Bill Text: FL S0264 | 2023 | Regular Session | Engrossed

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Interests of Foreign Countries

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Passed) 2023-05-09 - Chapter No. 2023-33, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/HB 645 (Ch. 2023-147) [S0264 Detail]

Download: Florida-2023-S0264-Engrossed.html
       CS for CS for SB 264                            Second Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       2023264e2
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to interests of foreign countries;
    3         creating s. 287.138, F.S.; defining terms; prohibiting
    4         governmental entities from knowingly entering into
    5         certain contracts; prohibiting governmental entities
    6         from taking specified actions after a specified date
    7         relating to contracts that give certain access to
    8         personal identifying information; providing an
    9         exception; authorizing the Attorney General to bring a
   10         civil action; providing penalties; requiring penalties
   11         to be deposited into the General Revenue Fund;
   12         requiring the Department of Management Services to
   13         adopt rules; creating s. 288.007, F.S.; defining
   14         terms; prohibiting governmental entities from
   15         knowingly entering into certain contracts; requiring
   16         governmental entities to require an affidavit from
   17         applicants before providing any economic incentive;
   18         requiring the Department of Economic Opportunity to
   19         adopt rules; providing a directive to the Division of
   20         Law Revision to create part III of ch. 692, F.S., to
   21         be entitled “Conveyances to Foreign Entities”;
   22         creating s. 692.201, F.S.; defining terms; creating
   23         ss. 692.202 and 692.203, F.S.; prohibiting foreign
   24         principals from purchasing agricultural land, or
   25         having more than a de minimus indirect interest in
   26         such land, and certain real property in this state,
   27         respectively; providing exceptions from ownership
   28         restrictions; authorizing foreign principals to
   29         continue to own or hold such land or property under
   30         certain circumstances; requiring certain foreign
   31         principals that own or acquire such land or real
   32         property to register with a specified department;
   33         requiring the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
   34         Services and the Department of Economic Opportunity,
   35         respectively, to establish a form for such
   36         registration; providing civil penalties; authorizing
   37         the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
   38         and the Department of Economic Opportunity to place a
   39         lien against unregistered agricultural land or real
   40         property, respectively; requiring certain foreign
   41         principals to sell, transfer, or otherwise divest
   42         themselves of certain agricultural land or real
   43         property within a specified timeframe; requiring
   44         buyers of such land or property to provide a signed
   45         affidavit; specifying that the failure to maintain or
   46         obtain the affidavit does not affect the title or
   47         insurability of the title for the agricultural land or
   48         real property, respectively, or subject the closing
   49         agent to certain liability; authorizing the Florida
   50         Real Estate Commission to adopt rules; authorizing
   51         that certain agricultural land or real property be
   52         forfeited to the state; authorizing the Department of
   53         Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department
   54         of Economic Opportunity to initiate civil actions for
   55         forfeiture of the interest in agricultural land or
   56         real property, respectively; requiring that such
   57         actions be filed in a certain circuit court; requiring
   58         clerks to record a lis pendens; requiring courts to
   59         advance the cause on the calendar; authorizing
   60         defendants to petition to modify or discharge the lis
   61         pendens; requiring the court to enter a specified
   62         final judgment under certain circumstances;
   63         authorizing the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
   64         Services and the Department of Economic Opportunity,
   65         respectively, to sell the agricultural land or real
   66         property; providing requirements for the proceeds from
   67         such sale; authorizing the Department of Agriculture
   68         and Consumer Services and the Department of Economic
   69         Opportunity, respectively, to seek a specified ex
   70         parte order; providing criminal penalties; requiring
   71         the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
   72         and the Department of Economic Opportunity,
   73         respectively, to adopt rules; creating s. 692.204,
   74         F.S.; prohibiting the People’s Republic of China, the
   75         Chinese Communist Party, any other political party or
   76         member of a political party in the People’s Republic
   77         of China, and certain persons and entities from
   78         purchasing or acquiring real property in this state or
   79         having more than a de minimus indirect interest in
   80         such real property; providing exceptions from
   81         ownership restrictions; authorizing such persons and
   82         entities to continue to own or hold such real property
   83         under certain circumstances; requiring certain persons
   84         or entities that own or acquire real property in this
   85         state to register with the Department of Economic
   86         Opportunity by a specified date; requiring the
   87         Department of Economic Opportunity to establish a form
   88         for such registration; providing civil penalties;
   89         authorizing the Department of Economic Opportunity to
   90         place a lien against unregistered real property;
   91         requiring certain persons and entities to sell,
   92         transfer, or otherwise divest themselves of certain
   93         real property within a specified timeframe; requiring
   94         buyers of real property to provide a signed affidavit;
   95         specifying that the failure to maintain or obtain the
   96         affidavit does not affect the title or insurability of
   97         the title for the real property or subject the closing
   98         agent to certain liability; authorizing the commission
   99         to adopt rules; authorizing certain real property to
  100         be forfeited to the state; authorizing the Department
  101         of Economic Opportunity to initiate civil actions for
  102         forfeiture of the interest in real property; requiring
  103         such actions to be filed in a certain circuit court;
  104         requiring clerks to record a lis pendens; requiring
  105         courts to advance the cause on the calendar;
  106         authorizing defendants to petition to modify or
  107         discharge the lis pendens; requiring the court to
  108         enter a specified final judgment under certain
  109         circumstances; authorizing the Department of Economic
  110         Opportunity to sell the real property; providing
  111         requirements for the proceeds from such sale;
  112         authorizing the Department of Economic Opportunity to
  113         seek a specified ex parte order; providing criminal
  114         penalties; requiring the Department of Economic
  115         Opportunity to adopt rules; creating s. 692.205, F.S.;
  116         providing an exception from ownership restrictions and
  117         registration requirements for real property that is
  118         used for diplomatic purposes; amending s. 408.051,
  119         F.S.; defining the terms “cloud computing” and “health
  120         care provider”; requiring that certain information
  121         held by health care providers that utilize certified
  122         electronic health record technology be maintained in
  123         specified locations; providing applicability; amending
  124         s. 408.810, F.S.; requiring a licensee to sign a
  125         specified affidavit upon initial application for a
  126         license and any renewal applications; authorizing
  127         disciplinary action by the Agency for Health Care
  128         Administration; prohibiting a person or entity that
  129         possesses a controlling interest from holding an
  130         interest in certain entities; providing definitions;
  131         amending s. 836.05, F.S.; providing enhanced criminal
  132         penalties for threatening a person while acting as a
  133         foreign agent with the intent of benefiting a foreign
  134         country of concern; providing an effective date.
