Florida Senate - 2017                                     SB 278
       
       
        
       By Senator Steube
       
       23-00527-17                                            2017278__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to local tax referenda; amending s.
    3         212.055, F.S.; requiring local government
    4         discretionary sales surtax referenda to be held on the
    5         date of a general election; providing an effective
    6         date.
    7          
    8  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
    9  
   10         Section 1. Paragraphs (a) and (c) of subsection (1),
   11  paragraph (a) of subsection (2), paragraph (a) of subsection
   12  (3), subsections (4) and (5), paragraph (a) of subsection (6),
   13  paragraph (a) of subsection (7), paragraph (b) of subsection
   14  (8), and paragraph (a) of subsection (9) of section 212.055,
   15  Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (10) is added to
   16  that section, to read:
   17         212.055 Discretionary sales surtaxes; legislative intent;
   18  authorization and use of proceeds.—It is the legislative intent
   19  that any authorization for imposition of a discretionary sales
   20  surtax shall be published in the Florida Statutes as a
   21  subsection of this section, irrespective of the duration of the
   22  levy. Each enactment shall specify the types of counties
   23  authorized to levy; the rate or rates which may be imposed; the
   24  maximum length of time the surtax may be imposed, if any; the
   25  procedure which must be followed to secure voter approval, if
   26  required; the purpose for which the proceeds may be expended;
   27  and such other requirements as the Legislature may provide.
   28  Taxable transactions and administrative procedures shall be as
   29  provided in s. 212.054.
   30         (1) CHARTER COUNTY AND REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
   31  SURTAX.—
   32         (a) Each charter county that has adopted a charter, each
   33  county the government of which is consolidated with that of one
   34  or more municipalities, and each county that is within or under
   35  an interlocal agreement with a regional transportation or
   36  transit authority created under chapter 343 or chapter 349 may
   37  levy a discretionary sales surtax, subject to approval by a
   38  majority vote of the electorate of the county or by a charter
   39  amendment approved by a majority vote of the electorate of the
   40  county.
   41         (c) The proposal to adopt a discretionary sales surtax as
   42  provided in this subsection and to create a trust fund within
   43  the county accounts shall be placed on the ballot in accordance
   44  with law and must be approved in a referendum as set forth in
   45  subsection (10) at a time to be set at the discretion of the
   46  governing body.
   47         (2) LOCAL GOVERNMENT INFRASTRUCTURE SURTAX.—
   48         (a)1. The governing authority in each county may levy a
   49  discretionary sales surtax of 0.5 percent or 1 percent. The levy
   50  of the surtax shall be pursuant to ordinance enacted by a
   51  majority of the members of the county governing authority and
   52  approved by a majority of the electors of the county, as set
   53  forth in subsection (10), voting in a referendum on the surtax.
   54  If the governing bodies of the municipalities representing a
   55  majority of the county’s population adopt uniform resolutions
   56  establishing the rate of the surtax and calling for a referendum
   57  on the surtax, the levy of the surtax shall be placed on the
   58  ballot and shall take effect if approved by a majority of the
   59  electors of the county, as set forth in subsection (10), voting
   60  in the referendum on the surtax.
   61         2. If the surtax was levied pursuant to a referendum held
   62  before July 1, 1993, the surtax may not be levied beyond the
   63  time established in the ordinance, or, if the ordinance did not
   64  limit the period of the levy, the surtax may not be levied for
   65  more than 15 years. The levy of such surtax may be extended only
   66  by approval of a majority of the electors of the county, as set
   67  forth in subsection (10), voting in a referendum on the surtax.
   68         (3) SMALL COUNTY SURTAX.—
   69         (a) The governing authority in each county that has a
   70  population of 50,000 or fewer less on April 1, 1992, may levy a
   71  discretionary sales surtax of 0.5 percent or 1 percent. The levy
   72  of the surtax shall be pursuant to ordinance enacted by an
   73  extraordinary vote of the members of the county governing
   74  authority if the surtax revenues are expended for operating
   75  purposes. If the surtax revenues are expended for the purpose of
   76  servicing bond indebtedness, the surtax shall be approved by a
   77  majority of the electors of the county, as set forth in
   78  subsection (10), voting in a referendum on the surtax.
