Florida Senate - 2023             CONFERENCE COMMITTEE AMENDMENT
       Bill No. SB 2502
       
       
       
       
       
       
                                Ì500786BÎ500786                         
       
                              LEGISLATIVE ACTION                        
                    Senate             .             House              
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                 Floor: AD/CR          .           Floor: AD            
             05/05/2023 09:29 AM       .      05/05/2023 10:35 AM       
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       The Conference Committee on SB 2502 recommended the following:
       
    1         Senate Conference Committee Amendment (with title
    2  amendment)
    3  
    4         Delete everything after the enacting clause
    5  and insert:
    6         Section 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the
    7  implementing and administering provisions of this act apply to
    8  the General Appropriations Act for the 2023-2024 fiscal year.
    9         Section 2. In order to implement Specific Appropriations 5,
   10  6, 80, and 81 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, the
   11  calculations of the Florida Education Finance Program for the
   12  2023-2024 fiscal year included in the document titled “Public
   13  School Funding: The Florida Education Finance Program (FEFP)
   14  Fiscal Year 2023-2024,” dated May 2, 2023, and filed with the
   15  Secretary of the Senate, are incorporated by reference for the
   16  purpose of displaying the calculations used by the Legislature,
   17  consistent with the requirements of state law, in making
   18  appropriations for the Florida Education Finance Program. This
   19  section expires July 1, 2024.
   20         Section 3. In order to implement Specific Appropriation 59B
   21  of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, section 1009.895,
   22  Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   23         1009.895 Open Door Grant Program.—
   24         (1) ESTABLISHMENT; PURPOSE.—As used in this section, the
   25  term:
   26         (a) “Cost of the program” means the cost of tuition, fees,
   27  examination, books, and materials to a student enrolled in an
   28  eligible program.
   29         (b) “Department” means the Department of Education.
   30         (c) “Institution” means school district postsecondary
   31  technical career centers under s. 1001.44, Florida College
   32  System institutions under s. 1000.21(3), charter technical
   33  career centers under s. 1002.34, and school districts with
   34  eligible integrated education and training programs.
   35         (d) “Program” means a noncredit industry certification
   36  preparation, clock hour career certificate programs, or for
   37  credit short-term career and technical education programs that
   38  result in the award of credentials identified under s.
   39  445.004(4).
   40         (e) “Student” means a person who is a resident of this
   41  state as determined under s. 1009.21 and is unemployed,
   42  underemployed, or furloughed.
   43         (2) The Open Door Grant Program is established and shall be
   44  administered by participating institutions in accordance with
   45  rules of the State Board of Education. The program is created to
   46  incentivize for the purpose of:
   47         (a) Creating and sustaining a demand-driven supply of
   48  credentialed workers for high-demand occupations by addressing
   49  and closing the gap between the skills needed by workers in the
   50  state and the skills of the available workforce in the state.
   51         (b) Expanding the affordability of workforce training and
   52  credentialing.
   53         (c)Increasing the interest of current and future workers
   54  to enroll in short-term, high-demand career and technical
   55  education that leads to a credential, credentialing and
   56  certificate, or degree programs.
   57         (2)ELIGIBILITY.—In order to be eligible for the program, a
   58  student must:
   59         (a) Meet the requirements under s. 1009.40(1)(a)2. and 3.;
   60         (b) Be enrolled in an integrated education and training
   61  program in which institutions establish partnerships with local
   62  workforce development boards to provide basic skills
   63  instruction, contextually and concurrently, with workforce
   64  training that results in the award of credentials under s.
   65  445.004(4) or a workforce education program as defined under s.
   66  1011.80(1)(b)-(f) that is included on the Master Credentials
   67  List under s. 445.004(4); and
   68         (c) Be enrolled at a school district postsecondary
   69  technical career center under s. 1001.44, a Florida College
   70  System institution under s. 1000.21(3), or a charter technical
   71  career center under s. 1002.34.
   72  
   73  An institution may not impose additional criteria to determine a
   74  student’s eligibility to receive a grant under this section.
   75         (3) GRANT AWARD.—A student is eligible to receive a maximum
   76  award equal to the amount needed to cover 100 percent of tuition
   77  and fees, exam or assessment costs, books, and related materials
   78  for eligible programs after all other federal and state
   79  financial aid is applied. In addition, a student may receive a
   80  stipend of up to $1,500, or an amount specified in the General
   81  Appropriations Act, per academic year to cover other education
   82  expenses related to the institutional cost of attendance. The
   83  institution shall make awards and stipends subject to
   84  availability of funding. Returning students must be given
   85  priority over new students.
   86         (4) DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS.—
   87         (a) For the 2023-2024 fiscal year, funding for eligible
   88  institutions must consist of a base amount provided for in the
   89  General Appropriations Act plus each institution’s proportionate
   90  share of full-time equivalent students enrolled in workforce
   91  education programs. Beginning in the 2024-2025 fiscal year, the
   92  funds appropriated for the Open Door Grant Program must be
   93  distributed to eligible institutions in accordance with a
   94  formula approved by the State Board of Education. The formula
   95  must consider at least the prior year’s distribution of funds
   96  and the number of eligible applicants who did not receive
   97  awards.
   98         (b) Subject to the appropriation of funds by the
   99  Legislature, the Department of Education shall transmit payment
  100  of grants to the institution in advance of the registration
  101  period. Institutions shall notify students of the amount of
  102  their awards.
  103         (c) The eligibility status of each student to receive a
  104  disbursement must be determined by each institution as of the
  105  end of its regular registration period, inclusive of a drop-add
  106  period. Institutions may not be required to reevaluate a
  107  student’s eligibility status after this date for purposes of
  108  changing eligibility determinations previously made.
  109         (d) Each term, institutions shall certify to the department
  110  within 30 days after the end of the regular registration period
  111  the amount of funds disbursed to each student. Institutions
  112  shall remit to the department any undisbursed advances for the
  113  fall, spring, and summer terms within 30 days after the end of
  114  the summer term.
  115         (5) INSTITUTIONAL REPORTING.—Each institution shall report
  116  to the department by the established date:
  117         (a) The number of students eligible for the program for
  118  each academic term. Each institution shall also report to the
  119  department any necessary demographic and eligibility data for
  120  students; and
  121         (3) The department shall provide grants to institutions on
  122  a first-come, first-serve basis for students who enroll in an
  123  eligible program. The department shall prioritize funding for
  124  integrated education and training programs in which institutions
  125  establish partnerships with local workforce development boards
  126  to provide basic skills instruction, contextually and
  127  concurrently, with workforce training that results in the award
  128  of credentials under s. 445.004(4). One-quarter of the
  129  appropriated funds must be prioritized to serve students
  130  attending rural institutions. No more than one-quarter of the
  131  appropriated funds may be disbursed annually to any eligible
  132  institution.
  133         (4) Subject to the availability of funds:
  134         (a) A student who enrolls in an eligible program offered by
  135  an institution and who does not receive state or federal
  136  financial aid may apply for and be awarded a grant to cover two
  137  thirds of the cost of the program, if at the time of enrollment
  138  the student pays one-third of the cost of the program and signs
  139  an agreement to either complete the program or pay an additional
  140  one-third of the cost of the program in the event of
  141  noncompletion. The department shall reimburse the institution in
  142  an amount equal to one-third of the cost of the program upon a
  143  student’s completion of the program. An additional one-third
  144  shall be provided upon attainment of a workforce credential or
  145  certificate by the student. Grant funds may be used to cover the
  146  student’s one-third of the cost of the program for students in
  147  integrated education and training programs and students who do
  148  not have a high school diploma and meet the requirements
  149  established by the department. An institution may cover the
  150  student’s one-third of the cost of the program based on student
  151  need, as determined by the institution.
  152         (b) A student receiving state or federal financial aid who
  153  enrolls in an eligible program offered by an institution may
  154  apply for and be awarded a grant to cover the unmet need of the
  155  cost of the program after the application of all eligible
  156  financial aid. Financial aid and grants received by the student
  157  shall be credited first to the student’s costs before the award
  158  of an open door grant. After a student is enrolled in an
  159  eligible program, the department shall award the grant to the
  160  institution for the amount of unmet need for the eligible
  161  student.
  162         (5) The department may not reimburse any institution more
  163  than $3,000 per completed workforce training program by an
  164  eligible student.
  165         (6) The department shall administer the grant and shall
  166  carry out the goals and purposes of the grant set forth in
  167  subsection (2). In administering the grant, the department
  168  shall:
  169         (a) Require eligible institutions to provide student
  170  specific data.
  171         (b) Undertake periodic assessments of the overall success
  172  of the grant program and recommend modifications, interventions,
  173  and other actions based on such assessments.
  174         (c) Establish the procedure by which eligible institutions
  175  shall notify the department when eligible students enroll in
  176  eligible programs.
  177         (d) Require each eligible institution to submit a report
  178  with Data from the previous fiscal year on program completion
  179  and credential attainment by students participating in the grant
  180  program that, at a minimum, includes:
  181         1. A list of the programs offered.
  182         2. The number of students who enrolled in the programs.
  183         3. The number of students who completed the programs.
  184         4. The number of students who attained workforce
  185  credentials, categorized by credential name and relevant
  186  occupation, after completing training programs.
  187         5. The average cost per workforce credential attained,
  188  categorized by credential name and relevant occupation.
  189         (6)(7)REPORTING.—The department shall compile the data
  190  provided under paragraph (5)(b) (6)(d) and annually report such
  191  aggregate data, in the aggregate and categorize such information
  192  by eligible institution, to the State Board of Education. The
  193  report shall also include information on the average wage, age,
  194  gender, race, ethnicity, veteran status, and other relevant
  195  information, of students who have completed workforce training
  196  programs categorized by credential name and relevant occupation.
  197         (7)(8)RULES.—The State Board of Education shall adopt
  198  rules to implement this section.
  199         Section 4. The amendments to s. 1009.895, Florida Statutes,
  200  made by this act expire July 1, 2024, and the text of that
  201  section shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2023,
  202  except that any amendments to such text enacted other than by
  203  this act shall be preserved and continue to operate to the
  204  extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions
  205  of text which expire pursuant to this section.
  206         Section 5. In order to implement Specific Appropriation 79
  207  of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, paragraphs (a) and
  208  (f) of subsection (4), subsection (5), and paragraph (e) of
  209  subsection (6) of section 1002.68, Florida Statutes, are amended
  210  to read:
  211         1002.68 Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program
  212  accountability.—
  213         (4)(a) Beginning with the 2023-2024 2022-2023 program year,
  214  the department shall adopt a methodology for calculating each
  215  private prekindergarten provider’s and public school provider’s
  216  performance metric, which must be based on a combination of the
  217  following:
  218         1. Program assessment composite scores under subsection
  219  (2), which must be weighted at no less than 50 percent.
  220         2. Learning gains operationalized as change-in-ability
  221  scores from the initial and final progress monitoring results
  222  described in subsection (1).
  223         3. Norm-referenced developmental learning outcomes
  224  described in subsection (1).
  225         (f) The department shall adopt procedures to annually
  226  calculate each private prekindergarten provider’s and public
  227  school’s performance metric, based on the methodology adopted in
  228  paragraphs (a) and (b), and assign a designation under paragraph
  229  (d). Beginning with the 2024-2025 2023-2024 program year, each
  230  private prekindergarten provider or public school shall be
  231  assigned a designation within 45 days after the conclusion of
  232  the school-year Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program
  233  delivered by all participating private prekindergarten providers
  234  or public schools and within 45 days after the conclusion of the
  235  summer Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program delivered by
  236  all participating private prekindergarten providers or public
  237  schools.
  238         (5)(a) If a public school’s or private prekindergarten
  239  provider’s program assessment composite score for its
  240  prekindergarten classrooms fails to meet the minimum program
  241  assessment composite score for contracting adopted in rule by
  242  the department, the private prekindergarten provider or public
  243  school may not participate in the Voluntary Prekindergarten
  244  Education Program beginning in the consecutive program year and
  245  thereafter until the public school or private prekindergarten
  246  provider meets the minimum composite score for contracting. A
  247  public school or private prekindergarten provider may request
  248  one program assessment per program year in order to requalify
  249  for participation in the Voluntary Prekindergarten Education
  250  Program, provided that the public school or private
  251  prekindergarten provider is not excluded from participation
  252  under ss. 1002.55(6), 1002.61(10)(b), 1002.63(9)(b), or
  253  paragraph (5)(b) of this section. If a public school or private
  254  prekindergarten provider would like an additional program
  255  assessment completed within the same program year, the public
  256  school or private prekindergarten provider shall be responsible
  257  for the cost of the program assessment.
  258         (b) If a private prekindergarten provider’s or public
  259  school’s performance metric or designation falls below the
  260  minimum performance metric or designation, the early learning
  261  coalition shall:
  262         1. Require the provider or school to submit for approval to
  263  the early learning coalition an improvement plan and implement
  264  the plan.
  265         2. Place the provider or school on probation.
  266         3. Require the provider or school to take certain
  267  corrective actions, including the use of a curriculum approved
  268  by the department under s. 1002.67(2)(c) and a staff development
  269  plan approved by the department to strengthen instructional
  270  practices in emotional support, classroom organization,
  271  instructional support, language development, phonological
  272  awareness, alphabet knowledge, and mathematical thinking.
  273         (b)(c) A private prekindergarten provider or public school
  274  that is placed on probation must continue the corrective actions
  275  required under paragraph (a) (b) until the provider or school
  276  meets the minimum performance metric or designation adopted by
  277  the department. Failure to meet the requirements of
  278  subparagraphs (a)1. and 3. (b)1. and 3. shall result in the
  279  termination of the provider’s or school’s contract to deliver
  280  the Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program for a period of
  281  at least 2 years but no more than 5 years.
  282         (c)(d) If a private prekindergarten provider or public
  283  school remains on probation for 2 consecutive years and fails to
  284  meet the minimum performance metric or designation, or is not
  285  granted a good cause exemption by the department, the department
  286  shall require the early learning coalition to revoke the
  287  provider’s eligibility and the school district to revoke the
  288  school’s eligibility to deliver the Voluntary Prekindergarten
  289  Education Program and receive state funds for the program for a
  290  period of at least 2 years but no more than 5 years.
  291         (6)
  292         (e) A private prekindergarten provider or public school
  293  granted a good cause exemption shall continue to implement its
  294  improvement plan and continue the corrective actions required
  295  under paragraph (5)(a) (5)(b) until the provider or school meets
  296  the minimum performance metric.
