The 2012 Florida Legislature began its work three months early this year to start the process of redrawing state house, senate and congressional district lines based on new Census numbers referred to as redistricting that is required as a result of the decennial census and reapportionment. While this and passing the state budget remain the only constitutionally-mandated duties of the legislature, members of the House and Senate found time to file some two-thousand bills ranging from death by firing squad to restrictions on the number of twinkies one can purchase with food assistance. Fortunately, the leadership of the Senate immersed itself in controversy, subjecting its members to tough votes, mostly coming up short and paying a political price.
Amid the infighting, desperate leadership looking for an easy win targeted the civil liberties of Floridians. The resurrection of a decade-long battle over prayer in school gave the socially conservative wings of both parties cover to claim a bipartisan victory. The Governor’s blatant disregard for basic constitutional liberties was on display as he championed drug testing for state employees, this time through the legislative process. Last session’s unfinished war on women’s health found shelter this year in nine antichoice measures, one of which threatened to effectively shut down any reasonable access to abortion care throughout the state. All the while partisan rhetoric and election-year pandering made any chance of reforming our elections, criminal and juvenile justice, or public education systems a distant prospect.
Fortunately despite some defeats, and with the help of our allies and in our organizational coalitions, we reveled in some victories: the defeat of every anti-choice measure this session, protecting and preserving a woman’s access to safe and quality health care in Florida; the narrow demise of a big business prison privatization scheme that would have fed Florida’s addiction to mass incarceration; the retreat of Alabama/Arizona-style anti-immigrant laws that promote racial profiling and fear in our communities; the absence of legislation or a proposed constitutional amendment to overturn our historic legal victory on adoptions; the Supreme Court’s affirmation that voters asked and will receive fair and apolitical districts by rejecting the legislature’s Senate maps; and the passage of one of our own proactive pieces of legislation protecting the safety and defending the dignity of incarcerated pregnant women by banning the cruel and archaic practice of shackling in the third trimester and during the birthing process.
We would have not been successful without the expert guidance and political savvy of our contract lobbyist Pamela Burch Fort or without a reliable home team comprised of Beth Wilson, Maria Kayanan, Derek Newton and Baylor Johnson. We look forward to continuing to defend freedom and liberty in Tallahassee - where we remain a subtle voice of reason in an often unreasonable place.
Respectfully,
Ronald F. Bilbao, Senior Legislative Associate and Advocacy Coordinator

Reproductive Rights

SB 290/HB 277 (Flores/Burgin) Abortions – The worst of nine anti-choice bills filed this session, this bill targeted abortion providers by mandating onerous restrictions such that a clinic must be wholly-owned and operated by a physician, requiring a 24-hour waiting period before a woman can obtain an abortion, and mandating ethics training for physicians performing abortions. The bill passed the House but failed to be considered by the Senate.

Religious Freedom

SB 98 (Siplin/Van Zant) School Prayer – This is the school prayer, which was termed “inspirational message” bill when Senate legal staff expressed doubts it could pass constitutional muster. The measure authorizes school districts to adopt a policy to allow students of all ages to deliver inspirational messages at compulsory and non-compulsory school events and prohibits school personnel from being involved in overseeing the message contents, sectarian or otherwise. The Senate version passed its chamber and was then brought over to House, heard in committees, and passed by the full House. It heads to the Governor for signage.
SB 1360/HB 1209 (Hays/Metz) Foreign Law – This bill, formerly targeting Sharia law, bans the state from using any religious or foreign law as a part of a legal decision or contract. The bill passed the full House but died in a Senate committee.

Immigration

HB 1315 (Harrell) E-Verify – The only anti-immigrant bill filed this session, this bill aimed at implementing the questionable federal electronic verification program for employers which required all employees to submit proof that they were not undocumented immigrants. The bill failed to get a hearing and had no Senate companion.
SB 106/HB 91 (Siplin/Bullard) In-State Tuition – This measure would allow all Florida students who meet certain requirements to be eligible for resident tuition rates at public colleges and universities in the state, regardless of immigration status. The bill failed in its first Senate committee.
SB 1018/HB 441 (R. Garcia/Fullwood) Resident Tuition – This bi-partisan bill would fix a rare exception in Florida’s public higher education system that bars citizen students of undocumented parents from paying resident tuition at public colleges and universities. It is the subject of an ongoing lawsuit by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The bill died on a tie vote in its first Senate committee.

