PDA

View Full Version : Newspaper Articles



05-04-2006, 09:15 PM
As your see your raise money in Oct, please realize it is only because we have PBA and not IUPPA that we have anything this session.

ENFORCEMENT
Officers are given 2 distinct messagesState corrections officers and troopers got very different answers when they submitted their pay requests to lawmakers.
BY EVAN S. BENN
ebenn@MiamiHerald.com
TALLAHASSEE - The two unions that represent Florida's correctional and state law-enforcement officers got different news Tuesday about the pay raises their members will get next year.

The prison guards, represented by the Florida Police Benevolent Association, received all of the $9.3 million they requested, enough for raises between 2 percent and 6 percent.

But Florida Highway Patrol troopers, wildlife conservation officers and other state cops will get none of the $38 million they asked for if the proposed state budget released Tuesday is approved by the Legislature.

'We're thinking, `How could they forget us again this year?' '' said Trooper Joe Mosca, a 20-year highway patrol veteran from Miami and former vice chairman of the International Union of Police Associations. The union represents about 4,000 state officers.

''The Senate leadership has time to make Key lime pie our state pie, but they don't have time to meet with us about paying law-enforcement officers better,'' Mosca said.

FHP and other state law-enforcement agencies are losing officers to city and county departments, which can offer higher salaries, Mosca said. With 2 percent to 4 percent raises over the years, many veteran state cops aren't making much more than rookies in their departments, he said.

The union that represents about 20,000 Florida prison guards and probation officers said the other group set its money requests too high.

''IUPA took the all-or-nothing approach, and they ended up with nothing,'' said David Murrell, executive director and lobbyist for the Florida PBA. ``They were asking for $38 million at one time, and that's probably a bit much.

''We're for more of an incremental approach,'' Murrell said.

Miami Herald staff writer Marc Caputo contributed to this report.

05-04-2006, 11:18 PM
http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 40316/1010 (http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060504/CUSTOMERSERVICE02/605040316/1010)

05-04-2006, 11:21 PM
THANKS PBA

05-14-2006, 05:04 AM
Another President Bush? George thinks brother Jeb would be a great one

By NEDRA PICKLER
Associated Press Writer

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Could there be a third President Bush? The current chief said Wednesday that younger brother Jeb would make a great one, too, and has asked him about making a run. The first President Bush likes the idea as well.

Jeb Bush, the Republican governor of Florida, has one asset that his presidential brother doesn't right now - approval from most of his constituents. While George W. Bush's approval ratings are in the low 30s, some 55 percent of Florida voters surveyed last month by Quinnipiac University said Jeb was doing a good job.

The governor has repeatedly said he won't be a candidate for president in 2008, but that doesn't stop his family from encouraging him to go for it some day.

"I would like to see Jeb run at some point in time, but I have no idea if that's his intention or not," the president said in an interview with Florida reporters, according to an account on the St. Petersburg Times Web site.

He said his brother would make "a great president" and that he had "pushed him fairly hard about what he intends to do."

"I truly don't think he knows," Bush said.

Jeb Bush, 53, will end his second term as governor in January. His brother George ends his second presidential term in January 2009. Neither can seek re-election because of term limits.

"I'm not running for president. I'm not running for United States Senate," the governor said Wednesday at a conference in Fort Lauderdale. "I'm trying to be a good governor."

As for his brother's comment that he would make a good president, he said, "I'm not going to disagree with the president, but I think I know what's in my heart, and I think I've expressed it pretty consistently over the past few months."

The governor got the buildup from his brother on the same day that he got some bad news out of Tallahassee. Florida House Speaker Allan Bense said Wednesday that despite personal appeals from the governor, he will not challenge Rep. Katherine Harris for the party's nomination for U.S. Senate.

Jeb Bush has said he doesn't think Harris, the former secretary of state famous for her role in the 2000 Florida recount that clinched George Bush's presidential bid, can win the seat.