  297         Section 6. The amendments to s. 1002.68(4)(a) and (f), (5),
  298  and (6)(e), Florida Statutes, made by this act expire July 1,
  299  2024, and the text of those subsections or paragraphs, as
  300  applicable, shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2023,
  301  except that any amendments to such text enacted other than by
  302  this act shall be preserved and continue to operate to the
  303  extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions
  304  of text which expire pursuant to this section.
  305         Section 7. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  306  197 through 223 and 539 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
  307  Act, and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida
  308  Statutes, the Agency for Health Care Administration, in
  309  consultation with the Department of Health, may submit a budget
  310  amendment, subject to the notice, review, and objection
  311  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to realign funding
  312  within and between agencies based on implementation of the
  313  managed medical assistance component of the Statewide Medicaid
  314  Managed Care program for the Children’s Medical Services program
  315  of the Department of Health. The funding realignment shall
  316  reflect the actual enrollment changes due to the transfer of
  317  beneficiaries from fee-for-service to the capitated Children’s
  318  Medical Services network. The Agency for Health Care
  319  Administration may submit a request for nonoperating budget
  320  authority to transfer the federal funds to the Department of
  321  Health pursuant to s. 216.181(12), Florida Statutes. This
  322  section expires July 1, 2024.
  323         Section 8. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  324  197 through 223 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
  325  notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes, the
  326  Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a budget
  327  amendment, subject to the notice, review, and objection
  328  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to realign funding
  329  within the Medicaid program appropriation categories to address
  330  projected surpluses and deficits within the program and to
  331  maximize the use of state trust funds. A single budget amendment
  332  shall be submitted in the last quarter of the 2023-2024 fiscal
  333  year only. This section expires July 1, 2024.
  334         Section 9. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  335  176 through 181 and 539 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
  336  Act, and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida
  337  Statutes, the Agency for Health Care Administration and the
  338  Department of Health may each submit a budget amendment, subject
  339  to the notice, review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177,
  340  Florida Statutes, to realign funding within the Florida Kidcare
  341  program appropriation categories, or to increase budget
  342  authority in the Children’s Medical Services network category,
  343  to address projected surpluses and deficits within the program
  344  or to maximize the use of state trust funds. A single budget
  345  amendment must be submitted by each agency in the last quarter
  346  of the 2023-2024 fiscal year only. This section expires July 1,
  347  2024.
  348         Section 10. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  349  490 through 494 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
  350  subsection (17) of section 381.986, Florida Statutes, is amended
  351  to read:
  352         381.986 Medical use of marijuana.—
  353         (17) Rules adopted pursuant to this section before July 1,
  354  2024 2023, are not subject to ss. 120.54(3)(b) and 120.541. This
  355  subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
  356         Section 11. Effective July 1, 2023, upon the expiration and
  357  reversion of the amendments made to subsection (1) of section 14
  358  of chapter 2017-232, Laws of Florida, pursuant to section 18 of
  359  chapter 2022-157, Laws of Florida, and in order to implement
  360  Specific Appropriations 490 through 494 of the 2023-2024 General
  361  Appropriations Act, subsection (1) of section 14 of chapter
  362  2017-232, Laws of Florida, is amended to read:
  363         Section 14. Department of Health; authority to adopt rules;
  364  cause of action.—
  365         (1) EMERGENCY RULEMAKING.—
  366         (a) The Department of Health and the applicable boards
  367  shall adopt emergency rules pursuant to s. 120.54(4), Florida
  368  Statutes, and this section necessary to implement s. 381.986 ss.
  369  381.986 and 381.988, Florida Statutes. If an emergency rule
  370  adopted under this section is held to be unconstitutional or an
  371  invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority, and becomes
  372  void, the department or the applicable boards may adopt an
  373  emergency rule pursuant to this section to replace the rule that
  374  has become void. If the emergency rule adopted to replace the
  375  void emergency rule is also held to be unconstitutional or an
  376  invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority and becomes
  377  void, the department and the applicable boards must follow the
  378  nonemergency rulemaking procedures of the Administrative
  379  Procedures Act to replace the rule that has become void.
  380         (b) For emergency rules adopted under this section, the
  381  department and the applicable boards need not make the findings
  382  required by s. 120.54(4)(a), Florida Statutes. Emergency rules
  383  adopted under this section are exempt from ss. 120.54(3)(b) and
  384  120.541, Florida Statutes. The department and the applicable
  385  boards shall meet the procedural requirements in s. 120.54(4)(a)
  386  s. 120.54(a), Florida Statutes, if the department or the
  387  applicable boards have, before July 1, 2019 the effective date
  388  of this act, held any public workshops or hearings on the
  389  subject matter of the emergency rules adopted under this
  390  subsection. Challenges to emergency rules adopted under this
  391  subsection are subject to the time schedules provided in s.
  392  120.56(5), Florida Statutes.
  393         (c) Emergency rules adopted under this section are exempt
  394  from s. 120.54(4)(c), Florida Statutes, and shall remain in
  395  effect until replaced by rules adopted under the nonemergency
  396  rulemaking procedures of the Administrative Procedures Act.
  397  Rules adopted under the nonemergency rulemaking procedures of
  398  the Administrative Procedures Act to replace emergency rules
  399  adopted under this section are exempt from ss. 120.54(3)(b) and
  400  120.541, Florida Statutes. By July 1, 2024 January 1, 2018, the
  401  department and the applicable boards shall initiate nonemergency
  402  rulemaking pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act to
  403  replace all emergency rules adopted under this section by
  404  publishing a notice of rule development in the Florida
  405  Administrative Register. Except as provided in paragraph (a),
  406  after July 1, 2024 January 1, 2018, the department and
  407  applicable boards may not adopt rules pursuant to the emergency
  408  rulemaking procedures provided in this section.
  409         Section 12. The amendments to subsection (1) of section 14
  410  of chapter 2017-232, Laws of Florida, made by this act expire
  411  July 1, 2024, and the text of that subsection shall revert to
  412  that in existence on June 30, 2019, except that any amendments
  413  to such text enacted other than by this act shall be preserved
  414  and continue to operate to the extent that such amendments are
  415  not dependent upon the portions of text which expire pursuant to
  416  this section.
  417         Section 13. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  418  202, 203, 206, and 210 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
  419  Act, the Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a
  420  budget amendment pursuant to chapter 216, Florida Statutes,
  421  requesting additional spending authority to implement the
  422  federally approved Directed Payment Program for hospitals
  423  statewide providing inpatient and outpatient services to
  424  Medicaid managed care enrollees, the Indirect Medical Education
  425  (IME) Program, and a nursing workforce expansion and education
  426  program for certain institutions participating in a graduate
  427  medical education or nursing education program. For institutions
  428  participating in the nursing workforce expansion and education
  429  program, the budget amendment must identify the educational
  430  institutions partnering with the teaching hospital. Institutions
  431  participating in the nursing workforce expansion and education
  432  program shall provide quarterly reports to the agency detailing
  433  the number of nurses participating in the program. This section
  434  expires July 1, 2024.
  435         Section 14. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  436  203, 206, and 210 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
  437  the Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a budget
  438  amendment pursuant to chapter 216, Florida Statutes, requesting
  439  additional spending authority to implement the federally
  440  approved Directed Payment Program and fee-for-service
  441  supplemental payments for cancer hospitals that meet the
  442  criteria in 42 U.S.C. s. 1395ww(d)(1)(B)(v). Notwithstanding s.
  443  409.908(1)(a), Florida Statutes, the executed Letters of
  444  Agreement for Fiscal Year 2022-2023 that support the Grants and
  445  Donations Trust Fund appropriation that provides a minimum fee
  446  schedule calculated as a supplemental per member per month
  447  payment through prepaid health plans for services provided by
  448  qualifying Florida cancer hospitals that meet the criteria in 42
  449  U.S.C. s. 1395ww(d)(1)(B)(v) shall remain in effect until the
  450  federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approves the
  451  expenditure of such funds and the funds are transferred to the
  452  Agency for Health Care Administration. The intergovernmental
  453  transfer amounts in the Letters of Agreement may be modified in
  454  accordance with the prevailing federal medical assistance
  455  matching percent at the time payments are made. This section
  456  expires July 1, 2024.
  457         Section 15. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  458  197 through 223 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, the
  459  Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a budget
  460  amendment, subject to the notice, review, and objection
  461  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to provide spending
  462  authority to implement the Low Income Pool component of the
  463  Florida Managed Medical Assistance Demonstration up to the total
  464  computable funds authorized by the federal Centers for Medicare
  465  and Medicaid Services. The budget amendment must include the
  466  final terms and conditions of the Low Income Pool, a proposed
  467  distribution model by entity, and a listing of entities
  468  contributing intergovernmental transfers to support the state
  469  match required. In addition, for each entity included in the
  470  distribution model, a signed attestation must be provided that
  471  includes the charity care cost upon which the Low Income Pool
  472  payment is based and an acknowledgment that should the
  473  distribution result in an overpayment based on the Low Income
  474  Pool cost limit audit, the entity is responsible for returning
  475  that overpayment to the agency for return to the federal Centers
  476  for Medicare and Medicaid Services. This section expires July 1,
  477  2024.
  478         Section 16. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  479  209 and 210 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, the
  480  Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a budget
  481  amendment pursuant to chapter 216, Florida Statutes, requesting
  482  additional spending authority to implement fee-for-service
  483  supplemental payments and a directed payment program for
  484  physicians and subordinate licensed health care practitioners
  485  employed by or under contract with a Florida medical or dental
  486  school, or a public hospital. Notwithstanding s. 409.908(1)(a),
  487  Florida Statutes, the executed Letters of Agreement for Fiscal
  488  Year 2022-2023 that support the Grants and Donations Trust Fund
  489  appropriation that provides a differential fee schedule paid as
  490  supplemental payments or a minimum fee schedule calculated as
  491  supplemental per member per month payment through prepaid health
  492  plans for services provided by doctors of medicine, osteopathy,
  493  and dentistry as well as other licensed health care
  494  practitioners acting under the supervision of those doctors
  495  pursuant to existing statutes and written protocols employed by
  496  or under contract with a medical or dental school or a public
  497  hospital in Florida shall remain in effect until the federal
  498  Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approves the
  499  expenditure of such funds and the funds are transferred to the
  500  Agency for Health Care Administration. The intergovernmental
  501  transfer amounts in the Letters of Agreement may be modified in
  502  accordance with the prevailing federal medical assistance
  503  matching percent at the time payments are made. This section
  504  expires July 1, 2024.
  505         Section 17. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  506  207, 210, and 221 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
  507  the Agency for Health Care Administration may submit a budget
  508  amendment pursuant to chapter 216, Florida Statutes, requesting
  509  additional spending authority to implement a certified
  510  expenditure program for emergency medical transportation
  511  services. This section expires July 1, 2024.
  512         Section 18. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  513  328, 330, 361, and 362 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
  514  Act, and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida
  515  Statutes, the Department of Children and Families may submit a
  516  budget amendment, subject to the notice, review, and objection
  517  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to realign funding
  518  within the department based on the implementation of the
  519  Guardianship Assistance Program, between the specific
  520  appropriations for guardianship assistance payments, foster care
  521  Level 1 room and board payments, relative caregiver payments,
  522  and nonrelative caregiver payments. This section expires July 1,
  523  2024.
  524         Section 19. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  525  197 through 199, 203, 206, 207, 209 through 211, 355, 365, 482,
  526  499 through 501, 507, and 511 of the 2023-2024 General
  527  Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292,
  528  Florida Statutes, the Department of Children and Families,
  529  Department of Health, and Agency for Health Care Administration
  530  may submit budget amendments, subject to the notice, review, and
  531  objection procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to
  532  increase budget authority to support refugee programs
  533  administered by the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement due
  534  to the ongoing instability of federal immigration policy and the
  535  resulting inability of the state to reasonably predict, with
  536  certainty, the budgetary need of this state with respect to the
  537  number of refugees relocated to the state as part of those
  538  federal programs. The Department of Children and Families shall
  539  submit quarterly reports to the Executive Office of the
  540  Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
  541  House of Representatives on the number of refugees entering the
  542  state, the nations of origin of such refugees, and current
  543  expenditure projections. This section expires July 1, 2024.
  544         Section 20. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  545  358 through 360, 372 through 378, and 383 through 387 of the
  546  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding ss.
  547  216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes, the Department of
  548  Children and Families may submit budget amendments, subject to
  549  the notice, review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177,
  550  Florida Statutes, to increase budget authority to support the
  551  following federal grant programs: the Supplemental Nutrition
  552  Assistance Grant Program, the Pandemic Electronic Benefit
  553  Transfer, the American Rescue Plan Grant, the State Opioid
  554  Response Grant, the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
  555  Block Grant, and the Mental Health Block Grant. This section
  556  expires July 1, 2024.
  557         Section 21. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  558  469 and 471 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
  559  notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes, the
  560  Department of Health may submit a budget amendment, subject to
  561  the notice, review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177,
  562  Florida Statutes, to increase budget authority for the
  563  Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children
  564  (WIC) and the Child Care Food Program if additional federal
  565  revenues will be expended in the 2023-2024 fiscal year. This
  566  section expires July 1, 2024.
  567         Section 22. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  568  478 and 523 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
  569  notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes, the
  570  Department of Health may submit a budget amendment, subject to
  571  the notice, review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177,
  572  Florida Statutes, to increase budget authority for the HIV/AIDS
  573  Prevention and Treatment Program if additional federal revenues
  574  specific to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment become available
  575  in the 2023-2024 fiscal year. This section expires July 1, 2024.
  576         Section 23. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  577  432 through 567 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
  578  notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes, the
  579  Department of Health may submit a budget amendment, subject to
  580  the notice, review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177,
  581  Florida Statutes, to increase budget authority for the
  582  department if additional federal revenues specific to COVID-19
  583  relief funds become available in the 2023-2024 fiscal year. This
  584  section expires July 1, 2024.
