Week In Review
This week the House of Representatives passed our bipartisan South Florida Clean Coastal Waters Act to combat harmful algal blooms in Florida! Keep reading to learn more:
We’ve made great progress this year for our waterways by working hard to lower Lake Okeechobee and prevent toxic discharges to our coast. But our fight is still going, and it’s not always easy. Read more to find out why.
I’ve said it before but it bears repeating: we will not tolerate oil drilling near our Florida coastlines. That's why I helped pass two bills this week to permanently protect our coasts! Check out this blog to learn more:
The House Science, Space and Technology Committee passed my South Florida Clean Coastal Waters Act this week! Keep reading to learn more about what this means for our communities as we work to clean up our waterways.
I refuse to standby and do nothing while radical Islamic extremists - like Hamas - do everything in their power to reign terror on innocent people around the world. Keep reading to learn more about how I'm fighting to change that.
Earlier this week the Army Corps of Engineers admitted - for the first time ever - that they knowingly discharged toxic water containing cyanobacteria and harmful algal blooms from Lake Okeechobee to our communities. Keep reading to find out what that means for our waters.
After several weeks of partisan obstruction, House leadership finally set aside the politics and worked with us to pass legislation sending emergency relief funds to address the crisis at our border. Read more:
This week I introduced a bill called the PROTECT Florida Act with one goal in mind: prioritizing the public health and safety of every single person in our state. Keep reading to learn more about what this means for our community.
This was a great week in our fight for clean water. In addition to fully funding the Tamiami Trail project, the House passed 4 important clean water bills! Keep reading to learn more...
We finally got the House Appropriations Committee to increase Everglades Restoration funding to $200 million for next year - nearly triple the amount we received last year! Keep reading for more.
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