BILL SUMMARY DETAILS

Florida League of Cities

  • State Funds (Support)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 13 (Killebrew) and SB 510 (Hooper) specify that funds deposited in the State Housing Trust Fund and the Local Government Housing Trust Fund may not be transferred or used for any other purpose. (Taggart)

  • Other Bills of Interest 

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 81 (Casello) and SB 224 (Berman) – Sales and Use Tax Exemption

    SB 302 (Taddeo) and HB 637 (Tant)  – Small Business Saturday Sales Tax Holiday

    SB 598 (Perry) – Back-to-school Sales Tax Holiday

    HJR 85 (Rizzo) and SJR 156 (Diaz) – Joint Resolution: Homestead Assessment Limitation for School Levies

    HB 87 (Rizzo) and SJR 158 (Diaz) – Homestead Assessment Limitation for School Levies

    CS/HB 597 (Woodson) and SB 1256 (Polsky) – Homestead Exemption for Seniors 65 and Older

    SB 734 (Gruters) – Sales Tax Holiday for Disaster Preparedness Supplies 

    HB 749 (Mooney) – Small County Discretionary Sales Surtaxes

    HB 1125 (Fischer) and CS/SB 1390 (Gruters) – Capital Investment Tax Credit

    HB 1209 (Fetterhoff) and SB 1408 (Burgess) – Department of Financial Services

    CS/CS/HB 1429 (Avila) and SB 2008 (Diaz) – Tourist and Convention Development Taxes

    HB 6047 (Altman) and SB 842 (Baxley) – Aircraft Sales and Lease Tax

    SB 58 (Rodriquez) – Hospitals’ Community Benefit Reporting

    SB 806 (Book) – Tax Exemption for Diapers and Incontinence Products

    SB 986 (Hutson) – Tax Exemption for Disabled Veterans

    CS/SB 1254 (Bean) and HB 1519 (Duggan) – Ad Valorem Assessments

    CS/HB 649 (Fernandez-Barquin) and SB 996 (Garcia) – Petition for Objection to Assessment

    HB 5001 (Appropriations) and SB 2500 (Appropriations) – General Appropriations Act

    HB 5003 (Appropriations) and SB 2502 (Appropriations) – Implementing the 2021-2022 GAA

  • Value of Timeshare Units (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 1007 (Killebrew) and CS/SB 1358 (Gruters) revise the method of determining the value of timeshare property by the county property appraiser. The bills require the county property appraiser to defer to the taxpayer for the determination of whether the number of resales is adequate. (Hughes)

  • Transparency in Government Spending (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/SB 506 (Garcia) and CS/HB 195 (Persons-Mulicka) require new reporting requirements for nongovernmental entities that receive a least 50 percent of their revenue from a governmental entity or expend at least $750,000 of government funds in any fiscal year. The bill provides that, before receiving funds from a governmental entity, a nongovernmental entity that received state funds in the previous year must submit to the governmental entity an attestation verifying that the nongovernmental entity has submitted the required report. Beginning January 15, 2022, a governmental entity may not expend, transfer or distribute funds to a nongovernmental entity until the nongovernmental entity has complied with the reporting and posting requirements. (Hughes)

  • Taxation of Property Used for Agriculture (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SB 516 (Rodriguez) and HB 927 (Tuck) specific the methodology for the assessment of the structures and equipment used in aquaculture. The bills allow the property owner to request removal of its agriculture classification if the tax assessed based on such methodology exceeds the tax assessed based on the value of the structures and equipment. (Hughes)

  • Tax Administration (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/HB 1241 (Stevenson) and SB 7068 (Finance and Tax) make various updates to the statutes administering numerous taxes. Of note, the bills require, rather than authorize, tax collectors to accept late payments of prepaid property taxes through July 31 and deletes a late payment penalty. (Hughes)

  • Tangible Personal Property Tax Returns (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 1037 (Roth) and SB 1210 (Baxley) authorize property owners of assessed property who have not filed personal property tax returns to qualify for tax exemption without filing an initial return. (Hughes)

  • Sales and Use Tax (Support)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/CS/SB 50 (Gruters) and CS/CS/HB 15 (Clemons) require retailers with no physical presence in Florida to collect Florida’s sales tax on sales of taxable items delivered to purchasers in Florida if the retailer makes a substantial number of sales into Florida or provides for the taxation of sales facilitated through a marketplace provider. The bills also delete a provision that exempts an out-of-state dealer that makes retail sales into Florida from collecting and remitting any local option surtax. The bills temporarily divert the increased collections in sales tax, due to this bill, to the Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund until it is replenished to pre-pandemic levels. CS/CS/HB 15 was amended to reduce the business rent tax from 5.5% to 2% once the Trust Fund reaches its pre-pandemic balance. (Hughes)

  • Rental of Homestead Property (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SB 132 (Hutson) allows the rental of a portion of a dwelling, claimed to be a homestead for tax purposes, while the dwelling is physically occupied by the owner does not constitute the abandonment of the dwelling as a homestead. (Hughes)

  • Property Tax Exemption: Nonprofit Homes for the Aged (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/SB 1330 (Rodriguez) and CS/HB 571 (Smith, D.) expand the current exemption from ad valorem taxes for property used for nonprofit homes for the aged. (Hughes)

  • Property Tax Exemption for Affordable Housing and Government (Support)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SB 674 (Rodriguez) and HB 563 (Rodriguez) authorize counties and municipalities to adopt ordinances to grant ad valorem tax exemptions to property owners whose properties are used for the government or affordable housing. The property owner must have taken affirmative steps to prepare the property to provide affordable housing to persons or families that meet specified income limits to qualify for the affordable housing exemption. For the governmental exemption, a governmental or public purpose is served if a person provides a service that the state, any of its political subdivisions or any municipality, agency, special district, authority or other public body corporate of the state could properly perform or serve and if the governmental or public purpose would otherwise be a valid purpose for the allocation of public funds. (Hughes)