  135          
  136  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  137  
  138         Section 1. Section 287.138, Florida Statutes, is created to
  139  read:
  140         287.138Contracting with entities of foreign countries of
  141  concern prohibited.—
  142         (1)As used in this section, the term:
  143         (a)“Controlling interest” means possession of the power to
  144  direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of a
  145  company, whether through ownership of securities, by contract,
  146  or otherwise. A person or entity that directly or indirectly has
  147  the right to vote 25 percent or more of the voting interests of
  148  the company or is entitled to 25 percent or more of its profits
  149  is presumed to possess a controlling interest.
  150         (b)“Department” means the Department of Management
  151  Services.
  152         (c)“Foreign country of concern” means the People’s
  153  Republic of China, the Russian Federation, the Islamic Republic
  154  of Iran, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the Republic
  155  of Cuba, the Venezuelan regime of Nicolás Maduro, or the Syrian
  156  Arab Republic, including any agency of or any other entity of
  157  significant control of such foreign country of concern.
  158         (d)“Governmental entity” means any state, county,
  159  district, authority, or municipal officer, department, division,
  160  board, bureau, commission, or other separate unit of government
  161  created or established by law including, but not limited to, the
  162  Commission on Ethics, the Public Service Commission, the Office
  163  of Public Counsel, and any other public or private agency,
  164  person, partnership, corporation, or business entity acting on
  165  behalf of any public agency.
  166         (2) A governmental entity may not knowingly enter into a
  167  contract with an entity which would give access to an
  168  individual’s personal identifying information if:
  169         (a) The entity is owned by the government of a foreign
  170  country of concern;
  171         (b) The government of a foreign country of concern has a
  172  controlling interest in the entity; or
  173         (c) The entity is organized under the laws of or has its
  174  principal place of business in a foreign country of concern.
  175         (3) Beginning July 1, 2025, a governmental entity may not
  176  extend or renew a contract with an entity listed in paragraphs
  177  (2)(a)-(c) if the contract would give such entity access to an
  178  individual’s personal identifying information.
  179         (4)(a) Beginning January 1, 2024, a governmental entity may
  180  not accept a bid on, a proposal for, or a reply to, or enter
  181  into, a contract with an entity which would grant the entity
  182  access to an individual’s personal identifying information
  183  unless the entity provides the governmental entity with an
  184  affidavit signed by an officer or representative of the entity
  185  under penalty of perjury attesting that the entity does not meet
  186  any of the criteria in paragraphs (2)(a)-(c).
  187         (b) Beginning July 1, 2025, when an entity extends or
  188  renews a contract with a governmental entity which would grant
  189  the entity access to an individual’s personal identifying
  190  information, the entity must provide the governmental entity
  191  with an affidavit signed by an officer or representative of the
  192  entity under penalty of perjury attesting that the entity does
  193  not meet any of the criteria in paragraphs (2)(a)-(c).
  194         (5) The Attorney General may bring a civil action in any
  195  court of competent jurisdiction against an entity that violates
  196  this section. Violations of this section may result in:
  197         (a) A civil penalty equal to twice the amount of the
  198  contract for which the entity submitted a bid or proposal for,
  199  replied to, or entered into;
  200         (b) Ineligibility to enter into, renew, or extend any
  201  contract, including any grant agreements, with any governmental
  202  entity for up to 5 years;
  203         (c) Ineligibility to receive or renew any license,
  204  certification, or credential issued by a governmental entity for
  205  up to 5 years; and
  206         (d) Placement on the suspended vendor list pursuant to s.
  207  287.1351.
