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Stories by Michael Carroll on Florida Record

FLORIDA RECORD

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Michael Carroll News


Carlos Muniz elected chief justice of state Supreme Court, replacing Canady

By Michael Carroll |
Florida Supreme Court justice Carlos Muñiz will take over as chief justice from Charles Canady after his colleagues unanimously elected him to a two-year term beginning July 1.

Florida's high court rejects proposals seeking to expand affordable legal services

By Michael Carroll |
Florida is effectively abdicating a leadership role to improve and expand the delivery of legal services to keep up with technological advances, globalization and alternative business models.

Merging agendas of populist Republicans, trial lawyers worry tort-reform advocates

By Michael Carroll |
Tort-reform proponents are warning that increasing support among populist Republicans for legislation that encourages the filing of private lawsuits will create a drag on state economies, including Florida’s.

Palm Beach County's anti-panhandling ordinance challenged as unconstitutional

By Michael Carroll |
A legal-aid organization is suing Palm Beach County, arguing that its anti-panhandling ordinance violates First Amendment protections and should no longer be enforced against county residents.

Florida's high court OKs state legislative districts, but jury is out on congressional maps

By Michael Carroll |
In a show of unity with the legislative branch, the Florida Supreme Court last week declared lawmakers’ redistricting maps for state House and Senate districts valid, signaling likely agreement on the boundaries of those districts for the decade ahead.

Damages caps on larger Florida cities, counties would rise under amended Florida bill

By Michael Carroll |
A compromise plan to increase the amount of money a claimant can recover from a local government agency passed the Senate Rules Committee last month, but it has an uncertain future as the Florida legislative session winds down.

Florida Senate passes reform plan to curb abusive litigation over property insurance claims

By Michael Carroll |
Additional reforms to help Florida’s beleaguered property insurance industry passed the state Senate Thursday as industry officials expressed hope that the reforms would curb questionable roof claims and rein in what they see as abusive litigation.

Federal judge dismisses lawsuit over sugarcane burning in south Florida

By Michael Carroll |
Glades residents who alleged in a 2019 federal lawsuit that pre-harvest burning in nearby sugarcane fields leads to health-compromising air pollution have agreed to end their litigation with prejudice, meaning the plaintiffs cannot refile the same claim.

DeSantis moves to extend COVID-19 legal liability shield for health care facilities

By Michael Carroll |
Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an extension of COVID-19 legal liability protections for health care providers such as nursing homes last week, gaining applause from business groups and supporters of tort reform alike.

Florida judge OKs injunction against release of actor Saget's autopsy photos, videos

By Michael Carroll |
An Orange County judge has granted a preliminary injunction against the release of photographs, video and audio recordings relating to the investigation of the death of actor Robert Saget at an Orlando hotel.

Christian nonprofit sues Tallahassee over homeless shelter permit denial

By Michael Carroll |
The operator of a transitional residential facility for homeless people in Tallahassee is alleging in a federal court that the city’s effort to shut the facility down flies in the face of the mission’s religious speech rights and religious beliefs.

Florida budget bill would withhold funding from districts that defied mask mandate ban

By Michael Carroll |
A budget bill passed last week by the Florida House of Representatives would strip $200 million from 12 school districts that defied Gov. Ron DeSantis’ ban on COVID-19 mask mandates in public schools.

Florida litigated property insurance claims jump 37% in January, raising industry concerns

By Michael Carroll |
After fluctuating up and down slightly in recent months, the number of litigated property insurance claims in Florida shot up 37% in January, the first significant jump since a high of 6,663 litigated claims in July 2021, new data shows.

Data privacy bill could unleash new wave of civil litigation, Florida chamber warns

By Michael Carroll |
Florida businesses are sounding alarm bells about a data privacy bill that passed the Florida House’s Commerce Committee last week, arguing that its passage would worsen the state’s legal climate and saddle companies with burdensome compliance costs.

Florida appeals court takes up Department of Health's bid to limit access to COVID-19 data

By Michael Carroll |
A Florida appeals court is taking up a bid by the state Department of Health to block the release of daily COVID-19 data, including information about county cases, positivity rates, hospitalizations and deaths.

Florida ends litigation over federal cruise industry policies as CDC allows order to expire

By Michael Carroll |
Florida’s attorney general has declared victory in its legal efforts to overturn the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s conditional sailing order (CSO), which sought to regulate the cruise industry in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Extension of COVID-19 liability protections for health care professionals goes to governor

By Michael Carroll |
Florida health care providers would continue to receive legal liability protections against COVID-19-related lawsuits well into 2023 under legislation that just passed the state legislature.

State Supreme Court declines to provide DeSantis with advisory opinion on redistricting

By Michael Carroll |
The Florida Supreme Court last week rebuffed Gov. Ron DeSantis on a redistricting question, declining to respond to a request for an advisory decision on whether the state constitution requires the retention of a Democrat-leaning congressional district.

Florida lawmakers resurrect effort to change rules on publication of legal notices

By Michael Carroll |
A Florida House panel is moving to revisit rules on how local governments can post legal notices and advertisements so that such public information would no longer be required to be published in local newspapers.

Environmental groups turn to courts to protect Florida manatees from starvation

By Michael Carroll |
Environmentalists are now turning to the federal courts to protect the marine habitat of Florida’s manatee population, which suffered a record number of deaths last year due to mass starvation.