  • Nonprofit Property Tax Exemptions (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/SB 1214 (Gruters) and CS/CS/HB 889 (Borrero) specify the conditions for retaining the ad valorem exemption of an exempt property. The bills require that revenue derived from the incidental use of the property must support the charitable, religious, scientific or literacy purpose that the property is used for. (Hughes)

  • Local Government Fiscal Transparency (Oppose – Mandate)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SB 154 (Diaz) amends multiple provisions related to local government financial transparency. The bill expands public notice and public hearing requirements for local option tax increases, other than property taxes and taxes adopted by referendum and new long-term tax-supported debt issuances. Each local government is required to prominently post on its website the voting records on any action taken by its governing board related to tax increases and new tax-supported debt issuances. The bill imposes requirements on county property appraisers and local governments relating to Truth in Millage (TRIM) notices, millage rate history and the amount of tax levied by each taxing authority on each parcel.

    Additionally, local governments will be required to conduct a debt affordability analysis prior to approving the issuance of new long-term tax-supported debt. The bill requires the local government annual audit reports to include information regarding compliance with the requirements of this newly created section of law. Failure to comply would result in the withholding of state-shared revenues. The bill revises the local government reporting requirements for economic development incentives. It requires each municipality to report to the Office of Economic and Demographic Research whether the incentive is provided directly to an individual business or by another entity on behalf of the local government and the source of dollars obligated for the incentive (including local, state and federal). (Hughes)

  • Government Property Tax Exemptions (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SB 1702 (Hutson) and HB 1555 (Harding) revise the types of lessees whose purposes and functions are deemed to be governmental, municipal, or public purposes. (Hughes)

  • Implementing Bill: Property Assessed for Elevated Properties (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    CS/SB 1186 (Brandes) and CS/HB 1379 (Chaney) implement SJR 1182 or HJR 1377 if approved by 60% of voters at the next general election. The bills specify that changes to elevate certain homestead and non-homestead residential property do not increase the assessed value of the property under specific circumstances. The bills require the property owners to provide certification. (Hughes)

  • Constitutional Amendment: Property Assessed for Elevated Properties (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    SJR 1182 (Brandes) and HJR 1377 (Chaney) propose an amendment to the Florida Constitution to authorize the Legislature to prohibit the consideration of improvements made to residential real property to improve the property’s resistance to flood damage when determining assessed value of the property for the purposes of ad valorem taxation. (Hughes)

  • Other Bills of Interest

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 61 (Roth) and SB 1238 (Roth) – Percentage of Elector Votes Required to Approve Constitutional Amendment or Revision

  • State Ethics Reform (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 7043 (Public Integrity & Ethics Committee) addresses public officer, public employee and third-party conduct regarding solicitation and negotiation of conflicting and potentially conflicting financial relationships, addresses post-service lobbying restrictions for certain state officers and revises executive branch lobbyist registration requirements. The bill prohibits public officers and employees from soliciting an employment or contractual relationship from entities from whom they are prohibited from entering into conflicting employment and contractual relationships. In addition, the bill requires public officers and employees to report or disclose particular solicitations and offers of employment or contractual relationships. The bill revises executive branch lobbying registration provisions to require electronic registration and affirmative consent of the principal to be represented by a lobbyist. (O’Hara)

  • Prohibition of Public Funds for Lobbying (Oppose – Preemption)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 215 (Sabatini) prohibits a local government from using public funds to retain a lobbyist to represent the local government before the legislative or executive branch. It would permit a full-time employee of local government to register as a lobbyist and represent the local government before the legislative or executive branch. The bill would also prohibit any person, except a full-time employee, from accepting public funds for lobbying. It provides for the filing of complaints with the Florida Commission on Ethics and the filing of civil actions for injunctive relief, as well as sanctions and recovery of attorney fees by prevailing parties. (O’Hara)

  • Local Government Ethics Reform (Watch)

    by Mary Edenfield | Apr 09, 2021

    HB 853 (Sirois) amends provisions of the Code of Ethics for Public Officers and Employees relating to conflicting business and contractual relationships, voting conflicts, annual ethics training and financial disclosure requirements. For purposes of conflicting relationships and whether an officer or employee has a material interest in a business entity, the bill specifies that contractual relationships held by a business entity will be deemed to be held by the officer or employee if the entity is not publicly traded or the officer or employee is an officer, director or member who manages such entity. The bill amends voting conflict requirements to include special district and school board members and modifies participation requirements currently applicable only to appointed public officers to include elected county, municipal or other local public officers, special district or school board members. In addition to a prohibition on voting, such officer may not participate (i.e., discuss or debate) in the conflicted matter without first disclosing the nature of his or her interest. The bill expands persons required to file Form 6 (full) financial disclosure to include elected mayors and governing body members of municipalities having more than $10 million in total revenue. The Department of Financial Services is required to provide an annual report to the Commission on Ethics showing the total revenues for each municipality. A municipality’s failure to file its annual financial report with the Department creates a presumption the municipality has more than $10 million in annual revenues for purposes of the financial disclosure requirement. The bill lists the minimum course contents for public officer ethics training requirements and expands the class of officers required to complete annual ethics training to include special district and water management district board members. Persons required to complete annual ethics training must certify completion of the training on their financial disclosure forms as well as identify the name of the training provider. The failure to certify completion of ethics training or to identify the training provider is deemed a material error or omission. (O’Hara)