Franklin County Schools may switch to four-day school week to attract teachers
The goal is to bring in qualified teachers to the area.
'We want the best and brightest teachers to come to Franklin County, to live in our community, to be paid a high salary, and to teach our students,' Superintendent Steven Lanier said.
Bay County wraps up NRDA artificial reef project
The current starting teacher salary is $44,000 but the school is starting negotiations for that to change.
'We're looking at starting teacher pay to be around $53,000. So with a high starting salary a high and the opportunity to have a four-day school week, why in the world would you not want to come to Franklin County,' Lanier said.
The pay raise has to be approved by the school board. There are currently 70 teachers working at the Franklin County School and the Apalachicola Bay Charter School.
With 1,200 students in Pre-K through 12th grade. The school superintendent believes the change would improve the graduation rate and increase enrollment.
They're asking the community to weigh in on the issue before making a decision. They've prepared an online survey to measure the interest and determine the pros and cons.
'The survey so far have been very positive. People are in favor of a four-day week because it'll help hopefully bring more students to Franklin County. I'll afford them opportunities that they have never had before,' Lanier added.
The 4-day workweek would only apply to teachers and students. The district office employees will maintain a 5-day work week. The Florida Department of Education mandates students to spend 1500 minutes at school per week.
The school is looking to add 30 to 45 minutes per day onto the schedule. They are still deciding if the day off will fall on Friday or Monday. But having a workday off could impact students with working parents.
'The only negative effects I've heard so far from the surveys are parents that both their parents work with their single parents and they work because they're wondering what they're going to do with their children on that off day,' Lanier said.
'Rural Renaissance' bill to benefit counties in the Panhandle
The school district will hold a series of meetings, starting in April to hear from the community.After receiving public input, they will come to the school board with a recommendation.
The school board will decide whether or not to approve it.
To fill out the survey, .
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
17-06-2025
- Politico
Property tax cliffhanger
WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING (HOPEFULLY): SINE DIE — 'State legislators finally concluded their lengthy, bumpy and at times bitter session late Monday after passing a new $115 billion budget and signing off on a $1.3 billion tax cut package designed primarily to aid Florida businesses,' reports POLITICO's Gary Fineout. 'The budget bill heads next to Gov. Ron DeSantis with only about two weeks left before the end of the fiscal year.' Good morning and welcome to Tuesday. After 105 days, Florida's 2025 regular session is finally over. But there's a big, lingering, 'to be continued …' that lawmakers and Sunshine State residents have to grapple with: property taxes. Gov. RON DESANTIS didn't get what he wanted, which was an average $1,000 property tax rebate, to be delivered in December, coupled with a constitutional amendment on the 2026 ballot that would ask voters to reduce or outright eliminate property taxes on Floridians' primary residences. Legislative leaders insist they want a property tax cut to happen in some form — eventually. They're going to study the issue and plan to hold meetings about it in the coming months. 'The property tax discussion, let me just say this: It is alive and well,' state Senate President BEN ALBRITTON told reporters. 'Just because we didn't find a way to be able to get that put into place this year does not mean that discussion is over.' Asked about whether it would make the ballot in 2026, House Speaker DANNY PEREZ said 'that's our plan,' adding: 'Me personally, I hope that we are able to abolish them, at a bare minimum, reduce them for certain people.' The governor is on a trade mission in France and didn't post about the budget overnight. But what was clear after last night's debate was how much the negotiations wound up as somewhat of a peace offering; every major player gave something up that they really wanted. Albritton had to put off a Rural Renaissance package until next year. And Perez didn't get a permanent sales tax cut. As the French would say, c'est la vie. But will it be