Thursday, June 11, 2026

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: Feds order a Florida power plant to keep burning dirty coal (Craig Pittman, Florida Phoenix, June 11, 2026)

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COMMENTARY

Feds order a Florida power plant to keep burning dirty coal

Instead of shutting down, Orlando plant must continue polluting the air and driving power bills higher.

JUNE 11, 2026 12:05 AM

 The Orlando Utilities Commission was on the verge of shutting down its 39-year-old coal-fired power plant at the Stanton Energy Center when Energy Secretary Chris Wright ordered it kept open for at least 90 days. (Photo via Orlando Utilities Commission)

Walt Disney World is supposed to be the Happiest Place on Earth. It’s certainly the most popular tourist destination. Fifty million people, some from Florida but most from elsewhere, flock to the rodent-themed amusement park every year to spend big bucks seeking a good time.

Now imagine all those people coming down with big coughing fits.

Sing it with me, Mouseketeers: “It’s a foul world after all! It’s a foul, foul world!”

This is what popped into my head last week when I heard that the U.S. Department of Energy had ordered the Orlando Utilities Commission to keep burning stinky old coal in its 39-year-old Stanton Energy Center Unit 1 power plant.

I checked the Orlando air quality for that day. It was officially listed as “poor.” The decrepit old coal plant had been slated for a shutdown this month. But the DOE said “N-O!” — which means the tourists will get no relief from the onslaught of air pollution.

Susannah Randolph via Sierra Club.

“Obviously, this is a clear federal overreach by the Trump administration to tell a local government what they can and can’t do,” said Susannah Randolph, an Orlando resident who leads the Sierra Club’s Florida chapter.

Why, you may ask, would a federal agency issue such an order? Because the feds have decided that there’s a looming energy emergency in Florida.

But it’s not driven by the need to keep the ghosts afloat in the “Haunted Mansion,” or to maintain the Monorail moving around, or to keep all the lights on in Cinderella’s Castle. Heck, this emergency isn’t even Disney-related.

“Although Florida is at ‘normal risk’ for long-term energy adequacy, the unit near Orlando needs to remain online partly to help serve potential data centers in the state, the department said,” a power industry publication called “Utility Dive” reported.

Considering the widespread Florida opposition to new power-hogging, water-guzzling data centers, that DOE edict benefiting “potential data centers” isn’t going to be a popular decision.

I contacted the Orlando power commission to ask whether this keep-coal-and-carry-on command is something it requested or something it plans to fight. Except for saying it didn’t ask for it, a spokeswoman for the utility that calls itself “the Reliable One” told me the commission had nothing to say. It is going to comply and keep quiet.

The acronym for the Orlando Utilities Commission is OUC, but I think its lack of resistance to this dopey DOE order requires the utility to add another word to its name — Helpless? Hapless? HeckWithYou? That way, its 288,000 customers can call it “OUCH.”

Because that’s what they’re going to say about their declining air quality and rising utility bills.

Wright is wrong

If I ran the Game Show Network, there’d be a new program called “The Prevaricators.” The theme song would be the Eurythmics singing “Would I Lie to You?” Contestants would listen to government officials make statements and then see if they can sniff out all the bat guano.

Chris Wright via Linkedin.

I think the debut of such a show would have to feature the sitting secretary of the Department of Energy, Chris Wright, because most of what he says is wrong.

He’s a former oil company executive, so he’s got a certain, shall we say, point of view. For instance, here’s what Wright has said about the growing threat of climate change: “There is no climate crisis… (sic) We have seen no increase in the frequency or intensity of hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts or floods despite endless fear mongering of the media, politicians and activists.”

Of course, we Floridians know first-hand that that’s some Pulitzer-level fiction. We’ve seen a LOT of evidence of hurricanes growing more intense and doing so more rapidly. And we’ve seen more and worse flooding than ever before thanks to sea level rise.

Now check out Wright’s explanation for forcing the Orlando area to keep inhaling the smoke from burning coal.

“Taking reliable generation off the grid compromises energy reliability and needlessly raises energy costs for Americans,” he said, according to a Department of Energy press release. “During peak summer demand, Floridians deserve continued access to affordable, reliable, and secure energy to power and cool their homes.”

This is a colossal load of what experts call “hooey.”

OUC wasn’t simply shutting down one of its two coal-fired plants. It spent about $100 million three years ago to buy a gas-powered plant in Osceola County that was idle. OUC planned to put that one online to replace the coal-powered plant. There would be no gap in the amount of power available.

The other problem with Wright’s statement is calling coal power “affordable.”

Raymer Maguire via Linkedin.

“Coal is the most expensive form of electricity,” said Raymer Maguire of the CLEO Institute, a nonprofit that offers educational information on climate issues (sounds like Wright could use some).

Maguire pointed out that the expense is a big reason why the state’s largest utility, Florida Power & Light, gets less than 1% of its power from coal, while the No. 2, Duke Energy gets 9%. The OUC, by contrast, has been generating about a quarter of its power from coal — but it would like to stop.

The OUC’s own financial statements show that coal costs more than its other sources of fuel. You can see why the OUC wanted to switch, but now it can’t.

Ted Kelly via Environmental Defense Fund.

