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LTC 116-2021 City of Temple Terrace Resolutions No. 31-21 and 34-21MIAMI BEACH OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK No. 116-2021 LETTER TO COMMISSION TO: Mayor Dan Gelber and Members of the City Commission FROM: Rafael E. Granado, City Clerk 74 DATE: March 18, 2021 SUBJECT: CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE RESOLUTIONS NO. 31-21 AND 34-21 Attached for your information are Resolutions No. 31-21 and 34-21, adopted by the Mayor and City Council of City of Temple Terrace on March 16, 2021. RESOLUTION 31-21 A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA, STRONGLY OPPOSING SENATE BILL 60 AND HOUSE BILL 883 THAT UNNECESSARILY PREVENT MUNICIPAL CODE ENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENTS FROM INVESTIGATING ANONYMOUS CODE ENFORCEMENT COMPLAINTS, AND URGING THE FLORIDA LEGISLATURE TO NOT INTERFERE WITH LOCAL MUNICIPALITIES' ABILITY TO PROTECT THE HEAL TH, SAFETY, WELFARE, AND VALUE OF THEIR NEIGHBORHOODS, AND TO ALLOW MUNICIPAL CODE ENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENTS TO CONTINUE INVESTIGATING UNLAWFUL CONDITIONS ON PROPERTIES WITHIN THE MUNICIPALITY, REGARDLESS OF THE SOURCE OF COMPLAINTS; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO DISTRIBUTE COPIES OF THIS RESOLUTION; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. RESOLUTION 34-21 A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA SUPPORTING SENATE BILL 596 AND HOUSE BILL 6023 WHICH WOULD REPEAL SECTION 163.045, FLORIDA STATUTES, A PREEMPTION RELATED TO TREE PRUNING, TRIMMING, OR REMOVAL ON RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO DISTRIBUTE THIS RESOLUTION; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. The City of Temple Terrace Clerk has requested that a copy of these Resolutions be provided to the Miami Beach Mayor, Commissioners, and the City Manager. If you have any questions, please contact the Office of the City Clerk at 305.673. 7 411. REG/le Attachment F :ICLER\$ALL ILi LIA IL TC's - Transmittal's\ Tempie Terrace\ Tempie Terrace Resos 31-21 and 34-21.docx RESOLUTION 31-21 A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA, STRONGLY OPPOSING SENA TE BILL 60 AND HOUSE BILL 883 THAT UNNECESSA RILY PREVENT MUNICIPAL CODE ENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENTS FROM INVESTIGATING ANONYMOUS CODE ENFORCEMENT COMPLAINTS, AND URGING THE FLORIDA LEGISLATURE TO NOT INTERFERE WITH LOCAL MUNICIPALITIES' ABILITY TO PROTECT THE HEALTH, SAFETY, WELFARE, AND VALUE OF THEIR NEIGHBORHOODS, AND TO ALLOW MUNICIPAL CODE ENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENTS TO CONTINUE INVESTIGATING UNLAWFUL CONDITIONS ON PROPERTIES WITHIN THE MUNICIPALITY, REGARDLESS OF THE SOURCE OF COMPLAINTS; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO DISTRIBUTE COPIES OF THIS RESOLUTION; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. WHEREAS, Florida municipalities establish ordinances and code provisions to promote, protect, and improve the health, safety, and welfare of the residents within their respective jurisdictions; and WHEREAS, the Florida Legislature, with the same intent to promote, protect, and improve the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens of the counties and municipalities of Florida, enacted Chapter 162, Florida Statutes, which authorized municipalities to establish code enforcement systems to enforce the codes and ordinances in effect in those local governments; and WHEREAS, many Florida municipalities, including the City of Temple Terrace, established code enforcement systems and designated employees to be code enforcement officers/inspectors to promote, protect, and improve the health, safety, and welfare of their respective communities; and WHEREAS, many of the complaints of code violations received by municipal code enforcement departments are anonymous because the complainants are concerned about creating negative feelings and/or retaliation from neighbors or landlords; and WHEREAS, municipal code enforcement officers/inspectors will investigate those anonymous complaints or reports to determine if a condition on the property exists that violates the municipality's ordinances or code provisions and, thus, negatively impacts the health, safety, and welfare of the municipality; and WHEREAS, if, upon investigation of that anonymous complaint, no violation of the municipality's ordinances and code is observed by the code enforcement officer/inspector, the complaint is closed, and no further action is taken with regard to that complaint; and WHEREAS, if, upon investigation of that anonymous complaint, a violation of the municipality's ordinances or city code is observed by the code enforcement officer or inspector, the violator is notified of the violative condition and given a reasonable opportunity to correct the violative condition without penalty unless the violative condition poses a serious threat to public health, safety, and welfare, is irreparable or irreversible in nature, or is a repeat violation; and WHEREAS, the above-described anonymous complaint process promotes, protects, and improves the health, safety, and welfare, as well as the appearance, of