Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Health Department Seeks Budget Increase To Rebuild Infrastructure

sign in front of department building
Google Maps
/
The Florida Channel
The Florida Department of Health was required to submit its legislative budget request for the upcoming fiscal year by Oct. 15.

As Florida battles the coronavirus pandemic, the effort has exposed an inconvenient truth that the state’s public health infrastructure has been whittled down by the Legislature, especially in the aftermath of the Great Recession.

Despite what is expected to be a tough budget year, the Florida Department of Health is asking for money to begin rebuilding that foundation.

Health department officials in their 2021-22 budget request made it clear to legislators: Florida has been stretched thin due to an ongoing series of outbreaks that have included Zika and hepatitis A.

“Such threats are likely to continue and are of concern to Florida’s large population with underlying health conditions and older residents,” the legislative budget request said.

The agency's proposed spending plan also notes that  “the national COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated an even greater need to build and sustain a professional epidemiological public health workforce, focused on infectious diseases and protection of our growing diverse population in Florida.”

To that end, the department asked to bolster its public health efforts by nearly $7 million in general revenue, with money going to adding  68 positions, including 14 new employees to help with the state lab in Jacksonville.

The department is also seeking help in other places: Surgeon General Scott Rivkees wants more than $8 million in general revenue to boost the efforts of the Office of Minority Health and Health Equity to work with public health departments to eliminate disparities in immunizations, cancer, diabetes, HIV/AIDS and infant mortality.

The agency has also asked for $1.4 million for “addressing the HIV epidemic,” including hiring advanced registered nurse practitioners and putting additional positions in counties with the highest HIV rates.

The department was required to submit its legislative budget request for the 2021-22 fiscal year by Oct. 15. But the Legislature won't actually address the budget, which will take effect July 1, until it meets in the spring. By then, Florida, as well as the rest of the country, should know whether or not there was another coronavirus spike over the winter.