The Bush name could hurt as well as help in national politics right now. But because of that familiar name and family connections throughout the country, Jeb Bush has the luxury of being able to wait and decide if he wants to run while other candidates have to get to work early.

"Right off the bat, if he decided to run, he's got the advantage over many of the others who might be contenders," said Republican political consultant Rich Galen, who has known the family since George H.W. Bush was vice president. "He doesn't have to establish his name. He's got it."

And, Galen points out, Jeb Bush has dealt with a lot of high-profile issues including hurricanes, immigration and sprawling development in one of the most important political states.

His own father says no one believes him when he says he's not interested in running at some point. Former President Bush told CNN's "Larry King Live" last year that he would like Jeb to run one day and that the son would be "awfully good" as president.

The Florida governor laughed when asked about his father's comments last June and said, "Oh, Lord." He simply shook his head no when asked if he was running.

The brothers Bush appeared together Tuesday during the president's visit to the Tampa area. Gov. Bush was waiting on the tarmac when Air Force One arrived and greeted the president with a politician's handshake and "Welcome to Florida." The president brushed aside the formality and playfully adjusted his younger brother's necktie.

Jeb Bush introduced his brother at a retirement community in Sun City Center. They had a private lunch together with political supporters, then visited a fire station and appeared together before television cameras to express concern about wildfires that were blazing across the state. The governor was not with the president during his visit to The Puerto Rican Club of Central Florida in Orlando Wednesday - George W. Bush's final stop on a three-day trip to the state. But the president was sure his brother still got some attention.

"Yesterday I checked in with my brother," President Bush said as he took the stage. "Make sure everything's going all right. I'm real proud of Jeb. He's a good, decent man and I love him dearly."

05-14-2006, 05:05 AM
http://www.gainesville.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... editorials (http://www.gainesville.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=editorials)

05-14-2006, 08:06 PM
:( :( :( :( :( :( :(

:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

:evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:

05-15-2006, 03:52 PM
thank you pba i am a 9 yr cpo and i make way under 40,000. i got no thanks for anyone. i need to smarten up and show me the money because being a cpo is the poor house folks.

06-13-2009, 01:31 PM
As your see your raise money in Oct, please realize it is only because we have PBA and not IUPPA that we have anything this session.

ENFORCEMENT
Officers are given 2 distinct messagesState corrections officers and troopers got very different answers when they submitted their pay requests to lawmakers.
BY EVAN S. BENN
ebenn@MiamiHerald.com
TALLAHASSEE - The two unions that represent Florida's correctional and state law-enforcement officers got different news Tuesday about the pay raises their members will get next year.

The prison guards, represented by the Florida Police Benevolent Association, received all of the $9.3 million they requested, enough for raises between 2 percent and 6 percent.

But Florida Highway Patrol troopers, wildlife conservation officers and other state cops will get none of the $38 million they asked for if the proposed state budget released Tuesday is approved by the Legislature.

'We're thinking, `How could they forget us again this year?' '' said Trooper Joe Mosca, a 20-year highway patrol veteran from Miami and former vice chairman of the International Union of Police Associations. The union represents about 4,000 state officers.

''The Senate leadership has time to make Key lime pie our state pie, but they don't have time to meet with us about paying law-enforcement officers better,'' Mosca said.

FHP and other state law-enforcement agencies are losing officers to city and county departments, which can offer higher salaries, Mosca said. With 2 percent to 4 percent raises over the years, many veteran state cops aren't making much more than rookies in their departments, he said.

The union that represents about 20,000 Florida prison guards and probation officers said the other group set its money requests too high.

''IUPA took the all-or-nothing approach, and they ended up with nothing,'' said David Murrell, executive director and lobbyist for the Florida PBA. ``They were asking for $38 million at one time, and that's probably a bit much.

''We're for more of an incremental approach,'' Murrell said.

Miami Herald staff writer Marc Caputo contributed to this report.

Interesting.