Politics
Scott Faces Tough Crowd on Facebook
Governor gets rough reception at raucous online 'Town Hall'
Around the State
Bill Clinton adviser James Carville once sagely observed, "You never know what you're gonna get when you drag a $100 bill through a trailer park."
Gov. Rick Scott reeled out a virtual version of that exercise Tuesday when he opened up a "Facebook Town Hall" and invited questions from Floridians.
A snarky online crowd -- dominated by what appeared to be teachers seething over performance-based pay and tenure reform bills pending in the Legislature -- responded quickly and, at times, viciously. The voluminous posts proffered a few sharp inquiries, along with loads of inflammatory political rhetoric. A sampling, edited for taste (not grammar):
Comments were flying in so fast and furious that Scott's replies were pushed off the Town Hall screen as soon as they were posted. His responses appeared on his Facebook page.
Unfazed by the technical glitches, Scott rose above the rancor, remained on the high road, and answered actual questions with measured responses:
ON EDUCATION FUNDING AND MERIT PAY FOR TEACHERS: My experience with teachers is they would like to be measured, the measurements need to be fair, and the most effective teachers need to be rewarded with both recognition and better pay. Then, the most effective teachers will remain in the profession.
ON HOW SCHOOLS CAN BETTER USE THE FUNDING THEY RECEIVE: The key is to set specific goals, measure those goals and when we are not meeting those goals. We also need to look at how much money is being spent in the classroom versus administration and capital costs.
ON COMBATING PILL MILL PROBLEMS: This is significant for the state. A friend of mine just lost his daughter. We need to focus on the distribution of narcotics and close down pill mills that are improperly distributing prescriptions.
ON HEALTH INSURANCE: The free market will work if government gets less involved in what type of health care insurance individuals and companies need to purchase. To drive health care costs down and thus, health care insurance, we need to create more competition.
ON MAKING FLORIDA MORE BUSINESS-FRIENDLY: Keep taxes and fees as low as possible, review regulations to eliminate those consumers do not need, make sure we are responsive to the needs of companies who want to create private-sector jobs in Florida.
ON PROPERTY INSURANCE: We need to make sure we have a robust insurance market, where the private sector wants to do business in Florida so Florida taxpayers are not on the hook. We need to deal with the significant cost of sinkhole coverage for homeowners and how that impacts the cost of property insurance.
ON THE ECONOMY: Just hired Gray Swopes, who started Monday. He ran economic development for Mississippi. We are talking to Florida businesses to determine what issues are impacting their interest in expanding in Florida.
Gov. Rick Scott reeled out a virtual version of that exercise Tuesday when he opened up a "Facebook Town Hall" and invited questions from Floridians.
A snarky online crowd -- dominated by what appeared to be teachers seething over performance-based pay and tenure reform bills pending in the Legislature -- responded quickly and, at times, viciously. The voluminous posts proffered a few sharp inquiries, along with loads of inflammatory political rhetoric. A sampling, edited for taste (not grammar):
- Since we all can't come to Tallahassee and ask you questions, why don't you actually sit down and answer some for the press instead of your insipid Tea Party sycophants?
- YOU are playing God and making poor choices by rejecting the funds for our state for employment, for health care, for education, for roads, for cost of living, etc...etc...etc...
- Eliminating another program Floridians had chosen to invest in, the drug database, seems to demonstrate your contempt for the people who were here long before you.
- How is taking $1.75 billion from our children's education, then giving $1.6 billion to your rich corporate buddies, going to balance the budget.
- I'm taking bets right now that in the end you will prove to be the worse thing that ever happened to the state of Florida.
- Florida governors do NOT wear New York Yankees gear!
Comments were flying in so fast and furious that Scott's replies were pushed off the Town Hall screen as soon as they were posted. His responses appeared on his Facebook page.
Unfazed by the technical glitches, Scott rose above the rancor, remained on the high road, and answered actual questions with measured responses:
ON EDUCATION FUNDING AND MERIT PAY FOR TEACHERS: My experience with teachers is they would like to be measured, the measurements need to be fair, and the most effective teachers need to be rewarded with both recognition and better pay. Then, the most effective teachers will remain in the profession.
ON HOW SCHOOLS CAN BETTER USE THE FUNDING THEY RECEIVE: The key is to set specific goals, measure those goals and when we are not meeting those goals. We also need to look at how much money is being spent in the classroom versus administration and capital costs.
ON COMBATING PILL MILL PROBLEMS: This is significant for the state. A friend of mine just lost his daughter. We need to focus on the distribution of narcotics and close down pill mills that are improperly distributing prescriptions.
ON HEALTH INSURANCE: The free market will work if government gets less involved in what type of health care insurance individuals and companies need to purchase. To drive health care costs down and thus, health care insurance, we need to create more competition.
