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[Florida] Senate Panel Approves Schiavo Bill
TBO.com ^ | October 21, 2003 | ALLISON NORTH JONES and ELAINE SILVESTRINI The Tampa Tribune

Posted on 10/21/2003 12:34:19 PM PDT by NautiNurse

TALLAHASSEE - A state Senate panel Tuesday morning approved legislation that would give Gov. Jeb Bush the power to order the feeding tube removed from Terri Schiavo reinserted.

The full Senate is expected to approve the bill Tuesday evening.

The battle to save Schiavo shifted to the state Capitol Monday, where legislative leaders agreed after intense, daylong negotiations to grant Bush the power to intervene in the emotionally charged case.

The Florida House of Representatives passed a bill 68-23 Monday night that would give Bush the authority to order the comatose Schiavo's feeding tube replaced, reversing a judicial order that other judges have upheld. Twenty-eight lawmakers did not vote.

The state Senate is expected to pass the same measure today and send it to Bush, who likely will sign the bill immediately.

``The proposed bill would allow for a stay in cases of withholding nutrition and hydration from patients in situations similar to that of Ms. Schiavo,'' Bush said in a statement.

Once the bill is signed, Bush will have 15 days to issue a one-time stay.

The move came just hours after an advocacy group for disabled people pleaded with a federal judge in Tampa to keep Schiavo, 39, alive long enough to investigate a claim that she is being abused by her husband. U.S. District Judge Steven D. Merryday said he will issue a decision in the nationally watched case soon.

Phones and computers across the state Capitol rang and chimed throughout the day as lawmakers were flooded with pleas to intervene in the Schiavo case. Earlier in the day, House Speaker Johnnie Byrd, a Plant City Republican running for the U.S. Senate, opened the possibility of legislative intervention by confirming that he planned to propose legislation to ``save'' Schiavo. Rep. John Stargel, R-Lakeland, sponsored the bill.

``The family is elated,'' said Randall Terry, a spokesman for Terri Schiavo's parents who are trying to keep their daughter alive. ``They recognize there are still hurdles to overcome. They're praying Terri's health holds out until the governor can intervene to save her.''

Urging caution is Senate President Jim King, R-Jacksonville.

King said he is leery of interfering in a case that has been vetted in nearly ``every court in the land.'' But citing ``unique and unusual circumstances,'' he signed off on what he considers a narrowly drafted measure that still delivers what Byrd and Bush want.

``If we are going to err, then let us err on the side of caution,'' King said. ``I just hope to God we've done the right thing.''

The bill gives Bush the power to issue a ``one-time'' stay under certain conditions.

All are designed to fit Schiavo's case. Among them, for example, is a requirement that the feeding tube must have been removed as of Oct. 15 - the day Schiavo's tube was removed. Others stipulate that the patient have no written advance directive or living will, and that a family member is actively challenging the judicial orders.

But the bill raised a variety of legal and constitutional concerns for lawmakers worried the Legislature was overstepping its bounds.

``This bill so oversteps our role, it not only sets a dangerous precedent, it turns democracy on its head,'' said Rep. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach.

In Tampa, an Advocacy Center for Persons with Disabilities attorney told Judge Merryday that the private agency received a telephone complaint Friday alleging Schiavo was the victim of neglect and abuse. The center is designated by the state to receive federal funds under a number of laws, including the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Attorney Gordon B. Scott asked Merryday to order that Schiavo be given nutrition long enough for the agency to investigate the abuse complaint. Such a temporary order, Scott said, would be in force for 10 days, after which Scott would be required to report any findings to the court.

Merryday asked Scott whether the agency would be in court if Terri Schiavo had left written instructions expressing her desire not to be kept alive on life support. State courts have ruled in favor of Michael Schiavo's claim that his wife had verbally expressed those wishes.

Scott said that if there were a legally valid written statement from Terri Schiavo, he would not have filed the request for the restraining order.

At the Pinellas Park hospice where Terri Schiavo spent her fifth full day without food or water Monday, the Schindler family remained upbeat while awaiting word from Tampa and Tallahassee.

The family is praying that the Legislature acts quickly to force the hospice to resume feeding Terri Schiavo, said her sister, Suzanne Carr.

``She seems to be alert,'' said her brother, Bob Schindler Jr. ``But every day that goes by, we're getting into a crucial time for her. She's got an incredible will to live.''

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Reporter David Sommer contributed to this report. Reporter Allison North Jones can be reached at (850) 222-8382. Reporter Elaine Silvestrini can be reached at (813) 259-7837.





TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: terrischiavo
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To: TexasGunLover
No argument, except remember that it does invite the government to OVERRIDE your spouses wishes. What if they are doing what you want? It's a two way street is all I'm saying...

What if (as IMHO may be soon shown) the husband had committed crimes against your trust fund which could only be covered up by your demise? Would you want the government to intervene?

