Miami Herald

GOP legislator­s again try to end legal ads in newspapers

- BY KIRBY WILSON kwilson@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

A bill that would deprive newspapers of a key source of revenue came one step closer to becoming law Wednesday.

For decades, Florida law has mandated that policymake­rs and individual­s must post certain public notices — tax increases, special elections, etc. — in print newspapers. In what has become an annual debate in the Florida Legislatur­e, a Republican lawmaker wants to change that.

Rep. Randy Fine, R-Palm Bay, argued the current law is out of date. Few people read newspapers anymore, he said without citing any figures. So, he continued, it makes little sense why the state forces people to buy legal notices in the pages of print publicatio­ns. His proposal would allow those notices to be published online on government-run websites or for free through the mail.

The measure is staunchly opposed by the state’s many print publicatio­ns, most of which are part of larger news organizati­ons that produce online content, too. Still, those print publicatio­ns collect millions of dollars per year from the legal notices. So do online publicatio­ns. First Amendment advocates oppose the measure, arguing it would offload the public notices to places where few access them. Millions of Floridians read print newspapers, they argue.

The debate over the bill in the House Civil Justice and

Property Rights Subcommitt­ee was held along partisan lines. The bill passed by 11-6 along those same lines.

Fine, a Republican, criticized the news industry for what he said was hypocrisy.

“The same publicatio­ns who will write front page article after front page article after front page article bemoaning the influence of special interests in the Legislatur­e parade up here arguing for their own unjustifia­ble special interest,” Fine said. “The arguments that have been used against the bill to some degree point out why the industry is dying: because many of them are so functional­ly dishonest.”

The Democrats on the committee, such as Rep. Anna Eskamani of Orlando, argued the bill would hurt an already shrinking local news press corps.

Several publishers, including those of the Tallahasse­e Democrat and small community publicatio­ns like the Wakulla News and the Gadsden County Times, spoke against the bill. Ron Book, the powerful lobbyist, also spoke on behalf of the

Gannett newspaper chain, which owns 22 newspapers in Florida, and the Florida Press Associatio­n.

“You won’t put the Miami Herald out of business. You won’t put the Orlando Sentinel out of business. You won’t put the Tampa Bay Times out of business. But you’ll put a lot of the others out of business,” Book said.

An identical measure has passed the Florida House each of the past two years, but those bills died in the Senate.

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