Bill Text: FL S1184 | 2024 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Land Use and Development Regulations

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2024-03-08 - Died in Community Affairs [S1184 Detail]

Download: Florida-2024-S1184-Introduced.html
       Florida Senate - 2024                                    SB 1184
       
       
        
       By Senator Ingoglia
       
       
       
       
       
       11-01010-24                                           20241184__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to land use and development
    3         regulations; amending s. 163.3177, F.S.; revising the
    4         types of data upon which comprehensive plans and plan
    5         amendments must be based; making technical changes;
    6         requiring that support data and summaries of the
    7         comprehensive plan be subject to the compliance review
    8         process; providing certain requirements for the
    9         support data and summaries of the comprehensive plan;
   10         deleting provisions regarding the use of methodologies
   11         in the evaluation of comprehensive plan data;
   12         prohibiting optional elements of the comprehensive
   13         plan from including certain policies; deleting a
   14         provision regarding the use of alternative data in a
   15         comprehensive plan amendment; requiring that future
   16         land use plans be based on data that includes elements
   17         related to the amount of land required to accommodate
   18         anticipated growth for specified types of development
   19         and the amount of certain land located outside of
   20         urban service areas; requiring that the future land
   21         use plan include certain criteria that would encourage
   22         the location of schools in certain areas; requiring
   23         that the future land use element discourage the
   24         proliferation of urban sprawl by taking certain
   25         measures; amending s. 163.3164, F.S.; revising
   26         definitions; amending s. 163.3202, F.S.; requiring
   27         local land development regulations to establish
   28         minimum lot sizes in certain districts and infill
   29         development standards for specified housing units;
   30         amending s. 479.01, F.S.; conforming a cross
   31         reference; providing an effective date.
   32          
   33  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   34  
   35         Section 1. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1), subsection (2),
   36  and paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section 163.3177, Florida
   37  Statutes, are amended to read:
   38         163.3177 Required and optional elements of comprehensive
   39  plan; studies and surveys.—
   40         (1) The comprehensive plan shall provide the principles,
   41  guidelines, standards, and strategies for the orderly and
   42  balanced future economic, social, physical, environmental, and
   43  fiscal development of the area that reflects community
   44  commitments to implement the plan and its elements. These
   45  principles and strategies shall guide future decisions in a
   46  consistent manner and shall contain programs and activities to
   47  ensure comprehensive plans are implemented. The sections of the
   48  comprehensive plan containing the principles and strategies,
   49  generally provided as goals, objectives, and policies, shall
   50  describe how the local government’s programs, activities, and
   51  land development regulations will be initiated, modified, or
   52  continued to implement the comprehensive plan in a consistent
   53  manner. It is not the intent of this part to require the
   54  inclusion of implementing regulations in the comprehensive plan
   55  but rather to require identification of those programs,
   56  activities, and land development regulations that will be part
   57  of the strategy for implementing the comprehensive plan and the
   58  principles that describe how the programs, activities, and land
   59  development regulations will be carried out. The plan shall
   60  establish meaningful and predictable standards for the use and
   61  development of land and provide meaningful guidelines for the
   62  content of more detailed land development and use regulations.
   63         (f) All required mandatory and optional elements of the
   64  comprehensive plan and plan amendments must shall be based upon
   65  relevant and appropriate data and an analysis by the local
   66  government that may include, but not be limited to, surveys,
   67  studies, community goals and vision, and other data available at
   68  the time of adoption of the comprehensive plan or plan
   69  amendment. To be based on data means to react to it in an
   70  appropriate way and to the extent necessary indicated by the
   71  data available on that particular subject at the time of
   72  adoption of the plan or plan amendment at issue.
   73         1. Surveys, studies, and data utilized in the preparation
   74  of the comprehensive plan may not be deemed a part of the
   75  comprehensive plan unless adopted as a part of it. Copies of
   76  such studies, surveys, data, and supporting documents for
   77  proposed plans and plan amendments must shall be made available
   78  for public inspection, and copies of such plans must shall be
   79  made available to the public upon payment of reasonable charges
   80  for reproduction. Support data or summaries are not subject to
   81  the compliance review process., but The comprehensive plan, the
   82  support data, and the summaries must be clearly based on current
   83  appropriate data and analyses that are relevant to and correlate
   84  with the proposed amendment. Support data or summaries may be
   85  used to aid in the determination of compliance and consistency.
