Bill Text: FL S1858 | 2018 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Improvements to Real Property
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2018-03-10 - Died in Judiciary [S1858 Detail]
Download: Florida-2018-S1858-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2018 SB 1858 By Senator Passidomo 28-01379A-18 20181858__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to improvements to real property; 3 amending s. 163.08, F.S.; defining terms; revising the 4 term “qualifying improvement”; specifying that a 5 financing agreement may not be used to fund ancillary 6 work except under certain conditions; specifying 7 conditions that must be determined before a financing 8 agreement may be approved; specifying that the failure 9 of a property owner to disclose specified information 10 does not invalidate a financing agreement; specifying 11 that the existence of a prior financing agreement is 12 not evidence meeting program requirements; specifying 13 the information that must be verified for residential 14 properties regarding a property owner’s ability to pay 15 the annual assessment; providing requirements for a 16 program administrator’s review of a property owner’s 17 ability to pay; specifying how the fair market value 18 on the property on which a qualifying improvement will 19 be placed is derived and requiring such value to be 20 disclosed to the property owner before execution of a 21 financing agreement; requiring a program administrator 22 to orally review specified information to specified 23 persons before the execution of a financing agreement 24 and record and receive written acknowledgement of such 25 provision; prohibiting the use of a prerecorded device 26 for certain purposes; requiring the program 27 administrator to develop additional procedures to 28 protect vulnerable adults; requiring certain local 29 governments to develop a written disclosure form that 30 contains specified information; requiring that such 31 form be provided to a property owner before executing 32 the property agreement; requiring that certain 33 statements on such form be individually acknowledged; 34 requiring a program administrator to provide a 35 cancellation form within a specified period; 36 specifying situations in which a contract to sell or 37 install a qualifying improvement on a residential 38 property is unenforceable; prohibiting a contractor 39 from beginning work under such a contract; providing 40 procedures for returning or restoring residential 41 property in specified situations in which a contract 42 is unenforceable; specifying circumstances where an 43 otherwise unenforceable contract is enforceable; 44 specifying practices in which a program administrator 45 may not engage; providing exceptions; specifying 46 actions that a program administrator, contractor, or 47 third party may not engage in regarding financing 48 agreements; specifying the circumstance in which a 49 program administrator may make final payment to a 50 contractor; requiring a program to have publicly 51 available specified information regarding qualifying 52 improvements; authorizing a program administrator to 53 include additional products under specified 54 conditions; specifying that agreements need not be 55 notarized; requiring the qualifying improvements 56 program to make an annual report available on its 57 website; specifying items to be included in such 58 report; providing an effective date. 59 60 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 61 62 Section 1. Subsections (7) and (10) through (16), of 63 section 163.08, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as 64 subsections (17), (19) through (24), and (26), respectively, 65 present subsection (8) is redesignated as subsection (18) and 66 amended, present subsections (2) and (9) are amended, and new 67 subsections (7) through (16) and (25) are added to that section, 68 to read: 69 163.08 Supplemental authority for improvements to real 70 property.— 71 (2) As used in this section, the term: 72 (a) “Facility” means any portion of a building, structure, 73 or site improvement located on a site as defined in Section 202 74 of the 2017 Florida Building Code. 75 (b) “Local government” means a county, a municipality, a 76 dependent special district as defined in s. 189.012, or a 77 separate legal entity created pursuant to s. 163.01(7). 78 (c) “Non-residential property” means any property type that 79 is not a residential property. 80 (d) “Program administrator” means an entity which 81 administers a qualifying improvement program for a local 82 government. 83 (e)(b)“Qualifying improvement” includes any: 84 1. Energy conservation and efficiency improvement, which is 85 a measure to reduce consumption through conservation or a more 86 efficient use of electricity, natural gas, propane, or other 87 forms of energy on the property, including, but not limited to, 88 air sealing; installation of insulation; installation of energy 89 efficient heating, cooling, or ventilation systems; building 90 modifications to increase the use of daylight; replacement of 91 windows; installation of energy controls or energy recovery 92 systems; installation of electric vehicle charging equipment; 93 and installation of efficient lighting equipment. 94 2. Renewable energy improvement, which is the installation 95 of any system in which the electrical, mechanical, or thermal 96 energy is produced from a method that uses one or more of the 97 following fuels or energy sources: hydrogen, solar energy, 98 geothermal energy, bioenergy, and wind energy. 