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LTC 218-2023 Legislative Wrap-Up 2023M IA M I BE A C H OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER NO. LTC# LETTER TO COMMISSION TO: FROM: Alina T. Hudak, City Mana DATE: May 10, 2023 SUBJECT: Legislative Wrap-Up 2023 bers of the City Commission The purpose of this letter to the Commission is to provide you with a preliminary update from the 2023 Legislative Session that wrapped up on Friday, May 5th. Below is a summary of some of the key bills filed impacting the City of Miami Beach. Sovereign Immunity (HB 401 / SB 604) as drafted, the bills would have substantially raised the sovereign immunity caps for damages sought against local governments. FAILED Solid Waste Management (HB 975 / SB 798) this legislation would have restricted our ability to regulate solid waste and recycling services for certain properties and could have had a significant fiscal impact as it would have capped franchise fees. FAILED Nonconforming or Unsafe Structures (HB 1317 / SB 1346) these bills would have preempted our authority to enforce major provisions of our historic preservation ordinance. FAILED Economic Programs (HB 5) this bill eliminates Enterprise Florida and the Florida Office of Film and Entertainment. Originally, the bill also included the elimination of the Entertainment Industry Sales Tax; however, this was removed from the bill and has been preserved. PASSED Permitless Carry (HB 543) this legislation allows for the permitless carry of concealed firearms. PASSED and was signed into law. A number of bills that targeted the LGBTQ community were APPROVED this session, including a gender-affirming care ban (SB 254), a bill establishing a requirement for restrooms based on sex (HB 1521 ), an expansion of the "Don't Say Gay Bill" (HB 1069), and (SB 1438) which would prohibit local governments from issuing permits that could expose children to adult live performances including drag shows. Short Term Rentals (SB 714 / HB 833) there was a late file amendment that would have eroded our authority to manage STRs. FAILED 218-2023 R e s id e n t ia l B u ild in g P e r m its (H B 6 7 1 / S B 6 8 2 ) th is b ill w o u ld h a v e d ra s tic a lly c h a n g e d th e b u ild in g p e r m it p ro c e s s , in cl u d in g th e n u m b e r o f d a y s w e a re a b le to re v ie w a p p lic a ti o n s , a n d w o u ld h a v e s ig n ifi c a n tl y re d u c e d p e rm it fe e s . FAILED Housing (SB 102) is a comprehensive bill that includes funding for affordable housing through tax credits and incentives for development. PASSED and was signed into law. Local Government (SB 718) prohibits a referendum process for any land development regulation. PASSED Local Ordinances (SB 170) imposes new requirements on cities, including a business impact estimate when adopting new ordinances. PASSED Taxation (SB 7062) authorizes us to impose the 1% local food and beverage sales tax if approved by referendum. PASSED Additionally, we are pleased to inform you that both of our State Appropriations Requests are currently fully funded in the budget, awaiting the Governor's signature. • Resilient seawalls along Collins Avenue - $500,000 • Stormwater pump water quality updates - $400,000 Attached for your information is a preliminary detailed update from our lobbyist team. I would like to extend our appreciation to all of you who participated in supporting the city's legislative package in Tallahassee with us. Also, our sincere appreciation to our legislative delegation for their invaluable support and dedicated efforts during this legislative session, as well as to our lobbyist team in Tallahassee. I would also like to express our thanks and commendation to Marcia Monserrat, Chief of Legislative and External Affairs, for her exceptional efforts throughout this legislative session. Again, thank you all so much for your unwavering support and guidance during this process. Please let me know if I can answer any questions or provide further assistance. ATH/MM E ooallL.book, %.. (Al 0(I(6 PK(SI01R( 9\004/10 Session 2023 Final Report Enclosed is our 2023 Session final report which includes an update on funding requests and legislative issues. Please note this report is submitted before many of the items within have been acted upon by the Governor, including funding requests. Please let us know if you have questions on issues included in this report, or on any other issue of concern. Miami Beach Funding Requests: For each funding request, Senate and House funding forms are required which describe in detail the project and its goals, the state funding amount needed and its intended use, and the amount of the local matching funds. We reviewed each of the forms and made recommendations for each request, working to ensure a stated 50% or more local match, and that each is within the parameters of the funding priorities of the Governor and Legislature. Prior to Session, we secured House and Senate sponsors for each request, Senator Garcia and Representative Basabe. Throughout Session, we held weekly meetings with each