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Florida Student Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Florida Student Association
AbbreviationFSA
FormationNovember 17, 1976; 48 years ago (1976-11-17)
TypeNonprofit corporation[1]
59-1673603[2]
Registration no.737328
Legal statusActive[3]
Jack Hitchcock
AffiliationsState University System of Florida
Websitewww.floridastudentassociation.com

Florida Student Association was formed in 1976 and is a non-profit corporation composed of the student body presidents from each of the State University System of Florida universities.[4]

Florida Student Association, Inc. (FSA) was formed in 1976 under the "Florida Not For Profit Corporation Act".[5] FSA represents the interests of about 400,000 students of the State University System of Florida. A statute enacted by the state legislature of Florida has created a "student government" at each state university. The statute provides that each student government shall have a "student body president".[6] FSA's board of directors includes the Student Body President of each state university student government. FSA's board of directors exercises the corporation's powers and manages its affairs.[7]

Current Members

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Universities
University Location Established Student Body President for 2022-2023
Florida A&M University Tallahassee, Florida 1887 Londe Mondelus
Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton, Florida 1961 Dalia Calvillo
Florida Gulf Coast University Fort Myers, Florida 1991 Emory Cavin
Florida International University Miami, Florida 1965 Alex Sutton
Florida Polytechnic University Lakeland, Florida 2012 Melia Rodriguez (Internal Vice Chair)
Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida 1851 Jack Hitchcock (Chair)
New College of Florida Sarasota, Florida 1960 Grace Keenan (External Vice Chair)
University of Central Florida Orlando, Florida 1963 Brandon Greenaway
University of Florida Gainesville, Florida 1853 Olivia Green
University of North Florida Jacksonville, Florida 1969 John Grosso
University of South Florida Tampa, Florida 1956 Cesar Esmeraldi
University of West Florida Pensacola, Florida 1963 Ariauna Range

State University System

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The Universities represented in the Florida Student Association are those that are in the State University System of the State of Florida.[8] The System is completely separate from the Florida Department of Education and State Board of Education, who control K-20, college, workforce and technical, blind, and VPK education.[9] U.S. News & World Report named Florida the No. 1 State University System in the United States for five years.[8] In 2022, Governor Ron DeSantis signed the Freedom First Budget Bill which allocated $2.7 billion to the State University System.[10]

Governance

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FSA coordinates the collective efforts of each of the State University student governments with a goal of providing unified student representation before the Florida Government. FSA holds monthly meetings where student leaders can interact with their peers from other institutions.

Florida Board of Governors

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The FSA president serves as a member of the board of governors without compensation but may be reimbursed for travel and per diem expenses to the extent provided by law.[11] The current Student Body President that was elected as FSA Chair to serve on the Board of Governors is Jack Hitchcock from Florida State University. The Chair works to represent the interests of the almost 400,000 students that attend these universities statewide.

Past Chairs of FSA Institution Year
Nimna Gabadage Florida State University 2022-2023
Nastassia Janvier Florida State University 2021-2022
2020-2021
Zenani Johnson University of West Florida 2019-2020
Jalisa White Florida Gulf Coast University 2018-2019
Kishane Patel University of West Florida 2017-2018
2016-2017
Tonnette Graham Florida A&M University 2015-2016
Stefano Cavallaro Florida State University 2014-2015

Financial Aid Appeals Committee

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An applicant for state student financial aid may appeal the rejection of his or her application. The appeal will be heard by a committee of four members appointed by the Florida Commissioner of Education. A decision rendered by an appeals committee constitutes "final agency action".[12]

An appeals committee is temporary in nature. There might be no appeals committees in existence at a particular time or there might be several appeals committees, with each committee being assigned to evaluate one or more appeals.

FSA is authorized by law to nominate students to serve as members of appeals committees. Each nominee must be enrolled in a public postsecondary institution in Florida.[13]

Rally in Tally

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The Florida Student Association holds an annual gathering in Tallahassee called Rally in Tally.[14] Students travel from each of the twelve universities in teams to lobby the Florida Legislature regarding education issues and concerns. Past speakers at Rally in Tally events include Mayor John E. Dailey, Sean Pittman, Amber Mariano (politician), Tim Cerio, and more.

