Bill Text: FL S1730 | 2019 | Regular Session | Comm Sub
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Community Development and Housing
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 3-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-05-02 - Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/HB 207 (Ch. 2019-106), CS/CS/HB 7103 (Ch. 2019-165) [S1730 Detail]
Download: Florida-2019-S1730-Comm_Sub.html
Bill Title: Community Development and Housing
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 3-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-05-02 - Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/HB 207 (Ch. 2019-106), CS/CS/HB 7103 (Ch. 2019-165) [S1730 Detail]
Download: Florida-2019-S1730-Comm_Sub.html
Florida Senate - 2019 CS for SB 1730 By the Committee on Community Affairs; and Senator Lee 578-03299-19 20191730c1 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to community development and housing; 3 amending s. 125.01055, F.S.; prohibiting a county from 4 adopting or imposing a requirement in any form 5 relating to affordable housing which has specified 6 effects; providing construction; amending s. 125.022, 7 F.S.; requiring that a county review the application 8 for completeness and issue a certain letter within a 9 specified period after receiving an application for 10 approval of a development permit or development order; 11 providing procedures for addressing deficiencies in, 12 and for approving or denying, the application; 13 conforming provisions to changes made by the act; 14 defining the term “development order”; amending s. 15 163.3180, F.S.; requiring a local government to credit 16 certain contributions, constructions, expansions, or 17 payments toward any other impact fee or exaction 18 imposed by local ordinance for public educational 19 facilities; providing requirements for the basis of 20 the credit; amending s. 163.31801, F.S.; adding 21 minimum conditions that certain impact fees must 22 satisfy; requiring that, under certain circumstances, 23 a holder of certain impact fee or mobility fee credits 24 receive the full value of the credits as of the date 25 they were first established based on the impact fee or 26 mobility fee rate that was in effect on such date; 27 providing that the government, in certain actions, has 28 the burden of proving by a preponderance of the 29 evidence that the imposition or amount of impact fees 30 or required dollar-for-dollar credits for the payment 31 of impact fees meets certain requirements; prohibiting 32 the court from using a deferential standard for the 33 benefit of the government; providing applicability; 34 authorizing a county, municipality, or special 35 district to provide an exception or waiver for an 36 impact fee for the development or construction of 37 housing that is affordable; providing that if a 38 county, municipality, or special district provides 39 such an exception or waiver, it is not required to use 40 any revenues to offset the impact; amending s. 41 166.033, F.S.; requiring that a municipality review 42 the application for completeness and issue a certain 43 letter within a specified period after receiving an 44 application for approval of a development permit or 45 development order; providing procedures for addressing 46 deficiencies in, and for approving or denying, the 47 application; conforming provisions to changes made by 48 the act; defining the term “development order”; 49 amending s. 166.04151, F.S.; prohibiting a 50 municipality from adopting or imposing a requirement 51 in any form relating to affordable housing which has 52 specified effects; providing construction; amending s. 53 494.001, F.S.; revising the definition of the term 54 “mortgage loan”; providing an effective date. 55 56 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 57 58 Section 1. Section 125.01055, Florida Statutes, is amended 59 to read: 60 125.01055 Affordable housing.— 61 (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a county 62 may adopt and maintain in effect any law, ordinance, rule, or 63 other measure that is adopted for the purpose of increasing the 64 supply of affordable housing using land use mechanisms such as 65 inclusionary housing ordinances. A county may not, however, 66 adopt or impose a requirement in any form, including, without 67 limitation, by way of a comprehensive plan amendment, ordinance, 68 or land development regulation or as a condition of a 69 development order or development permit, which has any of the 70 following effects: 71 (a) Mandating or establishing a maximum sales price or 72 lease rental for privately produced dwelling units. 73 (b) Requiring the allocation or designation, whether 74 directly or indirectly, of privately produced dwelling units for 75 sale or rental to any particular class or group of purchasers or 76 tenants. 77 (c) Requiring the provision of any onsite or offsite 78 workforce or affordable housing units or a contribution of land 79 or money for such housing, including, but not limited to, the 80 payment of any flat or percentage-based fee, whether calculated 81 on the basis of the number of approved dwelling units, the 82 amount of approved square footage, or otherwise. 