  585         Section 24. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  586  191 and 192A through 192E of the 2023-2024 General
  587  Appropriations Act:
  588         (1)The Agency for Health Care Administration shall replace
  589  the current Florida Medicaid Management Information System
  590  (FMMIS) and fiscal agent operations with a system that is
  591  modular, interoperable, and scalable for the Florida Medicaid
  592  program that complies with all applicable federal and state laws
  593  and requirements. The agency may not include in the project to
  594  replace the current FMMIS and fiscal agent contract:
  595         (a)Functionality that duplicates any of the information
  596  systems of the other health and human services state agencies;
  597         (b)Procurement for agency requirements external to
  598  Medicaid programs with the intent to leverage the Medicaid
  599  technology infrastructure for other purposes without legislative
  600  appropriation or legislative authorization to procure these
  601  requirements. The new system, the Florida Health Care Connection
  602  (FX) system, must provide better integration with subsystems
  603  supporting Florida’s Medicaid program; uniformity, consistency,
  604  and improved access to data; and compatibility with the Centers
  605  for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ Medicaid Information
  606  Technology Architecture (MITA) as the system matures and expands
  607  its functionality; or
  608         (c)Any contract executed after July 1, 2022, not including
  609  staff augmentation services purchased off the Department of
  610  Management Services Information Technology staff augmentation
  611  state term contract that are not deliverables based fixed price
  612  contracts.
  613         (2)For purposes of replacing FMMIS and the current
  614  Medicaid fiscal agent, the Agency for Health Care Administration
  615  shall:
  616         (a)Prioritize procurements for the replacement of the
  617  current functions of FMMIS and the responsibilities of the
  618  current Medicaid fiscal agent, to minimize the need to extend
  619  all or portions of the current fiscal agent contract.
  620         (b)Comply with and not exceed the Centers for Medicare and
  621  Medicaid Services funding authorizations for the FX system.
  622         (c)Ensure compliance and uniformity with the published
  623  MITA framework and guidelines.
  624         (d)Ensure that all business requirements and technical
  625  specifications have been provided to all affected state agencies
  626  for their review and input and approved by the executive
  627  steering committee established in paragraph (g).
  628         (e)Consult with the Executive Office of the Governor’s
  629  working group for interagency information technology integration
  630  for the development of competitive solicitations that provide
  631  for data interoperability and shared information technology
  632  services across the state’s health and human services agencies.
  633         (f)Implement a data governance structure for the project
  634  to coordinate data sharing and interoperability across state
  635  health care entities.
  636         (g)Implement a project governance structure that includes
  637  an executive steering committee composed of:
  638         1.The Secretary of Health Care Administration, or the
  639  executive sponsor of the project.
  640         2.A representative of the Division of Health Care Finance
  641  and Data of the Agency for Health Care Administration, appointed
  642  by the Secretary of Health Care Administration.
  643         3.Two representatives from the Division of Medicaid
  644  Policy, Quality, and Operations of the Agency for Health Care
  645  Administration, appointed by the Secretary of Health Care
  646  Administration.
  647         4.A representative of the Division of Health Care Policy
  648  and Oversight of the Agency for Health Care Administration,
  649  appointed by the Secretary of Health Care Administration.
  650         5.A representative of the Florida Center for Health
  651  Information and Transparency of the Agency for Health Care
  652  Administration, appointed by the Secretary of Health Care
  653  Administration.
  654         6.The Chief Information Officer of the Agency for Health
  655  Care Administration, or his or her designee.
  656         7.The state chief information officer, or his or her
  657  designee.
  658         8.Two representatives of the Department of Children and
  659  Families, appointed by the Secretary of Children and Families.
  660         9.A representative of the Department of Health, appointed
  661  by the State Surgeon General.
  662         10.A representative of the Agency for Persons with
  663  Disabilities, appointed by the director of the Agency for
  664  Persons with Disabilities.
  665         11.A representative from the Florida Healthy Kids
  666  Corporation.
  667         12.A representative from the Department of Elderly
  668  Affairs, appointed by the Secretary of Elderly Affairs.
  669         13.A representative of the Department of Financial
  670  Services who has experience with the state’s financial
  671  processes, including development of the PALM system, appointed
  672  by the Chief Financial Officer.
  673         (3)The Secretary of Health Care Administration or the
  674  executive sponsor of the project shall serve as chair of the
  675  executive steering committee, and the committee shall take
  676  action by a vote of at least 10 affirmative votes with the chair
  677  voting on the prevailing side. A quorum of the executive
  678  steering committee consists of at least 11 members.
  679         (4)The executive steering committee has the overall
  680  responsibility for ensuring that the project to replace FMMIS
  681  and the Medicaid fiscal agent meets its primary business
  682  objectives and shall:
  683         (a)Identify and recommend to the Executive Office of the
  684  Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
  685  House of Representatives any statutory changes needed to
  686  implement the modular replacement to standardize, to the fullest
  687  extent possible, the state’s health care data and business
  688  processes.
  689         (b)Review and approve any changes to the project’s scope,
  690  schedule, and budget which do not conflict with the requirements
  691  of subsections (1) and (2).
  692         (c)Ensure that adequate resources are provided throughout
  693  all phases of the project.
  694         (d)Approve all major project deliverables.
  695         (e)Review and verify that all procurement and contractual
  696  documents associated with the replacement of the current FMMIS
  697  and Medicaid fiscal agent align with the scope, schedule, and
  698  anticipated budget for the project.
  699         (5)This section expires July 1, 2024.
  700         Section 25. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  701  210, 211, 265, 277, 340, 501, and 523 of the 2023-2024 General
  702  Appropriations Act, the Agency for Health Care Administration,
  703  in consultation with the Department of Health, the Agency for
  704  Persons with Disabilities, the Department of Children and
  705  Families, and the Department of Corrections, shall competitively
  706  procure a contract with a vendor to negotiate, for these
  707  agencies, prices for prescribed drugs and biological products
  708  excluded from the programs established under s. 381.02035,
  709  Florida Statutes, and ineligible under 21 U.S.C. s. 384,
  710  including, but not limited to, insulin and epinephrine. The
  711  contract may allow the vendor to directly purchase these
  712  products for participating agencies when feasible and
  713  advantageous. The contracted vendor will be compensated on a
  714  contingency basis, paid from a portion of the savings achieved
  715  by its price negotiation or purchase of the prescription drugs
  716  and products. This section expires July 1, 2024.
  717         Section 26. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  718  256, 263, 264, 275, and 276 of the 2023-2024 General
  719  Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292,
  720  Florida Statutes, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities may
  721  submit budget amendments, subject to the notice, review, and
  722  objection procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to
  723  transfer funding from the Salaries and Benefits appropriation
  724  categories to categories used for contractual services in order
  725  to support additional staff augmentation resources needed at the
  726  Developmental Disability Centers. This section expires July 1,
  727  2024.
  728         Section 27. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
  729  210 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (1)
  730  of section 409.915, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  731         409.915 County contributions to Medicaid.—Although the
  732  state is responsible for the full portion of the state share of
  733  the matching funds required for the Medicaid program, the state
  734  shall charge the counties an annual contribution in order to
  735  acquire a certain portion of these funds.
  736         (1)(a) As used in this section, the term “state Medicaid
  737  expenditures” means those expenditures used as matching funds
  738  for the federal Medicaid program.
  739         (b) The term does not include funds specially assessed by
  740  any local governmental entity and used as the nonfederal share
  741  for the hospital directed payment program after July 1, 2021.
  742  This paragraph expires July 1, 2024.
  743         Section 28. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  744  598 through 705 and 718 through 753 of the 2023-2024 General
  745  Appropriations Act, subsection (4) of section 216.262, Florida
  746  Statutes, is amended to read:
  747         216.262 Authorized positions.—
  748         (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter relating
  749  to increasing the number of authorized positions, and for the
  750  2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year only, if the actual inmate
  751  population of the Department of Corrections exceeds the inmate
  752  population projections of the February 13, 2023 January 13,
  753  2022, Criminal Justice Estimating Conference by 1 percent for 2
  754  consecutive months or 2 percent for any month, the Executive
  755  Office of the Governor, with the approval of the Legislative
  756  Budget Commission, shall immediately notify the Criminal Justice
  757  Estimating Conference, which shall convene as soon as possible
  758  to revise the estimates. The Department of Corrections may then
  759  submit a budget amendment requesting the establishment of
  760  positions in excess of the number authorized by the Legislature
  761  and additional appropriations from unallocated general revenue
  762  sufficient to provide for essential staff, fixed capital
  763  improvements, and other resources to provide classification,
  764  security, food services, health services, and other variable
  765  expenses within the institutions to accommodate the estimated
  766  increase in the inmate population. All actions taken pursuant to
  767  this subsection are subject to review and approval by the
  768  Legislative Budget Commission. This subsection expires July 1,
  769  2024 2023.
  770         Section 29. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  771  3271 through 3337 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
  772  subsection (2) of section 215.18, Florida Statutes, is amended
  773  to read:
  774         215.18 Transfers between funds; limitation.—
  775         (2) The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court may receive one
  776  or more trust fund loans to ensure that the state court system
  777  has funds sufficient to meet its appropriations in the 2023-2024
  778  2022-2023 General Appropriations Act. If the Chief Justice
  779  accesses the loan, he or she must notify the Governor and the
  780  chairs of the legislative appropriations committees in writing.
  781  The loan must come from other funds in the State Treasury which
  782  are for the time being or otherwise in excess of the amounts
  783  necessary to meet the just requirements of such last-mentioned
  784  funds. The Governor shall order the transfer of funds within 5
  785  days after the written notification from the Chief Justice. If
  786  the Governor does not order the transfer, the Chief Financial
  787  Officer shall transfer the requested funds. The loan of funds
  788  from which any money is temporarily transferred must be repaid
  789  by the end of the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year. This
  790  subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
  791         Section 30. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  792  1132 through 1143 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act:
  793         (1)The Department of Juvenile Justice is required to
  794  review county juvenile detention payments to ensure that
  795  counties fulfill their financial responsibilities required in s.
  796  985.6865, Florida Statutes. If the Department of Juvenile
  797  Justice determines that a county has not met its obligations,
  798  the department shall direct the Department of Revenue to deduct
  799  the amount owed to the Department of Juvenile Justice from the
  800  funds provided to the county under s. 218.23, Florida Statutes.
  801  The Department of Revenue shall transfer the funds withheld to
  802  the Shared County/State Juvenile Detention Trust Fund.
  803         (2)As an assurance to holders of bonds issued by counties
  804  before July 1, 2023, for which distributions made pursuant to s.
  805  218.23, Florida Statutes, are pledged, or bonds issued to refund
  806  such bonds which mature no later than the bonds they refunded
  807  and which result in a reduction of debt service payable in each
  808  fiscal year, the amount available for distribution to a county
  809  shall remain as provided by law and continue to be subject to
  810  any lien or claim on behalf of the bondholders. The Department
  811  of Revenue must ensure, based on information provided by an
  812  affected county, that any reduction in amounts distributed
  813  pursuant to subsection (1) does not reduce the amount of
  814  distribution to a county below the amount necessary for the
  815  timely payment of principal and interest when due on the bonds
  816  and the amount necessary to comply with any covenant under the
  817  bond resolution or other documents relating to the issuance of
  818  the bonds. If a reduction to a county’s monthly distribution
  819  must be decreased in order to comply with this section, the
  820  Department of Revenue must notify the Department of Juvenile
  821  Justice of the amount of the decrease, and the Department of
  822  Juvenile Justice must send a bill for payment of such amount to
  823  the affected county.
  824  
  825  This section expires July 1, 2024.
  826         Section 31. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  827  763 through 784, 932 through 1075, and 1096 through 1131 of the
  828  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding the
  829  expiration date in section 36 of chapter 2022-157, Laws of
  830  Florida, subsection (1), paragraph (a) of subsection (2),
  831  paragraph (a) of subsection (3), and subsections (5), (6), and
  832  (7) of section 27.40, Florida Statutes, are reenacted to read:
  833         27.40 Court-appointed counsel; circuit registries; minimum
  834  requirements; appointment by court.—
  835         (1) Counsel shall be appointed to represent any individual
  836  in a criminal or civil proceeding entitled to court-appointed
  837  counsel under the Federal or State Constitution or as authorized
  838  by general law. The court shall appoint a public defender to
  839  represent indigent persons as authorized in s. 27.51. The office
  840  of criminal conflict and civil regional counsel shall be
  841  appointed to represent persons in those cases in which provision
  842  is made for court-appointed counsel, but only after the public
  843  defender has certified to the court in writing that the public
  844  defender is unable to provide representation due to a conflict
  845  of interest or is not authorized to provide representation. The
  846  public defender shall report, in the aggregate, the specific
  847  basis of all conflicts of interest certified to the court. On a
  848  quarterly basis, the public defender shall submit this
  849  information to the Justice Administrative Commission.
  850         (2)(a) Private counsel shall be appointed to represent
  851  persons in those cases in which provision is made for court
  852  appointed counsel but only after the office of criminal conflict
  853  and civil regional counsel has been appointed and has certified
  854  to the court in writing that the criminal conflict and civil
  855  regional counsel is unable to provide representation due to a
  856  conflict of interest. The criminal conflict and civil regional
  857  counsel shall report, in the aggregate, the specific basis of
  858  all conflicts of interest certified to the court. On a quarterly
  859  basis, the criminal conflict and civil regional counsel shall
  860  submit this information to the Justice Administrative
  861  Commission.
  862         (3) In using a registry:
  863         (a) The chief judge of the circuit shall compile a list of
  864  attorneys in private practice, by county and by category of
  865  cases, and provide the list to the clerk of court in each
  866  county. The chief judge of the circuit may restrict the number
  867  of attorneys on the general registry list. To be included on a
  868  registry, an attorney must certify that he or she:
  869         1. Meets any minimum requirements established by the chief
  870  judge and by general law for court appointment;
  871         2. Is available to represent indigent defendants in cases
  872  requiring court appointment of private counsel; and
  873         3. Is willing to abide by the terms of the contract for
  874  services, s. 27.5304, and this section.
  875  
  876  To be included on a registry, an attorney must enter into a
  877  contract for services with the Justice Administrative
  878  Commission. Failure to comply with the terms of the contract for
  879  services may result in termination of the contract and removal
  880  from the registry. Each attorney on the registry is responsible
  881  for notifying the clerk of the court and the Justice
  882  Administrative Commission of any change in his or her status.
  883  Failure to comply with this requirement is cause for termination
  884  of the contract for services and removal from the registry until
  885  the requirement is fulfilled.
  886         (5) The Justice Administrative Commission shall approve
  887  uniform contract forms for use in procuring the services of
  888  private court-appointed counsel and uniform procedures and forms
  889  for use by a court-appointed attorney in support of billing for
  890  attorney’s fees, costs, and related expenses to demonstrate the
  891  attorney’s completion of specified duties. Such uniform
  892  contracts and forms for use in billing must be consistent with
  893  s. 27.5304, s. 216.311, and the General Appropriations Act and
  894  must contain the following statement: “The State of Florida’s
  895  performance and obligation to pay under this contract is
  896  contingent upon an annual appropriation by the Legislature.”