99 3. Wind resistance improvement, which includes the products 100 and installation for, but is not limited to: 101 a. Improving the strength of the roof deck attachment; 102 b. Creating a secondary water barrier to prevent water 103 intrusion; 104 c.InstallingWind-resistant shingles; 105 d.InstallingGable-end bracing; 106 e. Reinforcing roof-to-wall connections; 107 f.InstallingStorm shutters; or 108 g.InstallingOpening protections. 109 (f) “Qualifying improvements program” means a program that 110 includes financing and administration activities undertaken by a 111 program administrator for property owners to purchase and 112 install qualifying improvements on a building or facility. 113 (g) “Residential property” means real estate on which any 114 of the following is located: 115 1. One single-family residential unit or one multifamily 116 structure containing one to four residential units. 117 2. Single-family residential units such as condominiums, 118 townhouses, timeshares, mobile homes, or houses in a subdivision 119 that may be legally sold, leased, or otherwise conveyed on a 120 unit-by-unit basis, regardless of whether the units are a part 121 of a larger building or parcel containing more than four 122 residential units. 123 (7) A financing agreement may not be used to fund ancillary 124 work unless the scope of the ancillary work is directly related 125 to and necessary for the installation and safe operation of a 126 qualifying improvement and the cost of the ancillary work does 127 not exceed the cost of the individual qualifying improvement to 128 which it is directly related. 129 (8) A program administrator may not approve a financing 130 agreement before reasonably determining that: 131 (a) The property taxes and other assessments on the 132 property are current and that the property owner has not been 133 delinquent in making such payments for the preceding 3 years or 134 for the time the property owner has owned the property, 135 whichever is less. 136 (b) The property has no recorded and outstanding 137 involuntary liens in excess of $1,000. 138 (c) There are no notices of default currently recorded on 139 the property which have not been rescinded. 140 (d) For residential properties, the property owner has not 141 been subject to a bankruptcy proceeding within the last 7 years 142 unless it was discharged or dismissed more than 2 years before 143 the application date. 144 (e) For residential properties, the property owner is 145 current on nonmortgage debt excluding medical debt, and has had 146 no more than one late payment exceeding 30 days during the 12 147 months immediately preceding the application date. 148 (f) The property owner is current on all mortgage debt on 149 the property and has had no more than one late payment exceeding 150 30 days during the 12 months immediately preceding the 151 application date. 152 (g) The property is within the geographic boundaries of the 153 applicable qualifying improvements program. 154 (h) The total financed amount and mortgage-related debt on 155 the property does not exceed 97 percent of the fair market value 156 of the property, as determined pursuant to subsection (10). 157 (i) The term of the financing agreement does not exceed the 158 estimated useful life of the qualifying improvement for which 159 the majority of the financing has been provided. The program 160 administrator shall determine the useful life using established 161 third-party standards or certification criteria from government 162 agencies or nationally recognized standards and testing 163 organizations. 164 (j) The program administrator must obtain a statement from 165 the property owner as to whether the property owner has obtained 166 or sought to obtain additional qualifying improvements on the 167 same property which have not yet been recorded. 168 169 The failure of a property owner to disclose information 170 specified in this subsection does not invalidate a financing 171 agreement or any obligation thereunder, even if the total 172 financed amount of the qualifying improvement exceeds the amount 173 that would otherwise be authorized under paragraph (h) or 174 subsection (18). The existence of a prior qualifying improvement 175 assessment or a prior financing agreement is not evidence that 176 the financing agreement under consideration is affordable or 177 meets other program requirements. 178 (9) In addition to the determinations in subsection (8), 179 and before a program administrator approves a qualifying 180 improvement on a residential property, he or she must use 181 information contained in the property owner’s application, 182 reasonably reliable third-party records, or an automated 183 verification system to reasonably determine whether the property 184 owner has the ability to pay the annual assessment for the 185 qualifying improvement. The program administrator must review 186 the property owner’s household income, housing expenses, assets, 187 and other debt obligations. If the program administrator uses an 188 automated verification system, it must be a system that can 189 verify the property owner’s income, is not based on predictive 190 or estimation methodologies, and has been determined sufficient 191 for such verification purposes by a federal mortgage lending 192 authority or regulator. In reviewing the property owner’s 193 ability to pay, the program administrator: 194 (a) When determining the household income, may include the 195 income of any property owner 18 years of age or older whose name 196 is on the property title. If a person’s income is considered, 197 that person’s debt obligations must also be considered. 