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June
2009
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Volume
1, Issue 5 | |
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| Overview: 2009 Regular Session of the
Florida Legislature |
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The Regular
Legislative Session, a nine-week period held annually in
the spring, ran a week longer this year to allow
additional time for the House and Senate to pass the
fiscal year 2009-2010 budget. Passage of the state's
annual budget is the only activity that is
constitutionally required of the legislature. After the
budget passed both chambers, the Session came to a close
on Friday, May 8.
On Wednesday,
May 27, Governor Crist signed the $66.5 billion budget
into law with appropriation vetoes of a 2% State
Employee Pay Reduction and the transfer of $6 million
from Florida's Concealed Weapons and Firearms Licensing
Program.
> Final
outcome of Conference budget areas of
interest
A total of 271 bills were passed by the
House and Senate this Session and will be or have already been
sent to the governor for his signature. Our updated
legislative report includes the final status
of bills that were closely followed by the
Conference during this legislative
session.
> Legislative
report
In summary, the following is a
list of bills contained on our report that passed both
chambers:
CS/CS/SB 766 (Oelrich) - Anatomical
Gifts CS/SB 414 (Crist) - Plastinated Bodies CS/HB
597 (Reed) - Homelessness CS/CS/SB 168 (Joyner) -
Statewide Task Force on Human
Trafficking CS/HB 123 (Snyder) - Human
Smuggling HB 109 (Bembry) - Clinical, Counseling, and
Psychotherapy Services CS/CS/CS/HB 935 (Bogdanoff) -
Area Agencies on Aging CS/CS/CS/HB 1495 (Nelson) -
Property Insurance CS/SB 1840 (Deutch) -
Cigarette User Fees CS/CS/SB 918
(Rich) - Florida Kidcare Program CS/HB 285 (Patronis) - Medicaid
Program/Low-Income Pool CS/CS/HB 453
(Weatherford) - Florida Income Tax Credit
Scholarship CS/CS/HB 1539 (Fresen) - School Athletic
Coaches
At the end of each week of the
legislative session the Conference issued a summary of
activity on bills of interest. To review these weekly
summaries, click here. | |
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FCC
Advocacy Network Activity
The Conference
thanks FCC Advocacy Network members for their extraordinary response
to action alerts issued this past legislative
session. Nearly 3000 electronic messages were sent
through our on-line system to state legislators urging that
they take the necessary steps to protect human life and
dignity
and promote the common good. In addition to email
messages, numerous phone calls and faxes from Network
members relayed vital information to our elected
officials.
Our network continues to
grow at a steady pace, and we welcome the over 1050 new
subscribers to the FCC Advocacy Network since the start of
2009. This network is an excellent opportunity for
Catholics in Florida to carry out their responsibility to
participate in political life.
Please encourage your family and friends to join
the FCC Advocacy Network by visiting www.flacathconf.org. |
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Florida Supreme Court Stays Two
ExecutionsCatholic
Bishops: Neither Retribution Nor Deterrence Justify Death
Penalty Two death row
inmates scheduled for execution were granted stays by the
Florida Supreme Court on May 21.
John Richard Marek,
convicted of the kidnapping, rape and strangulation of Adella
Marie Simmons, was scheduled to die by lethal injection on
Wednesday, May 13. Just prior to the stay, the bishops
of Florida issued a statement to Governor Crist. "We implore
you to commute Mr. Marek’s sentence to life in prison without
possibility of parole and reconsider your decision to continue
executions in Florida," said the bishops. > Full
statement from the bishops of
Florida |
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Mr. Marek's
attorney, Marty McClain, presented evidence in the form of
statements from three witnesses who said the co-defendant,
Raymond Wigley, admitted that he was the
strangler and not Marek. Wigley was
killed by another inmate in 2000 while serving a life
sentence.
David Eugene Johnston, convicted of the
stabbing and strangulation of 84-year-old Mary Hammond, was
scheduled for execution on Wednesday, May 27. His
attorney, Todd Doss, argued before the Florida Supreme Court
that physical evidence in the case should be DNA tested
since that
technology was not available at the time of the
crime. Mr.
Johnston’s request was granted, and the testing must be
completed within 90 days. |
"While the Church acknowledges that society has a
right to execute violent transgressors, the ability of the
modern penal system to protect society makes the need for the
death penalty very rare, if not practically
nonexistent." Bishops of Florida
September 17, 2008 |
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| Federal Stem Cell Research
Activity
On March 9, President Obama issued an Executive Order
overturning limits placed on government funding of
destructive embryonic stem cell research. On April 23, the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) published and accepted
public comments on
their draft
guidelines to implement this directive. Both the United States Conference
of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and Florida-based Citizens
for Science Ethics provided official comments. Key
points from the USCCB message include:
- Concern that
the guidelines miss the “central fact of science” that
embryos are living humans, and they ought not be destroyed
for research.
