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Extensive Media Enterprises Much of this week's edition examines how various legislators view the just-concluded Regular Legislative Session. However, work remains on issues such as property taxes, a new congressional map and – lest we forget – the budget. Of all the people in Tallahassee this year from this region, perhaps no one was as close to the process as Speaker Pro Tempore Wyman Duggan, who had a front-row seat during his final Regular Session in Tallahassee. During a chat this week with Bold, Duggan recounted successes of the Session, including efforts to protect local waterways and children. "Passing the Ocklawaha Bill," Duggan said, was a "decadeslong effort by lots of people."  Wyman Duggan reflects on the Legislative Session, highlighting wins, tensions and unfinished work. "I was happy to help do this piece, and we got it passed off the House floor, which, you know, hadn't happened before, so that's great. Obviously, the Senate didn't get it done, but it was still a tremendous accomplishment for me personally and in the House." While Duggan's bill got just three no votes in the House, the companion bill filed by Sen. Jason Brodeur never made it to the floor despite sailing through Committees. Duggan also spotlights legislation State Attorney Melissa Nelson brought to him, "arising out of the investigations of Douglas Anderson," the art school in Jacksonville that went through a spate of predatory teachers grooming students. The Senate companion, SB 590, sponsored by Sen. Jenn Bradley, passed. "It's going to the Governor for signature, and that tolls the statute of limitations for prosecuting mandatory reporters who are supposed to report improper activity and don't," Duggan said. Duggan also discussed the choppy dynamic between Senate President Ben Albritton and House Speaker Daniel Perez, saying that it wasn't necessarily that "out of the norm." He contends that former Speaker Paul Renner and former Senate President Kathleen Passidomo "probably worked in better harmony than Albritton and Perez," and that the fractiousness of this Session and in 2025 isn't necessarily "out of the historical norm." To that end, he expects the Legislature to play ball during redistricting, saying the Governor's Office likely will provide a map and "we'll probably pass it." (The drama, of course, is in how ambitious that map can be. U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack, for example, believes the Governor's push for five newly Republican seats would put current Republican incumbents "in danger." But that's not the state Legislature's concern.) Similarly, a Special Session is expected for a property tax amendment, as the Governor eyes eliminating them for homesteads. Duggan gave some insight into how he expects that to go, also, and why the Governor has slow-walked it so far. "I think the Governor's electoral strategy is built on the premise that constitutional amendments start out when they kind of get their big reveal to the public at their peak level of support, and over time, their support ebbs away. And then on Election Day, they, you know, they pass, or they don't pass, depending on where they started out," Duggan said, of the potential push for 60%. He believes the "Governor's approach to doing it as a special is built entirely around the strategy of having a sprint campaign rather than a marathon campaign." "He didn't want to roll out whatever it is he wants to do too early because over time the public would (become bored and) the dazzle would wear off by Election Day (and) there might not be 60% statewide support for it." |
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