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Volume 4 Number 38 September 21, 2007 |
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CONSUMER
SERVICES HELPLINE
800-342-2762 |
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| Top: CFO Sink
speaks at the 64th Annual Florida NAACP convention, following
Senator Tony Hill. |
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Fellow Floridian:
Florida
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink spoke at the annual NAACP conference this
week in Gainesville. At the luncheon Friday, she spoke to hundreds of
Floridians about the importance of diversity in state government and
ensuring equal rights for all.

CFO Sink discussed the progress that the Florida Cabinet has made this year
on the automatic restoration of civil rights. She will continue to advocate
for this issue, as there is much more progress to be made. Drawing on her
experience at this week’s Clemency Board meeting, CFO Sink described how
many citizens who have paid their debt to society are still facing
bureaucratic red tape as they try to restore their civil rights.
Read below to learn more about one of the Floridians who was granted a full
pardon this week from the Florida Cabinet.
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Students from Duval
Elementary School in Gainesville perform songs used to learn math
equations and times tables. The school went from an F to an A in a
year. The students are led by teacher Gloria Merriex. |
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CLEMENCY BOARD VOTES TO RELEASE
PASCO COUNTY MAN FROM PRISON
CFO Sink voted Thursday to commute the prison
sentence of Richard Paey, who was convicted in 2004
of drug trafficking. On a motion from Governor Crist
and seconded by CFO Sink, the Executive Clemency
Board unanimously commuted the 25-year prison
sentence for Richard Paey and remitted his $500,000
court- imposed fine. The Clemency Board also granted
Mr. Paey a full pardon, which forgives his guilt and
restores all of the rights he lost due to his felony
conviction.
Clemency is one of the CFO’s many responsibilities
in her role as a member of the Florida Cabinet. The
Governor and Cabinet sit as the Executive Clemency
Board, which provides a variety of relief to
convicted felons including: commuting prison
sentences, granting full pardons, remitting court
imposed fines and granting civil rights and the
authority to own, possess or use firearms.
Mr. Paey’s case exemplifies some of the inequities
that exist with mandatory minimum sentences and the
issues surrounding those suffering from chronic
pain. Mr. Paey suffered a serious automobile
accident and subsequent medical procedures proved
unsuccessful in alleviating his pain, leaving him
bound to a wheelchair. The only form of treatment
that enabled Mr. Paey to function was prescription
pain medicine. The state attorney’s office
prosecuted Mr. Paey under Florida’s drug trafficking
statute due to the large amount of medicine Mr. Paey
was consuming, even though the medicine was
prescribed by his physician.
Richard Paey was offered several plea deals that
would have avoided a prison sentence, however, he
rejected them and ended up spending nearly four
years in prison. Mr. Paey was released from prison
hours after the vote and was reunited with his wife,
children and family in Hudson, Florida.
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CFO SINK, MAJOR
INVESTORS, STATE OFFICIALS AND ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS SIGN PETITION TO SEC
REQUIRING FULL CORPORATE CLIMATE RISK DISCLOSURE
Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, along with a broad coalition of
investors, state officials with regulatory and fiscal management
responsibilities, and environmental groups, filed a landmark petition asking
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to require publicly-traded
companies to assess and fully disclose their financial risks from climate
change. The coalition today also formally asked the SEC’s Division of
Corporation Finance to immediately begin “[c]losely scrutinizing the
adequacy of registrants’ climate disclosures” under existing law.
“Florida has miles and miles of coastline that could be impacted by rising
sea level and millions of retirees who depend on high performance in their
retirement funds,” said CFO Sink, who serves on the board of the Florida
pension fund, which has $140 billion in assets. “It is my goal to help our
economy prepare for climate change, and action by the SEC on this petition
will result in better, more informed decisions for Florida's investors.”
CONTINUED
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CFO SINK: PENSACOLA MY SAFE FLORIDA HOME FAIR BREAKS
ATTENDANCE RECORDS
Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced that the My Safe
Florida Home (MSFH) Fair last Saturday in Pensacola broke all previous MSFH
event records with attendance of more than 3,000 North Floridians. In a
five-hour span, representatives from the MSFH program raised awareness about
the safety and financial incentives available through the program and helped
more than 1,000 homeowners sign up for a free wind inspection.
“I am thankful to the Floridians who attended the My Safe Florida Home
Fair this past Saturday and the members of our department who worked so hard
to make this event a success,” said CFO Sink, who runs the Department of
Financial Services and oversees the MSFH program. “Not only were we able to
sign-up 1,000 Floridians for a free wind inspection, we were also able to
promote the importance of mitigation in our state.”
CFO Sink hosted the MSFH Fair along with the Escambia County Commission,
Gulf Power Corporation and WEAR-TV. The fair featured various
hurricane-preparedness exhibits and more than 60 vendors. State
Representatives Clay Ford (R-Pensacola) and Dave Murzin (R-Pensacola), along
with local elected officials from Escambia, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa
Counties, were on hand Saturday at the Pensacola Civic Center to promote the
program.
CONTINUED
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Tax Watch Executive Director Dominic
Calabro, left, CFO Alex Sink, center, and second from right, Mike
Jennings, Tax Watch chairman, congratulate 2007 Davis Productivity
Award winners. |
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FLORIDA TAX WATCH PRESENTS
EFFICIENCY STUDIES
Florida Chief Financial Officer
Alex Sink joined Governor Charlie Crist as Florida
Tax Watch announced three new reports, which
according to Tax Watch, “identified numerous ways
the state government can both cut cost and increase
accountability, efficiency and effectiveness in the
wake of the call to cut $ 1 billion from the state’s
budget.”