ON MAKING FLORIDA MORE BUSINESS-FRIENDLY: Keep taxes and fees as low as possible, review regulations to eliminate those consumers do not need, make sure we are responsive to the needs of companies who want to create private-sector jobs in Florida.
ON PROPERTY INSURANCE: We need to make sure we have a robust insurance market, where the private sector wants to do business in Florida so Florida taxpayers are not on the hook. We need to deal with the significant cost of sinkhole coverage for homeowners and how that impacts the cost of property insurance.
ON THE ECONOMY: Just hired Gray Swopes, who started Monday. He ran economic development for Mississippi. We are talking to Florida businesses to determine what issues are impacting their interest in expanding in Florida.


Comments (15)
He didn't answer it. Here's another.
Did you throw away 24,000 jobs for HSR, and are you willing to nix the light rail project, merely because these public transportation projects conflict with future profits of Koch industries?
Here's another
Is it true you and your staff are behind an effort to take over the State Lottery and privatize it? Isn't this money supposed to be for scholarships to worthy Florida students, or do you not want Bright Futures for our kids?
Here's another
Does posting your schedule day of, charging exorbitant fees for information, running away from reporters, attending and speaking only to constituents at Tea rallies, and Lincoln Day Dinners, qualify as open government, answerable to ALL Floridians?
We need more snarky and vile questions.
You complain, then complain to your all mighty union you are so beholden too.
No one forced you into your profession, you chose it. Stop the gimmie gimmie gimmie mentality. You haven't had a raise? Welcome to the real world. Those of us in the private sector hasn't either and oh, by the way, we have to put money into our 401Ks. Welcome to the real world. We are broke.
You sure do sound like you are in the pocket of someone up there, since your name is "repubtallygirl".
Also, get your facts correct... this is a right to work state, so whichever "all mighty union" you are referring to... there aren't any in this state. You want an all mighty union, trying looking up north... here the unions protect their worker's due process and assist in collective bargaining...
Florida Governor Rick Scott has a mob associate in his leadership coalition. The man to help Florida get back on track is none other than Joe Ardolina of American Truck Sales (Sterling Designs Inc). He's a former vice president in the now defunct H&W Refuse Service who's president was Anthony Carione, fingered by Florida law enforcement along with his brother Frank Carione, as then active figures in the underworld. Another brother, Joseph Carione, pleaded guilty to defrauding the government as a co-defendant in a case that involved currently jailed Colombo crime boss Andrew Russo.
Ardolina's other now defunct business was RITE-WAY SANITATION CORP., incorporated in Florida, it uses the same name that was incorporated by Frank Carione in New York.
Rick Scott Announces Small Business Leadership Coalition
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/214/496/Rick_Scott_Announces_Small_Busine...
Google cache of Rick Scott's campaign page listing Joe Ardolina
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:8gqJIGahdWIJ:www.ri...
Joseph Ardolina is listed as an officer along with Anthony Carione in H&W Refuse Service. Ardolina's other company ILED Inc., has a 2008 filing listing Carione's signature at the bottom.
Florida Corporations Search http://www.sunbiz.org/corinam.html
Anthony Carione, brother of Frank Carione. Pg. 250; Space, Time, and Organized Crime: Second Edition. 1994 by Alan A. Block, Transaction Publishers, ISBN 1560001046.
Court file linking Frank Carione to Rite-Way Sanitation Corp. (NY) and Grand Carting. Pg. 46; Visa Mastermoney Litigation EDNY CV-96-5238
http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/f215100/215178.pdf
Newsday article linking then owner of Grand Carting, Joseph Carione, to Colombo crime boss Andrew Russo.
A Court Littered In Guilty Pleas / Illegal hauling netscarters
Published: February 19, 1999 7:00 PM
By Donna Brutkoski and Edward W. Lempinen
See also: USA v. Hickey, et al. Case No. 0:1996-cr-00693
The good people of Florida know all too well what "these people" are all about and who that group of people with their "hands out for taxpayers dollars" is and that it includes Mr. Scott or have you forgotten his history. In July 1997, FBI agents raided Columbia/HCA accounting offices in seven states, including Florida. Within days, Columbia’s board of directors ousted Scott, but gave him a nearly $10 million severance package, including stock shares worth $300 million and a $1 million a year consulting contract. (WGCU) Scott claims to have not known about the fraud which is the same excuse we always hear from those at the top. What happened to the "buck stops here"? In my opinion, the real reason Scott isnt in a prison cell for Medicare fraud is that his business partner in Columbia/HCA was none other than the brother of then Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist. In the United States, it is the poor that serve time not the rich and connected....they move into the governor's mansion.