198 (b) May not consider the equity of the property that will 199 secure the assessment. 200 (c) Shall determine the property owner’s debt obligations 201 using reasonably reliable third-party records, including at 202 least one consumer credit report from an agency that meets the 203 requirements of 15 U.S.C. s. 1681a(p). Debt obligations to be 204 reviewed must include: 205 1. Secured and unsecured debt. 206 2. Housing expenses. A program administrator shall make a 207 reasonable estimate of the basic housing expenses based on the 208 number of persons in the household. 209 3. Stated alimony or child support obligations. 210 (d) Shall determine whether the property owner has 211 sufficient income to pay the annual assessment and whether he or 212 she has sufficient residual income to meet his or her household 213 living expenses. 214 (10) A program administrator must derive the fair market 215 value of the property using one of the following methods and 216 must disclose the value to the property owner before the 217 property owner executes the financing agreement: 218 (a) The value derived using an automated valuation model 219 provided by a third-party vendor that contains estimation models 220 with confidence scores, if available. To use this method: 221 1. The third-party vendor must provide regular statistical 222 calibration. 223 2. The program administrator must use at least three 224 automated valuation models for each property. If a model 225 provides a range of values, the value for the model must be the 226 average between the high and low values. 227 3. The program administrator must use the value with the 228 highest confidence score for a property. If an automated 229 valuation model does not provide a confidence score for a 230 subject property, the program administrator must use the average 231 of all estimated values to determine the fair market value. 232 (b) The property appraiser’s determination of just value. 233 (c) An appraisal prepared by an independent third party, a 234 broker price opinion, a comparative market analysis, or any 235 other methodology commonly used in the real estate finance 236 industry. 237 (11)(a) Before a residential property owner executes a 238 financing agreement, the program administrator must orally 239 review the key terms of the financing agreement, using plain 240 language, with at least one property owner or the verified 241 authorized representative of the owner, and that person must 242 provide written acknowledgment that the oral review was given. 243 The program administrator may not use a prerecorded device to 244 convey any required disclosures. 245 (b) The program administrator must record the oral review 246 in an audio format and protect the information as required by 247 law. 248 (c) The program administrator shall develop additional 249 procedures under this subsection to prevent exploitation of 250 vulnerable adults. 251 (12)(a) Each local government that offers a qualifying 252 improvements program must develop a written disclosure form that 253 must be provided to the residential property owner before he or 254 she executes the financing agreement and which contains the key 255 terms of the agreement, including: 256 1. A description of the qualifying improvement and 257 ancillary work; 258 2. The total financed amount, including the cost of the 259 qualifying improvement, ancillary work, installation, program 260 fees, and prepaid interest, if any; 261 3. The annual assessment process and yearly schedule; 262 4. The amount of the annual assessment; 263 5. The term of the total financed amount; 264 6. The interest rate for the financed amount; and 265 7. The annual percentage rate. 266 (b) The disclosure form must also contain the following 267 statements which must be individually acknowledged by the 268 residential property owner: 269 1. “I understand that if I sell or refinance the property, 270 I may be required to pay off the outstanding financed amount as 271 a condition of the sale or the refinance.” 272 2. “I understand that I cannot be assessed a penalty if I 273 prepay the outstanding financed amount.” 274 3. “I understand that utility savings are not guaranteed 275 and will not reduce the assessment payments or total financed 276 amount.” 277 4. “I understand that the annual assessment will be paid 278 when property taxes are paid and will result in a lien being 279 placed on my property.” 280 5. “I understand that the annual assessment will be added 281 to my property tax bill, and if I pay my property taxes through 282 my mortgage payment using an escrow or impound account, I should 283 notify my mortgage lender, so that my monthly mortgage payment 284 can be adjusted to cover the increased property tax bill.” 285 6. “I understand that if I fail to pay the annual 286 assessment, I may incur penalties and fees, and the local 287 government could issue a tax certificate which might result in 288 me losing my property.” 289 7. “I understand that I should seek professional tax advice 290 if I have questions regarding tax credits, tax deductibility, or 291 the tax impact on the annual assessment or the financing 292 agreement.” 