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  • Updated
    27
    Mar
    2013
    8:08am, EDT

    Florida school apologizes after students stomp on ‘Jesus’

    View more videos at: http://nbcmiami.com.

    By Bruce Schreiner and Gilma Avalos , NBCMiami.com

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott has waded into a religious-infused campus controversy, asking the state university system chancellor to look into a classroom lesson at Florida Atlantic University in which students were instructed to stomp on sheets of paper that had "Jesus" written on them.

    Scott said in a letter Tuesday to State University System Chancellor Frank Brogan that he was "deeply disappointed" by the recent incident in an intercultural communications class and said it raised questions about "the lessons being taught in our classrooms." He said he wanted a report on the incident and how it was handled, as well as a statement of the university's policies to ensure such "lessons" don't occur again.

    "As we enter the week memorializing the events of Christ's passion, this incident gave me great concern over the lessons we are teaching our students," Scott wrote in the letter.

    A FAU spokeswoman told NBC 6 that the university received Scott's letter and appreciated his perspective.

    "Florida Atlantic University is deeply sorry for any hurt that this incident may have caused the community and beyond," wrote Lisa Metcalf, the school's director of media relations, in an email. "As an institution of higher learning, we embrace open discourse in our classrooms, but with that comes a level of responsibility. The exercise was insensitive and hurtful; it will not be used again."

    She added that lessons learned from the incident "will help us ensure our educational opportunities always reflect the university’s core values."

    Youngest Bachelor's Graduate at FAU Gets Master's

    Scott cited news reports indicating students were told by the class instructor to write "Jesus" in large letters on a sheet of paper and to place the paper on the floor in front of them. The students were given a brief time of reflection and then were told to step on the paper and tell the class how they felt.

    The exercise has outraged religious leaders such as the Rev. Mark Boykin, who plans to lead a march from his Boca Raton church to FAU to condemn the assignment next week.

    "We find this to be unconscionable, completely unprofessional and unacceptable," he said.

    At least one student found it so unacceptable that he refused to participate. Ryan Rotela, a devout Mormon and a junior at FAU's Davie campus, claims he was punished for doing so.

    His lawyer Hiram Sasser shared the notice of charges that Rotela received from FAU for violating the student code of conduct.

    "You are requested to attend a Student Conduct Conference," the notice read.

    "In the interim, you may not attend class (SPC 3710) or contact any of the students involved in this matter – verbally or electronically – or by any other means," the notice stated.

    Dr. Charles Brown, FAU's senior vice president of student affairs, said that Rotela was never up for punishment for refusing to participate in the exercise, however.

    "We apologize to all of our students and the community and people beyond the community who felt it was too sensitive," Brown said.

    Scott applauded Rotela, whom he spoke with on Tuesday, "for having the courage to stand up for his faith."

    "I told him that it took great conviction and bravery to stand up and say what he was asked to do was wrong, and went against what he believed in," Scott said in a statement.

    Sasser said that Rotela is again in good standing with the university. He has re-enrolled in the class, but one that is being taught by a different professor.

    Florida Gov. Scott to Universities: No More Tuition Hikes

    State University System spokeswoman Kim Wilmath said officials would work closely with FAU in preparing a response to Gov. Scott's concerns.

    "The State University System prides itself not only on its commitment to academic freedom, but at the same time, its awesome responsibility to the people it serves," she said in a written statement. "We are gratified to know that FAU has apologized for any offense the exercise has caused and has pledged never to use this exercise again. Clearly, there were things the university could have done differently by its own acknowledgement."

    The governor didn't seem satisfied with the apology, saying it was "in many ways inconsequential to the larger issue of a professor's poor judgment."

    "The professor's lesson was offensive, and even intolerant, to Christians and those of all faiths who deserve to be respected as Americans entitled to religious freedom," Scott said in his letter. "Our public higher educational institutions are designed to shape the minds of Florida's future leaders. We should provide educational leadership that is respectful of religious freedom of all people."