“Forcing this coal plant to remain open past retirement will needlessly jack up electricity bills for Central Florida families and businesses, right as they’re struggling with high energy costs,” said Ted Kelly of the Environmental Defense Fund.

But Wright doesn’t care about driving up energy prices in our increasingly unaffordable state.

He also doesn’t care that coal is the dirtiest fuel. In fact, his department keeps calling it “beautiful, clean coal.” As any contestant on “The Prevaricators” could tell you, that’s at least another gigaton of hogwash.

Think of the children

Coal is the most polluting fuel for generating electricity.

Its carbon-loaded emissions are bad news for our rapidly warming planet, of course — assuming Gov. Ron DeSantis will let us talk about that. But what I want to point out right now is coal’s dire health effects.

In 2023, the National Institutes of Health released a report about how “air pollution from coal power plants is associated with greater mortality than previously thought.”

Specifically, the NIH researchers “estimated that between 1999 and 2020, 460,000 deaths would not have occurred in the absence of emissions from the coal power plants.”

Liz Scott via American Lung Association.

Burning coal is particularly bad for infants, children, and teens, said Liz Scott of the American Lung Association.

“Their lungs are still developing,” she explained. “They breathe more air for their body size than adults and they’re frequently exposed to outdoor air.”

Her organization has calculated that air pollution in Orange County is responsible for creating 22,000 pediatric asthma cases, 710,000 cases of chronic pulmonary disease, and 97,000 cardiovascular disease cases. Continuing the life of that ancient coal plant won’t help any of those folks.

And we haven’t even talked about alllll the ash that’s produced. Not far from the Stanton Energy Center, there’s a 175-foot-tall mountain of coal ash that has the neighbors worried about what it’s doing to their air and water.

But the DOE doesn’t care about that, either. The only health issue it’s concerned about is resuscitating an industry that’s already on life support.

A gig for DEVO

The OUC order isn’t the only one of its kind.

The DOE has issued similar orders to keep coal plants alive in Michigan, Indiana, Colorado, and Washington, too. Michigan and Illinois have joined forces to sue, calling the order illegal.

The plant in Michigan, which has already cost ratepayers an extra $180 million, partially broke down after the DOE order. So did the two in Indiana. That’s not unusual, especially given the age of some of them.

Despite the expense and the breakdowns, DOE wants all of these plants to keep pumping out dirty emissions for one reason and one reason only.

“They want to keep the coal mines open,” Kelly explained.

In recent decades, the coal mining industry has been in a long, slow decline. It was the largest source of fuel for energy production in 1984, but since then it’s fallen out of fashion like big shoulder pads on women’s jackets. By 2024 it accounted for just 10% of the nation’s total energy output.

You can feel sad for all the Loretta Lynn relatives losing their dangerous livelihood, but according to free-market conservatives, that’s how capitalism works. Good government doesn’t pick winners and losers, right?

Yet now we have a president who’s been frantically giving the coal industry CPR, trying to turn that loser into a winner. He’s been so intent on reviving coal, I keep expecting him to announce that the first band to play in his renovated White House Ballroom will be DEVO doing “Working in a Coal Mine.”

Just last week, he announced plans to spend $700 million of our tax dollars on giving the industry a big boost, including creating two new coal-fired plants.

His favors for the coal industry don’t stop there, either. As ProPublica reported this week, the convicted felon in the Oval Office also killed a federal criminal investigation into the coal empire owned by Sen. Jim Justice, a Republican from West Virginia who happens to be one of his close allies.

Of course, just as you can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs, so you can’t prop up a heavily polluting industry without killing thousands of people via respiratory problems. But those are the breaks, kids!

Welcome to Tomorrowland

Florida GOP gubernatorial candidate Byron Donalds, whose campaign is backed by AI tech titans, says he fully supports the DOE order to Orlando to keep burning coal.

But he’s about the only one.

In Orlando, the order is going over about as well as you might expect. Lead balloons exhibit greater buoyancy.

State Rep. Anna Eskamani via Florida House.

The Orlando Sentinel, in its story on this, quoted state Rep. Anna Eskamani, now running for mayor of Orlando, who made it clear she’s no fan of the feds.

“They are spending public money to subsidize the dirtiest, costliest form of power we have — the exact thing we should be moving away from — while working families foot the bill,” she said.

I hoped to get a similar fiery quote from the sitting mayor, Buddy Dyer. In 2017, when our anti-science chief executive pulled the United States out of the Paris Climate Agreement, Dyer joined more than 80 other mayors across the country to make a commitment to switching to clean energy by 2050.

Mayor Buddy Dyer via City of Orlando.

“I am proud to support a vision of transitioning entirely to 100% clean and renewable energy in our city,” Dyer said then.

But when I contacted the mayor’s office this week, that defiance appeared to have dissipated. His spokeswoman told me the mayor would leave commenting to the folks at OUC. I pointed out that OUC was keeping mum. Unfortunately, that was the end of our conversation.

So, apparently, unlike the folks in Michigan, Orlando officialdom does not plan to sue the DOE to overturn this order. The decree lasts 90 days, so maybe Dyer & Co. think they just have to keep quiet until it expires.