Drug Testing

SB 1358/HB 1205 (Hays/Smith) Drug-Free Workplaces – The legislature took it upon itself, under the lobbying and legal “expertise” of the Governor’s counsel, to expand the Drug-Free Workplace Program to mandate random, suspicionless drug testing for state employees on a rotating basis. The state agency can choose whether to participate in the program as it will have to find the funds to do so, i.e. pay for the drug tests, in its current allotted budget. If an employee fails the drug test, he/she must attend a rehab program or face disciplinary action or discharge. The bill sailed through both chambers mostly along party-lines. It heads to the Governor for his enthusiastic signature.

Prison Privatization

SB 2038 (Rules) – This Senate bill by the Rules Committee would have privatized more than two dozen prisons in eighteen counties at a minimum savings of 7%. The bill failed on a close Senate vote, 19 yeas to 21 nays.

Criminal Justice

SB 732/HB 561 (Bogdanoff/Fresen) Mandatory Minimums –This bill would have revised the quantity of a controlled substance which a person must knowingly sell, purchase, manufacture, deliver, or bring into the state with the intent to distribute in order to be subjected to the automatic imposition of a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment. The bill passed two Senate committees but had no movement in the House.
SB 448/HB 177 (Bogdanoff/Porth) Inmate Reentry – This bill will shorten the sentences of non-violent, drug offenders who have completed at least half their sentence and qualify for a drug rehabilitation program. The bill gained bipartisan support and passed both chambers. It heads to the Governor for his signature.

Death Penalty

SB 772/SB 352/HB 29 (Altman/Braynon/Julien) Sentencing in Capital Felonies – This bill requires an advisory sentence of death be made by a unanimous recommendation of the jury in capital cases. These bills were not heard.
HB 4051 (Rehwinkel Vasilinda) Death Penalty – Abolishes the death penalty in Florida. This bill was not heard.

Public Assistance

SB 1128/HB 813 (Oelrich/J. Smith) TANF and SNAP Benefits – This bill opts Florida into a federal option prohibiting individuals convicted of a felony drug offense from receiving temporary cash assistance and food stamps. The House bill passed the full membership along party lines but the Senate measure stalled late in the Session when it was sub-referred to an additional committee and was never heard.

Military Funeral Protests

SB 632/HB 31 (Benacquisto/Rooney) Funeral Protests – This bill banned protesting one hour before and after and within one hundred feet of a funeral for a member of the military, elected official, EMT worker, or minor. The bill was amended in the House to remove the content-based restrictions but died in messages when the Senate refused to concur with the changes.

Voting

SB 1596/HB 1461 (Diaz de la Portilla/M. Gaetz) Voter ID – As originally filed, this bill would have allowed for a voter’s address to be challenged by a poll worker if the address on the photo ID did not match the address in the voter roll. The ACLU worked to successfully amend the bill to remove the harmful provision, but the bill became a vehicle for other amendments that weighed it down. The bill passed the House, then the Senate with amendments, but died in returning messages to the House.

Healthy Pregnancies for Incarcerated Women

SB 524/HB 367 (Joyner/Reed) Anti-Shackling – Written and filed for the first time last session, this bill bans the use of restraints on incarcerated pregnant women during labor, delivery and post-partum recovery, unless a corrections officer makes a determination that there is a documentable extraordinary circumstance. Certain restraints are completely banned during third trimester of pregnancy and prisoners are to be notified of the updated changes to the procedures upon taking effect. The bill passed unanimously through the Senate and the House and heads to the Governor for his signature.

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Saturday, March 31, 2012 - 9:00pm

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Life has certainly changed from the days of speedy mopeds, spicy curries, and the balmy offices of Art Relief International. My time in Thailand as the Executive Director of Cultural Canvas Thailand and Art Relief International has come to an end. While I can say that the transition between two very different worlds is not an easy one, it is something that I could not be more excited about.

Last week, I began my new job as Regional Organizer for the ACLU of Florida. With each passing day, my enthusiasm grows—a likely effect of the contagious excitement to preserve the rights and liberties of others that seems central to everyone working here. The roles that I will be playing our area continue to unfold as I delve into the diversity of projects in which the ACLU is involved.

Half of my time will be dedicated to developing, organizing, and implementing advocacy campaigns to advance and defend the rights of LGBT people in Northwest Florida. My first mission is to reduce discrimination in high schools, working with educators to prevent bullying and facilitate student-led Gay-Straight Alliances (GSAs). GSAs will be a fantastic way to make school a safer place for students.

In addition to my work with the LGBT rights, I will be working on other ACLU priority issues, including criminal justice reform, women’s rights, and drug policy reform. I am learning about Florida’s struggle with over-incarceration and the school-to-prison pipeline—issues that I am eager to work to counteract.

I see the work that the ACLU is doing and it is important. I am grateful to be involved with such a thoughtful and passionate organization. While the sunny, bustling ACLU office in downtown Pensacola is a huge change from my life in Thailand, I can say one thing for certain: I feel at home.