   86         2. Data must be taken from professionally accepted sources.
   87  The application of a methodology utilized in data collection or
   88  whether a particular methodology is professionally accepted may
   89  be evaluated. However, the evaluation may not include whether
   90  one accepted methodology is better than another. Original data
   91  collection by local governments is not required. However, local
   92  governments may use original data so long as methodologies are
   93  professionally accepted.
   94         3. The comprehensive plan must shall be based upon
   95  permanent and seasonal population estimates and projections,
   96  which must shall either be those published by the Office of
   97  Economic and Demographic Research or generated by the local
   98  government based upon a professionally acceptable methodology,
   99  whichever is greater. The plan must be based on at least the
  100  minimum amount of land required to accommodate the medium
  101  projections as published by the Office of Economic and
  102  Demographic Research for at least a 10-year planning period
  103  unless otherwise limited under s. 380.05, including related
  104  rules of the Administration Commission. Absent physical
  105  limitations on population growth, population projections for
  106  each municipality, and the unincorporated area within a county
  107  must, at a minimum, be reflective of each area’s proportional
  108  share of the total county population and the total county
  109  population growth.
  110         (2) Coordination of the required and optional several
  111  elements of the local comprehensive plan is shall be a major
  112  objective of the planning process. The required and optional
  113  several elements of the comprehensive plan must shall be
  114  consistent. Optional elements of the comprehensive plan may not
  115  contain policies that restrict the density or intensity
  116  established in the future land use element. Where data is
  117  relevant to required and optional several elements, consistent
  118  data must shall be used, including population estimates and
  119  projections unless alternative data can be justified for a plan
  120  amendment through new supporting data and analysis. Each map
  121  depicting future conditions must reflect the principles,
  122  guidelines, and standards within all elements, and each such map
  123  must be contained within the comprehensive plan.
  124         (6) In addition to the requirements of subsections (1)-(5),
  125  the comprehensive plan shall include the following elements:
  126         (a) A future land use plan element designating proposed
  127  future general distribution, location, and extent of the uses of
  128  land for residential uses, commercial uses, industry,
  129  agriculture, recreation, conservation, education, public
  130  facilities, and other categories of the public and private uses
  131  of land. The approximate acreage and the general range of
  132  density or intensity of use must shall be provided for the gross
  133  land area included in each existing land use category. The
  134  element must shall establish the long-term end toward which land
  135  use programs and activities are ultimately directed.
  136         1. Each future land use category must be defined in terms
  137  of uses included, and must include standards to be followed in
  138  the control and distribution of population densities and
  139  building and structure intensities. The proposed distribution,
  140  location, and extent of the various categories of land use must
  141  shall be shown on a land use map or map series which must shall
  142  be supplemented by goals, policies, and measurable objectives.
  143         2. The future land use plan and plan amendments must shall
  144  be based upon surveys, studies, and data regarding the area, as
  145  applicable, including:
  146         a. The amount of land required to accommodate anticipated
  147  growth, including the amount of land necessary to accommodate
  148  single-family and two-family homes and fee simple townhouse
  149  development.
  150         b. The projected permanent and seasonal population of the
  151  area.
  152         c. The character of undeveloped land.
  153         d. The availability of water supplies, public facilities,
  154  and services.
  155         e.The amount of land located outside the urban service
  156  area, excluding lands designated for conservation, preservation,
  157  or other public use.
  158         f.e. The need for redevelopment, including the renewal of
  159  blighted areas and the elimination of nonconforming uses which
  160  are inconsistent with the character of the community.
  161         g.f. The compatibility of uses on lands adjacent to or
  162  closely proximate to military installations.
  163         h.g. The compatibility of uses on lands adjacent to an
  164  airport as defined in s. 330.35 and consistent with s. 333.02.
  165         i.h. The discouragement of urban sprawl.
  166         j.i. The need for job creation, capital investment, and
  167  economic development that will strengthen and diversify the
  168  community’s economy.
  169         k.j. The need to modify land uses and development patterns
  170  within antiquated subdivisions.