  897         (6) After court appointment, the attorney must immediately
  898  file a notice of appearance with the court indicating acceptance
  899  of the appointment to represent the defendant and of the terms
  900  of the uniform contract as specified in subsection (5).
  901         (7)(a) A private attorney appointed by the court from the
  902  registry to represent a client is entitled to payment as
  903  provided in s. 27.5304 so long as the requirements of subsection
  904  (1) and paragraph (2)(a) are met. An attorney appointed by the
  905  court who is not on the registry list may be compensated under
  906  s. 27.5304 only if the court finds in the order of appointment
  907  that there were no registry attorneys available for
  908  representation for that case and only if the requirements of
  909  subsection (1) and paragraph (2)(a) are met.
  910         (b)1. The flat fee established in s. 27.5304 and the
  911  General Appropriations Act shall be presumed by the court to be
  912  sufficient compensation. The attorney shall maintain appropriate
  913  documentation, including contemporaneous and detailed hourly
  914  accounting of time spent representing the client. If the
  915  attorney fails to maintain such contemporaneous and detailed
  916  hourly records, the attorney waives the right to seek
  917  compensation in excess of the flat fee established in s. 27.5304
  918  and the General Appropriations Act. These records and documents
  919  are subject to review by the Justice Administrative Commission
  920  and audit by the Auditor General, subject to the attorney-client
  921  privilege and work-product privilege. The attorney shall
  922  maintain the records and documents in a manner that enables the
  923  attorney to redact any information subject to a privilege in
  924  order to facilitate the commission’s review of the records and
  925  documents and not to impede such review. The attorney may redact
  926  information from the records and documents only to the extent
  927  necessary to comply with the privilege. The Justice
  928  Administrative Commission shall review such records and shall
  929  contemporaneously document such review before authorizing
  930  payment to an attorney. Objections by or on behalf of the
  931  Justice Administrative Commission to records or documents or to
  932  claims for payment by the attorney shall be presumed correct by
  933  the court unless the court determines, in writing, that
  934  competent and substantial evidence exists to justify overcoming
  935  the presumption.
  936         2. If an attorney fails, refuses, or declines to permit the
  937  commission or the Auditor General to review documentation for a
  938  case as provided in this paragraph, the attorney waives the
  939  right to seek, and the commission may not pay, compensation in
  940  excess of the flat fee established in s. 27.5304 and the General
  941  Appropriations Act for that case.
  942         3. A finding by the commission that an attorney has waived
  943  the right to seek compensation in excess of the flat fee
  944  established in s. 27.5304 and the General Appropriations Act, as
  945  provided in this paragraph, shall be presumed to be correct,
  946  unless the court determines, in writing, that competent and
  947  substantial evidence exists to justify overcoming the
  948  presumption.
  949         Section 32. The text of s. 27.40(1), (2)(a), (3)(a), (5),
  950  (6), and (7), Florida Statutes, as carried forward from chapter
  951  2019-116, Laws of Florida, by this act, expires July 1, 2024,
  952  and the text of those subsections and paragraphs, as applicable,
  953  shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2019, except that
  954  any amendments to such text enacted other than by this act shall
  955  be preserved and continue to operate to the extent that such
  956  amendments are not dependent upon the portions of text which
  957  expire pursuant to this section.
  958         Section 33. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
  959  763 through 784, 932 through 1075, and 1096 through 1131 of the
  960  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding the
  961  expiration date in section 38 of chapter 2022-157, Laws of
  962  Florida, subsections (6) and (13) of section 27.5304, Florida
  963  Statutes, are reenacted and amended, and subsections (1), (3),
  964  (7), and (11), and paragraphs (a) through (e) of subsection (12)
  965  of that section are reenacted, to read:
  966         27.5304 Private court-appointed counsel; compensation;
  967  notice.—
  968         (1) Private court-appointed counsel appointed in the manner
  969  prescribed in s. 27.40(1) and (2)(a) shall be compensated by the
  970  Justice Administrative Commission only as provided in this
  971  section and the General Appropriations Act. The flat fees
  972  prescribed in this section are limitations on compensation. The
  973  specific flat fee amounts for compensation shall be established
  974  annually in the General Appropriations Act. The attorney also
  975  shall be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses in
  976  accordance with s. 29.007. If the attorney is representing a
  977  defendant charged with more than one offense in the same case,
  978  the attorney shall be compensated at the rate provided for the
  979  most serious offense for which he or she represented the
  980  defendant. This section does not allow stacking of the fee
  981  limits established by this section.
  982         (3) The court retains primary authority and responsibility
  983  for determining the reasonableness of all billings for attorney
  984  fees, costs, and related expenses, subject to statutory
  985  limitations and the requirements of s. 27.40(7). Private court
  986  appointed counsel is entitled to compensation upon final
  987  disposition of a case.
  988         (6) For compensation for representation pursuant to a court
  989  appointment in a proceeding under chapter 39:
  990         (a) At the trial level, compensation for representation for
  991  dependency proceedings shall not exceed $1,450 $1,000 for the
  992  first year following the date of appointment and shall not
  993  exceed $700 $200 each year thereafter. Compensation shall be
  994  paid based upon representation of a parent irrespective of the
  995  number of case numbers that may be assigned or the number of
  996  children involved, including any children born during the
  997  pendency of the proceeding. Any appeal, except for an appeal
  998  from an adjudication of dependency, shall be completed by the
  999  trial attorney and is considered compensated by the flat fee for
 1000  dependency proceedings.
 1001         1. Counsel may bill the flat fee not exceeding $1,450
 1002  $1,000 following disposition or upon dismissal of the petition.
 1003         2. Counsel may bill the annual flat fee not exceeding $700
 1004  $200 following the first judicial review in the second year
 1005  following the date of appointment and each year thereafter as
 1006  long as the case remains under protective supervision.
 1007         3. If the court grants a motion to reactivate protective
 1008  supervision, the attorney shall receive the annual flat fee not
 1009  exceeding $700 $200 following the first judicial review and up
 1010  to an additional $700 $200 each year thereafter.
 1011         4. If, during the course of dependency proceedings, a
 1012  proceeding to terminate parental rights is initiated,
 1013  compensation shall be as set forth in paragraph (b). If counsel
 1014  handling the dependency proceeding is not authorized to handle
 1015  proceedings to terminate parental rights, the counsel must
 1016  withdraw and new counsel must be appointed.
 1017         (b) At the trial level, compensation for representation in
 1018  termination of parental rights proceedings shall not exceed
 1019  $1,800 $1,000 for the first year following the date of
 1020  appointment and shall not exceed $700 $200 each year thereafter.
 1021  Compensation shall be paid based upon representation of a parent
 1022  irrespective of the number of case numbers that may be assigned
 1023  or the number of children involved, including any children born
 1024  during the pendency of the proceeding. Any appeal, except for an
 1025  appeal from an order granting or denying termination of parental
 1026  rights, shall be completed by trial counsel and is considered
 1027  compensated by the flat fee for termination of parental rights
 1028  proceedings. If the individual has dependency proceedings
 1029  ongoing as to other children, those proceedings are considered
 1030  part of the termination of parental rights proceedings as long
 1031  as that termination of parental rights proceeding is ongoing.
 1032         1. Counsel may bill the flat fee not exceeding $1,800
 1033  $1,000 30 days after rendition of the final order. Each request
 1034  for payment submitted to the Justice Administrative Commission
 1035  must include the trial counsel’s certification that:
 1036         a. Counsel discussed grounds for appeal with the parent or
 1037  that counsel attempted and was unable to contact the parent; and
 1038         b. No appeal will be filed or that a notice of appeal and a
 1039  motion for appointment of appellate counsel, containing the
 1040  signature of the parent, have been filed.
 1041         2. Counsel may bill the annual flat fee not exceeding $700
 1042  $200 following the first judicial review in the second year
 1043  after the date of appointment and each year thereafter as long
 1044  as the termination of parental rights proceedings are still
 1045  ongoing.
 1046         (c) For appeals from an adjudication of dependency,
 1047  compensation may not exceed $1,800 $1,000.
 1048         1. Counsel may bill a flat fee not exceeding $1,200 $750
 1049  upon filing the initial brief or the granting of a motion to
 1050  withdraw.
 1051         2. If a brief is filed, counsel may bill an additional flat
 1052  fee not exceeding $600 $250 upon rendition of the mandate.
 1053         (d) For an appeal from an adjudication of termination of
 1054  parental rights, compensation may not exceed $3,500 $2,000.
 1055         1. Counsel may bill a flat fee not exceeding $1,750 $1,000
 1056  upon filing the initial brief or the granting of a motion to
 1057  withdraw.
 1058         2. If a brief is filed, counsel may bill an additional flat
 1059  fee not exceeding $1,750 $1,000 upon rendition of the mandate.
 1060         (7) Counsel eligible to receive compensation from the state
 1061  for representation pursuant to court appointment made in
 1062  accordance with the requirements of s. 27.40(1) and (2)(a) in a
 1063  proceeding under chapter 384, chapter 390, chapter 392, chapter
 1064  393, chapter 394, chapter 397, chapter 415, chapter 743, chapter
 1065  744, or chapter 984 shall receive compensation not to exceed the
 1066  limits prescribed in the General Appropriations Act. Any such
 1067  compensation must be determined as provided in s. 27.40(7).
 1068         (11) It is the intent of the Legislature that the flat fees
 1069  prescribed under this section and the General Appropriations Act
 1070  comprise the full and complete compensation for private court
 1071  appointed counsel. It is further the intent of the Legislature
 1072  that the fees in this section are prescribed for the purpose of
 1073  providing counsel with notice of the limit on the amount of
 1074  compensation for representation in particular proceedings and
 1075  the sole procedure and requirements for obtaining payment for
 1076  the same.
 1077         (a) If court-appointed counsel moves to withdraw prior to
 1078  the full performance of his or her duties through the completion
 1079  of the case, the court shall presume that the attorney is not
 1080  entitled to the payment of the full flat fee established under
 1081  this section and the General Appropriations Act.
 1082         (b) If court-appointed counsel is allowed to withdraw from
 1083  representation prior to the full performance of his or her
 1084  duties through the completion of the case and the court appoints
 1085  a subsequent attorney, the total compensation for the initial
 1086  and any and all subsequent attorneys may not exceed the flat fee
 1087  established under this section and the General Appropriations
 1088  Act, except as provided in subsection (12).
 1089  
 1090  This subsection constitutes notice to any subsequently appointed
 1091  attorney that he or she will not be compensated the full flat
 1092  fee.
 1093         (12) The Legislature recognizes that on rare occasions an
 1094  attorney may receive a case that requires extraordinary and
 1095  unusual effort.
 1096         (a) If counsel seeks compensation that exceeds the limits
 1097  prescribed by law, he or she must file a motion with the chief
 1098  judge for an order approving payment of attorney fees in excess
 1099  of these limits.
 1100         1. Before filing the motion, the counsel shall deliver a
 1101  copy of the intended billing, together with supporting
 1102  affidavits and all other necessary documentation, to the Justice
 1103  Administrative Commission.
 1104         2. The Justice Administrative Commission shall review the
 1105  billings, affidavit, and documentation for completeness and
 1106  compliance with contractual and statutory requirements and shall
 1107  contemporaneously document such review before authorizing
 1108  payment to an attorney. If the Justice Administrative Commission
 1109  objects to any portion of the proposed billing, the objection
 1110  and supporting reasons must be communicated in writing to the
 1111  private court-appointed counsel. The counsel may thereafter file
 1112  his or her motion, which must specify whether the commission
 1113  objects to any portion of the billing or the sufficiency of
 1114  documentation, and shall attach the commission’s letter stating
 1115  its objection.
 1116         (b) Following receipt of the motion to exceed the fee
 1117  limits, the chief judge or a single designee shall hold an
 1118  evidentiary hearing. The chief judge may select only one judge
 1119  per circuit to hear and determine motions pursuant to this
 1120  subsection, except multicounty circuits and the eleventh circuit
 1121  may have up to two designees.
 1122         1. At the hearing, the attorney seeking compensation must
 1123  prove by competent and substantial evidence that the case
 1124  required extraordinary and unusual efforts. The chief judge or
 1125  single designee shall consider criteria such as the number of
 1126  witnesses, the complexity of the factual and legal issues, and
 1127  the length of trial. The fact that a trial was conducted in a
 1128  case does not, by itself, constitute competent substantial
 1129  evidence of an extraordinary and unusual effort. In a criminal
 1130  case, relief under this section may not be granted if the number
 1131  of work hours does not exceed 75 or the number of the state’s
 1132  witnesses deposed does not exceed 20.
 1133         2. Objections by or on behalf of the Justice Administrative
 1134  Commission to records or documents or to claims for payment by
 1135  the attorney shall be presumed correct by the court unless the
 1136  court determines, in writing, that competent and substantial
 1137  evidence exists to justify overcoming the presumption. The chief
 1138  judge or single designee shall enter a written order detailing
 1139  his or her findings and identifying the extraordinary nature of
 1140  the time and efforts of the attorney in the case which warrant
 1141  exceeding the flat fee established by this section and the
 1142  General Appropriations Act.
 1143         (c) A copy of the motion and attachments shall be served on
 1144  the Justice Administrative Commission at least 20 business days
 1145  before the date of a hearing. The Justice Administrative
 1146  Commission has standing to appear before the court, and may
 1147  appear in person or telephonically, including at the hearing
 1148  under paragraph (b), to contest any motion for an order
 1149  approving payment of attorney fees, costs, or related expenses
 1150  and may participate in a hearing on the motion by use of
 1151  telephonic or other communication equipment. The Justice
 1152  Administrative Commission may contract with other public or
 1153  private entities or individuals to appear before the court for
 1154  the purpose of contesting any motion for an order approving
 1155  payment of attorney fees, costs, or related expenses. The fact
 1156  that the Justice Administrative Commission has not objected to
 1157  any portion of the billing or to the sufficiency of the
 1158  documentation is not binding on the court.
 1159         (d) If the chief judge or a single designee finds that
 1160  counsel has proved by competent and substantial evidence that
 1161  the case required extraordinary and unusual efforts, the chief
 1162  judge or single designee shall order the compensation to be paid
 1163  to the attorney at a percentage above the flat fee rate,
 1164  depending on the extent of the unusual and extraordinary effort
 1165  required. The percentage must be only the rate necessary to
 1166  ensure that the fees paid are not confiscatory under common law.
