Published: May 14, 2021

Ralph Turlington who organized the drive for the Florida Lottery has died at the age of 100

Man who created Florida Lottery dies at 100 The man who organized the drive for the Florida Lottery has died at the age of 100.(Florida Lottery)

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (CAPITOL NEWS SERVICE) - The man who organized the drive for the Florida Lottery has died at the age of 100.

Creating the lottery was just one of many major accomplishments over a 36-year career in public service. Ralph Turlington was already a tenured professor at the University of Florida with an MBA from Harvard when he ran for the Florida Legislature in 1950.

“Our pay was $10 a day when we were in session,” Turlington said in a 2006 interview.

He spent the next 36 years shaping the Florida government.

“He brought the best out in people. He brought the best out in legislation,” Former Turlington Aide Frank Mirabella said.

Turlington was in the minority fighting segregation in the mid-1950s when lawmakers sought to dissolve local school boards if Blacks and Whites were taught in the same school.

“I was one of the seven who voted no, and I got an opponent the next year, and that was one of his campaign attacks on me,” Turlington said in the 2006 interview.

He also took on and defeated the pork choppers, a group of small county lawmakers who had a majority of votes in the legislature even though they were elected by less than 20 percent of the population.

In 1985, Turlington became the face of the citizens’ initiative to create the Florida Lottery. He argued schools needed more money.

“I don’t think the people are ready to support taxation, additional taxation, but I do believe that this is an alternative the people of Florida will support,” Turlington said in a 1985 press conference.

Turlington also wrote the law creating the state pension system.

“Which is now the best-funded retirement system for public employees,” Mirabella said.

The building housing the Department of Education has carried his name for more than 30 years, even though Turlington once passed a law that said buildings could not be named after a living person.

Betty Castor, who succeeded Turlington as Eduction Commissioner, before going on to be the President of USF, told us Friday that Turlington served with honor and humility.

https://www.wjhg.com/2021/05/14/man-who-created-florida-lottery-dies-at-100/