    This story was originally published on Wed Mar 27, 2013 8:08 AM EDT

    1360 comments

    Good thing the paper didn't say Mohammad, half the world would be rioting.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: religion, updated, florida-atlantic-university, rick-scott
  • 30
    Jun
    2012
    11:19pm, EDT

    Gov. Scott says Florida will not comply with health care law or expand Medicaid

    By Gary Fineout, NBCMiami.com

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott now says Florida will do nothing to comply with President Barack Obama's health care overhaul and will not expand its Medicaid program. The announcement is a marked changed after the governor recently said he would follow the law if it were upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.

    "Florida is not going to implement Obamacare. We are not going to expand Medicaid and we're not going to implement exchanges,'' Scott's spokesman Lane Wright told The Associated Press on Saturday. Wright stressed that the governor would work to make sure the law is repealed.

    Scott told Fox News the Medicaid expansion would cost Florida taxpayers $1.9 billion a year, but it's unclear how he arrived at that figure.


    See the original report at NBCMiami.com

    Scott said the state will not expand the Medicaid program in order to lower the number of uninsured residents, nor will Florida set up a state-run health exchange, a marketplace where people who need insurance policies could shop for them.

    "We care about having a health care safety net for the vulnerable Floridians, but this is an expansion that just doesn't make any sense,'' he told Fox host Greta Van Susteren.

    Scott has gone back and forth on the issue after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Congress cannot withhold federal Medicaid funding from states that opt out of a requirement in the overhaul to expand coverage to those just above the poverty line.

    On the day of the ruling Scott was cautious about the expansion, saying he wanted to read the ruling first. Then during an interview Friday morning on a Jacksonville radio station, Scott said it was unlikely he would go along with the expansion because of the potential cost to the state.

    But the governor told the Tampa Bay Times later in the day that he was still evaluating the ruling and would come up with a plan within a few weeks.

    Scott, the former CEO of a hospital chain, has been a vocal critic of the health care overhaul from the start. He made his first foray into politics by forming a group called Conservatives for Patients Rights that ran television ads criticizing the proposal before it was adopted by Congress.

    Scott has also complained about the growing cost of Medicaid, the $21 billion safety net program that primarily aids the poor but also picks up nursing home bills for senior citizens. The governor backed a push by the Republican-controlled Legislature to shift Medicaid patients into managed care programs, a move that is still awaiting federal approval.

    Scott has rejected federal money in the past, most notably $2.4 billion for high speed rail. His administration has also said no to some money attached to the Affordable Care Act.

    But Scott has said yes to money associated with the federal stimulus program and he has changed some of the positions he advocated during his run for governor. Scott also must weigh the political calculations of saying no to Medicaid because of tight budgets, while it is likely he will continue to push for substantial tax cuts between now and his re-election campaign in 2014.

    According to Census data released last year, Florida had the nation's third-highest rate of residents without health insurance during the past three years.

    President Obama's health care law called for states in 2014 to expand Medicaid eligibility to those making up to 133 percent of the poverty level, or $29,326 for a family of four. While estimates vary, the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration has concluded that as many as 1.95 million more people would join Medicaid and other state-subsidized health insurance programs over the next five years.

    Most of the cost, running into the billions, would be absorbed by the federal government. The Medicaid expansion would not cost the state anything until 2017 — although AHCA estimates that changes to other state-subsidized programs would require state money starting in 2014. AHCA estimates that the overall cost to the state would be $2.4 billion between 2013 and 2018 with the federal government picking up nearly $26 billion.

    But other groups analyzing the potential changes contend that state officials have ``hyper-inflated'' the potential costs because they assume too many people will enroll.

    The ultimate choice, however, won't be Scott's alone. It will also be decided by the Legislature.

    1988 comments

    Why not just play the Teapublikkklan game and hold him (and Bobby Jindahl) in contempt of the Supreme Court?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, health-care, supreme-court, featured, rick-scott
  • 1
    May
    2012
    3:14pm, EDT

    Democrat's panel recommends major changes to Florida's Stand Your Ground law

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images file

    State Sen. Chris Smith says changes are needed to Florida's Stand Your Ground law.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    As a governor’s task force appointed to review Florida’s Stand Your Ground law convened for its first meeting Tuesday, a rival panel formed by a state senator is recommending a major overhaul of the controversial self-defense bill.

