Bill Text: FL S0648 | 2010 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Building Safety [CPSC]

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-04-29 - Placed on Special Order Calendar; Read 2nd time -SJ 01005; Amendment(s) adopted (772328, 404418, 337832, 298178, 169094) -SJ 01007; Substituted CS/CS/CS/CS/HB 663 -SJ 01007; Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/CS/CS/HB 663 (Ch. 2010-176), CS/CS/CS/HB 713 (Ch. 2010-106), CS/HB 1035 (Ch. 2010-110), CS/CS/CS/SB 846 (Ch. 2010-99), SB 1136 (Ch. 2010-173), CS/CS/CS/SB 1196 (Ch. 2010-174) -SJ 01007 [S0648 Detail]

Download: Florida-2010-S0648-Comm_Sub.html
 
Florida Senate - 2010                       CS for CS for SB 648 
 
By the Committees on Military Affairs and Domestic Security; and 
Community Affairs; and Senator Bennett 
583-05280-10                                           2010648c2 
1                        A bill to be entitled 
2         An act relating to building safety; amending s. 
3         196.031, F.S.; specifying an additional condition that 
4         constitutes an abandonment of homestead property for 
5         purposes of a homestead exemption; amending s. 399.02, 
6         F.S.; authorizing the Division of Hotels and 
7         Restaurants of the Department of Business and 
8         Professional Regulation to have access to places in 
9         which a conveyance and equipment are located; 
10         authorizing the division to grant variances from 
11         certain rules for undue hardship; prohibiting the 
12         enforcement of Phase II Firefighters’ Service on 
13         certain elevators for a specified period; amending s. 
14         399.15, F.S.; providing an alternative method to allow 
15         access to regional emergency elevators; providing for 
16         a uniform lock box; providing for a master key; 
17         providing the Division of State Fire Marshal with 
18         enforcement authority; directing the Department of 
19         Financial Services to select the provider of the 
20         uniform lock box; creating s. 455.2122, F.S.; 
21         authorizing distance learning courses as an 
22         alternative to classroom instruction for certain 
23         licenses; prohibiting the department or regulatory 
24         board from requiring centralized licensing 
25         examinations for certain licenses; amending s. 
26         455.2123, F.S.; authorizing distance learning courses 
27         as an alternative to classroom instruction for certain 
28         licenses; prohibiting the department or a regulatory 
29         board from requiring centralized licensing 
30         examinations for certain licenses; amending s. 
31         468.631, F.S.; revising the amount of a surcharge on 
32         certain building permits; requiring the unit of 
33         government collecting the surcharge to remit the funds 
34         to the Department of Business and Professional 
35         Regulation; requiring the unit of government 
36         collecting the surcharge to retain a portion of the 
37         funds to fund certain activities of building 
38         departments; requiring that the remaining funds from 
39         the surcharge be used to fund the Florida Homeowners’ 
40         Construction Recovery Fund and the Florida Building 
41         Code Administrators and Inspectors Board; reducing the 
42         amount of information that must be reported to the 
43         Department of Business and Professional Regulation by 
44         a unit of government responsible for collecting 
45         certain permit fees; amending s. 468.83, F.S.; 
46         providing for the creation of the home inspection 
47         services licensing program within the Department of 
48         Business and Professional Regulation; amending s. 
49         468.8311, F.S.; revising the term “home inspection 
50         services”; amending s. 468.8312, F.S.; deleting a fee 
51         provision for certain certificates of authorization; 
52         amending s. 468.8313, F.S.; revising examination 
53         requirements for licensure as a home inspector; 
54         providing fingerprinting requirements and procedures 
55         for license applications; providing that the applicant 
56         is responsible for certain costs; amending s. 
57         468.8318, F.S.; revising requirements and procedures 
58         for certification of corporations and partnerships 
59         offering home inspection services to the public; 
60         deleting provisions relating to required certificates 
61         of authorization; amending s. 468.8319, F.S.; delaying 
62         the enforcement of a prohibition against performing 
63         certain activities by a person who is not licensed as 
64         a home inspector; revising certain prohibitions with 
65         respect to providers of home inspection services; 
66         amending s. 468.832, F.S.; providing an additional 
67         ground for taking certain disciplinary actions; 
68         amending s. 468.8324, F.S.; specifying additional 
69         requirements for licensure as a home inspector; 
70         creating s. 468.8325, F.S.; requiring the department 
71         to adopt rules to administer part XV of ch. 468, F.S., 
72         relating to home inspectors; amending s. 468.84, F.S.; 
73         providing for the creation of the mold-related 
74         services licensing program within the Department of 
75         Business and Professional Regulation; amending s. 
76         468.8412, F.S.; deleting a fee provision for certain 
77         biennial certificates of authorization renewal; 
78         amending s. 468.8413, F.S.; revising examination 
79         requirements and procedures for licensure as a mold 
80         assessor or mold remediator; providing fingerprinting 
81         requirements and procedures for license applications; 
82         providing that the applicant is responsible for 
83         certain costs; amending s. 468.8414, F.S.; specifying 
84         an additional applicant qualification criterion for 
85         licensure by endorsement; amending s. 468.8418, F.S.; 
86         revising requirements and procedures for certification 
87         of corporations and partnerships offering mold 
88         assessment or mold remediation services to the public; 
89         deleting provisions relating to required certificates 
90         of authorization; amending s. 468.8419, F.S.; delaying 
91         the enforcement of a prohibition against performing 
92         certain activities by a person who is not licensed as 
93         a mold assessor; amending s. 468.842, F.S.; providing 
94         an additional ground for taking certain disciplinary 
95         actions; amending s. 468.8421, F.S.; specifying an 
96         insurance coverage requirement for mold assessors; 
97         amending s. 468.8423, F.S.; specifying additional 
98         requirements for licensure as a mold assessor or mold 
99         remediator; creating s. 468.8424, F.S.; requiring the 
100         Department of Business and Professional Regulation to 
101         adopt rules to administer part XVI of ch. 468, F.S., 
102         relating to mold-related services; amending s. 
103         489.103, F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; amending 
104         s. 489.5335, F.S.; deleting certain core curriculum 
105         requirements that a person holding a journeyman 
106         license in the electrical trade must satisfy in order 
107         to work in more than one county or municipality; 
108         amending s. 553.37, F.S.; authorizing manufacturers to 
109         pay inspection fees directly to the provider of 
110         inspection services; providing requirements for rules 
111         of the Department of Business and Professional 
112         Regulation regarding the schedule of fees; authorizing 
113         the department to enter into contracts for the 
114         performance of certain administrative duties; revising 
115         inspection requirements for certain custom 
116         manufactured buildings; amending s. 553.375, F.S.; 
117         revising the requirement for recertification of 
118         manufactured buildings prior to relocation; amending 
119         s. 553.512, F.S.; requiring the Florida Building 
120         Commission to establish by rule a fee for certain 
121         waiver requests; amending s. 553.721, F.S.; revising 
122         the amount of a surcharge on certain building permits; 
123         requiring the unit of government collecting the 
124         surcharge to electronically remit the funds to the 
125         Department of Community Affairs; requiring the unit of 
126         government collecting the surcharge to retain a 
127         portion of the funds to fund certain activities of 
128         building departments; requiring the remaining funds 
129         from the surcharge to be used to fund the Florida 
130         Building Commission and the Department of Community 
131         Affairs; amending s. 553.73, F.S.; conforming cross 
132         references; authorizing counties and municipalities to 
133         adopt by ordinance administrative or technical 
134         amendments to the Florida Building Code for certain 
135         flood-related purposes; specifying requirements and 
136         procedures; revising foundation code adoption 
137         requirements; authorizing the Florida Building 
138         Commission to approve amendments relating to 
139         equivalency of standards; exempting certain mausoleums 
140         from the requirements of the Florida Building Code; 
141         exempting certain temporary housing provided by the 
142         Department of Corrections from the requirements of the 
143         Florida Building Code; restricting the code, code 
144         enforcement agencies, and local governments from 
145         imposing requirements on certain mechanical equipment 
146         on roofs; requiring that the Florida Building Code 
147         contain certain requirements regarding illumination in 
148         classroom units; requiring that classroom units be 
149         designed to provide and maintain an average of 40 
150         foot-candles of light at each desktop; requiring that 
151         public educational facilities consider using light 
152         emitting diode lighting before considering other 
153         lighting sources; amending s. 553.74, F.S.; specifying 
154         absence of impermissible conflicts of interest for 
155         certain committee or workgroup members while 
156         representing clients under certain circumstances; 
157         specifying certain prohibited activities for such 
158         members; amending s. 553.76, F.S.; authorizing the 
159         Florida Building Commission to adopt rules related to 
160         consensus-based decisionmaking; amending s. 553.775, 
161         F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; authorizing the 
162         commission to charge a fee for filing certain requests 
163         and for nonbinding interpretations; limiting fees for 
164         nonbinding interpretations; amending s. 553.79, F.S.; 
165         requiring certain inspection services to be performed 
166         under the alternative process for plan review and 
167         inspection or by a local governmental entity; 
168         reenacting s. 553.80(1), F.S., relating to the 
169         enforcement of the Florida Building Code, to 
170         incorporate the amendments made to s. 553.79, F.S., in 
171         a reference thereto; amending s. 553.80, F.S.; 
172         specifying nonapplicability of certain exemptions from 
173         the Florida Building Code granted by certain 
174         enforcement entities under certain circumstances; 
175         revising requirements for review of facility plans and 
176         construction surveyed for certain hospitals and health 
177         care facilities; amending s. 553.841, F.S.; deleting 
178         provisions requiring that the Department of Community 
179         Affairs maintain, update, develop, or cause to be 
180         developed a core curriculum for persons who enforce 
181         the Florida Building Code; amending s. 553.842, F.S.; 
182         authorizing rules requiring the payment of product 
183         evaluation fees directly to the administrator of the 
184         product evaluation and approval system; specifying the 
185         use of such fees; authorizing the Florida Building 
186         Commission to provide by rule for editorial revisions 
187         to certain approvals and charge certain fees; 
188         providing requirements for the approval of 
189         applications for state approval of a product; 
190         providing for certain approved products to be 
191         immediately added to the list of state-approved 
192         products; requiring that the commission’s oversight 
193         committee review approved products; revising the list 
194         of approved evaluation entities; deleting obsolete 
195         provisions governing evaluation entities; amending s. 
196         553.844, F.S.; providing an exemption from the 
197         requirements regarding protections for certain exposed 
198         mechanical equipment or appliances; providing for 
199         future expiration; amending s. 553.885, F.S.; revising 
200         requirements for carbon monoxide alarms; providing an 
201         exception for buildings undergoing alterations or 
202         repairs; defining the term “addition” as it relates to 
203         the requirement of a carbon monoxide alarm; amending 
204         s. 553.9061, F.S.; revising the energy-efficiency 
205         performance options and elements identified by the 
206         commission for purposes of meeting certain goals; 
207         amending s. 553.909, F.S.; revising a compliance 
208         criterion for certain swimming pool pumps or water 
209         heaters; revising requirements for residential 
210         swimming pool pumps and pump motors; amending s. 
211         553.912, F.S.; providing requirements for replacement 
212         air-conditioning systems; amending s. 627.711, F.S.; 
213         revising provisions relating to a uniform mitigation 
214         verification inspection form for factoring discounts 
215         for wind insurance; providing that such form is valid 
216         if signed by a home inspector who has completed a 
217         specified number of hours of mitigation training; 
218         amending s. 633.021, F.S.; providing additional 
219         definitions for fire equipment dealers; revising the 
220         definition of the term “preengineered systems”; 
221         amending s. 633.0215, F.S.; providing guidelines for 
222         the State Fire Marshal to apply when issuing an 
223         expedited declaratory statement; requiring that the 
224         State Fire Marshal issue an expedited declaratory 
225         statement under certain circumstances; providing 
226         requirements for a petition requesting an expedited 
227         declaratory statement; exempting certain condominiums 
228         from installing manual fire alarm systems; amending s. 
229         633.0245, F.S.; conforming cross-references; amending 
230         s. 633.025, F.S.; providing that property owners are 
231         not required to install fire sprinklers in residential 
232         properties based on the use of that property as a 
233         rental property or any change in or reclassification 
234         of the property’s primary use to a rental property; 
235         amending s. 633.026, F.S.; providing legislative 
236         intent; revising the authority of the State Fire 
237         Marshal to contract with and refer interpretive issues 
238         to certain entities; providing for the establishment 
239         of the Fire Code Interpretation Committee; providing 
240         for the membership of the committee and requirements 
241         for membership; requiring that nonbinding 
242         interpretations of the Florida Fire Prevention Code be 
243         issued within a specified period after a request is 
244         received; providing for the waiver of such requirement 
245         under certain conditions; requiring that the Division 
246         of State Fire Marshal charge a fee for nonbinding 
247         interpretations; providing that fees may be paid 
248         directly to a contract provider; providing 
249         requirements for requesting a nonbinding 
250         interpretation; requiring that the Division of State 
251         Fire Marshal develop a form for submitting a petition 
252         for a nonbinding interpretation; providing for a 
253         formal interpretation by the State Fire Marshal; 
254         requiring that an interpretation of the Florida Fire 
255         Prevention Code be published on the division’s website 
256         and in the Florida Administrative Weekly; amending s. 
257         626.061, F.S.; authorizing certain fire equipment 
258         dealer licensees to maintain inactive license status 
259         under certain circumstances; providing requirements; 
260         providing for a renewal fee; revising certain 
261         continuing education requirements; revising an 
262         applicant licensure qualification requirement; 
263         amending s. 633.081, F.S.; requiring that the State 
264         Fire Marshal inspect a building when the State Fire 
265         Marshal, rather than the Department of Financial 
266         Services, has cause to believe a violation has 
267         occurred; providing exceptions for requirements that 
268         certain firesafety inspections be conducted by 
269         firesafety inspectors; requiring that the Division of 
270         State Fire Marshal and the Florida Building Code 
271         Administrators and Inspectors Board enter into a 
272         reciprocity agreement for purposes of recertifying 
273         building code inspectors, plan inspectors, building 
274         code administrators, and firesafety inspectors; 
275         requiring that the State Fire Marshal develop by rule 
276         an advanced training and certification program for 
277         firesafety inspectors who have fire code management 
278         responsibilities; requiring that the program be 
279         consistent with certain standards and establish 
280         minimum training, education, and experience levels for 
281         such firesafety inspectors; amending s. 633.082, F.S.; 
282         authorizing alternative inspection procedures for 
283         certain fire hydrants; requiring periodic testing or 
284         operation of certain equipment; prohibiting an agency 
285         having jurisdiction from requiring the removal of a 
286         nonmandatory sprinkler system; amending s. 633.352, 
287         F.S.; providing an exception to requirements for 
288         recertification as a firefighter; amending s. 633.521, 
289         F.S.; revising requirements for certification as a 
290         fire protection system contractor; revising the 
291         prerequisites for taking the certification 
292         examination; authorizing the State Fire Marshal to 
293         accept more than one source of professional 
294         certification; revising legislative intent; amending 
295         s. 633.524, F.S.; authorizing the State Fire Marshal 
296         to enter into contracts for examination services; 
297         providing for the direct payment of examination fees 
298         to contract providers; amending s. 633.537, F.S.; 
299         revising the continuing education requirements for 
300         certain permitholders; amending s. 633.72, F.S.; 
301         revising the terms of service for members of the Fire 
302         Code Advisory Council; repealing s. 718.113(6), F.S., 
303         relating to requirements for 5-year inspections of 
304         certain condominium improvements; directing the 
305         Florida Building Commission to conform provisions of 
306         the Florida Building Code with revisions made by the 
307         act relating to the operation of elevators; requiring 
308         the Department of Management Services to consider the 
309         energy efficiency of buildings owned or operated by a 
310         state agency; requiring the Department of Management 
311         Services to lease buildings and facilities having 
312         high-efficiency lighting and consider energy 
313         efficiency when leasing buildings when feasible; 
314         requiring the Department of Management Services to 
315         adopt rules requiring state agencies to install high 
316         efficiency lamps when replacing an existing lamp or 
317         installing a new lamp in a building owned by a state 
318         agency; providing effective dates. 
319 
320  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 
321 
322         Section 1. Subsection (6) of section 196.031, Florida 
323  Statutes, is amended to read: 
324         196.031 Exemption of homesteads.— 
325         (6) When homestead property is damaged or destroyed by 
326  misfortune or calamity and the property is uninhabitable on 
327  January 1 after the damage or destruction occurs, the homestead 
328  exemption may be granted if the property is otherwise qualified 
329  and if the property owner notifies the property appraiser that 
330  he or she intends to repair or rebuild the property and live in 
331  the property as his or her primary residence after the property 
332  is repaired or rebuilt and does not claim a homestead exemption 
333  on any other property or otherwise violate this section. Failure 
334  by the property owner to commence the repair or rebuilding of 
335  the homestead property within 3 years after January 1 following 
336  the property’s damage or destruction constitutes abandonment of 
337  the property as a homestead. After the 3-year period, the 
338  expiration, lapse, nonrenewal, or revocation of a building 
339  permit issued to the property owner for such repairs or 
340  rebuilding also constitutes abandonment of the property as 
341  homestead. 
342         Section 2. Subsection (6) of section 399.02, Florida 
343  Statutes, is amended, and subsections (8) and (9) are added to 
344  that section, to read: 
345         399.02 General requirements.— 
346         (6)(a) The department is empowered to carry out all of the 
347  provisions of this chapter relating to the inspection and 
348  regulation of elevators and to enforce the provisions of the 
349  Florida Building Code. 
350         (b) In order to perform its duties and responsibilities 
351  under this section, the division may enter and have reasonable 
352  access to all buildings and rooms or spaces in which an existing 
353  or newly installed conveyance and equipment are located. 
