Florida
NYU freshman spending $10K to travel to Florida each weekend for 6-month internship
An NYU freshman is spending thousands of dollars for weekend getaways to sunny Florida, but it isn’t what you think.
The college student is paying the massive travel price tag to spend his weekends working rather than lounging on the beach.
Big Apple college kid Vincent Campanaro flies to Florida every weekend for an internship at The Ritz-Carlton, Naples, which he estimated will cost him more than $10,000 in travel expenses once the six-month gig comes to an end next month.
“It’s about $500 a week, which flying back and forth to Naples, that’s really penny-pinching because Naples is pretty expensive as I’m sure you probably know,” he said on Varney & Co. on Fox Business last week.
“But it’s not easy,” Campanaro noted. “Actually, there have been times where I had to sleep at the airport or just book a completely different flight because my flight price increased.”
He reportedly flies out of New York once his classes end Friday at 12:15 p.m. and gets back to his college dorm Sunday after flying out of Florida around 9 p.m.
He explained he was forced to turn to the Sunshine State because finding an internship in the hospitality field can be cutthroat.
“The internship market in general is incredibly competitive right now. So you’ve got people applying with, say, perfect test scores, perfect GPA, everything, and they send 200 applications in, they don’t get a single offer,” he said on Fox Business.
Campanaro, who is a dual major at NYU, though not in hospitality, admitted he doesn’t yet have the credentials compared to older students who have more skills to nab a closer internship.
“It’s basically luck of the draw,” the young man said. “I could have applied to every single internship in the entire country and not gotten a single one in New York, so it’s just a complete coincidence.”
He added, “Freshmen do not intern at hotels, really.”
Despite the exhaustive and expensive travel from school to internship and back again, Campanaro said he’s happy he pursued the unusual arrangement with one month to go in his internship.
“I’ve learned so much just about the Ritz-Carlton philosophy and customer centricity, all of that, and just sort of anticipating the needs and wants of your guests,” he said on Varney & Co.
In an essay he wrote for Business Insider, he shook off questions about how he manages the workload and travel in order to make the paid internship work. It involves studying as he’s in the middle of travel, he noted.
“I don’t see all of this as work but as the pursuit of my passions. Each task I embark on is driven by sincere interest and ambition, making every day an opportunity for discovery, learning, and personal growth,” he said.
Florida
Florida’s bright moon will dim Eta Aquarids meteor shower
The quick-firing Eta Aquarids will shoot across Florida skies in the early hours between May 5 and May 6.
Floridians who are willing to stay up to see the Eta Aquarid meteor shower may be able to see spectacular incandescent bits of debris from passing meteors, according to NASA.
Unlike last month’s Lyrid meteor shower, the Eta Aquarids will only have about 10 meteors per hour due to the moon’s brightness. Here’s what Florida Panhandle residents need to know to catch a peek at the meteor shower.
What makes the Eta Aquarids meteor shower special?
Eta Aquarid meteors hail from Halley’s comet, which was last seen by casual observers in our solar system in 1986, according to NASA.
The meteors are known for being quite fast, shooting across the sky at 40.7 miles per second. Their speed is responsible for the long trains of debris that follow in the wake of the meteors.
Stargazers can usually catch the Eta Aquarids meteor shower when they peak in early May.
When is the best time to see Eta Aquarids meteor shower in the Florida Panhandle?
The Eta Aquarids meteor shower will peak in the early morning hours between May 5 and May 6. The sky over the Florida Panhandle will be darkest around 12:45 a.m., but the moon’s luminosity and moderage cloud coverage will obscure views of the shower.
Where to look for Eta Aquarids meteor shower in the sky?
Look for Eta Aquarid meteors in the eastern sky, near the constellation Aquarius. The meteors originate from the area of the constellation that features one of its brightest stars, Eta Aquarii, according to NASA.
Here’s some more specific information regarding where to look in Pensacola, provided by TimeandDate.com.
Time (May 6)
Direction
Altitude
3 a.m.
95° east
7.6°
4 a.m.
103° east-southeast
20.3°
5 a.m.
113° east-southeast
32.6°
6 a.m.
125° southeast
43.9°
The direction is in reference to true north, and the altitude measures height in degrees over horizon.
How cloudy will it be?
View of the Eta Aquarids meteor shower will be further obscured by sky coverage, according to the National Weather Service. Sky coverage is forecast to be about 55% at 1 a.m. on May 5, and 48% by 4 a.m.
Tips to see Eta Aquarids meteor shower
Seeing the Eta Aquarids meteor shower will require a bit of luck in the Panhandle. Here are some tips to help you have the best chance of catching a meteor:
- Skies in the Florida Panhandle should be darkest around 12:45 a.m., making it the best time to see the Eta Aquarids.
