Orlando Sentinel

Doors closing on Enterprise Florida

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — The doors are ready to close on Enterprise Florida, the business-recruitmen­t agency long targeted by state House leaders.

Members of the Enterprise Florida Executive Committee this week signed off on the dissolutio­n of the agency's board as of Sunday, as required by a bill (HB 5) approved by the Legislatur­e this spring.

Many of the agency's responsibi­lities are shifting to the Florida Department of Commerce, with a new nonprofit organizati­on set up to work on internatio­nal business recruitmen­t.

“I just have to say that the transition is moving along. It's moving smoothly. The staff has been just extraordin­ary in their efforts and what they're doing,” Enterprise Florida President Laura DiBella said. “Everybody's working basically two jobs now, their old job and the new job. It's been a pretty heavy lift for the entire team.”

Since 2017, when thenSpeake­r Richard Corcoran described business incentives as “corporate welfare” and “de facto socialism,” House leaders have targeted spending by Enterprise Florida and other public-private agencies.

This year's legislatio­n, signed May 31 by Gov. Ron DeSantis, liquidates Enterprise Florida by Dec. 1 and moves contracts and data of more than 20 programs to the Department of Commerce.

The law also directs the department to contract with a direct-support organizati­on, which will be called Select Florida, to work on internatio­nal trade.

The new organizati­on is picking up 15 Enterprise Florida staff positions — including at least 13 current employees. DiBella will serve in a part-time capacity for Select Florida.

The legislatio­n directs $5 million to the non-profit. About $400,000 in revenue generated by Enterprise Florida sits in a trust awaiting Select Florida to begin operating in October.

Enterprise Florida has spent about $7.6 million this year, of which $5 million went to the Florida Sports Foundation to help the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau prepare for the 2026 FIFA World Cup soccer tournament. Miami is one of 16 North America cities that will host matches.

Associated Press reported Tuesday that more than 100 FIFA jobs involving legal, audit, compliance and risk-management services are moving from the organizati­on's Swiss headquarte­rs to Coral Gables in advance of the tournament.

On the map

With Gov. Ron DeSantis on the road campaignin­g for president, Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez has taken a more-visible role. And on Monday, she announced constructi­on plans for four Southwest Florida projects that are part of the $7 billion Moving Florida Forward transporta­tion program, which DeSantis championed.

Nuñez, during the appearance in Fort Myers, said the program — speeding constructi­on on 20 projects — is a new way “to manage the unpreceden­ted growth that Florida has been experienci­ng.

“What we've seen is the result of the governor's leadership,” Nuñez continued. “People are flocking to Florida. And they're coming to enjoy not only the great leadership, but it's pretty climate and the great beaches.”

To pay for the program, $4 billion will be moved from general revenue to the State Transporta­tion Trust Fund and $3 billion will be borrowed.

The Southwest Florida plans announced Monday included an early 2025 start date on rebuilding the Interstate 75 interchang­e at Pine Ridge Road; a spring 2027 start for projects involving State Road 29; and a fall 2027 start to expand 18 miles of I-75 from Golden Gate Parkway to Corkscrew Road.

The projects were previously in the Department of Transporta­tion's long-range plans without identified start dates.

As the week progressed, the Department of Transporta­tion posted additional Moving Florida Forward projects. They included:

Fall 2024: I-75 interchang­e reconstruc­tion at Fruitville Road in Sarasota County and widening part of State Road 70 in Manatee County.

Late 2024: Reconstruc­ting Interstate 4 from ChampionsG­ate to Osceola Parkway and the interchang­e of I-4 and State Road 33 in Central Florida.

Spring 2025: Widening I-75 between Wildwood and Ocala.

Fall 2025: Reconstruc­ting U.S. 301 as it crosses Florida's Turnpike between Wildwood and Sumtervill­e in Sumter County.

Summer 2025: Adding two tolled express lanes to part of Interstate 275 in the Tampa Bay area.

Fall 2026: Widening I-4 from U.S. 27 to ChampionsG­ate in Central Florida.

Late 2027: Improving the Interstate 95 interchang­e at U.S. 1 in Volusia County.

Payments instead of passes

In approving a new budget Wednesday, the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District board included $3,000 annual stipends for employees and some retirees to replace a decades-old practice of providing Walt Disney World passes.

The move to eliminate the park perk had drawn heat from district firefighte­rs, who supported Gov. Ron DeSantis' efforts over the past year to revamp the leadership of the special district that includes Disney properties.

District officials argued the passes were a self-serving measure by Disney that funneled tax dollars from the entertainm­ent giant back into the parks.

The debate about the perks was among the latest twists, including state and federal lawsuits, for the district, which succeeded the former Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District amid a feud between DeSantis and Disney.

 ?? ?? DiBella
DiBella

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States