   79         (4) INDIGENT CARE AND TRAUMA CENTER SURTAX.—
   80         (a)1. The governing body in each county the government of
   81  which is not consolidated with that of one or more
   82  municipalities, which has a population of at least 800,000
   83  residents and is not authorized to levy a surtax under
   84  subsection (5), may levy, pursuant to an ordinance either
   85  approved by an extraordinary vote of the governing body or
   86  conditioned to take effect only upon approval by a majority vote
   87  of the electors of the county, as set forth in subsection (10),
   88  voting in a referendum, a discretionary sales surtax at a rate
   89  that may not exceed 0.5 percent.
   90         2. If the ordinance is conditioned on a referendum, a
   91  statement that includes a brief and general description of the
   92  purposes to be funded by the surtax and that conforms to the
   93  requirements of s. 101.161 shall be placed on the ballot by the
   94  governing body of the county. The following questions shall be
   95  placed on the ballot:
   96  
   97                       FOR THE. . . .CENTS TAX                     
   98                     AGAINST THE. . . .CENTS TAX                   
   99  
  100         3. The ordinance adopted by the governing body providing
  101  for the imposition of the surtax shall set forth a plan for
  102  providing health care services to qualified residents, as
  103  defined in subparagraph 4. Such plan and subsequent amendments
  104  to it shall fund a broad range of health care services for both
  105  indigent persons and the medically poor, including, but not
  106  limited to, primary care and preventive care as well as hospital
  107  care. The plan must also address the services to be provided by
  108  the Level I trauma center. It shall emphasize a continuity of
  109  care in the most cost-effective setting, taking into
  110  consideration both a high quality of care and geographic access.
  111  Where consistent with these objectives, it shall include,
  112  without limitation, services rendered by physicians, clinics,
  113  community hospitals, mental health centers, and alternative
  114  delivery sites, as well as at least one regional referral
  115  hospital where appropriate. It shall provide that agreements
  116  negotiated between the county and providers, including hospitals
  117  with a Level I trauma center, will include reimbursement
  118  methodologies that take into account the cost of services
  119  rendered to eligible patients, recognize hospitals that render a
  120  disproportionate share of indigent care, provide other
  121  incentives to promote the delivery of charity care, promote the
  122  advancement of technology in medical services, recognize the
  123  level of responsiveness to medical needs in trauma cases, and
  124  require cost containment including, but not limited to, case
  125  management. It must also provide that any hospitals that are
  126  owned and operated by government entities on May 21, 1991, must,
  127  as a condition of receiving funds under this subsection, afford
  128  public access equal to that provided under s. 286.011 as to
  129  meetings of the governing board, the subject of which is
  130  budgeting resources for the rendition of charity care as that
  131  term is defined in the Florida Hospital Uniform Reporting System
  132  (FHURS) manual referenced in s. 408.07. The plan shall also
  133  include innovative health care programs that provide cost
  134  effective alternatives to traditional methods of service
  135  delivery and funding.
  136         4. For the purpose of this paragraph, the term “qualified
  137  resident” means residents of the authorizing county who are:
  138         a. Qualified as indigent persons as certified by the
  139  authorizing county;
  140         b. Certified by the authorizing county as meeting the
  141  definition of the medically poor, defined as persons having
  142  insufficient income, resources, and assets to provide the needed
  143  medical care without using resources required to meet basic
  144  needs for shelter, food, clothing, and personal expenses; or not
  145  being eligible for any other state or federal program, or having
  146  medical needs that are not covered by any such program; or
  147  having insufficient third-party insurance coverage. In all
  148  cases, the authorizing county is intended to serve as the payor
  149  of last resort; or
  150         c. Participating in innovative, cost-effective programs
  151  approved by the authorizing county.