293 8. “I understand that I have 3 days to cancel the financing 294 agreement. The 3-day-right-to-cancel period expires on midnight 295 of the third business day after I sign the agreement.” 296 (c) In addition, a program administrator must provide a 297 printed cancellation form to the residential property owner no 298 later than the time the property owner signs the financing 299 agreement which would allow the property owner to cancel the 300 contract. 301 (13)(a) A contract to sell or install a qualifying 302 improvement that is related to an application for financing in a 303 qualifying improvements program for a residential property is 304 unenforceable and a contractor may not begin work under such a 305 contract if: 306 1. The property owner would not have entered into the 307 contract but for the belief that the qualifying improvement or 308 its installation would be paid under the financing agreement; or 309 2. The property owner applied for, accepted, and canceled a 310 qualifying improvement financing agreement within the 3-day 311 right-to-cancel period set forth in subparagraph (12)(b)8. 312 (b) If a contractor has initiated work on a residential 313 property under an unenforceable contract as determined under 314 paragraph (a), the contractor: 315 1. May not receive compensation for that work under the 316 financing agreement. 317 2. Shall restore the property to its original condition at 318 no cost to the property owner. 319 3. Shall immediately return any money, property, and other 320 consideration given by the property owner. If the property owner 321 provided any property and the contractor does not or cannot 322 return it, the contractor shall immediately return the fair 323 market value of the property or its value as designated in the 324 contract, whichever is greater. 325 (c) If the contractor has delivered chattel or fixtures to 326 the residential property pursuant to an unenforceable contract, 327 the contractor shall have 90 days from the date the contract was 328 executed to retrieve the chattel or fixtures provided that: 329 1. The contractor has fulfilled the requirements of 330 subparagraphs (b)2. and 3. 331 2. The chattel and fixtures can be removed at the 332 contractor’s expense without damaging the property owner’s 333 property and can be practically returned. 334 (d) The residential property owner may retain any chattel 335 or fixtures provided pursuant to an unenforceable contract if a 336 contractor fails to comply with this subsection. 337 (e) A contract which is otherwise unenforceable under this 338 subsection remains enforceable if the residential property owner 339 waives his or her right to cancel the contract, allows the 340 contractor to proceed with the installation of the qualifying 341 improvement, and cancels the financing agreement. 342 (14)(a) A program administrator may not authorize a 343 contractor or third party to advertise the availability of 344 financing agreements or solicit property owners on behalf of the 345 program administrator, unless: 346 1. The contractor or third party maintains the appropriate 347 registration or certification from the Construction Industry 348 Licensing Board or any other permit, license, or registration 349 required to conduct business in the jurisdiction where it 350 operates, and provides proof of having the required bond and 351 insurance coverage amounts; and 352 2. The program administrator obtains the contractor’s or 353 third party’s written agreement that the contractor or third 354 party will meet applicable laws and rules and qualifying 355 improvement program policies and procedures, including those on 356 advertising and marketing. 357 (b) A program administrator may not provide any direct or 358 indirect cash payment or thing of material value to a contractor 359 in excess of the actual price charged by that contractor for the 360 sale and installation of the qualifying improvements that are 361 financed by a financing agreement. However, a program 362 administrator may provide information or service to a contractor 363 to facilitate the installation of a qualifying improvement for a 364 property owner. 365 (c) A program administrator may not reimburse a contractor 366 for its expenses for advertising and marketing campaigns and 367 materials. A program administrator and a contractor may share 368 expenses in connection with joint advertising and marketing 369 campaigns and materials, if the expenses are shared on a 370 commercially reasonable basis. 371 (d) A program administrator may not provide any direct cash 372 payment or other thing of material value to a property owner 373 explicitly conditioned upon the property owner entering into a 374 financing agreement. However, a program administrator may offer 375 programs or promotions that provide reduced fees or interest 376 rates if the reduced fees or interest rates are reflected in the 377 financing agreements and are not provided to the property owners 378 as cash consideration. 379 (e) A program administrator, contractor, or a third party 380 may not make any representation as to the tax deductibility of a 381 financing agreement unless that representation is consistent 382 with representations, statements, or opinions of the Internal 383 Revenue Service or an applicable state tax agency with regard to 384 the tax treatment of non-ad valorem assessments. 