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Extensive Media Enterprises House Speaker-designate Sam Garrison is on record as being against what could be part of a proposal by Gov. Ron DeSantis to pay the way for the state's poorest counties in the event voters decide to eliminate property taxes in November. Garrison also suggested that even Republicans who recognize the burden of millage may disagree on how to alleviate it. On Thursday, he told members of the Jacksonville Bar Association that he is "very concerned that whatever we do be done uniformly." "I don't want to get in the business, especially on a constitutional referendum, of having different rules for different counties," he added. Garrison noted that Clay County, the northern part of which is a functional suburb of Jacksonville, is in a "doughnut hole" between urban areas like Duval and 32 of Florida's 67 counties designated as fiscally constrained.  Sam Garrison discussed property tax concerns and legislative challenges during remarks in Jacksonville. Typically lower in population and property value, they include Baker, Bradford, Calhoun, Columbia, DeSoto, Dixie, Franklin, Gadsden, Gilchrist, Glades, Gulf, Hamilton, Hardee, Hendry, Highlands, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Lafayette, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Okeechobee, Putnam, Suwannee, Taylor, Union, Wakulla and Washington counties. DeSantis has called the amount of money needed to make up for uncollected property tax revenue "budget dust." Garrison also discussed the unique challenges of leading a "top-down" legislative branch made up of 120 people with "no shortage of egos," working to "manage the personalities and the basic needs of 119 of your closest friends who you can't hire or fire. And all of whom, you know, think they should have your job." "You're in charge of everything, from what bills are heard to what coffee is served," he noted, joking that the job is a "piece of cake." And given that voters pick the members, there's a lot of variance in the Legislature. "If I got to choose who the members would be, there's probably a very different membership, right? But they represent their districts. And so, there are things you can do within any sort of political organization that we have a big structure like that to try to reward positive behavior, and not reward, you know, behavior that's less positive. It's called politics," Garrison said. Garrison also acknowledges that the last couple of Sessions in Tallahassee, where Speaker Daniel Perez has jousted with Senate President Ben Albritton, "haven't actually been the smoothest couple of years," given the "real personality conflicts" that have surfaced between the two leaders. He sees an opportunity to work with the new Governor and believes the first two years of an incoming administration offer the chance to tackle "big issues." |
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