Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

A brief look at 2019: higher pay, insurance breaks and new laws

State government will focus on inaugurati­on of Gov.-elect DeSantis

- By Jim Turner and Jim Saunders News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E – Minimum-wage workers will get a pay raise, businesses will get a break on insurance bills and a few new laws took effect Tuesday as 2019 begins in Florida.

Minimum-wageworker­s will start earning $8.46 an hour Tuesday, up from $8.25 an hour in 2018 — and more than a dollar above the $7.25 federal minimum wage.

Florida’s minimum wage ticks up each year because of a 2004 constituti­onal amendment that ties the rate to inflation.

Also, businesses across the state will begin to see lower workers’ compensati­on insurance rates. Regulators have approved an overall 13.8 percent decrease in workers’ compensati­on rates for 2019. The decrease follows a 9.5 average rate reduction in 2018. The National Council on Compensati­on Insurance, which files rate proposals for the industry each year, said in an August filing that the decrease is in line with trends in other states.

“Consistent improvemen­t in loss experience is the primary driver underlying the filing. More specifical­ly, the long-term decline in claim frequency has continued to more than offset moderate increases in claim severity,” an overview by the organizati­on known as NCCI said. “This has resulted in continued downward pressure on the overall average rate level need and is consistent with trends across most NCCI states.”

Most laws passed during the 2018 legislativ­e session took effect July 1, Oct. 1 or upon Gov. Rick Scott’s signature. In all, lawmakers sent 195 bills to Scott from the session that ended in March. The governor vetoed two, while signing the rest.

A handful take effect Tuesday, including a measure (HB 1011) that requires homeowners’ insurance policies to make clear that they do not cover flood damage.

“I’ve met many constituen­ts who had no idea that their hurricane coverage did not include protection­s when their homes flooded,” Sen. Annette Taddeo, D-Miami, said late last year when she introduced the Senate version of the bill. “This is especially problemati­c in South Florida as we face sea level rise and stronger storm surges from climate change.”

Also this week, the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission will hold a conference call to vote on a report that includes findings and recommenda­tions stemming from the Feb. 14 shooting in Broward County that killed 17 people. The commission was created as part of broad legislatio­n approved during the 2018 session after the shooting at the Parkland high school. The commission will finalize the report Wednesday. It is expected to deal with numerous issues, including the possibilit­y of arming teachers and ways to bolster the security of school buildings.

With the start of the new year, however, much of the attention in state government will focus on next week’s inaugurati­on of Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis. A transition team has been gradually filling out the administra­tion of DeSantis, who will be sworn in Jan. 8.

“I’ve met many constituen­ts who had no idea that their hurricane coverage did not include protection­s when their homes flooded.”

Sen. Annette Taddeo,

D-Miami

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