But I bet when that September expiration date rolls around, Wright will simply renew it for another 90 days, then another 90 after that. That’s what he’s been doing in Michigan. Heck, he’ll probably do the same thing for the Stanton Energy Plant’s No. 2 coal plant, which is supposed to switch to natural gas next year.

Meanwhile, guess who’s completely rejected the use of fossil fuels for power generation? Walt Disney World. This is one place that’s embraced the idea of being Tomorrowland.

“Hidden Mickey” solar farm near EPCOT via Disney World.

“At Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, solar energy plays an especially significant role,” the theme park reported recently. “In total across four sites, the resort now has 212,000 kilowatts of solar capacity, with over 600,000 solar panels — generating roughly enough energy to power over 19,000 Florida homes for one year.”

Disney’s four Florida solar farms include one near EPCOT that’s in the shape of its widely recognized corporate symbol. Together, the four “can now produce up to 100% of the resort’s daytime power needs, helping support one of the largest vacation destinations in the world.”

Maybe I’m wrong, but it sure seems to me that between solar-friendly Disney and the coal-drunk DOE, the second one is the real Mickey Mouse operation.

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Craig Pittman
CRAIG PITTMAN

Craig Pittman is a native Floridian. In 30 years at the Tampa Bay Times, he won numerous state and national awards for his environmental reporting. He is the author of six books. In 2020 the Florida Heritage Book Festival named him a Florida Literary Legend. Craig is co-host of the "Welcome to Florida" podcast. He lives in St. Petersburg with his wife and children.

Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.



ANNALS OF GRUMPI$TAN: FIFA Peace Prize Recipient Vows to Hit Iran ‘VERY HARD’ on First Night of World Cup (Alex Nguyen, Mother Jones, June 11,2026)

From Mother Jones magazine:

FIFA Peace Prize Recipient Vows to Hit Iran ‘VERY HARD’ on First Night of World Cup

President Trump is trying to achieve FIFA’s dream of “advancing peace and unity” with continued strikes on Iran.

Donald Trump and Gianni Infantino shake hands behind a golden trophy labeled, in part, "DONALD J. TRUMP." The trophy is the FIFA Peace Prize.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino presents President Donald Trump with the FIFA Peace Prize at the Kennedy Center on Dec. 5, 2025.Stephanie Scarbrough/Pool/AP

Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.

On Thursday, President Donald Trump said that the US would strike Iran “VERY HARD TONIGHT,” in a bid to “assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets.”

Trump made the statement in a Truth Social post, comparing the effort to the US military kidnapping Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January and taking over the country’s multi-billion-dollar oil industry. 

The possible strikes come on the same day as the first two World Cup matches, the global soccer tournament organized by FIFA, a corrupt governing body, whose president awarded Trump the FIFA Peace Prize for his “unwavering commitment to advancing peace and unity.” Among the achievements FIFA cited: playing “a pivotal role” in establishing a ceasefire and promoting peace between Israel and Palestine.”

As I wrote in May, Trump has used his supposed success in Venezuela as fuel for subsequent takeovers attempts of Iran and Cuba. If he sees his legacy on the line—with both his and Israel’s war in Iran and the World Cup—the possible consequences look dire. 

According to data from Iran’s government ministries, nearly 3,500 people have been killed since February 28, and, per a Wednesday report from the New York Times, the US military may have already hit two water facilities serving thousands of people in Iran (which many international law experts label as a war crime).

LET FREEDOM RING! Celebrate Independence! Protect free speech and promote healing!



When I was a little boy, my parents often took me to see the Liberty Bell, located near our rural Southern New Jersey home.  

My father won votes by his 82nd ABN DIVN Association Board of Directors votes to hold Conventions in Philadelphia.  

I once heard one of his sales pitches, which ended with, "you can reach out and touch the Liberty Bell.

I was touched by the nice notes, below, from St. Johns County Commission Chair Clay Murphy at the conclusion of a long e-mail chain over several years, inviting our elected officials to respect our First and Ninth Amendment rights to free speech.

We love this Nation.  

We love this magical place.  

We all need to listen to each other.

Yes we can!


----- Forwarded Message -----

From: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com>
To: Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us>
Cc: bcc5ataylor@sjcfl.us <bcc5ataylor@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Krista Joseph <bcc4kjoseph@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Sarah Arnold <bcc2sarnold@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Christian Whitehurst <bcc1cwhitehurst@sjcfl.us>; Rich Komando <rkomando@sjcfl.us>
Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2026 at 07:44:39 PM EDT
Subject: Re: Respecting and Honoring our Right to Public Comment on Every Single Agenda Item at SJC County Commission

Dear Mr. Chairman:


On Friday, June 5, 2026 at 10:05:03 PM EDT, Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us> wrote:


So I was thinking about this issue. On reflection, not allowing comment on information items only may have been an oversight on my part. Thanks for pointing that out to me. I’ll do better.

