Florida
Will frozen temps bring any snow to Florida? What to know
As December begins, Florida is expected to continue experiencing freezing temperatures on Sunday and into next week, sparking curiousness over the possibility of snow in the Sunshine State.
The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued a freeze warning for portions of northeast and north-central Florida and will go into effect overnight into Monday morning. The warning comes as a polar cold front is expected to sweep across the state.
The freeze warning extends along the I-10 and I-75 corridors, stretching west of Jacksonville and down to Gainesville. Frost advisories are also in effect on the eastern edges of these areas between 1 a.m. and 9 a.m. Monday.
According to NWS, the temperatures amid the freeze warning could dip as low as 30 degrees as the warning is issued when temperatures are forecasted to go below 32 degrees for a long period of time.
While the cold snap might inspire dreams of a winter wonderland, Floridians shouldn’t expect to see snowflakes. Instead, dry air will dominate, pushing in behind the cold fronts.
“Right now, there’s no opportunity for any snow here through the holiday weekend and into the first week of December,” David Reese, a meteorologist with the NWS in Tallahassee, told USA Today. “Really dry air is pushing in behind the fronts. There will be a little moisture as the front moves through.”
Newsweek has reached out to Reese via a direct message on X, formerly Twitter, and the NWS via email for comment.
The western Panhandle and northeast Florida will experience similar conditions—cold, dry, and clear.
“Our little piece of Florida isn’t expecting snow,” Steve Miller, a meteorologist with NWS Mobile, Alabama, said, per USA Today. “It’ll be pretty dry and breezy, with inland freezes possible Saturday and Sunday.”
Chris Livingston/Getty Images
While Florida isn’t exactly a winter wonderland, snow has occasionally dusted the state, delighting residents unaccustomed to the frosty phenomenon.
The first documented snowfall in Florida dates back to 1774, according to the Florida Climate Center. And while snow doesn’t fall every year, it’s not as rare as some might assume.
“Since 1886, there have been more than 80 months in which at least a trace of snow has been reported somewhere in the state,” the Climate Center revealed.
Monday night could be the coldest of the season so far, with temperatures dropping to freeze levels in Duval County and potentially hitting the hard freeze benchmark of 28 degrees in some areas, according to Angie Enyedi, an NWS meteorologist in Jacksonville.
“Could possibly have some locations getting to hard freeze criteria of 28 degrees, but it’ll stay dry and clear,” she said, per USA Today.
The NWS Climate Prediction Center has warned of a potential “hard freeze” affecting the Southeast, including northern parts of Florida. The center said this will likely hit early next week. “Please protect susceptible vegetation, and if you are traveling south, bring your jackets!” the center said in an X post.
A hard freeze warning is issued if the temperature is expected to be below 28 degrees for at least three hours. These occur in rural areas in the interior of south Florida about once every 10 years, and less frequently along coastal metropolitan areas.
NWS meteorologists have previously issued freeze warnings or freeze watches across nine Southern states on Thursday amid a cold front that saw temperatures drop below freezing overnight on Thanksgiving.
Florida
South Florida to see rising temperatures this weekend as rain chances start to drop
The CBS News Miami NEXT Weather Team is tracking the return of drier air for the upcoming weekend with only a few stray showers in the mix.
Scattered showers and isolated storms will be possible on Friday, but mostly in the Keys.
Drier air continues to move into South Florida over the weekend with only 10-20% stray shower chances.
As rain chances go down, temperatures go up over the next several days.
Mostly cloudy skies will keep highs in the mid-80s on Friday, but more sunshine arrives for the weekend and will cause highs to climb into the upper 80s.
Beachgoers should be aware of a high rip current risk at the coast for Friday through Sunday due to the easterly breeze.
Tropical moisture slowly starts to return on Sunday, leading to warmer and wetter conditions for the upcoming workweek.
Afternoon highs peak around 90 for Monday as scattered shower and storm chances linger through the first half of the workweek.
Florida
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Florida
CFO tells Florida voters don’t believe ‘big government apologists’ hype on property tax
Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia had a message for south Florida voters Wednesday.
Don’t believe the hype from “big government apologists” who claim cities and counties won’t be able to afford core government services if Gov. Ron DeSantis’ revamped property tax package is approved by 60% of the voters in November.
Ingoglia, appointed CFO by DeSantis, has been making the case for months that local governments have engaged in wasteful spending for the last five years, creating the premise that cities and counties can absorb the financial hit that would come their way if the package passes.
