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Plans afoot to find way to build high-speed rail line without state involvement
Gov. Rick Scott's premature rejection of high-speed rail stunned business advocates of the project. Still, they insist, the governor's decision may be a mere speed bump on the way to the Tampa-Orlando line getting built. St. Petersburg Times
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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My Word: Rick Scott ignored rail's facts
On Wednesday our governor decided to cancel high-speed rail to save tax dollars and concentrate on putting people to work in other ways. This man just doesn't get it. Now single-handedly, he has denied future generations of Floridians and visitors the opportunity to ride on a world-class transportation system that would have created thousands of jobs just when we need them the most. And we had the federal government and private sector willing to make it happen for us. Orlando Sentinel
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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High-speed rail: Florida lawmakers will meet today to discuss saving train
WASHINGTON – Several Florida lawmakers plan to meet today with Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood to discuss ways to save a high-speed rail line between Orlando and Tampa. The gathering comes a day after Gov. Rick Scott – citing a need to curb government spending – rejected $2.4 billion in federal funds to build the transit line. Orlando Sentinel
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Pondering the offshore permit problem
The problem I'm referring to isn't the problem with permits per se, but with the number that have been granted and are pending. Last week, Michael Bromwich head of Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, told me and members of the Chronicle's editorial board that the agency isn't delaying permit applications. He said 31 shallow water permits had been issued since June, and nine were pending. This has prompted head-shaking disbelief from some in the industry, who have been talking about delays for months. Houston Chronicle
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Dewhurst, Senate propose their own health care overhaul for Texas
AUSTIN — Texas’ government and private health insurance plans need new methods of paying caregivers, Senate Republican leaders said Wednesday. Doctors and hospitals should not be reimbursed for volume of treatment but for quality and good results for patients, said Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound. Dallas Morning News
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Georgia GOP senators kill Sunday alcohol sales bill
ATLANTA -- Georgians aren't likely to be able to vote this year on whether stores in their communities can sell alcohol on Sunday afternoon after the Senate Republican Caucus agreed to kill the proposal. Savannah Morning News
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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O-h, n-o! B-i-n-g-o! Electronic gaming issue rises once more in Alabama
Will the controversy over electronic bingo ever be resolved? Are there not more pressing matters facing the state? Apparently not. Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange has written a letter to the National Indian Gaming Commission telling them that the electronic bingo machines that are operated by the Poarch Creek Indians in their casinos are illegal under Alabama law and must be removed. Read more: Anniston Star
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Amazon's exit spurs tax fight in Texas
DALLAS—The planned closure of an Amazon.com Inc. distribution center in a suburb here has opened a debate about whether taxes or jobs is the better answer for Texas' tattered budget. Read more: Wall Street Journal
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Amid budget mess, should Texas be in cancer business?
To solve the state’s budget crisis, lawmakers are considering sweeping cuts to almost everything, from school funding to child welfare services. But a $300-million-a-year cancer institute championed by Gov. Rick Perry and now-retired cyclist Lance Armstrong and approved by voters in 2007 has so far escaped the budget knife. Read more: Texas Tribune
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

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Editorial: Are state liquor stores best?
When he was a legislator, Mac Gipson favored the privatization of the state's liquor sales. But now that he runs the state's Alcoholic Beverage Control agency, Gipson has changed his mind. Gipson, who was named administrator of the ABC Board recently by Gov. Robert Bentley, defends the state's current approach to liquor sales. Read more: The Montgomery Advertiser
Submitted 1 years 91 days ago

 

 

Features & Opinion

 
OPINION
By Dennis Cuneo
 

Much has been written about the need to expand and diversify our energy base. With the recent spike in gasoline prices and the Iranian threat to disrupt global oil supplies, some are calling for the equivalent of a Manhattan Project to develop alternative energy sources. Others say that renewables are still too expensive and that we shouldn’t encourage them at the expense of fossil fuels. The highly publicized failure of Solyndra has called into question whether the federal government should continue the U.S. Department of Energy loan program, initiated under the Bush Administration, to provide funding for alternative energy projects. Supporters of the program say that without government funding, we risk ceding leadership of the alternative energy market to China.

 

 

 FEATURE  
By Glenn McCullough, Jr.
 
On February 9 the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission did something it has not done in 34 years: approve a license (two in fact) to build two advanced nuclear reactors. For a consortium of utilities constructing two advanced nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle on the Georgia-South Carolina border, this means major strides generating 2,200 megawatts of new electricity, enough for approximately one million homes and businesses.
 
 
FEATURE  
By Dan Juneau
 
National, state, and local business groups from around the country opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka “ObamaCare”) when it was being debated in Congress last year.
Many trade association representatives (including this writer) went to Washington to express business community concerns about the legislation and to request votes against it. History records that the legislation (all 2700 pages of nearly incomprehensible jargon) was finally enacted on party line votes in both chambers and signed into law by President Obama.
 
 
by Mike Randle
 
The headline above is of a great song from the '70s. It was by The Outlaws and was recorded in 1975 (go straight to You Tube to listen to it and bring the entire staff into your C-suite and rock on). I was a student but more like the starting shortstop for the University of Tampa Spartans baseball team in 1975.
 


 

 


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