83 (2) This section does not limit the authority of a county 84 to create or implement a voluntary density bonus program or any 85 other voluntary incentive-based program designed to increase the 86 supply of workforce or affordable housing units. 87 Section 2. Section 125.022, Florida Statutes, is amended to 88 read: 89 125.022 Development permits and orders.— 90 (1) Within 30 days after receiving an application for a 91 development permit or development order, a county must review 92 the application for completeness and issue a letter indicating 93 that all required information is submitted or specifying with 94 particularity any areas that are deficient. If deficient, the 95 applicant has 30 days to address the deficiencies by submitting 96 the required additional information. Within 90 days after the 97 initial submission, if complete, or the supplemental submission, 98 whichever is later, the county shall approve, approve with 99 conditions, or deny the application for a development permit or 100 development order. The time periods contained in this section 101 may be waived in writing by the applicant. An approval, approval 102 with conditions, or denial of the application for a development 103 permit or development order must include written findings 104 supporting the county’s decision. 105 (2)(1)When reviewing an application for a development 106 permit or development order that is certified by a professional 107 listed in s. 403.0877, a county may not request additional 108 information from the applicant more than three times, unless the 109 applicant waives the limitation in writing. Before a third 110 request for additional information, the applicant must be 111 offered a meeting to attempt to resolve outstanding issues. 112 Except as provided in subsection (5)(4), if the applicant 113 believes the request for additional information is not 114 authorized by ordinance, rule, statute, or other legal 115 authority, the county, at the applicant’s request, shall proceed 116 to process the application for approval or denial. 117 (3)(2)When a county denies an application for a 118 development permit or development order, the county shall give 119 written notice to the applicant. The notice must include a 120 citation to the applicable portions of an ordinance, rule, 121 statute, or other legal authority for the denial of the permit 122 or order. 123 (4)(3)As used in this section, the termsterm“development 124 permit” and “development order” havehasthe same meaning as in 125 s. 163.3164, but dodoesnot include building permits. 126 (5)(4)For any development permit application filed with 127 the county after July 1, 2012, a county may not require as a 128 condition of processing or issuing a development permit or 129 development order that an applicant obtain a permit or approval 130 from any state or federal agency unless the agency has issued a 131 final agency action that denies the federal or state permit 132 before the county action on the local development permit. 133 (6)(5)Issuance of a development permit or development 134 order by a county does not in any way create any rights on the 135 part of the applicant to obtain a permit from a state or federal 136 agency and does not create any liability on the part of the 137 county for issuance of the permit if the applicant fails to 138 obtain requisite approvals or fulfill the obligations imposed by 139 a state or federal agency or undertakes actions that result in a 140 violation of state or federal law. A county shall attach such a 141 disclaimer to the issuance of a development permit and shall 142 include a permit condition that all other applicable state or 143 federal permits be obtained before commencement of the 144 development. 145 (7)(6)This section does not prohibit a county from 146 providing information to an applicant regarding what other state 147 or federal permits may apply. 148 Section 3. Paragraph (h) of subsection (6) of section 149 163.3180, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 150 163.3180 Concurrency.— 151 (6) 152 (h)1. In order to limit the liability of local governments, 153 a local government may allow a landowner to proceed with 154 development of a specific parcel of land notwithstanding a 155 failure of the development to satisfy school concurrency, if all 156 the following factors are shown to exist: 157 a. The proposed development would be consistent with the 158 future land use designation for the specific property and with 159 pertinent portions of the adopted local plan, as determined by 160 the local government. 161 b. The local government’s capital improvements element and 162 the school board’s educational facilities plan provide for 163 school facilities adequate to serve the proposed development, 164 and the local government or school board has not implemented 165 that element or the project includes a plan that demonstrates 166 that the capital facilities needed as a result of the project 167 can be reasonably provided. 168 c. The local government and school board have provided a 169 means by which the landowner will be assessed a proportionate 170 share of the cost of providing the school facilities necessary 171 to serve the proposed development. 