354         (8) The division may grant variances for undue hardship 
355  pursuant to s. 120.542 and the rules adopted under this section. 
356  Such rules must include a process for requests for variances. 
357  The division may not grant a request for a variance unless it 
358  finds that the variance will not adversely affect the safety of 
359  the public. 
360         (9) Updates to the Safety Code for Existing Elevators and 
361  Escalators, ASME A17.1 and A17.3, which require Phase II 
362  Firefighters’ Service on elevators may not be enforced until 
363  July 1, 2015, or until the elevator is replaced or requires 
364  major modification, whichever occurs first, on elevators in 
365  condominiums or multifamily residential buildings, including 
366  those that are part of a continuing care facility licensed under 
367  chapter 651, or similar retirement community with apartments, 
368  having a certificate of occupancy by the local building 
369  authority which was issued before July 1, 2008. This exception 
370  does not prevent an elevator owner from requesting a variance 
371  from the applicable codes before or after July 1, 2015. This 
372  subsection does not prohibit the division from granting 
373  variances pursuant to s. 120.542 and subsection (8). The 
374  division shall adopt rules to administer this subsection. 
375         Section 3. Present subsection (7) of section 399.15, 
376  Florida Statutes, is renumbered as subsection (8), and a new 
377  subsection (7) is added to that section to read: 
378         399.15 Regional emergency elevator access.— 
379         (7) As an alternative to complying with the requirements of 
380  subsection (1), each building in this state which is required to 
381  meet the provisions of subsections (1) and (2) may instead 
382  provide for the installation of a uniform lock box that contains 
383  the keys to all elevators in the building allowing public 
384  access, including service and freight elevators. The uniform 
385  lock box must be keyed to allow all uniform lock boxes in each 
386  of the seven state emergency response regions to operate in fire 
387  emergency situations using one master key. The master key for 
388  the uniform lock shall be issued only to the fire department. 
389  The Division of State Fire Marshal of the Department of 
390  Financial Services shall enforce this subsection. The Department 
391  of Financial Services shall select the provider of the uniform 
392  lock box to be installed in each building in which the 
393  requirements of this subsection are implemented. 
394         Section 4. Section 455.2122, Florida Statutes, is created 
395  to read: 
396         455.2122 Education.—A board, or the department where there 
397  is no board, shall approve distance learning courses as an 
398  alternative to classroom courses to satisfy prelicensure or 
399  postlicensure education requirements provided for in part VIII 
400  of chapter 468 or part I of chapter 475. A board, or the 
401  department when there is no board, may not require centralized 
402  examinations for completion of prelicensure or postlicensure 
403  education requirements for those professions licensed under part 
404  VIII of chapter 468 or part I of chapter 475. 
405         Section 5. Section 455.2123, Florida Statutes, is amended 
406  to read: 
407         455.2123 Continuing education.—A board, or the department 
408  when there is no board, may provide by rule that distance 
409  learning may be used to satisfy continuing education 
410  requirements. A board, or the department when there is no board, 
411  shall approve distance learning courses as an alternative to 
412  classroom courses to satisfy continuing education requirements 
413  provided for in part VIII, part XV, or part XVI of chapter 468 
414  or part I or part II of chapter 475 and may not require 
415  centralized examinations for completion of continuing education 
416  requirements for the professions licensed under part VIII, part 
417  XV, or part XVI of chapter 468 or part I or part II of chapter 
418  475. 
419         Section 6. Effective October 1, 2010, section 468.631, 
420  Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
421         468.631 Building Code Administrators and Inspectors Fund.— 
422         (1) This part shall be funded through a surcharge, to be 
423  assessed pursuant to s. 125.56(4) or s. 166.201 at the rate of 
424  1.5 percent of all permit fees associated with enforcement of 
425  the Florida Building Code as defined by the uniform account 
426  criteria and specifically the uniform account code for building 
427  permits adopted for local government financial reporting 
428  pursuant to s. 218.32 one-half cent per square foot of under 
429  roof floor space permitted, including new construction, 
430  renovations, alterations, and additions. The minimum amount 
431  collected on any permit issued shall be $2. The unit of 
432  government responsible for collecting permit fees pursuant to s. 
433  125.56(4) or s. 166.201 shall collect such surcharge and shall 
434  remit the funds to the department on a quarterly calendar basis 
435  beginning not later than December 31, 2010 1993, for the 
436  preceding quarter, and continuing each third month thereafter; 
437  and such unit of government shall may retain an amount up to 10 
438  percent of the surcharge collected to fund the participation of 
439  building departments in the national and state building code 
440  promulgation processes and to provide education related to 
441  enforcement of the Florida Building Code projects and activities 
442  intended to improve the quality of building code enforcement. 
443  There is created within the Professional Regulation Trust Fund a 
444  separate account to be known as the Building Code Administrators 
445  and Inspectors Fund, which shall deposit and disburse funds as 
446  necessary for the implementation of this part. The proceeds from 
447  this surcharge shall be allocated equally to fund the Florida 
448  Homeowners’ Construction Recovery Fund established by s. 489.140 
449  and the functions of the Building Code Administrators and 
450  Inspectors Board. The department shall annually establish the 
451  amount needed to fund the certification and regulation of 
452  building code administrators, plans examiners, and building code 
453  inspectors. Any funds collected in excess of the amount needed 
454  to adequately fund the certification and regulation of building 
455  code administrators, plans examiners, and building code 
456  inspectors shall be deposited into the Florida Homeowners’ 
457  Construction Recovery Fund established by s. 489.140. If the 
458  Florida Homeowners’ Construction Recovery Fund is fully funded 
459  as provided by s. 489.140, any remaining funds shall be 
460  distributed to the Construction Industry Licensing Board for use 
461  in the regulation of certified and registered contractors. 
462         (2) The unit of government responsible for collecting 
463  permit fees under this section shall report to the department 
464  quarterly the number of permits issued for under-roof floor 
465  space during the quarter, the total square footage for the 
466  number of permits issued for under-roof floor space during the 
467  quarter, and the calculation of the amount of funds being 
468  remitted to the department. The report shall be attested to by 
469  the officer in charge of collecting permit fees. 
470         Section 7. Section 468.83, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
471  read: 
472         468.83 Home inspection services licensing program; 
473  purpose.— 
474         (1) There is created within the department the home 
475  inspection services licensing program. 
476         (2) The Legislature recognizes that there is a need to 
477  require the licensing of home inspectors and to ensure that 
478  consumers of home inspection services can rely on the competence 
479  of home inspectors, as determined by educational and experience 
480  requirements and testing. Therefore, the Legislature deems it 
481  necessary in the interest of the public welfare to regulate home 
482  inspectors in this state. 
483         Section 8. Subsection (4) of section 468.8311, Florida 
484  Statutes, is amended to read: 
485         468.8311 Definitions.—As used in this part, the term: 
486         (4) “Home inspection services” means a limited visual 
487  examination of one or more of the following readily accessible 
488  installed systems and components of a home: the structure, 
489  electrical system, HVAC system, roof covering, plumbing system, 
490  interior components, exterior components, and site conditions 
491  that affect the structure, for the purposes of providing a 
492  written professional opinion of the condition of the home. 
493         Section 9. Subsections (4) through (8) of section 468.8312, 
494  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
495         468.8312 Fees.— 
496         (4) The fee for a certificate of authorization shall not 
497  exceed $125. 
498         (4)(5) The biennial renewal fee shall not exceed $200. 
499         (5)(6) The fee for licensure by endorsement shall not 
500  exceed $200. 
501         (6)(7) The fee for application for inactive status or for 
502  reactivation of an inactive license shall not exceed $200. 
503         (7)(8) The fee for applications from providers of 
504  continuing education may not exceed $500. 
505         Section 10. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 468.8313, 
506  Florida Statutes, are amended, present subsection (6) of that 
507  section is renumbered as subsection (7) and amended, and a new 
508  subsection (6) is added to that section, to read: 
509         468.8313 Examinations.— 
510         (1) A person desiring to be licensed as a home inspector 
511  must shall apply to the department after he or she satisfies the 
512  examination requirements of this part to take a licensure 
513  examination. 
514         (2) An applicant may shall be entitled to take the 
515  licensure examination for the purpose of determining whether he 
516  or she is qualified to practice in this state as a home 
517  inspector if he or she passes the required examination, the 
518  applicant is of good moral character, and completes has 
519  completed a course of study of at least no less than 120 hours 
520  that covers all of the following components of a home: 
521  structure, electrical system, HVAC system, roof covering, 
522  plumbing system, interior components, exterior components, and 
523  site conditions that affect the structure. 
524         (6) An applicant for a license shall submit, together with 
525  the application, a complete set of electronic fingerprints to 
526  the department. The department shall submit the fingerprints to 
527  the Department of Law Enforcement for state processing, and the 
528  Department of Law Enforcement shall forward them to the Federal 
529  Bureau of Investigation for national processing, to determine 
530  whether the applicant has a criminal history record. The 
531  department shall review the background results to determine if 
532  an applicant meets licensure requirements. The applicant is 
533  responsible for the cost associated with processing the 
534  fingerprints. The authorized agencies or vendors shall collect 
535  such fees and pay the processing costs due to the Department of 
536  Law Enforcement. 
537         (7)(6) The department may adopt rules pursuant to ss. 
538  120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement the provisions of this 
539  section. 
540         Section 11. Section 468.8318, Florida Statutes, is amended 
541  to read: 
542         468.8318 Certification of corporations and partnerships.— 
543         (1) The department shall issue a certificate of 
544  authorization to a corporation or partnership offering home 
545  inspection services to the public if the corporation or 
546  partnership satisfies all of the requirements of this part. 
547         (2) The practice of or the offer to practice home 
548  inspection services by licensees through a corporation or 
549  partnership offering home inspection services to the public, or 
550  by a corporation or partnership offering such services to the 
551  public through licensees under this part as agents, employees, 
552  officers, or partners, is permitted subject to the provisions of 
553  this part, provided that all personnel of the corporation or 
554  partnership who act in its behalf as home inspectors in this 
555  state are licensed as provided by this part; and further 
556  provided that the corporation or partnership has been issued a 
557  certificate of authorization by the department as provided in 
558  this section. Nothing in this section shall be construed to 
559  allow a corporation to hold a license to practice home 
560  inspection services. No corporation or partnership shall be 
561  relieved of responsibility for the conduct or acts of its 
562  agents, employees, or officers by reason of its compliance with 
563  this section, nor shall any individual practicing home 
564  inspection services be relieved of responsibility for 
565  professional services performed by reason of his or her 
566  employment or relationship with a corporation or partnership. 
567         (3) For the purposes of this section, a certificate of 
568  authorization shall be required for a corporation, partnership, 
569  association, or person practicing under a fictitious name and 
570  offering home inspection services to the public; however, when 
571  an individual is practicing home inspection services in his or 
572  her own given name, he or she shall not be required to register 
573  under this section. 
574         (4) Each certificate of authorization shall be renewed 
575  every 2 years. Each partnership and corporation certified under 
576  this section shall notify the department within 1 month of any 
577  change in the information contained in the application upon 
578  which the certification is based. 
579         (5) Disciplinary action against a corporation or 
580  partnership shall be administered in the same manner and on the 
581  same grounds as disciplinary action against a licensed home 
582  inspector. 
583         Section 12. Section 468.8319, Florida Statutes, is amended 
584  to read: 
585         468.8319 Prohibitions; penalties.— 
586         (1) A person home inspector, a company that employs a home 
587  inspector, or a company that is controlled by a company that 
588  also has a financial interest in a company employing a home 
589  inspector may not: 
590         (a) Effective July 1, 2011, practice or offer to practice 
591  home inspection services unless the person has complied with the 
592  provisions of this part; 
593         (b) Effective July 1, 2011, use the name or title 
594  “certified home inspector,” “registered home inspector,” 
595  “licensed home inspector,” “home inspector,” “professional home 
596  inspector,” or any combination thereof unless the person has 
597  complied with the provisions of this part; 
598         (c) Present as his or her own the license of another; 
599         (d) Knowingly give false or forged evidence to the 
600  department or an employee thereof; 
601         (e) Use or attempt to use a license that has been suspended 
602  or revoked; 
603         (f) Perform or offer to perform, prior to closing, for any 
604  additional fee, any repairs to a home on which the inspector or 
605  the inspector’s company has prepared a home inspection report. 
606  This paragraph does not apply to a home warranty company that is 
607  affiliated with or retains a home inspector to perform repairs 
608  pursuant to a claim made under a home warranty contract; 
609         (g) Inspect for a fee any property in which the inspector 
610  or the inspector’s company has any financial or transfer 
611  interest; 
612         (h) Offer or deliver any compensation, inducement, or 
613  reward to any broker or agent therefor for the referral of the 
614  owner of the inspected property to the inspector or the 
615  inspection company; or 
616         (i) Accept an engagement to make an omission or prepare a 
617  report in which the inspection itself, or the fee payable for 
618  the inspection, is contingent upon either the conclusions in the 
619  report, preestablished findings, or the close of escrow. 
620         (2) Any person who is found to be in violation of any 
621  provision of this section commits a misdemeanor of the first 
622  degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. 
623         (3) This section does not apply to unlicensed activity as 
624  described in paragraph (1)(a), paragraph (1)(b), or s. 455.228 
625  which occurs before July 1, 2011. 
626         Section 13. Subsection (1) of section 468.832, Florida 
627  Statutes, is amended to read: 
628         468.832 Disciplinary proceedings.— 
629         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for which the 
630  disciplinary actions in subsection (2) may be taken: 
631         (a) Violation of any provision of this part or s. 
632  455.227(1).; 
633         (b) Attempting to procure a license to practice home 
634  inspection services by bribery or fraudulent misrepresentation.; 
635         (c) Having a license to practice home inspection services 
636  revoked, suspended, or otherwise acted against, including the 
637  denial of licensure, by the licensing authority of another 
638  state, territory, or country.; 
639         (d) Being convicted or found guilty of, or entering a plea 
640  of nolo contendere to, regardless of adjudication, a crime in 
641  any jurisdiction that directly relates to the practice of home 
642  inspection services or the ability to practice home inspection 
643  services.; 
644         (e) Making or filing a report or record that the licensee 
645  knows to be false, willfully failing to file a report or record 
646  required by state or federal law, willfully impeding or 
647  obstructing such filing, or inducing another person to impede or 
648  obstruct such filing. Such reports or records shall include only 
649  those that are signed in the capacity of a licensed home 
650  inspector.; 
651         (f) Advertising goods or services in a manner that is 
652  fraudulent, false, deceptive, or misleading in form or content.; 
653         (g) Engaging in fraud or deceit, or negligence, 
654  incompetency, or misconduct, in the practice of home inspection 
655  services.; 
656         (h) Failing to perform any statutory or legal obligation 
657  placed upon a licensed home inspector; violating any provision 
658  of this chapter, a rule of the department, or a lawful order of 
659  the department previously entered in a disciplinary hearing; or 
660  failing to comply with a lawfully issued subpoena of the 
661  department.; or 
662         (i) Practicing on a revoked, suspended, inactive, or 
663  delinquent license. 
664         (j) Failing to meet any standard of practice adopted by 
665  rule of the department. 
666         Section 14. Section 468.8324, Florida Statutes, is amended 
667  to read: 
668         468.8324 Grandfather clause.— 
669         (1) A person who performs home inspection services as 
670  defined in this part may qualify for licensure to be licensed by 
671  the department as a home inspector if the person submits an 
672  application to the department postmarked on or before March 1, 
673  2011, which shows that the applicant: meets the licensure 
674  requirements of this part by July 1, 2010. 
675         (a) Is certified as a home inspector by a state or national 
676  association that requires, for such certification, successful 
677  completion of a proctored examination on home inspection 
678  services and completes at least 14 hours of verifiable education 
679  on such services; or 
680         (b) Has at least 3 years of experience as a home inspector 
681  at the time of application and has completed 14 hours of 
682  verifiable education on home inspection services. To establish 
683  the 3 years of experience, an applicant must submit at least 120 
684  home inspection reports prepared by the applicant. 
685         (2) The department may investigate the validity of a home 
686  inspection report submitted under paragraph (1)(b) and, if the 
687  applicant submits a false report, may take disciplinary action 
688  against the applicant under s. 468.832(1)(e) or (g). 
689         (3) An applicant may not qualify for licensure under this 
690  section if he or she has had a home inspector license or a 
691  license in any related field revoked at any time or suspended 
692  within the previous 5 years or has been assessed a fine that 
693  exceeds $500 within the previous 5 years. For purposes of this 
694  subsection, a license in a related field includes, but is not 
695  limited to, licensure in real estate, construction, mold-related 
696  services, or building code administration or inspection. 
697         (4) An applicant for licensure under this section must 
698  comply with the criminal history, good moral character, and 
699  insurance requirements of this part. 
700         Section 15. Section 468.8325, Florida Statutes, is created 
701  to read: 
702         468.8325 Rulemaking authority.—The department shall adopt 
703  rules to administer this part. 
704         Section 16. Section 468.84, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
705  read: 
706         468.84 Mold-related services licensing program; legislative 
707  purpose.— 
708         (1) There is created within the department the mold-related 
709  services licensing program. 
710         (2) The Legislature finds it necessary in the interest of 
711  the public safety and welfare, to prevent damage to real and 
712  personal property, to avert economic injury to the residents of 
713  this state, and to regulate persons and companies that hold 
714  themselves out to the public as qualified to perform mold 
715  related services. 