  208         (6) Any penalties collected under subsection (5) must be
  209  deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
  210         (7) The department shall adopt rules to implement this
  211  section, including rules establishing the form for the affidavit
  212  required under subsection (4).
  213         Section 2. Section 288.007, Florida Statutes, is created to
  214  read:
  215         288.007 Economic incentives to foreign countries of concern
  216  prohibited.—
  217         (1)As used in this section, the term:
  218         (a)“Controlled by” means having possession of the power to
  219  direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of a
  220  company, whether through ownership of securities, by contract,
  221  or otherwise. A person or entity that directly or indirectly has
  222  the right to vote 25 percent or more of the voting interests of
  223  the company or that is entitled to 25 percent or more of its
  224  profits is presumed to control the foreign entity.
  225         (b)“Economic incentive” means all programs administered
  226  by, or for which an applicant for the program must seek
  227  certification, approval, or other action by, the department
  228  under this chapter, chapter 212, or chapter 220; and all local
  229  economic development programs, grants, or financial benefits
  230  administered by a political subdivision or an agent thereof.
  231         (c)“Foreign country of concern” has the same meaning as in
  232  s. 692.201.
  233         (d)“Foreign entity” means an entity that is:
  234         1.Owned or controlled by the government of a foreign
  235  country of concern; or
  236         2.A partnership, association, corporation, organization,
  237  or other combination of persons organized under the laws of or
  238  having its principal place of business in a foreign country of
  239  concern, or a subsidiary of such entity.
  240         (e)“Government entity” means a state agency, a political
  241  subdivision, or any other public or private agency, person,
  242  partnership, corporation, or business entity acting on behalf of
  243  any public agency.
  244         (2)A government entity may not knowingly enter into an
  245  agreement or contract for an economic incentive with a foreign
  246  entity.
  247         (3)Before providing any economic incentive, a government
  248  entity must require the recipient or applicant to provide the
  249  government entity with an affidavit signed under penalty of
  250  perjury attesting that the recipient or applicant is not a
  251  foreign entity.
  252         (4)The department shall adopt rules to administer this
  253  section, including rules establishing the form for the affidavit
  254  required under subsection (3).
  255         Section 3. The Division of Law Revision is directed to
  256  create part III of chapter 692, Florida Statutes, consisting of
  257  ss. 692.201, 692.202, 692.203, 692.204, and 692.205, Florida
  258  Statutes, to be entitled “Conveyances to Foreign Entities.”
  259         Section 4. Section 692.201, Florida Statutes, is created to
  260  read:
  261         692.201 Definitions.—As used in this part, the term:
  262         (1) “Agricultural land” means land classified as
  263  agricultural under s. 193.461.
  264         (2) “Critical infrastructure facility” means any of the
  265  following, if it employs measures such as fences, barriers, or
  266  guard posts that are designed to exclude unauthorized persons:
  267         (a) A chemical manufacturing facility.
  268         (b) A refinery.
  269         (c) An electrical power plant as defined in s. 403.031(20).
  270         (d) A water treatment facility or wastewater treatment
  271  plant.
  272         (e) A liquid natural gas terminal.
  273         (f) A telecommunications central switching office.
  274         (g) A gas processing plant, including a plant used in the
  275  processing, treatment, or fractionation of natural gas.
  276         (h)A seaport as listed in s. 311.09.
  277         (i) A spaceport territory as defined in s. 331.303(18).
  278         (j)An airport as defined in s. 333.01.
  279         (3)“Foreign country of concern” means the People’s
  280  Republic of China, the Russian Federation, the Islamic Republic
  281  of Iran, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the Republic
  282  of Cuba, the Venezuelan regime of Nicolás Maduro, or the Syrian
  283  Arab Republic, including any agency of or any other entity of
  284  significant control of such foreign country of concern.
  285         (4)“Foreign principal” means:
  286         (a)The government or any official of the government of a
  287  foreign country of concern;
  288         (b)A political party or member of a political party or any
  289  subdivision of a political party in a foreign country of
  290  concern;
  291         (c)A partnership, association, corporation, organization,
  292  or other combination of persons organized under the laws of or
  293  having its principal place of business in a foreign country of
  294  concern, or a subsidiary of such entity; or
  295         (d)Any person who is domiciled in a foreign country of
  296  concern and is not a citizen or lawful permanent resident of the
  297  United States.
  298         (e)Any person, entity, or collection of persons or
  299  entities, described in paragraphs (a) through (d) having a
  300  controlling interest in a partnership, association, corporation,
  301  organization, trust, or any other legal entity or subsidiary
  302  formed for the purpose of owning real property in this state.
  303         (5)“Military installation” means a base, camp, post,
  304  station, yard, or center encompassing at least 10 contiguous
  305  acres that is under the jurisdiction of the Department of
  306  Defense or its affiliates.
  307         (6)“Real property” means land, buildings, fixtures, and
  308  all other improvements to land.
