After making two lobbying trips to Washington, D.C., and authorizing $61.2 million in emergency state spending, said Thursday he is glad Congress reached agreement on a $1.1 billion initiative to fight the mosquito-borne Zika virus.
"It's great that Congress finally passed the Zika bill," Scott said after the U.S. House and Senate voted on the measure Wednesday.
The governor said it was unclear how much money Florida would receive from the federal initiative. Scott said he would ask for the state to be reimbursed for its $61.2 million in emergency Zika spending, including his proposal for the to match the state's $25 million for vaccine research.
U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan's office said $933 million of the federal funding will go to the , including $394 million to the CDC for mosquito control and surveillance. Another $397 million is slated for the for vaccine and diagnostic development.
As of Thursday afternoon, Florida had 932 Zika cases, including 92 infections of pregnant women, according to numbers posted online by the state Department of Health. The virus can cause severe birth defects.
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