GOVERNOR
JEB BUSH
2004 STATE OF THE STATE ADDRESS
March 2, 2004
Source: The Executive Office of the Governor
President King, Speaker Byrd, members of the
Legislature, honored guests, and my fellow Floridians, good morning.
I am honored to be joined by my partner in life, Columba. She is a
wonderful first lady of our state, and I am proud of her work for the
people we serve.
In addition, I am fortunate to have as my partner in service, Lt.
Governor Toni Jennings, who has done such a fine job for Florida over
the last year.
In 2003, I had the pleasure and honor of welcoming 14 new Senators and
30 new Representatives to this chamber for the first time. This year, we
are all veterans of the legislative process; having debated,
deliberated, and negotiated critical issues for the good of the people
we serve during the regular session, through the summer, and well into
late autumn.
The faces in this room are now familiar. Very familiar. Very, very
familiar. Seriously, I thank you for your dedication, and your tireless
work for the people of Florida.
Today we welcome one of our own back from the battlefield.
Representative Carey Baker returned home from serving his country just
four weeks ago and is here today to continue his service to Florida. We
are extremely proud to welcome him back to this chamber and are grateful
for his safe return.
Last month we welcomed home almost 2,000 soldiers of the Florida
National Guard from the war on terror. As we speak, another 1,000
Florida men and women are making their way to foreign shores to continue
the effort.
Some, like Florida Army National Guard Sgt. Roy Wood, won’t make it
home. In 2003, Sgt. Wood walked away from his job as an emergency room
surgeon at Lee Memorial Hospital in Ft. Myers to serve with his unit in
Afghanistan.
He felt so strongly about the mission and the soldiers with whom he
served that he volunteered to go, even though he had to give up his
Major’s rank and serve as a Sergeant to do it. He served proudly and
courageously, saving the lives of both soldiers and civilians.
He was the first Florida National Guardsman to give his life serving in
Afghanistan. To his wife, Hana, who is here today with their two
children, Roy Andrew and Caroline,
I offer my deepest condolences for your loss.
It has been said, “God grants liberty only to those who love it and
are always ready to defend it.” Hana, because of your husband, and the
thousands who continue the fight, America will always be free.
We must acknowledge the great debt we owe patriots like Sgt. Wood. We
should honor their service by ensuring that our actions, both in and out
of this chamber, are worthy of their sacrifice. We must serve this state
as honorably and effectively as they serve this country.
I believe we are on the right path.
Last year, I asked you to join me in an unshakable commitment to
educating our children, diversifying our economy, and strengthening the
bonds that hold our families together. Today, I thank you for honoring
that commitment and ask that we continue on the path of progress for the
people we serve.
As a result of your leadership, the state of our state is stronger than
ever, because more children are learning in our schools and more
students are graduating prepared for success.
We are stronger because we have built a solid foundation for progress
and prosperity.
A foundation that attracts investment and opportunity like The Scripps
Research Institute, as well as high value, high wage jobs, in cutting
edge emerging technologies.
We are stronger because we recognize that government isn’t the sole
answer to the most important questions, and we welcome community and
faith based organizations as partners to serve the needs of Florida
families.
Florida is in a better position to serve our people and face our future,
and I thank the members of the Legislature for creating that
opportunity.
In this country true opportunity starts with education. This year marks
the 50th anniversary of Brown
v. Board of Education, a landmark case that guaranteed
equal access to education. The Florida Department of Education has
created an outstanding chronicle of the progress we’ve made so far
toward that goal, and I hope Floridians will take the time to experience
this exhibit as it travels around our state.
Today, Florida is closer to fulfilling the promise of Brown v. Board
than ever before, because the Legislature had the will to pass sweeping
education reforms and demand more for our children. I applaud you for
the courage this bold move required, and congratulate you on the
remarkable success of this effort to date.
Next year, we’ll add voluntary universal Pre-K, and I urge you to
provide the resources we need to train 9,600 pre-school professionals
this year, and to create the framework for a comprehensive high-quality
program focused on critical early literacy skills. As we increase the
number of children ready to learn when they enter kindergarten, we
decrease the number who will struggle, be retained, and require remedial
help in higher grades.
Over the last five years, we’ve seen rising student achievement in
schools across the state. This achievement crosses all ethnic, income,
and county lines, proving there are no natural barriers to academic
success, only fabricated excuses.