- Advancements
in treatment using stem cells have come from the use of
adult and cord blood stem cells.
- The proposal
fails to consider a key finding of the National Bioethics
Advisory Commission, that human embryos should only be used
for research when there is no other source of these cells;
we now have induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS), which are
embryonic-like and obtained without harming embryos.
- Leading
researchers have expressed their own misgivings regarding
the morality of destroying human embryos for research and
indicated, due to the advancement of iPS cells, it is the
"beginning of the end" for embryonic stem cell
research.
Said Michael
Sheedy, Florida Catholic Conference Associate Director for
Health, “We regret that the U.S. appears poised to exceed the
current funding restrictions on this life destroying
research.” Proposed guidelines do not allow creation of
embryos for destruction in research, but use of "leftover"
embryos from in vitro fertilization clinics. Sheedy
added, "This does not prevent scientists from creating a
surplus of embryos in the fertility process with the knowledge
that they will not be implanted and thus considered
"leftover". The guidelines also prohibit funding for
human/animal hybrids, somatic cell nuclear transfer (cloning)
and parthenogenesis (forming an embryo with only one
gamete).
> Full
comments from USCCB to NIH |
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> Registration
brochure |
2009 State Respect Life
Conference
The Love
that Satisfies
The Diocese of Orlando is pleased to host this
year's event. With topics that include Best Practices in
Ministry, Theology of the Body, Human Trafficking, Legislative
Issues and Evangelization, this conference provides a great
opportunity to gain knowledge and join in prayer and
fellowship. It kicks-off on Friday, October 16 with a youth
night and ends with a White Mass celebrated by Bishop Wenski
on Sunday, October 18. All events take place at the Marriott
Hotel, Lake Mary. Registration deadline: September 15,
2009.
For more information, Contact Liz Clayton at
(407) 246-4819; eclayton@orlandodiocese.org
or visit www.advocacyjustice.org. |
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| Conference Files Amicus Brief
in Support of Sugar Cane Cutters
Prior to the
mechanization of sugar cane harvesting in the 1990's, H-2A
migrant workers from the Caribbean were brought to Florida for
the hand harvesting of the crops working for companies in the
Clewiston, Belle Glade and Palm Beach areas. In Achord vs.
Osceola Farms Co., the cutters claim they were not paid
the federally guaranteed hourly wage. Former supervisors have
stated in depositions that they were ordered by company
officials to underreport workers’ hours.
The
constitutionality of an 1835 statute that requires
non-residents of Florida to post a $100 bond in order to
access the court system is being challenged by Florida Legal
Services representing the cutters, most of whom live in
Jamaica making less than $100 per month. In addition to the
Florida Catholic Conference, others filing amicus
curiae or “friend of the court” briefs in support of the
approximately 1,500 workers seeking back wages are several
farmworker organizations; the Guatemalan consulate; Sandy
D’Alemberte, former president of Florida State University and
past president of the American Bar Association and John Mills,
former speaker of the Florida House of Representatives and
former dean of the University of Florida law school.
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Florida Catholic
Conference Joins Faith Groups to Support Foreign Aid
Reform
In April, the
Florida Catholic Conference and several faith communities
urged U.S. Congresswoman Ileana-Ros-Lehtinen to support H.R.
2139, an initial step to make our nation’s foreign assistance
more effective. Foreign aid reform is necessary to
better meet the needs of poor and hungry people around the
world. Human
well-being can be enhanced by aid that is better
targeted to relieve poverty, that is more reliable, flexible
and responsive, and that avoids inefficiencies and
duplication.
> Letter
to Congresswoman Ileana-Ros-Lehtinen, April 29,
2009 |
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A Call for Reform of Florida Prison
System
Several
organization, including the Florida Catholic Conference,
joined the Collins Center for Public Policy on an open letter
to the Governor, Legislature,
and People of Florida calling for reform of the prison
system. Identifying several in adequacies with the
system, the letter urges implementation of legislation passed
in 2008 that establishes the Correctional Policy Advisory Council, support for
funding of effective programs designed to treat offenders in
the community and assist with inmate re-entry into society,
and assistance from the Council on State Governments or other
national organizations.
