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 uffer financial catastrophe upon divorce, and that 
the lower-earning spouse and stay-at-home parent will not be financially 
punished. Floridians have relied on this system post-divorce and planned 
their lives accordingly."The proposed law also would have set limits on 
the amount of alimony and how long one would receive financial support 
from an ex-spouse.The bill would have made it harder to get alimony 
in short-term marriages. And it would have prevented alimony payments from 
lasting longer than one-half of the length of the marriage.It also would 
have required judges to give divorced parents equal custody of their children 
absent extraordinary circumstances."I'm actually surprised," said Jason 
Marks, a divorce attorney in Miami, about the veto. The bill had 
passed the House 85-31, with members of both parties crossing over. The 
Senate approved it 29-11."My assumption is, you haven't heard the last of 
it," Marks said. "Most family law practitioners will agree that uniformity 
in determination of alimony is a good thing."The bill said that in 
a short-term marriage, defined as less than 11 years, the assumption is 
that alimony would not be awarded. If alimony were granted, it would 
not be more than 25 percent of the ex-spouse's gross income.For marriages 
that last between 11 and 20 years, there's no assumption either way 
in the bill, but alimony would not have amounted to more than 
35 percent of the ex-spouse's gross income.And in marria
 particularly on border security, could 
help Obama sell the immigration overhaul in the U.S., particularly to wary 
Republicans. GOP lawmakers have long insisted the U.S. must focus its efforts 
on securing the border before addressing the legal status of the more 
than 11 million immigrants in the country illegally.The immigration bill 
being debated in the Senate would strengthen border security, allow tens 
of thousands of new high- and low-skilled workers into the country, require 
all employers to check their workers' legal status and provide an eventual 
path to citizenship for most of the immigrants in the U.S. illegally.More 
than half of the immigrants in the U.S. illegally are from Mexico, 
according to the Pew Research Center.Following a speech Friday to Mexican 
entrepreneurs, Obama will travel to Costa Rica, his first visit as president 
to the Central American nation. In addition to meetings with Costa Rican 
President Laura Chincilla, Obama will attend a gathering of leaders from 
the Central American Integration system. The regional network also includes 
the leaders of Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.On 
Saturday, Obama will attend a business conference aimed at fostering economic 
cooperation between the U.S. and Central American nations. The president 
is due back in Washington Saturday night.
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