  152         5. Moneys collected pursuant to this paragraph remain the
  153  property of the state and shall be distributed by the Department
  154  of Revenue on a regular and periodic basis to the clerk of the
  155  circuit court as ex officio custodian of the funds of the
  156  authorizing county. The clerk of the circuit court shall:
  157         a. Maintain the moneys in an indigent health care trust
  158  fund;
  159         b. Invest any funds held on deposit in the trust fund
  160  pursuant to general law;
  161         c. Disburse the funds, including any interest earned, to
  162  any provider of health care services, as provided in
  163  subparagraphs 3. and 4., upon directive from the authorizing
  164  county. However, if a county has a population of at least
  165  800,000 residents and has levied the surtax authorized in this
  166  paragraph, notwithstanding any directive from the authorizing
  167  county, on October 1 of each calendar year, the clerk of the
  168  court shall issue a check in the amount of $6.5 million to a
  169  hospital in its jurisdiction that has a Level I trauma center or
  170  shall issue a check in the amount of $3.5 million to a hospital
  171  in its jurisdiction that has a Level I trauma center if that
  172  county enacts and implements a hospital lien law in accordance
  173  with chapter 98-499, Laws of Florida. The issuance of the checks
  174  on October 1 of each year is provided in recognition of the
  175  Level I trauma center status and shall be in addition to the
  176  base contract amount received during fiscal year 1999-2000 and
  177  any additional amount negotiated to the base contract. If the
  178  hospital receiving funds for its Level I trauma center status
  179  requests such funds to be used to generate federal matching
  180  funds under Medicaid, the clerk of the court shall instead issue
  181  a check to the Agency for Health Care Administration to
  182  accomplish that purpose to the extent that it is allowed through
  183  the General Appropriations Act; and
  184         d. Prepare on a biennial basis an audit of the trust fund
  185  specified in sub-subparagraph a. Commencing February 1, 2004,
  186  such audit shall be delivered to the governing body and to the
  187  chair of the legislative delegation of each authorizing county.
  188         6. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
  189  county shall not levy local option sales surtaxes authorized in
  190  this paragraph and subsections (2) and (3) in excess of a
  191  combined rate of 1 percent.
  192         (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
  193  the governing body in each county the government of which is not
  194  consolidated with that of one or more municipalities and which
  195  has a population of fewer less than 800,000 residents, may levy,
  196  by ordinance subject to approval by a majority of the electors
  197  of the county, as set forth in subsection (10), voting in a
  198  referendum, a discretionary sales surtax at a rate that may not
  199  exceed 0.25 percent for the sole purpose of funding trauma
  200  services provided by a trauma center licensed pursuant to
  201  chapter 395.
  202         1. A statement that includes a brief and general
  203  description of the purposes to be funded by the surtax and that
  204  conforms to the requirements of s. 101.161 shall be placed on
  205  the ballot by the governing body of the county. The following
  206  shall be placed on the ballot:
  207  
  208                       FOR THE. . . .CENTS TAX                     
  209                     AGAINST THE. . . .CENTS TAX                   
  210  
  211         2. The ordinance adopted by the governing body of the
  212  county providing for the imposition of the surtax shall set
  213  forth a plan for providing trauma services to trauma victims
  214  presenting in the trauma service area in which such county is
  215  located.
  216         3. Moneys collected pursuant to this paragraph remain the
  217  property of the state and shall be distributed by the Department
  218  of Revenue on a regular and periodic basis to the clerk of the
  219  circuit court as ex officio custodian of the funds of the
  220  authorizing county. The clerk of the circuit court shall:
  221         a. Maintain the moneys in a trauma services trust fund.
  222         b. Invest any funds held on deposit in the trust fund
  223  pursuant to general law.
  224         c. Disburse the funds, including any interest earned on
  225  such funds, to the trauma center in its trauma service area, as
  226  provided in the plan set forth pursuant to subparagraph 2., upon
  227  directive from the authorizing county. If the trauma center
  228  receiving funds requests such funds be used to generate federal
  229  matching funds under Medicaid, the custodian of the funds shall
  230  instead issue a check to the Agency for Health Care
  231  Administration to accomplish that purpose to the extent that the
  232  agency is allowed through the General Appropriations Act.
