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SB 1080

school districts; property; housing developments

57th Legislature - Second Regular Session Introduced by John Kavanagh

SB 1080 standardizes local land-use reviews with clear filing requirements, defined processing timelines, refunds for delays, and new paths for agricultural enclave projects.

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Bill Summary · SB 1080

SB 1080 — REGULATION‑TECH (Local Government Land Regulation) — Summary

Status: Rule 3‑9(a) / Re‑referred to Assignments (Introduced Feb 4, 2025)
Primary sponsor: Sen. McClain; Committee substitute sponsored by Rules Committee
Effective date (if enacted): October 1, 2025

Purpose / Intent

SB 1080 is designed to standardize and accelerate local government review of land‑use and zoning applications, reduce procedural delays in permitting, and create new administrative pathways for certain development requests (notably agricultural enclaves). The bill also adds remedies for applicants when statutorily required timeframes are not met.

Key provisions

  • Minimum application information: Requires counties and municipalities to specify the minimum information required for certain zoning and development permit/order applications so that applicants know what is required for a complete filing.
  • Defined processing timeframes: Directs local governments to process development permit and development order applications within specified time limits (consistent with existing statutory review periods and extensions); failure to meet those timeframes triggers remedies (see refunds).
  • Applicant refunds: If a local government fails to meet the processing timeframes established by the bill, the local government must issue refunds to the applicant (committee analyses reference this new refund requirement; bill text governs specifics).
  • Hearing limits and timing: Prohibits a local government from limiting the number of quasi‑judicial or public hearings each month in a way that would delay consideration of an application for a development permit or order.
  • Comprehensive plan amendments: Clarifies that a comprehensive plan amendment does not need to be approved at the second public hearing in order to avoid being deemed withdrawn. (A House amendment further provided that if an amendment is not finally passed within 180 days after the second hearing, the amendment is deemed withdrawn.)
  • Agricultural enclaves: Establishes a substantially new administrative approval mechanism for development proposed on qualifying agricultural enclave parcels (creates an alternative pathway distinct from the standard comprehensive plan amendment/residential conversion process).
  • Impact fees: Includes limitations aimed at preventing “extraordinary” increases to impact fees (analyses describe new constraints; exact thresholds/definitions are in bill language).
  • Building‑permit funding: A message amendment allows local governments to use certain building‑code fees and fines to support processes related to obtaining or finalizing building permits.

Who would be affected

  • Local governments (counties and municipalities): required to adopt/clarify application checklists, adhere to new timing and hearing rules, and potentially pay refunds or face administrative remedies.
  • Applicants and developers: benefit from clearer filing requirements, faster review deadlines, a new refund remedy for missed deadlines, and streamlined options for certain enclave developments.
  • Property owners of agricultural enclaves: gain an alternative administrative approval route, subject to statutory qualifications.
  • Residents and local stakeholders: may experience faster permitting outcomes and modified public hearing schedules; impacts on planning outcomes and fee structures could affect infrastructure funding and development patterns.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • The bill moved through Community Affairs, Judiciary, and Rules committees with favorable recommendations (committee analyses dated March–April 2025).
  • Committee Substitute (CS/SB 1080) made substantial changes; a House amendment clarified the 180‑day withdrawal rule and allowed use of building‑code fee funds for permitting processes.
  • If enacted, the bill’s operative date is October 1, 2025.

Additional note

Multiple unrelated bills in other states also carry the identifier “SB 1080” (Arizona, Hawaii, Illinois) on unrelated topics; this summary addresses the Florida Senate bill concerning local government land regulation as reflected in the Florida Senate committee analyses.

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

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