Connect with us

North Florida News

Jaguars Foundation and Florida Blue Host 3rd Annual Community Day in Jacksonville

Published

on

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (FNN SPORTS) – Hundreds of volunteers from Jacksonville’s business community will join forces with the Jaguars Foundation for the 3rd Annual Community Day presented by Florida Blue on Friday, August 8. The event will focus on assembling care packages to benefit thousands of local children, families, and military service members.

The event will take place at Toon Town Pickleball and kick off with remarks from representatives of the Jaguars Foundation and Florida Blue. Volunteers from major companies including Florida Blue, CSX, FIS, Regency Centers, and JEA will help prepare care packages for several nonprofit organizations: Feeding Northeast Florida, St. Michael’s Soldiers, Changing Homelessness, Communities In Schools, and residents of the OUTEAST community.

The morning will wrap up with entertainment, including a live DJ, tailgate games, lunch, and photo opportunities featuring Jaguars mascot Jaxson de Ville and Jaguars Legends Josh Scobee and Aaron Beasley.

Event Details:
WHAT: 3rd Annual Community Day presented by Florida Blue – Care Package Assembly for Jacksonville-area nonprofits
WHEN: Friday, August 8 | 9:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
WHERE: Toon Town Pickleball, 1726 E. Church St., Jacksonville, FL 32202
WHO: Volunteers from local businesses, Jaguars Foundation staff, Florida Blue representatives, and Jaguars Legends

____________________________________________________________________

Staff | Sports@FloridaNationalNews.com

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

North Florida News

Governor DeSantis Reviews 11 Florida Bills Covering Agriculture, Coastal Resiliency and Drug Prices

Published

on

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (FNN)Ron DeSantis on Thursday received 11 bills from the Florida Legislature addressing issues ranging from agriculture and coastal resiliency to drug prices and public records.

The measures now await the governor’s review and signature, veto or approval without signature.

The bills sent to the governor include:

  • CS/CS/CS/SB 290 — Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services

  • CS/SB 844 — Sickle Cell Disease Care Management and Treatment Continuing Education

  • CS/CS/SB 302 — Coastal Resiliency

  • SB 386 — Farm Equipment

  • CS/CS/CS/HB 1417 — Department of Environmental Protection

  • HB 7011 — A Review under the Open Government Sunset Review Act

  • CS/HB 697 — Drug Prices and Coverage

  • HB 569 — Forensic Client Services

  • CS/CS/CS/HB 1443 — Parkinson’s Disease Registry

  • CS/HB 1445 — Public Records

  • CS/CS/CS/HB 399 — Land Use and Development Regulations

Under Florida law, the governor has until April 2, 2026, to act on the legislation.

Continue Reading

North Florida News

Fentrice Driskell Says 2026 Florida Legislature Session Was a ‘Failure’ as Budget Remains Unfinished

Published

on

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (FNN) — Members of the Florida House Democratic Caucus criticized Republican leadership Friday, calling the 2026 session of the Florida Legislature a failure after lawmakers adjourned without completing the state budget.

Democratic leaders said the Legislature failed to address rising costs affecting Florida families and seniors, including housing, insurance, groceries and health care.

“Republicans fought among themselves and Floridians lost,” said House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa.

Democrats Criticize GOP Legislative Priorities

Driskell said Democrats repeatedly focused on affordability during the session and filed legislation aimed at lowering the cost of living. She argued Republican lawmakers instead prioritized controversial policy issues that did not directly address household expenses.

According to House Democrats, those issues included proposals related to firearm regulations, voting access, vaccine policy, local government authority over property taxes, and debates surrounding diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

“Republicans used affordability as an empty buzzword and ignored the problem,” Driskell said. “Florida is becoming too expensive for too many Floridians.”

Driskell also noted that Republicans control the governor’s office and both legislative chambers but were unable to finalize a budget before the session concluded.

House Democrats Highlight Affordability Bills

House Democrats pointed to several proposals they filed this session aimed at reducing costs for Floridians.

Among them were HB 319, designed to lower property insurance costs; HB 687, which sought to cut government waste and corrupt spending; and HB 675, intended to make homeownership more affordable.

Democrats argued those proposals would have provided financial relief to working families facing rising housing and insurance costs across the state.

Democrats Cite Bipartisan Legislation Passed

Despite disagreements over priorities, Democratic lawmakers said they successfully advocated for several measures that passed both chambers during the session.

Approved legislation included measures to enhance child protective investigations, expand a veterans dental care grant program, strengthen protections for victims of domestic violence, and create a uterine fibroid research database.

Other bills addressed human trafficking education for nurses, historic cemetery protections, drowning prevention, support services for people with developmental disabilities, expanded health care access, and improved treatment and education related to sickle cell disease.

Democrats Call for Focus on Affordability

House Democratic Leader-designate Christine Hunschofsky, D-Parkland, said Floridians expect lawmakers to address the state’s affordability crisis and complete their constitutional duty to pass a balanced budget.

“Floridians want, and deserve, a state government that works to make their lives better,” Hunschofsky said. “We were elected to pass a balanced budget and help Floridians with the affordability crisis. Unfortunately, we’re going home without accomplishing either.”

She added that Democrats plan to continue advocating for policies aimed at lowering costs and improving quality of life for Florida residents.

Continue Reading

North Florida News

Gov. Ron DeSantis Names Alex Peraza to Miami-Dade Judicial Nominating Commission

Published

on

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (FNN)Ron DeSantis announced Friday the appointment of Alex Peraza to the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Judicial Nominating Commission, which serves Miami-Dade County.

Peraza, of Coral Gables, is a partner at Diamond Kaplan & Rothstein, P.A., a law firm based in South Florida.

The Judicial Nominating Commission is responsible for reviewing and recommending qualified candidates for judicial appointments within the circuit.

Peraza earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Miami and his juris doctor from the University of Florida. His appointment term will run through July 1, 2027.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement Ticket Time Machine ad
Advertisement Orlando Regional REALTOR Association logo
Advertisement Parts Pass App
Advertisement Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Metro Orlando
Advertisement
Advertisement African American Chamber of Commerce of Central Florida
Advertisement FNN News en Español
Advertisement Indian American Chamber of Commerce logo
Advertisement Florida Sports Channel

FNN Newsletter

Trending