716         Section 17. Subsections (6) through (10) of section 
717  468.8412, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
718         468.8412 Fees.— 
719         (6) The fee for a biennial certificate of authorization 
720  renewal shall not exceed $400. 
721         (6)(7) The fee for licensure by endorsement shall not 
722  exceed $200. 
723         (7)(8) The fee for application for inactive status shall 
724  not exceed $100. 
725         (8)(9) The fee for reactivation of an inactive license 
726  shall not exceed $200. 
727         (9)(10) The fee for applications from providers of 
728  continuing education may not exceed $500. 
729         Section 18. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 468.8413, 
730  Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (6) is added to 
731  that section, to read: 
732         468.8413 Examinations.— 
733         (1) A person desiring to be licensed as a mold assessor or 
734  mold remediator must shall apply to the department after 
735  satisfying the examination requirements of this part to take a 
736  licensure examination. 
737         (2) An applicant may shall be entitled to take the 
738  licensure examination to practice in this state as a mold 
739  assessor or mold remediator if he or she passes the required 
740  examination, the applicant is of good moral character, and 
741  completes has satisfied one of the following requirements: 
742         (a)1. For a mold remediator, at least a 2-year associate of 
743  arts degree, or the equivalent, with at least 30 semester hours 
744  in microbiology, engineering, architecture, industrial hygiene, 
745  occupational safety, or a related field of science from an 
746  accredited institution and a minimum of 1 year of documented 
747  field experience in a field related to mold remediation; or 
748         2. A high school diploma or the equivalent with a minimum 
749  of 4 years of documented field experience in a field related to 
750  mold remediation. 
751         (b)1. For a mold assessor, at least a 2-year associate of 
752  arts degree, or the equivalent, with at least 30 semester hours 
753  in microbiology, engineering, architecture, industrial hygiene, 
754  occupational safety, or a related field of science from an 
755  accredited institution and a minimum of 1 year of documented 
756  field experience in conducting microbial sampling or 
757  investigations; or 
758         2. A high school diploma or the equivalent with a minimum 
759  of 4 years of documented field experience in conducting 
760  microbial sampling or investigations. 
761         (6) An applicant for a license shall submit, together with 
762  the application, a complete set of electronic fingerprints to 
763  the department. The department shall submit the fingerprints to 
764  the Department of Law Enforcement for state processing, and the 
765  Department of Law Enforcement shall forward them to the Federal 
766  Bureau of Investigation for national processing, to determine 
767  whether the applicant has a criminal history record. The 
768  department shall review the background results to determine if 
769  an applicant meets licensure requirements. The applicant is 
770  responsible for the cost associated with processing the 
771  fingerprints. The authorized agencies or vendors shall collect 
772  such fees and pay the processing costs due to the Department of 
773  Law Enforcement. 
774         Section 19. Subsection (3) of section 468.8414, Florida 
775  Statutes, is amended to read: 
776         468.8414 Licensure.— 
777         (3) The department shall certify as qualified for a license 
778  by endorsement an applicant who is of good moral character, who 
779  has the insurance coverage required under s. 468.8421, and who: 
780         (a) Is qualified to take the examination as set forth in s. 
781  468.8413 and has passed a certification examination offered by a 
782  nationally recognized organization that certifies persons in the 
783  specialty of mold assessment or mold remediation that has been 
784  approved by the department as substantially equivalent to the 
785  requirements of this part and s. 455.217; or 
786         (b) Holds a valid license to practice mold assessment or 
787  mold remediation issued by another state or territory of the 
788  United States if the criteria for issuance of the license were 
789  substantially the same as the licensure criteria that is 
790  established by this part as determined by the department. 
791         Section 20. Section 468.8418, Florida Statutes, is amended 
792  to read: 
793         468.8418 Certification of partnerships and corporations.— 
794         (1) The department shall issue a certificate of 
795  authorization to a corporation or partnership offering mold 
796  assessment or mold remediation services to the public if the 
797  corporation or partnership satisfies all of the requirements of 
798  this part. 
799         (2) The practice of or the offer to practice mold 
800  assessment or mold remediation by licensees through a 
801  corporation or partnership offering mold assessment or mold 
802  remediation to the public, or by a corporation or partnership 
803  offering such services to the public through licensees under 
804  this part as agents, employees, officers, or partners, is 
805  permitted subject to the provisions of this part, provided that 
806  the corporation or partnership has been issued a certificate of 
807  authorization by the department as provided in this section. 
808  Nothing in this section shall be construed to allow a 
809  corporation to hold a license to practice mold assessment or 
810  mold remediation. No corporation or partnership shall be 
811  relieved of responsibility for the conduct or acts of its 
812  agents, employees, or officers by reason of its compliance with 
813  this section, nor shall any individual practicing mold 
814  assessment or mold remediation be relieved of responsibility for 
815  professional services performed by reason of his or her 
816  employment or relationship with a corporation or partnership. 
817         (3) For the purposes of this section, a certificate of 
818  authorization shall be required for a corporation, partnership, 
819  association, or person practicing under a fictitious name, 
820  offering mold assessment or mold remediation; however, when an 
821  individual is practicing mold assessment or mold remediation 
822  under his or her own given name, he or she shall not be required 
823  to register under this section. 
824         (4) Each certificate of authorization shall be renewed 
825  every 2 years. Each partnership and corporation certified under 
826  this section shall notify the department within 1 month of any 
827  change in the information contained in the application upon 
828  which the certification is based. 
829         (5) Disciplinary action against a corporation or 
830  partnership shall be administered in the same manner and on the 
831  same grounds as disciplinary action against a licensed mold 
832  assessor or mold remediator. 
833         Section 21. Subsection (1) of section 468.8419, Florida 
834  Statutes, is amended, and subsection (4) is added to that 
835  section, to read: 
836         468.8419 Prohibitions; penalties.— 
837         (1) A person mold assessor, a company that employs a mold 
838  assessor, or a company that is controlled by a company that also 
839  has a financial interest in a company employing a mold assessor 
840  may not: 
841         (a) Effective July 1, 2011, perform or offer to perform any 
842  mold assessment unless the mold assessor has documented training 
843  in water, mold, and respiratory protection under s. 468.8414(2). 
844         (b) Effective July 1, 2011, perform or offer to perform any 
845  mold assessment unless the person has complied with the 
846  provisions of this part. 
847         (c) Use the name or title “certified mold assessor,” 
848  “registered mold assessor,” “licensed mold assessor,” “mold 
849  assessor,” “professional mold assessor,” or any combination 
850  thereof unless the person has complied with the provisions of 
851  this part. 
852         (d) Perform or offer to perform any mold remediation to a 
853  structure on which the mold assessor or the mold assessor’s 
854  company provided a mold assessment within the last 12 months. 
855         (e) Inspect for a fee any property in which the assessor or 
856  the assessor’s company has any financial or transfer interest. 
857         (f) Accept any compensation, inducement, or reward from a 
858  mold remediator or mold remediator’s company for the referral of 
859  any business to the mold remediator or the mold remediator’s 
860  company. 
861         (g) Offer any compensation, inducement, or reward to a mold 
862  remediator or mold remediator’s company for the referral of any 
863  business from the mold remediator or the mold remediator’s 
864  company. 
865         (h) Accept an engagement to make an omission of the 
866  assessment or conduct an assessment in which the assessment 
867  itself, or the fee payable for the assessment, is contingent 
868  upon the conclusions of the assessment. 
869         (4) This section does not apply to unlicensed activity as 
870  described in paragraph (1)(a), paragraph (1)(b), or s. 455.228 
871  which occurs before July 1, 2011. 
872         Section 22. Subsection (1) of section 468.842, Florida 
873  Statutes, is amended to read: 
874         468.842 Disciplinary proceedings.— 
875         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for which the 
876  disciplinary actions in subsection (2) may be taken: 
877         (a) Violation of any provision of this part or s. 
878  455.227(1).; 
879         (b) Attempting to procure a license to practice mold 
880  assessment or mold remediation by bribery or fraudulent 
881  misrepresentations.; 
882         (c) Having a license to practice mold assessment or mold 
883  remediation revoked, suspended, or otherwise acted against, 
884  including the denial of licensure, by the licensing authority of 
885  another state, territory, or country.; 
886         (d) Being convicted or found guilty of, or entering a plea 
887  of nolo contendere to, regardless of adjudication, a crime in 
888  any jurisdiction that directly relates to the practice of mold 
889  assessment or mold remediation or the ability to practice mold 
890  assessment or mold remediation.; 
891         (e) Making or filing a report or record that the licensee 
892  knows to be false, willfully failing to file a report or record 
893  required by state or federal law, willfully impeding or 
894  obstructing such filing, or inducing another person to impede or 
895  obstruct such filing. Such reports or records shall include only 
896  those that are signed in the capacity of a registered mold 
897  assessor or mold remediator.; 
898         (f) Advertising goods or services in a manner that is 
899  fraudulent, false, deceptive, or misleading in form or content.; 
900         (g) Engaging in fraud or deceit, or negligence, 
901  incompetency, or misconduct, in the practice of mold assessment 
902  or mold remediation.; 
903         (h) Failing to perform any statutory or legal obligation 
904  placed upon a licensed mold assessor or mold remediator; 
905  violating any provision of this chapter, a rule of the 
906  department, or a lawful order of the department previously 
907  entered in a disciplinary hearing; or failing to comply with a 
908  lawfully issued subpoena of the department.; or 
909         (i) Practicing on a revoked, suspended, inactive, or 
910  delinquent license. 
911         (j) Failing to meet any standard of practice adopted by 
912  rule of the department. 
913         Section 23. Subsection (1) of section 468.8421, Florida 
914  Statutes, is amended to read: 
915         468.8421 Insurance.— 
916         (1) A mold assessor shall maintain general liability and 
917  errors and omissions for both preliminary and postremediation 
918  mold assessment insurance coverage in an amount of at least $1 
919  million not less than $1,000,000. 
920         Section 24. Section 468.8423, Florida Statutes, is amended 
921  to read: 
922         468.8423 Grandfather clause.— 
923         (1) A person who performs mold assessment or mold 
924  remediation as defined in this part may qualify to be licensed 
925  by the department as a mold assessor or mold remediator if the 
926  person submits his or her application to the department by March 
927  1, 2011, whether postmarked or delivered by that date, and if 
928  the person: meets the licensure requirements of this part by 
929  July 1, 2010. 
930         (a) Is certified as a mold assessor or mold remediator by a 
931  state or national association that requires, for such 
932  certification, successful completion of a proctored examination 
933  on mold assessment or mold remediation, as applicable, and 
934  completes at least 60 hours of education on mold assessment or 
935  at least 30 hours of education on mold remediation, as 
936  applicable; or 
937         (b) At the time of application, has at least 3 years of 
938  experience as a mold assessor or mold remediator. To establish 
939  the 3 years of experience, an applicant must submit at least 40 
940  mold assessments or remediation invoices prepared by the 
941  applicant. 
942         (2) The department may investigate the validity of a mold 
943  assessment or remediation invoice submitted under paragraph 
944  (1)(b) and, if the applicant submits a false assessment or 
945  invoice, may take disciplinary action against the applicant 
946  under s. 468.842(1)(e) or (g). 
947         (3) An applicant may not qualify for licensure under this 
948  section if he or she has had a mold assessor or mold remediator 
949  license or a license in any related field revoked at any time or 
950  suspended within the previous 5 years or has been assessed a 
951  fine that exceeds $500 within the previous 5 years. For purposes 
952  of this subsection, a license in a related field includes, but 
953  is not limited to, licensure in real estate, construction, home 
954  inspection, building code administration or inspection, or 
955  indoor air quality. 
956         (4) An applicant for licensure under this section must 
957  comply with the good moral character and insurance requirements 
958  of this part. 
959         Section 25. Section 468.8424, Florida Statutes, is created 
960  to read: 
961         468.8424 Rulemaking authority.—The department shall adopt 
962  rules to administer this part. 
963         Section 26. Subsection (22) of section 489.103, Florida 
964  Statutes, is amended to read: 
965         489.103 Exemptions.—This part does not apply to: 
966         (22) A person licensed pursuant to s. 633.061(1)(d) or 
967  (3)(2)(b) performing work authorized by such license. 
968         Section 27. Subsection (1) of section 489.5335, Florida 
969  Statutes, is amended to read: 
970         489.5335 Journeyman; reciprocity; standards.— 
971         (1) An individual who holds a valid, active journeyman 
972  license in the electrical trade issued by any county or 
973  municipality in this state may work as a journeyman in any other 
974  county or municipality of this state without taking an 
975  additional examination or paying an additional license fee, if 
976  he or she: 
977         (a) Has scored at least 70 percent, or after October 1, 
978  1997, at least 75 percent, on a proctored journeyman Block and 
979  Associates examination or other proctored examination approved 
980  by the board for the electrical trade; 
981         (b) Has completed an apprenticeship program registered with 
982  the Department of Labor and Employment Security and demonstrates 
983  4 years’ verifiable practical experience in the electrical 
984  trade, or demonstrates 6 years’ verifiable practical experience 
985  in the electrical trade; 
986         (c) Has satisfactorily completed specialized and advanced 
987  module coursework approved by the Florida Building Commission, 
988  as part of the building code training program established in s. 
989  553.841, specific to the discipline, and successfully completed 
990  the program’s core curriculum courses or passed an equivalency 
991  test in lieu of taking the core curriculum courses and provided 
992  proof of completion of such curriculum courses or examination 
993  and obtained a certificate from the board pursuant to this part 
994  or, pursuant to authorization by the certifying authority, 
995  provides proof of completion of such curriculum or coursework 
996  within 6 months after such certification; and 
997         (d) Has not had a license suspended or revoked within the 
998  last 5 years. 
999         Section 28. Subsections (2), (8), and (9) of section 
1000  553.37, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (12) is 
1001  added to that section, to read: 
1002         553.37 Rules; inspections; and insignia.— 
1003         (2) The department shall adopt rules to address: 
1004         (a) Procedures and qualifications for approval of third 
1005  party plan review and inspection agencies and of those who 
1006  perform inspections and plan reviews. 
1007         (b) Investigation of consumer complaints of noncompliance 
1008  of manufactured buildings with the Florida Building Code and the 
1009  Florida Fire Prevention Code. 
1010         (c) Issuance, cancellation, and revocation of any insignia 
1011  issued by the department and procedures for auditing and 
1012  accounting for disposition of them. 
1013         (d) Monitoring the manufacturers’, inspection agencies’, 
1014  and plan review agencies’ compliance with this part and the 
1015  Florida Building Code. Monitoring may include, but is not 
1016  limited to, performing audits of plans, inspections of 
1017  manufacturing facilities and observation of the manufacturing 
1018  and inspection process, and onsite inspections of buildings. 
1019         (e) The performance by the department and its designees and 
1020  contractors of any other functions required by this part. 
1021         (8) The department, by rule, shall establish a schedule of 
1022  fees to pay the cost of the administration and enforcement of 
1023  this part. The rule may provide for manufacturers to pay fees to 
1024  the administrator directly via the Building Code Information 
1025  System. 
1026         (9) The department may delegate its enforcement authority 
1027  to a state department having building construction 
1028  responsibilities or a local government, and may enter into 
1029  contracts for the performance of its administrative duties under 
1030  this part. The department may delegate its plan review and 
1031  inspection authority to one or more of the following in any 
1032  combination: 
1033         (a) A state department having building construction 
1034  responsibilities; 
1035         (b) A local government; 
1036         (c) An approved inspection agency; 
1037         (d) An approved plan review agency; or 
1038         (e) An agency of another state. 
1039         (12) Custom or one-of-a-kind prototype manufactured 
1040  buildings are not required to have state approval, but must be 
1041  in compliance with all local requirements of the governmental 
1042  agency having jurisdiction at the installation site. 
1043         Section 29. Section 553.375, Florida Statutes, is amended 
1044  to read: 
1045         553.375 Recertification of manufactured buildings.—Prior to 
1046  the relocation to a site that has a higher design wind speed, 
1047  modification, or change of occupancy of a manufactured building 
1048  within the state, the manufacturer, dealer, or owner thereof may 
1049  apply to the department for recertification of that manufactured 
1050  building. The department shall, by rule, provide what 
1051  information the applicant must submit for recertification and 
1052  for plan review and inspection of such manufactured buildings 
1053  and shall establish fees for recertification. Upon a 
1054  determination by the department that the manufactured building 
1055  complies with the applicable building codes, the department 
1056  shall issue a recertification insignia. A manufactured building 
1057  that bears recertification insignia does not require any 
1058  additional approval by an enforcement jurisdiction in which the 
1059  building is sold or installed, and is considered to comply with 
1060  all applicable codes. As an alternative to recertification by 
1061  the department, the manufacturer, dealer, or owner of a 
1062  manufactured building may seek appropriate permitting and a 
1063  certificate of occupancy from the local jurisdiction in 
1064  accordance with procedures generally applicable under the 
1065  Florida Building Code. 
1066         Section 30. Subsection (1) of section 553.512, Florida 
1067  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1068         553.512 Modifications and waivers; advisory council.— 
1069         (1) The Florida Building Commission shall provide by 
1070  regulation criteria for granting individual modifications of, or 
1071  exceptions from, the literal requirements of this part upon a 
1072  determination of unnecessary, unreasonable, or extreme hardship, 
1073  provided such waivers shall not violate federal accessibility 
1074  laws and regulations and shall be reviewed by the Accessibility 
1075  Advisory Council. The commission shall establish by rule a fee 
1076  to be paid upon submitting a request for a waiver as provided in 
1077  this section. Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
1078  subsection, if an applicant for a waiver demonstrates economic 
1079  hardship in accordance with 28 C.F.R. s. 36.403(f)(1), a waiver 
1080  shall be granted. The commission may not consider waiving any of 
1081  the requirements of s. 553.5041 unless the applicant first 
1082  demonstrates that she or he has applied for and been denied 
1083  waiver or variance from all local government zoning, subdivision 
1084  regulations, or other ordinances that prevent compliance 
1085  therewith. Further, the commission may not waive the requirement 
1086  of s. 553.5041(5)(a) and (c)1. governing the minimum width of 
1087  accessible routes and minimum width of accessible parking 
1088  spaces. 
