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HB 869

An Act amending the act of March 10, 1949 (P.L.30, No.14), known as the Public School Code of 1949, in terms and courses of study, providing for nonpublic school and home education program exemption.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Mark Gillen and 7 co-sponsors

Expands UUE contractors to install water-based fire sprinkler piping up to 5 feet outside, and Fire Protection System Contractor Vs with UUE license up to the fire riser inside, un

Referred to State Government
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Bill Summary · HB 869

Bill summary — CS/HB 869 (Florida, committee report version)

Note: the materials you provided include multiple unrelated "HB 869" bills from different states. This summary focuses on the Florida committee report (CS/HB 869) titled regarding underground utility and excavation contractors and fire protection piping — the text most directly tied to the committee analysis you supplied.

Purpose / intent

The bill would expand the permitted scope of practice for licensed underground utility and excavation (UUE) contractors — and for Fire Protection System Contractor Vs who also hold an UUE license — to allow these contractors to install piping that is integral to water‑based fire protection systems subject to specified limits. The intent is to clarify and broaden who may perform certain underground and building‑adjacent fire‑system piping work.

Key provisions

  • Permits licensed UUE contractors to install piping that is integral to a fire protection system, but only up to a point within 5 feet of the building exterior where the system will be installed. (Committee Report: Sections 1 & 2.)
  • Permits Fire Protection System Contractor V licensees who also hold an UUE license to install such piping up to the building’s fire riser (the connection to pressurized water that feeds sprinklers), ending no more than 1 foot above the finished floor inside the building. (Sections 1 & 2.)
  • Maintains existing requirements that fire protection systems must be installed in accordance with the Fire Code and Building Code and are subject to local permitting, inspection, and approval processes.
  • Effective date specified in the committee report: July 1, 2025 (Section 6 of the report).

Who is affected

  • Primary: licensed underground utility and excavation contractors and Fire Protection System Contractor Vs (particularly those holding both licenses). The change would expand their permissible work and therefore potential revenue sources.
  • Secondary: building owners, general contractors, and fire protection system installers (potentially changing who performs specific piping work).
  • Regulatory bodies remain: Florida DBPR Construction Industry Licensing Board (licenses for UUE contractors) and the Division of State Fire Marshal (fire protection contractor certification and regulation).
  • Local governments continue to enforce permitting, inspections, and code compliance for fire protection system installations.

Fiscal / economic impact

  • Committee report: potential positive but indeterminate fiscal impact on the private sector because affected contractors may gain additional revenue from the expanded scope of work. No state fiscal impact was identified in the report.

Procedural / status notes

  • Committee action (Industries & Professional Activities subcommittee): reported favorably as committee substitute (15 Y, 1 N) per the committee report (dated 3/20/2025).
  • The title and committee report reflect the bill as a committee substitute.
  • Final legislative status (from the documents you supplied): the bill ultimately "Died in Committee" (Commerce Committee) and therefore was not enacted.

If you want, I can:
- Extract the exact statutory text changes proposed (sections referenced) and show before/after language; or
- Prepare a short analysis of likely industry reactions or compliance implications for contractors and AHJs (authorities having jurisdiction).

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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