  171         3. The future land use plan element must shall include
  172  criteria to be used to:
  173         a. Achieve the compatibility of lands adjacent or closely
  174  proximate to military installations, considering factors
  175  identified in s. 163.3175(5).
  176         b. Achieve the compatibility of lands adjacent to an
  177  airport as defined in s. 330.35 and consistent with s. 333.02.
  178         c. Encourage preservation of recreational and commercial
  179  working waterfronts for water-dependent uses in coastal
  180  communities.
  181         d. Encourage the location of schools proximate to urban
  182  service residential areas to the extent possible and encourage
  183  the location of schools in all areas if necessary to provide
  184  adequate school capacity to serve residential development.
  185         e. Coordinate future land uses with the topography and soil
  186  conditions, and the availability of facilities and services.
  187         f. Ensure the protection of natural and historic resources.
  188         g. Provide for the compatibility of adjacent land uses.
  189         h. Provide guidelines for the implementation of mixed-use
  190  development including the types of uses allowed, the percentage
  191  distribution among the mix of uses, or other standards, and the
  192  density and intensity of each use.
  193         4. The amount of land designated for future planned uses
  194  shall provide a balance of uses that foster vibrant, viable
  195  communities and economic development opportunities and address
  196  outdated development patterns, such as antiquated subdivisions.
  197  The amount of land designated for future land uses must should
  198  allow the operation of real estate markets to provide adequate
  199  choices for permanent and seasonal residents and business and
  200  may not be limited solely by the projected population. The
  201  element must shall accommodate at least the minimum amount of
  202  land required to accommodate the medium projections as published
  203  by the Office of Economic and Demographic Research for at least
  204  a 10-year planning period unless otherwise limited under s.
  205  380.05, including related rules of the Administration
  206  Commission.
  207         5. The future land use plan of a county may designate areas
  208  for possible future municipal incorporation.
  209         6. The land use maps or map series must shall generally
  210  identify and depict historic district boundaries and must shall
  211  designate historically significant properties meriting
  212  protection.
  213         7. The future land use element must clearly identify the
  214  land use categories in which public schools are an allowable
  215  use. When delineating the land use categories in which public
  216  schools are an allowable use, a local government shall include
  217  in the categories sufficient land proximate to residential
  218  development to meet the projected needs for schools in
  219  coordination with public school boards and may establish
  220  differing criteria for schools of different type or size. Each
  221  local government shall include lands contiguous to existing
  222  school sites, to the maximum extent possible, within the land
  223  use categories in which public schools are an allowable use.
  224         8. Future land use map amendments must shall be based upon
  225  the following analyses:
  226         a. An analysis of the availability of facilities and
  227  services.
  228         b. An analysis of the suitability of the plan amendment for
  229  its proposed use considering the character of the undeveloped
  230  land, soils, topography, natural resources, and historic
  231  resources on site.
  232         c. An analysis of the minimum amount of land needed to
  233  achieve the goals and requirements of this section.
  234         9. The future land use element must and any amendment to
  235  the future land use element shall discourage the proliferation
  236  of urban sprawl by planning for future development as provided
  237  in this section.
  238         a. The primary indicators that a plan or plan amendment
  239  does not discourage the proliferation of urban sprawl are listed
  240  below. The evaluation of the presence of these indicators must
  241  shall consist of an analysis of the plan or plan amendment
  242  within the context of features and characteristics unique to
  243  each locality in order to determine whether the plan or plan
  244  amendment:
  245         (I) Promotes, allows, or designates for development
  246  substantial areas of the jurisdiction to develop as low
  247  intensity, low-density, or single-use development or uses.
  248         (II) Promotes, allows, or designates significant amounts of
  249  urban development to occur in rural areas at substantial
  250  distances from existing urban areas while not using undeveloped
  251  lands that are available and suitable for development.
  252         (III) Promotes, allows, or designates urban development in
  253  radial, strip, isolated, or ribbon patterns generally emanating
  254  from existing urban developments.
  255         (IV) Fails to adequately protect and conserve natural
  256  resources, such as wetlands, floodplains, native vegetation,
  257  environmentally sensitive areas, natural groundwater aquifer
  258  recharge areas, lakes, rivers, shorelines, beaches, bays,
  259  estuarine systems, and other significant natural systems.