  309         Section 5. Section 692.202, Florida Statutes, is created to
  310  read:
  311         692.202Purchase of agricultural land by foreign principals
  312  prohibited.—
  313         (1)A foreign principal may not directly or indirectly own,
  314  have a controlling interest in, or acquire by purchase, grant,
  315  devise, or descent agricultural land or any interest, except a
  316  de minimus indirect interest, in such land in this state. A
  317  foreign principal has a de minimus indirect interest if any
  318  ownership is the result of the foreign principal’s ownership of
  319  registered equities in a publicly traded company owning the land
  320  and if the foreign principal’s ownership interest in the company
  321  is either:
  322         (a)Less than 5 percent of any class of registered equities
  323  or less than 5 percent in the aggregate in multiple classes of
  324  registered equities; or
  325         (b)A noncontrolling interest in an entity controlled by a
  326  company that is both registered with the United States
  327  Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment adviser
  328  under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, and is
  329  not a foreign entity.
  330         (2)A foreign principal that directly or indirectly owns or
  331  acquires agricultural land or any interest in such land in this
  332  state before July 1, 2023, may continue to own or hold such land
  333  or interest, but may not purchase or otherwise acquire by grant,
  334  devise, or descent any additional agricultural land or interest
  335  in such land in this state.
  336         (3)(a)A foreign principal that directly or indirectly owns
  337  or acquires agricultural land or any interest in such land in
  338  this state before July 1, 2023, must register with the
  339  Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services by January 1,
  340  2024. The department must establish a form for such
  341  registration, which, at minimum, must include all of the
  342  following:
  343         1.The name of the owner of the agricultural land or the
  344  owner of the interest in such land.
  345         2.The address of the agricultural land, the property
  346  appraiser’s parcel identification number, and the property’s
  347  legal description.
  348         3.The number of acres of the agricultural land.
  349         (b)A foreign principal that fails to timely file a
  350  registration with the department is subject to a civil penalty
  351  of $1,000 for each day that the registration is late. The
  352  department may place a lien against the unregistered
  353  agricultural land for the unpaid balance of any penalties
  354  assessed under this paragraph.
  355         (4)Notwithstanding subsection (1), a foreign principal may
  356  acquire agricultural land on or after July 1, 2023, by devise or
  357  descent, through the enforcement of security interests, or
  358  through the collection of debts, provided that the foreign
  359  principal sells, transfers, or otherwise divests itself of the
  360  agricultural land within 3 years after acquiring the
  361  agricultural land.
  362         (5)(a)At the time of purchase, a buyer of agricultural
  363  land or an interest in such land must provide an affidavit
  364  signed under penalty of perjury attesting that the buyer is:
  365         1.Not a foreign principal; and
  366         2.In compliance with the requirements of this section.
  367         (b)The failure to obtain or maintain the affidavit does
  368  not:
  369         1.Affect the title or insurability of the title for the
  370  agricultural land; or
  371         2.Subject the closing agent to civil or criminal
  372  liability, unless the closing agent has actual knowledge that
  373  the transaction will result in a violation of this section.
  374         (c)The Florida Real Estate Commission shall adopt rules to
  375  implement this subsection, including rules establishing the form
  376  for the affidavit required under this subsection.
  377         (6)(a)The agricultural land or an interest in such land
  378  that is owned or acquired in violation of this section may be
  379  forfeited to the state.
  380         (b)The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services may
  381  initiate a civil action in the circuit court of the county in
  382  which the property lies for the forfeiture of the agricultural
  383  land or any interest therein.
  384         (c)Upon filing such action, the clerk must record a lis
  385  pendens in accordance with s. 48.23. The court must advance the
  386  cause on the calendar. The defendant may at any time petition to
  387  modify or discharge the lis pendens based upon a finding that
  388  there is no probable cause to believe that the agricultural
  389  land, or any portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of
  390  this section.
  391         (d)If the court finds that the agricultural land, or any
  392  portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of this section,
  393  the court must enter a final judgment of forfeiture vesting
  394  title to the agricultural land in this state, subject only to
  395  the rights and interests of bona fide lienholders, and such
  396  final judgment relates back to the date of the lis pendens.
  397         (e)The department may sell the agricultural land subject
  398  to a final judgment of forfeiture. Any proceeds from the sale
  399  must first be paid to any lienholders of the land, followed by
  400  payment of any outstanding fines assessed pursuant to this
  401  section, after which the department must be reimbursed for all
  402  costs related to the forfeiture civil action and any costs
  403  related to the sale of the land. Any remaining proceeds must be
  404  paid to the property owner.
  405         (f)At any time during the forfeiture proceeding the
  406  department may seek an ex parte order of seizure of the
  407  agricultural land upon a showing that the defendant’s control of
  408  the agricultural land constitutes a clear and present danger to
  409  the state.
  410         (7)A foreign principal that purchases or acquires
  411  agricultural land or any interest therein in violation of this
  412  section commits a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable
  413  as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
  414         (8)A person who knowingly sells agricultural land or any
  415  interest therein in violation of this section commits a
  416  misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s.
  417  775.082 or s. 775.083.
  418         (9)The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
  419  shall adopt rules to implement this section.