1089         Section 31. Effective October 1, 2010, section 553.721, 
1090  Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
1091         553.721 Surcharge.— 
1092         (1) In order for the Department of Community Affairs to 
1093  administer and carry out the purposes of this part and related 
1094  activities, there is hereby created a surcharge, to be assessed 
1095  at the rate of 1.5 percent of all permit fees associated with 
1096  enforcement of the Florida Building Code as defined by the 
1097  uniform account criteria and specifically the uniform account 
1098  code for building permits adopted for local government financial 
1099  reporting pursuant to s. 218.32. The minimum amount collected on 
1100  any permit issued shall be $2 one-half cent per square foot 
1101  under-roof floor space permitted pursuant to s. 125.56(4) or s. 
1102  166.201. However, for additions, alterations, or renovations to 
1103  existing buildings, the surcharge shall be computed on the basis 
1104  of the square footage being added, altered, or renovated. The 
1105  unit of government responsible for collecting a permit fee 
1106  pursuant to s. 125.56(4) or s. 166.201 shall collect such 
1107  surcharge and electronically remit the funds collected to the 
1108  department on a quarterly calendar basis beginning not later 
1109  than December 31, 2010, for the preceding quarter, and 
1110  continuing each third month thereafter, and such unit of 
1111  government shall may retain 10 an amount up to 5 percent of the 
1112  surcharge collected to fund the participation of building 
1113  departments in the national and state building code promulgation 
1114  processes and to provide education related to enforcement of the 
1115  Florida Building Code cover costs associated with the collection 
1116  and remittance of such surcharge. All funds remitted to the 
1117  department pursuant to this subsection shall be deposited in the 
1118  Operating Trust Fund. Funds collected from such surcharge shall 
1119  be used exclusively for the duties of the Florida Building 
1120  Commission and the Department of Community Affairs under this 
1121  chapter not be used to fund research on techniques for 
1122  mitigation of radon in existing buildings. Funds used by the 
1123  department as well as funds to be transferred to the Department 
1124  of Health shall be as prescribed in the annual General 
1125  Appropriations Act. The department shall adopt rules governing 
1126  the collection and remittance of surcharges in accordance with 
1127  chapter 120. 
1128         (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), and for the 2008-2009 
1129  fiscal year only, the amount transferred from the Operating 
1130  Trust Fund to the Grants and Donations Trust Fund of the 
1131  Department of Community Affairs pursuant to the General 
1132  Appropriations Act for the 2008-2009 fiscal year shall be used 
1133  for the regional planning councils, civil legal assistance, and 
1134  the Front Porch Florida Initiative. 
1135         Section 32. Subsections (2) and (3) and paragraph (b) of 
1136  subsection (4) of section 553.73, Florida Statutes, are amended, 
1137  present subsections (5) through (13) of that section are 
1138  renumbered as subsections (6) through (14), respectively, a new 
1139  subsection (5) is added to that section, paragraph (a) of 
1140  present subsection (6) and present subsections (7) and (9) of 
1141  that section are amended, and subsections (15) and (16) are 
1142  added to that section, to read: 
1143         553.73 Florida Building Code.— 
1144         (2) The Florida Building Code shall contain provisions or 
1145  requirements for public and private buildings, structures, and 
1146  facilities relative to structural, mechanical, electrical, 
1147  plumbing, energy, and gas systems, existing buildings, 
1148  historical buildings, manufactured buildings, elevators, coastal 
1149  construction, lodging facilities, food sales and food service 
1150  facilities, health care facilities, including assisted living 
1151  facilities, adult day care facilities, hospice residential and 
1152  inpatient facilities and units, and facilities for the control 
1153  of radiation hazards, public or private educational facilities, 
1154  swimming pools, and correctional facilities and enforcement of 
1155  and compliance with such provisions or requirements. Further, 
1156  the Florida Building Code must provide for uniform 
1157  implementation of ss. 515.25, 515.27, and 515.29 by including 
1158  standards and criteria for residential swimming pool barriers, 
1159  pool covers, latching devices, door and window exit alarms, and 
1160  other equipment required therein, which are consistent with the 
1161  intent of s. 515.23. Technical provisions to be contained within 
1162  the Florida Building Code are restricted to requirements related 
1163  to the types of materials used and construction methods and 
1164  standards employed in order to meet criteria specified in the 
1165  Florida Building Code. Provisions relating to the personnel, 
1166  supervision or training of personnel, or any other professional 
1167  qualification requirements relating to contractors or their 
1168  workforce may not be included within the Florida Building Code, 
1169  and subsections (4), (5), (6), (7), and (8), and (9) are not to 
1170  be construed to allow the inclusion of such provisions within 
1171  the Florida Building Code by amendment. This restriction applies 
1172  to both initial development and amendment of the Florida 
1173  Building Code. 
1174         (3) The commission shall select from available national or 
1175  international model building codes, or other available building 
1176  codes and standards currently recognized by the laws of this 
1177  state, to form the foundation for the Florida Building Code. The 
1178  commission may modify the selected model codes and standards as 
1179  needed to accommodate the specific needs of this state. 
1180  Standards or criteria referenced by the selected model codes 
1181  shall be similarly incorporated by reference. If a referenced 
1182  standard or criterion requires amplification or modification to 
1183  be appropriate for use in this state, only the amplification or 
1184  modification shall be specifically set forth in the Florida 
1185  Building Code. The Florida Building Commission may approve 
1186  technical amendments to the code, subject to the requirements of 
1187  subsections (8) (7) and (9) (8), after the amendments have been 
1188  subject to the following conditions: 
1189         (a) The proposed amendment has been published on the 
1190  commission’s website for a minimum of 45 days and all the 
1191  associated documentation has been made available to any 
1192  interested party before any consideration by any Technical 
1193  Advisory Committee; 
1194         (b) In order for a Technical Advisory Committee to make a 
1195  favorable recommendation to the commission, the proposal must 
1196  receive a three-fourths vote of the members present at the 
1197  Technical Advisory Committee meeting and at least half of the 
1198  regular members must be present in order to conduct a meeting; 
1199         (c) After Technical Advisory Committee consideration and a 
1200  recommendation for approval of any proposed amendment, the 
1201  proposal must be published on the commission’s website for not 
1202  less than 45 days before any consideration by the commission; 
1203  and 
1204         (d) Any proposal may be modified by the commission based on 
1205  public testimony and evidence from a public hearing held in 
1206  accordance with chapter 120. 
1207 
1208  The commission shall incorporate within sections of the Florida 
1209  Building Code provisions which address regional and local 
1210  concerns and variations. The commission shall make every effort 
1211  to minimize conflicts between the Florida Building Code, the 
1212  Florida Fire Prevention Code, and the Life Safety Code. 
1213         (4) 
1214         (b) Local governments may, subject to the limitations of 
1215  this section, adopt amendments to the technical provisions of 
1216  the Florida Building Code which apply solely within the 
1217  jurisdiction of such government and which provide for more 
1218  stringent requirements than those specified in the Florida 
1219  Building Code, not more than once every 6 months. A local 
1220  government may adopt technical amendments that address local 
1221  needs if: 
1222         1. The local governing body determines, following a public 
1223  hearing which has been advertised in a newspaper of general 
1224  circulation at least 10 days before the hearing, that there is a 
1225  need to strengthen the requirements of the Florida Building 
1226  Code. The determination must be based upon a review of local 
1227  conditions by the local governing body, which review 
1228  demonstrates by evidence or data that the geographical 
1229  jurisdiction governed by the local governing body exhibits a 
1230  local need to strengthen the Florida Building Code beyond the 
1231  needs or regional variation addressed by the Florida Building 
1232  Code, that the local need is addressed by the proposed local 
1233  amendment, and that the amendment is no more stringent than 
1234  necessary to address the local need. 
1235         2. Such additional requirements are not discriminatory 
1236  against materials, products, or construction techniques of 
1237  demonstrated capabilities. 
1238         3. Such additional requirements may not introduce a new 
1239  subject not addressed in the Florida Building Code. 
1240         4. The enforcing agency shall make readily available, in a 
1241  usable format, all amendments adopted pursuant to this section. 
1242         5. Any amendment to the Florida Building Code shall be 
1243  transmitted within 30 days by the adopting local government to 
1244  the commission. The commission shall maintain copies of all such 
1245  amendments in a format that is usable and obtainable by the 
1246  public. Local technical amendments shall not become effective 
1247  until 30 days after the amendment has been received and 
1248  published by the commission. 
1249         6. Any amendment to the Florida Building Code adopted by a 
1250  local government pursuant to this paragraph shall be effective 
1251  only until the adoption by the commission of the new edition of 
1252  the Florida Building Code every third year. At such time, the 
1253  commission shall review such amendment for consistency with the 
1254  criteria in paragraph (9)(8)(a) and adopt such amendment as part 
1255  of the Florida Building Code or rescind the amendment. The 
1256  commission shall immediately notify the respective local 
1257  government of the rescission of any amendment. After receiving 
1258  such notice, the respective local government may readopt the 
1259  rescinded amendment pursuant to the provisions of this 
1260  paragraph. 
1261         7. Each county and municipality desiring to make local 
1262  technical amendments to the Florida Building Code shall by 
1263  interlocal agreement establish a countywide compliance review 
1264  board to review any amendment to the Florida Building Code, 
1265  adopted by a local government within the county pursuant to this 
1266  paragraph, that is challenged by any substantially affected 
1267  party for purposes of determining the amendment’s compliance 
1268  with this paragraph. If challenged, the local technical 
1269  amendments shall not become effective until time for filing an 
1270  appeal pursuant to subparagraph 8. has expired or, if there is 
1271  an appeal, until the commission issues its final order 
1272  determining the adopted amendment is in compliance with this 
1273  subsection. 
1274         8. If the compliance review board determines such amendment 
1275  is not in compliance with this paragraph, the compliance review 
1276  board shall notify such local government of the noncompliance 
1277  and that the amendment is invalid and unenforceable until the 
1278  local government corrects the amendment to bring it into 
1279  compliance. The local government may appeal the decision of the 
1280  compliance review board to the commission. If the compliance 
1281  review board determines such amendment to be in compliance with 
1282  this paragraph, any substantially affected party may appeal such 
1283  determination to the commission. Any such appeal shall be filed 
1284  with the commission within 14 days of the board’s written 
1285  determination. The commission shall promptly refer the appeal to 
1286  the Division of Administrative Hearings for the assignment of an 
1287  administrative law judge. The administrative law judge shall 
1288  conduct the required hearing within 30 days, and shall enter a 
1289  recommended order within 30 days of the conclusion of such 
1290  hearing. The commission shall enter a final order within 30 days 
1291  thereafter. The provisions of chapter 120 and the uniform rules 
1292  of procedure shall apply to such proceedings. The local 
1293  government adopting the amendment that is subject to challenge 
1294  has the burden of proving that the amendment complies with this 
1295  paragraph in proceedings before the compliance review board and 
1296  the commission, as applicable. Actions of the commission are 
1297  subject to judicial review pursuant to s. 120.68. The compliance 
1298  review board shall determine whether its decisions apply to a 
1299  respective local jurisdiction or apply countywide. 
1300         9. An amendment adopted under this paragraph shall include 
1301  a fiscal impact statement which documents the costs and benefits 
1302  of the proposed amendment. Criteria for the fiscal impact 
1303  statement shall include the impact to local government relative 
1304  to enforcement, the impact to property and building owners, as 
1305  well as to industry, relative to the cost of compliance. The 
1306  fiscal impact statement may not be used as a basis for 
1307  challenging the amendment for compliance. 
1308         10. In addition to subparagraphs 7. and 9., the commission 
1309  may review any amendments adopted pursuant to this subsection 
1310  and make nonbinding recommendations related to compliance of 
1311  such amendments with this subsection. 
1312         (5) Notwithstanding subsection (4), counties and 
1313  municipalities may adopt by ordinance an administrative or 
1314  technical amendment to the Florida Building Code relating to 
1315  flood resistance in order to implement the National Flood 
1316  Insurance Program or incentives. Specifically, an administrative 
1317  amendment may assign the duty to enforce all or portions of 
1318  flood-related code provisions to the appropriate agencies of the 
1319  local government and adopt procedures for variances and 
1320  exceptions from flood-related code provisions other than 
1321  provisions for structures seaward of the coastal construction 
1322  control line consistent with the requirements in 44 C.F.R. s. 
1323  60.6. A technical amendment is authorized to the extent that it 
1324  is more stringent than the code. A technical amendment is not 
1325  subject to the requirements of subsection (4) and may not be 
1326  rendered void when the code is updated if the amendment is 
1327  adopted for the purpose of participating in the Community Rating 
1328  System promulgated pursuant to 42 U.S.C. s. 4022, the amendment 
1329  had already been adopted by local ordinance prior to July 1, 
1330  2010, or the amendment requires a design flood elevation above 
1331  the base flood elevation. Any amendment adopted pursuant to this 
1332  subsection shall be transmitted to the commission within 30 days 
1333  after adoption. 
1334         (7)(6)(a) The commission, by rule adopted pursuant to ss. 
1335  120.536(1) and 120.54, shall update the Florida Building Code 
1336  every 3 years. When updating the Florida Building Code, the 
1337  commission shall select the most current version of the 
1338  International Building Code, the International Fuel Gas Code, 
1339  the International Mechanical Code, the International Plumbing 
1340  Code, and the International Residential Code, all of which are 
1341  adopted by the International Code Council, and the National 
1342  Electrical Code, which is adopted by the National Fire 
1343  Protection Association, to form the foundation codes of the 
1344  updated Florida Building Code, if the version has been adopted 
1345  by the applicable model code entity and made available to the 
1346  public at least 6 months prior to its selection by the 
1347  commission. The commission shall select the most current version 
1348  of the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) as a 
1349  foundation code; however, the IECC shall be modified by the 
1350  commission to maintain the efficiencies of the Florida Energy 
1351  Efficiency Code for Building Construction adopted and amended 
1352  pursuant to s. 553.901. 
1353         (8)(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (3) or 
1354  subsection (7) (6), the commission may address issues identified 
1355  in this subsection by amending the code pursuant only to the 
1356  rule adoption procedures contained in chapter 120. Provisions of 
1357  the Florida Building Code, including those contained in 
1358  referenced standards and criteria, relating to wind resistance 
1359  or the prevention of water intrusion may not be amended pursuant 
1360  to this subsection to diminish those construction requirements; 
1361  however, the commission may, subject to conditions in this 
1362  subsection, amend the provisions to enhance those construction 
1363  requirements. Following the approval of any amendments to the 
1364  Florida Building Code by the commission and publication of the 
1365  amendments on the commission’s website, authorities having 
1366  jurisdiction to enforce the Florida Building Code may enforce 
1367  the amendments. The commission may approve amendments that are 
1368  needed to address: 
1369         (a) Conflicts within the updated code; 
1370         (b) Conflicts between the updated code and the Florida Fire 
1371  Prevention Code adopted pursuant to chapter 633; 
1372         (c) The omission of previously adopted Florida-specific 
1373  amendments to the updated code if such omission is not supported 
1374  by a specific recommendation of a technical advisory committee 
1375  or particular action by the commission; 
1376         (d) Unintended results from the integration of previously 
1377  adopted Florida-specific amendments with the model code; 
1378         (e) Equivalency of standards; 
1379         (f)(e) Changes to or inconsistencies with federal or state 
1380  law; or 
1381         (g)(f) Adoption of an updated edition of the National 
1382  Electrical Code if the commission finds that delay of 
1383  implementing the updated edition causes undue hardship to 
1384  stakeholders or otherwise threatens the public health, safety, 
1385  and welfare. 
1386         (10)(9) The following buildings, structures, and facilities 
1387  are exempt from the Florida Building Code as provided by law, 
1388  and any further exemptions shall be as determined by the 
1389  Legislature and provided by law: 
1390         (a) Buildings and structures specifically regulated and 
1391  preempted by the Federal Government. 
1392         (b) Railroads and ancillary facilities associated with the 
1393  railroad. 
1394         (c) Nonresidential farm buildings on farms. 
1395         (d) Temporary buildings or sheds used exclusively for 
1396  construction purposes. 
1397         (e) Mobile or modular structures used as temporary offices, 
1398  except that the provisions of part II relating to accessibility 
1399  by persons with disabilities shall apply to such mobile or 
1400  modular structures. 
1401         (f) Those structures or facilities of electric utilities, 
1402  as defined in s. 366.02, which are directly involved in the 
1403  generation, transmission, or distribution of electricity. 
1404         (g) Temporary sets, assemblies, or structures used in 
1405  commercial motion picture or television production, or any 
1406  sound-recording equipment used in such production, on or off the 
1407  premises. 
1408         (h) Storage sheds that are not designed for human 
1409  habitation and that have a floor area of 720 square feet or less 
1410  are not required to comply with the mandatory wind-borne-debris 
1411  impact standards of the Florida Building Code. 
1412         (i) Chickees constructed by the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians 
1413  of Florida or the Seminole Tribe of Florida. As used in this 
1414  paragraph, the term “chickee” means an open-sided wooden hut 
1415  that has a thatched roof of palm or palmetto or other 
1416  traditional materials, and that does not incorporate any 
1417  electrical, plumbing, or other nonwood features. 
