Monday, July 12, 2010

Alex Sink's Special Session Letter

Alex Sink sends a letter to Senate President Jeff Atwater and House Speaker Larry Cretal with a request of wonky intuitives for the July 20-23 special session. The letter reads as a smart piece of progressive policy. Which should guarantee that Sink's proposal will be hated by Republicans in the legislature.

Using litigation money to environmental study is an idea appealing to green supporters. The Florida legislature thinks short-term. Florida is in a deficit and the legislature will use any incoming money to help fill the financial sinkhole.

Enforcement on speedier claims is a win-win for Democrats. BP America has received criticism for handling of claims. Democrats can get legislation for legal enforcement on claims. If Republicans vote against the legislation Democrats can hammer Republicans. Florida Democrats have failed to use policy proposals for political leverage. This is an opportunities for Democrats to win on policy and politics.

Tax relief for businesses hurt by the spill is a proposal that should get bipartisan support. Republicans love tax cuts and Democrats will see the cuts as a form of stimulus for the fishing and the tourism industries.

Below is Alex Sink's letter.

**********

The Honorable Jeff Atwater

President of the Florida Senate

312 Senate Office Building
404 South Monroe Street
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1100



The Honorable Larry Cretul

Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives

420 The Capitol

402 South Monroe Street

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1300



Dear President Atwater and Speaker Cretul:

When the Florida Legislature convenes later this month to guard against future catastrophic threats to our state’s economy and environment by passing a constitutional amendment to ban near beach drilling, your members have the added responsibility to ensure that our small business owners, citizens, and way of life are protected.

The need for a ban on near beach drilling to prevent a future catastrophic disaster on our beaches is clear, and the time to make sure our beaches are protected is now. Without protecting our state waters through the constitutional amendment process, the Florida we know and love is in critical danger. But you also should take this session to pass smart, meaningful legislation that will directly impact the lives of so many of our residents and offer critically needed help for our small business owners.

In our fight to save Florida jobs, the need is urgent, and the task at hand trumps all else. The cost of the actions necessary to protect Florida’s economy must be the responsibility of BP and the federal government. The cost of inaction would otherwise be shouldered by all Floridians.

As Florida’s top fiscal officer, I have outlined the following incentives, claims changes, and environmental initiatives to protect Florida’s economy:


Recoup Economic Damages

Enact laws, retroactive if necessary, that will guarantee recovery of the economic damages suffered by businesses, homeowners, and local and state governments resulting from major disasters.

Mandate Speedier Claims Fulfillment

Create a single-point of entry for claimants, including plain language forms, with requirements for review and fulfillment within 15 business days. This process should include a dispute resolution process in the case of denial, with final arbitration overseen by the government.

Tax Relief for Businesses and Residents

Authorize property tax rebates for business and residential property owners whose property values have fallen because of the oil spill, similar to hurricanes, tornados, and fires.

Pass tourism tax incentives, such as a temporary waiver of the bed tax, to help the tourism industry recover and rebound, injecting tourism spending dollars back into our economy.

Provide Job Training and Re-Training

Dedicate federal government resources for job training and re-training in Northwest Florida so that our unemployed fisherman, charter boat operators, marina workers and restaurant and hotel workers have clear opportunities to learn new skills. Include provisions to extend training to other regions if the oil begins to impact other parts of Florida.

Provide direction to Enterprise Florida and the Office of Tourism, Trade and Economic Development to focus economic development efforts in Northwest Florida with the near- and long-term goal of creating non-tourism job opportunities.

Florida Environmental Endowment

Create an independently managed Florida Environmental Endowment funded by BP grants or future litigation settlements to provide resources for the study of Florida’s aquatic environment.

Constitutional Amendment to Ban Near Beach Drilling

Florida must ban oil drilling in its near shore waters through a constitutional amendment to prevent this type of disaster from ever occurring up to ten miles off our beaches.


The nature and challenge of expanding this special session is unprecedented. It is my hope that the solutions produced will match the size and scope of this disaster.

Sincerely,

Alex Sink

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