 1167  The percentage may not exceed 200 percent of the established
 1168  flat fee, absent a specific finding that 200 percent of the flat
 1169  fee in the case would be confiscatory. If the chief judge or
 1170  single designee determines that 200 percent of the flat fee
 1171  would be confiscatory, he or she shall order the amount of
 1172  compensation using an hourly rate not to exceed $75 per hour for
 1173  a noncapital case and $100 per hour for a capital case. However,
 1174  the compensation calculated by using the hourly rate shall be
 1175  only that amount necessary to ensure that the total fees paid
 1176  are not confiscatory, subject to the requirements of s.
 1177  27.40(7).
 1178         (e) Any order granting relief under this subsection must be
 1179  attached to the final request for a payment submitted to the
 1180  Justice Administrative Commission and must satisfy the
 1181  requirements of subparagraph (b)2.
 1182         (13) Notwithstanding the limitation set forth in subsection
 1183  (5) and for the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year only, the
 1184  compensation for representation in a criminal proceeding may not
 1185  exceed the following:
 1186         (a) For misdemeanors and juveniles represented at the trial
 1187  level: $1,000.
 1188         (b) For noncapital, nonlife felonies represented at the
 1189  trial level: $15,000.
 1190         (c) For life felonies represented at the trial level:
 1191  $15,000.
 1192         (d) For capital cases represented at the trial level:
 1193  $25,000. For purposes of this paragraph, a “capital case” is any
 1194  offense for which the potential sentence is death and the state
 1195  has not waived seeking the death penalty.
 1196         (e) For representation on appeal: $9,000.
 1197         (f) This subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1198         Section 34. The amendments made to s. 27.5304(6), Florida
 1199  Statutes, by this act, and the text of s. 27.5304(1), (3), (7),
 1200  (11), and (12)(a)-(e), Florida Statutes, as carried forward from
 1201  chapter 2019-116, Laws of Florida, by this act, expire July 1,
 1202  2024, and the text of those subsections and paragraphs, as
 1203  applicable, shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2019,
 1204  except that any amendments to such text enacted other than by
 1205  this act shall be preserved and continue to operate to the
 1206  extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions
 1207  of text which expire pursuant to this section.
 1208         Section 35. In order to implement appropriations used to
 1209  pay existing lease contracts for private lease space in excess
 1210  of 2,000 square feet in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
 1211  Act, the Department of Management Services, with the cooperation
 1212  of the agencies having the existing lease contracts for office
 1213  or storage space, shall use tenant broker services to
 1214  renegotiate or reprocure all private lease agreements for office
 1215  or storage space expiring between July 1, 2024, and June 30,
 1216  2026, in order to reduce costs in future years. The department
 1217  shall incorporate this initiative into its 2023 master leasing
 1218  report required under s. 255.249(7), Florida Statutes, and may
 1219  use tenant broker services to explore the possibilities of
 1220  collocating office or storage space, to review the space needs
 1221  of each agency, and to review the length and terms of potential
 1222  renewals or renegotiations. The department shall provide a
 1223  report to the Executive Office of the Governor, the President of
 1224  the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by
 1225  November 1, 2023, which lists each lease contract for private
 1226  office or storage space, the status of renegotiations, and the
 1227  savings achieved. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1228         Section 36. In order to implement appropriations authorized
 1229  in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act for data center
 1230  services, and notwithstanding s. 216.292(2)(a), Florida
 1231  Statutes, an agency may not transfer funds from a data
 1232  processing category to a category other than another data
 1233  processing category. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1234         Section 37. In order to implement the appropriation of
 1235  funds in the appropriation category “Special Categories-Risk
 1236  Management Insurance” in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations
 1237  Act, and pursuant to the notice, review, and objection
 1238  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, the Executive Office
 1239  of the Governor may transfer funds appropriated in that category
 1240  between departments in order to align the budget authority
 1241  granted with the premiums paid by each department for risk
 1242  management insurance. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1243         Section 38. In order to implement the appropriation of
 1244  funds in the appropriation category “Special Categories-Transfer
 1245  to Department of Management Services-Human Resources Services
 1246  Purchased per Statewide Contract” in the 2023-2024 General
 1247  Appropriations Act, and pursuant to the notice, review, and
 1248  objection procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, the
 1249  Executive Office of the Governor may transfer funds appropriated
 1250  in that category between departments in order to align the
 1251  budget authority granted with the assessments that must be paid
 1252  by each agency to the Department of Management Services for
 1253  human resource management services. This section expires July 1,
 1254  2024.
 1255         Section 39. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1256  2871 in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act in the Building
 1257  Relocation appropriation category from the Architects Incidental
 1258  Trust Fund of the Department of Management Services, and in
 1259  accordance with s. 215.196, Florida Statutes:
 1260         (1)Upon the final disposition of a state-owned building,
 1261  the Department of Management Services may use up to 5 percent of
 1262  facility disposition funds from the Architects Incidental Trust
 1263  Fund to defer, offset, or otherwise pay for all or a portion of
 1264  relocation expenses including furniture, fixtures, and equipment
 1265  for state agencies impacted by the disposition of the
 1266  department’s managed facilities in the Florida Facilities Pool.
 1267  The extent of the financial assistance provided to impacted
 1268  state agencies shall be determined by the department.
 1269         (2)The Department of Management Services may submit budget
 1270  amendments for an increase in appropriation if necessary for the
 1271  implementation of this section pursuant to the provisions of
 1272  chapter 216, Florida Statutes. Budget amendments for an increase
 1273  in appropriation shall include a detailed plan providing all
 1274  estimated costs and relocation proposals.
 1275         (3)This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1276         Section 40. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1277  2845 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act from the
 1278  Architects Incidental Trust Fund of the Department of Management
 1279  Services, notwithstanding s. 253.025(4), Florida Statutes, and
 1280  in accordance with s. 215.196, Florida Statutes, the Department
 1281  of Management Services may acquire additional state-owned office
 1282  buildings as defined in s. 255.248, Florida Statutes, or
 1283  property for inclusion in the Florida Facilities Pool as created
 1284  in s. 255.505, Florida Statutes. This section expires July 1,
 1285  2024.
 1286         Section 41. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1287  2449 through 2452 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act:
 1288         (1)The Department of Financial Services shall replace the
 1289  four main components of the Florida Accounting Information
 1290  Resource Subsystem (FLAIR), which include central FLAIR,
 1291  departmental FLAIR, payroll, and information warehouse, and
 1292  shall replace the cash management and accounting management
 1293  components of the Cash Management Subsystem (CMS) with an
 1294  integrated enterprise system that allows the state to organize,
 1295  define, and standardize its financial management business
 1296  processes and that complies with ss. 215.90-215.96, Florida
 1297  Statutes. The department may not include in the replacement of
 1298  FLAIR and CMS:
 1299         (a)Functionality that duplicates any of the other
 1300  information subsystems of the Florida Financial Management
 1301  Information System; or
 1302         (b)Agency business processes related to any of the
 1303  functions included in the Personnel Information System, the
 1304  Purchasing Subsystem, or the Legislative Appropriations
 1305  System/Planning and Budgeting Subsystem.
 1306         (2)For purposes of replacing FLAIR and CMS, the Department
 1307  of Financial Services shall:
 1308         (a)Take into consideration the cost and implementation
 1309  data identified for Option 3 as recommended in the March 31,
 1310  2014, Florida Department of Financial Services FLAIR Study,
 1311  version 031.
 1312         (b)Ensure that all business requirements and technical
 1313  specifications have been provided to all state agencies for
 1314  their review and input and approved by the executive steering
 1315  committee established in paragraph (c), including any updates to
 1316  these documents.
 1317         (c)Implement a project governance structure that includes
 1318  an executive steering committee composed of:
 1319         1.The Chief Financial Officer or the executive sponsor of
 1320  the project.
 1321         2.A representative of the Division of Treasury of the
 1322  Department of Financial Services, appointed by the Chief
 1323  Financial Officer.
 1324         3.The Chief Information Officers of the Department of
 1325  Financial Services and the Department of Environmental
 1326  Protection.
 1327         4.Two employees from the Division of Accounting and
 1328  Auditing of the Department of Financial Services, appointed by
 1329  the Chief Financial Officer. Each employee must have experience
 1330  relating to at least one of the four main components that
 1331  compose FLAIR.
 1332         5.Two employees from the Executive Office of the Governor,
 1333  appointed by the Governor. One employee must have experience
 1334  relating to the Legislative Appropriations System/Planning and
 1335  Budgeting Subsystem.
 1336         6.One employee from the Department of Revenue, appointed
 1337  by the executive director, who has experience using or
 1338  maintaining the department’s finance and accounting systems.
 1339         7.Two employees from the Department of Management
 1340  Services, appointed by the Secretary of Management Services. One
 1341  employee must have experience relating to the department’s
 1342  personnel information subsystem and one employee must have
 1343  experience relating to the department’s purchasing subsystem.
 1344         8.A state agency administrative services director,
 1345  appointed by the Governor.
 1346         9.The executive sponsor of the Florida Health Care
 1347  Connection (FX) System or his or her designee, appointed by the
 1348  Secretary of Health Care Administration.
 1349         10.The state chief information officer, or his or her
 1350  designee, as a nonvoting member. The state chief information
 1351  officer, or his or her designee, shall provide monthly status
 1352  reports to the executive steering committee pursuant to the
 1353  oversight responsibilities in s. 282.0051, Florida Statutes.
 1354         11.One employee from the Department of Business and
 1355  Professional Regulation who has experience in finance and
 1356  accounting and FLAIR, appointed by the Secretary of Business and
 1357  Professional Regulation.
 1358         12.One employee from the Florida Fish and Wildlife
 1359  Conservation Commission who has experience using or maintaining
 1360  the commission’s finance and accounting systems, appointed by
 1361  the chair of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 1362  Commission.
 1363         13.The budget director of the Department of Education, or
 1364  his or her designee.
 1365         (3)(a)The Chief Financial Officer or the executive sponsor
 1366  of the project shall serve as chair of the executive steering
 1367  committee, and the committee shall take action by a vote of at
 1368  least eight affirmative votes with the Chief Financial Officer
 1369  or the executive sponsor of the project voting on the prevailing
 1370  side. A quorum of the executive steering committee consists of
 1371  at least 10 members.
 1372         (b)No later than 14 days before a meeting of the executive
 1373  steering committee, the chair shall request input from committee
 1374  members on agenda items for the next scheduled meeting.
 1375         (c)The chair shall establish a working group consisting of
 1376  FLAIR users, state agency technical staff who maintain
 1377  applications that integrate with FLAIR, and no less than four
 1378  state agency finance and accounting or budget directors. The
 1379  working group shall meet at least monthly to review PALM
 1380  functionality, assess project impacts to state financial
 1381  business processes and agency staff, and develop recommendations
 1382  to the executive steering committee for improvements. The chair
 1383  shall request input from the working group on agenda items for
 1384  each scheduled meeting. The PALM project team shall dedicate a
 1385  staff member to the group and provide system demonstrations and
 1386  any project documentation, as needed, for the group to fulfill
 1387  its duties.
 1388         (d) The chair shall request all agency project sponsors to
 1389  provide bimonthly status reports to the executive steering
 1390  committee. The form and format of the bimonthly status reports
 1391  shall be developed by the Florida PALM project and provided to
 1392  the executive steering committee meeting for approval. Such
 1393  agency status reports shall provide information to the executive
 1394  steering committee on the activities and ongoing work within the
 1395  agency to prepare their systems and impacted employees for the
 1396  deployment of the Florida PALM System. The first bimonthly
 1397  status report is due September 1, 2023, and bimonthly
 1398  thereafter.
 1399         (4)The executive steering committee has the overall
 1400  responsibility for ensuring that the project to replace FLAIR
 1401  and CMS meets its primary business objectives and shall:
 1402         (a)Identify and recommend to the Executive Office of the
 1403  Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
 1404  House of Representatives any statutory changes needed to
 1405  implement the replacement subsystem that will standardize, to
 1406  the fullest extent possible, the state’s financial management
 1407  business processes.
 1408         (b)Review and approve any changes to the project’s scope,
 1409  schedule, and budget which do not conflict with the requirements
 1410  of subsection (1).
 1411         (c)Ensure that adequate resources are provided throughout
 1412  all phases of the project.
 1413         (d)Approve all major project deliverables and any cost
 1414  changes to each deliverable over $250,000.
 1415         (e)Approve contract amendments and changes to all
 1416  contract-related documents associated with the replacement of
 1417  FLAIR and CMS.
 1418         (f) Review, and approve as warranted, the format of the
 1419  bimonthly agency status reports to include meaningful
 1420  information on each agency’s progress in planning for the
 1421  Florida PALM Major Implementation, covering the agency’s people,
 1422  processes, technology, and data transformation activities.
 1423         (g)Ensure compliance with ss. 216.181(16), 216.311,
 1424  216.313, 282.318(4)(h), and 287.058, Florida Statutes.
 1425         (5)This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1426         Section 42. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1427  2995 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 1428  notwithstanding the expiration date in section 54 of chapter
 1429  2022-157, Laws of Florida, subsection (3) of section 282.709,
 1430  Florida Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 1431         282.709 State agency law enforcement radio system and
 1432  interoperability network.—
 1433         (3) In recognition of the critical nature of the statewide
 1434  law enforcement radio communications system, the Legislature
 1435  finds that there is an immediate danger to the public health,
 1436  safety, and welfare, and that it is in the best interest of the
 1437  state to continue partnering with the system’s current operator.
 1438  The Legislature finds that continuity of coverage is critical to
 1439  supporting law enforcement, first responders, and other public
 1440  safety users. The potential for a loss in coverage or a lack of
 1441  interoperability between users requires emergency action and is
 1442  a serious concern for officers’ safety and their ability to
 1443  communicate and respond to various disasters and events.
 1444         (a) The department, pursuant to s. 287.057(10), shall enter
 1445  into a 15-year contract with the entity that was operating the
 1446  statewide radio communications system on January 1, 2021. The
 1447  contract must include:
 1448         1. The purchase of radios;
 1449         2. The upgrade to the Project 25 communications standard;
 1450         3. Increased system capacity and enhanced coverage for
 1451  system users;
 1452         4. Operations, maintenance, and support at a fixed annual
 1453  rate;
 1454         5. The conveyance of communications towers to the
 1455  department; and
 1456         6. The assignment of communications tower leases to the
 1457  department.
