March 16, 2023
2023 Session, Week 2
Members of the Legislature got to work this second week of Session, as the bills they sponsor began to work their way through the committee system.
GRU/Utilities

Representative Chuck Clemons announced his intention to file a bill to change how the local utility, GRU, is governed. The procedure for the bill is to be first heard by our local delegation, which is slated to meet tomorrow (Friday) at 11:00 am. As of the writing of this email, the bill language is not yet available.

HB 1331 -- Municipal Utilities -- This bill would allow Florida’s Public Service Commission more authority and oversight to any municipality supplying electricity or gas to any retail customer outside its corporate boundaries.

Newberry Economic Development

Budget requests by the City of Newberry to match funding from Alachua County for a new project will greatly benefit our local agriculture industry.


Public Records

Rep. Clemons' CS/HB 273 -- Public Records/Autopsy Reports of Minor Victims of Domestic Violence -- is rapidly progressing through House and Senate committees with favorable reception.
Charter Schools

Sen. Keith Perry is championing the creation of the first statewide charter school, billed as the "IMG of academic academies," to be located in Alachua County. Several other changes are teed up related to school choice.

Public Schools

CS/HB 1 -- School Choice -- has been filed. Also known as “Universal School Choice," this bill would open up vouchers for private schools to any student, regardless of ability or income level. While the bill has passed its first committee hearing, it has met with some initial pushback and changes are widely expected as it moves through committee hearings.

SB 256 -- Employee Organizations Representing Public Employees – would amend how teachers' unions are collecting membership dues. The bill would block union dues from being automatically deducted from members' paychecks and increase the paying membership rate from 50% to 60% to enable recertification of the union.

SB 1320 -- Child Protection in Public Schools – billed as an expansion of Parental Rights in schools, this bill would prohibit an employee, contractor or student of a public school from being required to refer to a person using personal titles or pronouns that do not correspond with that person’s sex, and prohibit classroom instruction by school personnel on sexual orientation or gender identity until grade 9.

Postsecondary Education

Sen. Perry's SB 958 -- Postsecondary Educational Institutions -- has passed a House committee. This bill creates an Office of Public Policy Events through the Board of Governors and the State University System that would put a satellite office on each campus. These offices would ensure that speakers representing “multiple, divergent and opposing” viewpoints be presented on each campus.

Several bills have been introduced to tighten control of the higher education system in Florida, including the similar HB 999 and SB 266:
HB 999 -- Public Postsecondary Educational Institutions -- would change the tenure system in Florida’s higher education, allowing the chair of the university board of trustees to review any faculty member’s tenure status, and would prohibit the college system from providing funds for any activities that “espouse the diversity, equity and inclusion of Critical Race Theory rhetoric.” It would also prohibit the teaching of “identity politics, such as Critical Race Theory, or defines American history as contrary to the creation of a new nation based on the universal principles stated in the Declaration of Independence. “

SB 266 -- Higher Education -- revises the mission of each state university; requires each state university to annually report certain research expenditures of a specified amount; authorizes each state university board of trustees to review any faculty member’s tenure status; authorizes the Board of Trustees of the University of Florida to use funds to establish and fund the Hamilton College for Classical and Civic Education; revises how general education core courses are established; and removes a prohibition against a public postsecondary institution from being accredited by the same accrediting body for multiple consecutive accreditation cycles

Temporary Teacher Certificates

Rep. Yvonne Hinson has introduced a bill to allow certain paraprofessionals to be issued temporary teaching certificates, valid for 5 years while being mentored.
Appropriations

Significant amounts of our region's economic engine are governed by state budget requests, including those from the University of Florida, Santa Fe College, Alachua County and our municipalities.

Sen. Keith Perry has amended the Early Childhood Music Education Incentive Program--SB 478--conducted at UF.
Affordable, or "Attainable," Housing

CS/SB 102 -- Housing -- a top priority of Senate President Passidomo, budgets hundreds of millions of dollars to state programs targeting workforce housing solutions, as well as prohibiting local government from enacting “rent control” programs.
Tort Reform

Several bills changing who may be responsible for paying attorneys' fees are in committee.