1418         (j) Family mausoleums not exceeding 250 square feet in area 
1419  which are prefabricated and assembled on site or preassembled 
1420  and delivered on site and have walls, roofs, and a floor 
1421  constructed of granite, marble, or reinforced concrete. 
1422 
1423  With the exception of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (f), in 
1424  order to preserve the health, safety, and welfare of the public, 
1425  the Florida Building Commission may, by rule adopted pursuant to 
1426  chapter 120, provide for exceptions to the broad categories of 
1427  buildings exempted in this section, including exceptions for 
1428  application of specific sections of the code or standards 
1429  adopted therein. The Department of Agriculture and Consumer 
1430  Services shall have exclusive authority to adopt by rule, 
1431  pursuant to chapter 120, exceptions to nonresidential farm 
1432  buildings exempted in paragraph (c) when reasonably necessary to 
1433  preserve public health, safety, and welfare. The exceptions must 
1434  be based upon specific criteria, such as under-roof floor area, 
1435  aggregate electrical service capacity, HVAC system capacity, or 
1436  other building requirements. Further, the commission may 
1437  recommend to the Legislature additional categories of buildings, 
1438  structures, or facilities which should be exempted from the 
1439  Florida Building Code, to be provided by law. The Florida 
1440  Building Code does not apply to temporary housing provided by 
1441  the Department of Corrections to any prisoner in the state 
1442  correctional system. 
1443         (15) An agency or local government may not require that 
1444  existing mechanical equipment on the surface of a roof be 
1445  installed in compliance with the requirements of the Florida 
1446  Building Code until the equipment is required to be removed or 
1447  replaced. 
1448         (16)The Florida Building Code must require that the 
1449  illumination in classroom units be designed to provide and 
1450  maintain an average of 40 foot-candles of light at each desktop. 
1451  Public educational facilities must consider using light-emitting 
1452  diode lighting before considering other lighting sources. 
1453         Section 33. Subsection (5) is added to section 553.74, 
1454  Florida Statutes, to read: 
1455         553.74 Florida Building Commission.— 
1456         (5) Notwithstanding s. 112.313 or any other provision of 
1457  law, a member of any of the commission’s technical advisory 
1458  committees, or a member of any other advisory committee or 
1459  workgroup of the commission, does not have an impermissible 
1460  conflict of interest when representing clients before the 
1461  commission or one of its committees or workgroups. However, the 
1462  member, in his or her capacity as a member of the committee or 
1463  workgroup, may not take part in any discussion regarding or take 
1464  action on any matter in which he or she has a direct financial 
1465  interest. 
1466         Section 34. Subsection (2) of section 553.76, Florida 
1467  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1468         553.76 General powers of the commission.—The commission is 
1469  authorized to: 
1470         (2) Issue memoranda of procedure for its internal 
1471  management and control. The commission may adopt rules related 
1472  to its consensus-based decisionmaking process, including, but 
1473  not limited to, super majority voting requirements for 
1474  commission actions relating to the adoption of the Florida 
1475  Building Code or amendments to the code. 
1476         Section 35. Subsections (2) and (4) of section 553.775, 
1477  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
1478         553.775 Interpretations.— 
1479         (2) Local enforcement agencies, local building officials, 
1480  state agencies, and the commission shall interpret provisions of 
1481  the Florida Building Code in a manner that is consistent with 
1482  declaratory statements and interpretations entered by the 
1483  commission, except that conflicts between the Florida Fire 
1484  Prevention Code and the Florida Building Code shall be resolved 
1485  in accordance with s. 553.73(11)(10)(c) and (d). 
1486         (4) In order to administer this section, the commission may 
1487  adopt by rule and impose a fee for filing requests for 
1488  declaratory statements and binding and nonbinding 
1489  interpretations to recoup the cost of the proceedings which may 
1490  not exceed $125 for each request for a nonbinding interpretation 
1491  and $250 for each request for a binding review or 
1492  interpretation. For proceedings conducted by or in coordination 
1493  with a third-party, the rule may provide that payment be made 
1494  directly to the third party, who shall remit to the department 
1495  that portion of the fee necessary to cover the costs of the 
1496  department. 
1497         Section 36. Subsection (9) of section 553.79, Florida 
1498  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1499         553.79 Permits; applications; issuance; inspections.— 
1500         (9) Any state agency whose enabling legislation authorizes 
1501  it to enforce provisions of the Florida Building Code may enter 
1502  into an agreement with any other unit of government to delegate 
1503  its responsibility to enforce those provisions and may expend 
1504  public funds for permit and inspection fees, which fees may be 
1505  no greater than the fees charged others. Inspection services 
1506  that are not required to be performed by a state agency under a 
1507  federal delegation of responsibility or by a state agency under 
1508  the Florida Building Code must be performed under the 
1509  alternative plans review and inspection process created in s. 
1510  553.791 or by a local governmental entity having authority to 
1511  enforce the Florida Building Code. 
1512         Section 37. For the purpose of incorporating the amendment 
1513  made by this act to section 553.79, Florida Statutes, in a 
1514  reference thereto, subsection (1) of section 553.80, Florida 
1515  Statutes, is reenacted, and paragraph (c) of subsection (1) and 
1516  subsection (3) of that section are amended, to read: 
1517         553.80 Enforcement.— 
1518         (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (a)-(g), each local 
1519  government and each legally constituted enforcement district 
1520  with statutory authority shall regulate building construction 
1521  and, where authorized in the state agency’s enabling 
1522  legislation, each state agency shall enforce the Florida 
1523  Building Code required by this part on all public or private 
1524  buildings, structures, and facilities, unless such 
1525  responsibility has been delegated to another unit of government 
1526  pursuant to s. 553.79(9). 
1527         (a) Construction regulations relating to correctional 
1528  facilities under the jurisdiction of the Department of 
1529  Corrections and the Department of Juvenile Justice are to be 
1530  enforced exclusively by those departments. 
1531         (b) Construction regulations relating to elevator equipment 
1532  under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Elevators of the 
1533  Department of Business and Professional Regulation shall be 
1534  enforced exclusively by that department. 
1535         (c) In addition to the requirements of s. 553.79 and this 
1536  section, facilities subject to the provisions of chapter 395 and 
1537  parts part II and VIII of chapter 400 shall have facility plans 
1538  reviewed and construction surveyed by the state agency 
1539  authorized to do so under the requirements of chapter 395 and 
1540  parts part II and VIII of chapter 400 and the certification 
1541  requirements of the Federal Government. Facilities subject to 
1542  the provisions of part IV of chapter 400 may have facility plans 
1543  reviewed and shall have construction surveyed by the state 
1544  agency authorized to do so under the requirements of part IV of 
1545  chapter 400 and the certification requirements of the Federal 
1546  Government. 
1547         (d) Building plans approved under s. 553.77(3) and state 
1548  approved manufactured buildings, including buildings 
1549  manufactured and assembled offsite and not intended for 
1550  habitation, such as lawn storage buildings and storage sheds, 
1551  are exempt from local code enforcing agency plan reviews except 
1552  for provisions of the code relating to erection, assembly, or 
1553  construction at the site. Erection, assembly, and construction 
1554  at the site are subject to local permitting and inspections. 
1555  Lawn storage buildings and storage sheds bearing the insignia of 
1556  approval of the department are not subject to s. 553.842. Such 
1557  buildings that do not exceed 400 square feet may be delivered 
1558  and installed without need of a contractor’s or specialty 
1559  license. 
1560         (e) Construction regulations governing public schools, 
1561  state universities, and community colleges shall be enforced as 
1562  provided in subsection (6). 
1563         (f) The Florida Building Code as it pertains to toll 
1564  collection facilities under the jurisdiction of the turnpike 
1565  enterprise of the Department of Transportation shall be enforced 
1566  exclusively by the turnpike enterprise. 
1567         (g) Construction regulations relating to secure mental 
1568  health treatment facilities under the jurisdiction of the 
1569  Department of Children and Family Services shall be enforced 
1570  exclusively by the department in conjunction with the Agency for 
1571  Health Care Administration’s review authority under paragraph 
1572  (c). 
1573 
1574  The governing bodies of local governments may provide a schedule 
1575  of fees, as authorized by s. 125.56(2) or s. 166.222 and this 
1576  section, for the enforcement of the provisions of this part. 
1577  Such fees shall be used solely for carrying out the local 
1578  government’s responsibilities in enforcing the Florida Building 
1579  Code. The authority of state enforcing agencies to set fees for 
1580  enforcement shall be derived from authority existing on July 1, 
1581  1998. However, nothing contained in this subsection shall 
1582  operate to limit such agencies from adjusting their fee schedule 
1583  in conformance with existing authority. 
1584         (3)(a) Each enforcement district shall be governed by a 
1585  board, the composition of which shall be determined by the 
1586  affected localities. 
1587         (b)1. At its own option, each enforcement district or local 
1588  enforcement agency may adopt promulgate rules granting to the 
1589  owner of a single-family residence one or more exemptions from 
1590  the Florida Building Code relating to: 
1591         a.(a) Addition, alteration, or repairs performed by the 
1592  property owner upon his or her own property, provided any 
1593  addition or alteration shall not exceed 1,000 square feet or the 
1594  square footage of the primary structure, whichever is less. 
1595         b.(b) Addition, alteration, or repairs by a nonowner within 
1596  a specific cost limitation set by rule, provided the total cost 
1597  shall not exceed $5,000 within any 12-month period. 
1598         c.(c) Building and inspection fees. 
1599         2. However, the exemptions under subparagraph 1. do not 
1600  apply to single-family residences that are located in mapped 
1601  flood hazard areas, as defined in the code, unless the 
1602  enforcement district or local enforcement agency has determined 
1603  that the work, which is otherwise exempt, does not constitute a 
1604  substantial improvement, including the repair of substantial 
1605  damage, of such single-family residences. 
1606         3. Each code exemption, as defined in sub-subparagraphs 
1607  1.a., b., and c. paragraphs (a), (b), and (c), shall be 
1608  certified to the local board 10 days prior to implementation and 
1609  shall only be effective in the territorial jurisdiction of the 
1610  enforcement district or local enforcement agency implementing 
1611  it. 
1612         Section 38. Subsections (4) through (9) of section 553.841, 
1613  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
1614         553.841 Building code compliance and mitigation program.— 
1615         (4) The department, In administering the Florida Building 
1616  Code Compliance and Mitigation Program, the department shall 
1617  maintain, update, develop, or cause to be developed: 
1618         (a) A core curriculum that is prerequisite to the advanced 
1619  module coursework. 
1620         (b) advanced modules designed for use by each profession. 
1621         (c) The core curriculum developed under this subsection 
1622  must be submitted to the Department of Business and Professional 
1623  Regulation for approval. Advanced modules developed under this 
1624  paragraph must be approved by the commission and submitted to 
1625  the respective boards for approval. 
1626         (5) The core curriculum shall cover the information 
1627  required to have all categories of participants appropriately 
1628  informed as to their technical and administrative 
1629  responsibilities in the effective execution of the code process 
1630  by all individuals currently licensed under part XII of chapter 
1631  468, chapter 471, chapter 481, or chapter 489, except as 
1632  otherwise provided in s. 471.017. The core curriculum shall be 
1633  prerequisite to the advanced module coursework for all licensees 
1634  and shall be completed by individuals licensed in all categories 
1635  under part XII of chapter 468, chapter 471, chapter 481, or 
1636  chapter 489 within the first 2-year period after initial 
1637  licensure. Core course hours taken by licensees to complete this 
1638  requirement shall count toward fulfillment of required 
1639  continuing education units under part XII of chapter 468, 
1640  chapter 471, chapter 481, or chapter 489. 
1641         (5)(6) Each biennium, upon receipt of funds by the 
1642  Department of Community Affairs from the Construction Industry 
1643  Licensing Board and the Electrical Contractors’ Licensing Board 
1644  provided under ss. 489.109(3) and 489.509(3), the department 
1645  shall determine the amount of funds available for the Florida 
1646  Building Code Compliance and Mitigation Program. 
1647         (6)(7) If the projects provided through the Florida 
1648  Building Code Compliance and Mitigation Program in any state 
1649  fiscal year do not require the use of all available funds, the 
1650  unused funds shall be carried forward and allocated for use 
1651  during the following fiscal year. 
1652         (7)(8) The Florida Building Commission shall provide by 
1653  rule for the accreditation of courses related to the Florida 
1654  Building Code by accreditors approved by the commission. The 
1655  commission shall establish qualifications of accreditors and 
1656  criteria for the accreditation of courses by rule. The 
1657  commission may revoke the accreditation of a course by an 
1658  accreditor if the accreditation is demonstrated to violate this 
1659  part or the rules of the commission. 
1660         (8)(9) This section does not prohibit or limit the subject 
1661  areas or development of continuing education or training on the 
1662  Florida Building Code by any qualified entity. 
1663         Section 39. Subsections (1), (5), (8), and (17) of section 
1664  553.842, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
1665         553.842 Product evaluation and approval.— 
1666         (1) The commission shall adopt rules under ss. 120.536(1) 
1667  and 120.54 to develop and implement a product evaluation and 
1668  approval system that applies statewide to operate in 
1669  coordination with the Florida Building Code. The commission may 
1670  enter into contracts to provide for administration of the 
1671  product evaluation and approval system. The commission’s rules 
1672  and any applicable contract may provide that the payment of fees 
1673  related to approvals be made directly to the administrator. Any 
1674  fee paid by a product manufacturer shall be used only for 
1675  funding the product evaluation and approval system. The product 
1676  evaluation and approval system shall provide: 
1677         (a) Appropriate promotion of innovation and new 
1678  technologies. 
1679         (b) Processing submittals of products from manufacturers in 
1680  a timely manner. 
1681         (c) Independent, third-party qualified and accredited 
1682  testing and laboratory facilities, product evaluation entities, 
1683  quality assurance agencies, certification agencies, and 
1684  validation entities. 
1685         (d) An easily accessible product acceptance list to 
1686  entities subject to the Florida Building Code. 
1687         (e) Development of stringent but reasonable testing 
1688  criteria based upon existing consensus standards, when 
1689  available, for products. 
1690         (f) Long-term approvals, where feasible. State and local 
1691  approvals will be valid until the requirements of the code on 
1692  which the approval is based change, the product changes in a 
1693  manner affecting its performance as required by the code, or the 
1694  approval is revoked. However, the commission may authorize by 
1695  rule editorial revisions to approvals and charge a fee as 
1696  provided in this section. 
1697         (g) Criteria for revocation of a product approval. 
1698         (h) Cost-effectiveness. 
1699         (5) Statewide approval of products, methods, or systems of 
1700  construction may be achieved by one of the following methods. 
1701  One of these methods must be used by the commission to approve 
1702  the following categories of products: panel walls, exterior 
1703  doors, roofing, skylights, windows, shutters, and structural 
1704  components as established by the commission by rule. 
1705         (a) Products for which the code establishes standardized 
1706  testing or comparative or rational analysis methods shall be 
1707  approved by submittal and validation of one of the following 
1708  reports or listings indicating that the product or method or 
1709  system of construction was evaluated to be in compliance with 
1710  the Florida Building Code and that the product or method or 
1711  system of construction is, for the purpose intended, at least 
1712  equivalent to that required by the Florida Building Code: 
1713         1. A certification mark or listing of an approved 
1714  certification agency, which may be used only for products for 
1715  which the code designates standardized testing; 
1716         2. A test report from an approved testing laboratory; 
1717         3. A product evaluation report based upon testing or 
1718  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, from 
1719  an approved product evaluation entity; or 
1720         4. A product evaluation report based upon testing or 
1721  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, 
1722  developed and signed and sealed by a professional engineer or 
1723  architect, licensed in this state. 
1724 
1725  A product evaluation report or a certification mark or listing 
1726  of an approved certification agency which demonstrates that the 
1727  product or method or system of construction complies with the 
1728  Florida Building Code for the purpose intended shall be 
1729  equivalent to a test report and test procedure as referenced in 
1730  the Florida Building Code. An application for state approval of 
1731  a product under subparagraph 1. must be approved by the 
1732  department after the commission staff or a designee verifies 
1733  that the application and related documentation are complete. 
1734  This verification must be completed within 10 business days 
1735  after receipt of the application. Upon approval by the 
1736  department, the product shall be immediately added to the list 
1737  of state-approved products maintained under subsection (13). 
1738  Approvals by the department shall be reviewed and ratified by 
1739  the commission’s program oversight committee except for a 
1740  showing of good cause that a review by the full commission is 
1741  necessary. The commission shall adopt rules providing a means to 
1742  cure deficiencies identified within submittals for products 
1743  approved under this paragraph. 
1744         (b) Products, methods, or systems of construction for which 
1745  there are no specific standardized testing or comparative or 
1746  rational analysis methods established in the code may be 
1747  approved by submittal and validation of one of the following: 
1748         1. A product evaluation report based upon testing or 
1749  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, from 
1750  an approved product evaluation entity indicating that the 
1751  product or method or system of construction was evaluated to be 
1752  in compliance with the intent of the Florida Building Code and 
1753  that the product or method or system of construction is, for the 
1754  purpose intended, at least equivalent to that required by the 
1755  Florida Building Code; or 
1756         2. A product evaluation report based upon testing or 
1757  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, 
1758  developed and signed and sealed by a professional engineer or 
1759  architect, licensed in this state, who certifies that the 
1760  product or method or system of construction is, for the purpose 
1761  intended, at least equivalent to that required by the Florida 
1762  Building Code. 
1763         (8) The commission may adopt rules to approve the following 
1764  types of entities that produce information on which product 
1765  approvals are based. All of the following entities, including 
1766  engineers and architects, must comply with a nationally 
1767  recognized standard demonstrating independence or no conflict of 
1768  interest: 
1769         (a) Evaluation entities approved pursuant to this paragraph 
1770  that meet the criteria for approval adopted by the commission by 
1771  rule. The commission shall specifically approve the National 
1772  Evaluation Service, the International Association of Plumbing 
1773  and Mechanical Officials Evaluation Service the International 
1774  Conference of Building Officials Evaluation Services, the 
1775  International Code Council Evaluation Services, the Building 
1776  Officials and Code Administrators International Evaluation 
1777  Services, the Southern Building Code Congress International 
1778  Evaluation Services, and the Miami-Dade County Building Code 
1779  Compliance Office Product Control. Architects and engineers 
1780  licensed in this state are also approved to conduct product 
1781  evaluations as provided in subsection (5). 
