Florida
State picks North Central Florida farmer for pot license
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LIVE OAK, Fla. (Information Service of Florida) – The proprietor of a Suwannee County farm is in line to be the state’s latest medical-marijuana operator, beating out 11 different candidates competing for a license earmarked for a Black farmer with ties to Florida.
The state Division of Well being on Tuesday introduced it had issued a “written discover of intent” to approve a medical-marijuana license for Terry Donnell Gwinn, setting the stage for what might be protracted litigation over the sought-after alternative to affix the medical-pot business.
“Mr. Gwinn could be very happy that his software was chosen for licensure and is grateful for the laborious work by the Florida Division of Well being, Workplace of Medical Marijuana Use, to finish the overview of the functions acquired. He appears ahead to working with the workplace to finish the ultimate steps to licensure,” Gwinn’s lawyer, Jim McKee, mentioned in a press release offered to The Information Service of Florida.
Gwinn, 69, and his brother Clifford have farmed for greater than 40 years and function Gwinn Brothers Farm in McAlpin, the assertion mentioned.
Gwinn has cultivated watermelons, soybeans, peanuts, corn and peas on the 1,137-acre farm and has “deep roots in the neighborhood,” it mentioned.
Gwinn’s software listed McAlpin-based “Gwinn Brothers Medicinals” as the fictional title of the operation.
Along with awarding a license to a Black farmer, this week’s determination might assist pave the best way for well being officers to double the variety of medical-marijuana operators within the state — at the moment at 22, not together with Gwinn — as required by a 2017 legislation that set tips for the business.
Florida voters in 2016 handed a constitutional modification that broadly legalized medical marijuana. The ensuing 2017 legislation included a provision requiring well being officers to concern a license to a Black farmer as a result of not one of the African-American farmers in Florida might meet eligibility necessities for an earlier spherical of state licenses.
That earlier spherical of licenses was primarily based on a 2014 legislation that legalized non-euphoric hashish for a restricted variety of sufferers.
The 2017 legislation required granting a license to “one applicant that could be a acknowledged class member” in class-action lawsuits often known as the “Pigford” circumstances. These circumstances had been filed by Black farmers alleging discrimination by the U.S. Division of Agriculture.
To be eligible for the medical-marijuana license, Black farmers needed to present that they’d performed enterprise in Florida for at the very least 5 years. Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration started accepting functions for the license in March.
Black farmers who needed to use had been hit by sticker shock when the Division of Well being’s software course of included a non-refundable price of $146,000 — greater than double what potential operators paid the final time an software course of was open.
To assuage considerations about the associated fee, the Legislature handed a legislation saying that entities who had been deemed eligible for the Black farmer license wouldn’t need to pay to use for future licenses.
The 2017 legislation laid out a schedule for brand spanking new licenses to return on-line because the variety of sufferers who’ve certified for the hashish therapy grows. With greater than 750,000 sufferers, the legislation requires at the very least 22 extra licenses, together with the one introduced this week.
Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration put the Black farmer license on the entrance of the road in awarding further licenses after the Florida Supreme Court docket final yr dominated in a key case difficult a part of the 2017 legislation.
The division’s determination to award the earmarked license for Gwinn is sort of sure to spur litigation from medical-marijuana hopefuls who misplaced out. All however 5 of the 22 medical-marijuana companies at the moment working within the state had been issued licenses after drawn-out authorized and administrative challenges.
Present licenses have bought for greater than $50 million.
“All people who misplaced goes to problem,” Daniel Russell, a Tallahassee lawyer with the Dean Mead agency who represents one of many candidates, instructed the Information Service. “All of us noticed how this went final time. There have been imagined to be 5 licensees and now there’s greater than 20, and it occurred through litigation methods and lobbying methods. In order that’s what we’re going to do once more.”
Russell mentioned his consumer, Willard Meeks, was among the many handful of candidates whose submissions acquired a rating from the well being division.
“We predict we put collectively an incredible software, have a superb crew and sit up for a constructive end result sooner or later,” Russell mentioned.
It’s seemingly that lots of the dozen candidates had been deemed ineligible for the Black farmer license.
A information launch saying the intent to award the license to Gwinn didn’t determine what number of functions had been scored however mentioned the Division of Well being “used a aggressive choice course of to determine the applicant that greatest meets the authorized necessities for licensure.”
Correspondence between the state and candidates, posted in March on the Division of Well being’s web site together with the functions, offered a glimpse into what seemed to be widespread confusion over eligibility for the license.
For instance, applicant Fred Fisher’s software mentioned his household’s roots in Jonesville, a Black agricultural group in Alachua County, date to the times of slavery. He offered a household tree and images of headstones.
However Fisher doesn’t seem to have participated within the Pigford lawsuits, as required by the legislation. In his software, he described how he was a sufferer of discrimination by U.S. Division of Agriculture brokers when his household sought monetary help after a drought within the early Nineteen Eighties.