of the House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittee Chairs and the Full Appropriations Chairs as well as the House Speaker and Senate President and their staff. As the budget conference process began, we continually advocated on behalf of the funding requests with the Appropriations Chairs, House Speaker and Senate President. Budget conference officially ended when the final budget was filed and distributed to members at 8:48 am on May 2, which started the mandatory 72- hour "cooling off' period before House and Senate members voted on the budget on Friday, May 5th. Our next steps are ongoing, as we have met with the Governor's budget analysts to advocate for each project as they move through the Governor's review process. Request Funding Allocated Miami Beach Resilient Seawalls Along Collins Avenue Fully Funded: $500,000 (LFIR # 1608/HSE # I 066) Budget Line 1705A Sponsors: Senator Garcia, Representative Basabe Amount Requested: $500,000 Match: 54.6% Miami Beach Stormwater Pump Water Quality Upgrades Fully Funded: $400,000 (LFIR #2021 /HSE # 1061) Budget Line 1705A Sponsors: Senator Garcia, Representative Basabe Amount Requested: $400,000 Match: 50% Sargassum Cleanup Statewide Grant Program $5 million (statewide grant) (Department of Emergency Management) Budget Line 2678A Legislative Issues included within this report are as follows: • Housing: SB 102 has been signed into law, Chapter No. 2023-17 • School Choice/Universal Voucher: HB I has been signed into law, Chapter No. 2023-16 • Civil Remedies: HB 837 has been signed into law, Chapter No. 2023-15 • Local Regulation of Nonconforming or Unsafe Structures • Vacation Rentals • Gaming/amendments • Sargassum Seaweed Removal • Environmental Protection • Solid Waste Management • Sovereign Immunity • Financial Disclosure for Elected Officials • Local Ordinances/Business Impact Estimate • Condominium and Cooperative Associations • Homestead Tax Exemption for Senior, Low-income, Long-term Residents • Public Nuisance/threatening actions/hate crime • Municipal Utilities Local Regulation of Nonconforming or Unsafe Structures: (SB 1346/HB 1317) As reported throughout Session, we worked in conjunction with the City, with Miami-Dade County and affected local governments around the state, in opposition to this bill. We met with the Senate and House bill sponsors multiple times, Senator Avila and Representative Roach, offering amendment language and expressing the City's opposition. We offered amendment language that Senator Jones offered in committee to include federally designated and locally designated historic districts (not simply federally designated historic properties and single family homes). Senator Avila indicated that the amendment was unfriendly, and Senator Jones withdrew his amendment as anticipated, in order to maintain the language as available at a future point in time. Before he withdrew the amendment, Senator Jones discussed the critical need for this modified language. As the legislation progressed and was heard on the Senate floor, Senator Powell offered this same language on our behalf. The amendment failed and the bill passed the Senate, 33-6 In the House, we met with the House sponsor Representative Roach, several times and offered amendment language. We assisted the city in testifying in committee, and coordinated with the City of Coral Gables to testify as well. As the bill progressed in the House, we continued to voice opposition. Once the House bill was ineligible to be heard by the full House, (as it was not on a special order calendar on Day 55- House rule), we worked in conjunction with Representative Basabe, Representative Lopez, and Representative Stevenson, (St. Augustine), to assure no similar language was offered as an amendment to other bills moving forward that were germane. No amendments were offered. SB 1346/HB 1317 did not pass. Vacation Rentals: (SB 714 and HB 833) We continued this year to voice opposition to further regulation on vacation rentals. This bill was slow to begin movement this Session, and as it moved, we, working with the Florida League of Cities and lobbyists representing affected municipalities, continued to voice opposition. As has happened in the past, we as a collective group, were able to voice enough opposition to both the House and Senate, and neither were able to come to an agreement on language. The later iterations of this legislation had various facets, including the ability for local governments to levy fines for non-registration and regulation on parking and garbage requirements (for all areas, not only the vacation rentals); would have required local governments to accept or deny a registration application in 15 days, and allowed for 2 "g r a n d fa t h e r e d " lo c a l o r d in a n c e s a d o p te d o n o r b e fo r e J un e l , 2 0 1 1 . T h e la te r v e r s io n s a ll o w e d lo c a l g o v e r nm e n ts to r e s t r ic t m a x im u m o c c u p a n c y , if a p p lie d a c ro s s a ll r e n t e d p ro p e rt ie s w it h in th e ir ju ri s d ic tio n , a ll o w e d a fe e fo r in s p