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SB 1142

Relating to the family and medical leave insurance program.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by David Smith

Florida SB 1142 lets water districts release conservation easements on small urban parcels, enabling development aligned with nearby zoning and raising local tax assessments.

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · SB 1142

SB 1142 — Release of Conservation Easements (summary)

Note: The provided materials include multiple unrelated bills that share the SB 1142 designation in different states (see “Other SB 1142 versions” below). The detailed analysis documents in the packet, however, describe a Florida Senate bill on release of conservation easements. The summary below describes that Florida measure.

Main purpose

SB 1142 directs Florida’s water management districts to release (remove) conservation easements held by the district on privately owned parcels when certain conditions are met, allowing the fee‑simple owner to use the property consistent with adjacent zoning and subject to tax and mitigation requirements.

Key provisions

  • Application-triggered release: A water management district must release a conservation easement upon application by the fee‑simple owner if all of the following are true:
    • The parcel subject to the easement is less than 15 acres.
    • The parcel is bordered on at least three sides by impervious surfaces (for example, roads, parking lots).
    • Any undeveloped adjacent parcels are also less than 15 acres and bordered on three or more sides by impervious surfaces.
    • The land contains no historical, architectural, archaeological, or cultural significance.
    • The applicant has secured sufficient mitigation credits (to offset environmental impacts).
  • Property taxation: Upon release of the easement, the property’s ad valorem taxes must be based on the property’s just (market) value.
  • Development use: Once the easement is released, the property may be developed in ways consistent with the zoning designation of adjacent lands (subject to other applicable local/state permits).
  • Effective date: The Judiciary Committee analyses indicate an effective date of July 1, 2025.

Who is affected

  • Private landowners whose property is subject to conservation easements held by a water management district — especially smaller, urban parcels surrounded by impervious development.
  • Water management districts — required to process applications and release easements meeting the statutory criteria.
  • Local governments and tax authorities — ad valorem assessments may change when easements are released.
  • Environmental mitigation-credit markets and conservation programs — demand for mitigation credits may increase; release of easements may reduce conserved acres and affect habitat/drainage/stormwater functions.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Conservation: The bill narrows protection for certain small parcels, potentially reducing public conservation holdings in highly urbanized areas.
  • Development and land use: Enables infill or redevelopment where parcels meet conditions; consistency limited to adjacent zoning.
  • Fiscal: Taxable value likely increases on released parcels (shift from conservation-value assessments to just value), which could increase local tax revenues.
  • Administrative: Water management districts will have to evaluate applications, verify mitigation credits and lack of historic/cultural significance, and potentially update records/maps.
  • Environmental mitigation: Requiring mitigation credits offsets some impacts but effectiveness depends on credit availability and quality.

Procedural status (from supplied materials)

  • Introduced: February 6, 2025.
  • Favorable reports from Environment & Natural Resources and Judiciary committees (March 2025).
  • Listed status: Rule 3‑9(a) / Re‑referred to Assignments (indicates re‑referral in chamber procedure as of the provided file).

Other SB 1142 versions (from supplied packet)

Several unrelated bills from other states are also labeled “SB 1142” in the materials:
- Arizona: Prohibits foreign contributions to influence ballot measures and requires certification under penalty of perjury.
- Hawaii: Proposes mortgage‑servicer rules for disbursement of insurance proceeds after property damage and related borrower protections.
- Illinois: Technical amendment to the Illinois AgrAbility Act.

If you want, I can (a) prepare a legislative one‑pager focused on likely impacts for a specific stakeholder (water management districts, local governments, developers, or conservation groups), or (b) produce separate, full summaries of the Arizona/Hawaii/Illinois SB 1142 texts. Which would you prefer?

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

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