On this Thursday, June 3, episode of Sundial:
Nikki Fried Runs For Governor
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried is the latest Democratic candidate to launch a bid for the 2022 gubernatorial race. As the lone Democratic statewide officeholder, Fried is the de-facto leader of the Democratic Party in Tallahassee and has been a counterpoint to the DeSantis administration on the coronavirus pandemic, gun control and immigration.
Before Fried can challenge DeSantis, she鈥檒l need to win the primary next August and faces a difficult challenger in Democratic U.S. Rep 鈥 and former governor 鈥 Charlie Crist.
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鈥淲e all know Charlie. Charlie has been here for a long time. But the people of our state want something new. I鈥檓 not a career politician. I鈥檓 not somebody who is beholden to anybody besides the people of our state,鈥 Fried said on Sundial.
St. Pete Polls conducted a survey of Florida Democratic voters last week and found Charlie Crist leads Nikki Fried by a margin of more than 30%. Beyond those odds, a Democrat hasn鈥檛 gotten into the governor鈥檚 mansion in Tallahassee in more than 20 years. But Fried argued she鈥檚 the candidate for Floridians that want change.
鈥淎fter talking to people and getting this message across they鈥檙e going to know the system is rigged against them. Whether it鈥檚 our constitutional amendments that we have been passing consistently over the last 20 years, that once it gets to Tallahassee they dismantle it and let it go towards special interests," said Fried. "Whether it's our healthcare system, or the unemployment system that was designed to fail the people and we saw that firsthand last year."
The agriculture commissioner is facing scrutiny from Republicans for her ties to the medical marijuana industry. Last week, for money she gained from investments in the company Harvest. When asked about whether voters should be concerned about her being beholden to special interests, Fried said she would sell her shares of Harvest if she were elected governor.
Florida鈥檚 New Budget
This week, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed off on the biggest spending plan in the state鈥檚 history.
The $101.5 billion budget includes money for infrastructure, the environment, schools, health care and even wage raises for some state employees. This year鈥檚 boost is about $9 billion higher than last year鈥檚. Much of that money is coming from multiple federal bailout plans.
鈥淚t certainly is a sign that the state is rebounding since the pandemic,鈥 said Ana Ceballos, the Miami Herald鈥檚 politics and policy reporter. 鈥淭his year [DeSantis] used his veto pen sparingly.鈥
In local projects, the governor vetoed just $54 million 鈥 much less than the $1 billion he vetoed the previous year in preparation for the economic setbacks from the pandemic.
The veto also included about $1 billion in federal money for a new emergency fund, the governor made this cut citing the hurdles the government put in place to make the money usable.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 money that should be spent on Floridians and not put aside in reserves,鈥 said Esteban Santis, a budget and revenue policy analyst with Florida Policy Institute.
His organization has made the case that the federal money vetoed should have been used to fix the 鈥渂roken unemployment insurance system or implementing a state earned income tax credit.鈥 Florida has until 2024 to use those funds.
Cleaning Water Using Cacti
For millions of people living in the developing world, access to clean drinking water remains a critical challenge on a daily basis. Norma Alcantar, a chemical engineer from the University of South Florida, developed an innovative low-cost solution to the problem 鈥 using cacti in order to clean drinking water.
鈥淪o it鈥檚 like a gooey, very viscous substance that cacti have and they have properties that really act like a fishing net in the ocean. You throw the fishing net and it will fish whatever you have in the ocean. The cactus has these sugars that will act like a fishing net, it will catch whatever is in the water,鈥 Alcantar said.
She was recently inducted into the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame for her creation. She used the invention to clean water in camps of displaced Haitians in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake.
鈥淎fter the earthquake, there was a lot of debris in the water because most of the construction had actually gone down. And that had dissolved many of the metals from the construction sites and concrete and sediments into their water supplies,鈥 Alcantar said.