    State Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale, put together his own 18-member panel on April 5, saying he was frustrated that Republican Gov. Rick Scott was moving too slowly to re-examine Stand Your Ground in the aftermath of the Trayvon Martin shooting.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    On Monday, Smith’s panel released a report that recommended significant revisions to the 2005 law, which allows citizens to use deadly force in public places if they reasonably believe their life is in danger.


    George Zimmerman, a 28-year-old neighborhood watch volunteer, told Sanford, Fla., police he acted in self-defense when he shot the 17-year-old Martin, who was unarmed, on Feb. 26. Police didn’t immediately arrest Zimmerman. He was charged with second-degree murder on April 11 – 46 days after the shooting – following high-profile protests and a review of the case by a special prosecutor.

     

    “Stand Your Ground has been on the books for seven years now. There is ample and overwhelming documentation of the law’s use, and more importantly, its abuse,” Smith said Monday in a letter to Gov. Rick Scott accompanying his panel’s report.

    George Zimmerman's attorney defends move as a counter to fake sites. WESH's Cara Moore reports.

    “The Sanford shooting should not have been a cause for delay; to the contrary, it was a compelling call to action that something needed to be done about the law’s confusing and often misapplied provisions.”

    Smith’s panel didn't call for a repeal of the law. Instead, it unanimously recommended that cases of people claiming self-defense under Stand Your Ground be presented to a grand jury to determine what a “reasonable" person would do in the situation. It also called for educating the public and law enforcement; creating a system to track self-defense claims in the state; and adding language requiring “imminent” danger.

    “Weeks ago when I stood here, I called for the governor to act immediately. And when the governor didn’t act, I decided to act,” Smith, an outspoken critic of the current law, said at a press conference on Monday to present the findings.

    Brendan Mcdermid / Reuters file

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott appointed a panel to review Stand Your Ground and rissue recommendations on public safety policy.

    “Stand Your Ground has been used way before Trayvon Martin and will be used way after Trayvon Martin. But in order to make sure we have a just, legal and safe society I still believe that the Legislature should act soon and make sure we clarify how we should live in a civilized society.”

    Read the full report by Sen. Chris Smith's panel

    Meanwhile, the governor’s official task force to explore Stand Your Ground met for the first time Tuesday in Tallahassee. The 19-member panel is led by Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll, who co-sponsored Stand Your Ground in 2005 and voted for it.

    She opened the meeting by saying the panel has no "preconceived notions" about what it will recommend. She said its mission is not to “try the Zimmerman-Martin case.”

    “This law is not specific to any one area of our state or person, it can apply to any area of the state,” Carroll said, Sunshine State News reported.

    Tuesday’s meeting was mostly organizational and held to discuss the panel’s mission. At future meetings the panel will take public testimony. Smith has been invited to present his own panel’s findings at a future meeting.

    The panel will make public safety recommendations to the governor and the Legislature.

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    443 comments

    Stand your ground in principle is not a bad law. Hunting someone down, provoking them and then shooting them becasue you have a gun..., and they don't..., is criminal.

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    Explore related topics: crime, stand-your-ground, rick-scott, trayvon-martin, george-zimmerman, chris-smith-florida
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    2:08pm, EDT

    Florida lawmaker Chris Smith blasts Gov. Rick Scott for moving 'at tortoise speed' in reviewing 'Stand Your Ground' law

    Keith Bedford / Reuters

    People march in a rally in support of slain teenager Trayvon Martin in New York on April 10. Martin's death led to protests nationwide.


    Follow @msnbc_us
    By James Eng, NBC News

    A Florida lawmaker is accusing Gov. Rick Scott of moving "at tortoise speed” in examining whether changes are needed to the the state’s controversial “Stand Your Ground” law after the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin by a community watch volunteer.

    Scott on Thursday named the members of a 17-person Task Force on Citizen Safety and Protection that will thoroughly examine the controversial 2005 Florida law that says citizens do not have to retreat if attacked and can use deadly force if they "reasonably believe” they are in danger.

    Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll will chair the panel and the Rev. R. B. Holmes Jr., the pastor of the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church in Tallahassee, will be vice chair. Both are black.