Thank You,

Clay Murphy

Commissioner, District 3

St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners

500 San Sebastian View, St. Augustine, FL  32084

P: 904-209-0303 | C: 904-436-3973 |  www.sjcfl.us

Compassionate-Trustworthy-Innovative

 

Clay Murphy, District 3, Chair - St. Johns County

 



From: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com>
Sent: Friday, June 5, 2026 7:54:36 PM
To: Commissioner Ann Taylor <bcc5ataylor@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Krista Joseph <bcc4kjoseph@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Sarah Arnold <bcc2sarnold@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Clay Murphy <bcc3cmurphy@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Christian Whitehurst <bcc1cwhitehurst@sjcfl.us>; Rich Komando <rkomando@sjcfl.us>; Nicole Crosby <ncrosby28@yahoo.com>; Tom Reynolds <thomasfreynolds@yahoo.com>
Subject: Fw: Respecting and Honoring our Right to Public Comment on Every Single Agenda Item at SJC County Commission
 




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com>
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2025 at 09:37:30 PM EDT
Subject: Fw: Respecting and Honoring our Right to Public Comment on Every Single Agenda Item at SJC County Commission

FYI



----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Rich Komando <rkomando@sjcfl.us>
To: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com>; bcc4kjoseph@scjfl.us <bcc4kjoseph@scjfl.us>
Cc: Commissioner Krista Joseph <bcc4kjoseph@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Ann Taylor <ataylor@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Sarah Arnold <bcc2sarnold@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Christian Whitehurst <bcc1cwhitehurst@sjcfl.us>; Betty Dixon <bdixon@sjcfl.us>; Kealey West <kwest@sjcfl.us>; Lex Taylor III <ltaylor@sjcfl.us>; Joy Andrews <jqandrews@sjcfl.us>; Thomas Filloramo <tfilloramo@sjcfl.us>; Brad Bradley <bbradley@sjcfl.us>; SJC Public Affairs <sjcpublicaffairs@sjcfl.us>; Jesse Dunn <jdunn@sjcfl.us>; Wayne Larson <wlarson@sjcfl.us>; Ryan Mauch <rmauch@sjcfl.us>; Mike Roberson <mroberson@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us>; gpellicer@sjcfl.us <gpellicer@sjcfl.us>; Neal Shinkre <nshinkre@sjcfl.us>; Ryan Ross <rross@sjcfl.us>; Lucy Viti <LViti@gannett.com>; Robert Hardwick <sheriff@sjso.org>; Matthew Cline <mcline@sjso.org>; Eddie Creamer <eddie@sjcpa.us>; taxcollector@sjcfl.us <taxcollector@sjcfl.us>; Vicky Oakes <voakes@votesjc.com>; Wayne Fusco <wfusco@votesjc.com>; bpatty <bpatty@stjohnsclerk.com>; inspector_general@stjohnsclerk.com <inspector_general@stjohnsclerk.com>; FL_GOV Inspector General <fl_gov.inspectorgeneral@eog.myflorida.com>; Executive Investigations Complaints <executiveinvestigationscomplaints@fdle.state.fl.us>; R.J. Larizza <larizzar@sao7.org>; Benjamin Rich <richb@sao7.org>; Bryan Shorstein <shorsteinb@sao7.org>; SAOPIO <saopio@sao7.org>; tom.leek@myfloridasenate.com <tom.leek@myfloridasenate.com>; Nicholas Weilhammer <nicholas.weilhammer@myfloridalegal.com>; pat.gleason@myfloridalegal.com <pat.gleason@myfloridalegal.com>; sam.greco@myfloridahouse.gov <sam.greco@myfloridahouse.gov>; Judson Sapp <judson.sapp@myfloridahouse.gov>; Judson Sapp <judson.sapp@flhouse.gov>; Kim Kendall <kim.kendall@myfloridahouse.gov>; Kim Kendall <kimjkendall@gmail.com>; samuel.a.greco@gmail.com <samuel.a.greco@gmail.com>; Shorty Robbins <shorty.robbins@myfloridahouse.gov>; Shorty Robbins <Shorty.Robbins@flhouse.gov>; shorty.lampsjc@gmail.com <shorty.lampsjc@gmail.com>; Khalil Maycock <kmaycock@wjxt.com>; Noah Hertz <noah@jaxtoday.org>; noah@jacksonvilletoday.org <noah@jacksonvilletoday.org>; aschindler@wjct.org <aschindler@wjct.org>; Historic City News <historiccity@gmail.com>; WJCT Radio - First Coast Connect <firstcoastconnect@wjct.org>; WJXT News Tips <newstips@news4jax.com>; jasebes@news4jax.com <jasebes@news4jax.com>; kfluker@orlandosentinel.com <kfluker@orlandosentinel.com>; patricia.mazzei@nytimes.com <patricia.mazzei@nytimes.com>; jessica.silver-greenberg@nytimes.com <jessica.silver-greenberg@nytimes.com>; lori.rozsa@washpost.com <lori.rozsa@washpost.com>; Waste & Abuse - Shared Fraud <fwa@stjohnsclerk.com>; sauls@nytimes.com <sauls@nytimes.com>; Max Royle <mroyle@cityofsab.org>; David Birchim <dbirchim@citystaug.com>; Nancy Sikes-Kline <nsikeskline@citystaug.com>; jdepreter@citystaug.com <jdepreter@citystaug.com>; Cynthia Garris <cgarris@citystaug.com>; Barbara Blonder <bblonder@citystaug.com>; Jim Springfield <jspringfield@mac.com>; Comm Rumrell <comdrumrell@cityofsab.org>; Comm Samora <comdsamora@cityofsab.org>; Comm Morgan <comvmorgan@cityofsab.org>; Comm George <comugeorge@cityofsab.org>; Beth Sweeny <combsweeny@cityofsab.org>; antitrust.atr@usdoj.gov <antitrust.atr@usdoj.gov>; antitrust@ftc.gov <antitrust@ftc.gov>; antitrust.complaints@usdoj.gov <antitrust.complaints@usdoj.gov>; jspringfield@citystaug.com <jspringfield@citystaug.com>; Darlene Galambos <dgalambos@citystaug.com>; Isabelle Lopez <ilopez@citystaug.com>; tgrant@citystaug.com <tgrant@citystaug.com>; Reuben Franklin <rfranklin@citystaug.com>; Melissa Wissel <mwissel@citystaug.com>; waltbog@nytimes.com <waltbog@nytimes.com>
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2025 at 06:36:51 PM EDT
Subject: Re: Respecting and Honoring our Right to Public Comment on Every Single Agenda Item at SJC County Commission