1782         (b) Testing laboratories accredited by national 
1783  organizations, such as A2LA and the National Voluntary 
1784  Laboratory Accreditation Program, laboratories accredited by 
1785  evaluation entities approved under paragraph (a), and 
1786  laboratories that comply with other guidelines for testing 
1787  laboratories selected by the commission and adopted by rule. 
1788         (c) Quality assurance entities approved by evaluation 
1789  entities approved under paragraph (a) and by certification 
1790  agencies approved under paragraph (d) and other quality 
1791  assurance entities that comply with guidelines selected by the 
1792  commission and adopted by rule. 
1793         (d) Certification agencies accredited by nationally 
1794  recognized accreditors and other certification agencies that 
1795  comply with guidelines selected by the commission and adopted by 
1796  rule. 
1797         (e) Validation entities that comply with accreditation 
1798  standards established by the commission by rule. 
1799         (17)(a) The Florida Building Commission shall review the 
1800  list of evaluation entities in subsection (8) and, in the annual 
1801  report required under s. 553.77, shall either recommend 
1802  amendments to the list to add evaluation entities the commission 
1803  determines should be authorized to perform product evaluations 
1804  or shall report on the criteria adopted by rule or to be adopted 
1805  by rule allowing the commission to approve evaluation entities 
1806  that use the commission’s product evaluation process. If the 
1807  commission adopts criteria by rule, the rulemaking process must 
1808  be completed by July 1, 2009. 
1809         (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (8)(a), the International 
1810  Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials Evaluation 
1811  Services is approved as an evaluation entity until October 1, 
1812  2009. If the association does not obtain permanent approval by 
1813  the commission as an evaluation entity by October 1, 2009, 
1814  products approved on the basis of an association evaluation must 
1815  be substituted by an alternative, approved entity by December 
1816  31, 2009, and on January 1, 2010, any product approval issued by 
1817  the commission based on an association evaluation is void. 
1818         Section 40. Subsection (4) is added to section 553.844, 
1819  Florida Statutes, to read: 
1820         553.844 Windstorm loss mitigation; requirements for roofs 
1821  and opening protection.— 
1822         (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, exposed 
1823  mechanical equipment or appliances fastened to a roof or 
1824  installed on the ground in compliance with the code using rated 
1825  stands, platforms, curbs, slabs, or other means are deemed to 
1826  comply with the wind-resistance requirements of the 2007 Florida 
1827  Building Code, as amended. Further support or enclosure of such 
1828  mechanical equipment or appliances may not be required by a 
1829  state or local official having authority to enforce the Florida 
1830  Building Code. This subsection expires on the effective date of 
1831  the 2010 Florida Building Code. 
1832         Section 41. Section 553.885, Florida Statutes, is amended 
1833  to read: 
1834         553.885 Carbon monoxide alarm required.— 
1835         (1) Every separate building or addition to an existing 
1836  building, other than a hospital, an inpatient hospice facility, 
1837  or a nursing home facility licensed by the Agency for Health 
1838  Care Administration, constructed for which a building permit is 
1839  issued for new construction on or after July 1, 2008, and having 
1840  a fossil-fuel-burning heater or appliance, a fireplace, or an 
1841  attached garage, or other feature, fixture, or element that 
1842  emits carbon monoxide as a byproduct of combustion shall have an 
1843  approved operational carbon monoxide alarm installed within 10 
1844  feet of each room used for sleeping purposes in the new building 
1845  or addition, or at such other locations as required by the 
1846  Florida Building Code. The requirements of this subsection may 
1847  be satisfied with the installation of a hard-wired or battery 
1848  powered carbon monoxide alarm or a hard-wired or battery-powered 
1849  combination carbon monoxide and smoke alarm. For a new hospital, 
1850  an inpatient hospice facility, or a nursing home facility 
1851  licensed by the Agency for Health Care Administration, or a new 
1852  state correctional institution, an approved operational carbon 
1853  monoxide detector shall be installed inside or directly outside 
1854  of each room or area within the hospital or facility where a 
1855  fossil-fuel-burning heater, engine, or appliance is located. 
1856  This detector shall be connected to the fire alarm system of the 
1857  hospital or facility as a supervisory signal. This subsection 
1858  does not apply to existing buildings that are undergoing 
1859  alterations or repairs unless the alteration is an addition as 
1860  defined in subsection (3). 
1861         (2) The Florida Building Commission shall adopt rules to 
1862  administer this section and shall incorporate such requirements 
1863  into its next revision of the Florida Building Code. 
1864         (3) As used in this section, the term: 
1865         (a) “Carbon monoxide alarm” means a device that is meant 
1866  for the purpose of detecting carbon monoxide, that produces a 
1867  distinct audible alarm, and that meets the requirements of and 
1868  is approved by the Florida Building Commission. 
1869         (b) “Fossil fuel” means coal, kerosene, oil, fuel gases, or 
1870  other petroleum or hydrocarbon product that emits carbon 
1871  monoxide as a by-product of combustion. 
1872         (c) “Addition” means an extension or increase in floor 
1873  area, number of stories, or height of a building or structure. 
1874         Section 42. Subsection (2) of section 553.9061, Florida 
1875  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1876         553.9061 Scheduled increases in thermal efficiency 
1877  standards.— 
1878         (2) The Florida Building Commission shall identify within 
1879  code support and compliance documentation the specific building 
1880  options and elements available to meet the energy performance 
1881  goals established in subsection (1). Energy efficiency 
1882  performance options and elements include, but are not limited 
1883  to: 
1884         (a) Energy-efficient water heating systems, including solar 
1885  water heating. 
1886         (b) Energy-efficient appliances. 
1887         (c) Energy-efficient windows, doors, and skylights. 
1888         (d) Low solar-absorption roofs, also known as “cool roofs.” 
1889         (e) Enhanced ceiling and wall insulation. 
1890         (f) Reduced-leak duct systems and energy-saving devices and 
1891  features installed within duct systems. 
1892         (g) Programmable thermostats. 
1893         (h) Energy-efficient lighting systems. 
1894         (i) Energy-saving quality installation procedures for 
1895  replacement air-conditioning systems, including, but not limited 
1896  to, equipment sizing analysis and duct inspection. 
1897         (j) Shading devices, sunscreening materials, and overhangs. 
1898         (k) Weatherstripping, caulking, and sealing of exterior 
1899  openings and penetrations. 
1900         (l) Energy-efficient centralized computer data centers in 
1901  office buildings. 
1902         Section 43. Subsections (3) and (4) of section 553.909, 
1903  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
1904         553.909 Setting requirements for appliances; exceptions.— 
1905         (3) Commercial or residential swimming pool pumps or water 
1906  heaters manufactured on or sold after July 1, 2011, shall comply 
1907  with the requirements of this subsection. 
1908         (a) Natural gas pool heaters shall not be equipped with 
1909  constantly burning pilots. 
1910         (b) Heat pump pool heaters shall have a coefficient of 
1911  performance at low temperature of not less than 4.0. 
1912         (c) The thermal efficiency of gas-fired pool heaters and 
1913  oil-fired pool heaters shall not be less than 78 percent. 
1914         (d) All pool heaters shall have a readily accessible on-off 
1915  switch that is mounted outside the heater and that allows 
1916  shutting off the heater without adjusting the thermostat 
1917  setting. 
1918         (4)(a) Residential swimming pool filtration pumps and pump 
1919  motors manufactured on or after July 1, 2011, must comply with 
1920  the requirements in this subsection. 
1921         (b) Residential filtration pool pump motors shall not be 
1922  split-phase, shaded-pole, or capacitor start-induction run 
1923  types. 
1924         (c) Residential filtration pool pumps and pool pump motors 
1925  with a total horsepower of 1 HP or more shall have the 
1926  capability of operating at two or more speeds with a low speed 
1927  having a rotation rate that is no more than one-half of the 
1928  motor’s maximum rotation rate. 
1929         (d) Residential filtration pool pump motor controls shall 
1930  have the capability of operating the pool pump at a minimum of 
1931  two speeds. The default circulation speed shall be the 
1932  residential filtration speed, with a higher speed override 
1933  capability being for a temporary period not to exceed one normal 
1934  cycle or 24 hours 120 minutes, whichever is less; except that 
1935  circulation speed for solar pool heating systems shall be 
1936  permitted to run at higher speeds during periods of usable solar 
1937  heat gain. 
1938         Section 44. Section 553.912, Florida Statutes, is amended 
1939  to read: 
1940         553.912 Air conditioners.—All air conditioners that which 
1941  are sold or installed in the state shall meet the minimum 
1942  efficiency ratings of the Florida Energy Efficiency Code for 
1943  Building Construction. These efficiency ratings shall be 
1944  minimums and may be updated in the Florida Energy Efficiency 
1945  Code for Building Construction by the department in accordance 
1946  with s. 553.901, following its determination that more cost 
1947  effective energy-saving equipment and techniques are available. 
1948  It is the intent of the Legislature that all replacement air 
1949  conditioning systems should be installed using energy-saving, 
1950  quality installation procedures, including, but not limited to, 
1951  equipment sizing analysis and duct inspection. 
1952         Section 45. Subsection (2) of section 627.711, Florida 
1953  Statutes, is amended to read: 
1954         627.711 Notice of premium discounts for hurricane loss 
1955  mitigation; uniform mitigation verification inspection form.— 
1956         (2) By July 1, 2007, the Financial Services Commission 
1957  shall develop by rule a uniform mitigation verification 
1958  inspection form that shall be used by all insurers when 
1959  submitted by policyholders for the purpose of factoring 
1960  discounts for wind insurance. In developing the form, the 
1961  commission shall seek input from insurance, construction, and 
1962  building code representatives. Further, the commission shall 
1963  provide guidance as to the length of time the inspection results 
1964  are valid. An insurer shall accept as valid a uniform mitigation 
1965  verification form certified by the Department of Financial 
1966  Services or signed by: 
1967         (a) A hurricane mitigation inspector certified by the My 
1968  Safe Florida Home program; 
1969         (b) A building code inspector certified under s. 468.607; 
1970         (c) A general, building, or residential contractor licensed 
1971  under s. 489.111; 
1972         (d) A professional engineer licensed under s. 471.015 who 
1973  has passed the appropriate equivalency test of the Building Code 
1974  Training Program as required by s. 553.841; 
1975         (e) A professional architect licensed under s. 481.213; or 
1976         (f) A home inspector licensed under s. 468.8314 who has 
1977  completed at least 2 hours of mitigation training; or 
1978         (g)(f) Any other individual or entity recognized by the 
1979  insurer as possessing the necessary qualifications to properly 
1980  complete a uniform mitigation verification form. 
1981         Section 46. Subsections (7) through (28) of section 
1982  633.021, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (8) 
1983  through (29), respectively, a new subsection (7) is added to 
1984  that section, and present subsection (20) of that section is 
1985  amended, to read: 
1986         633.021 Definitions.—As used in this chapter: 
1987         (7)(a) “Fire equipment dealer Class A” means a licensed 
1988  fire equipment dealer whose business is limited to servicing, 
1989  recharging, repairing, installing, or inspecting all types of 
1990  fire extinguishers and conducting hydrostatic tests on all types 
1991  of fire extinguishers. 
1992         (b) “Fire equipment dealer Class B” means a licensed fire 
1993  equipment dealer whose business is limited to servicing, 
1994  recharging, repairing, installing, or inspecting all types of 
1995  fire extinguishers, including recharging carbon dioxide units 
1996  and conducting hydrostatic tests on all types of fire 
1997  extinguishers, except carbon dioxide units. 
1998         (c) “Fire equipment dealer Class C” means a licensed fire 
1999  equipment dealer whose business is limited to servicing, 
2000  recharging, repairing, installing, or inspecting all types of 
2001  fire extinguishers, except recharging carbon dioxide units, and 
2002  conducting hydrostatic tests on all types of fire extinguishers, 
2003  except carbon dioxide units. 
2004         (d) “Fire equipment dealer Class D” means a licensed fire 
2005  equipment dealer whose business is limited to servicing, 
2006  recharging, repairing, installing, hydrotesting, or inspecting 
2007  of all types of preengineered fire extinguishing systems. 
2008         (21)(a)(20) A “preengineered system” is a fire suppression 
2009  system that which: 
2010         1.(a) Uses any of a variety of extinguishing agents. 
2011         2.(b) Is designed to protect specific hazards. 
2012         3.(c) Must be installed according to pretested limitations 
2013  and configurations specified by the manufacturer and applicable 
2014  National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) standards. Only 
2015  those chapters within the National Fire Protection Association 
2016  standards which pertain to servicing, recharging, repairing, 
2017  installing, hydrotesting, or inspecting any type of 
2018  preengineered fire extinguishing system may be used. 
2019         4.(d) Must be installed using components specified by the 
2020  manufacturer or components that are listed as equal parts by a 
2021  nationally recognized testing laboratory such as Underwriters 
2022  Laboratories, Inc., or Factory Mutual Laboratories, Inc. 
2023         5.(e) Must be listed by a nationally recognized testing 
2024  laboratory. 
2025         (b) Preengineered systems consist of and include all of the 
2026  components and parts providing fire suppression protection, but 
2027  do not include the equipment being protected, and may 
2028  incorporate special nozzles, flow rates, methods of application, 
2029  pressurization levels, and quantities of agents designed by the 
2030  manufacturer for specific hazards. 
2031         Section 47. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section 
2032  633.0215, Florida Statutes, is amended, and subsections (13) and 
2033  (14) are added to that section, to read: 
2034         633.0215 Florida Fire Prevention Code.— 
2035         (3) No later than 180 days before the triennial adoption of 
2036  the Florida Fire Prevention Code, the State Fire Marshal shall 
2037  notify each municipal, county, and special district fire 
2038  department of the triennial code adoption and steps necessary 
2039  for local amendments to be included within the code. No later 
2040  than 120 days before the triennial adoption of the Florida Fire 
2041  Prevention Code, each local jurisdiction shall provide the State 
2042  Fire Marshal with copies of its local fire code amendments. The 
2043  State Fire Marshal has the option to process local fire code 
2044  amendments that are received less than 120 days before the 
2045  adoption date of the Florida Fire Prevention Code. 
2046         (b) Any local amendment to the Florida Fire Prevention Code 
2047  adopted by a local government shall be effective only until the 
2048  adoption of the new edition of the Florida Fire Prevention Code, 
2049  which shall be every third year. At such time, the State Fire 
2050  Marshal shall adopt such amendment as part of the Florida Fire 
2051  Prevention Code or rescind the amendment. The State Fire Marshal 
2052  shall immediately notify the respective local government of the 
2053  rescission of the amendment and the reason for the rescission. 
2054  After receiving such notice, the respective local government may 
2055  readopt the rescinded amendment. Incorporation of local 
2056  amendments as regional and local concerns and variations shall 
2057  be considered as adoption of an amendment pursuant to this 
2058  section part. 
2059         (13)(a) The State Fire Marshal shall issue an expedited 
2060  declaratory statement relating to interpretations of provisions 
2061  of the Florida Fire Prevention Code according to the following 
2062  guidelines: 
2063         1. The declaratory statement shall be rendered in 
2064  accordance with s. 120.565, except that a final decision must be 
2065  issued by the State Fire Marshal within 45 days after the 
2066  division’s receipt of a petition seeking an expedited 
2067  declaratory statement. The State Fire Marshal shall give notice 
2068  of the petition and the expedited declaratory statement or the 
2069  denial of the petition in the next available issue of the 
2070  Florida Administrative Weekly after the petition is filed and 
2071  after the statement or denial is rendered. 
2072         2. The petitioner must be the owner of the disputed project 
2073  or the owner’s representative. 
2074         3. The petition for an expedited declaratory statement must 
2075  be: 
2076         a. Related to an active project that is under construction 
2077  or must have been submitted for a permit. 
2078         b. The subject of a written notice citing a specific 
2079  provision of the Florida Fire Prevention Code which is in 
2080  dispute. 
2081         c. Limited to a single question that is capable of being 
2082  answered with a “yes” or “no” response. 
2083         (b) A petition for a declaratory statement which does not 
2084  meet all of the requirements of this subsection must be denied 
2085  without prejudice. This subsection does not affect the right of 
2086  the petitioner as a substantially affected person to seek a 
2087  declaratory statement under s. 633.01(6). 
2088         (14) A condominium that is one or two stories in height and 
2089  has an exterior corridor providing a means of egress is exempt 
2090  from installing a manual fire alarm system as required in s. 9.6 
2091  of the most recent edition of the Life Safety Code adopted in 
2092  the Florida Fire Prevention Code. 
