News Service of Florida
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The bill focuses on single-use electronic cigarettes and will allow the state attorney general's office to set up a registry of products deemed off-limits, after an administrative process.
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A lawsuit over people being dropped from Medicaid after the public health emergency will begin May 3, according to an order by Jacksonville-based U.S. District Judge Marcia Morales Howard.
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The contracts will involve tens of billions of dollars in the coming years, with about 3.45 million people receiving health care through the managed-care system as of February
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A potential rule would aim to make schools licensed by the state’s Commission for Independent Education eligible to receive the money.
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A memorandum of understanding was completed to create a governance structure for a new academic health center in Tallahassee and medical campus in Panama City Beach.
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The court issued an order scheduling the arguments for June 5 in the case, which is one of a series of similar class-action lawsuits filed against colleges in the state.
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Gov. Ron DeSantis says if the "weed one" passes "this state will start to smell like marijuana in our cities and towns,” and called the abortion measure "very, very extreme in a number of different ways.”
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The grand jury issued an interim report Feb. 2 and is asking the state Supreme Court for an extension through Dec. 26.
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A panel of the 2nd District Court of Appeal overturned a circuit judge’s decision to grant summary judgment in a lawsuit filed by a man who alleged he suffered hip fractures while unconscious in the hospital.
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The State Board of Education is slated this week to approve a proposal that would require public colleges to have supplies of emergency opioid antagonists in residence halls and dormitories.