172 2. If a local government applies school concurrency, it may 173 not deny an application for site plan, final subdivision 174 approval, or the functional equivalent for a development or 175 phase of a development authorizing residential development for 176 failure to achieve and maintain the level-of-service standard 177 for public school capacity in a local school concurrency 178 management system where adequate school facilities will be in 179 place or under actual construction within 3 years after the 180 issuance of final subdivision or site plan approval, or the 181 functional equivalent. School concurrency is satisfied if the 182 developer executes a legally binding commitment to provide 183 mitigation proportionate to the demand for public school 184 facilities to be created by actual development of the property, 185 including, but not limited to, the options described in sub 186 subparagraph a. Options for proportionate-share mitigation of 187 impacts on public school facilities must be established in the 188 comprehensive plan and the interlocal agreement pursuant to s. 189 163.31777. 190 a. Appropriate mitigation options include the contribution 191 of land; the construction, expansion, or payment for land 192 acquisition or construction of a public school facility; the 193 construction of a charter school that complies with the 194 requirements of s. 1002.33(18); or the creation of mitigation 195 banking based on the construction of a public school facility in 196 exchange for the right to sell capacity credits. Such options 197 must include execution by the applicant and the local government 198 of a development agreement that constitutes a legally binding 199 commitment to pay proportionate-share mitigation for the 200 additional residential units approved by the local government in 201 a development order and actually developed on the property, 202 taking into account residential density allowed on the property 203 prior to the plan amendment that increased the overall 204 residential density. The district school board must be a party 205 to such an agreement. As a condition of its entry into such a 206 development agreement, the local government may require the 207 landowner to agree to continuing renewal of the agreement upon 208 its expiration. 209 b. If the interlocal agreement and the local government 210 comprehensive plan authorize a contribution of land; the 211 construction, expansion, or payment for land acquisition; the 212 construction or expansion of a public school facility, or a 213 portion thereof; or the construction of a charter school that 214 complies with the requirements of s. 1002.33(18), as 215 proportionate-share mitigation, the local government shall 216 credit such a contribution, construction, expansion, or payment 217 toward any other impact fee or exaction imposed by local 218 ordinance for public educational facilitiesthe same need, on a 219 dollar-for-dollar basis at fair market value. The credit must be 220 based on the total impact fee assessed and not upon the impact 221 fee for any particular type of school. 222 c. Any proportionate-share mitigation must be directed by 223 the school board toward a school capacity improvement identified 224 in the 5-year school board educational facilities plan that 225 satisfies the demands created by the development in accordance 226 with a binding developer’s agreement. 227 3. This paragraph does not limit the authority of a local 228 government to deny a development permit or its functional 229 equivalent pursuant to its home rule regulatory powers, except 230 as provided in this part. 231 Section 4. Section 163.31801, Florida Statutes, is amended 232 to read: 233 163.31801 Impact fees; short title; intent; minimum 234 requirements; audits; challengesdefinitions; ordinances levying235impact fees.— 236 (1) This section may be cited as the “Florida Impact Fee 237 Act.” 238 (2) The Legislature finds that impact fees are an important 239 source of revenue for a local government to use in funding the 240 infrastructure necessitated by new growth. The Legislature 241 further finds that impact fees are an outgrowth of the home rule 242 power of a local government to provide certain services within 243 its jurisdiction. Due to the growth of impact fee collections 244 and local governments’ reliance on impact fees, it is the intent 245 of the Legislature to ensure that, when a county or municipality 246 adopts an impact fee by ordinance or a special district adopts 247 an impact fee by resolution, the governing authority complies 248 with this section. 249 (3) At a minimum, an impact fee adopted by ordinance of a 250 county or municipality or by resolution of a special district 251 must satisfy all of the following conditions, at minimum: 252 (a)Require thatThe calculation of the impact fee must be 253 based on the most recent and localized data. 254 (b) The local government must provide for accounting and 255 reporting of impact fee collections and expenditures. If a local 256 governmental entity imposes an impact fee to address its 257 infrastructure needs, the entity mustshallaccount for the 258 revenues and expenditures of such impact fee in a separate 259 accounting fund. 260 (c)LimitAdministrative charges for the collection of 261 impact fees must be limited to actual costs. 