enough to assuage DeSantis? The governor has the power to bring lawmakers back to Tallahassee for a special session to try to pressure them to address the issue earlier, should he so choose. They could of course gavel in and gavel out like they did during the immigration debate (before then clocking in their own special session), but they've already spent a lot more time in Tallahassee this year than they'd planned. Even Perez acknowledged Monday evening that he was glad to see the session 'finally' near its end. Either way, the issue is sure to ignite plenty of debate during an election year, including among Democrats. Gubernatorial candidate DAVID JOLLY recently said property tax reform is needed, once carefully studied. On Monday, state House Democratic Leader FENTRICE DRISKELL told reporters she thought DeSantis should drop the issue because of how much it risked hurting local governments. 'It's a bad idea,' she said. 'And even if it resurrects itself, I think that the Legislature has a responsibility … to put responsible choices before the people.' State Sen. BLAISE INGOGLIA (R-Spring Hill), who'd pushed the topic in his chamber and is interested in becoming the state's next chief financial officer, called the issue No. 1 for homeowners. 'This issue is not going away and neither am I,' he told Playbook. 'I will not rest until we get it done.' Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget that Playbook should look at? Get in touch at: kleonard@ ... DATELINE TALLAHASSEE ... WHAT'S IN THE BUDGET — 'On their final night, legislators also signed off a bill (HB 5017) that requires the state to permanently set aside $250 million to reduce the total of the state's debt,' reports POLITICO's Gary Fineout. 'They also approved a proposed constitutional amendment (HJR 5019) that will ask voters to dramatically increase the size of one of the state's main budget reserves — a move that will require the state to set aside $750 million each year.' TUCKED INSIDE — 'Florida is opening the door for certain charter schools to operate inside of existing traditional public schools as part of the state's latest school choice expansions,' reports POLITICO's Andrew Atterbury. 'The policy allows 'Schools of Hope' charters to 'co-locate' with local campuses where enrollment is lagging, a move GOP lawmakers see as a win-win as many schools struggle to cope with losing students. The idea was originally part of a bill that failed to pass during session, but its language was revived and reappeared in legislation accompanying the state education budget [that passed] Monday night.' POT PIECE — 'The budget proposed by the Legislature for next year extends rulemaking authority for the Office of Medical Marijuana Use, but only until the end of this year,' reports POLITICO's Arek Sarkissian. 'The language was added by House Health Care Budget Subcommittee Chair Alex Andrade (R-Pensacola), who said the OMMU no longer requires such authority, which allows the bureau to circumvent laws governing non-emergency rule making. The language … would also direct the Office of Medical Marijuana Use to complete non-emergency rulemaking on those rules made under emergency terms over the years by Sept. 1.' DEMOCRATS WHO RAISED OBJECTIONS — 'They took issue with provisions to allow Gov. Ron DeSantis' office to probe spending by local governments, to allow charter school operators to set up shop within an existing public school and to reverse a decision made last year to dedicate funding from the Seminole Gaming Compact to environmental and land conservation programs,' reports Gray Rohrer of USA Today Network — Florida. WHAT DIDN'T MAKE THE BUDGET — A bill that would have freed up tourist tax revenue so it could be spent on local projects like mass transit was scrapped after a push from the tourism industry, reports Jeffrey Schweers and Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel. Under current law, the money gets spent on marketing campaigns and recreational projects such as stadiums. REJECTED — 'The Florida Department of Environmental Protection on Monday denied a permit to drill for oil near the Apalachicola River, upholding recommendations of an administrative law judge and giving a victory to environmentalists and Northwest Florida residents who rallied against the proposal,' reports Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida. 