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Stories by Michael Carroll on Florida Record

FLORIDA RECORD

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Michael Carroll News


Florida teachers union wins injunction against school reopening order

By Michael Carroll |
The Florida Education Association seemed to gain the upper hand this week in its court battle to overturn Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran’s executive order requiring Florida schools to offer in-person learning by Monday.

FSU board backs effort to rename university's law building

By Michael Carroll |
Florida State University’s Board of Trustees added its support last week to a years-long effort to remove the name of a segregationist, the late Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice B.K. Roberts, from the main College of Law building.

Florida Bar exam postponed for third time amid security concerns

By Michael Carroll |
Amid concerns about software problems, technical support and online privacy, Florida officials this week postponed the 2020 state bar exam for a third time since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.

State representative fires latest legal salvo against Florida high court pick

By Michael Carroll |
A state representative who’s trying to overturn the nomination of Judge Renatha Francis to the Florida Supreme Court lacks standing in her lawsuit and misreads clear constitutional wording, Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a Supreme Court filing.

Class action accuses Bahamas Paradise Cruise Line of holding crew members without pay

By Michael Carroll |
A Miami law firm has filed a federal class-action lawsuit against the Bahamas Paradise Cruise Line, alleging that the firm coerced crew members on its ships to work without pay and failed to promptly repatriate them to their home countries.

Surveys divided on giving coronavirus legal immunity to Florida businesses

By Michael Carroll |
Nearly six in 10 Florida voters oppose guaranteed immunity for corporations and businesses from lawsuits involving COVID-19 infections, according to a poll carried out on behalf of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Florida presses U.S. Supreme Court for water-sharing decree

By Michael Carroll |
In the latest salvo in a two-state water war, Florida filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court that forecasts environmental and economic doom unless the court issues a decree capping Georgia’s Apalachicola River water consumption.

Orange County school district sued over COVID-19 reopening plans

By Michael Carroll |
The union representing 14,000 local educators is suing Orange County Public Schools and its superintendent to halt the district’s reopening plans, arguing that the current risks of coronavirus outbreaks is too high.

DeSantis remains silent on coronavirus legal liability protections

By Michael Carroll |
Florida’s Ron DeSantis opted not to sign a letter bearing the signatures of 21 other Republican governors last month that urged congressional leaders to provide legal liability protections to health care workers, enterprises and schools during the coronavirus pandemic.

11th Circuit judges rebuff moves to disqualify them from felon voting case

By Michael Carroll |
Two federal appeals court judges rebuffed calls by 10 Democratic U.S. senators that they recuse themselves from a closely watched case involving felon voting rights in Florida.

Pandemic taking a bite out of Florida court funding

By Michael Carroll |
Revenue outlooks for trust funds that help to fund Florida’s judicial system are nearly $50 million below fiscal-year estimates made in December of 2019 as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

278 coronavirus-related lawsuits filed in Florida, law firm reports

By Michael Carroll |
Coronavirus-related lawsuits filed in Florida since the beginning of the year now number 278, the third highest litigation count nationwide behind California and New York, according to a tracking system set up by the law firm Hunton Andrews Kurth.

DeSantis' pick for Florida Supreme Court called unqualified in lawsuit

By Michael Carroll |
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is standing by his appointment of Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Renatha Francis to the state Supreme Court in the wake of a lawsuit filed by a state lawmaker that challenges Francis’ qualifications for the position.

Florida felons' voting status unclear in the wake of federal court actions

By Michael Carroll |
The voting status of hundreds of thousands of Floridians who have served sentences for felony convictions remains uncertain as a result of two recent federal court actions.

Court referee rejects Florida attorney's bid to overturn suspension order

By Michael Carroll |
A court referee has rebuffed efforts by Coral Gables attorney Scot Strems to dissolve a suspension order alleging he engaged in a “vast campaign of unprofessional, unethical and fraudulent conduct.”

Jacksonville residents, businesses sue to stop GOP convention

By Michael Carroll |
Several Jacksonville residents and business owners are suing to cancel or scale down the scheduled Aug. 24-27 Republican National Convention due to coronavirus health concerns.

Environmental group sues governor over ban on 'rights of nature'

By Michael Carroll |
An Orange County environmental group is suing Gov. Ron DeSantis over his signing of a bill that bars local governments from conferring “rights of nature” on waterways and other parts of the natural environment.

Fontainebleau not required to pay for laid-off workers' health care coverage, lawsuit says

By Michael Carroll |
Miami’s Fontainebleau Hotel is suing the local hospitality workers union in federal court, arguing that the resort is not required to pay millions of dollars for health care coverage of laid-off employees.

Coronavirus spike forces Florida bar exam to go online

By Michael Carroll |
Florida’s planned in-person July 28-29 bar exam has been delayed three weeks and rescheduled in an online format due to rising coronavirus cases in the state.

Appeals court ruling affirms legality of Florida cities' red-light camera operations

By Michael Carroll |
Florida cities likely won’t have to pump the brakes on their automated red-light camera operations, thanks to a decision just handed down by the state’s Third District Court of Appeal.