  420         Section 6. Section 692.203, Florida Statutes, is created to
  421  read:
  422         692.203Purchase of real property on or around military
  423  installations or critical infrastructure facilities by foreign
  424  principals prohibited.—
  425         (1)A foreign principal may not directly or indirectly own,
  426  or have a controlling interest in, or acquire by purchase,
  427  grant, devise, or descent any interest, except a de minimus
  428  indirect interest, in real property on or within 10 miles of any
  429  military installation or critical infrastructure facility in
  430  this state. A foreign principal has a de minimus indirect
  431  interest if any ownership is the result of the foreign
  432  principal’s ownership of registered equities in a publicly
  433  traded company owning the land and if the foreign principal’s
  434  ownership interest in the company is either:
  435         (a)Less than 5 percent of any class of registered equities
  436  or less than 5 percent in the aggregate in multiple classes of
  437  registered equities; or
  438         (b)A noncontrolling interest in an entity controlled by a
  439  company that is both registered with the United States
  440  Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment adviser
  441  under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, and is
  442  not a foreign entity.
  443         (2)A foreign principal that directly or indirectly owns or
  444  acquires any interest in real property on or within 10 miles of
  445  any military installation or critical infrastructure facility in
  446  this state before July 1, 2023, may continue to own or hold such
  447  real property, but may not purchase or otherwise acquire by
  448  grant, devise, or descent any additional real property on or
  449  within 10 miles of any military installation or critical
  450  infrastructure facility in this state.
  451         (3)(a)A foreign principal must register with the
  452  Department of Economic Opportunity if the foreign principal owns
  453  or acquires real property on or within 10 miles of any military
  454  installation or critical infrastructure facility in this state
  455  as authorized under subsection (4) or if the foreign principal
  456  owned or acquired an interest, other than a de minimus indirect
  457  interest, in such property before July 1, 2023. The department
  458  must establish a form for such registration which, at a minimum,
  459  must include all of the following:
  460         1.The name of the owner of the real property.
  461         2.The address of the real property, the property
  462  appraiser’s parcel identification number, and the property’s
  463  legal description.
  464         (b)A foreign principal that fails to timely file a
  465  registration with the department is subject to a civil penalty
  466  of $1,000 for each day that the registration is late. A foreign
  467  principal must register a property interest owned before July 1,
  468  2023, by December 31, 2023. The registration is considered to be
  469  late after January 31, 2024. A foreign principal who owns or
  470  acquires real property on or after July 1, 2023, as authorized
  471  under subsection (4), must register the real property within 30
  472  days after the property is owned or acquired. The department may
  473  place a lien against the unregistered real property for the
  474  unpaid balance of any penalties assessed under this paragraph.
  475         (4)Notwithstanding subsection (1) a foreign principal who
  476  is a natural person may purchase one residential real property
  477  that is up to 2 acres in size if all of the following apply:
  478         (a)The parcel is not on or within 5 miles of any military
  479  installation in this state.
  480         (b)The person has a current verified United States Visa
  481  that is not limited to authorizing tourist-based travel or
  482  official documentation confirming that the person has been
  483  granted asylum in the United States, and such visa or
  484  documentation authorizes the person to be legally present within
  485  this state.
  486         (c)The purchase is in the name of the person who holds the
  487  visa or official documentation described in paragraph (b).
  488         (5)Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (2), a foreign
  489  principal may acquire real property or any interest therein
  490  which is on or within 10 miles of any military installation or
  491  critical infrastructure facility in this state on or after July
  492  1, 2023, by devise or descent, through the enforcement of
  493  security interests, or through the collection of debts, provided
  494  that the foreign principal sells, transfers, or otherwise
  495  divests itself of such real property within 3 years after
  496  acquiring the real property.
  497         (6)(a)At the time of purchase, a buyer of the real
  498  property that is on or within 10 miles of any military
  499  installation or critical infrastructure facility in this state
  500  must provide an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury
  501  attesting that the buyer is:
  502         1.Not a foreign principal or not a foreign principal
  503  prohibited from purchasing the subject real property; and
  504         2.In compliance with the requirements of this section.
  505         (b)The failure to obtain or maintain the affidavit does
  506  not:
  507         1.Affect the title or insurability of the title for the
  508  real property; or
  509         2.Subject the closing agent to civil or criminal
  510  liability, unless the closing agent has actual knowledge that
  511  the transaction will result in a violation of this section.
  512         (c)The Florida Real Estate Commission shall adopt rules to
  513  implement this subsection, including rules establishing the form
  514  for the affidavit required under this subsection.
  515         (7)(a)If any real property is owned or acquired in
  516  violation of this section, the real property may be forfeited to
  517  the state.
  518         (b)The Department of Economic Opportunity may initiate a
  519  civil action in the circuit court of the county in which the
  520  property lies for the forfeiture of the real property or any
  521  interest therein.
  522         (c)Upon filing such action, the clerk must record a lis
  523  pendens in accordance with s. 48.23. The court must advance the
  524  cause on the calendar. The defendant may at any time petition to
  525  modify or discharge the lis pendens based upon a finding that
  526  there is no probable cause to believe that the real property, or
  527  any portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of this
  528  section.
