Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Let the state Legislatur­e know you’re watching

- By Paula Dockery Paula Dockery is a syndicated columnist who served in the Legislatur­e for 16 years as a Republican from Lakeland.

The Florida Legislatur­e will be holding committee meetings in January and February to hear bills that will be considered during its 60-day session starting in March. Now is the time to start paying attention and to let your elected officials know what’s important to you.

Voters unhappy with their state government need to take some responsibi­lity by taking notice and by communicat­ing with their state senators or representa­tives as well as the president of the Florida Senate, speaker of the Florida House and Gov. Rick Scott.

You can watch the Legislatur­e in action on The Florida Channel. Then schedule a visit, attend a town hall or legislativ­e delegation meeting, call their office, email, tweet, or write them a letter. My letter would look like this: Dear Governor Scott, Senate President Joe Negron and Speaker Richard Corcoran,

I’d like you to consider the following requests, which I believe are in the best interest of our state and the 20 million Floridians who call it home.

Our budget will be the largest to date but projected revenues will still not allow you to accomplish everything on your wish lists, so you’ll have to prioritize.

One place to save, as Speaker Corcoran has smartly pointed out, is in cash incentives and tax breaks to corporatio­ns to relocate or expand here. We have spent hundreds of millions, if not billions, on this wrong-headed approach with little success.

Government should not attempt to pick winners and losers among competing businesses; the free market should decide. And government should not extract taxes from its hard-working citizens to give to for-profit businesses.

A better use of tax dollars is to train Floridians for jobs where businesses find a shortage of skilled workers – a proposal President Negron wisely outlines in his plan to invest in our colleges and universiti­es. Investing in higher education and research is the best way to prepare our students for meaningful opportunit­y in a changing world and to position our state for economic growth by attracting industry with good-paying jobs.

Speaker Corcoran has also found waste in the generous Visit Florida budget. Tourism is important but we could cut that budget to $40 million or $50 million and still see record tourism numbers if we keep our beaches clean and our parks pristine.

President Negron has shown leadership in tackling messes like Lake Okeechobee and the Indian River Lagoon. Please follow his lead on storing these outflows and treating them before release.

Our environmen­tal policy needs to address treating water close to its source before it becomes the much more costly expense of clean up after it pollutes our rivers, lakes, estuaries and ground water supply.

Please recognize regulation serves an important public purpose for the health and safety of our residents and visitors. Stop any efforts to allow fracking in our state, to allow more carcinogen­s in our water supply and to commercial­ize our state parks.

Educating our children is an important responsibi­lity. Please value and prioritize our public schools. Treat teachers like the profession­als they are and allow them more autonomy to teach.

Get rid of Common Core, reduce the volume of highstakes standardiz­ed testing —which will save the state hundreds of millions of dollars — and reduce state bureaucrac­y by returning control to the locally elected school boards.

Support school choice but with the caveat that all schools receiving tax dollars are held to the same rules, regulation­s and requiremen­ts. Private choice and charter schools should be funded after our public schools are given the resources needed for instructio­n, transporta­tion and facilities.

We need to clean up our prisons. We have a responsibi­lity to care for those in our custody. We have failed. Whistleblo­wers in the Inspector General’s Office were punished for exposing abuse while those covering it up were rewarded.

Privatizin­g prisons is not the answer — as it leads to demand for more prisoners at an annual cost of $20,000 per inmate. Profession­alize our Department of Correction­s with more and better training, advancemen­t opportunit­ies and zero-tolerance for corruption.

Find less expensive ways to punish nonviolent offenders, particular­ly those incarcerat­ed for drug possession or for driving on a suspended driver’s license. Rehabilita­tion and working off debt are more productive and less costly.

Get rid of minimum mandatory sentences, return discretion to judges, decriminal­ize some nonviolent offenses and focus on preparing inmates to be productive, law-abiding citizens after completing their sentences.

The voters sent strong messages on constituti­onal amendments to purchase and manage lands for natural resource protection, to make marijuana available for medical use, and to stop gerrymande­ring legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Honor their wishes. Thanks for your service to the people of Florida. Respectful­ly, A concerned voter who will be watching.

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