Thank you again Mr. Slavin for your concern.

I agree with Ms. Hodges that the public is able to speak about every item on an agenda. For that reason, even with presentation items, you and other members of the public are able speak during general public comment which is called for at the beginning of the meeting.

Very truly yours,

 

cid:image005.png@01D9BE22.B9EC0AC0

Rich Komando

County Attorney

Office of the County Attorney

St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners

500 San Sebastian View, St. Augustine FL  32084

904-209-0805 |  www.sjcfl.us

rkomando@sjcfl.us

 

 



 

 














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From: Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com>
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2025 9:15 AM
To: bcc4kjoseph@scjfl.us <bcc4kjoseph@scjfl.us>
Cc: Commissioner Krista Joseph <bcc4kjoseph@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Ann Taylor <ataylor@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Sarah Arnold <bcc2sarnold@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Christian Whitehurst <bcc1cwhitehurst@sjcfl.us>; Betty Dixon <bdixon@sjcfl.us>; Rich Komando <rkomando@sjcfl.us>; Kealey West <kwest@sjcfl.us>; Lex Taylor III <ltaylor@sjcfl.us>; Joy Andrews <jqandrews@sjcfl.us>; Thomas Filloramo <tfilloramo@sjcfl.us>; Brad Bradley <bbradley@sjcfl.us>; SJC Public Affairs <sjcpublicaffairs@sjcfl.us>; Jesse Dunn <jdunn@sjcfl.us>; Wayne Larson <wlarson@sjcfl.us>; Ryan Mauch <rmauch@sjcfl.us>; Mike Roberson <mroberson@sjcfl.us>; Commissioner Clay Murphy <cmurphy@sjcfl.us>; gpellicer@sjcfl.us <gpellicer@sjcfl.us>; Neal Shinkre <nshinkre@sjcfl.us>; Ryan Ross <rross@sjcfl.us>; Lucy Viti <LViti@gannett.com>; Robert Hardwick <sheriff@sjso.org>; Matthew Cline <mcline@sjso.org>; Eddie Creamer <eddie@sjcpa.us>; taxcollector@sjcfl.us <taxcollector@sjcfl.us>; Vicky Oakes <voakes@votesjc.com>; Wayne Fusco <wfusco@votesjc.com>; bpatty <bpatty@stjohnsclerk.com>; inspector_general@stjohnsclerk.com <inspector_general@stjohnsclerk.com>; FL_GOV Inspector General <fl_gov.inspectorgeneral@eog.myflorida.com>; Executive Investigations Complaints <executiveinvestigationscomplaints@fdle.state.fl.us>; R.J. Larizza <larizzar@sao7.org>; Benjamin Rich <richb@sao7.org>; Bryan Shorstein <shorsteinb@sao7.org>; SAOPIO <saopio@sao7.org>; tom.leek@myfloridasenate.com <tom.leek@myfloridasenate.com>; Nicholas Weilhammer <nicholas.weilhammer@myfloridalegal.com>; pat.gleason@myfloridalegal.com <pat.gleason@myfloridalegal.com>; sam.greco@myfloridahouse.gov <sam.greco@myfloridahouse.gov>; Judson Sapp <judson.sapp@myfloridahouse.gov>; Judson Sapp <judson.sapp@flhouse.gov>; Kim Kendall <kim.kendall@myfloridahouse.gov>; Kim Kendall <kimjkendall@gmail.com>; samuel.a.greco@gmail.com <samuel.a.greco@gmail.com>; Shorty Robbins <shorty.robbins@myfloridahouse.gov>; Shorty Robbins <Shorty.Robbins@flhouse.gov>; shorty.lampsjc@gmail.com <shorty.lampsjc@gmail.com>; Khalil Maycock <kmaycock@wjxt.com>; Noah Hertz <noah@jaxtoday.org>; noah@jacksonvilletoday.org <noah@jacksonvilletoday.org>; aschindler@wjct.org <aschindler@wjct.org>; Historic City News <historiccity@gmail.com>; WJCT Radio - First Coast Connect <firstcoastconnect@wjct.org>; WJXT News Tips <newstips@news4jax.com>; jasebes@news4jax.com <jasebes@news4jax.com>; kfluker@orlandosentinel.com <kfluker@orlandosentinel.com>; patricia.mazzei@nytimes.com <patricia.mazzei@nytimes.com>; jessica.silver-greenberg@nytimes.com <jessica.silver-greenberg@nytimes.com>; lori.rozsa@washpost.com <lori.rozsa@washpost.com>; Waste & Abuse - Shared Fraud <fwa@stjohnsclerk.com>; sauls@nytimes.com <sauls@nytimes.com>; Max Royle <mroyle@cityofsab.org>; David Birchim <dbirchim@citystaug.com>; Nancy Sikes-Kline <nsikeskline@citystaug.com>; jdepreter@citystaug.com <jdepreter@citystaug.com>; Cynthia Garris <cgarris@citystaug.com>; Barbara Blonder <bblonder@citystaug.com>; Jim Springfield <jspringfield@mac.com>; Comm Rumrell <comdrumrell@cityofsab.org>; Comm Samora <comdsamora@cityofsab.org>; Comm Morgan <comvmorgan@cityofsab.org>; Comm George <comugeorge@cityofsab.org>; Beth Sweeny <combsweeny@cityofsab.org>; antitrust.atr@usdoj.gov <antitrust.atr@usdoj.gov>; antitrust@ftc.gov <antitrust@ftc.gov>; antitrust.complaints@usdoj.gov <antitrust.complaints@usdoj.gov>; jspringfield@citystaug.com <jspringfield@citystaug.com>; Darlene Galambos <dgalambos@citystaug.com>; Isabelle Lopez <ilopez@citystaug.com>; tgrant@citystaug.com <tgrant@citystaug.com>; Reuben Franklin <rfranklin@citystaug.com>; Melissa Wissel <mwissel@citystaug.com>; waltbog@nytimes.com <waltbog@nytimes.com>
Subject: Re: Respecting and Honoring our Right to Public Comment on Every Single Agenda Item at SJC County Commission
 
