Miami Herald

Fried blasts DeSantis for keeping Cabinet ‘in the dark’ on virus

- Miami Herald Staff Writers Joey Flechas and Michelle Marchante contribute­d to this report.

Gov. Ron DeSantis convened the first Cabinet meeting since early February on Thursday and ran into a buzz-saw of criticism from the state’s lone Democratic leader, Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried, for keeping the independen­tly elected members of the Cabinet “in the dark” about the state’s response to the data and decisions regarding the novel coronaviru­s.

“Each of us was independen­tly elected by the people of this great state. Each of us received more than 4 million votes and were put here to do a job,” Fried said as she sat alone in the Cabinet meeting room while DeSantis and the other two Republican­s on the Cabinet attended by phone.

“In the critical four months of this pandemic, this Cabinet has been left in the dark,’’ Fried said.

Fried said she formally requested that DeSantis have Surgeon General Scott Rivkees and other officials from the Department of Health appear at the meeting “to discuss decisions around the COVID-19 data, which our state in its reopening relies on” but he refused.

She cited the cumulative $2.4 billion drop in state revenue and said she also asked for updates on the state’s revenue picture from the Department of Revenue and the Office of Financial Regulation “but again I didn’t see any of those on the agenda.”

The governor and the three members of Florida’s Cabinet, which include Attorney General Ashley Moody and Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, share the authority and oversight over several critical state department­s. The agencies regulate highway safety, tax collection­s, insurance and financial industries. As a group, they oversee the state’s bond debt and pension fund, approve the acquisitio­n of land for conservati­on purposes and provide oversight of where power plants will be sited.

But DeSantis, like his Republican predecesso­r, former Gov. Rick Scott, has chafed at the shared authority and held fewer joint meetings of the group than many governors, often turning much of the agenda into an opportunit­y to deliver proclamati­ons and awards.

Although DeSantis has traveled around the state holding pandemic-related news conference­s with near-daily frequency for the past two months, DeSantis decided the Cabinet could not meet in person.

“Health and safety concerns as a result of COVID-19 led to the decision to conduct the Cabinet meeting via teleconfer­ence,” DeSantis spokeswoma­n Helen Aguirre Ferré told the News Service of Florida on Wednesday. “For Gov. DeSantis, providing a safe and healthy workplace environmen­t is of the utmost concern.”

Despite those apparent concerns, DeSantis has held numerous meetings with reporters in the Cabinet meeting room while neither he nor his staff wear masks. He has attended multiple news conference­s with Republican mayors of Miami and Jacksonvil­le.

From the start, DeSantis refused to provide Fried any platform to speak. The meeting began with Fried asking for “a moment of silence to mark the

100,000 Americans and 2,300 Floridians who’ve died” from the novel coronaviru­s.

He waited 10 seconds and then Fried asked “for a couple of moments” to speak. DeSantis would not recognize her.

The Cabinet agenda included routine items related to a review of the Division of Emergency Management’s 2020 statewide emergency shelter plan, the refinancin­g of bond issues that saved the state more than $100 million in bond debt, and the annual approval of Florida Forever land purchases.

Not included on the agenda, Fried said, were updates on “the feeding of millions of our Floridians, and our children and families during COVID-19” as well as updates on the wildfires in North Florida “that have burned thousands of our acres and prompted evacuation­s, as we’ve dealt with severe drought.”

Fried also noted that the Florida Senate refused to confirm DeSantis’ appointee to be the chief judge for the Division of Administra­tive Hearings, John MacIver, leaving it up to DeSantis to reappoint him. If the governor fails to act to rename MacIver to oversee the 29 judges that rule on state government issues ranging from workers’ compensati­on disputes to the locations of nuclear power plants, he loses his job.

“So, just as a final question, while we are reopening, are we going to plan on reopening this decision and considerin­g additional applicants at our next Cabinet meeting?” Fried asked. DeSantis ignored her. “Anybody else?” he asked, seeking comment from the other two Republican­s on the panel. Patronis quickly jumped in and turned the question into a testimonia­l.

“Look, hey, I want to thank you and I couldn’t be more proud to be a Floridian watching you and your administra­tion deal with something that has never been seen before in any of our lifetimes: that COVID-19 threat and economic hardships,’’ Patronis said. “But look, I said this to my team that thank God we had Gov. De Santis not Gov. Cuomo.” Patronis was referring to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

He noted how DeSantis and his wife, Casey, brought a new baby “into this world in these times and what you were dealing with.’’ Patronis said he “couldn’t help but get choked up” when DeSantis said his baby’s grandparen­ts hadn’t had a chance to hold her.

He added that his team had phone calls about revenue forecasts, and he wasn’t worried. “I’ve checked what you do to get through this pandemic. We will persevere,’’ he said. “You have my support, and I appreciate the things you’ve done to see us through these, these turbulent waters.”

DeSantis did not respond but asked Moody if she had anything to add.

“No governor, I just want to assure you throughout this, we have been in constant communicat­ion with the relevant agencies. They’ve been amazingly responsive,’’ she said.

After the meeting, the governor was not available for comment, and his communicat­ions team did not respond to requests for comment on Fried’s remarks.

AT ODDS OVER MIA SCREENING

City commission­ers want Miami Internatio­nal Airport to screen all arriving passengers for coronaviru­s symptoms, and they are going to ask voters if they agree in a straw poll during the August primary.

Such a measure would mark a major expansion of an existing screening effort focused on travelers coming from countries and states hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic. Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez strongly rebuffed the idea, saying the county does not have legal authority to conduct health screenings on its own — the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conducts tests for certain travelers now.

Gimenez accused commission­ers of political posturing by putting the question on the ballot, which will ultimately cost taxpayers about $120,000 — a price that frustrated commission­ers who do not believe they should have to pay the county that much to piggyback on a primary that is already happening.

Miami’s city government does not run the airport. It is controlled by Miami-Dade County’s government, headed by Gimenez. Without direct authority over the county’s aviation division, city commission­ers are turning to voters to measure support — and likely to mount public pressure — for a mass screening program.

On Thursday, commission­ers unanimousl­y voted to hold a straw poll during the Aug. 18 primary, posing the following question to the electorate:

“Would you support requiring the Miami-Dade County Mayor who has authority over the MiamiDade County Aviation Department to start a program to screen all passengers arriving at Miami Internatio­nal Airport for the COVID-19 virus?”

The non-binding ballot question could be seen as a pressure tactic to urge Gimenez to deploy a broader screening system.

VIRUS NUMBERS

Florida’s Department of Health on Thursday morning confirmed 651 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state total of known cases to hit and surpass 53,000. The state now has a total of 53,285 confirmed cases.

There were also 45 new deaths announced, raising the statewide toll to 2,364.

Less than half of the new cases and half of the new deaths were in South Florida:

Miami-Dade County reported 171 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 14 new deaths. The county’s confirmed total is now at 17,396 cases with 669 deaths, the highest in the state.

Broward County reported 45 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19 and two new deaths. The county’s confirmed total is now at 6,870 with 307 deaths.

Palm Beach County saw 86 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19 and seven new deaths. The county’s known total is now at 5,541 with 327 deaths.

Monroe County did not see any additional cases of the disease and no new deaths. The Florida Keys now have 107 known cases and four deaths.

 ?? STEVE CANNON AP, file 2019 ?? Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried did not get answers on how Florida is compiling coronaviru­s data.
STEVE CANNON AP, file 2019 Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried did not get answers on how Florida is compiling coronaviru­s data.

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