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Thursday, March 29, 2012 - 4:57pm

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When news broke about the shooting death of Trayvon Martin and the decision of the Sanford, Florida Police Department not to press charges of any sort against the shooter, George Zimmerman, the ACLU added its voice to those who were calling for a more thorough outside investigation.

Our Mid-Florida Regional Director Joyce Hamilton Henry was one of five speakers at the first rally in Sanford, held at the Allen AME Chapel.

Our concerns about the inept work of local police and prosecutors has been heightened by reports that the detective investigating the shooting death of Trayvon had recommended the filing of charges, but was overruled by the States Attorney for Seminole County.

And now, with so much of the conversation (witness Change.org, that has collected approximately two million signatures on a petition calling for the arrest of George Zimmerman, essentially defining Zimmerman’s arrest as justice for Trayvon),we have tried to change the focus of the discussion.

The op-ed below the break, which is reprinted from the Tampa Bay Times (formerly the St. Petersburg Times) focuses on:

  •  Not putting excessive faith in the criminal justice system;
  • It doesn’t always render justice or too frequently it renders inadequate justice
  •  We need to use this incident to address (a) problems of race, (b) problems with local law enforcement, and (c) America’s gun culture

Questions in teen's shooting need to go deeper

By now nearly everyone has heard about the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.

We've consumed the media coverage because we know that the unfolding story is deeper and more powerful than the tragic death of an unarmed 17-year-old high school student. It is a tragedy at the intersection of racial stereotypes, the integrity of the police and America's gun culture.

Clearly, it is about the death of Trayvon Martin and how, after the avalanche of public outrage over the inept response by local police, leaders far and wide (including the ACLU) succeeded in prompting a more thorough outside investigation.

But now that the U.S. Justice Department, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and other law enforcement agencies are involved, we should avoid the temptation to see the investigation and whatever results from the criminal justice system as the end of the discussion. As great a tragedy as it is already, it would be made worse by glossing over the underlying issues that are seizing national attention.

America has a race problem. It is profoundly sad that it takes a shooting death to get Americans to talk about it or acknowledge it. Racial stereotypes and biases infect much of life in America from education to employment, access to health care and housing, and a justice system that incarcerates black Americans at a far greater rate than others.

How Americans see one another matters. It mattered that George Zimmerman saw a young black man in his neighborhood, and then called police to say he saw someone "suspicious." Too often, being young and black is enough to be stopped by police. It's also enough to be seen as "suspicious" by someone on neighborhood watch.

We should also acknowledge that police are not immune from negligence, incompetence or even outright bias. No law enforcement agency is. Innocent people are arrested and convicted and some who are guilty escape justice. It used to be common in Florida that crimes with undeniable racial motives were swept under the rug or overlooked while families and communities waited in vain for justice.

It matters that Sanford police reportedly deviated from standard practice the night of the shooting. That is one reason why the involvement of the FBI and the FDLE was necessary.

Another issue that speaks out for our attention is Florida's gun culture.

Florida lawmakers have pushed the bounds of responsible gun ownership beyond recognition. Debates are now about prohibiting doctors from asking parents if there are guns in the home with children, recognizing a "right" to bring guns to work and school, and the right to "stand your ground." Public policies have helped create a culture in which gun owners feel emboldened to shoot first and not ask questions at all.

It matters because a self-appointed neighborhood watchman feels it's appropriate to use a gun while following someone in his neighborhood.

Investigators are going over the facts about what happened in Sanford on Feb. 26. The criminal justice system will address whatever it does or does not find.

One reason why our concern should not end with an arrest or prosecution is that we need to be prepared for the possibility that the criminal justice system will not yield justice — or an inadequate justice that outrages all sides. Recall the acquittal of the men who killed Emmett Till in Mississippi or Arthur McDuffie in Miami, or the acquittal of the four officers who killed Amadou Diallo in New York by firing 41 bullets, or the acquittal of the officers who brutally beat Rodney King in Los Angeles.

Americans who are watching the Trayvon story need to do more than watch the actual detectives working the case. We all need to work just as hard to ask the tough questions about what underlies this tragedy.

And if we want the truth and justice for all the parties in this case, we should demand honest answers — and we should demand it of ourselves as well.

We need to use the Trayvon Martin tragedy to restart the conversation about race in America, as well as problems with local police and our nation's culture of guns.

That discussion must at least start by acknowledging that struggles with these issues, but especially race, taint so much of American life and culture.

As tragic as it is to lose a young person to a senseless shooting, it would be a more profound tragedy if we wait for the next Trayvon Martin to ask these questions again.

Howard Simon is executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida.

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - 5:15pm

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