  529         (d)If the court finds that the real property, or any
  530  portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of this section,
  531  the court must enter a final judgment of forfeiture vesting
  532  title to the real property in this state, subject only to the
  533  rights and interests of bona fide lienholders, and such final
  534  judgment relates back to the date of the lis pendens.
  535         (e)The department may sell the real property subject to a
  536  final judgment of forfeiture. Any proceeds from the sale must
  537  first be paid to any lienholders of the land, followed by
  538  payment of any outstanding fines assessed pursuant to this
  539  section, after which the department must be reimbursed for all
  540  costs related to the forfeiture civil action and any costs
  541  related to the sale of the land. Any remaining proceeds must be
  542  paid to the property owner.
  543         (f)At any time during the forfeiture proceeding the
  544  department may seek an ex parte order of seizure of the real
  545  property upon a showing that the defendant’s control of the real
  546  property constitutes a clear and present danger to the state.
  547         (8)A foreign principal that purchases or acquires real
  548  property or any interest therein in violation of this section
  549  commits a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as
  550  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
  551         (9)A person who knowingly sells real property or any
  552  interest therein in violation of this section commits a
  553  misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s.
  554  775.082 or s. 775.083.
  555         (10)The Department of Economic Opportunity shall adopt
  556  rules to implement this section.
  557         Section 7. Section 692.204, Florida Statutes, is created to
  558  read:
  559         692.204Purchase or acquisition of real property by the
  560  People’s Republic of China prohibited.—
  561         (1)(a)The following persons or entities may not directly
  562  or indirectly own, have a controlling interest in, or acquire by
  563  purchase, grant, devise, or descent any interest, except a de
  564  minimus indirect interest, in real property in this state:
  565         1.The People’s Republic of China, the Chinese Communist
  566  Party, or any official or member of the People’s Republic of
  567  China or the Chinese Communist Party.
  568         2.Any other political party or member of a political party
  569  or a subdivision of a political party in the People’s Republic
  570  of China.
  571         3.A partnership, an association, a corporation, an
  572  organization, or any other combination of persons organized
  573  under the laws of or having its principal place of business in
  574  the People’s Republic of China, or a subsidiary of such entity.
  575         4.Any person who is domiciled in the People’s Republic of
  576  China and who is not a citizen or lawful permanent resident of
  577  the United States.
  578         5.Any person, entity, or collection of persons or entities
  579  described in subparagraphs 1. through 4. having a controlling
  580  interest in a partnership, association, corporation,
  581  organization, trust, or any other legal entity or subsidiary
  582  formed for the purpose of owning real property in this state.
  583         (b)A person or entity has a de minimus indirect interest
  584  if any ownership is the result of the person’s or entity’s
  585  ownership of registered equities in a publicly traded company
  586  owning the land and if the person’s or entity’s ownership
  587  interest in the company is either:
  588         1.Less than 5 percent of any class of registered equities
  589  or less than 5 percent in the aggregate in multiple classes of
  590  registered equities; or
  591         2.A noncontrolling interest in an entity controlled by a
  592  company that is both registered with the United States
  593  Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment adviser
  594  under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, and is
  595  not a foreign entity.
  596         (2)Notwithstanding subsection (1), a natural person
  597  described in paragraph (1)(a) may purchase one residential real
  598  property that is up to 2 acres in size if all of the following
  599  apply:
  600         (a)The parcel is not on or within 5 miles of any military
  601  installation in this state.
  602         (b)The person has a current verified United States Visa
  603  that is not limited to authorizing tourist-based travel or
  604  official documentation confirming that the person has been
  605  granted asylum in the United States and such visa or
  606  documentation authorizes the person to be legally present within
  607  this state.
  608         (c)The purchase is in the name of the person who holds the
  609  visa or official documentation described in paragraph (b).
  610         (3) A person or entity described in paragraph (1)(a) that
  611  directly or indirectly owns or acquires any interest in real
  612  property in this state before July 1, 2023, may continue to own
  613  or hold such real property, but may not purchase or otherwise
  614  acquire by grant, devise, or descent any additional real
  615  property in this state.
  616         (4)(a) A person or entity described in paragraph (1)(a),
  617  subsection (2), or subsection (5) must register with the
  618  Department of Economic Opportunity if the person or entity owns
  619  or acquires more than a de minimus indirect interest in real
  620  property in this state. The department must establish a form for
  621  such registration which, at a minimum, must include all of the
  622  following:
  623         1. The name of the owner of the real property.
  624         2. The address of the real property, the property
  625  appraiser’s parcel identification number, and the property’s
  626  legal description.
  627         (b) A person or entity that fails to timely file a
  628  registration with the department is subject to a civil penalty
  629  of $1,000 for each day that the registration is late. The person
  630  or entity subject to the registration requirements must register
  631  the property or property interests owned or acquired before July
  632  1, 2023, by December 31, 2023. The registration is considered to
  633  be late 30 days after January 31, 2024. A person or entity that
  634  owns or acquires real property or an interest in real property
  635  as authorized under subsection (2) or subsection (5), other than
  636  a de minimus indirect interest, on or after July 1, 2023, must
  637  register the real property or interest within 30 days after the
  638  property or interest is owned or acquired. The department may
  639  place a lien against the unregistered real property for the
  640  unpaid balance of any penalties assessed under this paragraph.