521 posted on 10/22/2003 7:05:10 AM PDT by supercat (Why is it that the more "gun safety" laws are passed, the less safe my guns seem?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 520 | View Replies]

To: NautiNurse
Viewpoints c/o
Houston Chronicle
P.O. Box 4260
Houston, Texas 77210
Email: viewpoints@chron.com
Fax: (713) 362-3575

RE: Brain-damaged woman to resume tube-feeding, Oct. 22
Florida legislators may allow feeding tube to be reinserted, Oct. 21


October 22, 2003


Dear Viewpoints Editor:

As an advocate of religious freedom, I applaud the State of Florida for intervening to save the life of Terri Schiavo (“Florida legislators may allow feeding tube to be reinserted” Oct. 21). This probate case represents more than just the right to life or the right to die, but the widespread abuse of guardianships and legal authority to commit crimes against elderly or disabled persons without adequate legal defense.

The Democrats who argued against the state overruling the courts should equally protest the abuse of court authority to override federal and state laws. Without the system of checks and balances by the other two branches of government, the judiciary could easily have gotten away with murder. George Felos and other attorneys for the guardian clearly exploited this case, as well as the family and the law, as a discredit to the right-to-die movement and a shame to the legal profession.



Emily T. Nghiem
P.O. Box 981101
Houston, Texas 77098
713-867-5998
< emilynghiem@hotmail.com >
522 posted on 10/22/2003 4:27:59 PM PDT by emilynghiem (proper checks and balances)
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To: JustPiper
Viewpoints c/o
Houston Chronicle
P.O. Box 4260
Houston, Texas 77210
Email: viewpoints@chron.com
Fax: (713) 362-3575

RE: Brain-damaged woman to resume tube-feeding, Oct. 22
Florida legislators may allow feeding tube to be reinserted, Oct. 21


October 22, 2003


Dear Viewpoints Editor:

As an advocate of religious freedom, I applaud the State of Florida for intervening to save the life of Terri Schiavo (“Florida legislators may allow feeding tube to be reinserted” Oct. 21). This probate case represents more than just the right to life or the right to die, but the widespread abuse of guardianships and legal authority to commit crimes against elderly or disabled persons without adequate legal defense.

The Democrats who argued against the state overruling the courts should equally protest the abuse of court authority to override federal and state laws. Without the system of checks and balances by the other two branches of government, the judiciary could easily have gotten away with murder. George Felos and other attorneys for the guardian clearly exploited this case, as well as the family and the law, as a discredit to the right-to-die movement and a shame to the legal profession.



Emily T. Nghiem
P.O. Box 981101
Houston, Texas 77098
713-867-5998
< emailus@ev1.net >
523 posted on 10/22/2003 4:30:09 PM PDT by emilynghiem (proper checks and balances)
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To: emilynghiem
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35231 WAKE UP!! TIME FOR ANOTHER EMAIL FLOOD!! article from worldnetdaily a few hours ago: <>
524 posted on 10/23/2003 5:09:28 AM PDT by still trying (Terri returned to Woodside Hospice--still in danger!!)
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To: still trying
MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH
Terri snatched from hospital
Attorney: Brain-damaged woman still in danger as judge has not appointed guardian ad litem



Posted: October 23, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern


By Sarah Foster
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


Attorney Patricia Anderson's greatest fear was realized yesterday when she learned that Michael Schiavo had removed his wife Terri Schindler-Schiavo from Morton Plant Hospital in Clearwater, Fla., where she was taken to have her feeding tube reinstalled, and returned clandestinely to the Woodside Facility of the Hospice of the Florida Sun Coast in Pinellas Park where she has been a patient for over three years.

Just hours earlier, Anderson – who has represented Robert and Mary Schindler in their decade-long legal battle with their son-in-law – told WorldNetDaily she was intensely concerned that Schiavo would remove Terri from the hospital before her condition was medically stabilized and she was rehydrated, in accordance with Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's executive order.

This would be completely at odds with the purpose of Tuesday's special legislation by the Florida legislature that empowered Gov. Jeb Bush to order Schiavo's feeding tube reinserted, and halted the court-ordered death of the 39-year-old brain-damaged woman, whose husband had long sought to end her life.

But Schiavo had done that several times in the past, most recently in August when Terri was shuttled back and forth on three separate occasions during bouts with pneumonia and other medical problems. Each time she was kept at Morton Plant only a few days, and returned to the hospice in a much-weakened state.

"I don't have any doubt that she should be in intensive care at the hospital," said Anderson. "But the fact is, Michael's her guardian and if he withdraws his consent for them to treat her there's nothing they can do. Their hands are tied. This tells you a lot about him."

Anderson said she felt that the hospital would have preferred to keep her before releasing her prematurely, but Schiavo is the one who must consent to treatment.

"If he revokes the consent and he is her legal guardian, their hands are tied," she explained. "They cannot continue to treat her without his consent. That is why the appointment of a guardian ad litem is so very crucial," she added.

525 posted on 10/23/2003 5:44:15 AM PDT by still trying (Terri returned to Woodside Hospice--still in danger!!)
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