  260         (V) Fails to adequately protect adjacent agricultural areas
  261  and activities, including silviculture, active agricultural and
  262  silvicultural activities, passive agricultural activities, and
  263  dormant, unique, and prime farmlands and soils.
  264         (VI) Fails to maximize use of existing public facilities
  265  and services.
  266         (VII) Fails to maximize use of future public facilities and
  267  services.
  268         (VIII) Allows for land use patterns or timing which
  269  disproportionately increase the cost in time, money, and energy
  270  of providing and maintaining facilities and services, including
  271  roads, potable water, sanitary sewer, stormwater management, law
  272  enforcement, education, health care, fire and emergency
  273  response, and general government.
  274         (IX) Fails to provide a clear separation between rural and
  275  urban uses.
  276         (X) Discourages or inhibits infill development or the
  277  redevelopment of existing neighborhoods and communities.
  278         (XI) Fails to encourage a functional mix of uses.
  279         (XII) Results in poor accessibility among linked or related
  280  land uses.
  281         (XIII) Results in the loss of significant amounts of
  282  functional open space.
  283         b. The future land use element or plan amendment must shall
  284  be determined to discourage the proliferation of urban sprawl if
  285  it incorporates a development pattern or urban form that
  286  achieves four or more of the following:
  287         (I) Directs or locates economic growth and associated land
  288  development to geographic areas of the community in a manner
  289  that does not have an adverse impact on and protects natural
  290  resources and ecosystems.
  291         (II) Promotes the efficient and cost-effective provision or
  292  extension of public infrastructure and services.
  293         (III) Promotes walkable and connected communities and
  294  provides for compact development and a mix of uses at densities
  295  and intensities that will support a range of housing choices and
  296  a multimodal transportation system, including pedestrian,
  297  bicycle, and transit, if available.
  298         (IV) Promotes conservation of water and energy.
  299         (V) Preserves agricultural areas and activities, including
  300  silviculture, and dormant, unique, and prime farmlands and
  301  soils.
  302         (VI) Preserves open space and natural lands and provides
  303  for public open space and recreation needs.
  304         (VII) Creates a balance of land uses based upon demands of
  305  the residential population for the nonresidential needs of an
  306  area.
  307         (VIII) Provides uses, densities, and intensities of use and
  308  urban form that would remediate an existing or planned
  309  development pattern in the vicinity that constitutes sprawl or
  310  if it provides for an innovative development pattern such as
  311  transit-oriented developments or new towns as defined in s.
  312  163.3164.
  313         10. The future land use element must shall include a future
  314  land use map or map series.
  315         a. The proposed distribution, extent, and location of the
  316  following uses must shall be shown on the future land use map or
  317  map series:
  318         (I) Residential.
  319         (II) Commercial.
  320         (III) Industrial.
  321         (IV) Agricultural.
  322         (V) Recreational.
  323         (VI) Conservation.
  324         (VII) Educational.
  325         (VIII) Public.
  326         b. The following areas must shall also be shown on the
  327  future land use map or map series, if applicable:
  328         (I) Historic district boundaries and designated
  329  historically significant properties.
  330         (II) Transportation concurrency management area boundaries
  331  or transportation concurrency exception area boundaries.
  332         (III) Multimodal transportation district boundaries.
  333         (IV) Mixed-use categories.
  334         c. The following natural resources or conditions must shall
  335  be shown on the future land use map or map series, if
  336  applicable:
  337         (I) Existing and planned public potable waterwells, cones
  338  of influence, and wellhead protection areas.
  339         (II) Beaches and shores, including estuarine systems.
  340         (III) Rivers, bays, lakes, floodplains, and harbors.
  341         (IV) Wetlands.
  342         (V) Minerals and soils.
  343         (VI) Coastal high hazard areas.
  344         Section 2. Subsections (12), (22), (51), and (52) of
  345  section 163.3164, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  346         163.3164 Community Planning Act; definitions.—As used in
  347  this act:
  348         (12) “Density” means an objective measurement of the number
  349  of people or residential units allowed per unit of land, such as
  350  dwelling units residents or employees per acre.