2093         Section 48. Subsections (2) and (10) of section 633.0245, 
2094  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
2095         633.0245 State Fire Marshal Nursing Home Fire Protection 
2096  Loan Guarantee Program.— 
2097         (2) The State Fire Marshal may enter into limited loan 
2098  guarantee agreements with one or more financial institutions 
2099  qualified as public depositories in this state. Such agreements 
2100  shall provide a limited guarantee by the State of Florida 
2101  covering no more than 50 percent of the principal sum loaned by 
2102  such financial institution to an eligible nursing home, as 
2103  defined in subsection (10), for the sole purpose of the initial 
2104  installation at such nursing home of a fire protection system, 
2105  as defined in s. 633.021(10)(9), approved by the State Fire 
2106  Marshal as being in compliance with the provisions of s. 633.022 
2107  and rules adopted thereunder. 
2108         (10) For purposes of this section, “eligible nursing home” 
2109  means a nursing home facility that provides nursing services as 
2110  defined in chapter 464, is licensed under part II of chapter 
2111  400, and is certified by the Agency for Health Care 
2112  Administration to lack an installed fire protection system as 
2113  defined in s. 633.021(10)(9). 
2114         Section 49. Subsection (11) is added to section 633.025, 
2115  Florida Statutes, to read: 
2116         633.025 Minimum firesafety standards.— 
2117         (11)Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (9), a 
2118  property owner shall not be required to install fire sprinklers 
2119  in any residential property based on the use of such property as 
2120  a rental property or any change in or reclassification of the 
2121  property’s primary use to a rental property. 
2122         Section 50. Section 633.026, Florida Statutes, is amended 
2123  to read: 
2124         633.026 Legislative intent; informal interpretations of the 
2125  Florida Fire Prevention Code.—It is the intent of the 
2126  Legislature that the Florida Fire Prevention Code be interpreted 
2127  by fire officials and local enforcement agencies in a manner 
2128  that reasonably and cost-effectively protects the public safety, 
2129  health, and welfare, ensures uniform interpretations throughout 
2130  this state, and provides just and expeditious processes for 
2131  resolving disputes regarding such interpretations. It is the 
2132  further intent of the Legislature that such processes provide 
2133  for the expeditious resolution of the issues presented and that 
2134  the resulting interpretation of such issues be published on the 
2135  website of the Division of State Fire Marshal. 
2136         (1) The Division of State Fire Marshal shall by rule 
2137  establish an informal process of rendering nonbinding 
2138  interpretations of the Florida Fire Prevention Code. The 
2139  Division of State Fire Marshal may contract with and refer 
2140  interpretive issues to a third party, selected based upon cost 
2141  effectiveness, quality of services to be performed, and other 
2142  performance-based criteria, which nonprofit organization that 
2143  has experience in interpreting and enforcing the Florida Fire 
2144  Prevention Code. The Division of State Fire Marshal shall 
2145  immediately implement the process prior to the completion of 
2146  formal rulemaking. It is the intent of the Legislature that the 
2147  Division of State Fire Marshal establish create a Fire Code 
2148  Interpretation Committee composed of seven persons and seven 
2149  alternates, equally representing each area of the state process 
2150  to refer questions to a small group of individuals certified 
2151  under s. 633.081(2), to which a party can pose questions 
2152  regarding the interpretation of the Florida Fire Prevention Code 
2153  provisions. 
2154         (2) Each member and alternate member of the Fire Code 
2155  Interpretation Committee must be certified as a firesafety 
2156  inspector pursuant to s. 633.081(2) and must have a minimum of 5 
2157  years of experience interpreting and enforcing the Florida Fire 
2158  Prevention Code and the Life Safety Code. Each member and 
2159  alternate member must be approved by the Division of State Fire 
2160  Marshal and deemed by the division to have met these 
2161  requirements for at least 30 days before participating in a 
2162  review of a nonbinding interpretation. It is the intent of the 
2163  Legislature that the process provide for the expeditious 
2164  resolution of the issues presented and publication of the 
2165  resulting interpretation on the website of the Division of State 
2166  Fire Marshal. It is the intent of the Legislature that this 
2167  program be similar to the program established by the Florida 
2168  Building Commission in s. 553.775(3)(g). 
2169         (3) Each nonbinding interpretation of code provisions must 
2170  be provided within 10 business days after receipt of a request 
2171  for interpretation. The response period established in this 
2172  subsection may be waived only with the written consent of the 
2173  party requesting the nonbinding interpretation and the Division 
2174  of State Fire Marshal. Nonbinding Such interpretations shall be 
2175  advisory only and nonbinding on the parties or the State Fire 
2176  Marshal. 
2177         (4) In order to administer this section, the Division of 
2178  State Fire Marshal shall charge department may adopt by rule and 
2179  impose a fee for nonbinding interpretations, with payment made 
2180  directly to the third party. The fee may not exceed $150 for 
2181  each request for a review or interpretation. The division may 
2182  authorize payment of fees directly to the nonprofit organization 
2183  under contract pursuant to subsection (1). 
2184         (5) A party requesting a nonbinding interpretation who 
2185  disagrees with the interpretation issued under this section may 
2186  apply for a formal interpretation from the State Fire Marshal 
2187  pursuant to s. 633.01(6). 
2188         (6) The Division of State Fire Marshal shall issue or cause 
2189  to be issued a nonbinding interpretation of the Florida Fire 
2190  Prevention Code pursuant to this section when requested to do so 
2191  upon submission of a petition by a fire official or by the owner 
2192  or owner’s representative or the contractor or contractor’s 
2193  representative of a project in dispute. The division shall adopt 
2194  a petition form by rule and the petition form must be published 
2195  on the State Fire Marshal’s website. The form shall, at a 
2196  minimum, require: 
2197         (a) The name and address of the local fire official, 
2198  including the address of the county, municipality, or special 
2199  district. 
2200         (b) The name and address of the owner or owner’s 
2201  representative or the contractor or contractor’s representative. 
2202         (c) A statement of the specific sections of the Florida 
2203  Fire Prevention Code being interpreted by the local fire 
2204  official. 
2205         (d) An explanation of how the petitioner’s substantial 
2206  interests are being affected by the local interpretation of the 
2207  Florida Fire Prevention Code. 
2208         (e) A statement of the interpretation of the specific 
2209  sections of the Florida Fire Prevention Code by the local fire 
2210  official. 
2211         (f) A statement of the interpretation that the petitioner 
2212  contends should be given to the specific sections of the Florida 
2213  Fire Prevention Code and a statement supporting the petitioner’s 
2214  interpretation. 
2215         (7) Upon receipt of a petition that meets the requirements 
2216  of subsection (6), the Division of State Fire Marshal shall 
2217  immediately provide copies of the petition to the Fire Code 
2218  Interpretation Committee, and shall publish the petition and any 
2219  response submitted by the local fire official on the State Fire 
2220  Marshal’s website. 
2221         (8) The committee shall conduct proceedings as necessary to 
2222  resolve the issues and give due regard to the petition, the 
2223  facts of the matter at issue, specific code sections cited, and 
2224  any statutory implications affecting the Florida Fire Prevention 
2225  Code. The committee shall issue an interpretation regarding the 
2226  provisions of the Florida Fire Prevention Code within 10 days 
2227  after the filing of a petition. The committee shall issue an 
2228  interpretation based upon the Florida Fire Prevention Code or, 
2229  if the code is ambiguous, the intent of the code. The 
2230  committee’s interpretation shall be provided to the petitioner 
2231  and shall include a notice that if the petitioner disagrees with 
2232  the interpretation, the petitioner may file a request for formal 
2233  interpretation by the State Fire Marshal under s. 633.01(6). The 
2234  committee’s interpretation shall be provided to the State Fire 
2235  Marshal, and the division shall publish the interpretation on 
2236  the State Fire Marshal’s website and in the Florida 
2237  Administrative Weekly. 
2238         Section 51. Present subsections (2) through (10) of section 
2239  633.061, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (3) 
2240  through (11), respectively, a new subsection (2) is added to 
2241  that section, and paragraphs (a) and (c) of present subsection 
2242  (3) of that section are amended, to read: 
2243         633.061 Fire suppression equipment; license to install or 
2244  maintain.— 
2245         (2) A person who holds a valid fire equipment dealer 
2246  license may maintain such license in an inactive status during 
2247  which time he or she may not engage in any work under the 
2248  definition of the license held. An inactive status license shall 
2249  be void after 2 years or at the time that the license is 
2250  renewed, whichever comes first. The biennial renewal fee for an 
2251  inactive status license shall be $75. An inactive status license 
2252  may not be reactivated unless the continuing education 
2253  requirements of this chapter have been fulfilled. 
2254         (4)(3)(a) Such licenses and permits shall be issued by the 
2255  State Fire Marshal for 2 years beginning January 1, 2000, and 
2256  each 2-year period thereafter and expiring December 31 of the 
2257  second year. All licenses or permits issued will expire on 
2258  December 31 of each odd-numbered year. The failure to renew a 
2259  license or permit by December 31 of the second year will cause 
2260  the license or permit to become inoperative. The holder of an 
2261  inoperative license or permit shall not engage in any activities 
2262  for which a license or permit is required by this section. A 
2263  license or permit which is inoperative because of the failure to 
2264  renew it shall be restored upon payment of the applicable fee 
2265  plus a penalty equal to the applicable fee, if the application 
2266  for renewal is filed no later than the following March 31. If 
2267  the application for restoration is not made before the March 
2268  31st deadline, the fee for restoration shall be equal to the 
2269  original application fee and the penalty provided for herein, 
2270  and, in addition, the State Fire Marshal shall require 
2271  reexamination of the applicant. The fee for a license or permit 
2272  issued for 1 year or less shall be prorated at 50 percent of the 
2273  applicable fee for a biennial license or permit. After initial 
2274  licensure, each licensee or permittee must shall successfully 
2275  complete a course or courses of continuing education for fire 
2276  equipment technicians of at least 16 32 hours. A license or 
2277  permit may not be renewed unless the licensee or permittee 
2278  produces documentation of the completion of at least 16 hours of 
2279  continuing education for fire equipment technicians during the 
2280  biennial licensure period within 4 years of initial issuance of 
2281  a license or permit and within each 4-year period thereafter or 
2282  no such license or permit shall be renewed. A person who is both 
2283  a licensee and a permittee shall be required to complete 16 32 
2284  hours of continuing education during each renewal per 4-year 
2285  period. Each licensee shall ensure that all permittees in his or 
2286  her employment meet their continuing education requirements. The 
2287  State Fire Marshal shall adopt rules describing the continuing 
2288  education requirements and shall have the authority upon 
2289  reasonable belief, to audit a fire equipment dealer to determine 
2290  compliance with continuing education requirements. 
2291         (c) A license of any class shall not be issued or renewed 
2292  by the State Fire Marshal and a license of any class shall not 
2293  remain operative unless: 
2294         1. The applicant has submitted to the State Fire Marshal 
2295  evidence of registration as a Florida corporation or evidence of 
2296  compliance with s. 865.09. 
2297         2. The State Fire Marshal or his or her designee has by 
2298  inspection determined that the applicant possesses the equipment 
2299  required for the class of license sought. The State Fire Marshal 
2300  shall give an applicant a reasonable opportunity to correct any 
2301  deficiencies discovered by inspection. A fee of $50, payable to 
2302  the State Fire Marshal, shall be required for any subsequent 
2303  reinspection. 
2304         3. The applicant has submitted to the State Fire Marshal 
2305  proof of insurance providing coverage for comprehensive general 
2306  liability for bodily injury and property damage, products 
2307  liability, completed operations, and contractual liability. The 
2308  State Fire Marshal shall adopt rules providing for the amounts 
2309  of such coverage, but such amounts shall not be less than 
2310  $300,000 for Class A or Class D licenses, $200,000 for Class B 
2311  licenses, and $100,000 for Class C licenses; and the total 
2312  coverage for any class of license held in conjunction with a 
2313  Class D license shall not be less than $300,000. The State Fire 
2314  Marshal may, at any time after the issuance of a license or its 
2315  renewal, require upon demand, and in no event more than 30 days 
2316  after notice of such demand, the licensee to provide proof of 
2317  insurance, on a form provided by the State Fire Marshal, 
2318  containing confirmation of insurance coverage as required by 
2319  this chapter. Failure, for any length of time, to provide proof 
2320  of insurance coverage as required shall result in the immediate 
2321  suspension of the license until proof of proper insurance is 
2322  provided to the State Fire Marshal. An insurer which provides 
2323  such coverage shall notify the State Fire Marshal of any change 
2324  in coverage or of any termination, cancellation, or nonrenewal 
2325  of any coverage. 
2326         4. The applicant applies to the State Fire Marshal, 
2327  provides proof of experience, and successfully completes a 
2328  prescribed training course offered by the State Fire College or 
2329  an equivalent course approved by the State Fire Marshal. This 
2330  subparagraph does not apply to any holder of or applicant for a 
2331  permit under paragraph (f) or to a business organization or a 
2332  governmental entity seeking initial licensure or renewal of an 
2333  existing license solely for the purpose of inspecting, 
2334  servicing, repairing, marking, recharging, and maintaining fire 
2335  extinguishers used and located on the premises of and owned by 
2336  such organization or entity. 
2337         5. The applicant has a current retestor identification 
2338  number that is appropriate for the license for which the 
2339  applicant is applying and that is listed with the United States 
2340  Department of Transportation. 
2341         6. The applicant has passed, with a grade of at least 70 
2342  percent, a written examination testing his or her knowledge of 
2343  the rules and statutes regulating the activities authorized by 
2344  the license and demonstrating his or her knowledge and ability 
2345  to perform those tasks in a competent, lawful, and safe manner. 
2346  Such examination shall be developed and administered by the 
2347  State Fire Marshal, or his or her designee in accordance with 
2348  policies and procedures of the State Fire Marshal. An applicant 
2349  shall pay a nonrefundable examination fee of $50 for each 
2350  examination or reexamination scheduled. No reexamination shall 
2351  be scheduled sooner than 30 days after any administration of an 
2352  examination to an applicant. No applicant shall be permitted to 
2353  take an examination for any level of license more than a total 
2354  of four times during 1 year, regardless of the number of 
2355  applications submitted. As a prerequisite to licensure of the 
2356  applicant: 
2357         a. Must be at least 18 years of age. 
2358         b. Must have 4 years of proven experience as a fire 
2359  equipment permittee at a level equal to or greater than the 
2360  level of license applied for or have a combination of education 
2361  and experience determined to be equivalent thereto by the State 
2362  Fire Marshal. Having held a permit at the appropriate level for 
2363  the required period constitutes the required experience. 
2364         c. Must not have been convicted of, or pled nolo contendere 
2365  to, any felony. If an applicant has been convicted of any such 
2366  felony, the applicant must comply with s. 112.011(1)(b). 
2367 
2368  This subparagraph does not apply to any holder of or applicant 
2369  for a permit under paragraph (f) or to a business organization 
2370  or a governmental entity seeking initial licensure or renewal of 
2371  an existing license solely for the purpose of inspecting, 
2372  servicing, repairing, marking, recharging, hydrotesting, and 
2373  maintaining fire extinguishers used and located on the premises 
2374  of and owned by such organization or entity. 
2375         Section 52. Section 633.081, Florida Statutes, is amended 
2376  to read: 
2377         633.081 Inspection of buildings and equipment; orders; 
2378  firesafety inspection training requirements; certification; 
2379  disciplinary action.—The State Fire Marshal and her or his 
2380  agents shall, at any reasonable hour, when the State Fire 
2381  Marshal department has reasonable cause to believe that a 
2382  violation of this chapter or s. 509.215, or a rule promulgated 
2383  thereunder, or a minimum firesafety code adopted by a local 
2384  authority, may exist, inspect any and all buildings and 
2385  structures which are subject to the requirements of this chapter 
2386  or s. 509.215 and rules promulgated thereunder. The authority to 
2387  inspect shall extend to all equipment, vehicles, and chemicals 
2388  which are located within the premises of any such building or 
2389  structure. 
2390         (1) Each county, municipality, and special district that 
2391  has firesafety enforcement responsibilities shall employ or 
2392  contract with a firesafety inspector. Except as provided in s. 
2393  633.082(2), the firesafety inspector must conduct all firesafety 
2394  inspections that are required by law. The governing body of a 
2395  county, municipality, or special district that has firesafety 
2396  enforcement responsibilities may provide a schedule of fees to 
2397  pay only the costs of inspections conducted pursuant to this 
2398  subsection and related administrative expenses. Two or more 
2399  counties, municipalities, or special districts that have 
2400  firesafety enforcement responsibilities may jointly employ or 
2401  contract with a firesafety inspector. 
2402         (2) Except as provided in s. 633.082(2), every firesafety 
2403  inspection conducted pursuant to state or local firesafety 
2404  requirements shall be by a person certified as having met the 
2405  inspection training requirements set by the State Fire Marshal. 
2406  Such person shall: 
2407         (a) Be a high school graduate or the equivalent as 
2408  determined by the department; 
2409         (b) Not have been found guilty of, or having pleaded guilty 
2410  or nolo contendere to, a felony or a crime punishable by 
2411  imprisonment of 1 year or more under the law of the United 
2412  States, or of any state thereof, which involves moral turpitude, 
2413  without regard to whether a judgment of conviction has been 
2414  entered by the court having jurisdiction of such cases; 
2415         (c) Have her or his fingerprints on file with the 
2416  department or with an agency designated by the department; 
2417         (d) Have good moral character as determined by the 
2418  department; 
2419         (e) Be at least 18 years of age; 
2420         (f) Have satisfactorily completed the firesafety inspector 
2421  certification examination as prescribed by the department; and 
2422         (g)1. Have satisfactorily completed, as determined by the 
2423  department, a firesafety inspector training program of not less 
2424  than 200 hours established by the department and administered by 
2425  agencies and institutions approved by the department for the 
2426  purpose of providing basic certification training for firesafety 
2427  inspectors; or 
2428         2. Have received in another state training which is 
2429  determined by the department to be at least equivalent to that 
2430  required by the department for approved firesafety inspector 
2431  education and training programs in this state. 