e c t io n s a ft e r r e g is tra t io n , th o u g h n e v e r s e t tli n g o n a s p e c ifi c , a gr e e d u p o n a m o un t. T h e S e n a te b ill in cl u d e d a li m it e d a m o u n t o f fu n d in g a n d s ix fu ll tim e p o s itio n s fo r D B P R to im p le m e n t th is le g is la tio n . S B 7 1 4 /HB 8 3 3 - S B 7 1 4 p a s s e d th e fu ll H o u s e W e dn e s d a y o f th e la s t w e e k o f S e s s io n w ith a b a d am e n d m e n t b y R e p r e s e n t a t iv e D u g g a n , (b a r c o d e 4 3 3 6 3 5 ). A lo n g w it h th e L e a g u e o f C it ie s a n d o t h e r s , w e w o r k e d to s e c u r e n o v o t e s o n th e a m e n d m e n t , h o w e v e r H o u s e le a d e r s h ip w h ip p e d th e v o t e s o n b o th th e a m e n d m e n t a n d th e b ill a n d it p a s s e d th e H o u s e b y a v o t e o f 7 3 - 3 9 . A t th a t p o in t, it w a s s e n t in m e s s a g e s b a c k to th e S e n a te . O n th e la s t d a y o f S e s s io n , F r id a y , M a y 5 , th e S e n a te r e fu s e d to c o n c ur w it h th e D u g g a n a m e n dm e n t a n d r e q u e s te d th e H o u s e to r e c e d e . T h e H o u s e d id n o t , a n d th e b ill d id n o t p a s s . S B 7 1 4 /H B 8 3 3 d i d n o t p a s s . Gaming/amendments: We closely watched for any amendments that could have been filed to the gaming bill, SB 7044 throughout Session, to any legislation that addressed the duties of the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, and the tax package, SB 7062 all of which would have been germane amendment vehicles. We also spoke to House and Senate leadership multiple times on the City's behalf about potential legislation that pertained to gaming permit mobility and/or transfers. SB 7044 passed and was solely a glitch bill to remedy inadvertent issues that have arisen due to the sale and subsequent transfer application of a license from West Flagler Associates, Ltd. To Wind Creek Miami, LLC. No amendments pertaining to gaming that affect Miami Beach were filed. Sargassum Seaweed Removal: As a preemptive measure, mid-Session, we began to raise the issue of the increasing problem of sargassum seaweed on Florida beaches. As noted in news reports, a 5,000-mile floating sargassum bloom in the ocean has begun to impact the Florida coastline and beaches which will be reflected in our tourism based economy. The Legislature has included a Sargassum Cleanup Grant Program with $5 million in funding, to be administered through the FDEM. Budget line 2678A. Environmental Protection: (SB I 632/HB 1379) Language contained in this bill renames this grant program the Water Quality Improvement Grant and expands eligibility for a myriad of projects and locations around the state. This bill addresses a number of topics, however, specific to local governments, this bill expands the wastewater grant program to include areas and types of waterbodies that would be eligible, expands the types of projects to include additional wastewater projects, stormwater projects, and regional agricultural projects, removes the requirement that each grant have a minimum 50% local matching funds but it does allow DEP prioritize those with the local matching funds, and requires DEP to coordinate with local governments to identify the most effective and beneficial water quality improvement projects. Regarding sanitary sewer services, the bill requires local governments to develop a plan to provide sanitary sewer services for developments of more than 50 residential lots that have more than one OSTDS per acre within a 10- year planning horizon (not required for rural areas of opportunity), requires local governments to update their comprehensive plans to include the sanitary sewer planning element by July 1, 2024, and requires local governments that are subject to a BMAP (or located within the basin of waters not meeting applicable nutrient-related water quality standards) to provide DEP with an annual update on the status of the construction of sanitary sewers to serve such areas. HB 13 79 has passed. CS/CS/HB 1379 engrossed and enrolled: https://www.flsenate.gov/Scssion/Bill/2023/1379/BillText/er/PDF 3 S o li d W a s t e M a n a g e m e n t (HB 975/SB 798) This legislation stalled, having been heard in only one committee, and a Senate similar companion bill which was not been heard. Did not pass. Sovereign Immunity: (SB 604/HB 401) The bills as drafted would have substantially raised the sovereign immunity caps for damages sought against local governments. The cap amounts were in negotiations but stalled mid-Session. We expect this issue to be filed next Session. Did not pass. Financial Disclosure for Elected Officials: (SB 774/HB 37) The bill would require mayors and municipal elected officials to begin filing Form 6 for the annual financial disclosure starting January I, 2024. Current law requires that these officials file only the limited disclosure of financial interests, Form 1, and current law requires that state legislators file Form 6. This bill does not include non-elected managers. SB 774 would take effect