Our A+ reforms have replaced those excuses with expectations in Florida
classrooms and made schools accountable for achieving them. Every year
more educators answer that challenge and more students learn a year’s
worth of knowledge or more in a year’s time. Children who were once
left behind now find the support they need to reach their potential.
Children like Isaac Cuyler, a 5th grader at Riley Elementary School here
in Tallahassee. Isaac struggled as a 2nd grader and again as a 4th
grader. His parents and teachers thought it best to give him more time
rather than push him forward unprepared.
Last year, Isaac improved from a level one, below basic reader to a
level four, above grade level reader, making a 580-point gain in a
single school year. That’s not learning to take a test, that’s
learning to read.
Today, Isaac is an honor roll student who reads at a 6th grade level. He
also anchors the school’s morning television show, competes in the
Black History Brain Bowl, and is a candidate for advanced classes in
middle school next year.
Isaac couldn’t join us today; he’s busy dazzling his teachers and
demonstrating his reading skills on the FCAT. His parents, Catina and
Isaac, Sr. are here, and with their permission, I’d like to introduce
you to their son and his school through this video. (Video)
In addition to success stories like Isaac Cuyler and Riley Elementary,
we now have independent confirmation that our education reforms are
working for students across our state.
In 2003, Florida’s 4th graders were the only readers in the entire
country to show significant learning gains on the National Assessment of
Education Progress – four times the national average. These gains
crossed all ethnicities as our minority students outpaced their national
counterparts by similar leaps.
That’s Isaac’s class by the way, proving his kind of achievement is
becoming the rule rather than the exception in Florida.
We must push this success into our middle schools as well. I ask you to
support this goal by passing the Middle Grades Reform Act, and putting
professional reading coaches in our middle schools. My budget funds
reading coaches in half of Florida’s middle schools, with priority
given to those with the lowest performance. These actions will give
struggling students in grades six through eight the support they need to
succeed.
We have driven accountability into our schools, and achievement is up
among our students. The School Recognition Program has been the heart
and soul of this success.
People rise to the challenge when recognized for the effort.
I strongly urge lawmakers to continue to fully fund this program. The
people we serve live in the real world, where success is directly
rewarded. Florida’s educators have dedicated their careers to teaching
children, a job for which there will never be enough recognition or
compensation. They are driving more success in our schools every year.
Our teachers and students should be celebrated, applauded and rewarded
for a job well done.
As student achievement rises in Florida, so do high school graduation
rates. From 1998 to 2002, graduation rates rose steadily among all
racial groups. In 2003 we raised the standards for graduation, replacing
the 8th grade level competency test with the 10th grade FCAT. Despite
this higher standard, graduation rates held steady or rose among every
group.
We also saw improved results among students with limited English
proficiency and those with disabilities. More than 80 percent of limited
English proficient seniors earned a high school diploma or certificate
last year, compared to 35 percent the year before. More than 87 percent
of Florida high school seniors with disabilities completed high school
with some type of diploma in 2003, a higher success rate than in years
past.
This progress, like the other improvements, stretches across racial
lines. The improved results reflect improved education in our state and
expanded opportunity for the next generation of Floridians.
As more Florida students read and calculate math at grade level, we need
to inspire and prepare them to set their sites on education beyond high
school. Our unique College Board Partnership ensures more Florida
students, especially those historically underserved, have access to
higher education. The program provides professional development programs
for teachers, college preparation in inner city and low-income
communities, SAT preparation, tutoring programs, and information on
college opportunities to families of students.
Since we created this program, the number of minority students taking
advanced placement courses in Florida schools has risen by 94 percent.
During the same period, we have more than tripled the number of students
taking the practice SAT. In 2003 four times as many African American
students took this college prep test than in 1998. Among Hispanic
students, the number has risen by almost 500 percent.
More students of all backgrounds are preparing for higher education and
more are entering Florida’s community colleges and universities.
Students like Norma Peñate, who is here today with her parents. Norma
was born in Cuba and lived in Venezuela before moving to Florida with
her family at the age of seven.
As a student at Miami Senior High, Norma worked hard to achieve. In her
junior year, the school became one of the first to participate in a
teacher development program offered by the College Board. At the
workshop, teachers learned new techniques for identifying high potential
students and introducing them to more challenging curriculum in the
Advanced Placement program.