262 (d) The local government must provideRequire thatnotice 263 notbe provided noless than 90 days before the effective date 264 of an ordinance or resolution imposing a new or increased impact 265 fee. A county or municipality is not required to wait 90 days to 266 decrease, suspend, or eliminate an impact fee. 267 (e) Collection of the impact fee may not be required to 268 occur earlier than the date of issuance of the building permit 269 for the property that is subject to the fee. 270 (f) The impact fee must be proportional and reasonably 271 connected to, or have a rational nexus with, the need for 272 additional capital facilities and the increased impact generated 273 by the new residential or commercial construction. 274 (g) The impact fee must be proportional and reasonably 275 connected to, or have a rational nexus with, the expenditures of 276 the funds collected and the benefits accruing to the new 277 residential or nonresidential construction. 278 (h) The local government must specifically earmark funds 279 collected under the impact fee for use in acquiring, 280 constructing, or improving capital facilities to benefit new 281 users. 282 (i) Revenues generated by the impact fee may not be used, 283 in whole or in part, to pay existing debt or for previously 284 approved projects unless the expenditure is reasonably connected 285 to, or has a rational nexus with, the increased impact generated 286 by the new residential or nonresidential construction. 287 (j) The local government must credit against the collection 288 of the impact fee any contributions related to public 289 educational facilities, including, but not limited to, land 290 dedication, site planning and design, and construction, whether 291 provided in a proportionate share agreement or any other form of 292 exaction. Any such contributions must be applied to reduce 293 impact fees on a dollar-for-dollar basis at fair market value. 294 (4) If the holder of impact fee or mobility fee credits 295 granted by a local government, whether granted under this 296 section, s. 380.06, or otherwise, uses such credits in lieu of 297 the actual payment of an impact fee or mobility fee and the 298 impact fee or mobility fee is greater than the rate that was in 299 effect when such credits were first established, the holder of 300 those credits must, whenever they are utilized, receive the full 301 value of the credits as of the date on which they were first 302 established based on the impact fee or mobility fee rate that 303 was in effect on such date. 304 (5)(4)Audits of financial statements of local governmental 305 entities and district school boards which are performed by a 306 certified public accountant pursuant to s. 218.39 and submitted 307 to the Auditor General must include an affidavit signed by the 308 chief financial officer of the local governmental entity or 309 district school board stating that the local governmental entity 310 or district school board has complied with this section. 311 (6)(5)In any action challenging an impact fee or the 312 government’s failure to provide required dollar-for-dollar 313 credits for the payment of impact fees as provided in s. 314 163.3180(6)(h)2.b, the government has the burden of proving by a 315 preponderance of the evidence that the imposition or amount of 316 the fee or credit meets the requirements of state legal 317 precedentorand this section. The court may not use a 318 deferential standard for the benefit of the government. 319 (7) This section applies to mobility fees adopted pursuant 320 to s. 163.3180(5)(i). 321 (8) A county, municipality, or special district may provide 322 an exception or waiver for an impact fee for the development or 323 construction of housing that is affordable, as defined in s. 324 420.9071. If a county, municipality, or special district 325 provides such an exception or waiver, it is not required to use 326 any revenues to offset the impact. 327 Section 5. Section 166.033, Florida Statutes, is amended to 328 read: 329 166.033 Development permits and orders.— 330 (1) Within 30 days after receiving an application for 331 approval of a development permit or development order, a 332 municipality must review the application for completeness and 333 issue a letter indicating that all required information is 334 submitted or specifying with particularity any areas that are 335 deficient. If deficient, the applicant has 30 days to address 336 the deficiencies by submitting the required additional 337 information. Within 90 days of the initial submission, if 338 complete, or the supplemental submission, whichever is later, 339 the municipality must approve, approve with conditions, or deny 340 the application for a development permit or development order. 341 The time periods contained in this subsection may be waived in 342 writing by the applicant. An approval, approval with conditions, 343 or denial of the application for a development permit or 344 development order must include written findings supporting the 345 county’s decision. 