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News and politics for the city of Jacksonville (FL), Florida, and the United States. Though I am a Libertarian/Socialist, my hope is to be as objective as possible in delivering news that should be important to you. In addition, this website can be useful for researching important moments in history. From the dawn of civilization to the present day, this website provides a plethora of valuable links for your research needs.
Issue: Fire union agreement
What it means: Firefighters have already signed off on this new agreement, which includes 2 percent pay cuts and employee insurance contributions but guarantees no layoffs for two years. Now, the city council has ratified the agreement.
Bill No. 2010-824
Action: Passed, 15-0.
Jacksonville City Councilman Don Redman said he was only attempting to respond to constituents’ concerns when he filed a bill last week that, if approved, would have urged Duval County residents to celebrate Halloween on Saturday instead of Sunday.
Instead, he asked council President Jack Webb to allow him to withdraw that request, citing the conflict with Saturday’s Georgia-Florida football game among his reasons.
The vote in Tuesday’s council meeting to withdraw was unanimous.
Redman’s last-minute request, which would have been nonbinding, was widely panned as being short-sighted and an unnecessary distraction from more serious council business.
Webb was one of the first to cite the Georgia-Florida conflict as a potential roadblock to Redman’s bill. Initially, Redman had asked that the bill be considered as an emergency item Tuesday.
Jacksonville City Hall's cell phone bill was reduced about $170,000 by cancelling unused phones, prohibiting downloads and making sure users are on appropriate plans.
The changes, including canceling 139 phones that weren't being used and appointing a cell phone coordinator in each department, came in response to a city inspector general report issued a year ago.
That report found "little oversight over cellular expenditures," with used phones still incurring monthly charges and some employees racking up excessive text messaging fees and charges for roaming and calls to directory assistance.
Some users were downloading ringtones, games and videos while others were texting despite not being on a texting plan.
The single largest chunk of the savings - $50,000 - came from canceling unused phones. Such "zombie" phones came from workers leaving the city's employ but their phones remaining active because no one was told to shut them off.The accounts of civilian deaths among nearly 400,000 purported Iraq war logs released Friday by the WikiLeaks website include deaths unknown or unreported before now — as many as 15,000 by the count of one independent research group.
The field reports from U.S. forces and intelligence officers also indicate U.S. forces often failed to follow up on credible evidence that Iraqi forces mistreated, tortured and killed their captives as they battled a violent insurgency.
Iraq Body Count, a private British-based group that has tracked the number of Iraqi civilians killed since the war began, said it had analyzed the information and found 15,000 previously unreported deaths, which would raise its total from as many as 107,369 civilians to more than 122,000 civilians.
It said most of the newly disclosed deaths included targeted assassinations, drive-by shootings, torture, executions and checkpoint killings.
The Iraqi government has issued a tally claiming at least 85,694 deaths of civilians and security officials were killed between January 2004 and Oct. 31, 2008.
In all income groups, women are more likely to give, and in four of five groups, they give more than men do — sometimes twice as much, according to the study by the Women's Philanthropy Institute at Indiana University's Center on Philanthropy.
In the study's middle range of income, $43,500 to $67,532, the average donation was $728 from women, $373 from men.
More than 17,000 doctors and other healthcare providers have taken money from seven major drug companies to talk to other doctors about their products, a joint investigation by news organizations and non-profit groups found.
More than 380 of the doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other professionals took in more than $100,000 in 2009 and 2010, according to the investigation released on Tuesday. The report said far more doctors are likely to have taken such payments, but it documented these based on information from seven drugmakers.
The payments are not illegal and usually not even considered improper. But the investigation by journalism group ProPublica, Consumer Reports magazine, NPR radio and several publications showed doctors were sometimes urged to recommend "off-label" prescriptions of drugs, meaning using them for conditions they are not approved for.
t said 40 others had been warned by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for research misconduct, had lost hospital privileges or were convicted of crimes.The U.S. government will spend up to $760 million to compensate American Indian farmers who were unfairly denied loans by the Agriculture Department, the Obama administration announced on Tuesday.
"With today's agreement, we take an important step forward in remedying USDA's unfortunate civil rights history," President Barack Obama said in a statement.