 1458         (b) The State Agency Law Enforcement Radio System Trust
 1459  Fund is established in the department and funded from surcharges
 1460  collected under ss. 318.18, 320.0802, and 328.72. Upon
 1461  appropriation, moneys in the trust fund may be used by the
 1462  department to acquire the equipment, software, and engineering,
 1463  administrative, and maintenance services it needs to construct,
 1464  operate, and maintain the statewide radio system. Moneys in the
 1465  trust fund from surcharges shall be used to help fund the costs
 1466  of the system. Upon completion of the system, moneys in the
 1467  trust fund may also be used by the department for payment of the
 1468  recurring maintenance costs of the system.
 1469         Section 43. The text of s. 282.709(3), Florida Statutes, as
 1470  carried forward from chapter 2021-37, Laws of Florida, by this
 1471  act, expires July 1, 2024, and the text of that subsection shall
 1472  revert to that in existence on June 1, 2021, except that any
 1473  amendments to such text enacted other than by this act shall be
 1474  preserved and continue to operate to the extent that such
 1475  amendments are not dependent upon the portions of text which
 1476  expire pursuant to this section.
 1477         Section 44. In order to implement appropriations relating
 1478  to the purchase of equipment and services related to the
 1479  Statewide Law Enforcement Radio System (SLERS) as authorized in
 1480  the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding s.
 1481  287.057, Florida Statutes, state agencies and other eligible
 1482  users of the SLERS network may use the Department of Management
 1483  Services SLERS contract for purchase of equipment and services.
 1484  This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1485         Section 45. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1486  2889 through 2900 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 1487  and notwithstanding rule 60A-1.031, Florida Administrative Code,
 1488  the transaction fee as identified in s. 287.057(24)(c), Florida
 1489  Statutes, shall be collected for use of the online procurement
 1490  system and is 0.7 percent for the 2023-2024 fiscal year only.
 1491  This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1492         Section 46. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1493  2800 through 2824 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 1494  and upon the expiration and reversion of the amendments made by
 1495  section 57 of chapter 2022-157, Laws of Florida, paragraph (i)
 1496  of subsection (9) of section 24.105, Florida Statutes, is
 1497  amended to read:
 1498         24.105 Powers and duties of department.—The department
 1499  shall:
 1500         (9) Adopt rules governing the establishment and operation
 1501  of the state lottery, including:
 1502         (i) The manner and amount of compensation of retailers,
 1503  except for the 2023-2024 fiscal year only, effective July 1,
 1504  2023, the commission for lottery ticket sales shall be 6 percent
 1505  of the purchase price of each ticket sold or issued as a prize
 1506  by a retailer. Any additional retailer compensation is limited
 1507  to the Florida Lottery Retailer Bonus Commission program
 1508  appropriated in Specific Appropriation 2820 of the 2023-2024
 1509  General Appropriations Act.
 1510         Section 47. The amendment to s. 24.105(9)(i), Florida
 1511  Statutes, made by this act expires July 1, 2024, and the text of
 1512  that paragraph shall revert to that in existence on June 30,
 1513  2022, except that any amendments to such text enacted other than
 1514  by this act shall be preserved and continue to operate to the
 1515  extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions
 1516  of text which expire pursuant to this section.
 1517         Section 48. Effective upon this act becoming a law, and in
 1518  order to implement Specific Appropriations 2441 through 2448 of
 1519  the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (3) is
 1520  added to section 717.123, Florida Statutes, to read:
 1521         717.123 Deposit of funds.—
 1522         (3) Notwithstanding subsection (1), and for the 2022-2023
 1523  fiscal year, the department shall retain, from funds received
 1524  under this chapter, an amount not exceeding $65 million from
 1525  which the department shall make prompt payment of claims allowed
 1526  by the department and shall pay the costs incurred by the
 1527  department in administering and enforcing this chapter. This
 1528  subsection expires July 1, 2024.
 1529         Section 49. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1530  3033 through 3041 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 1531  paragraph (ll) is added to subsection (6) of section 627.351,
 1532  Florida Statutes, to read:
 1533         627.351 Insurance risk apportionment plans.—
 1534         (6) CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORPORATION.—
 1535         (ll)1. In addition to any other method of alternative
 1536  dispute resolution authorized by Florida law, the corporation
 1537  may adopt policy forms which provide for the resolution of
 1538  disputes regarding its claim determinations, including disputes
 1539  regarding coverage for, or the scope and value of, a claim, in a
 1540  proceeding before the Division of Administrative Hearings. Any
 1541  such policy forms are not subject to s. 627.70154.
 1542         2. The corporation may contract with the division to
 1543  conduct proceedings to resolve disputes regarding its claim
 1544  determinations as may be provided for in the applicable policies
 1545  of insurance.
 1546         3. This paragraph expires July 1, 2024.
 1547         Section 50. Effective upon this act becoming a law, and in
 1548  order to implement section 123 of the 2023-2024 General
 1549  Appropriations Act, paragraph (f) is added to subsection (7) of
 1550  section 934.50, Florida Statutes, to read:
 1551         934.50 Searches and seizure using a drone.—
 1552         (7) SECURITY STANDARDS FOR GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY DRONE USE.—
 1553         (f) Notwithstanding this subsection:
 1554         1.Subject to appropriation, the drone replacement grant
 1555  program is created within the Department of Law Enforcement. The
 1556  program shall provide funds to law enforcement agencies that
 1557  turn in drones that are not in compliance with this section. To
 1558  be eligible, the drone must have not reached its end of life and
 1559  must still be in working condition. Funds shall be provided per
 1560  drone based upon the drone’s current value. Grant funds may only
 1561  be used to purchase drones that are in compliance with this
 1562  section. The Department of Law Enforcement shall expeditiously
 1563  develop an application process and funds shall be allocated on a
 1564  first-come, first-served basis, determined by the date the
 1565  department receives the application. The department may adopt
 1566  rules to implement this program. For the purposes of this
 1567  paragraph, the term “law enforcement agency” has the same
 1568  meaning as in s. 934.50.
 1569         2. The Department of Law Enforcement shall provide drones
 1570  received through the drone grant replacement program to the
 1571  Florida Center for Cybersecurity within the University of South
 1572  Florida. The Florida Center for Cybersecurity shall analyze
 1573  whether the drones present cybersecurity concerns and shall
 1574  provide its findings or recommendations to the Department of
 1575  Management Services regarding the drones’ safety or security.
 1576         3. The Department of Law Enforcement is authorized, and all
 1577  conditions are deemed met, to adopt emergency rules under s.
 1578  120.54(4) for the purpose of implementing the drone replacement
 1579  grant program. Notwithstanding any other law, emergency rules
 1580  adopted under this section are effective for 12 months after
 1581  adoption and may be renewed during the pendency of procedures to
 1582  adopt permanent rules addressing the subject of the emergency
 1583  rules.
 1584  
 1585  This paragraph expires July 1, 2024.
 1586         Section 51. Effective upon this act becoming a law, and in
 1587  order to implement Specific Appropriations 3109 through 3140 of
 1588  the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, paragraph (g) of
 1589  subsection (13) of section 120.80, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1590  to read:
 1591         120.80 Exceptions and special requirements; agencies.—
 1592         (13) FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION.—
 1593         (g)1. Rules adopted by the Florida Public Service
 1594  Commission to implement ss. 366.04(8) and (9) and 366.97 are not
 1595  subject to s. 120.541.
 1596         2. For the 2023-2024 fiscal year, rules adopted by the
 1597  Florida Public Service Commission to implement ss. 350.113,
 1598  364.336, 366.14, 367.145, and 368.109 are not subject to s.
 1599  120.541. This subparagraph expires July 1, 2024.
 1600         Section 52. In order to implement specific appropriations
 1601  from the land acquisition trust funds within the Department of
 1602  Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Department of
 1603  Environmental Protection, the Department of State, and the Fish
 1604  and Wildlife Conservation Commission, which are contained in the
 1605  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (3) of section
 1606  215.18, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1607         215.18 Transfers between funds; limitation.—
 1608         (3) Notwithstanding subsection (1) and only with respect to
 1609  a land acquisition trust fund in the Department of Agriculture
 1610  and Consumer Services, the Department of Environmental
 1611  Protection, the Department of State, or the Fish and Wildlife
 1612  Conservation Commission, whenever there is a deficiency in a
 1613  land acquisition trust fund which would render that trust fund
 1614  temporarily insufficient to meet its just requirements,
 1615  including the timely payment of appropriations from that trust
 1616  fund, and other trust funds in the State Treasury have moneys
 1617  that are for the time being or otherwise in excess of the
 1618  amounts necessary to meet the just requirements, including
 1619  appropriated obligations, of those other trust funds, the
 1620  Governor may order a temporary transfer of moneys from one or
 1621  more of the other trust funds to a land acquisition trust fund
 1622  in the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the
 1623  Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of State,
 1624  or the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Any action
 1625  proposed pursuant to this subsection is subject to the notice,
 1626  review, and objection procedures of s. 216.177, and the Governor
 1627  shall provide notice of such action at least 7 days before the
 1628  effective date of the transfer of trust funds, except that
 1629  during July 2023 2022, notice of such action shall be provided
 1630  at least 3 days before the effective date of a transfer unless
 1631  such 3-day notice is waived by the chair and vice chair of the
 1632  Legislative Budget Commission. Any transfer of trust funds to a
 1633  land acquisition trust fund in the Department of Agriculture and
 1634  Consumer Services, the Department of Environmental Protection,
 1635  the Department of State, or the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 1636  Commission must be repaid to the trust funds from which the
 1637  moneys were loaned by the end of the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal
 1638  year. The Legislature has determined that the repayment of the
 1639  other trust fund moneys temporarily loaned to a land acquisition
 1640  trust fund in the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
 1641  Services, the Department of Environmental Protection, the
 1642  Department of State, or the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 1643  Commission pursuant to this subsection is an allowable use of
 1644  the moneys in a land acquisition trust fund because the moneys
 1645  from other trust funds temporarily loaned to a land acquisition
 1646  trust fund shall be expended solely and exclusively in
 1647  accordance with s. 28, Art. X of the State Constitution. This
 1648  subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1649         Section 53. (1)In order to implement specific
 1650  appropriations from the land acquisition trust funds within the
 1651  Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Department
 1652  of Environmental Protection, the Department of State, and the
 1653  Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission which are contained in
 1654  the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, the Department of
 1655  Environmental Protection shall transfer revenues from the Land
 1656  Acquisition Trust Fund within the department to the land
 1657  acquisition trust funds within the Department of Agriculture and
 1658  Consumer Services, the Department of State, and the Fish and
 1659  Wildlife Conservation Commission as provided in this section. As
 1660  used in this section, the term “department” means the Department
 1661  of Environmental Protection.
 1662         (2)After subtracting any required debt service payments,
 1663  the proportionate share of revenues to be transferred to each
 1664  land acquisition trust fund shall be calculated by dividing the
 1665  appropriations from each of the land acquisition trust funds for
 1666  the fiscal year by the total appropriations from the Land
 1667  Acquisition Trust Fund within the department and the land
 1668  acquisition trust funds within the Department of Agriculture and
 1669  Consumer Services, the Department of State, and the Fish and
 1670  Wildlife Conservation Commission for the fiscal year. The
 1671  department shall transfer the proportionate share of the
 1672  revenues in the Land Acquisition Trust Fund within the
 1673  department on a monthly basis to the appropriate land
 1674  acquisition trust funds within the Department of Agriculture and
 1675  Consumer Services, the Department of State, and the Fish and
 1676  Wildlife Conservation Commission and shall retain its
 1677  proportionate share of the revenues in the Land Acquisition
 1678  Trust Fund within the department. Total distributions to a land
 1679  acquisition trust fund within the Department of Agriculture and
 1680  Consumer Services, the Department of State, and the Fish and
 1681  Wildlife Conservation Commission may not exceed the total
 1682  appropriations from such trust fund for the fiscal year.
 1683         (3)In addition, the department shall transfer from the
 1684  Land Acquisition Trust Fund to land acquisition trust funds
 1685  within the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the
 1686  Department of State, and the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 1687  Commission amounts equal to the difference between the amounts
 1688  appropriated in chapter 2022-156, Laws of Florida, to the
 1689  department’s Land Acquisition Trust Fund and the other land
 1690  acquisition trust funds, and the amounts actually transferred
 1691  between those trust funds during the 2022-2023 fiscal year.
 1692         (4)The department may advance funds from the beginning
 1693  unobligated fund balance in the Land Acquisition Trust Fund to
 1694  the Land Acquisition Trust Fund within the Fish and Wildlife
 1695  Conservation Commission needed for cash flow purposes based on a
 1696  detailed expenditure plan. The department shall prorate amounts
 1697  transferred quarterly to the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 1698  Commission to recoup the amount of funds advanced by June 30,
 1699  2024.
 1700         (5)This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1701         Section 54. In order to implement specific appropriations
 1702  from the Florida Forever Trust Fund within the Department of
 1703  Environmental Protection, which are contained in the 2023-2024
 1704  General Appropriations Act, paragraph (m) of subsection (3) of
 1705  section 259.105, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1706         259.105 The Florida Forever Act.—
 1707         (3) Less the costs of issuing and the costs of funding
 1708  reserve accounts and other costs associated with bonds, the
 1709  proceeds of cash payments or bonds issued pursuant to this
 1710  section shall be deposited into the Florida Forever Trust Fund
 1711  created by s. 259.1051. The proceeds shall be distributed by the
 1712  Department of Environmental Protection in the following manner:
 1713         (m) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a)-(j) and for the 2023
 1714  2024 fiscal year, the proceeds shall be distributed as provided
 1715  in the General Appropriations Act. This paragraph expires July
 1716  1, 2024 Notwithstanding paragraphs (a)-(j) and for the 2021-2022
 1717  fiscal year, the amount of $1,998,100 to only the Department of
 1718  Environmental Protection for grants pursuant to s. 375.075. This
 1719  paragraph expires July 1, 2022.
 1720         Section 55. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1721  1438 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 1722  notwithstanding the expiration date in section 64 of chapter
 1723  2022-157, Laws of Florida, paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of
 1724  section 570.93, Florida Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 1725         570.93 Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services;
 1726  agricultural water conservation and agricultural water supply
 1727  planning.—
 1728         (1) The department shall establish an agricultural water
 1729  conservation program that includes the following:
 1730         (a) A cost-share program, coordinated with the United
 1731  States Department of Agriculture and other federal, state,
 1732  regional, and local agencies when appropriate, for irrigation
 1733  system retrofit and application of mobile irrigation laboratory
 1734  evaluations, and for water conservation and water quality
 1735  improvement pursuant to s. 403.067(7)(c).