  233         d. Prepare on a biennial basis an audit of the trauma
  234  services trust fund specified in sub-subparagraph a., to be
  235  delivered to the authorizing county.
  236         4. A discretionary sales surtax imposed pursuant to this
  237  paragraph shall expire 4 years after the effective date of the
  238  surtax, unless reenacted by ordinance subject to approval by a
  239  majority of the electors of the county, as set forth in
  240  subsection (10), voting in a subsequent referendum.
  241         5. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
  242  county shall not levy local option sales surtaxes authorized in
  243  this paragraph and subsections (2) and (3) in excess of a
  244  combined rate of 1 percent.
  245         (5) COUNTY PUBLIC HOSPITAL SURTAX.—Any county as defined in
  246  s. 125.011(1) may levy the surtax authorized in this subsection
  247  pursuant to an ordinance either approved by extraordinary vote
  248  of the county commission or conditioned to take effect only upon
  249  approval by a majority vote of the electors of the county, as
  250  set forth in subsection (10), voting in a referendum. In a
  251  county as defined in s. 125.011(1), for the purposes of this
  252  subsection, “county public general hospital” means a general
  253  hospital as defined in s. 395.002 which is owned, operated,
  254  maintained, or governed by the county or its agency, authority,
  255  or public health trust.
  256         (a) The rate shall be 0.5 percent.
  257         (b) If the ordinance is conditioned on a referendum, the
  258  proposal to adopt the county public hospital surtax shall be
  259  placed on the ballot in accordance with subsection (10) law at a
  260  time to be set at the discretion of the governing body. The
  261  referendum question on the ballot shall include a brief general
  262  description of the health care services to be funded by the
  263  surtax.
  264         (c) Proceeds from the surtax shall be:
  265         1. Deposited by the county in a special fund, set aside
  266  from other county funds, to be used only for the operation,
  267  maintenance, and administration of the county public general
  268  hospital; and
  269         2. Remitted promptly by the county to the agency,
  270  authority, or public health trust created by law which
  271  administers or operates the county public general hospital.
  272         (d) Except as provided in subparagraphs 1. and 2., the
  273  county must continue to contribute each year an amount equal to
  274  at least 80 percent of that percentage of the total county
  275  budget appropriated for the operation, administration, and
  276  maintenance of the county public general hospital from the
  277  county’s general revenues in the fiscal year of the county
  278  ending September 30, 1991:
  279         1. Twenty-five percent of such amount must be remitted to a
  280  governing board, agency, or authority that is wholly independent
  281  from the public health trust, agency, or authority responsible
  282  for the county public general hospital, to be used solely for
  283  the purpose of funding the plan for indigent health care
  284  services provided for in paragraph (e);
  285         2. However, in the first year of the plan, a total of $10
  286  million shall be remitted to such governing board, agency, or
  287  authority, to be used solely for the purpose of funding the plan
  288  for indigent health care services provided for in paragraph (e),
  289  and in the second year of the plan, a total of $15 million shall
  290  be so remitted and used.
  291         (e) A governing board, agency, or authority shall be
  292  chartered by the county commission upon this act becoming law.
  293  The governing board, agency, or authority shall adopt and
  294  implement a health care plan for indigent health care services.
  295  The governing board, agency, or authority shall consist of no
  296  more than seven and no fewer than five members appointed by the
  297  county commission. The members of the governing board, agency,
  298  or authority shall be at least 18 years of age and residents of
  299  the county. No member may be employed by or affiliated with a
  300  health care provider or the public health trust, agency, or
  301  authority responsible for the county public general hospital.
  302  The following community organizations shall each appoint a
  303  representative to a nominating committee: the South Florida
  304  Hospital and Healthcare Association, the Miami-Dade County
  305  Public Health Trust, the Dade County Medical Association, the
  306  Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, and the Mayor of Miami-Dade
  307  County. This committee shall nominate between 10 and 14 county
  308  citizens for the governing board, agency, or authority. The
  309  slate shall be presented to the county commission and the county
  310  commission shall confirm the top five to seven nominees,
  311  depending on the size of the governing board. Until such time as
  312  the governing board, agency, or authority is created, the funds
  313  provided for in subparagraph (d)2. shall be placed in a
  314  restricted account set aside from other county funds and not
  315  disbursed by the county for any other purpose.