Obama urged Congress to appropriate funds promised months ago in two other cases. In February, the government announced a $1.25 billion settlement for USDA discrimination against black farmers. A December 2009 settlement calls for $3.4 billion to resolve an Indian trust cast.
Compensation in the so-called Keepseagle case of USDA discrimination against American Indian farmers from 1981-99 would be paid from a federal judgment fund and not require congressional action, said officials. Some $680 million will be available to pay discrimination claims approved by an impartial adjudicator and USDA will provide up to $80 million in forgiveness of farm-loan debts.
Payments of up to $50,000 apiece will be considered for people who show substantial evidence of discrimination. Those with stronger evidence of economic losses can get up to $250,000.
Filed in 1999, the Keepseagle case accused USDA of denying loans to thousands of American Indians while approving similar loans for white farmers and ranchers. West said the settlement needs approval by the federal judge handling the case, brought by George and Marilyn Keepseagle, of North Dakota.
A new ranking of the nation's 400 biggest charities shows donations dropped by 11 percent overall last year as the Great Recession ended - the worst decline in 20 years since the Chronicle of Philanthropy began keeping a tally.
The Philanthropy 400 report to be released Monday shows such familiar names as the United Way and the Salvation Army, both based near Washington, continue to dominate the ranking, despite the 2009 declines. The survey accounts for $68.6 billion in charitable contributions.
A look at some of the action taken by the Jacksonville City Council on Tuesday night:
Issue: Ethics code
What it means: The council considered an amendment to the city charter to add an ethics code and ethics policy. Among the changes, the city's ethics officer would report directly to the Ethics Commission, and all the city's constitutional officers would be subject to the Ethics Code. Bill No. 2010-616
Action: Re-referred back to committee.
Issue: Jacksonville Symphony Association
What it means: The Jacksonville Symphony would be allowed to lease the Jacoby Hall at the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts through 2013. This revised lease provides for a base rental rate of $95,000 for 2010-11, with increases in subsequent years tied to the inflation rate. Bill No. 2010-719
Action: Approved, 15-0.
Issue: USS Charles F. Adams museum
What it means: This legislation expresses the council's formal support of efforts by the Jacksonville Historic Naval Ship Association to bring the retired Navy vessel to the city. The USS Charles F. Adams would be come a floating museum on the Southbank near the Acosta Bridge. Bill No. 2010-675
Action: Approved, 15-0.
The Riverside/Avondale area of Jacksonville has been named on the American Planning Association’s 2010 Great Places in America as one of the organization’s 10 “Great Neighborhoods.”
Referring to the adjoining areas on the banks of the St. John’s River west of Downtown as “Jacksonville’s hidden gem,” the planning association notes that the neighborhoods comprise two historic districts that spread over eight miles and are on the National Register of Historic Places.
In a report released on Tuesday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee's top Democrats said the number of people refused health insurance plans by big insurers Aetna Inc, Humana Inc, UnitedHealth Group Inc and WellPoint Inc due to pre-existing conditions rose 49 percent in the last three years.
The denials affected tens of thousands of individuals seeking to buy their own insurance. In 2009, 257,100 could not get a plan compared with 172,400 in 2007, the committee said.
Overall, the insurers refused to sell plans to more than 651,000 individuals -- or one out of every seven applicants -- because of their medical history, Committee Chairman Henry Waxman and fellow Democrat Representative Bart Stupak said.
U.S. intelligence agencies have wasted many billions of dollars by mismanaging secret, high-technology programs, the deputy chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence says.
"The American public would be outraged if they knew," Sen. Christopher S. Bond, Missouri Republican, told The Washington Times. "Billions and billions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted."
Mr. Bond said he was unable to provide details or exact figures because the programs are classified. "I wish I could, but I can't," he said, adding that "many billions of dollars" were wasted on "just one program" that had been canceled recently.
In 2009, retired Navy Adm. Dennis C. Blair, then-director of national intelligence, revealed for the first time that U.S. spending on military and civilian intelligence programs totaled about $75 billion.
Thehas 1,350 cell phones, and that does not include all of JSO's cell phones, which you also pay for.
The cell phone bill at City Hall is on average $80,000 a month. A 2009 cell phone audit found the city dropped its connection on a number of levels.
"We found out employees weren't sure what their plans were. What was included, excluded," said city Inspector General Pam Markham, who spent months reviewing bills.