  641         (5) Notwithstanding subsection (1), a person or an entity
  642  described in paragraph (1)(a) may acquire real property in this
  643  state on or after July 1, 2023, by devise or descent, through
  644  the enforcement of security interests, or through the collection
  645  of debts, provided that the person or entity sells, transfers,
  646  or otherwise divests itself of such real property within 3 years
  647  after acquiring the real property, unless the person or entity
  648  is exempt under s. 692.205.
  649         (6)(a) At the time of purchase, a buyer of real property in
  650  this state must provide an affidavit signed under penalty of
  651  perjury attesting that the buyer is:
  652         1. Not a person or entity described in paragraph (1)(a) or
  653  that the buyer is a person described in paragraph (1)(a) but is
  654  authorized under subsection (2) to purchase the subject
  655  property; and
  656         2. In compliance with the requirements of this section.
  657         (b) The failure to obtain or maintain the affidavit does
  658  not:
  659         1. Affect the title or insurability of the title for the
  660  real property; or
  661         2. Subject the closing agent to civil or criminal
  662  liability, unless the closing agent has actual knowledge that
  663  the transaction will result in a violation of this section.
  664         (c) The Florida Real Estate Commission shall adopt rules to
  665  implement this subsection, including rules establishing the form
  666  for the affidavit required under this subsection.
  667         (7)(a) If any real property is owned or acquired in
  668  violation of this section, the real property may be forfeited to
  669  the state.
  670         (b) The Department of Economic Opportunity may initiate a
  671  civil action in the circuit court of the county in which the
  672  property lies for the forfeiture of the real property or any
  673  interest therein.
  674         (c) Upon filing such action, the clerk must record a lis
  675  pendens in accordance with s. 48.23. The court must advance the
  676  cause on the calendar. The defendant may at any time petition to
  677  modify or discharge the lis pendens based upon a finding that
  678  there is no probable cause to believe that the real property, or
  679  any portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of this
  680  section.
  681         (d) If the court finds that the real property, or any
  682  portion thereof, is owned or held in violation of this section,
  683  the court must enter a final judgment of forfeiture vesting
  684  title to the real property in this state, subject only to the
  685  rights and interests of bona fide lienholders, and such final
  686  judgment relates back to the date of the lis pendens.
  687         (e) The department may sell the real property subject to a
  688  final judgment of forfeiture. Any proceeds from the sale must
  689  first be paid to any lienholders of the land, followed by
  690  payment of any outstanding fines assessed pursuant to this
  691  section, after which the department must be reimbursed for all
  692  costs related to the forfeiture civil action and any costs
  693  related to the sale of the land. Any remaining proceeds must be
  694  paid to the property owner.
  695         (f) At any time during the forfeiture proceeding the
  696  department may seek an ex parte order of seizure of the real
  697  property upon a showing that the defendant’s control of the real
  698  property constitutes a clear and present danger to the state.
  699         (8) A violation of this section constitutes a felony of the
  700  third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
  701  or s. 775.084.
  702         (9) A person who knowingly sells real property or any
  703  interest therein in violation of this section commits a
  704  misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s.
  705  775.082 or s. 775.083.
  706         (10) The Department of Economic Opportunity shall adopt
  707  rules to implement this section.
  708         Section 8. Section 692.205, Florida Statutes, is created to
  709  read:
  710         692.205 Inapplicability of this part to real property for
  711  diplomatic purposes.—This part does not apply to a foreign
  712  principal that acquires real property for a diplomatic purpose
  713  that is recognized, acknowledged, or allowed by the Federal
  714  Government.
  715         Section 9. Present subsections (3), (4), and (5) of section
  716  408.051, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (4),
  717  (5), and (6), respectively, a new subsection (3) is added to
  718  that section, and subsection (2) of that section is reordered
  719  and amended, to read:
  720         408.051 Florida Electronic Health Records Exchange Act.—
  721         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
  722         (c)(a) “Electronic health record” means a record of a
  723  person’s medical treatment which is created by a licensed health
  724  care provider and stored in an interoperable and accessible
  725  digital format.
  726         (i)(b) “Qualified electronic health record” means an
  727  electronic record of health-related information concerning an
  728  individual which includes patient demographic and clinical
  729  health information, such as medical history and problem lists,
  730  and which has the capacity to provide clinical decision support,
  731  to support physician order entry, to capture and query
  732  information relevant to health care quality, and to exchange
  733  electronic health information with, and integrate such
  734  information from, other sources.
  735         (a)(c) “Certified electronic health record technology”
  736  means a qualified electronic health record that is certified
  737  pursuant to s. 3001(c)(5) of the Public Health Service Act as
  738  meeting standards adopted under s. 3004 of such act which are
  739  applicable to the type of record involved, such as an ambulatory
  740  electronic health record for office-based physicians or an
  741  inpatient hospital electronic health record for hospitals.
  742         (b) “Cloud computing” has the same meaning as in s.