2432         (3) Each special state firesafety inspection which is 
2433  required by law and is conducted by or on behalf of an agency of 
2434  the state must be performed by an individual who has met the 
2435  provision of subsection (2), except that the duration of the 
2436  training program shall not exceed 120 hours of specific training 
2437  for the type of property that such special state firesafety 
2438  inspectors are assigned to inspect. 
2439         (4) A firefighter certified pursuant to s. 633.35 may 
2440  conduct firesafety inspections, under the supervision of a 
2441  certified firesafety inspector, while on duty as a member of a 
2442  fire department company conducting inservice firesafety 
2443  inspections without being certified as a firesafety inspector, 
2444  if such firefighter has satisfactorily completed an inservice 
2445  fire department company inspector training program of at least 
2446  24 hours’ duration as provided by rule of the department. 
2447         (5) Every firesafety inspector or special state firesafety 
2448  inspector certificate is valid for a period of 3 years from the 
2449  date of issuance. Renewal of certification shall be subject to 
2450  the affected person’s completing proper application for renewal 
2451  and meeting all of the requirements for renewal as established 
2452  under this chapter or by rule promulgated thereunder, which 
2453  shall include completion of at least 40 hours during the 
2454  preceding 3-year period of continuing education as required by 
2455  the rule of the department or, in lieu thereof, successful 
2456  passage of an examination as established by the department. 
2457         (6) The State Fire Marshal may deny, refuse to renew, 
2458  suspend, or revoke the certificate of a firesafety inspector or 
2459  special state firesafety inspector if it finds that any of the 
2460  following grounds exist: 
2461         (a) Any cause for which issuance of a certificate could 
2462  have been refused had it then existed and been known to the 
2463  State Fire Marshal. 
2464         (b) Violation of this chapter or any rule or order of the 
2465  State Fire Marshal. 
2466         (c) Falsification of records relating to the certificate. 
2467         (d) Having been found guilty of or having pleaded guilty or 
2468  nolo contendere to a felony, whether or not a judgment of 
2469  conviction has been entered. 
2470         (e) Failure to meet any of the renewal requirements. 
2471         (f) Having been convicted of a crime in any jurisdiction 
2472  which directly relates to the practice of fire code inspection, 
2473  plan review, or administration. 
2474         (g) Making or filing a report or record that the 
2475  certificateholder knows to be false, or knowingly inducing 
2476  another to file a false report or record, or knowingly failing 
2477  to file a report or record required by state or local law, or 
2478  knowingly impeding or obstructing such filing, or knowingly 
2479  inducing another person to impede or obstruct such filing. 
2480         (h) Failing to properly enforce applicable fire codes or 
2481  permit requirements within this state which the 
2482  certificateholder knows are applicable by committing willful 
2483  misconduct, gross negligence, gross misconduct, repeated 
2484  negligence, or negligence resulting in a significant danger to 
2485  life or property. 
2486         (i) Accepting labor, services, or materials at no charge or 
2487  at a noncompetitive rate from any person who performs work that 
2488  is under the enforcement authority of the certificateholder and 
2489  who is not an immediate family member of the certificateholder. 
2490  For the purpose of this paragraph, the term “immediate family 
2491  member” means a spouse, child, parent, sibling, grandparent, 
2492  aunt, uncle, or first cousin of the person or the person’s 
2493  spouse or any person who resides in the primary residence of the 
2494  certificateholder. 
2495         (7) The Division of State Fire Marshal and the Florida 
2496  Building Code Administrators and Inspectors Board, established 
2497  pursuant to under s. 468.605, shall enter into a reciprocity 
2498  agreement to facilitate joint recognition of continuing 
2499  education recertification hours for certificateholders licensed 
2500  under s. 468.609 and firesafety inspectors certified under 
2501  subsection (2). 
2502         (8) The State Fire Marshal shall develop by rule an 
2503  advanced training and certification program for firesafety 
2504  inspectors having fire code management responsibilities. The 
2505  program must be consistent with the appropriate provisions of 
2506  NFPA 1037, or similar standards adopted by the division, and 
2507  establish minimum training, education, and experience levels for 
2508  firesafety inspectors having fire code management 
2509  responsibilities. 
2510         (9)(7) The department shall provide by rule for the 
2511  certification of firesafety inspectors. 
2512         Section 53. Subsections (2) and (3) of section 633.082, 
2513  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
2514         633.082 Inspection of fire control systems, fire hydrants, 
2515  and fire protection systems.— 
2516         (2) Fire hydrants and fire protection systems installed in 
2517  public and private properties, except one-family or two-family 
2518  dwellings, in this state shall be inspected following procedures 
2519  established in the nationally recognized inspection, testing, 
2520  and maintenance standards publications NFPA-24 and NFPA-25 as 
2521  set forth in the edition adopted by the State Fire Marshal. 
2522  Quarterly, annual, 3-year, and 5-year inspections consistent 
2523  with the contractual provisions with the owner shall be 
2524  conducted by the certificateholder or permittees employed by the 
2525  certificateholder pursuant to s. 633.521, except that: 
2526         (a) Public fire hydrants owned by a governmental entity 
2527  shall be inspected following procedures established in the 
2528  inspection, testing, and maintenance standards adopted by the 
2529  State Fire Marshal or equivalent standards such as those 
2530  contained in the latest edition of the American Water Works 
2531  Association’s Manual M17, “Installation, Field Testing, and 
2532  Maintenance of Fire Hydrants.” 
2533         (b) County, municipal, and special district utilities may 
2534  perform fire hydrant inspections required by this section using 
2535  designated employees. Such designated employees need not be 
2536  certified under this chapter. However, counties, municipalities, 
2537  or special districts that use designated employees are 
2538  responsible for ensuring that the designated employees are 
2539  qualified to perform such inspections. 
2540         (3) The inspecting contractor shall provide to the building 
2541  owner or hydrant owner and the local authority having 
2542  jurisdiction a copy of the applicable inspection report 
2543  established under this chapter. The maintenance of fire hydrant 
2544  and fire protection systems as well as corrective actions on 
2545  deficient systems is the responsibility of the owner of the 
2546  system or hydrant. Equipment requiring periodic testing or 
2547  operation to ensure its maintenance shall be tested or operated 
2548  as specified in the Fire Prevention Code, Life Safety Code, 
2549  National Fire Protection Association standards, or as directed 
2550  by the agency having jurisdiction, provided that such agency 
2551  shall not require a sprinkler system not required by the Fire 
2552  Prevention Code, Life Safety Code or National Fire Protection 
2553  Association Standards to be removed regardless of its condition. 
2554  This section does not prohibit governmental entities from 
2555  inspecting and enforcing firesafety codes. 
2556         Section 54. Section 633.352, Florida Statutes, is amended 
2557  to read: 
2558         633.352 Retention of firefighter certification.—Any 
2559  certified firefighter who has not been active as a firefighter, 
2560  or as a volunteer firefighter with an organized fire department, 
2561  for a period of 3 years shall be required to retake the 
2562  practical portion of the minimum standards state examination 
2563  specified in rule 69A-37.056(6)(b) 4A-37.056(6)(b), Florida 
2564  Administrative Code, in order to maintain her or his 
2565  certification as a firefighter; however, this requirement does 
2566  not apply to state-certified firefighters who are certified and 
2567  employed as full-time firesafety inspectors or firesafety 
2568  instructors, regardless of the firefighter’s employment status 
2569  as determined by the division. The 3-year period begins on the 
2570  date the certificate of compliance is issued or upon termination 
2571  of service with an organized fire department. 
2572         Section 55. Paragraph (e) of subsection (2) and subsections 
2573  (3), (10), and (11) of section 633.521, Florida Statutes, are 
2574  amended to read: 
2575         633.521 Certificate application and issuance; permit 
2576  issuance; examination and investigation of applicant.— 
2577         (2) 
2578         (e) An applicant may not be examined more than four times 
2579  during 1 year for certification as a contractor pursuant to this 
2580  section unless the person is or has been certified and is taking 
2581  the examination to change classifications. If an applicant does 
2582  not pass one or more parts of the examination, she or he may 
2583  take any part of the examination three more times during the 1 
2584  year period beginning upon the date she or he originally filed 
2585  an application to take the examination. If the applicant does 
2586  not pass the examination within that 1-year period, she or he 
2587  must file a new application and pay the application and 
2588  examination fees in order to take the examination or a part of 
2589  the examination again. However, the applicant may not file a new 
2590  application sooner than 6 months after the date of her or his 
2591  last examination. An applicant who passes the examination but 
2592  does not meet the remaining qualifications as provided in 
2593  applicable statutes and rules within 1 year after the 
2594  application date must file a new application, pay the 
2595  application and examination fee, successfully complete a 
2596  prescribed training course approved by the State Fire College or 
2597  an equivalent course approved by the State Fire Marshal, and 
2598  retake and pass the written examination. 
2599         (3)(a) As a prerequisite to taking the examination for 
2600  certification as a Contractor I, Contractor II, or Contractor 
2601  III, the applicant must be at least 18 years of age, be of good 
2602  moral character, and shall possess 4 years’ proven experience in 
2603  the employment of a fire protection system Contractor I, 
2604  Contractor II, or Contractor III or a combination of equivalent 
2605  education and experience in both water-based and chemical fire 
2606  suppression systems. 
2607         (b) As a prerequisite to taking the examination for 
2608  certification as a Contractor II, the applicant must be at least 
2609  18 years of age, be of good moral character, and have 4 years of 
2610  verifiable employment experience with a fire protection system 
2611  as a Contractor I or Contractor II, or a combination of 
2612  equivalent education and experience in water-based fire 
2613  suppression systems. 
2614         (c) Required education and experience for certification as 
2615  a Contractor I, Contractor II, Contractor III, or Contractor IV 
2616  includes training and experience in both installation and system 
2617  layout as defined in s. 633.021. 
2618         (d) As a prerequisite to taking the examination for 
2619  certification as a Contractor III, the applicant must be at 
2620  least 18 years of age, be of good moral character, and have 4 
2621  years of verifiable employment experience with a fire protection 
2622  system as a Contractor I or Contractor II, or a combination of 
2623  equivalent education and experience in chemical fire suppression 
2624  systems. 
2625         (e) As a prerequisite to taking the examination for 
2626  certification as a Contractor IV, the applicant must shall be at 
2627  least 18 years old, be of good moral character, be licensed as a 
2628  certified plumbing contractor under chapter 489, and 
2629  successfully complete a training program acceptable to the State 
2630  Fire Marshal of not less than 40 contact hours regarding the 
2631  applicable installation standard used by the Contractor IV as 
2632  described in NFPA 13D. The State Fire Marshal may adopt rules to 
2633  administer this subsection have at least 2 years’ proven 
2634  experience in the employment of a fire protection system 
2635  Contractor I, Contractor II, Contractor III, or Contractor IV or 
2636  combination of equivalent education and experience which 
2637  combination need not include experience in the employment of a 
2638  fire protection system contractor. 
2639         (f) As a prerequisite to taking the examination for 
2640  certification as a Contractor V, the applicant must shall be at 
2641  least 18 years old, be of good moral character, and have been 
2642  licensed as a certified underground utility and excavation 
2643  contractor or certified plumbing contractor pursuant to chapter 
2644  489, have verification by an individual who is licensed as a 
2645  certified utility contractor or certified plumbing contractor 
2646  pursuant to chapter 489 that the applicant has 4 years’ proven 
2647  experience in the employ of a certified underground utility and 
2648  excavation contractor or certified plumbing contractor, or have 
2649  a combination of education and experience equivalent to 4 years’ 
2650  proven experience in the employ of a certified underground 
2651  utility and excavation contractor or certified plumbing 
2652  contractor. 
2653         (g) Within 30 days after the date of the examination, the 
2654  State Fire Marshal shall inform the applicant in writing whether 
2655  she or he has qualified or not and, if the applicant has 
2656  qualified, that she or he is ready to issue a certificate of 
2657  competency, subject to compliance with the requirements of 
2658  subsection (4). 
2659         (10) Effective July 1, 2008, The State Fire Marshal shall 
2660  require the National Institute of Certification in Engineering 
2661  Technologies (NICET), Sub-field of Inspection and Testing of 
2662  Fire Protection Systems Level II or equivalent training and 
2663  education as determined by the division as proof that the 
2664  permitholders are knowledgeable about nationally accepted 
2665  standards for the inspection of fire protection systems. It is 
2666  the intent of this act, from July 1, 2005, until July 1, 2008, 
2667  to accept continuing education of all certificateholders’ 
2668  employees who perform inspection functions which specifically 
2669  prepares the permitholder to qualify for NICET II certification. 
2670         (11) It is intended that a certificateholder, or a 
2671  permitholder who is employed by a certificateholder, conduct 
2672  inspections required by this chapter. It is understood that 
2673  after July 1, 2008, employee turnover may result in a depletion 
2674  of personnel who are certified under the NICET Sub-field of 
2675  Inspection and Testing of Fire Protection Systems Level II or 
2676  equivalent training and education as required by the Division of 
2677  State Fire Marshal which is required for permitholders. The 
2678  extensive training and experience necessary to achieve NICET 
2679  Level II certification is recognized. A certificateholder may 
2680  therefore obtain a provisional permit with an endorsement for 
2681  inspection, testing, and maintenance of water-based fire 
2682  extinguishing systems for an employee if the employee has 
2683  initiated procedures for obtaining Level II certification from 
2684  the National Institute for Certification in Engineering 
2685  Technologies Sub-field of Inspection and Testing of Fire 
2686  Protection Systems and achieved Level I certification or an 
2687  equivalent level as determined by the State Fire Marshal through 
2688  verification of experience, training, and examination. The State 
2689  Fire Marshal may establish rules to administer this subsection. 
2690  After 2 years of provisional certification, the employee must 
2691  have achieved NICET Level II certification or obtain equivalent 
2692  training and education as determined by the division, or cease 
2693  performing inspections requiring Level II certification. The 
2694  provisional permit is valid only for the 2 calendar years after 
2695  the date of issuance, may not be extended, and is not renewable. 
2696  After the initial 2-year provisional permit expires, the 
2697  certificateholder must wait 2 additional years before a new 
2698  provisional permit may be issued. The intent is to prohibit the 
2699  certificateholder from using employees who never reach NICET 
2700  Level II status, or equivalent training and education as 
2701  determined by the division, by continuously obtaining 
2702  provisional permits. 
2703         Section 56. Subsection (3) is added to section 633.524, 
2704  Florida Statutes, to read: 
2705         633.524 Certificate and permit fees; use and deposit of 
2706  collected funds.— 
2707         (3) The State Fire Marshal may enter into a contract with 
2708  any qualified public entity or private company in accordance 
2709  with chapter 287 to provide examinations for any applicant for 
2710  any examination administered under the jurisdiction of the State 
2711  Fire Marshal. The State Fire Marshal may direct payments from 
2712  each applicant for each examination directly to such contracted 
2713  entity or company. 
2714         Section 57. Subsection (4) of section 633.537, Florida 
2715  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2716         633.537 Certificate; expiration; renewal; inactive 
2717  certificate; continuing education.— 
2718         (4) The renewal period for the permit class is the same as 
2719  that for the employing certificateholder. The continuing 
2720  education requirements for permitholders are what is required to 
2721  maintain NICET Sub-field of Inspection and Testing of Fire 
2722  Protection Systems Level II, equivalent training and education 
2723  as determined by the division, or higher certification plus 8 
2724  contact hours of continuing education approved by the State Fire 
2725  Marshal during each biennial renewal period thereafter. The 
2726  continuing education curriculum from July 1, 2005, until July 1, 
2727  2008, shall be the preparatory curriculum for NICET II 
2728  certification; after July 1, 2008, the technical curriculum is 
2729  at the discretion of the State Fire Marshal and may be used to 
2730  meet the maintenance of NICET Level II certification and 8 
2731  contact hours of continuing education requirements. It is the 
2732  responsibility of the permitholder to maintain NICET II 
2733  certification or equivalent training and education as determined 
2734  by the division as a condition of permit renewal after July 1, 
2735  2008. 
2736         Section 58. Subsection (4) of section 633.72, Florida 
2737  Statutes, is amended to read: 
2738         633.72 Florida Fire Code Advisory Council.— 
2739         (4) Each appointee shall serve a 4-year term. No member 
2740  shall serve more than two consecutive terms one term. No member 
2741  of the council shall be paid a salary as such member, but each 
2742  shall receive travel and expense reimbursement as provided in s. 
2743  112.061. 
2744         Section 59. Subsection (6) of section 718.113, Florida 
2745  Statutes, is repealed. 
2746         Section 60. The Florida Building Commission shall revise 
2747  the Florida Building Code in order to make it consistent with 
2748  the revisions made by this act to s. 399.02, Florida Statutes. 
2749         Section 61. (1)The Department of Management Services shall 
2750  consider the energy efficiency of all materials used in the 
2751  construction, alteration, repair, or rebuilding of a building or 
2752  facility owned or operated by a state agency. Whenever feasible, 
2753  the department shall lease a building or facility that has high 
2754  efficiency lighting. 
2755         (2)The Department of Management Services shall adopt rules 
2756  requiring a state agency to install high-efficiency lamps when 
2757  replacing an existing lamp or installing a new lamp in a 
2758  building owned by the state agency. 
2759         Section 62. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this 
2760  act, this act shall take effect July 1, 2010. 
2761 
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