As California Cancels Walgreens, Casey DeSantis Partners With The Company To Help Needy Floridians

Florida First Lady Casey DeSantis knows her Hope Florida program isn’t going to be the sexiest story in the news cycle. She knows it won’t drive social media clicks or spark heated debate on cable news panels. And yet, she’s hoping it transforms the way Americans think about government assistance.

Hope Florida first launched in September 2021 to provide a partnership between government agencies and faith-based organizations. Its aim was to offer deeper and more meaningful help to needy and struggling Floridians while at the same time providing greater accountability in how the state uses taxpayer money.

“I would go out and do press conferences early on in 2019 and people would talk about the child welfare sphere, for example,” DeSantis tells The Daily Wire. “They would look at other states and they would say, ‘Well, here’s what other states are spending per capita on this issue. And your spending is less.’ So by that they were implying that you need to spend more and that will result in the best outcomes. And that just isn’t the case. A lot of times, it’s just throwing money at these programs where you see a lot of bureaucracy and bloat and middle managers.”

To both eliminate the waste and achieve better outcomes, she spearheaded an initiative that would allow those receiving public benefits, youth in foster care, and pregnant mothers struggling with substance abuse to share their needs on an online “care portal.” The portal would connect them directly to more than 1,000 faith-based organizations and other non-profits who could immediately provide everything from household items like food and furniture to help getting plugged into job training.

DeSantis chuckles at how competitive the faith-based organizations have become over grabbing opportunities to meet needs that come into the care portal. “I think it’s exciting to them because they’ll see a request come into their inbox and within seconds it’ll say, ‘Already been served,’ meaning the need has already been met. So there’s a competition to be the first to grab them. There’s really this hunger on the part of the community to accomplish the goals because they know somebody is out there who needs help, and it’s making it tangible.”

Another innovation has been transforming state agency employees into “hope navigators” who are assigned to individual families and participants.

An already overloaded single mom living out of her car may feel overwhelmed at trying to figure out how to tap into different agencies to get help to feed her kids, find childcare, look for employment, and plug into vocational training. The hope navigator acts as a single point person who can assist her in meeting all of her needs, sparing her from the draining and demoralizing exercise of repeating her story to any number of government agents and non-profit workers.

DeSantis feels the navigators have been a crucial part of reimagining what public assistance looks like, both for those who need help and those providing it. “Instead of just saying, you know, ‘Here’s your [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families] payment, I’ll see you in six months, let me know how it goes,’ for the first time, these navigators tell me that they feel like they’re a part of the solution. They have an emotional investment in the success of the folks they are serving,” she says.

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DeSantis believes this sense of making a difference explains why the program has a 91% retention rate in staffing: “Now the agency employees feel like they’re really a part of the solution.”

Though it’s little more than 18 months old, Hope Florida is already showing impressive results. Forty-three percent of participants have been able to reduce or entirely eliminate their reliance on TANF and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. In a one-year period, the program’s success at helping people to get to the point where they don’t need government assistance has saved the taxpayer $11 million, and it’s projected to save $120 million over ten years.

That success is why DeSantis announced on Tuesday that Florida is expanding Hope Florida to include the private sector as well. And she’s starting with the company California Governor Gavin Newsom is trying to cancel.

Newsom announced on March 8 that Walgreens isn’t welcome in the Golden State over its decision to abide by laws in 21 red states that restrict the distribution of abortion pills. “California won’t be doing business with @walgreens — or any company that cowers to the extremists and puts women’s lives at risk,” Newsom tweeted.

But in the Sunshine State, the company will be one of the first private businesses signing up for the provider side of the care portal to meet the needs of vulnerable and struggling Floridians. DeSantis believes that the participation of the private sector will enhance the effectiveness of the program all the more.

“There’s so many great things that are happening at the community level,” she says. “But those doing the work were siloed. You’d have the nonprofits in one bucket, you have the private sector in another, and you have the faith-based community in another. They’re all doing wonderful things, but up until this point, they really hadn’t had a collaborative way of working with government.”

To DeSantis, Hope Florida is a way of fulfilling Reagan’s vision of limiting the size and scope of government bureaucracy while also harnessing the power it has to help.

“It offers everyone a way to be a part of the solution, to make a difference while still being a good steward. It’s about organizing and creating a plan for somebody who is in need to get on a path to economic self-sufficiency and prosperity. But it does it not by growing government but by maximizing resources and actually getting people off of government assistance and helping them live up to their God given potential and achieve the American dream.”

Nevada Governor Rips Biden For ‘Federal Confiscation’ Of Over 500,000 Acres: ‘Historic Mistake’

Nevada Governor Joe Lombardo blasted President Joe Biden’s creation of national monuments in Nevada on Tuesday.

Biden used authority granted to the president under the Antiquities Act of 1906 on Tuesday to create two national monuments — one in Nevada and one in Texas — and he directed resources toward studying a possible marine national monument southwest of Hawaii. The two national monuments together impose strict regulations on roughly 510,000 acres of land.

The national monument declared in Nevada is by far the bigger of the two, itself covering over half a million acres. The Avi Kwa Ame National Monument was designated over a region known as Spirit Mountain in southern Nevada. Lombardo said that the designation, made without his input, locks up land long planned for mineral development and other projects.

“Since I took office, the Biden White House has not consulted with my administration about any of the details of the proposed Avi Kwa Ame national monument which, given the size of the proposal, seems badly out of step,” the Republican governor told Fox News in a statement.

“Upon learning that the President was considering unilateral action, I reached out to the White House to raise several concerns, citing the potential for terminal disruption of rare earth mineral mining projects and long-planned, bipartisan economic development efforts,” he continued. “While I’m still waiting for a response, I’m not surprised.”

The region of Avi Kwa Ame is rich in minerals. The state of Nevada has large reserves of lithium in particular, a key ingredient in green technology such as batteries. The designation potentially killed at least one green energy project, the 400-megawatt Angora Solar Project by Avantus, a California-based renewable energy company. The company had requested the Biden administration carve 2,000 acres for the solar farm, which Biden did not accommodate, according to POLITICO.

“It’s one of our most beautiful landscapes that ties together one of the largest contiguous wildlife corridors in the United States: 500,000 acres. It’s breathtaking,” Biden said. “Rich in biodiversity; sacred lands that are central to the creation story of so many tribes who have been here since time immemorial.”

“It’s a place of reverence. It’s a place of spirituality. And it’s a place of healing. And now it’ll be recognized for the significance it holds and be preserved forever,” he added.

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The Biden administration claimed while designating the national monument that it would not “slow the positive momentum of clean energy development in the State of Nevada.”

Lombardo disagreed, saying that the national monument would cost his state jobs and raise the price of land for Nevada residents.

“This kind of ‘Washington Knows Best’ policy might win plaudits from unaccountable special interests, but it’s going to cost our state jobs and economic opportunity — all while making land more expensive and more difficult to develop for affordable housing and critical infrastructure projects,” the governor said. “The federal confiscation of 506,814 acres of Nevada land is a historic mistake that will cost Nevadans for generations to come.”

Biden also designated nearly 7,000 acres near El Paso, Texas, as the Castner Range National Monument.

“The people of El Paso have fought to protect this for 50 years. Their work has finally paid off,” Biden said. “And now we’ll clear the area of old munitions, create access to the outdoors for communities and parks, and we’re going to — green spaces that — they’re harder and harder to find. And importantly, Castner Range will be preserved for future generations.”

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