'The department last year issued a draft permit for Louisiana-based Clearwater Land & Minerals Fla. to drill an exploratory well in an unincorporated part of Calhoun County, which is between Tallahassee and Panama City. But the environmental group Apalachicola Riverkeeper challenged the draft permit at the state Division of Administrative Hearings.' C'EST MAGNIFIQUE — On Monday in Paris, DeSantis announced Otto Aviation was relocating its headquarters to Jacksonville and building a new manufacturing facility at Cecil Airport. The project is expected to bring in 389 new jobs. POO FIGHT — Indian Creek Village — the 'Billionaire Bunker' that's home to JEFF BEZOS, JARED KUSHNER and IVANKA TRUMP, and TOM BRADY — successfully lobbied the Florida Legislature to block the town of Surfside from charging a $10 million fee to move sewer off the island, reports Mike Baker of The New York Times. For years, Indian Creek has relied on septic tanks that are badly polluting Biscayne Bay. PENINSULA AND BEYOND TODAY — Miami commissioners are set to vote this morning on whether the city's police department will partner with ICE for immigration enforcement in what is known as a 287(g) agreement. DeSantis wants all larger agencies to participate and has urged the Legislature to give him the authority to punish those who don't comply. PUSH FOR LAWSUIT DISMISSAL — 'Lawyers for the Pinellas County school district and the Florida Department of Education say a former Pinellas teacher's claims he was forced to resign because of pronoun discrimination are unfounded,' reports the Tampa Bay Times' Jeffrey S. Solochek. 'They've asked a federal court to dismiss Toby Tobin's lawsuit, saying Tobin failed to demonstrate he encountered a hostile work environment. Tobin, who is a transgender male, also failed to prove he was pushed out of his job because of the 2023 law that bars public school employees from asking or requiring students to use pronouns for them other than the ones ascribed to them by their sex at birth.' SCHOOL BOOK REMOVALS — 'Battling on a new front in Florida's ongoing school book disputes, Orange and Osceola school districts have each pulled more than a dozen books that the state's education board called 'pornographic' on a list sent to another school district last month,' reports Steven Walker of the Orlando Sentinel. Some of the books removed: 'Forever' by Judy Blume, 'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' by Malinda Lo, 'Forever for a Year' by B. T. Gottfred, 'And They Lived …' by Steven Salvatore, 'Homegoing' by Yaa Gyasi and 'Red Hood' by Elana K. Arnold. CAMPAIGN MODE AIRWAVES FIGHT BEGINS — 'U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, the first major Republican candidate running for Governor, has come out swinging against the first significant Democrat in the race,' reports Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics. 'An attack ad against former U.S. Rep. David Jolly, who kicked off his own campaign this month, slams the Republican-turned Democrat over the views of his party. The one-minute spot leans heavily on a clip of Jolly in an interview with Hopium Chronicles in May, when he said Democrats in the wake of 2024 losses don't need to revisit party positions.' 2A APPROACH — 'As he runs for Florida governor, David Jolly is pursuing two seemingly incongruous goals on an important, and emotional, issue: guns,' reports Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun Sentinel. 'Like many Democrats, he advocates increasing restrictions on firearms to reduce the carnage of gun violence. Simultaneously, Jolly is advancing a strategy to win by talking to voters Democrats often ignore, specifically including gun owners among the constituencies he plans to engage.' DATELINE D.C. URGING AGAINST DEPORTATION — 'Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) penned a letter for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem raising 'serious concerns' about the detention of Gregory Antonio Sanabria Tarazona, who was jailed for more than three years by Venezuelan authorities and reportedly tortured for his participation in nationwide anti-Maduro protests in 2014,' reports Verónica Egui Brito and Syra Ortiz Blanes of the Miami Herald. TRANSITION TIME — KATIE INMAN joined the public policy and regulation group for Holland & Knight's Tallahassee office. Inman previously worked as general counsel in the Florida attorney general's office. — LORNA MCGEORGE has joined law firm Husch Blackwell as partner in its financial services and capital markets group and as a member of its private wealth team. She previously worked at GrayRobinson. ODDS, ENDS AND FLORIDA MEN BIRTHDAYS: State Rep. Rachel Plakon ... Brett Doster, president of The Front Line Agency … Vickie Chachere, journalist and communications consultant.
