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ACA enrollment amid government shutdown, PolitiFact and weekly news

FILE - Jaqueline Benitez shops for groceries at a supermarket
Allison Dinner
/
FR171780 AP
FILE - Jaqueline Benitez, who depends on California's SNAP benefits to help pay for food, shops for groceries at a supermarket in Bellflower, Calif., on Feb. 13, 2023.

ACA enrollment set to begin amid government shutdown 

The federal government shutdown is now the second longest in history. If it lasts until Nov. 6, 2025, it will be the longest.

Federal funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - called SNAP will expire on Nov. 1, 2025. Nearly 3 million Floridians are enrolled in SNAP.

Communities across the state are responding in different ways with food drives, donations, and free meals.

The Head Start Program, which helps low income children and families get ready for Kindergarten, is running out of funding. Florida is one of the states with the most children enrolled in the program.

This is all happening as open enrollment is set to begin for the Affordable Care Act or ACA. Prospective enrollees will likely see higher premiums as the congressional deadlock over enhanced healthcare subsidies continues.

Guest:

  • Katie Roders Turner, Executive Director of the Family Healthcare Foundation. 

Property tax fact-check  

The future of property taxes for Florida homeowners will be the major focus of the upcoming legislative session for state lawmakers. Gov. Ron DeSantis is pushing for a proposal to reduce or eliminate some of the property taxes for homeowners.

The Governor recently claimed that primary residences are not the main source of property tax revenue for local governments.

Guest:

  • Samantha Putterman, Florida government reporter at PolitiFact.

Weekly news briefing  

Hurricane Melissa hit Jamaica, then Cuba and part of the Bahamas this week.

It made landfall in Jamaica as a Category 5 storm with 185 mile per hour winds. Florida’s large Caribbean community, including those in the Tampa Bay area, has been collecting goods to send to those in need after the storm.

The Trump Administration has launched at least eight strikes on boats in the Caribbean near Venezuela that it claims were carrying drugs. These attacks are a new front in how President Trump is using the American military to fight international drug trafficking.

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