    State Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale, noted that the governor’s announcement of the makeup of the panel comes nearly a month after Scott first said he intended to assemble a task force.

    “I’m glad the governor has finally followed my lead and is getting to work to make it happen. But I remain puzzled as to why it has taken him so long to act,” Smith said in a statement.

    “In the meantime, I remain concerned that the governor continues to move at tortoise speed in addressing the use of Stand Your Ground and the issue of public safety.”

    AP

    Undated family photo of Trayvon Martin, who was shot to death March 16. Martin was 17 at the time.

    Sanford, Fla., police initially cited the self-defense claim under Stand Your Ground in their decision not to immediately arrest and charge George Zimmerman on the night of Feb. 26 when he shot and killed the 17-year-old Martin in a confrontation in a gated community. Martin, who was unarmed, was black. Zimmerman, whose mother is Hispanic and father is white, says he fired in self-defense.

    Last week, a special prosecutor assigned to review the case charged the 28-year-old Zimmerman with second-degree murder, contending Zimmerman “profiled” and followed Martin and “falsely assumed” he was one of the “punks” who “did not belong in the gated community.”

    Gary W. Green / Pool / EPA

    George Zimmerman, right, stands with his attorney Mark O'Mara as he makes his first appearance in front of a judge, via closed-circuit TV, at the Seminole County Correctional Facility in Sanford on April 12.

    Video: Judge steps down from Zimmerman case

    The governor’s task force will look into all laws and regulations dealing with public safety, including Stand Your Ground, and make recommendations to the governor and the state Legislature.

    “We are a nation of laws, and I am committed to letting our legal system work to ensure the people in our state are safe and protected,” Scott said in a news release.  “I have the utmost confidence that Lt. Gov. Carroll and Rev. Holmes are the best people to lead the review of Florida’s citizen safety laws.”

    Scott did not say whether he favors a repeal of the law.

    On Wednesday, the governor told the Orlando Sentinel editorial board he wished the task force could be formed quicker, but he must follow a “logical process” to get it right. “You want to put together a good team. It takes time,” he said.

    Smith, who is black, has repeatedly spoken out against Stand Your Ground since Martin’s death. He contends the law has evolved into a “Get Out of Jail Free” card for those whom it was never intended to protect.

    Impatient with the pace of the governor’s action, Smith earlier organized his own task force, which includes prosecutors, defense attorneys, police executives and politicians, to examine the law.

    “The Stand Your Ground evidence is already overwhelming and ready for a collective examination. So long as assailants can continue to walk simply by claiming self-defense, we don’t need a drawn-out bureaucratic road show to confirm what we already know,” Smith said.

    The other members of the task force announced Thursday by Scott include:

    • Okaloosa County Sheriff Larry Ashley
    • State Rep. Dennis Baxley, of Ocala
    • Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Kenneth B. Bell, of Pensacola
    • State Rep. Jason Brodeur, of Sanford
    • Orlando attorney Derek E. Bruce
    • Criminal defense attorney Joseph A. Caimano Jr., of Tampa
    • Edna Canino, of Miami, president of the Florida Embassy of League of United Latin American Citizens
    • Gretchen Lorenzo, of Fort Myers, neighborhood watch coordinator for the Fort Myers Police Department
    • Judge Krista Marx, of West Palm Beach, Fifteenth Judicial Circuit of Florida.
    • Maria Newman, neighborhood watch volunteer with the City of Melbourne.
    • Katherine Fernandez Rundle, of Miami, state attorney for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit.
    • Stacy A. Scott, of Gainesville, assistant public defender with the Eighth Judicial Circuit.
    • Mark Seiden, of Miami, self-employed attorney.
    • State Sen. David Simmons, of Altamonte Springs
    • State Senator Gary Siplin, of Orlando

    The task force will hold public hearings and take testimony in the coming months. Its first meeting is tentatively scheduled for May 1 in Tallahassee at the Florida Department of Transportation headquarters. 

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    562 comments

    Dear media outlets, Please stop using pictures of the victim when he was 12 years old in an effort to incite anger in the public. I recommend using updated photos rather than the innocent 7th grade photos you continue to use. That way, at least you are seen as making an attempt to report the truth.  …

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