  351         (22) “Intensity” means an objective measurement of the
  352  extent to which land may be developed or used, expressed in
  353  square feet per unit of land, including the consumption or use
  354  of the space above, on, or below ground; the measurement of the
  355  use of or demand on natural resources; and the measurement of
  356  the use of or demand on facilities and services.
  357         (51) “Urban service area” means areas identified in the
  358  comprehensive plan where public facilities and services,
  359  including, but not limited to, central water and sewer capacity
  360  and roads, are already in place or may be expanded by investment
  361  by the are identified in the capital improvements element. The
  362  term includes any areas identified in the comprehensive plan as
  363  urban service areas, regardless of local government or the
  364  private sector as evidenced by an executed agreement with the
  365  local government to provide urban services within the local
  366  government’s 20-year planning period limitation.
  367         (52) “Urban sprawl” means an unplanned and uncontrolled a
  368  development pattern characterized by low density, automobile
  369  dependent development with either a single use or multiple uses
  370  that are not functionally related, requiring the extension of
  371  public facilities and services in an inefficient manner, and
  372  failing to provide a clear separation between urban and rural
  373  uses.
  374         Section 3. Subsection (2) of section 163.3202, Florida
  375  Statutes, is amended to read:
  376         163.3202 Land development regulations.—
  377         (2) Local land development regulations must shall contain
  378  specific and detailed provisions necessary or desirable to
  379  implement the adopted comprehensive plan and must, shall at a
  380  minimum:
  381         (a) Regulate the subdivision of land.
  382         (b)Establish minimum lot sizes within single-family and
  383  two-family homes and fee simple townhouse zoning districts to
  384  accommodate the maximum density authorized in the comprehensive
  385  plan, excluding the land area required to be set aside for
  386  subdivision roads, sidewalks, stormwater ponds, open space,
  387  landscape buffers, and any other mandatory land development
  388  regulations that require land to be set aside which could
  389  otherwise be used for the development of single-family and two
  390  family homes and fee simple townhouses.
  391         (c)Establish infill development standards for single
  392  family and two-family homes and fee simple townhouse dwelling
  393  units to allow for the administrative approval of development of
  394  infill single-family and two-family homes and fee simple
  395  townhouses.
  396         (d)(b) Regulate the use of land and water for those land
  397  use categories included in the land use element and ensure the
  398  compatibility of adjacent uses and provide for open space.
  399         (e)(c) Provide for protection of potable water wellfields.
  400         (f)(d) Regulate areas subject to seasonal and periodic
  401  flooding and provide for drainage and stormwater management.
  402         (g)(e) Ensure the protection of environmentally sensitive
  403  lands designated in the comprehensive plan.
  404         (h)(f) Regulate signage.
  405         (i)(g) Provide that public facilities and services meet or
  406  exceed the standards established in the capital improvements
  407  element required by s. 163.3177 and are available when needed
  408  for the development, or that development orders and permits are
  409  conditioned on the availability of these public facilities and
  410  services necessary to serve the proposed development. A local
  411  government may not issue a development order or permit that
  412  results in a reduction in the level of services for the affected
  413  public facilities below the level of services provided in the
  414  local government’s comprehensive plan.
  415         (j)(h) Ensure safe and convenient onsite traffic flow,
  416  considering needed vehicle parking.
  417         (k)(i) Maintain the existing density of residential
  418  properties or recreational vehicle parks if the properties are
  419  intended for residential use and are located in the
  420  unincorporated areas that have sufficient infrastructure, as
  421  determined by a local governing authority, and are not located
  422  within a coastal high-hazard area under s. 163.3178.
  423         (l)(j) Incorporate preexisting development orders
  424  identified pursuant to s. 163.3167(3).
  425         Section 4. Subsection (29) of section 479.01, Florida
  426  Statutes, is amended to read:
  427         479.01 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
  428         (29) “Zoning category” means the designation under the land
  429  development regulations or other similar ordinance enacted to
  430  regulate the use of land as provided in s. 163.3202(2)(d) s.
  431  163.3202(2)(b), which designation sets forth the allowable uses,
  432  restrictions, and limitations on use applicable to properties
  433  within the category.
  434         Section 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2024.

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