Erick Hueck, the school’s AP coordinator, encouraged Norma to
challenge herself further by joining his AP chemistry class. After
taking that challenge, Norma took advantage of the full range of college
preparation classes offered through the College Board partnership,
including six more AP classes, as well as the SAT and the ACT.
She’s not alone. In 2003, 65 percent of Miami Senior High’s 10th
graders took the practice SAT, a 376 percent increase over 1999. During
the same period, the number of students taking AP courses nearly
quadrupled. These are more than numbers, they are students, young men
and women who are reaching for their dreams and achieving them.
While earning her diploma, Norma also earned 24 college credits, enough
to start her university career almost a year ahead. Today, she’s a
junior majoring in accounting at one of the top ten accounting programs
in the nation, the University of Florida. She’s earned a 3.9 GPA and
will begin her Masters program in the fall as part of a five-year
accelerated program.
Norma comes from a large family. Counting all the cousins, she has more
than 200 relatives. She’s extremely proud to be the first one of any
generation in her entire family to go to college. And we are extremely
proud of her. Norma, would you please stand?
The College Board partnership has proven its value to Florida students
and universities.
I ask you to protect this springboard to higher education, by making it
a permanent part of our education system, one that is safeguarded by
statute.
As we improve education and opportunity in our public schools, we must
also plan for massive success in our community colleges and state
universities. This year I’ve recommended increases in funding for
these institutions to help meet the challenge before them. I hope you
will make the same commitment.
I also hope you’ll take the action required to foster a vibrant,
diversified economy that offers opportunity for our graduates to build
careers and live their dreams here in Florida.
Over the past five years, we’ve made the right decisions to drive
growth in our state. We’ve created a business environment that
attracts innovation, investment, and jobs. We have also strengthened our
commitment to Florida’s natural treasures.
We’re actively conserving environmentally sensitive land. Everglades
restoration is ahead of schedule and under budget. We’re restoring the
Loxahatchee and opening areas that have been closed for decades by
pollution. Today a new marine sanctuary protects the Florida Keys, and
conservation along the banks of the Suwannee spurs eco-tourism and the
economies of eight rural counties.
From the River of Grass to Florida’s springs to the oceans that roll
up on our shores, Florida will continue to protect the natural bounty
and beauty of our state.
We are carefully balancing our growth and environmental protection –
to create the best quality of life and business climate in the country.
As a result, Florida is regularly on the short list for companies
looking to expand or relocate and we are winning more of these
competitions every day.
Today, Florida continues to lead the nation in job growth, a position we’ve
held for the last 22 months. Our unemployment rate continues to drop and
has been significantly below the national average for almost two years.
More people are working in the Sunshine State today, and they’re
keeping more of their hard earned money. Since 1998 we have provided
more than $8 billion in tax relief to the people we serve. It is their
money, not ours, and I applaud you for putting it back into their hands.
The key to our success is the fiscal discipline that has become the
hallmark of our efforts over the past five years. I recommended a $55.4
billion budget for Florida next year, a modest 2.6 percent increase over
current funding.
If we adhere to this spending restraint and avoid creating new
unnecessary debt, we will be able to fund Florida’s priorities at a
significantly higher level than last year, and still return a total of
$139 million to its rightful owners, the taxpayers of this great state.
We must also aggressively address obstacles to our prosperity. One of
the biggest threats to our thriving economy is access to affordable
health insurance for workers. More than 2.8 million Floridians are
uninsured today, and double-digit growth in premiums each year makes it
harder and harder for employers to offer this benefit to workers.
In January, I rolled-out a framework of comprehensive reform that will
begin to address the underlying issues that are pushing health coverage
beyond the reach of many Floridians. The solution will not be easy or
simple, but I look to the public servants in this room to help us find
the right answer for Florida, and I am confident will we succeed.
As part of that reform effort, Florida’s KidCare program needs our
attention. KidCare was created to provide insurance to children who have
no other access to coverage. Today the program serves 1.6 million
children – 755,000 more than in 1998, and there are still more
children waiting.
In addition to Medicaid, KidCare includes other valuable programs –
specifically Medikids, Healthy Kids, and CMS. These non-Medicaid
programs provide the critical safety net many parents need to ensure
their children are protected. They are not offered as cheaper
alternatives for parents who currently buy coverage through their
employers.