Appearing at the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue’s Urban Search and Rescue Training Facility, Ingoglia focused his remarks on the property tax package the Legislature passed Tuesday and its effects on funding public safety.
“Scare tactics”
“The first thing I would say is, you’re going to hear a lot of scare tactics and misinformation coming out from a lot of different places in this fight,” he told reporters in Miami.
The ballot summary language in HJR 1F reads, “Save Our Homes from Excessive Property Taxes.”
The ballot summary continues: “This amendment benefits Florida taxpayers by exempting homestead properties from taxation.” It goes on to advise voters that the proposal would exempt the first $250,000 of a homestead’s value from taxation and would require, through general law, “a schedule for full elimination.”
Ingoglia said that government’s first role is to protect the public, which is why the “first thing” that every local government should do if the proposal passes is to fund the police, firefighters, and other first responders.
“So, when I hear the misinformation and the talking points coming out from the big government apologists that say that they have to cut fire and they have to cut police, what they are saying is that that’s the last thing that they’re thinking about in the hierarchy of how they build their budgets,” he said.
Photo by Mitch Perry
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Florida Phoenix
Tampa City Councilmember Luis Viera, a Democrat, is running for the state House of Representatives, hoping to fill the Hillsborough County seat now held by House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell.
In his time on the council, Viera has been a strong advocate for pay increases for the Tampa Police Department and for securing funding for new fire stations.
He says that if the constitutional amendment is passed in November, “We’re going to see significant change in revenue for police and fire with this.”
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said last year that “every dollar of Tampa’s $380 million in property tax revenue is allocated to police and fire services,” and that the city’s total expenditures on public safety exceeded $455 million — well more than all of the revenue collected from property taxes.
No “trust fund” for public safety or schools
During the regular 2026 legislative session, the Florida House of Representatives passed its own property tax reduction plan (HJR 203). That proposal would have banned local governments from reducing funding for law enforcement below what had been appropriated for the services over the past two years. However, the Senate never considered the measure, or any other property tax relief bill, and it died.
DeSantis’ original tax proposal unveiled last week would have created in the Florida Constitution a local government trust fund so the state could help some municipalities pay for essential core services, including public safety and schools. But there was no dedicated source of revenue to finance the trust fund and the Republican-led Legislature eliminated it from the property tax plan.
Ingoglia didn’t mention the deleted trust fund during his South Florida press conference, ostensibly called to discuss hurricane preparedness. Instead, the CFO accused local government officials who claim public safety will need to be cut of bad governing.
“When I hear the misinformation and the talking points coming out from the big government apologists that say that they have to cut fire and they have to cut police, what they’re saying is, that that’s the last thing that they’re thinking about,” Ingoglia said. “That is the exact opposite of what they should be doing.”
The silence is deafening
Although Florida firefighters and emergency services responders spoke against the tax proposal in House and Senate committee this week, the Florida Sheriffs Association (FSA) and the Florida Police Chiefs Association have remained quiet. The Florida Police Chiefs Association did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the Sheriff’s Association affirmed to the Phoenix that it still had not taken a position on the proposal.
The Florida Chamber of Commerce said in a written statement last week that it would review the proposal with its members.
Another major representative of the business community, Associated Industries of Florida, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
NFIB of Florida, representing small businesses, said in a statement on its website that it had not taken a position but had called for protections that would prohibit local governments from increasing taxes on commercial property to accommodate for lost revenues. Those protections were included in what was passed.
“NFIB has NOT taken a position on the overall proposal, but we will be balloting our membership on the amendment if it is passed by the Legislature,” the website notes.
Although DeSantis and Ingoglia have been talking about reducing property taxes for more than a year, the framework for DeSantis’ plan wasn’t shared with legislators until last week. It was approved in Special Session F after just two days of debate this week.
To say the proposal was rushed through the Legislature and not sufficiently vetted is “quite the understatement,” Viera said.
“The biggest issue that I think is going to worry people is public safety and first responders,” he said.
“As you know, in my nine-and-a-half years on city council, I’ve always been a big champion of police and fire, and that includes on a lot of hard votes with cops and with fire, where I stand by them on a lot of different issues, and I think that, for me, supporting cops and firefighters is about more than showing up and giving them donuts on Christmas. It’s about taking hard votes and asking voters to fund those services that are tax dollars. If we pass this, this is going to be a major, major burden on basic police and fire services in Tampa.”
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
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