  743  282.0041.
  744         (d) “Health care provider” means any of the following:
  745         1. A provider as defined in s. 408.803.
  746         2. A health care practitioner as defined in s. 456.001.
  747         3. A health care professional certified under part IV of
  748  chapter 468.
  749         4. A home health aide as defined in s. 400.462.
  750         5. A service provider as defined in s. 394.455 and the
  751  service provider’s clinical and nonclinical staff who provide
  752  inpatient or outpatient services.
  753         6. A continuing care facility licensed under chapter 651.
  754         7. A pharmacy permitted under chapter 465.
  755         (e)(d) “Health record” means any information, recorded in
  756  any form or medium, which relates to the past, present, or
  757  future health of an individual for the primary purpose of
  758  providing health care and health-related services.
  759         (f)(e) “Identifiable health record” means any health record
  760  that identifies the patient or with respect to which there is a
  761  reasonable basis to believe the information can be used to
  762  identify the patient.
  763         (g)(f) “Patient” means an individual who has sought, is
  764  seeking, is undergoing, or has undergone care or treatment in a
  765  health care facility or by a health care provider.
  766         (h)(g) “Patient representative” means a parent of a minor
  767  patient, a court-appointed guardian for the patient, a health
  768  care surrogate, or a person holding a power of attorney or
  769  notarized consent appropriately executed by the patient granting
  770  permission to a health care facility or health care provider to
  771  disclose the patient’s health care information to that person.
  772  In the case of a deceased patient, the term also means the
  773  personal representative of the estate of the deceased patient;
  774  the deceased patient’s surviving spouse, surviving parent, or
  775  surviving adult child; the parent or guardian of a surviving
  776  minor child of the deceased patient; the attorney for the
  777  patient’s surviving spouse, parent, or adult child; or the
  778  attorney for the parent or guardian of a surviving minor child.
  779         (3) SECURITY AND STORAGE OF PERSONAL MEDICAL INFORMATION.
  780  In addition to the requirements in 45 C.F.R. part 160 and
  781  subparts A and C of part 164, a health care provider that
  782  utilizes certified electronic health record technology must
  783  ensure that all patient information stored in an offsite
  784  physical or virtual environment, including through a third-party
  785  or subcontracted computing facility or an entity providing cloud
  786  computing services, is physically maintained in the continental
  787  United States or its territories or Canada. This subsection
  788  applies to all qualified electronic health records that are
  789  stored using any technology that can allow information to be
  790  electronically retrieved, accessed, or transmitted.
  791         Section 10. Subsections (14) and (15) are added to section
  792  408.810, Florida Statutes, to read:
  793         408.810 Minimum licensure requirements.—In addition to the
  794  licensure requirements specified in this part, authorizing
  795  statutes, and applicable rules, each applicant and licensee must
  796  comply with the requirements of this section in order to obtain
  797  and maintain a license.
  798         (14) The licensee must sign an affidavit at the time of his
  799  or her initial application for a license and on any renewal
  800  applications thereafter that attests under penalty of perjury
  801  that he or she is in compliance with s. 408.051(3). The licensee
  802  must remain in compliance with s. 408.051(3) or the licensee
  803  shall be subject to disciplinary action by the agency.
  804         (15)(a) The licensee must ensure that a person or entity
  805  who possesses a controlling interest does not hold, either
  806  directly or indirectly, regardless of ownership structure, an
  807  interest in an entity that has a business relationship with a
  808  foreign country of concern or that is subject to s. 287.135.
  809         (b) For purposes of this subsection, the term:
  810         1. “Business relationship” means engaging in commerce in
  811  any form, including, but not limited to, acquiring, developing,
  812  maintaining, owning, selling, possessing, leasing, or operating
  813  equipment, facilities, personnel, products, services, personal
  814  property, real property, military equipment, or any other
  815  apparatus of business or commerce.
  816         2. “Foreign country of concern” has the same meaning as in
  817  s. 692.201.
  818         3. “Interest” has the same meaning as in s. 286.101(1).
  819         Section 11. Section 836.05, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  820  read:
  821         836.05 Threats; extortion.—
  822         (1) Whoever, either verbally or by a written or printed
  823  communication, maliciously threatens to accuse another of any
  824  crime or offense, or by such communication maliciously threatens
  825  an injury to the person, property or reputation of another, or
  826  maliciously threatens to expose another to disgrace, or to
  827  expose any secret affecting another, or to impute any deformity
  828  or lack of chastity to another, with intent thereby to extort
  829  money or any pecuniary advantage whatsoever, or with intent to
  830  compel the person so threatened, or any other person, to do any
  831  act or refrain from doing any act against his or her will,
  832  commits shall be guilty of a felony of the second degree,
  833  punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  834         (2) A person who commits a violation of subsection (1) and
  835  at the time of the violation is acting as a foreign agent, as
  836  defined in s. 812.081(1), with the intent of benefiting a
  837  foreign country of concern, as defined in s. 692.201, commits a
  838  felony of the first degree, punishable as provided in s.
  839  775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  840         Section 12. This act shall take effect July 1, 2023.

feedback