Politics

Bay of Pigs Museum, Disney Transit Line Among $70 Billion Budget Plans

By: Jim Turner | Posted: March 9, 2012 3:55 AM
Orlando International Airport and Disneyworld

$1.2 million of the budget is set aside for transportation linking Orlando International Airport and Walt Disney World. | Credit: foundcity.net

Legislators are expected to cast the final votes on the $70.4 billion budget for the next fiscal year on Friday afternoon.

The 423-page plan, which includes an increase in school spending, money for a museum highlighting the Bay of Pigs invasion and an airport-to-Disney World transit line, is an increase from the $69.2 billion budget for the current fiscal year that ends June 30.

House Speaker Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park, called the work a “Herculean effort.”

View the budget plan here.

The payroll would further trim the state’s budget by paying for 117,881 employees, down from 122,235 in the current year.

Pre-K-12 education would see an $843.9 million increase, a significant boost but not the full $1 billion requested by Gov. Rick Scott. The total increases per-student funding from $6,224 to $6,375.

Charter schools would collectively receive $55 million toward construction costs.

Another Scott priority, funding for restoration of the Florida Everglades, landed $30 million, which was $10 million less than requested by the governor. Meanwhile, the Florida Forever land-buying program is designated to receive $8.7 million, half of Scott’s requested total.

The budget for the state’s operations of Medicaid went unchanged from the current year, with $22.3 billion in funding. At the same time, funding for state hospitals is going to drop 5.6 percent.

Visit Florida, the state’s tourism arm highlighting Florida for the state’s 500th anniversary next year, Viva Florida, is in line to receive $54 million, up from $35 million.

While Florida TaxWatch wasn’t ready to comment on the budget Thursday, the fiscal plan features a marked departure from the past few years with numerous single-line expenditures that are expected to be among the Tallahassee-based watchdog outfit’s annual list of “turkeys.”

Sen. Jim Norman, R-Tampa, agreed that many may not be appropriate in the current economy, but noted that earmarks can be “an investment” to attract jobs, “like incentive packages that bring corporations here."

The budget includes more than $11 million items listed as cultural grants:
  • $500,000: Florida Aquarium.
  • $25,000: Firehouse Cultural Center -- LaBelle.
  • $150,000: Spence Lanier Pioneer Enrichment Center.
  • $50,000: Lake Wales Arts Council.
  • $100,000: Family Empowerment and Intervention -- North Miami.
  • $75,000: Haitian Heritage Museum Project.
  • $500,000: Bay of Pigs Museum, Miami.
  • $250,000: Science and Discovery Center of Northwest Florida.
  • $300,000: Heritage Trail Network Black History House -- Tallahassee.
  • $500,000: Straz Center Renovations Project, Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center Inc. (Hillsborough County)
  • $500,000: Dunedin Fine Art Center Multi-Phase Construction Project, Phase 2 (Pinellas County).
  • $99,822: Accessibility Enhancement and Facility Improvements, Hippodrome State Theater Inc. (Alachua County)
  • $650,000: Sidney and Berne Davis Art Center Restoration, Florida Arts Inc. (Lee County)
  • $36,000: Children’s Museum Boardwalk, The Children’s Museum Inc. (Palm Beach County)
  • $445,000: Mound House: History from the Ground Up, Town of Fort Myers Beach (Lee County).
  • $300,000: Atrium for All Seasons, Philharmonic Center for the Arts Inc. (Collier County)
  • $500,000: The New Elliott Museum, Historical Society of Martin County Inc.
  • $100,000: Renovation of the Original Galleries, Museum of Fine Arts of St. Petersburg, Florida, Inc. (Pinellas County)
  • $500,000: Veterinary Hospital and Animal Conservation and Science Center at Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo (Hillsborough County).
  • $350,000: Hotel Ponce de Leon Solarium -- Flagler College, St. Augustine (St. Johns County).
The state’s transit plan would also set aside $1.2 million for a transit line to link Orlando International Airport and Disney World, and $1.118 million to prepare the Orlando Executive Airport for the National Business Aviation Association Convention.