Lobbying

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FSA is authorized by law to "Adopt, change, amend, and repeal bylaws, not inconsistent with law or its articles of incorporation, for the administration of the affairs of the corporation and the exercise of its corporate powers".[15] FSA has adopted a bylaw which provides, in part, that "the activities of the corporation shall include the carrying on of lobbying efforts and otherwise attempting to influence legislation".[16]

In 2022, the Florida Student Association lobbied for the return of the $600 Bright Futures Book Stipend, increased resources even the statewide distribution of Title IX officers, a vast increase in mental health resources, and the installment of the Open Educational Resources. From the same session, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a record $396 million for school safety and mental health initiatives.[17]

In 2019, the Florida Student Association partnered with Representative Mel Ponder (R) and Senator Anitere Flores (R) to pass House Bill 3419, which would have provided additional funding to homelessness and food insecurity programs on college campuses.[18] This bill eventually died in the Appropriations Committee.[19] FSA also tried to partner with Mike Caruso (R) to eliminate the tax on college textbooks and other instructional materials. The Florida Student Association lobbied successfully for the expansion of Florida's Medical Amnesty laws, which will protect those who call for assistance during an alcohol and drug overdose across the state through HB 595.

FSA was a driving force in the effort to create the "Florida Prepaid College Program".[20] In 1985, FSA asked key Florida legislators to review the State of Michigan's prepaid tuition plan. After reviewing Michigan's plan, Florida State Senator Ileana Ros-Lehtinen sponsored a bill to establish a similar prepaid tuition plan in Florida.[21] With lobbying efforts by student government presidents and David Corry (FSA Executive Director)[22] and Shari Caprara (FSA Legislative Director),[23] the Florida House of Representatives and the Florida Senate both passed the bill. The bill was then signed into law by Florida Governor Bob Martinez. Since that bill became Florida law, more than 1.6 million prepaid college plans have been purchased and nearly 350,000 students have attended college under a prepaid college plan.[24] Most of the plans were purchased by parents and grandparents when their children/grandchildren were toddlers.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Florida Student Association, Inc. was organized under the "Florida Not For Profit Corporation Act"; Chapter 617 of the Florida Statutes.
  2. ^ The Employer Identification Number (EIN) "59-1673603" was assigned to Florida Student Association, Inc. by the United States Internal Revenue Service.
  3. ^ FSA is classified as an "Active" corporation.
  4. ^ Solodev (2020-10-16). "Higher Education". www.fldoe.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  5. ^ Section 617.01011 of the Florida Statutes.
  6. ^ Section 1004.26, "University student governments", Florida Statutes.
  7. ^ Section 617.0801, "Duties of board of directors", Florida Statutes.
  8. ^ a b "Universities". State University System of Florida. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  9. ^ Solodev (2022-05-31). "Florida Department of Education". www.fldoe.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  10. ^ "Governor Ron DeSantis Announces The Freedom First Budget". Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  11. ^ Section 1001.70(2) of the Florida Statutes.
  12. ^ Rule 6A-20.0371, "Right to Appeal Eligibility Determination", Florida Administrative Code.
  13. ^ Section 1009.42, "Financial aid appeal process", Florida Statutes.
  14. ^ "Rally in Tally". FSA. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  15. ^ Section 617.0302(5), "Corporate powers", Florida Statutes.
  16. ^ FSA bylaws, Article II, as amended on February 2, 2012.
  17. ^ Silvers, David. "Florida medical amnesty bill could save student lives | Opinion". Tallahassee Democrat. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  18. ^ "Rally in Tally". FSA. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  19. ^ "House Bill 3419 (2020) - the Florida Senate".
  20. ^ Section 1009.98, "Stanley G. Tate Florida Prepaid College Program", Florida Statutes.
  21. ^ "Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, The First Hispanic Woman Elected to Congress" Archived 2017-01-16 at the Wayback Machine. CHLI Spotlight. Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute, March 13, 2014.
  22. ^ David Corry became the "Executive Director" of FSA on August 2, 1986. "SG bosses pick new leaders at meeting". Central Florida Future, Vol. 18, No. 54, page 1. University of Central Florida, June 18, 1986.
  23. ^ Shari Caprara became the "Legislative Director" of FSA in August, 1985. Florida Flambeau. Florida State University, August 19, 1985.
  24. ^ "Overview" of prepaid college plans, offered by the Florida Prepaid College Board.
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