Fisher mentioned he and his brother weren’t allowed to talk with an agent and had been instructed that, “as a Black farmer there was no manner we had been going to get help.”
His written complaints “had been by no means formally accepted,” his affidavit mentioned.
The collection of Gwinn additionally comes amid a push to place a proposed constitutional modification on the 2024 poll that might legalize leisure use of marijuana in Florida.
Trulieve, the state’s largest medical-marijuana firm, has contributed $10 million to assist launch the initiative.
The “Grownup Private Use of Marijuana” proposal would permit individuals 21 or older “to own, buy, or use marijuana merchandise and marijuana equipment for non-medical private consumption by smoking, ingestion, or in any other case.”
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Copyright 2022 WCJB. All rights reserved.

Florida
Ex-MLB star Furcal faces felony charges in Florida

SUNRISE, Fla. — Former major league shortstop Rafael Furcal is facing felony charges in South Florida, authorities said.
The former All-Star turned himself in at the Broward County jail Wednesday and was released on bail a short time later, according to court records. He’s charged with aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and throwing a missile into a public or private dwelling or vehicle.
Court records didn’t list a defense attorney for Furcal. His former agent, Paul Kinzer, declined to comment on the charges and did not provide a way to reach Furcal directly.
The Sunrise Police Department issued the warrant for Furcal’s arrest Monday, but it didn’t immediately release details about what led to the criminal charges.
Furcal, 47, started with the Atlanta Braves in 2000, followed by stints with the Los Angeles Dodgers and the St. Louis Cardinals. He was with the Cardinals in 2011 when they beat the Texas Rangers in the World Series. He finished his professional baseball career with the Miami Marlins in 2014.
Furcal completed the 12th unassisted triple play in MLB history on Aug. 10, 2003, while playing for the Braves against the Cardinals.
Florida
Florida Panthers one win from advancing to Stanley Cup conference final after beating Maple Leafs

Can the Florida Panthers really go back-to-back?
With a dominant roster and playoff experience, the Panthers are poised to make a strong run at back-to-back Stanley Cup titles.
Sports Pulse
- Sergei Bobrovsky’s shutout streak ended late in the third period, but he still made 32 saves.
- Depth players like Kulikov, Boqvist, Mikkola, and Greer scored key goals for Florida.
The Florida Panthers shut the Toronto Maple Leafs down – again – and are one win away from returning to the Stanley Cup conference finals.
Sergei Bobrovsky came within 1:06 of securing back-to-back shutouts to lead the Panthers to a 6-1 Game 5 victory over the Maple Leafs in Toronto on May 14. Florida will take a 3-2 lead back to Sunrise with a chance to close the series on May 16.
Bobrovsky went 143:25 without giving up a goal — starting late in the third period of Game 3 — before his skid was snapped. But that was not before another dominant 32-save performance.
“We’re definitely happy with where we’re at, but we’re also humbled and focused,” Bobrovsky said. “We just have to focus on the next shift, the next moment, and get ready.”
Aaron Ekblad opened the scoring with 5:22 to go in the first period. He fired a wrist shot off a feed from Sam Reinhart.
Dmitry Kulikov extended Florida’s lead to two goals 6:08 into the second period. His slap shot from the point deflected off the stick of Toronto forward Scott Laughton and past Joseph Woll.
Jesper Boqvist made it 3-0 by tapping home a feed from Reinhart off the rush with 9:55 to go in the second period. Niko Mikkola extended that lead to four goals with a slap shot off the rush with 5:59 to go in the middle frame.
A.J. Greer tacked on a fifth Panthers goal 6:23 into the third period, tapping home a rebound after a Jonah Gadjovich shot hit Jake McCabe in the face. Sam Bennett added a sixth goal 9:10 into the third period with a quick wrist shot on a power play.
”At the end of the day, the job’s not done,” Ekblad said. “There’s still a lot of work to do — to go home, recover and have our best game at home in Game 6.”
Here are three takeaways from Florida’s Game 5 victory:
Jesper Boqvist steps up in Evan Rodrigues’ absence
With Evan Rodrigues out of the lineup after taking a high hit from Oliver Ekman-Larsson in Game 4, the Panthers opted to go with Jesper Boqvist over rookie Mackie Samoskevich on the first line next to Sam Reinhart and Aleksander Barkov.
Boqvist stepped up and notched a goal and an assist despite going 25 games without a point and 39 games without a goal to finish the regular season and in the first seven games of the postseason.
Florida coach Paul Maurice trusted Boqvist with the assignment because of his defensive acumen and his versatility and he delivered. He helped set up Florida’s first goal by staying aggressive on the forecheck and keeping the puck in the offensive zone before Ekblad eventually fired the shot that gave the Panthers the lead. He flashed his speed off the rush to notch his first goal since Jan. 25.