Permitting and Licensing Issues

HB 85/SB 360 -- Causes of Action Based on Improvements to Real Property --
This bill revises the time in which action founded on design, planning or construction of improvement to real property must be commenced (changes the 4-year window commencement from the actual date of possession by the owner to the date of the temporary certificate of completion or the date of abandonment, whichever is earliest); revises date on which statute of limitations period begins (reducing from 10 years to 7 years); provides for calculation of statute of limitations period for multi-dwelling buildings; and defines "material violation."

HB 235/SB 350 --  Alternative Mobility Funding Systems -- This bill will affect local governments by specifying criteria that must or may be included in a mobility plan and mobility fee for transportation. A mobility plan identifies multimodal projects necessary to permit redevelopment, infill and development. A mobility fee is a one-time fee paid by the developer.

The bill would prohibit a transportation impact fee or fee that is not a mobility-based fee from being imposed within the area that is within a mobility plan. The bill would require mobility fees to be updated every five years. The bill also dictates the comprehensive requirements a local government must follow in implementing the mobility plan and fee.

The legislature also passed a limit to the increases of impact fees a local government may enact, with one exception / process. This bill would eliminates this exception.

Insurance

The property insurance market remains in flux and several bills have been introduced around this issue.
Social Issues

HB 7 -- Pregnancy and Parenting Support -- Republican Legislators proposed additional restrictions on abortion. The bill would ban abortions after six weeks of pregnancy including an exception for victims of rape and/or incest. This bill is a reduction from last session’s signed-into-law, 15-week ban that does not include any exceptions.

SB 1316 -- Information Dissemination -- also known as the “Blogger Registration” bill, would require bloggers to register with the Office of Legislative Services or the Commission on Ethics if they wrote articles about Legislators or executive branch officials. Since the filing of the bill, Governor DeSantis and Speaker Renner have both publicly stated their objection to the bill. As such, for now, the bill appears to be dead.

CS/SB 254 -- Treatments for Sex Reassignment -- This bill would allow the state to “enter, modify or stay a child custody determination” – take emergency action – to take over a child’s care if they are undergoing “sex-reassignment prescriptions or procedures” in another state.

Also Following

HB 3/SB 302 -- Government and Corporate Activism -- The bill would eliminate the consideration of environmental and social governance (ESG) for Florida’s retirement and investments.

HJR 129 -- Requiring Broader Public Support for Constitutional Amendments or Revisions -- This proposed amendment to Florida’s constitution would raise the threshold for constitutional amendments to pass from 60% to 66.67%, except for a repeal of an amendment that would only need to meet the same threshold which was required at the passing. Ironically, it would only need 60% to pass.

HB 5  -- Economic Programs -- Speaker Renner, in his opening remarks of the session, called for eliminating Enterprise Florida, the public-private partnership founded in the mid 90s with the mission of promoting Florida as a premier business destination and expanding the state’s economy through private-sector job creation. The bill has been filed.

SB 1718 -- Immigration -- Don’t call it “e-verify”, but this bill has sweeping changes to businesses that knowingly hire “unauthorized aliens” on the payroll, including increasing the maximum fine that may be imposed for a first violation. Florida would also stop recognizing out-of-state driver’s licenses for people that can’t prove their lawful presence and require certain hospitals to collect patient immigration status data information on admission or registration forms.

HB 269 -- Public Nuisances -- This bill would prohibit projecting certain images onto buildings or other property without permission, enhance criminal penalties for persons who commit violations while evidencing religious or ethnic animus and require certain violations to be reported as hate crimes. In addition, the bill creates a first degree misdemeanor for any person who distributes pamphlets, flyers or other materials, whether for commercial or non-commercial purposes, including outside a private residence, and such materials discarded by recipients that lead to littering.
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Director, Public Policy + Grassroots Engagement