Dear Commissioners:
Our St. Johns County Attorney and our St. Johns County Commission owe us an apology. 
Thank you.
With kindest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,  
Ed Slavin
Box 3084
St. Augustine, Florida 32085-3084  
(904) 377-4998


On Sunday, June 15, 2025 at 08:03:41 PM EDT, Ed Slavin <easlavin@aol.com> wrote:


  • Dear Commissioners:
    1. There no "presentation" exception to our Constitutional right to public comment on all County Commission agenda items. 
    2. Please cease and desist from violating our rights again, as occurred at the June 3, 2025 meeting when two (2) constitutional officers made their budget "presentations," with no public comment allowed. Don't do that again. 
    3. Learned counsel for our Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns Couny (AMCD), Ms. Lawsikia Hodges, on June 12 correctly advised AMCD that we have the right to speak on every single agenda item.
    4. Please read my January 10, 2023 Cease and Desist letter (below) that i wrote to Commissioners Christian Whitehurst and Sarah Arnold then chair and Vice Chair of the St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners, respectively to which there was no response. This is an admission by silence and an adoptive admission.
    5. The facts and law are undisputed. 
    6. Please discuss at our June 17, 2025 SJC BoCC meeting.
    7. Let freedom ring. 
    Thank you.
    With kindest regards, I am,
    Sincerely yours,
    Ed Slavin 
    Box 3084 
    St. Augustine, Florida 32085-3084
    (904) 377-4998






    Dear St. Johns County Commission Chairman Christian Whitehurst and Vice Chairman Sarah Arnold:

    1. We, the people of St. Johns County, have a right to your honest services, uncontaminated by misuse or abuse of public position. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. 1346.  Our Florida Ethics Commission explains:

    Misuse of Public Position 
    Public officers and employees, and local government attorneys are prohibited from corruptly using or attempting to use their official positions or the resources thereof to obtain a special privilege or benefit for themselves or others. [Sec. 112.313(6), Fla. Stat.]
    Abuse of Public Position
    Public officers and employees are prohibited from abusing their public positions in order to obtain a disproportionate benefit for themselves or certain others. [Article II, Section 8(h), Florida Constitution.]


    2. The Rule of Law -- Our First Amendment, and our Florida Constitution, Article I, Sections 4&5 -- in their majesty, protect our rights to free speech and our right to "instruct' you as our representatives. You and others acting in concert with you must cease from all further content-based, discriminatory and special restrictions on First Amendment protected activity by the two of you, as the ill-advised, misguided Chairman and Vice Chairman of our St. Johns County Commission.  
     
    3. Chairman Whitehurst and Vice Chair Arnold: you both show favoritism toward developers, including State Senator TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON, a wealthy developer and his family, who coordinate contributions to your campaigns.  These donee-beneficiaries appear to be recipient of a "special privilege or benefit" for them and their undisclosed partners and investors in SilverLeaf, a "disproportionate" benefit.  See F.S. 112.313(6) and Article II, Section 8(h), Florida Constitution.

    4. Chairman Whitehurst and Vice Chair Arnold: you have no right or entitlement to interrupt, haze, obstruct, delay, impede, chill, coerce, harass or stigmatize public comment speakers.  You were wrong to make uneducated, uninformed, pronouncements that citizens can't criticize our leaders if they are "not present to defend themselves."  

