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SB 1078

Relating to official misconduct.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Ed Diehl and 6 co-sponsors

The bill simplifies permits for small fire alarm/sprinkler work, speeds approvals, tightens deadlines, and enforces uniform statewide code by limiting nonconforming local amendment

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · SB 1078

SB 1078 — Regulation-Tech (Fire Prevention) — Summary

Status & timeline (Florida)
- Filed: Feb 4, 2025
- Multiple committee substitutes adopted (Banking & Insurance; Community Affairs; Rules). Substantial changes made in committee substitutes.
- Current status (House of origin / Senate): Rule 3‑9(a) / Re‑referred to Assignments (referred back to Assignments on April 11, 2025).
- Effective date (as drafted): July 1, 2025.

Purpose
- Clarify and standardize a streamlined permitting pathway for small fire alarm and fire sprinkler projects, tighten procedural timelines for permitting/inspections, improve inspection reporting, and limit local ordinances that conflict with the statewide Fire Prevention Code.

Key provisions and changes
1. Simplified permitting process (fire alarm and sprinkler projects)
- Requires local governments to adopt a simplified permitting process that meets the minimum requirements in the Florida Building Code for projects altering 20 or fewer alarm devices or 20 or fewer sprinklers.
- Allows a contractor to begin work authorized by the permit immediately after submitting a completed permit application.
- Specifies deadlines for permit issuance and for scheduling inspections (deadlines added where statute previously was silent).
- Removes (or clarifies removal of) the current statutory requirement that the local enforcement agency must perform “at least one inspection” for qualifying simplified projects.
- Clarifies that contractors must keep plans/specifications on site for onsite plan review (rather than simply “make them available at each inspection”).
- Requires contractors to provide copies of documentation requested by the local enforcement agency for recording purposes within a specified timeframe and bars agencies from demanding documentation for devices/areas outside the permitted scope.

  1. Remedies for missed deadlines

    • If a local government fails to meet the statutory deadlines for permit issuance or inspections, the bill requires a partial refund or reduction of the permit fee unless an enumerated exception applies.
  2. Definitions and scope

    • Amends definitions to clarify which projects qualify for the simplified permitting pathway (consistent with 20‑device / 20‑sprinkler thresholds).
  3. Local ordinance compliance

    • Declares local amendments that do not comply with the Florida Fire Prevention Code to be unenforceable (language varies in drafts: “null and void,” “rescinded,” or “unenforceable” appears in different committee analyses).
    • Limits municipal enforcement to ordinances that were submitted to the Florida Building Commission and the State Fire Marshal as of the date the permit was submitted.
    • Some drafts require local governments to submit newly adopted Fire Prevention Code amendments to registered fire protection contractors.
  4. Inspection reporting improvements

    • Revises required uniform summary inspection report content: instead of brief descriptions of each deficiency, reports must include totals (broken out into critical vs. noncritical deficiencies), the total number of impairment deficiencies, and brief descriptions for impairment deficiencies.
    • In later committee versions, requires contractors to submit a detailed inspection report along with the uniform summary report.

Who is affected
- Local governments and local enforcement agencies (required to adopt compliant simplified permitting processes and meet deadlines).
- Licensed contractors (electrical/alarm and fire protection contractors): may begin qualifying work sooner, must maintain onsite plans for plan review, must supply requested documentation promptly, and must submit inspection reports as required.
- Building owners, property managers, and occupants (potentially faster permit turnarounds; changes to inspection regiment).
- Florida Building Commission and State Fire Marshal (receive ordinance submissions and act as reference points for enforceability).
- Local fire marshals (disciplinary implications noted in some drafts if they enforce rescinded ordinances).

Potential impacts
- Administrative: may speed permit processing and reduce plan-review waits for small projects; could increase upfront procedural compliance by local governments to meet new deadlines and refund rules.
- Contractors: earlier ability to commence work reduces project delays for qualifying small alterations; increases onus to maintain documentation and provide inspection reports.
- Public safety oversight: modifies inspection requirements for small projects—removal of a guaranteed inspection could raise concerns among some stakeholders, while standardizing reporting aims to improve data uniformity.
- Uniformity: narrows local variation by limiting enforcement of unsent or nonconforming local amendments to the Fire Prevention Code.

Notes
- The bill has been substantively amended in committee; language and certain obligations (e.g., inspection requirements, remedies for missed deadlines, municipal enforcement penalties) vary across committee substitute versions. Review of the engrossed text should be consulted for final statutory language if enacted.

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

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