Florida received additional federal funds in January, a bonus for fully
using the federal dollars to serve Florida’s children in need. The new
money will allow us to serve even more children. I applaud President
King and Speaker Byrd for making KidCare a priority issue for this
Legislative session. I look forward to having a bill on my desk in the
next few weeks that will provide health coverage to more children.
As you address economic issues this year, I also ask that you recognize
the importance of investing in economic development. Like education, it
provides some of the greatest returns on taxpayer dollars.
We must invest in the projects, both incentives and infrastructure, that
support our continued growth. We must retain and grow key industry
sectors like manufacturing. We must prepare to move quickly to close
deals that bring jobs to the people of Florida. We must build on our
Centers of Excellence program to drive innovation and lure investment in
cutting-edge emerging technologies.
We must protect our military bases and the $44 billion defense industry
by aggressively defending our military installations in the 2005 base
closure (BRAC) process. We must also find more ways to support the
military men and women who serve their country from our state. I support
the legislation proposed to help military families transition into our
communities and our schools, as part of our effort to make Florida the
most military friendly state in the nation.
Finally, we must make the investment in our rural communities so they
too can be part of Florida’s success. I propose $174 million to
support economic development in these areas, and hope you will join me
in this commitment by giving struggling counties the resources they
need, and the flexibility to use them effectively to serve their people.
The future of our state will be driven not only by the economic choices
we make, but also by the values we choose. We are committed to serving
the most vulnerable among us, to addressing issues that threaten our
families, to finding families for children who need them, and to
promoting and protecting the self-determination of Floridians with
disabilities.
Teen substance abuse, including tobacco, adds tremendous stress to
families and limits the futures of Florida’s youth. The latest studies
show that we are making significant progress in the fight against drug
abuse among students, and we will continue to press forward on that
issue.
Florida has also had success reducing tobacco use among our young
people. Since 1998, smoking rates have declined by 57 percent among
middle school students and 37 percent among high school students.
Budget constraints put this important program in jeopardy last year.
This year we need to make the program, and the funding to support, it a
permanent part of Florida’s Department of Health. This money is
important, but the real power comes from thousands of teens across our
state who recognize the dangers of smoking and encourage their peers not
to start.
Prescription drug abuse among adults in Florida is growing at an
alarming pace, taking more lives than heroin and cocaine combined. We
first noticed this trend three years ago and have been trying to take
the innovative, common sense action to halt it ever since.
This year, once again, you will have the opportunity to create a
prescription drug tracking system that will allow us to punish unethical
providers, prevent addicts from obtaining the drugs they abuse, and
protect the privacy of patients in Florida. I urge you to pass
legislation to define this system, fund its creation, and help us fight
prescription drug abuse in Florida.
I’ve recommended increases in funding for Florida’s most vulnerable
residents, including those with developmental disabilities. Our goal
should be to provide the services they need to maintain their
independence and self-determination -- including supportive employment
efforts to ensure Floridians with disabilities have an opportunity to
work and contribute to their communities. In the last five years, we
have built a record of support we can be proud of. But there is still
more to do, because there are still Floridians waiting for critical
services.
A number of these services are provided through Florida’s Medicaid
system. Five weeks ago, I proposed a $13.8 billion Medicaid budget, over
a billion dollars more than current funding, just to keep the programs
we have today.
My recommendation was based on cost projections made in October. Last
Friday, we learned that $13.8 billion won’t be enough. We’ll need
another $710 million more —almost three-quarters of a billion dollars.
We’re short $315 million this year and need another $395 million next
year. Almost half of this new money will have to come from General
Revenue.
This would be less appalling if it meant we were serving new groups of
Floridians, but we’re not. Or if it meant we were serving Floridians
better, but we’re not. We’re fighting a battle against reducing
benefits, and we’re losing ground every day.
The cost of Medicaid continues to skyrocket in large part because the
system takes a rigid, one-size fits all approach to service, including
automatic price increases, benefits that are richer than private sector
insurance, and unlimited use of services.
Plainly stated, double digit increases in the Medicaid budget can’t be
sustained.
We must find a better way. A way that ensures more vulnerable Floridians
receive the specific, targeted services they need without crippling
other priorities like our schools, our environment and other critical
programs
Today, I’m asking for your support to work with Washington in an
unprecedented partnership to overhaul this broken system and create the
flexibility we need for an effective program that provides increased
access to services, greater dignity and personal power to vulnerable
residents, and the predictability of costs that will be critical to
protecting this system over the long term.