As CFO and former Vice Chair of
Florida Tax Watch, Sink is a strong proponent of
identifying ways that government can operate in a
more streamlined fashion and provide Floridians with
better service. In addition to working with the
Governor and legislative leaders to develop
long-term financial plans for the state, CFO Sink
plans to use the report to identify ways the
Department of Financial Services can implement
cost-saving ideas.
Recent
Prudential Financial/Davis Productivity Award
winners were honored as the call for entries for the
next series of awards goes out. The Davis
Productivity Awards honor state government for
increasing performance and productivity.
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Florida Financial Services
Commission members:
CFO Sink, Agriculture
Commissioner Bronson, Governor Crist and Attorney General McCollum. |
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FLORIDA FINANCIAL SERVICES COMMISSION ADOPTS RULE TO PROTECT MILITARY
PERSONNEL FROM INSURANCE SALES FRAUD
The Florida Financial Services Commission, which is comprised of Gov.
Charlie Crist and members of the Cabinet, adopted a Rule proposed by
Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty that will protect active duty service
members of the U.S. Armed Forces from dishonest and predatory insurance
sales practices in Florida.

This new Rule defines as deceptive behavior the solicitation of soldiers by
insurers to purchase life insurance coverage. In the multi-state case, the
insurer solicited soldiers on base urging them to purchase more life
insurance when in fact nearly all soldiers already had $250,000 in low-cost
life insurance provided and partially subsidized by the federal government.
“Florida was part of a $70 million multi-state settlement last year against
a Texas-based company accused of improper sales of insurance and investment
products to U.S. military personnel,” McCarty said. “We want to make sure we
have the appropriate regulations in place to prevent this from happening
again to Florida residents.”
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Click on map to enlarge |
STATE PURCHASES 51 MILES OF RAIL-TRAIL IN
CENTRAL FLORIDA The Governor and Cabinet, sitting as the Board
of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund, today approved the
purchase from Florida East Coast Railway of slightly less than 51 miles of
abandoned rail corridor for $16 million. The cost is 61% of the appraised
value. Forty miles of the trail falls in Volusia County, while the rest in
Brevard County. This purchase is particularly notable because it is
Florida's largest single trail purchase ever. The corridor will be converted
into recreational trails that may become part of a larger greenway project
linking Maine to Key West. Once completed, the trail will have a 10-foot
wide asphalt or rubberized path allowing water to seep into the ground. The
path will narrow to about eight feet wide in environmentally sensitive
areas. A four- to eight-foot-wide dirt horse trail will run parallel.
Volusia and Brevard counties are responsible for creating the trail and
managing it once complete.
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RESOLUTION OF THE
GOVERNOR AND CABINET ON FINANCIAL PLANNING WEEK
WHEREAS, the Financial Planning Association of
Florida is the membership organization for the financial
planning community, representing 1,800 members dedicated
to supporting the financial planning process as a way to
help Floridians achieve their goals and dreams; and
WHEREAS, by becoming aware of the value of
financial planning, including tax, estate, investment,
risk and retirement planning, citizens will have the
tools necessary to increase their financial literacy and
learn to apply the financial planning process to their
personal situations; and

WHEREAS, the financial planning process provides a
template for assessing, evaluating and achieving
financial objectives through personal goal setting,
budgeting, making smart financial decisions and
monitoring results; and
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CFO SINK
ANNOUNCES ARREST OF FORMER AGENT WHO STOLE MORE THAN $90,000 IN PREMIUMS
FROM MORE THAN 40 VICTIMS
Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced the arrest of a former
insurance agent who allegedly pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in
premiums and left dozens of homeowners in Pasco, Hernando and Hillsborough
counties without coverage during the 2004-2005 hurricane seasons.
Bruce Anthony Fonte, 53, former owner of the now-defunct Family Insurance,
located in Port Richey, is charged with organized scheme to defraud in the
first degree, punishable by up to 30 years in prison if he is convicted. The
arrest is a result of an investigation and joint effort on the part of
multiple divisions of the Department of Financial Services, including the
Division of Insurance Fraud (DIF), the Division of Agent and Agency
Services, the Division of Legal Services, and the Division of Consumer
Services. Fonte turned himself in this morning to the Pasco County Jail.
“This individual abused his customers’ trust and put them at great risk for
his own personal gain,” said CFO Sink, who oversees the Department. “I
commend those who worked quickly to stop additional customers from being
harmed.”
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MY SAFE FLORIDA HOME
PROGRAM TO BE ON HAND AT DEERFIELD BEACH HURRICANE
EXPO
Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced
members of the My Safe Florida Home (MSFH) program
will be on hand at a hurricane expo in Deerfield
Beach Saturday, to sign up homeowners for free wind
inspections and to raise awareness about the safety
and financial incentives available through the MSFH
program.
The Virtual Hurricane expo, hosted by the Disaster
Survival House, is a week-long event featuring free
information and resources for consumers about
hurricane preparedness. In addition to registering
homeowners for free wind inspections,
representatives from the MSFH program will conduct a
presentation about the program at the expo on
September 22. Broadcasts of hurricane preparedness
presentations will be streaming live online at
www.GetTalkingNOW.com from September 20- September
25 and will remain available online after the expo
is completed, to serve as a resource for consumers.
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