Reach Jim Turner at jturner@sunshinestatenews.com or at (772) 215-9889.



Comments (8)

Frank
12:56AM MAR 10TH 2012
Another wonderful budget from the state's "me, me, me" legislators - cut the universities, destroy 4,000+ jobs, mandate un-necessary costly drug-testing programs (where's the problem?), while adding tons of expensive turkeys for powerful, rich, term-limited legslators such as creating a 12th university for the senate budget chairman. At least we'll get to see whether the state's Tea Parties stay quiet with forked-tied tongues, or whether they dilengently work hard to convince the Governor to veto huge portions of this pork-laden disaster. Time to speak up, or hypocritically shut up.
Steve W
12:37PM MAR 9TH 2012
Bay of Pigs: another of the CIA's many "Legacy of Ashes" hallmarks. This fiasco is already detailed in schoolbooks, let's spend the U$500,000 on bolstering science projects at the Miami Science Museum so kids can be inspired and learn new and positive things. Private funding should be used to fund the Bay of Pigs museum, if Miami insists. Maybe, if asked politely, the Bearded One will donate selected Bahia de Cochinos treasures from his garage of horrors.

The Disney Transit Line makes sense in many ways. First, 1.2 million probably covers the engineering studies and perhaps right-of-ways, so Disney must be funding the rest of this project, which must be in the 10s of millions to actually build. Disney provides many jobs not only in the park but in all of the service areas. Not to mention the big taxes paid to Florida. And a transit line will help relieve vehicle traffic.

Investing in culture is healthy and positive, otherwise we'd have nothing but shopping malls, houses and roads. There are jobs involved, also. It would be good to see budgeting for libraries as well, before they disappear completely. Libraries are those gems that people take for granted until they go missing.
Robert H
12:02PM MAR 9TH 2012
A Bay of Pigs Museum, I can almost support. It was an important piece of our past about how little our nation felt about Cuba.

A tram ride from the airport to Disney? Doesn't Disney make enough money to pay for that on their own? Why should tax payer ( specially those who don't go to the parks) be burdened with paying for that? What a joke!
Disenchanted
10:01AM MAR 9TH 2012
Disney is making enough money without me having to donate to them.

Non-profits are a great way for campaign donors to get back multiple times back the $5000 they contribute to an incumbent (or newbie for that matter). Give them taxpayer-funded grants to pay their annual salaries, office expenses, travel and entertainment etc. (Perfectly legal because the legislators write the laws that protect themselves.)

I personally consider all these expenses as "discretionary" money - in that it doesn't benefit the majority of the Floridians who are required to pay for it.
Robert Lloyd
8:46AM MAR 9TH 2012
Scott (normally someone I agree with) should have scratched 100% of the school money. We are spending money on a Bay of Pigs museum? People don't have jobs, money to have medical treatment, and we are stealing money from our people and spending it on a stupid museum?

People should be outraged, but you are not.

We should cut 1% of the state revenue each year for the coming 75 years. We would eventually have our grandchildren futures secured and we would not send the country into a depression.

Of course only Christians should be running things also. Our Founding Fathers understood this.
True American
10:42AM MAR 9TH 2012
You, sir, are a bigot.

Thank you, Sunshine State News, for rising above Robert Lloyd's daily rhetoric and covering stories for all Floridians and all Americans. This museum is long overdue in a part of the world that has been so affected by it. I am looking forward to seeing the exhibits, though I am too young to remember the Bay of Pigs.
Robert Lloyd
4:27PM MAR 9TH 2012
>>You, sir, are a bigot.<<

I place my opinions for all to see and to intellectually consider. This 'bigot' happens to care for the many Floridians that have lost everything the last 5 years and continue to suffer. I will speak up against socialists like yourselves that selfishly try to justify government theft via taxation for political museums, etc.
Frank
2:47PM APR 29TH 2012
You can certainly exercise your freedom of speech.

That doesn't make you any less of a bigot, as demostrated by your continuing tirades against non-Christians, non-whites, and anyone else who inconveniently doesn't expouse to your with-me-or-against-me dillusions.

Leave a Comment on This Story

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.