"People can ask me any question they want," Scott said. The international airplane maintenance company moved its morning break so roughly 300 nonunion workers on duty could ask questions. He pointed to a "town hall" he held at the Flightstar Services hangar Tuesday. Scott said the public can ask questions at other events. "It would give the public more confidence if they knew what was being discussed," Wilcox said. "If there's a lot of people, people don't talk as much."īen Wilcox of Common Cause, a nonprofit consumer advocate, said an open meeting would let the public see Scott at work. "People are not as receptive to talking" in front of media, Scott said. He is on a five-day, 10-city listening tour as he prepares to take office Jan. Scott shrugged off questions about the second private meeting with business executives in two days. There, dozens of business interests get exclusive access to ask Florida's incoming governor for more tax money to spend, less taxes to pay and fewer regulations to obey. The other takes place behind closed doors. One resembles many of the events on his eight-month campaign for office: public events with photo ops and, on Tuesday, a question-and-answer session with a Jacksonville company's employees. JACKSONVILLE - Gov.-elect Rick Scott seems to be on two jobs tours at the same time.
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