  316         1. The plan shall divide the county into a minimum of four
  317  and maximum of six service areas, with no more than one
  318  participant hospital per service area. The county public general
  319  hospital shall be designated as the provider for one of the
  320  service areas. Services shall be provided through participants’
  321  primary acute care facilities.
  322         2. The plan and subsequent amendments to it shall fund a
  323  defined range of health care services for both indigent persons
  324  and the medically poor, including primary care, preventive care,
  325  hospital emergency room care, and hospital care necessary to
  326  stabilize the patient. For the purposes of this section,
  327  “stabilization” means stabilization as defined in s.
  328  397.311(44). Where consistent with these objectives, the plan
  329  may include services rendered by physicians, clinics, community
  330  hospitals, and alternative delivery sites, as well as at least
  331  one regional referral hospital per service area. The plan shall
  332  provide that agreements negotiated between the governing board,
  333  agency, or authority and providers shall recognize hospitals
  334  that render a disproportionate share of indigent care, provide
  335  other incentives to promote the delivery of charity care to draw
  336  down federal funds where appropriate, and require cost
  337  containment, including, but not limited to, case management.
  338  From the funds specified in subparagraphs (d)1. and 2. for
  339  indigent health care services, service providers shall receive
  340  reimbursement at a Medicaid rate to be determined by the
  341  governing board, agency, or authority created pursuant to this
  342  paragraph for the initial emergency room visit, and a per-member
  343  per-month fee or capitation for those members enrolled in their
  344  service area, as compensation for the services rendered
  345  following the initial emergency visit. Except for provisions of
  346  emergency services, upon determination of eligibility,
  347  enrollment shall be deemed to have occurred at the time services
  348  were rendered. The provisions for specific reimbursement of
  349  emergency services shall be repealed on July 1, 2001, unless
  350  otherwise reenacted by the Legislature. The capitation amount or
  351  rate shall be determined before program implementation by an
  352  independent actuarial consultant. In no event shall such
  353  reimbursement rates exceed the Medicaid rate. The plan must also
  354  provide that any hospitals owned and operated by government
  355  entities on or after the effective date of this act must, as a
  356  condition of receiving funds under this subsection, afford
  357  public access equal to that provided under s. 286.011 as to any
  358  meeting of the governing board, agency, or authority the subject
  359  of which is budgeting resources for the retention of charity
  360  care, as that term is defined in the rules of the Agency for
  361  Health Care Administration. The plan shall also include
  362  innovative health care programs that provide cost-effective
  363  alternatives to traditional methods of service and delivery
  364  funding.
  365         3. The plan’s benefits shall be made available to all
  366  county residents currently eligible to receive health care
  367  services as indigents or medically poor as defined in paragraph
  368  (4)(d).
  369         4. Eligible residents who participate in the health care
  370  plan shall receive coverage for a period of 12 months or the
  371  period extending from the time of enrollment to the end of the
  372  current fiscal year, per enrollment period, whichever is less.
  373         5. At the end of each fiscal year, the governing board,
  374  agency, or authority shall prepare an audit that reviews the
  375  budget of the plan, delivery of services, and quality of
  376  services, and makes recommendations to increase the plan’s
  377  efficiency. The audit shall take into account participant
  378  hospital satisfaction with the plan and assess the amount of
  379  poststabilization patient transfers requested, and accepted or
  380  denied, by the county public general hospital.
  381         (f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
  382  county may not levy local option sales surtaxes authorized in
  383  this subsection and subsections (2) and (3) in excess of a
  384  combined rate of 1 percent.