> An
Open Letter to the Governor, Legislature, and People of
Florida |
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Federal Education
Programs Catholic School Leaders Seeking Improved Communication
Regarding No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Services and Federal
Stimulus Options
The
flow of information from the United States Department of
Education (USDOE) to state and local agencies has been a topic
of discussion and action by the Florida Catholic Conference
Schools Executive Committee. Presently,
communication
channels are from the USDOE to the Florida Department of
Education (FDOE); from there, information flows to and from
local school districts and then to public and non-public,
elementary and secondary schools.
James Herzog, Florida Catholic Conference
Associate Director for Education, held meetings in May 2009
with Michael Kooi, Executive Director of the FDOE Office of
Independent Education and Parental Choice, and state contact
persons for priority areas addressed in the
Vision
for Catholic School Participation in Federal
Programs.
At present,
Conference staff is corresponding with appropriate state
contact persons to identify
instances in which Catholic schools are successfully
participating in priority programs and those in which schools
may need additional information and encouragement for eligible
students.
Furthermore, staff is hoping to identify the dollar
value of services being rendered by students in Catholic
schools. The overarching goal is to help encourage
schools to seek their equitable share of services from title
programs, as well as the American Recovery and Reinvestment
(ARRA) funds starting to flow into the Sunshine State.
Finally, the Conference Education Office plans to develop an
annual survey or reporting mechanism to gather information
from each diocesan schools office about participation levels
in each county served. |
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| Florida Catholic
Conference Offers a Fond Farewell and Welcomes New
Faces |
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 Photo:
FCC
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Pat Tierney, Superintendent, Diocese of
St. Augustine, Retires after 29 Years of
Service When Pat
Tierney joined the Diocese of St. Augustine in 1980 to head
its Catholic education program she oversaw 19 schools with a
student population of 5,200. During her nearly three
decades of service, the Catholic school community grew to 29
schools and more than 11,000 students spanning northeast and
north central Florida. Throughout her tenure, Mrs. Tierney
maintained an environment in which faculty and students
excelled, while allowing each school to preserve its Catholic
identity.
As Superintendent, Mrs. Tierney served on
the Florida Catholic Conference Schools Executive
Committee. In addition, she was chairperson of the
Accreditation Committee for three academic years beginning in
2002 and a member of the Ad Hoc Standards Revision Committee
from 2000-02. She completed over two dozen on-site
school visitations for the accreditation
program.
> Article
on Pat Tierney in St. Augustine Catholic
magazine |
| Bishop Barbarito, Episcopal Moderator for
Education, and James Herzog present Pat Tierney with a plaque
at a recent meeting of the Accreditation
Committee. |
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Pat Bronsard to Assume Role as Superintendent,
Diocese of St. Augustine Pat Bronsard has been with the diocese of St.
Augustine for 12 years, first as a teacher at Christ the King
school and then as curriculum coordinator. In 2005, she
became associate superintendent. She has master's
degrees in reading and English and completed a certification
program in Catholic Education Leadership from the
University of Notre Dame.
Mrs. Bronsard currently serves as Florida Catholic
Conference Accreditation Committee Vice Chair for the 2008-09
and 2009-10 school years and is a member of the Subcommittee on the Second Round of the School
Improvement Plan (SIP). |
 Photo:
DOSA |
 Photo: Kevin Vickery |
Kevin Vickery Fills Position of Superintendent of
Schools, Diocese of Pensacola-Tallahassee
Kevin Vickery started
work at the Pensacola-Tallahassee Diocesan Schools Office on
May 4. Hailing from Iowa, he brings with him 20 years of
experience in educational administration at both the principal
and superintendent levels, including 10 years as the
superintendent of schools for the Diocese of Sioux City. As
Superintendent, Mr. Vickery will serve on the Florida Catholic
Conference Schools Executive Committee.
> Article on Kevin Vickery in the Florida Catholic
newspaper > Welcome
letter from James B. Herzog, Associate Director for
Education |
Michael Kooi Joins Florida
Catholic Conference Accreditation
Committee
(FCCAC) Mr.
Kooi came on board with the FCCAC in late December 2008.
He serves the people of Florida as Executive Director of the
Office of Independent Education and Parental Choice within the
state's Department of Education.
Mr.
Kooi will fill
the spot for one of two committee members from an outside
educational organization. In this capacity, he is
following in the “footsteps” of other
Department
of Education members who have
served with the FCCAC over the years.
> More
on Michael Kooi in FL Department of Education
newsletter
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 Photo:
FLDOE |
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If you are unable to view this newletter, visit the
following link to read it online: http://www.flacathconf.org/Publications/Newsletter/Volume1Issue5.htm
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