Spring 2020 - Issue 5

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CATALYST MARCH 11, 2020 VOLUME XL ISSUE V

New College of Florida's student-run newspaper

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Merger bill dies in House due to lack of Senate support BY JACOB WENTZ House Bill (HB) 7087, which would merge New College and Florida Polytechnic University into the University of Florida (UF), was officially declared dead in the Florida Legislature on Friday, March 6. This declaration came before a scheduled floor vote on Monday, March 9 and after the bill passed two House committees. No companion bill was ever introduced in the Senate. “It wasn’t going to get the support in the Senate so we abandoned it,” House Speaker José Oliva said after the House adjourned late Friday evening. “It’s a shame, but that’s the process.” Proponents of the bill argued that the state spends too much money on New College and Florida Polytechnic. Bill sponsor Rep. Randy Fine (R-Palm Bay), cited an “obligation to taxpayers to generate degrees at the lowest possible cost.” The Tuesday before the session,

Photo courtesy of Ellie Young

Students approach the Florida Capitol building in Tallahassee to advocate for independence on Tuesday, Feb. 25. "I was proud to stand with students, parents, alumni and faculty to advocate for New College's independence," Rep. Margaret Good said.

Florida TaxWatch, an independent, nonpartisan taxpayer research institute and government watchdog, urged the Legislature to “pump the breaks” until a better understanding of any cost savings and the effects of the mergers on Florida’s economic and workforce goals became avail-

able. The organization noted “the optics are bad” because the introduction of the bill mid-session made it look like “the fix is in for Florida Poly and New College.” “I think that this is proof that advocacy matters,” Rep. Margaret Good (D-Sarasota) said, referencing

student, parent, faculty and alumni opposition to the bill. “We were able to highlight the issue in such a way that TaxWatch prepared that report that I think was really valuable in advocacy efforts.” Three amendments were proposed to the bill before it was postponed on Friday. Good proposed the first at 12:39 p.m. on Wednesday, March 4. The amendment called for a study to be conducted by the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability (OPPAGA) to analyze the impact of a merger on the three institutions and their students. “The reason I proposed that amendment was because I wanted to be able to talk about the fact that there was no evidence that this was going to save Florida any money; that there was no evidence that New College would be able to retain its high quality education; that it would continued on p. 10

Emerging coronavirus cases spur Florida health concerns BY CHUCK LEAVENGOOD

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On Sunday, March 1, Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a public health emergency in the state of Florida after two “presumptively positive” cases of the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) were found in a man in his 60s in Manatee County and a woman in her 20s in Hillsborough County who had traveled to Italy. One of the individuals with the virus was treated at Doctors Hospital of Sarasota. As of March 9, there have been 13 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the state of Florida and two deaths. Both of the people who passed away were in their 70s. There have not been any confirmed cases of COVID-19 at the Sarasota Memorial Hospital. “We know we’ll get through this,” President and CEO of Sarasota Memorial Hospital David Verinder said in a press conference on March

WHAT’S INSIDE

Photo courtesy of Gage Skidmore

Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency and announced he expected the state to receive $27 million in federal funding to help fight the spread of the virus.

3 with Vern Buchanan. Public Information Officer of the Florida Department of Health in Sarasota County (DOH) Steve Huard stated that the DOH is monitoring health trends on a daily basis in case

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the virus spreads to Sarasota. “DOH Sarasota is preparing for the possibility that COVID-19 may become a global pandemic and ensuring that local plans, resources and capabilities are in place to respond to

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a widespread outbreak and lessen the impacts on Florida’s communities,” Huard said. The Sarasota Memorial Hospital stated that it is following CDC protocols for the virus. According to Director of Marketing and Communications Anne Comer-Woods, New College is also following these protocols. Program Director of the Counseling and Wellness Center (CWC) Anne Fisher and Interim Dean of Student Affairs Randy Harrell have been in contact with Sarasota County Emergency Management. Florida ranks as the 39th most prepared state for public health disasters. Some of the largest public health issues tied to the economy are lack of paid-time off to prevent the spread of the disease and uninsured continued on p. 10

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