    5. You have no right to interrupt speakers with taunts, jibes, insults, commentary or ranting cant. You have no right to threaten, as last month I publicly told Mr. Whitehurst, "like a dockside bully," in the words of Saint Thomas More, portrayed in Robert Bolt's play and movie, A Man for All Seasons.  

    6. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said St. Johns County was the "most lawless" in America. While citizens here have repeatedly won First Amendment victories here, it's like President John F. Kennedy said during the Cuban Missile Crisis -- "there's always some poor S.O.B. who doesn't get the word."

    7. Your mean-spirited actions at recent SJC BoCC meetings are an affront to First Amendment values.  See., e.g., New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964), which noted America's "profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open..." See Terminello v. Chicago, 337 U. S. 1, 337 (1949); De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U. S. 353 (1937).   From this day forward, you must stop threatening and insulting citizens, "like a dockside bully."  The law is on our side.   See Lozman v. The City of Riviera Beach, Florida, 585 U.S. ---, 138 1S.Ct. 945, 201 L.Ed. 2d 241 (2018), our United States Supreme Court 8-1 remanded a civil rights lawsuit for trial after Riviera Beach arrested Fane Lozman, a citizen activist speaking in public comment, in violation of his civil and constitutional rights. The case settled for $875,000.

    8. Our First Amendment deserves "breathing space."  NAACP v. Button,371 U.S. 415, 433 (1963) New York Times. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1974); Gasparinetti v. Kerr, 568 F.2d 311, 314-17 (3d Cir. 1977)(illegal restrictions on policemen’s First Amendment rights); Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps, 479 767, 772, 777 (1986)(O’Connor, J.)(newspaper entitled to breathing space in defamation case); Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46, 52, 56 (1988) (Reqhnqist, J.)(magazine parody of TV preacher entitled to breathing space); Keefe v. Ganeakos, 418 F.2d 359, 362 (1st Cir. 1969)(Aldrich, C.J.)(chilling effect on First Amendment by illegal suspension of teacher over sharing Atlantic Monthly article on Vietnam War); Parducci v. Rutland, 316 F.Supp. 352, 355, 357 (M.D. Ala 1970)(Johnson, C.J.)(chilling effect in illegal firing of English teacher over Kurt Vonnegut’s Welcome to the Monkey House). 

    9. Our Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 586 U.S. 215 (2015) that content-based laws targeting free speech rights require "strict scrutiny."   North Carolina's Supreme Court explained in Moore v. City of Creedmoor, 345 N.C. 356 (1997):
    “[Citizens]  have a right to assert a public complaint concerning the negligence of public officials and to petition the government for redress of grievances.  Mills v. Alabama, 384 U.S. 214, 86 S.Ct. 1434, 16 L.Ed.2d 484 (1966).   The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly held that the First Amendment guarantees the right to criticize police officers.   See Norwell v. City of Cincinnati, 414 U.S. 14, 94 S.Ct. 187, 38 L.Ed.2d 170 (1973) (protecting the right to non-provocative voicing of objections to police action);  New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 84 S.Ct. 710, 11 L.Ed.2d 686 (1964) (protecting the right to criticize police chief in context of libel lawsuit).   It should also be noted that once the government has opened a forum-such as a public meeting-to allow direct citizen involvement, it may not discriminate between speakers based upon the content of their speech.  Madison Joint Sch. Dist. v. Wisconsin Employment Relations Comm'n, 429 U.S. 167, 176, 97 S.Ct. 421, 426, 50 L.Ed.2d 376, 385 (1976). 

    10. In the "Pentagon Papers" case, a new Nixon-appointed trial judge, U.S. District Court Judge Murray Gurfein (later an appellate judge) famously wrote, ""The security of the Nation is not at the ramparts alone. Security also lies in the value of our free institutions. A cantankerous press, an obstinate press, an ubiquitous press must be suffered by those in authority in order to preserve the even greater values of freedom of expression and the right of the people to know." United States v. New York Times Co., 328 F. Supp. 324, 331 (S.D.N.Y. 1971).  Stop violating our "prized" American constitutional rights.  Bridges v. California, 314 U.S. 252 (1941).  Café Erotica v. St. Johns County, 360 F.3d 1274 (11th Cir. 2004) struck down our County's overbroad zoning regulation of a business owner's large billboard criticizing the County's code enforcement officer, Mr. James Acosta, as a "fat ass Barney Fife," one who allegedly cost our County thousands of dollars in "lost lawsuits" due to selective enforcement.  Your public pronouncements about not criticizing persons not present is a content-based restriction that does not withstand strict scrutiny. Your unwritten and unconstitutional orders violate the First Amendment's right to protected activity and are insulting, misguided, misanthropic. and dictatorial.  They are contrary to the genius of a free people and are blatant viewpoint discrimination, in violation of the First Amendment and Civil Rights laws.  See, e.g., United Teachers of Dade v. Stierheim, 213 F. Supp. 2d 1368, 1371 (S.D. Fla. 2002); Sherrill v. Knight, 569 F.2d 124, 129 (D.C.Cir.1977) ("arbitrary or content-based criteria for press pass issuance are prohibited under the [F]irst [A]mendment"); Quad-City Cmty. News Serv. v. Jebens, 334 F. Supp. 8, 17 (S.D.Iowa 1971) (stating "any classification which serves to penalize or restrain the exercise of a First Amendment right, unless shown to be necessary to promote a compelling governmental interest, is unconstitutional").  