upon becoming law. SB 774 has passed. CS/CS/SB 774 engrossed and enrolled: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/774/BillText/er/PDF Local Ordinances/Business Impact Estimate: (SB 170/HB 1515) The bill requires counties and cities to produce a "business impact estimate" before passing a local ordinance and authorizes courts to assess and award reasonable attorney fees and costs and damages in civil actions filed against local governments specific to this legislation. SB 1 70 has passed. CS/CS/SB 170 engrossed and enrolled: https://www.tlsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/l 70/BillText/er/PDF Condominium and Cooperative Associations: (SB 154/HB 1395) SB 154 addresses the following issues: • Further revises the milestone inspection requirements. • Requires the Florida Building Commission to establish by rule, a building safety program to implement the milestone inspection requirements. This must include inspection criteria, testing protocols, standardized inspection and reporting forms that are adaptable to an electronic format, and record maintenance requirements for the local authority having jurisdiction. • The bill amends s. 627.351, F.S., to exempt unit owner polices from the flood insurance requirement for Citizens personal lines property coverage. The bill also revises the provision requiring flood insurance coverage to base the dates by which flood insurance coverage must be obtained on the dwelling replacement cost instead of property value. • Revises the reserve funding requirements relating to condominium and cooperative associations. • Revises structural integrity reserve study requirements • Revises and clarifies those who have access to records - both any association member and any authorized by the association • Appropriates $1,301,928 in recurring funds and S67,193 in nonrecurring funds from the Division of Florida Condominiums, Timeshares, and Mobile Homes Trust Fund to the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, and to authorize IO full-time employees. 4 S B 15 4 h a s p a s s e d . CS/CS/SB 154 engrossed and enrolled: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/154/BillText/er/PDF Homestead Tax Exemption for Senior, Low-income, Long-term Residents: (SB 126/HB 159) SJR 126 proposes an amendment to the Florida Constitution to raise the eligible real estate value for the optional full homestead exemption on long-term, low-income seniors from $250,000 to $300,000. If adopted by the Legislature, the proposed amendment will be submitted to Florida's electors for approval or rejection at the next general election in November 2024. If approved by at least 60 percent of the electors, the proposed amendment will take effect on January 1, 2025 Did not pass. Public Nuisance/threatening actions/hate crime: (SB 994/HB 269) Among many threatening actions, this bill would prohibit the distribution of materials that involves religious or ethnic intimidation, threat, or intent to harm, to desecrate or destroy any religious cemetery, gravesite, or grave marker, including any Holocaust memorial of any type, school or community center, public or private property, and various other heinous acts detailed in the legislation. The bill was amended to reflect the following: • Revises elements of new offenses relating to littering, harassment, and criminal mischief, including damaging any cemetery, grave, or memorial or any school or community center, unlawfully projecting images on buildings. It also revises the current offense relating to disturbing a school or place of worship to increase the penalty from a second degree misdemeanor to a first degree misdemeanor. Some offenses require evidence of religious or ethnic animus. • Creates s. 810.098, F.S., which provides it is a first degree misdemeanor for a person to trespass on the campus of a state university or Florida College System institution for the purpose of threatening or intimidating another person, and the person is warned to depart and refuses to do so. • The Senate bill specifies what constitutes prima facie evidence for the purpose of hate crimes penalty reclassification. • Requires hate-crime reporting. • Changes effective date from October I, 2023 to upon becoming a law. HB 269 has passed and was signed into law by the Governor: Chapter No. 2023-24 Municipal Utilities: (HB 1331/SB 1712) The bill places limits on the portion of municipal utility revenues that may be used to fund or finance a municipality's non-utility related general government functions. In doing so, the bill limits the rate of transfer for municipal electric, natural gas, and water or wastewater utilities. Under the bill, the greater the proportion of customers outside of city boundaries that a municipal utility serves, the lower the cap is on transfers. Both bills remove a provision allowing water or sewer utilities to add, for consumers outside of its boundaries, a surcharge of up to 25 percent of the rates, fees, and charges imposed on consumers within its boundaries. HB 1331/SB 1712 did not pass. ►2023 Regular Legislative Session May 5 5