Has the Florida Senate lost its mind? You have to ask yourself.
Has the Florida Senate lost its mind? You have to ask yourself.
Rick Scott won -- he got the job. It cost $100 million to do it.
You have the Florida Legislature up here in the state capital pondering how to spend $700 million on restoration ...
It's all in the report. Read the University of Florida Water Institute report.
No good has come of the Everglades Trust's six-figure TV, radio and online campaign to buy U.S. Sugar Corp. land.
On the exact day (in 1845) when Florida became the 27th state in the union, Speaker Steve Crisafulli convened the Florida Legislature with a reminder of how far the Sunshine State has come.
In case you think most of the jobs that came to Florida in the last 12 years did little to change the state's tourism-ag-real estate culture, you've missed the mating dance of the governor's
The outlook might get brighter next week for the Everglades Foundation and its allies, but for now their voice crying out to buy U.S. Sugar Corp.
The subject of public employee retirement systems is one of the toughest nuts for legislatures especially to crack.But for many local governments in Florida, there's another, seldom-mentioned
President Obama was as good as his word Tuesday, vetoing the Keystone XL Pipeline days ahead of his deadline to make the decision.
Spreading a lie isn't going to win the Everglades Trust friends or influence any of the people I know.
Though the Seminole Tribe of Florida has its hands full negotiating a new gaming compact with Florida Gov.
Twenty-eight hundred applications for 10 seats on a volunteer committee due to be chosen in seven days.
And the Florida Department of Education is still sorting through them.
The speakers at the microphone on the Old Courthouse steps railed on about anything and everything land and water -- even about a pipe carrying "dirty" gas to South Florida, about polluted springs,
Sending water south from Lake Okeechobee to meander naturally through the Everglades -- the "flowway" endorsed by the Everglades Foundation as the only way -- "will never happen, it's pie in