Orlando Sentinel

Bid for slavery memorial advances

- By Lloyd Dunkelberg­er

TALLAHASSE­E — A bill that would lead to the creation of a slavery memorial at the Florida Capitol began moving Tuesday in the state Senate.

The Senate Government­al Oversight and Accountabi­lity Committee unanimousl­y approved the bill (SB 286), sponsored by Sen. Darryl Rouson, DSt. Petersburg, who said the memorial would recognize “the fundamenta­l injustice, cruelty, brutality and inhumanity of slavery” in Florida and rest of the nation.

The vote was significan­t because the House voted 118-0 during the 2017 legislativ­e session to authorize a slavery memorial, but the proposal never received a hearing in the Senate.

The bill approved by the committee Tuesday is filed for the 2018 session, which starts Jan. 9.

A similar bill (HB 67), sponsored by Rep. Kionne McGhee, D-Miami, has cleared three House committees and is ready for a floor vote after the 2018 session starts.

Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, the Senate Government­al Oversight and Accountabi­lity chairman, opposed the previous slavery-memorial legislatio­n, raising questions about its intent and design.

But he said working with Rouson has helped resolve his concerns.

“For the record, I would say he and I have been on the same page,” Baxley said. “I never opposed the monument. We should all recognize those who came before us and paid a great price for what we have received.”

He said he wanted to make sure the memorial focused “on the people who endured slavery rather than the institutio­n itself.”

He also said he was concerned about giving “a free hand” to state agencies involved in the design of the memorial. “If we’re going to do it, let’s do it right,” he said.

In his discussion­s with Rouson, Baxley said he is more comfortabl­e with the intent and the process for designing the slavery memorial and finding a place for it on the state Capitol grounds.

Under the bill, the Department of Management Services would be the lead agency in designing the memorial and designatin­g a place for it. The agency would work in conjunctio­n with the Florida Historical Commission and the Division of Historical Resources, which is part of the Florida Department of State.

The Department of Management Services, which oversees state facilities, would be required to deliver a report on the slavery memorial to Gov. Rick Scott and legislativ­e leaders by Nov. 1, with the 2019 Legislatur­e reviewing the proposal and providing for the project.

In supporting Rouson’s bill, Baxley, who is the descendant of a Confederat­e soldier and who has defended the Confederat­e flag and memorials, said he voted for the legislatio­n “with an expectatio­n of permanency” for all historical memorials and monuments.

“And I hope that we can keep growing mutual respect for all of us honoring the permanency of those who came before us,” he said.

Last month, Baxley voted against a separate proposal (SB 472 and SCR 184) that would replace a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith in the National Statuary Hall in Washington.

Statues of Smith and John Gorrie, widely considered the father of air conditioni­ng, have long represente­d Florida at the National Statuary Hall. funding

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States