- Find a spot with as little light pollution as possible, like the beach or rural areas.
- Bring something comfortable to sit or lie on, like a lawn chair, blanket or sleeping bag.
- Give your eyes about 30 minutes to adjust to the darkness.
When is the next meteor shower?
There will be a gap between meteor showers following the Eta Aquarids. The Southern delta Aquarids will peak on the night of July 30.
2026 meteor shower calendar
Popular showers, like the Perseids, Alpha Capricornids and Southern Delta Aquariids, are just a few months away.
The following meteor showers are still ahead in 2026, according to the American Meteor Society:
- Southern delta Aquarids – July 12 to Aug. 23; peaks on the night of July 30
- Alpha Capricornids – July 3 to Aug. 15; peaks on the night of July 30
- Perseids – July 17 to Aug. 24; peaks on the night of Aug. 12
- Orionids – Oct. 2 to Nov. 7; peaks on the night of Oct. 21
- Southern Taurids – Sept. 20 to Nov. 20; peaks on the night of Nov. 4
- Northern Taurids – Oct. 20 to Dec. 10; peaks on the night of Nov. 11
- Leonids – Nov. 6 to Nov. 30; peaks on the night of Nov. 16
- Geminids – December 4, 2026 to Dec. 17; peaks on the night of Dec. 13
- Ursids – Dec. 17 to Dec. 26; peaks on the night of Dec. 21
- Quadrantids – Dec. 28, 2026 to Jan. 12, 2027; peaks on the night of Jan. 3, 2027
Florida
Former Florida mayor seeks return to city commission
His goals include making Stuart’s economy one based on tourism.
MARTIN COUNTY — Sensing chaos in the city, former Stuart Mayor Merritt Matheson has filed to run again for a seat on the City Commission.
So far, he has one opponent: Johnny Cealmov.
Matheson served as mayor from December 2021 to August 2022, when former Mayor Christopher Collins defeated him by a slim margin of 95 votes or 2.6% in the election that year. He began his service as a city commissioner in 2018.
“I’m running to bring back integrity, respectful, responsible leadership and stability to the city of Stuart,” Matheson said. “I’d like to stop the chaos that we’ve seen in the city.”
Collins, in his first term on the commission, quit as mayor April 30 to run for Martin County Commission. Stuart Vice Mayor Sean Reed automatically becomes mayor.
The chaos includes going through four city managers in six months and departures of high-level staff, such as the finance director, as well as other finance department staff, Matheson said.
The chaos also includes, he said, the unnecessary lawsuits the city has faced and others it lost, such as one with Polk Street Hotels. It includes, too, the severance paid to former City Manager Michael Mortell, who was fired without cause.
The city remains out of compliance with Senate Bill 180, a state law prohibiting changes to land development regulations between August 1, 2024, and October 1, 2027, because it’s still implementing the changes it made after August 1, 2024.
The state, Matheson said, has reacted to the chaos by taking away Stuart’s ability to govern itself — by enacting laws like SB 180 — which made changes to Stuart’s land development regulations null and void.
What prompted Matheson to run?
Nothing in particular prompted him to run for City Commission this time, he said. The chaos certainly played a part.
Collins’ push to use Martin County Forever funds to buy a historic school building was another reason, Matheson said. Martin County Forever funds are meant for improvements to water quality and to conserve environmentally sensitive land.
Stuart is getting about $2 million a year for 10 years from the Martin County Forever initiative that voters passed in 2024.
“The best way to manage growth in Martin County is grow our conservation land,” Matheson said. He helped lead the work to get the Martin County Forever initiative passed and he sits on the Martin County Environmental Lands Oversight Committee, which helps direct the use of those funds.
What he would like to accomplish
Calling himself a “slow-growth proponent,” Matheson said he follows the law and understands property rights, too, he said.
“The job of a commissioner, more often than not, is choosing the best of two bad outcomes,” Matheson said.
He would like to improve the city’s infrastructure, such as sidewalks, bike lanes and landscaping. And he wants to find solutions to ease traffic. He’s a proponent of other ways of getting around, which might include a water taxi, for example.
And he would like Stuart to become a tourism-based economy, rather than a growth-based economy, he said.
Keith Burbank is a watchdog reporter for TCPalm, usually covering Martin County. He can be reached at keith.burbank@tcpalm.com.
Florida
California’s high cost of housing is a warning for Florida | Opinion
If housing costs went down as development increased, that would already be happening. But it didn’t happen that way in California, and it’s not going to happen in Florida, either.
