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- Get your Bill McCollum autograph today! GOP reigns supreme on eBay
- Unemployment in Florida reaches 11.2 percent; debate over federal aid continues
- Rubio within 10 points of Crist? So says Daily Kos poll
- Sink’s CFO office chief to move to campaign
- AG race could be a contest of dog lovers
- Meek tries to pin down Crist on unemployment compensation aid
- Rubio backer collects $$ from Crist buddies
- GOP “emergency meeting” tomorrow; Okaloosa party votes against Greer
- Dockery snags endorsement from former GOP chairman Tom Slade
- Erin Isaac’s resignation letter
- Aronberg gets painters’ union endorsement
- AARP: Poll shows members support health care reform
- New “fair and balanced” Tally news service coming?
- Today’s number: 35, average age for high blood pressure in military
- Gun rights advocates split between McCollum, Dockery
The Florida Symposium on Offshore Energy just kicked off at Florida State University, where guests are paying $50 a head to hear from experts on the legal, environmental and economic ramifications of lifting the ban on offshore oil drilling in Florida’s waters.
Oil drilling is poised to be the hottest topic of the 2010 legislative session, with House Speaker-designate Dean Cannon planning to re-introduce legislation that would lift the longstanding ban on drilling in state waters. The late-arrived House plan never made it to a vote in the Senate, but future Senate President Mike Haridopolos intends to file it in his chamber this time around.
In comments to reporters, the lead panelists vowed today to attack critical issues that legislative panels have barely scratched so far—like how much oil really lurks out there in state waters, and whether it’s financially worth the trouble to taxpayers and the state to permit drilling. So far, though, we’ve noticed only a small handful of lawmakers here to listen in. Interestingly, most of them voted no on drilling last spring: Reps. Leonard Bembry (D), Gary Aubuchon (R) and Peter Nehr (R). Rep. Rich Glorioso (R), who voted yes, is also here.
There is also healthy mix of legislative and Cabinet staff present—tasked, no doubt, with giving their bosses the digest version of the three-hour program later. Less visible is the green lobby, which is already grumbling about what it perceives to be a pro-drilling bias among panel members.
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