The audit also found 86 cell phones that were paid for but not used, some for seven months, at a cost of $15,100.The Jacksonville Transportation Authority has won a $2.4 million grant to repair and refurbish downtown bus hub structures, maintain existing drainage ponds and repair the roof at the Rosa Parks Transit Station.
This money, which is coming from the U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Transit Administration, will be spent in early 2011, JTA officials said.
The grant is part of the fiscal year 2010 State of Good Repair program.
JTA has also been informed by the federal government that it spent all the federal stimulus money it was awarded properly, without any deficiencies.
"There's no reason why we can't do this," Mr. Obama said in a brief Rose Garden event. "There's no reason why the world's best infrastructure should lie beyond our borders. This is America. We've always had the best infrastructure. ... All we need is the political will."
Mr. Obama is proposing a $50 billion plan as an initial step toward a six-year program of transportation programs. It calls for building, fixing or maintaining thousands of miles of roads, rail lines and airport runways, along with installing a new air navigation system to reduce travel delays, and other projects.
Pratt-Dannals, in a telephone message sent to parents, stressed that this week is when the state does a student count that determines state funding.
The district says that students must be in class at least one day this week to be counted for funding purposes. Another student count is also done in February.
The state of Florida is getting nearly $25 million in federal grants for substance abuse and addiction treatment.
Health News Florida reported Friday that four community health centers in Florida will share $14.5 million for expansion, and five counties will share nearly $9.7 million for addiction treatment.
Jacksonville Housing Finance Authority has issued an additional $20 million in single family mortgage revenue bonds, according to a news release.
Proceeds from the bonds will provide low interest mortgage financing and assistance with down payment or closing costs to families in need.
The program has lowered the interest rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage to 3.99 percent and extended the program until Feb. 1, 2011.
To qualify, an individual or family must meet specific income guidelines and standard credit underwriting requirements. The home must be a primary residence and located within Duval County. Qualified participants include first-time homebuyers, honorably discharged veterans or persons refinancing a predatory loan product.
The first-time homebuyer requirement will be waived for borrowers refinancing qualified subprime loans, which are adjustable rate, single-family residential mortgage loans that closed between Jan. 1, 2002, and Dec. 31, 2007, and that the HFA determines would be reasonably likely to cause financial hardship to the borrower if not refinanced. The market value of a residence that is refinanced cannot exceed $250,000 at the time of the financing.
Overall, deportations totaled about 392,000, or a less than 1 percent increase over 2009, leaving U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement short of of the goal it set for itself of 400,000 deportations.
Still, the administration said its new focus on immigrants with criminal records is paying off, with about half of those deported in 2010 being convicted criminals. In 2009, when about 390,000 immigrants were deported, only about a third of them had criminal records.
Amendment 1, Repeal of Public Campaign Finance Requirement
Amendment 2, Homestead ad Valorem Tax Credit for Deployed Military Personnel
Amendment 4, Referenda Required for Adoption and Amendment of Local Government Comprehensive Land Use Plans
Amendment 5, Standards for Legislature to Follow in Legislative Redistricting
Amendment 6, Standards for Legislature to Follow in Congressional Redistricting
Amendment 8, Revision of the Class Size Requirements for Florida Public Schools
Complete amendment information is available on the state Division of Elections website.
Only about 1 percent, or roughly 280,000, of American companies export, and that share isn’t growing, although existing exporters are increasing their foreign market share, a trade analyst told a Jacksonville symposium Tuesday morning.
Jorge Arce, director of the U.S. Commercial Service’s Jacksonville office, said about 97 percent of U.S. exporters are small companies, and most of those have 15 or less employees. Queries to his office from companies looking to get into exporting have been nearly nonexistent during the recession.
At last week’s raucous Jacksonville City Council meeting, roughly 80 people took to the podium to address the council, with the overwhelming majority opposing a tax hike.
But only one was quizzed on her occupation.
Elexia Coleman-Moss, a young entrepreneur who serves as chair of JCCI Forward, was called back to the podium by Councilman Clay Yarborough after she spoke in favor of preserving social services.
Coleman-Moss responded with an explanation of her vocation and was then asked if she received city money.
She doesn’t. But the same can’t be said for some speakers who opposed the hike.
Astoundingly, they didn’t face the same query.