385 (f) A program administrator may not provide to a contractor 386 engaged in soliciting financing agreements on its behalf any 387 information that discloses the amount of funds for which a 388 property owner is eligible for qualifying improvements or the 389 amount of equity in a property. 390 (g) For residential properties, a contractor may not 391 provide a different price for a qualifying improvement financed 392 under this section than the contractor would provide if the 393 property owner paid for the improvement in cash. 394 (15) A program administrator may not make the final payment 395 to a contractor unless the property owner has signed a 396 certificate of completion. 397 (16)(a) The qualifying improvements program must make 398 available, on its website, an updated list of products that have 399 been approved by the local government as qualifying 400 improvements. The list shall, at a minimum, include the 401 following information for each product on that list: 402 1. A name or description of the product. 403 2. Eligibility criteria, including performance thresholds, 404 certification requirements, and installation criteria. 405 (b) A product may not be included on the list unless the 406 product meets one or more standards or certification criteria 407 established by appropriate federal government agencies or by 408 credible third-party private organizations. 409 (c) A program administrator may include additional products 410 as part of an overall project for qualifying improvements that 411 are not included in the list of products if the following items 412 are available: 413 1. An application process, approved by the local 414 government, that allows a contractor or property owner to 415 request a product to be considered as a qualifying improvement; 416 and 417 2. Guidelines approved by the local government which the 418 program administrator will use in reviewing the application for 419 a custom improvement. The guidelines must identify minimum 420 requirements needed for approval of a custom improvement. 421 (18)(8)A local government may enter into a financing 422 agreement only with the record owner of the affected property. 423 Any financing agreement entered into pursuant to this section or 424 a summary memorandum of such agreement mustshallbe recorded in 425 the public records of the county within which the property is 426 located by the sponsoring unit of local government within 5 days 427 after execution of the agreement. The recorded agreement must 428shallprovide constructive notice that the assessment to be 429 levied on the property constitutes a lien of equal dignity to 430 county taxes and assessments from the date of recordation. An 431 agreement, including its supporting documents and disclosures, 432 entered into under this section, does not need to be notarized. 433(9)Before entering into a financing agreement, the local434government shall reasonably determine that all property taxes435and any other assessments levied on the same bill as property436taxes are paid and have not been delinquent for the preceding 3437years or the property owner’s period of ownership, whichever is438less; that there are no involuntary liens, including, but not439limited to, construction liens on the property; that no notices440of default or other evidence of property-based debt delinquency441have been recorded during the preceding 3 years or the property442owner’s period of ownership, whichever is less; and that the443property owner is current on all mortgage debt on the property.444 (25) The qualifying improvements program must make 445 available on its website a report by December 31 each year 446 containing the following information, separated by city, county, 447 and zip code, and all methodologies and supporting assumptions 448 or sources relied upon in preparing the report: 449 (a) The number of qualifying improvements funded. 450 (b) The aggregate, average, and median dollar amounts of 451 annual and total qualifying improvements assessments funded. 452 (c) The percentage, the number, and the dollar value of 453 qualifying improvements assessments represented by the following 454 category types: 455 1. Energy efficiency; 456 2. Renewable energy; and 457 3. Wind resistance. 458 (d) The number of defaulted assessments including the total 459 number and defaulted amount, the number and dates of missed 460 payments, the total number of parcels defaulted and years in 461 default, and the percentage of defaults by total assessments. 462 (e) The total amount of energy saved, the total dollar 463 amount of such savings by property owners categorized by 464 qualifying improvements installed, the total number of energy 465 savings improvements, and the number of improvements installed 466 that meet standards of the Energy Star program of the United 467 States Environmental Protection Agency, including the overall 468 average efficiency rating of installed products for each 469 category type specified in paragraph (c). 470 (f) The total amount of renewable energy produced 471 categorized by the type of qualifying improvement installed and 472 the total number of renewable energy installations, including 473 the average and median system size. 474 (g) Estimated amount of greenhouse gas emissions 475 reductions. 476 (h) Estimated number of jobs created. 477 (i) The number and percentage of homeowners 60 years of age 478 or older. 479 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2018.