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June 17, 2015: More Than A Million Floridians Could Lose Health Coverage

Today on WLRN-Miami Herald News, you heard:

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10:04 Environmentalists are considering suing over Amendment 1 funding as the Florida Legislature reaches an agreement on an $80 billion state budget.

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9:35 Did Florida lawmakers fund Amendment 1 as the voters intended?

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9:04 Haitians living in the Dominican Republic face an urgent deadline tonight if they want to stay in that country.

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8:43 We ask NPR's Nina Totenberg how the Supreme Court decision about Obamacare might affect Florida.

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8:30 The Seminole Tribe of Florida is challenging a court decision that could lead to slot machines at several dog and horse tracks.

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8:20 Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush appeared on The Tonight Show last night and took part in one of host Jimmy Fallon's signature bits - slow jamming the news.

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8:04 On Tuesday, Gov. Rick Scott signed into law a wide-ranging tax cut package that will reduce costs on cell-phone bills, cable TV bills, gun club memberships, college textbooks and luxury boat repairs.

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7:43 Did Florida lawmakers fund Amendment 1 as the voters intended?

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7:30 Since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, it's been 10 years since a major hurricane has hit Florida. Still, the Director of the National Hurricane Center, Richard Knabb, says Floridians must always be on their toes for any potential storm activity.

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7:20 The Florida House has rejected a plan to go after poor-performing for-profit colleges.

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7:04 As Venezuela's crime and inflation keep spiraling, anti-government protests are starting up again. But a growing number of Venezuelans have decided to leave the country rather than take to the streets.

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6:43 We ask NPR's Nina Totenberg how the Supreme Court decision about Obamacare might affect Florida.

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6:30 The Seminole Tribe of Florida is challenging a court decision that could lead to slot machines at several dog and horse tracks.

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6:20 State lawmakers have reached a deal on a nearly $79 billion budget.

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6:04 Depending on which way it goes, this month's Supreme Court decision on Obamacare subsidies could strip more than a million Floridians of their health coverage and send health insurance rates sharply higher.

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