”He’s just got so much speed and he battles out there,” Reinhart said. “Any time you can get those legs, especially in a tight-checking series like this, it’s going to be a positive. He stepped in, was very comfortable and he made some big plays to help us tonight.”
Panthers depth continues to shine in big ways
Through the first 10 games of the postseason, the Panthers have already broken a franchise record with 17 different players scoring in this postseason run — and their Game 5 performance was a big sign of that.
Florida was able to beat Toronto without its usual suspects completely taking over the game. Four players — Kulikov, Boqvist, Mikkola and Greer — all scored their first goals of the postseason. The Panthers got three of their goals from defensemen and had all four forward lines on the ice for at least one of the goals.
“They don’t get on the magazines,” Maurice said. “It’s special when those guys score.”
The Panthers have enough talent to where not one player has to take over the game on a day-to-day basis, and in Game 5, it was the entire roster that pitched in to steal a game in Toronto.
Florida continues to slow down Toronto’s rush attack
Ever since the midway point of Game 3, the Panthers have started to play their game and it has flipped the series on its head. Florida has gotten to its forecheck, stabilized its gap game on transition and has found the answer to slowing down the speedy Maple Leafs.
Game 5 was a perfect example of that. The Panthers held the Maple Leafs to just eight high-danger shots and one shot off the rush. Florida held onto the puck for the majority of the game and continued to hem Toronto in its own end and it led to an onslaught.
”I think they did a great job,” Bobrovsky said. “They played a hard gap game. Very simple, struck hard as a unit — all five guys. So, this was a good one.”
Florida
Are Florida's home insurance reforms helping homeowners?

Impact of 2022 Florida insurance reforms
Florida lawmakers made it harder to sue home insurance companies and offered those companies additional state-backed reinsurance in 2022. How is that impacting the market now, after the 2024 hurricanes? FOX 13’s Craig Patrick reports.
TAMPA, Fla. – As Florida’s homeowners dispute insurance denials from last year’s hurricanes, state reforms intended to improve service and bring down our bills are coming under scrutiny.
The backstory:
In 2022, the Florida Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis made it harder to sue home insurance companies and offered those companies additional state-backed reinsurance – state money to subsidize the private market.
Before this passed, some lawmakers doubted subsidies for the insurance companies and making it harder for consumers to sue them would help consumers.
“It’s corporate welfare. It’s only helping big businesses, and my constituents are not going to feel any relief as a result of it,” said Michael Grieco, who served as a Democratic state representative from 2018-22.
READ: Home insurance nightmares continue months after 2024 hurricanes
Then in 2023, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed DeSantis delivered the biggest insurance bailout in history and crushed Florida homeowners whose houses were destroyed. Trump claimed Florida’s insurance commissioner did nothing, while Floridians’ lives were ruined.
For context, Trump and DeSantis were running against each other at the time.
Dig deeper:
State lawmakers said it would take more time for their changes to pay off. They said we would need to wait a year and a half to see the results.
However, homeowners reported their premiums continued to rise through 2023.
For example, in Pinellas County, Dave Lesko’s home insurance bill increased from $5,500 to $7,500 in 2023, after he had renovated and bolstered it with stronger windows. Then in 2024, his bill rose to $17,000.
Dave Lesko says his insurance bill rose to $17,000 in 2024. It was $5,500 in 2022 and $7,500 in 2023.
“I thought so at first I read the number wrong. I had to get my glasses and double-check, but it’s correct and it’s actually a 120% increase from last year,” Lesko said.
Then Florida took hits from Hurricanes Debby, Helene, and Milton.
And Weiss Ratings found a sharp increase in damage claim denials compared to prior storms in prior years.
“Some of the bigger providers in the state have denial rates close to 50%, so half of the claims are being denied,” said Weiss Ratings founder Dr. Martin Weiss.
Weiss Ratings shows 14 property insurers in Florida closed more than half their claims in 2024 with no payments. Weiss notes that does not include claims that fall outside the policy’s coverage (like mistakenly filing flood claims on a home policy).
Florida home insurance: Reviewing the impact on state reforms
In Washington, U.S. Republican Senator Josh Hawley flagged the rise in denial rates in calling for a congressional investigation.
The Republican Governor of Louisiana, Jeff Landry, cited Florida’s reforms as a model for what not to do.
“They tried wholesale tort reform that insurance companies said would lower rates in Florida and today, policyholders in Florida struggle to get the very claims paid on the policies they paid for,” Gov. Jeff Landry said.
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The other side:
Florida’s insurance commissioner disagrees. Michael Yaworsky notes more insurance companies are doing business in Florida. He said rates have leveled off in Florida, and some are going down.
“We are seeing that stability has emerged throughout the marketplace,” Yaworsky said.
The Source: Information for this story was gathered by FOX 13’s Craig Patrick.
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