  385         (6) SCHOOL CAPITAL OUTLAY SURTAX.—
  386         (a) The school board in each county may levy, pursuant to
  387  resolution conditioned to take effect only upon approval by a
  388  majority vote of the electors of the county, as set forth in
  389  subsection (10), voting in a referendum, a discretionary sales
  390  surtax at a rate that may not exceed 0.5 percent.
  391         (7) VOTER-APPROVED INDIGENT CARE SURTAX.—
  392         (a)1. The governing body in each county that has a
  393  population of fewer than 800,000 residents may levy an indigent
  394  care surtax pursuant to an ordinance conditioned to take effect
  395  only upon approval by a majority vote of the electors of the
  396  county, as set forth in subsection (10), voting in a referendum.
  397  The surtax may be levied at a rate not to exceed 0.5 percent,
  398  except that if a publicly supported medical school is located in
  399  the county, the rate shall not exceed 1 percent.
  400         2. Notwithstanding subparagraph 1., the governing body of
  401  any county that has a population of fewer than 50,000 residents
  402  may levy an indigent care surtax pursuant to an ordinance
  403  conditioned to take effect only upon approval by a majority vote
  404  of the electors of the county, as set forth in subsection (10),
  405  voting in a referendum. The surtax may be levied at a rate not
  406  to exceed 1 percent.
  407         (8) EMERGENCY FIRE RESCUE SERVICES AND FACILITIES SURTAX.—
  408         (b) Upon the adoption of the ordinance, the levy of the
  409  surtax must be placed on the ballot by the governing authority
  410  of the county enacting the ordinance. The ordinance will take
  411  effect if approved by a majority of the electors of the county,
  412  as set forth in subsection (10), voting in a referendum held for
  413  such purpose. The referendum shall be placed on the ballot of a
  414  regularly scheduled election. The ballot for the referendum must
  415  conform to the requirements of s. 101.161.
  416         (9) PENSION LIABILITY SURTAX.—
  417         (a) The governing body of a county may levy a pension
  418  liability surtax to fund an underfunded defined benefit
  419  retirement plan or system, pursuant to an ordinance conditioned
  420  to take effect upon approval by a majority vote of the electors
  421  of the county, as set forth in subsection (10), voting in a
  422  referendum, at a rate that may not exceed 0.5 percent. The
  423  county may not impose a pension liability surtax unless the
  424  underfunded defined benefit retirement plan or system is below
  425  80 percent of actuarial funding at the time the ordinance or
  426  referendum is passed. The most recent actuarial report submitted
  427  to the Department of Management Services pursuant to s. 112.63
  428  must be used to establish the level of actuarial funding for
  429  purposes of determining eligibility to impose the surtax. The
  430  governing body of a county may only impose the surtax if:
  431         1. An employee, including a police officer or firefighter,
  432  who enters employment on or after the date when the local
  433  government certifies that the defined benefit retirement plan or
  434  system formerly available to such an employee has been closed
  435  may not enroll in a defined benefit retirement plan or system
  436  that will receive surtax proceeds.
  437         2. The local government and the collective bargaining
  438  representative for the members of the underfunded defined
  439  benefit retirement plan or system or, if there is no
  440  representative, a majority of the members of the plan or system,
  441  mutually consent to requiring each member to make an employee
  442  retirement contribution of at least 10 percent of each member’s
  443  salary for each pay period beginning with the first pay period
  444  after the plan or system is closed.
  445         3. The pension board of trustees for the underfunded
  446  defined benefit retirement plan or system, if such board exists,
  447  is prohibited from participating in the collective bargaining
  448  process and engaging in the determination of pension benefits.
  449         4. The county currently levies a local government
  450  infrastructure surtax pursuant to subsection (2) which is
  451  scheduled to terminate and is not subject to renewal.
  452         5. The pension liability surtax does not take effect until
  453  the local government infrastructure surtax described in
  454  subparagraph 4. is terminated.
  455         (10)DATES FOR REFERENDA.—A referendum to adopt or amend a
  456  local government discretionary sales surtax under this section
  457  shall be held only at a general election, as defined in s.
  458  97.021, and requires the approval of a majority of the voters
  459  voting on the ballot question for passage.
  460         Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2017.