Can anything fix the US housing crisis?
Will 2026 bring an affordable housing fix, or are high prices the new normal for buyers and renters?
“It’s the economy, stupid,” Bill Clinton famously proclaimed on his way to winning the presidency in 1992. As we approach midterm elections more than 30 years later, a similar catchphrase could be: “It’s affordability, stupid.”
Many Americans consider the cost of living the top issue that needs to be addressed in November elections. While food, gas and health care costs are a big part of this equation, the biggest expense many families have to reckon with every month is their mortgage or rent payments.
With that in mind, it’s instructive to look at what has happened – and is happening – in Florida and California, two large, heavily populated states on opposite sides of our country.
By one metric, these states appear to be headed in different directions. However, they have more in common than their political leaders might imagine.
A tale of two states, more alike than they may realize
In 2025, California experienced a net loss of 150,000 people, according to one estimate. Other estimates indicate slow growth over the past three years, although the state’s population is about where it was in 2019, before significant population losses during the COVID-19 years.
By contrast, my home state of Florida has been growing like a flower in springtime. Florida added almost 200,000 residents from 2024 to 2025, capping a decade with an overall population growth of 16.5%.
If you’re planning a car trip to Disney World or other Orlando area attractions this summer, these growth statistics will become more than an abstraction.
As you’re driving south on Interstate 75 near the Florida Turnpike junction, about an hour north of your destination, there’s an excellent chance you’ll get mired in bumper-to-bumper traffic in what seems like the middle of nowhere.
You’ll actually be passing through two of the nation’s fastest-growing metro areas, Ocala and The Villages, which may be totally unfamiliar unless you’re a horse breeder or you’ve heard tales about senior citizens spending their retirement years engaged in bawdy activities.
What political narratives miss on affordability
In the hyperpartisan shorthand of our times, a simple narrative has emerged: People are fleeing the liberal, tax-and-spend policies of California, a blue state, while they’re flocking to the red state paradise Gov. Ron DeSantis dubbed “the Free State of Florida.”
That surely makes a good applause line at conservative political events, but the reality is much more practical. According to research by the Public Policy Institute of California, high housing costs are most often cited as the reason why people have chosen to leave the Golden State.
According to the institute, about 900,000 people left California from 2015 to 2025 over housing costs. More than 1 in 3 Californians have at least considered leaving the state for that reason.
That should be setting off alarm bells in Florida and other places where fast population growth is seen as a sign of prosperity.
Even with the recent downturn, California’s population has grown from almost 33.9 million in 2000 to 39.3 million, according to U.S. Census data. During many of those years, California was outpacing the national growth rate.
During that time, the median home price nearly quadrupled, from $226,870 in January 2000 to $889,190 this March.
Florida’s housing prices have been rising with its population, too. Median home prices in the Sunshine State are about $420,000 now, up from about $105,500 in 2000.
Some Florida lawmakers apparently think they can grow their way out of a housing affordability crisis. The state legislature has approved a bill that places new limits on local governments’ efforts to control growth and development within their jurisdictions.
The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. David Borrero, a Republican from the Miami suburb of Hialeah, suggested the legislation would drive home costs down by increasing the stock of housing available in the state.
That would be true only if all housing units looked the same, but they don’t. Modern developers aren’t building quaint bungalows for working-class folks anymore. They’re building mega mansions and high-rise oceanfront condominiums, because – as the old saying goes – that’s where the money is.
If housing costs went down as development increased, that would already be happening. But it didn’t happen that way in California, and it’s not going to happen in Florida, either.
‘Build, baby, build’ isn’t an affordable housing strategy
Developers always seem to think the solution is to build more houses – and let the market take care of itself. However, market corrections may take years to take shape, while most regular folks are battling with their household expense budgets on a month-to-month basis.
There are certainly ways to encourage more specific types of affordable housing. For example, by offering tax breaks or other incentives for more “live-work” spaces, where apartments or condos are located above businesses, or so-called “mother-in-law” units, where small guest houses are permitted on lots with larger primary homes.
Small-lot houses, apartments or condominiums clustered around commercial areas can create walkable neighborhoods, where more people can walk to work or shopping rather than commuting long distances between urban centers and the suburbs.
But if developers just get a free hand to do whatever they want, wherever they want, they’re going to keep building more expensive homes on large land tracts until the real estate bubble bursts.
At that point, people are going to start voting with their moving vans, leaving Florida, much like they did in California.
These two large states, ranked first and third in population, should serve as a cautionary tale for the rest of the country. Trying to grow your way out of a housing affordability problem just won’t work.
Blake Fontenay is USA TODAY’s commentary editor.
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