the municipality by abating violative conditions while preventing negative feelings and potential retaliation by neighbors or landlords against the complainant; and WHEREAS, on January 5, 2021, Florida Senator Jennifer Bradley filed Senate Bill 60 ("SB 60") for consideration during the 2021 Florida Legislative Session that prohibits a code enforcement officer from initiating investigations and enforcement proceedings of potential violations of codes and ordinances by way of anonymous complaints, and requires persons who report potential violations of codes and ordinances to provide their name and address to the governing body before an investigation occurs, unless the code enforcement officer has reason to believe that a violation presents an imminent threat to public health, safety, or welfare or imminent destruction of habitat or sensitive resources; and WHEREAS, on February 10, 2021, Florida Representative Tobin Overdorf introduced House Bill 883 ("HB 883") with preemptions identical to those in Senate Bill 60; and WHEREAS, prohibiting both the investigation and enforcement of code violations reported by anonymous sources will have a serious adverse effect on the promotion, protection, and improvement of the health, safety, and welfare of the residents of municipalities, including the City of Temple Terrace, because legitimate complaints will not be reported due to fear of retaliation from a neighbor and landlord; and WHEREAS, the exception contained in SB 60 and HB 883 allowing a code inspector to investigate an anonymous report if the inspector "has reason to believe that the violation presents an imminent threat to public health, safety, or welfare or imminent destruction of habitat or sensitive resources" creates a "Catch-22" because the inspector cannot assess whether the anonymously reported violation presents an imminent threat without investigating, yet the inspector is prohibited from investigating because the report is anonymous; and WHEREAS, Sections 162.21 and 166.0415, Florida Statutes, already provide, respectively, that a code enforcement inspector may issue a civil citation "upon personal investigation, if there is reasonable cause to believe that a person has committed a civil infraction in violation of a duly enacted code or ordinance" and "when such code enforcement officer or inspector has actual knowledge that a violation has been committed"; and WHEREAS, municipalities should continue to have the power to implement the code enforcement system that best promotes, protects, and improves the health, safety, and welfare of the residents of the municipality, and not be limited to initiating investigations and enforcement proceedings from anonymous reports only when the threat to health, safety, and welfare is imminent. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, THAT: Section 1: The City ofTemple Terrace opposes SB 60 and HB 883 that would prohibit the investigation of anonymous code enforcement complaints and, thus, detrimentally affect our code enforcement system that promotes, protects, and improves the health, safety, and welfare of the residents of our community. Section 2: The City Clerk is hereby directed to distribute copies of this Resolution to Representatives Lawrence McClure and Tobin Overdorf, Senators Danny Burgess and Jennifer Bradley, Governor Ron Desantis, the Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, the President of the Florida Senate, the Florida League of Cities, and to all municipalities in Hillsborough County. Section 3: Effective Date. This Resolution shall become effective upon adoption. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA this 16th day of March, 2021. (Corporate Seal) X Andrew Ross, Mayor Chair of the City Council Signed by: City Clerk Attest: Cheryl A. Mooney City Clerk Signed by. City Clerk Approved As To Form & Content: Pamela Cichon City Attorney Signed by: City Clerk RESOLUTION 34-21 A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA SUPPORTING SENATE BILL 596 AND HOUSE BILL 6023 WHICH WOULD REPEAL SECTION 163.045, FLORIDA STATUTES, A PREEMPTION RELATED TO TREE PRUNING, TRIMMING, OR REMOVAL ON RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO DISTRIBUTE THIS RESOLUTION; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. WHEREAS, the residents, businesses, and college campus in Temple Terrace highly value trees, speak out to protect the urban tree canopy, and use their own time to steward the urban forest through tree planting projects and inventorying efforts; and WHEREAS, the City takes pride in having been certified as a Tree City USA for 12 years since 2008, which requires maintaining a tree board or department, enforcing a community tree ordinance, spending at least $2 per capita on urban forestry, and celebrating Arbor Day; and WHEREAS, the City's 2040 Comprehensive Plan under Strategic Response, provides "Oak Tree Canopy - Temple Terrace prides itself on its natural assets, one of the foremost is its extensive oak tree canopy. It is the seamless interface of man and nature that make Temple Terrace, in part, such a highly appealing place. As with the river, this important resource will be protected and built upon"; and WHEREAS, the City lists