 1736         Section 56. The text of s. 570.93(1)(a), Florida Statutes,
 1737  as carried forward from chapter 2019-116, Laws of Florida, by
 1738  this act expires July 1, 2024, and the text of that paragraph
 1739  shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2019, except that
 1740  any amendments to such text enacted other than by this act shall
 1741  be preserved and continue to operate to the extent that such
 1742  amendments are not dependent upon the portions of text which
 1743  expire pursuant to this section.
 1744         Section 57. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1745  1757 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 1746  notwithstanding the expiration date in section 66 of chapter
 1747  2022-157, Laws of Florida, paragraph (g) of subsection (15) of
 1748  section 376.3071, Florida Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 1749         376.3071 Inland Protection Trust Fund; creation; purposes;
 1750  funding.—
 1751         (15) ETHANOL OR BIODIESEL DAMAGE; PREVENTIVE MEASURES.—The
 1752  department shall pay, pursuant to this subsection, up to $10
 1753  million each fiscal year from the fund for the costs of labor
 1754  and equipment to repair or replace petroleum storage systems
 1755  that may have been damaged due to the storage of fuels blended
 1756  with ethanol or biodiesel, or for preventive measures to reduce
 1757  the potential for such damage.
 1758         (g) Payments may not be made for the following:
 1759         1. Proposal costs or costs related to preparation of the
 1760  application and required documentation;
 1761         2. Certified public accountant costs;
 1762         3. Except as provided in paragraph (j), any costs in excess
 1763  of the amount approved by the department under paragraph (b) or
 1764  which are not in substantial compliance with the purchase order;
 1765         4. Costs associated with storage tanks, piping, or
 1766  ancillary equipment that has previously been repaired or
 1767  replaced for which costs have been paid under this section;
 1768         5. Facilities that are not in compliance with department
 1769  storage tank rules, until the noncompliance issues have been
 1770  resolved; or
 1771         6. Costs associated with damage to petroleum storage
 1772  systems caused in whole or in part by causes other than the
 1773  storage of fuels blended with ethanol or biodiesel.
 1774         Section 58. The text of s. 376.3071(15)(g), Florida
 1775  Statutes, as carried forward from chapter 2020-114, Laws of
 1776  Florida, by this act, expires July 1, 2024, and the text of that
 1777  paragraph shall revert to that in existence on July 1, 2020, but
 1778  not including any amendments made by this act or chapter 2020
 1779  114, Laws of Florida, and any amendments to such text enacted
 1780  other than by this act shall be preserved and continue to
 1781  operate to the extent that such amendments are not dependent
 1782  upon the portion of text which expires pursuant to this section.
 1783         Section 59. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1784  2267 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 1785  notwithstanding chapter 287, Florida Statutes, the Department of
 1786  Citrus shall enter into agreements for the purpose of increasing
 1787  production of trees that show tolerance or resistance to citrus
 1788  greening and to commercialize technologies that produce
 1789  tolerance or resistance to citrus greening in trees. The
 1790  department shall enter into these agreements no later than
 1791  January 1, 2024, and shall file with the department’s Inspector
 1792  General a certification of conditions and circumstances
 1793  justifying each agreement entered into without competitive
 1794  solicitation. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 1795         Section 60. In order to implement section 142 of the 2023
 1796  2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (22) of section
 1797  161.101, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1798         161.101 State and local participation in authorized
 1799  projects and studies relating to beach management and erosion
 1800  control.—
 1801         (22) Notwithstanding subsections (1), (15), and (16), and
 1802  for the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year, for beaches located in
 1803  Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Collier, Duval, Flagler, Indian
 1804  River, Lee, Manatee, Martin, Nassau, Palm Beach, St. Johns, St.
 1805  Lucie, Sarasota, and Volusia Counties, impacted by Hurricane Ian
 1806  or Hurricane Nicole, the department may waive or reduce the
 1807  match requirements for local governments. This subsection
 1808  expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1809         Section 61. In order to implement section 143 of the 2023
 1810  2024 General Appropriations Act, section 10 of chapter 2022-272,
 1811  Laws of Florida, is amended to read:
 1812         Section 10. Hurricane Restoration Reimbursement Grant
 1813  Program.—
 1814         (1) There is hereby created within the Department of
 1815  Environmental Protection the Hurricane Restoration Reimbursement
 1816  Grant Program for the purpose of providing financial assistance
 1817  to mitigate coastal beach erosion for coastal homeowners whose
 1818  property was significantly impacted by Hurricane Ian or
 1819  Hurricane Nicole in 2022. The department is authorized to
 1820  provide financial assistance grants to eligible recipients
 1821  located in Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Collier, Duval, Flagler,
 1822  Indian River, Lee, Manatee, Martin, Nassau, Palm Beach, Saint
 1823  Johns, Saint Lucie, Sarasota, and Volusia Counties.
 1824         (2) The department may provide grants to property owners to
 1825  mitigate for coastal beach erosion caused by Hurricane Ian or
 1826  Hurricane Nicole during 2022. Grant funding may only be used to
 1827  reimburse a property owner for construction costs:
 1828         (a) Related to sand placement and temporary or permanent
 1829  coastal armoring construction projects to mitigate coastal beach
 1830  erosion and may not be used for the repair of residential
 1831  structures.
 1832         (b) Incurred as a result of preparation for or damage
 1833  sustained from Hurricane Ian or Hurricane Nicole in 2022.
 1834         (c) Incurred after September 23, 2022.
 1835         (d) Related to a project that has been permitted, is exempt
 1836  from permitting requirements, or is otherwise authorized by law.
 1837         (3) Financial assistance grants may only be provided to
 1838  mitigate damage to property located in Brevard, Broward,
 1839  Charlotte, Collier, Duval, Flagler, Indian River, Lee, Manatee,
 1840  Martin, Nassau, Palm Beach, Saint Johns, Saint Lucie, Sarasota,
 1841  and Volusia Counties that is a:
 1842         (a) Residential property that meets the following
 1843  requirements:
 1844         1. The parcel must be a single-family, site-built,
 1845  residential property or a multi-family, site-built, residential
 1846  property not to exceed four units; and
 1847         2. The homeowner must have been granted a homestead
 1848  exemption on the home under chapter 196, Florida Statutes;
 1849         (b) Residential condominium, as defined in chapter 718,
 1850  Florida Statutes; or
 1851         (c) Cooperative, as defined in chapter 719, Florida
 1852  Statutes.
 1853         (4)(a) The department shall cost-share with $1 provided by
 1854  the property owner for every $1 provided by the state with a
 1855  maximum of $300,000 $150,000 in state funding toward the actual
 1856  cost of an eligible project. The department shall prioritize
 1857  applicants who are low-income or moderate-income persons, as
 1858  defined in s. 420.0004, Florida Statutes. Grants will be awarded
 1859  to property owners for eligible projects following the receipt
 1860  of a completed application on a first-come, first-served basis
 1861  until funding is exhausted.
 1862         1. Applications may be submitted beginning February 1,
 1863  2023.
 1864         2. Applicants must include evidence that the project meets
 1865  the criteria in subsections (2) and (3).
 1866         (b) If the department determines that an application meets
 1867  the requirements of this section, the department shall enter
 1868  into a cost-share grant agreement with the applicant consistent
 1869  with this section.
 1870         (c) The department shall disburse grant funds on a
 1871  reimbursement basis. In order to receive reimbursement, property
 1872  owners must submit, at a minimum:
 1873         1. If applicable, the permit issued under chapter 161,
 1874  Florida Statutes, or applicable statute, and evidence that the
 1875  project complies with all permitting requirements.
 1876         2. All invoices and payment receipts for eligible projects.
 1877         3. If applicable, documentation that the eligible project
 1878  was completed by a licensed professional or contractor.
 1879         (5) No later than January 31, 2023, the department shall
 1880  adopt emergency rules prescribing the procedures,
 1881  administration, and criteria for approving the applications for
 1882  the Hurricane Restoration Reimbursement Grant Program. The
 1883  department is authorized, and all conditions are deemed met, to
 1884  adopt emergency rules under ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54(4),
 1885  Florida Statutes, to implement this section. The Legislature
 1886  finds that such emergency rulemaking authority is necessary to
 1887  address critical shoreline erosion which may result in the loss
 1888  of property by homeowners in those areas of the state that
 1889  sustained damage due to Hurricane Ian or Hurricane Nicole during
 1890  2022. Such rules shall remain effective for 6 months after the
 1891  date of adoption.
 1892         (6) This section expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1893         Section 62. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1894  2722 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, paragraph (b)
 1895  of subsection (3) and subsection (5) of section 321.04, Florida
 1896  Statutes, are amended to read:
 1897         321.04 Personnel of the highway patrol; rank
 1898  classifications; probationary status of new patrol officers;
 1899  subsistence; special assignments.—
 1900         (3)
 1901         (b) For the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year only, upon the
 1902  request of the Governor, the Department of Highway Safety and
 1903  Motor Vehicles shall assign one or more patrol officers to the
 1904  office of the Lieutenant Governor for security services. This
 1905  paragraph expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1906         (5) For the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year only, the
 1907  assignment of a patrol officer by the department shall include a
 1908  Cabinet member specified in s. 4, Art. IV of the State
 1909  Constitution if deemed appropriate by the department or in
 1910  response to a threat and upon written request of such Cabinet
 1911  member. This subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1912         Section 63. In order to implement section 185 of the 2023
 1913  2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (3) of section
 1914  288.80125, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1915         288.80125 Triumph Gulf Coast Trust Fund.—
 1916         (3) For the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year, funds shall be
 1917  used for the Rebuild Florida Revolving Loan Fund program to
 1918  provide assistance to businesses impacted by Hurricane Michael
 1919  as provided in the General Appropriations Act. This subsection
 1920  expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1921         Section 64. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1922  2277 through 2284 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 1923  subsection (3) of section 288.8013, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1924  to read:
 1925         288.8013 Triumph Gulf Coast, Inc.; creation; funding;
 1926  investment.—
 1927         (3) Triumph Gulf Coast, Inc., shall establish a trust
 1928  account at a federally insured financial institution to hold
 1929  funds received from the Triumph Gulf Coast Trust Fund and make
 1930  deposits and payments. Interest earned in the trust account
 1931  shall be deposited monthly into the Triumph Gulf Coast Trust
 1932  Fund. Triumph Gulf Coast, Inc., may invest surplus funds in the
 1933  Local Government Surplus Funds Trust Fund, pursuant to s.
 1934  218.407. Earnings generated by investments and interest of the
 1935  fund may be retained and used to make awards pursuant to this
 1936  act or, notwithstanding paragraph (2)(d), for administrative
 1937  costs, including costs in excess of the cap, and interest
 1938  earned, net of fees, shall be transferred monthly into the
 1939  Triumph Gulf Coast Trust Fund. Administrative costs may include
 1940  payment of travel and per diem expenses of board members,
 1941  audits, salary or other costs for employed or contracted staff,
 1942  including required staff under s. 288.8014(9), and other
 1943  allowable costs. The annual salary for any employee or
 1944  contracted staff may not exceed $130,000, and associated
 1945  benefits may not exceed 35 percent of salary.
 1946         Section 65. The amendments to s. 288.8013(3), Florida
 1947  Statutes, made by this act expire July 1, 2024, and the text of
 1948  that subsection shall revert to that in existence on June 30,
 1949  2023, except that any amendments to such text enacted other than
 1950  by this act shall be preserved and continue to operate to the
 1951  extent that such amendments are not dependent upon the portions
 1952  of text which expire pursuant to this section.
 1953         Section 66. In order to implement section 215 of the 2023
 1954  2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (4) of section
 1955  339.08, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1956         339.08 Use of moneys in State Transportation Trust Fund.—
 1957         (4) Notwithstanding any other law, and for the 2023-2024
 1958  2022-2023 fiscal year only, funds are appropriated to the State
 1959  Transportation Trust Fund from the General Revenue Fund as
 1960  provided in the General Appropriations Act. The department is
 1961  not required to deplete the resources transferred from the
 1962  General Revenue Fund for the fiscal year as required in s.
 1963  339.135(3)(b), and the funds may not be used in calculating the
 1964  required quarterly cash balance of the trust fund as required in
 1965  s. 339.135(6)(b). The department shall track and account for
 1966  such appropriated funds as a separate funding source for
 1967  eligible projects on the State Highway System and grants to
 1968  Florida ports. This subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1969         Section 67. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 1970  1992 through 2005, 2015, 2016, 2024 through 2027, 2031 through
 1971  2035, 2037 through 2045, and 2080 through 2093 of the 2023-2024
 1972  General Appropriations Act, paragraph (h) of subsection (7) of
 1973  section 339.135, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1974         339.135 Work program; legislative budget request;
 1975  definitions; preparation, adoption, execution, and amendment.—
 1976         (7) AMENDMENT OF THE ADOPTED WORK PROGRAM.—
 1977         (h)1. Any work program amendment that also adds a new
 1978  project, or phase thereof, to the adopted work program in excess
 1979  of $3 million is subject to approval by the Legislative Budget
 1980  Commission. Any work program amendment submitted under this
 1981  paragraph must include, as supplemental information, a list of
 1982  projects, or phases thereof, in the current 5-year adopted work
 1983  program which are eligible for the funds within the
 1984  appropriation category being used for the proposed amendment.
 1985  The department shall provide a narrative with the rationale for
 1986  not advancing an existing project, or phase thereof, in lieu of
 1987  the proposed amendment.
 1988         2. If the department submits an amendment to the
 1989  Legislative Budget Commission and the commission does not meet
 1990  or consider the amendment within 30 days after its submittal,
 1991  the chair and vice chair of the commission may authorize the
 1992  amendment to be approved pursuant to s. 216.177. This
 1993  subparagraph expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 1994         Section 68. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 1995  3067 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, section
 1996  250.245, Florida Statutes, is created to read:
 1997         250.245 Florida National Guard Joint Enlistment Enhancement
 1998  Program.—
 1999         (1)The Florida National Guard Joint Enlistment Enhancement
 2000  Program (JEEP) is established within the Department of Military
 2001  Affairs. The purpose of the program is to motivate soldiers,
 2002  airmen, and retirees of the Florida National Guard to bolster
 2003  recruitment efforts and increase the force structure of the
 2004  Florida National Guard.
 2005         (2)As used in this section, the term “recruiting
 2006  assistant” means a member of the Florida National Guard or a
 2007  retiree of the Florida National Guard who assists in the
 2008  recruitment of a new member and who provides motivation,
 2009  encouragement, and moral support until the enlistment of such
 2010  new member.
 2011         (3)A current member in pay grade E-1 to O-3 or a retiree
 2012  in any pay grade is eligible for participation in JEEP as a
 2013  recruiting assistant.