346 (2)(1)When reviewing an application for a development 347 permit or development order that is certified by a professional 348 listed in s. 403.0877, a municipality may not request additional 349 information from the applicant more than three times, unless the 350 applicant waives the limitation in writing. Before a third 351 request for additional information, the applicant must be 352 offered a meeting to attempt to resolve outstanding issues. 353 Except as provided in subsection (5)(4), if the applicant 354 believes the request for additional information is not 355 authorized by ordinance, rule, statute, or other legal 356 authority, the municipality, at the applicant’s request, shall 357 proceed to process the application for approval or denial. 358 (3)(2)When a municipality denies an application for a 359 development permit or development order, the municipality shall 360 give written notice to the applicant. The notice must include a 361 citation to the applicable portions of an ordinance, rule, 362 statute, or other legal authority for the denial of the permit 363 or order. 364 (4)(3)As used in this section, the termsterm“development 365 permit” and “development order” havehasthe same meaning as in 366 s. 163.3164, but dodoesnot include building permits. 367 (5)(4)For any development permit application filed with 368 the municipality after July 1, 2012, a municipality may not 369 require as a condition of processing or issuing a development 370 permit or development order that an applicant obtain a permit or 371 approval from any state or federal agency unless the agency has 372 issued a final agency action that denies the federal or state 373 permit before the municipal action on the local development 374 permit. 375 (6)(5)Issuance of a development permit or development 376 order by a municipality does notin any waycreate any right on 377 the part of an applicant to obtain a permit from a state or 378 federal agency and does not create any liability on the part of 379 the municipality for issuance of the permit if the applicant 380 fails to obtain requisite approvals or fulfill the obligations 381 imposed by a state or federal agency or undertakes actions that 382 result in a violation of state or federal law. A municipality 383 shall attach such a disclaimer to the issuance of development 384 permits and shall include a permit condition that all other 385 applicable state or federal permits be obtained before 386 commencement of the development. 387 (7)(6)This section does not prohibit a municipality from 388 providing information to an applicant regarding what other state 389 or federal permits may apply. 390 Section 6. Section 166.04151, Florida Statutes, is amended 391 to read: 392 166.04151 Affordable housing.— 393 (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a 394 municipality may adopt and maintain in effect any law, 395 ordinance, rule, or other measure that is adopted for the 396 purpose of increasing the supply of affordable housing using 397 land use mechanisms such as inclusionary housing ordinances. A 398 municipality may not, however, adopt or impose a requirement in 399 any form, including, without limitation, by way of a 400 comprehensive plan amendment, ordinance, or land development 401 regulation or as a condition of a development order or 402 development permit, which has any of the following effects: 403 (a) Mandating or establishing a maximum sales price or 404 lease rental for privately produced dwelling units. 405 (b) Requiring the allocation or designation, whether 406 directly or indirectly, of privately produced dwelling units for 407 sale or rental to any particular class or group of purchasers or 408 tenants. 409 (c) Requiring the provision of any on-site or off-site 410 workforce or affordable housing units or a contribution of land 411 or money for such housing, including, but not limited to, the 412 payment of any flat or percentage-based fee whether calculated 413 on the basis of the number of approved dwelling units, the 414 amount of approved square footage, or otherwise. 415 (2) This section does not limit the authority of a 416 municipality to create or implement a voluntary density bonus 417 program or any other voluntary incentive-based program designed 418 to increase the supply of workforce or affordable housing units. 419 Section 7. Subsection (24) of section 494.001, Florida 420 Statues, is amended to read: 421 494.001 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term: 422 (24) “Mortgage loan” means any: 423 (a) Residential loan thatprimarily for personal, family,424or household use whichis secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, 425 or other equivalent consensual security interest on a dwelling, 426 as defined in s. 103(w)s. 103(v)of the federal Truth in 427 Lending Act, or for the purchase of residential real estate upon 428 which a dwelling is to be constructed; 429 (b) Loan on commercial real property if the borrower is an 430 individual or the lender is a noninstitutional investor; or 431 (c) Loan on improved real property consisting of five or 432 more dwelling units if the borrower is an individual or the 433 lender is a noninstitutional investor. 434 Section 8. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.