our "Oak Tree Canopy" in its Comprehensive Plan as the second "asset" upon which the "City and its residents will focus ... to position the city for growth and economic development", and further states, "The city's oak tree canopy is another natural feature identified by citizens as a distinguishing natural asset giving uniqueness and identity to the city, and therefore shaping its form. It is as much a part of the city's heritage as Mediterranean Revival buildings ...."; and WHEREAS, the City's 2040 Comprehensive Plan under Future Land Use states that the city's "'natural assets' are critically important to Temple Terrace's identity" and that they "create a beautiful green environment," citing the "oak tree canopy" as an example; and WHEREAS, the City's Comprehensive Plan, Future Land Use Goals, Objectives, and Policies include "LU Policy 1.1.4: Continue to recognize among its best natural assets, which give a natural form to the City are ... its oak tree canopy .... " and "LU Policy 1.1.5: Continue to recognize about its natural assets the need for ongoing vigilant natural resource protection ...."; and WHEREAS, the Committee Substitute of HB1159 (2019) (creating Section 163.045, Florida Statutes), a preemption related to tree pruning, trimming, or removal on residential property, was passed and signed into law with vague and undefined language that has made interpretation both difficult and inconsistent across municipalities, has become a trap for property owners who remove a tree, and has led to the irreparable clear cutting of land in Temple Terrace by developers attempting to use the statute to avoid complying with the City's land development regulations; and WHEREAS, Section 163.045, Florida Statutes gave certified arborists and landscape architects, who may have no training in risk assessment of trees, the final decision power over the life or death of one of Temple Terrace's most valuable assets; and WHEREAS, Section 163.045, Florida Statutes, eliminates all notification to the City before removing a tree if it is determined to be a danger to persons or property, any failure by the property owner to fully comply with the statute {such as the arborist's lack of certification, removing the wrong tree, and whether the determination was made prior to the removal) is not discovered until after the irreparable damage has been done; and WHEREAS, because there is no prevailing state interest regarding trees on residential property, tree protection and removal has long been recognized as a legitimate exercise of local government Home Rule powers and should remain so; and WHEREAS, local government tree ordinances and regulations, including those ofThe City of Temple Terrace, are already designed to maintain trees and tree canopies while allowing for pruning and removal of dead and dangerous trees, as well as the removal of trees necessary for development; and WHEREAS, the City Council recognizes that Temple Terrace's extraordinary tree canopy is necessary for preservation of wildlife habitats, beneficial for climate adaptation, stormwater management, nutrient uptake and filtration, and it enhances quality of life for residents, property values, and community character; and WHEREAS, members of the Florida Legislature, Senator Linda Stewart and Representative Anna Eskamani, have filed Senate Bill 596 ("SB 596) and House Bill 6023 ("HB 6023") for consideration during the 2021 session of the Florida Legislature, and propose to repeal Section 163.045, Florida Statutes, effectively restoring the rights of local governments to enact and/or enforce local ordinances and regulations related to pruning, trimming, or removal of trees on residential property within their respective corporate limits; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, THAT: Section 1: The foregoing recitals are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true, and the same are hereby incorporated by reference and made a part of this Resolution. Section 2: It is in the best interest of the City and other local governments that Home Rule authority to regulate the trimming, pruning, and removal of trees be restored to thereby protect that essential resource. Section 3: The Florida Legislature is strongly urged to support Senate Bill 596 and House Bill 6023, and to repeal Section 163.045, Florida Statutes, which preempts local laws related to tree pruning, trimming, or removal on residential property. Section 4: The City Clerk is hereby directed to distribute a copy of this Resolution to Senators Danny Burgess and Linda Stewart, Representatives Lawrence McClure and Anna Eskamani, Governor Ron Desantis, the Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, the President of the Florida Senate, the Florida League of Cities, and to all municipalities in Hillsborough County. Section 5: This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon its adoption. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMPLE TERRACE, FLORIDA this 16th day of March, 2021. (Corporate Seal) X Andrew Ross, Mayor Chair of the City Council Signed by: City Clerk Attest: Cheryl A. Mooney City Clerk Signed by: City Clerk Approved As To Form & Content: Pamela Cichon City Attorney Signed by: City Clerk