I know we can find a better way to serve Floridians who need Medicaid
services, as well as the taxpayers who foot the bill. With your support,
we will.
As we address the issues required to strengthen Florida’s families, we
must also do our part to find families for children who need them, by
finding permanent homes for the children in state care.
Children like Sharelle Patterson, who is here today. Sharelle has been
in state care since she and her five brothers and sisters were removed
from an abusive home in 1997. She’s lived in a number of foster homes
as well as a group home for girls. Over the years, most of her brothers
and sisters have been adopted.
Last year, at the age of 15, Sharelle took matters into her own hands.
She asked a teacher who had been influential in her life, her ROTC
instructor, Marine Master Sergeant Lawrence Patterson, to adopt her. He
and his wife, Tanya, said yes, and started the process last fall.
Sharelle moved into her new home on January 9th. The adoption becomes
final next month, but they are already a family. Sharelle, Tanya,
Lawrence -- The Patterson Family -- will you please stand?
Congratulations!
There are more than 4,000 children like Sharelle in DCF care today,
including her younger sister. In November, we launched the No Place Like
Home initiative to find Florida families like the Pattersons, who will
open their hearts and homes to them.
We’re actively looking for the right families, and streamlining the
adoption process to remove the obstacles and frustrations that have been
part of the process for far too long. I ask you to support these new
families by approving the funds required to support adoption in Florida.
We are committed to supporting Florida’s families, but government will
never be the full answer to their needs. Our state is blessed with an
incredibly strong network of community and faith-based partners that
offer a helping hand, provide counseling, and teach skills required to
build strong families and hold them together.
Partners like Pastor Ken Scrubbs from the First Baptist Church of
Leesburg, whose ministry provides mentors to 650 elementary school
students and programs to encourage parents to become active participants
in their children’s academic and social success.
Partners like Francois Leconte, CEO of Minority Development &
Empowerment in Broward County. His organization provides services and
support to more than 6,000 Haitian and Caribbean immigrants every year,
to help them start their new lives here, become self-sufficient, and
contribute to the community that welcomed them.
Today, the people of Haiti are in our prayers as we hope for a peaceful
resolution to a dangerous and difficult time.
Gentlemen, I thank you for coming today. I applaud your commitment to
the people in your communities, and I value your partnership and
friendship. Your helping hands extend our reach to serve more
Floridians.
We will continue fostering partnerships among community and faith based
groups, other non-profit partners, and state government to ensure that
Florida is not only the best place to build a business, it’s a
supportive place to raise a family.
During this legislative session, we must never forget that what we do
here limits or expands opportunities for people in this state. The
decisions we make today will determine the future of Florida long after
we have left public life.
Issac Cuyler, the young man in our video, represents that future, and
our responsibility.
Isaac is a member of what will be the first graduating class of A+
reforms. The decisions we made five years ago improved the quality of
education for Isaac and his peers. But our job is far from over.
Next year, as he moves into 6th grade at Griffin Middle School, we need
to continue to support and encourage his achievement by passing the
Middle Grades Reform Act and putting reading coaches into middle
schools.
In four years, Isaac will enroll at Godby High School. We need to make
sure the opportunities provided by our College Board partnership still
exist when Isaac and his classmates arrive.
Florida’s community colleges and state universities offer the finest
education at the most reasonable prices in the country. We should
continue to work with these institutions to ensure this same educational
opportunity and value is available to Isaac when he’s ready for
college – and it’s clear he will be.
Finally, as Isaac prepares for success, we must make sure Florida offers
ample opportunity for him to build his dreams here. We must continue to
make the right decisions today to build a strong, diverse, sustainable
economy for Isaac, the 2.6 million other children in Florida schools
today, and the millions that will follow. Access to affordable health
insurance is the greatest threat to Florida’s working families today
– and I ask that you make finding a solution a top priority.
Parents across our state tell their children that dreams have no limits.
They need our support to keep that promise.
It will take the wisdom to choose the right direction, and the will to
act upon that decision.
It will take the strength to hold fast to the principles that work, and
the courage to change what doesn’t.
It will take leadership, and we have it.
I thank you for your commitment to Florida and the people we serve. The
legacy of your service will be a bright future of hope and opportunity
for all who live and work in Florida.
I look forward to working with you to ensure the state of our state
continues to grow stronger every year.
Thank you, and God bless our beloved state.
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