    11. In Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 828-829, 115 S. Ct. 2510, 132 L. Ed. 2d 700 (1995) our Supreme Court held that "[d]iscrimination  against speech because of its message is presumed to be unconstitutional ... When the government targets not subject matter, but particular views taken by speakers on a subject, the violation of the First Amendment is all the more blatant. ... Viewpoint discrimination is thus an egregious form of content discrimination.").  

    12. Our St. Johns County and City of St. Augustine governments have repeatedly violated free speech rights and repeatedly lost First Amendment cases to its citizens, see Cafe Erotica v. St. Johns County, supra, including several cases brought by visual artists, Bates I & Bates II, as well as  Celli v. City of St. Augustine, 214 F.Supp. 2d 1256 (M.D. Fla. 2000)(upholding $23,500 jury verdict for four hours of First Amendment violation re: St. Aug Dog newspaper rights to free distribution on St. George Street); Rev. Ruth Jensen v. City of St. Augustine, 3:05-CV-504-J-25HTS TRO (M.D. Fla. 2005)(ordering Rainbow flags flown on Bridge of Lions June 8-13, 2005 in honor of Gay Pride).  The City was found guilty of viewpoint discrimination in both the Celli and Jensen decisions, which were swift justice and never appealed.  

    13. Despite constitutional law establishing that the First Amendment deserves "breathing space," the St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners and its unqualified Administrator, HUNTER SINCLAIR CONRAD, et al. continue to show disrespect for dissent, chilling free speech rights.  

    14.  Supreme Court Justice Robert  Houghwot Jackson, later our Nuremberg War Crimes prosecutor, wrote for the Supreme Court in the landmark flag salute case, "If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion, or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein." West Virginia Board of Education v. Barmette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943).  

    15.  Supreme Court Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis wrote that our "government is the potent omnipresent teacher. For good or ill it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy." Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438 (1928)(Brandeis, J., dissenting), dissent heeded and case overruled, Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967). 

    16. Please cease and desist from illegal orders, ukases, interrupting and interfering with my right to speak as a citizen, a journalist and as a Democratic candidate for County Commission. Respect our rights.  Listen, don't interrupt. Honor your oaths, from this day forward.  

    17.  Otherwise, you could each be held civilly and criminally liable for meretricious meritless efforts to violate our rights to engage in First Amendment protected activity under color of law, violating the First, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments, enforceable pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1983, 1985 & 1988.

    18.  You both voted with undeserved enthusiasm to support a vast expanansion of SilverLeaf, controlled by State Senator TRAVIS HUTSON and his family, which have abused the power of St. Johns County's only State Senator, the new Chair of our Florida State Senate Fiscal Policy Committee, former Chair of the Senate Committee on Regulated Industries.

    19. You both, along with SilverLeaf, developer-Senator HUTSON and their commercial allies, plumped for passage of a 15% sales tax increase. 

    20. We, the People defeated this indecent, unconscionable 15% sales tax increase proposal, in a landslide.  

    21. We, the People, also helped defeat your good friend, Jeremiah Ray Blocker, whose animus and animadversions against persons engaged in First Amendment protected activity reached pathological levels, as evidenced by his hateful 2020 late-night text messages to me. 

    22. Your retaliation against outspoken citizens is unspeakable and unAmerican.  
     
    23. Your retaliation and content-based discrimination are both corrupt and indefensible, and must be ended at once.   

    24. In derogation of citizen rights to speak, you have both presumed to inflict your own anti-speech "ordinance," which is unwritten.  It is both misuse and abuse of public position. See F.S. 112.313(6); Florida Constitution, Article II, Section 8(h). 

    25. As my grandmother would say, "Drop the oyster and leave the wharf!"  

    26. Cease and desist from all further lawbreaking.

    27. St. Johns County has pronounced itself a "Second Amendment Sanctuary."  Other jurisdictions pronounced themselves "First Amendment Sanctuaries."  St. Johns County has not done so yet.

    28. When will St. Johns County learn to appreciate and respect the First Amendment?  When will our elected officials heed the wisdom of the November 19, 2006 St. Augustine Record editorial, "Always Important to Stick to Your Guns," inter alia praising my work and telling local officials to get "thicker skins" (after I was unfairly attacked by St. Augustine's misguided then-Mayor).  

    29. It takes a village.  The spirit of our Founders is watching you, and is guiding us.  

    30. Thomas Jefferson said, "I have sworn, upon the Altar of Almighty God, eternal hostility against every from of tyranny over the mind" of humankind. In the New Year, I promise you that I will help encourage our residents to teach you, Commissioners Whitehurst and Arnold, that our First Amendment rights must be respected and not neglected.  Please consult competent counsel today. Do either of you have your own private attorney?  If so, who? Do either of your personal insurance policies cover 42 U.S.C. 1983 civil rights actions?   Please call me to discuss.

    Thank you.   

    With kindest regards, I am,  
    Sincerely yours,

    Ed Slavin
    St. Augustine, Florida 32085-3084
    (904) 377-4998