Yahoo
03-06-2025
- Yahoo
Florida state budget talks resume with $2.25B tax cut 'framework' in place
Armed with a new 'framework' for a deal, Florida House and Senate negotiators met June 3 to resolve their differences over a 2025-26 state budget. After blowing past their original deadline to pass a budget due to an impasse between House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, and Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, over tax cuts, the chambers spent the day trading offers on spending for health care and environmental programs. While some disagreements were resolved, the details on the main source of the dispute – tax cuts – aren't likely to be unveiled for several days. Under the latest framework for a deal reached between the chambers, though, there will be $2.25 billion in recurring tax cuts. That will include eliminating the tax that Florida businesses pay on rents and exempting some items from sales taxes. Exactly which items will be exempt remains to be seen, though a memo announcing the deal last week from Albritton said the exemptions would be 'targeted towards Florida families.' Another plank of the agreement is to put more money – $750 million per year – into a key reserve fund. That move will require lawmakers to put a measure on the 2026 ballot. The House and Senate are poised to take up that measure Thursday. Lawmakers were supposed to pass a budget by May 2, the last day of the regular session, but the dispute led them to extend the session to June 6. The first outline of a broad deal between Perez and Albritton included an outright reduction in the state sales tax, from 6% to 5.75%. The across-the-board sales tax cut was a priority for Perez, who wants to restrain spending by drastically cutting back the amount of revenue available to the state. Albritton was wary of such a move, but he was willing to compromise to pass his top priority – an infusion of resources to rural areas to boost education, health care and transportation programs and projects, dubbed the 'Rural Renaissance.' Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has pressed lawmakers to move forward with cuts to property taxes, threatened to veto any tax cut bill with an overall sales tax reduction. He feared a major sales tax cut would make it harder to pass his preferred property tax reductions. Albritton opted to drop his Rural Renaissance priority to reach a deal with Perez. Now, rank-and-file members will hammer out the details in the coming days. The clock is running: The state's budget year runs July 1 to June 30, and failing to come up with a budget by the end of June could force a partial state government shutdown. Lawmakers also have to build in time for DeSantis to review their plan for any line-item vetoes before he signs it into law. Gray Rohrer is a reporter with the USA TODAY Network-Florida Capital Bureau. He can be reached at grohrer@ Follow him on X: @GrayRohrer. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Sales tax exemptions, reserves part of Florida budget talks
Yahoo
02-06-2025
- Yahoo
Warriors add Tennessee sharpshooter in second round of latest Yahoo Sports NBA mock draft
While June marks the start of the NBA Finals, the new month on the calendar also brings the highly anticipated 2025 edition of the NBA Draft on June 25. Through most of draft season, most mock drafts have had the Golden State Warriors targeting a big man with their second-round selection. However, in the latest mock draft from Yahoo! Sports' Kevin O'Connor, the Warriors landed some shooting to add alongside Steph Curry in the backcourt. Advertisement With the No. 41 overall selection, O'Connor slotted Tennessee guard Chaz Lanier to the Warriors in the second round. According to O'Connor, Lanier thrived as a "knockdown shooter." Via Yahoo! Sports: The Warriors need more shooting, which explains everything about this pick. Lanier transferred to Tennessee after four years at North Florida and immediately thrived as a knockdown shooter with shot-making creativity. But without great size or playmaking at his age, he's a second-round prospect. Prior to transferring to Tennessee, Lanier spent four seasons at North Florida. After being named to the first-team All-ASUN, Lanier transferred to Tennessee to play under Rick Barnes in Knoxville. On his way to earning SEC Newcomer of the Year, Lanier averaged 18 points on 43.1% shooting from the field and 39.5% shooting from beyond the arc to go along with 3.9 rebounds and 1.1 assists in 31.4 minutes per game. Advertisement Lanier drilled five or more 3-pointers in nine different games for the Volunteers, including eight made triples in a 30-point performance against Texas A&M. The first round of the NBA draft is set to begin on Wednesday, June 25 at Brooklyn's Barclays Center. This post originally appeared on Warriors Wire! Follow us on Facebook and Twitter! This article originally appeared on Warriors Wire: Warriors add sharpshooter in second round of new NBA mock from Yahoo