lincoln portraits in class runs into Dem pushback

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A bill that would require public school classrooms to display portraits of Presidents George Washington and Abraham Lincoln faced opposition in its first Senate stop, where Democrats expressed concerns about race and representation.

The measure ultimately advanced on a 6-1 vote by the Senate Committee on Education Pre-K-12.

Its sponsor, Zephyrhills Republican Sen. Danny Burgess, described the legislation (SB 420) as symbolic, educational and unifying. It’s also timely, he said, considering the U.S. is celebrating its 250th anniversary this July.

“These individuals helped us become who we are as a country,” he said. “It’s appropriate for the present and future that we never lose sight of what it meant to both build our country — to be the founder of our country, as George Washington was — but also to preserve our country, to fight to end slavery, to keep our union together. These individuals represent so much (and) unite us all.”

But the proposal failed to unify the seven committee members present to vote on it.

Jacksonville Democratic Sen. Tracie Davis, who cast the sole “no” vote Tuesday, argued SB 420 will set a new mandate that classrooms display certain photos — a precedent, she said, that can “potentially be expounded upon from future Legislatures” and contribute to political indoctrination.

Burgess pushed back on that assertion. Washington and Lincoln were both “imperfect,” like “all of us,” but “represent the ongoing effort for America to continue to try to be better.”

Tamarac Democratic Sen. Rosalind Osgood inquired as to whether the bill would still permit teachers to display photos of Harriet Tubman, who helped countless slaves escape captivity and was the first woman to lead U.S. troops in an armed assault, alongside pics of Washington and Lincoln.

Burgess said SB 420 would preclude other photos from being displayed “in no way, shape or form.”

Still, Osgood said, there is a “great level of sensitivity” among African American people and how governments have overwritten Black history, such as Florida education standards approved in 2023 requiring students to be taught that slaves learned skills they could use “for their personal benefit” and President Donald Trump’s removal last year of so-called “divisive” exhibits at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

“I want our state to continue to be the state that builds us and brings us together,” Osgood said. “As we move forward with this, please, I’m going to ask you if you will be sensitive to that.”

Burgess said he would, adding that he’d like to meet with Osgood later to learn more about her views. The point of choosing Washington and Lincoln, he said, was that their values “rose above the politics of present day,” while still serving as an inspiration for greater unity.

SB 420 would require each district School Board to adopt rules mandating the “conspicuous” display of pictures of Washington and Lincoln in classrooms used primarily for social studies instruction and in all K-5 classrooms.

The bill would also direct the Florida Department of Education to select the portraits and make them available to each school district beginning July 1.

SB 420 will next go to the Senate Appropriations Committee on Pre-K-12, after which it has one more stop before reaching a floor vote.

Its House twin (HB 371) by Stuart Republican Rep. John Snyder awaits a hearing before the first of two committees to which it was referred.



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