 2014         (4)The Adjutant General shall provide compensation to
 2015  recruiting assistants participating in JEEP. A recruiting
 2016  assistant shall receive $1,000 for each new member referred by
 2017  them to the Florida National Guard upon the enlistment of such
 2018  referred member.
 2019         (5)The Department of Military Affairs, in cooperation with
 2020  the Florida National Guard, shall adopt rules to administer the
 2021  program.
 2022         (6) This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2023         Section 69. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 2024  2342 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (7)
 2025  of section 288.0655, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2026         288.0655 Rural Infrastructure Fund.—
 2027         (7) For the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year, the funds
 2028  appropriated for the grant program for Florida Panhandle
 2029  counties shall be distributed pursuant to and for the purposes
 2030  described in the proviso language associated with Specific
 2031  Appropriation 2342 2287 of the 2023-2024 2022-2023 General
 2032  Appropriations Act. This subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 2033         Section 70. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 2034  2687 through 2696 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 2035  and notwithstanding ss. 216.181 and 216.292, Florida Statutes,
 2036  the Division of Emergency Management may submit budget
 2037  amendments, subject to the notice, review, and objection
 2038  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, to increase budget
 2039  authority for projected expenditures due to reimbursements from
 2040  federally declared disasters. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2041         Section 71. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 2042  2654 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, paragraph (d)
 2043  of subsection (4) of section 112.061, Florida Statutes, is
 2044  amended to read:
 2045         112.061 Per diem and travel expenses of public officers,
 2046  employees, and authorized persons; statewide travel management
 2047  system.—
 2048         (4) OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS.—The official headquarters of an
 2049  officer or employee assigned to an office shall be the city or
 2050  town in which the office is located except that:
 2051         (d) A Lieutenant Governor who permanently resides outside
 2052  of Leon County, may, if he or she so requests, have an
 2053  appropriate facility in his or her county designated as his or
 2054  her official headquarters for purposes of this section. This
 2055  official headquarters may only serve as the Lieutenant
 2056  Governor’s personal office. The Lieutenant Governor may not use
 2057  state funds to lease space in any facility for his or her
 2058  official headquarters.
 2059         1. A Lieutenant Governor for whom an official headquarters
 2060  is established in his or her county of residence pursuant to
 2061  this paragraph is eligible for subsistence at a rate to be
 2062  established by the Governor for each day or partial day that the
 2063  Lieutenant Governor is at the State Capitol to conduct official
 2064  state business. In addition to the subsistence allowance, a
 2065  Lieutenant Governor is eligible for reimbursement for
 2066  transportation expenses as provided in subsection (7) for travel
 2067  between the Lieutenant Governor’s official headquarters and the
 2068  State Capitol to conduct state business.
 2069         2. Payment of subsistence and reimbursement for
 2070  transportation between a Lieutenant Governor’s official
 2071  headquarters and the State Capitol shall be made to the extent
 2072  appropriated funds are available, as determined by the Governor.
 2073         3. This paragraph expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 2074         Section 72. Effective upon this act becoming a law, in
 2075  order to implement section 8 of the 2023-2024 General
 2076  Appropriations Act:
 2077         (1)The Department of Management Services, pursuant to s.
 2078  110.123(3), Florida Statutes, shall release, during the 2021
 2079  2022 fiscal year or 2022-2023 fiscal year, competitive
 2080  procurements for third-party administrative services for
 2081  preferred provider organization plans, health maintenance
 2082  organization services, and pharmacy benefits manager services to
 2083  become effective January 1, 2024.
 2084         (2)Such competitive procurements and resultant contracts
 2085  shall continue the State Group Health Insurance Standard Plans,
 2086  State Group Health Insurance High Deductible Plans, State Group
 2087  Health Maintenance Organization Standard Plans, and State Group
 2088  Health Maintenance Organization High Deductible Plans within the
 2089  State Group Insurance Program. The benefits provided under each
 2090  of the plans shall be those benefits as provided in the Plan
 2091  Year 2023 State Employees’ PPO Plan Group Health Insurance Plan
 2092  Booklet and Benefit Document and the Plan Year 2023 Health
 2093  Maintenance Organization contracts and benefit documents,
 2094  modified only by revisions approved by the Legislature.
 2095         (3)It is the intent of the Legislature that state agencies
 2096  operate in an efficient manner and contract for necessary
 2097  services in the best interests of the state and its residents.
 2098  In recognition of the limitations otherwise placed on state
 2099  agencies pursuant to s. 216.311, Florida Statutes, when
 2100  contracting for services, the Department of Management Services,
 2101  when contracting for administrative services relating to the
 2102  administration of the health plans beginning in plan year 2024,
 2103  may enter into contracts that may require the payment of
 2104  administrative fees not to exceed 110 percent of the amount
 2105  appropriated in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act to the
 2106  Division of State Group Insurance for such services.
 2107         (4)Notwithstanding s. 110.123(3)(f), Florida Statutes, the
 2108  Department of Management Services shall maintain and offer the
 2109  same PPO and HMO health plan alternatives to the participants of
 2110  the State Group Health Insurance Program during the 2023-2024
 2111  fiscal year which were in effect for the 2022-2023 fiscal year.
 2112  
 2113  This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2114         Section 73. (1) In order to implement section 8 of the
 2115  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, beginning July 1, 2023,
 2116  and on the first day of each month thereafter, the Department of
 2117  Management Services shall assess an administrative health
 2118  insurance assessment to each state agency equal to the
 2119  employer’s cost of individual employee health care coverage for
 2120  each vacant position within such agency eligible for coverage
 2121  through the Division of State Group Insurance. As used in this
 2122  section, the term “state agency” means an agency within the
 2123  State Personnel System, the Department of the Lottery, the
 2124  Justice Administrative Commission and all entities
 2125  administratively housed in the Justice Administrative
 2126  Commission, and the state courts system.
 2127         (2) Each state agency shall remit the assessed
 2128  administrative health insurance assessment under subsection (1)
 2129  to the State Employees Health Insurance Trust Fund, for the
 2130  State Group Insurance Program, as provided in ss. 110.123 and
 2131  110.1239, Florida Statutes, from currently allocated monies for
 2132  salaries and benefits, within 30 days after receipt of the
 2133  assessment from the Department of Management Services. Should
 2134  any state agency become more than 60 days delinquent in payment
 2135  of this obligation, the Department of Management Services shall
 2136  certify to the Chief Financial Officer the amount due and the
 2137  Chief Financial Officer shall transfer the amount due to the
 2138  Department of Management Services.
 2139         (3) The administrative health insurance assessment shall
 2140  not apply to positions for which funding, or a portion of
 2141  funding, is paid for with federal funds. Each state agency shall
 2142  provide the Department of Management Services with a complete
 2143  list of position numbers that are funded, or partially funded,
 2144  with federal funding no later than July 31, 2023, and shall
 2145  update the list on the last day of each month thereafter. For
 2146  federally funded positions, or partially funded positions, each
 2147  state agency shall immediately take steps to include the
 2148  administrative health insurance assessment in its indirect cost
 2149  plan for the 2024-2025 fiscal year and each fiscal year
 2150  thereafter. A state agency shall notify the Department of
 2151  Management Services upon approval of the updated indirect cost
 2152  plan. If the state agency is not able to obtain approval from
 2153  its federal awarding agency, the state agency must notify the
 2154  Department of Management Services no later than January 16,
 2155  2024.
 2156         (4) Pursuant to the notice, review, and objection
 2157  procedures of s. 216.177, Florida Statutes, the Executive Office
 2158  of the Governor may transfer budget authority appropriated in
 2159  the Salaries and Benefits appropriation category between
 2160  agencies in order to align the appropriations granted with the
 2161  assessments that must be paid by each agency to the Department
 2162  of Management Services for the administrative health insurance
 2163  assessment.
 2164         (5)This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2165         Section 74. In order to implement Specific Appropriations
 2166  2787 and 2788 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 2167  notwithstanding s. 11.13(1), Florida Statutes, the authorized
 2168  salaries for members of the Legislature for the 2023-2024 fiscal
 2169  year shall be set at the same level in effect on July 1, 2010.
 2170  This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2171         Section 75. In order to implement the transfer of funds
 2172  from the General Revenue Fund from trust funds for the 2023-2024
 2173  General Appropriations Act, and notwithstanding the expiration
 2174  date in section 86 of chapter 2022-157, Laws of Florida,
 2175  paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section 215.32, Florida
 2176  Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 2177         215.32 State funds; segregation.—
 2178         (2) The source and use of each of these funds shall be as
 2179  follows:
 2180         (b)1. The trust funds shall consist of moneys received by
 2181  the state which under law or under trust agreement are
 2182  segregated for a purpose authorized by law. The state agency or
 2183  branch of state government receiving or collecting such moneys
 2184  is responsible for their proper expenditure as provided by law.
 2185  Upon the request of the state agency or branch of state
 2186  government responsible for the administration of the trust fund,
 2187  the Chief Financial Officer may establish accounts within the
 2188  trust fund at a level considered necessary for proper
 2189  accountability. Once an account is established, the Chief
 2190  Financial Officer may authorize payment from that account only
 2191  upon determining that there is sufficient cash and releases at
 2192  the level of the account.
 2193         2. In addition to other trust funds created by law, to the
 2194  extent possible, each agency shall use the following trust funds
 2195  as described in this subparagraph for day-to-day operations:
 2196         a. Operations or operating trust fund, for use as a
 2197  depository for funds to be used for program operations funded by
 2198  program revenues, with the exception of administrative
 2199  activities when the operations or operating trust fund is a
 2200  proprietary fund.
 2201         b. Operations and maintenance trust fund, for use as a
 2202  depository for client services funded by third-party payors.
 2203         c. Administrative trust fund, for use as a depository for
 2204  funds to be used for management activities that are departmental
 2205  in nature and funded by indirect cost earnings and assessments
 2206  against trust funds. Proprietary funds are excluded from the
 2207  requirement of using an administrative trust fund.
 2208         d. Grants and donations trust fund, for use as a depository
 2209  for funds to be used for allowable grant or donor agreement
 2210  activities funded by restricted contractual revenue from private
 2211  and public nonfederal sources.
 2212         e. Agency working capital trust fund, for use as a
 2213  depository for funds to be used pursuant to s. 216.272.
 2214         f. Clearing funds trust fund, for use as a depository for
 2215  funds to account for collections pending distribution to lawful
 2216  recipients.
 2217         g. Federal grant trust fund, for use as a depository for
 2218  funds to be used for allowable grant activities funded by
 2219  restricted program revenues from federal sources.
 2220  
 2221  To the extent possible, each agency must adjust its internal
 2222  accounting to use existing trust funds consistent with the
 2223  requirements of this subparagraph. If an agency does not have
 2224  trust funds listed in this subparagraph and cannot make such
 2225  adjustment, the agency must recommend the creation of the
 2226  necessary trust funds to the Legislature no later than the next
 2227  scheduled review of the agency’s trust funds pursuant to s.
 2228  215.3206.
 2229         3. All such moneys are hereby appropriated to be expended
 2230  in accordance with the law or trust agreement under which they
 2231  were received, subject always to the provisions of chapter 216
 2232  relating to the appropriation of funds and to the applicable
 2233  laws relating to the deposit or expenditure of moneys in the
 2234  State Treasury.
 2235         4.a. Notwithstanding any provision of law restricting the
 2236  use of trust funds to specific purposes, unappropriated cash
 2237  balances from selected trust funds may be authorized by the
 2238  Legislature for transfer to the Budget Stabilization Fund and
 2239  General Revenue Fund in the General Appropriations Act.
 2240         b. This subparagraph does not apply to trust funds required
 2241  by federal programs or mandates; trust funds established for
 2242  bond covenants, indentures, or resolutions whose revenues are
 2243  legally pledged by the state or public body to meet debt service
 2244  or other financial requirements of any debt obligations of the
 2245  state or any public body; the Division of Licensing Trust Fund
 2246  in the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services; the
 2247  State Transportation Trust Fund; the trust fund containing the
 2248  net annual proceeds from the Florida Education Lotteries; the
 2249  Florida Retirement System Trust Fund; trust funds under the
 2250  management of the State Board of Education or the Board of
 2251  Governors of the State University System, where such trust funds
 2252  are for auxiliary enterprises, self-insurance, and contracts,
 2253  grants, and donations, as those terms are defined by general
 2254  law; trust funds that serve as clearing funds or accounts for
 2255  the Chief Financial Officer or state agencies; trust funds that
 2256  account for assets held by the state in a trustee capacity as an
 2257  agent or fiduciary for individuals, private organizations, or
 2258  other governmental units; and other trust funds authorized by
 2259  the State Constitution.
 2260         Section 76. The text of s. 215.32(2)(b), Florida Statutes,
 2261  as carried forward from chapter 2011-47, Laws of Florida, by
 2262  this act, expires July 1, 2024, and the text of that paragraph
 2263  shall revert to that in existence on June 30, 2011, except that
 2264  any amendments to such text enacted other than by this act shall
 2265  be preserved and continue to operate to the extent that such
 2266  amendments are not dependent upon the portions of text which
 2267  expire pursuant to this section.
 2268         Section 77. In order to implement appropriations in the
 2269  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act for state employee travel,
 2270  the funds appropriated to each state agency which may be used
 2271  for travel by state employees are limited during the 2023-2024
 2272  fiscal year to travel for activities that are critical to each
 2273  state agency’s mission. Funds may not be used for travel by
 2274  state employees to foreign countries, other states, conferences,
 2275  staff training activities, or other administrative functions
 2276  unless the agency head has approved, in writing, that such
 2277  activities are critical to the agency’s mission. The agency head
 2278  shall consider using teleconferencing and other forms of
 2279  electronic communication to meet the needs of the proposed
 2280  activity before approving mission-critical travel. This section
 2281  does not apply to travel for law enforcement purposes, military
 2282  purposes, emergency management activities, or public health
 2283  activities. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2284         Section 78. In order to implement appropriations in the
 2285  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act for state employee travel
 2286  and notwithstanding s. 112.061, Florida Statutes, costs for
 2287  lodging associated with a meeting, conference, or convention
 2288  organized or sponsored in whole or in part by a state agency or
 2289  the judicial branch may not exceed $225 per day. An employee may
 2290  expend his or her own funds for any lodging expenses in excess
 2291  of $225 per day. For purposes of this section, a meeting does
 2292  not include travel activities for conducting an audit,
 2293  examination, inspection, or investigation or travel activities
 2294  related to a litigation or emergency response. This section
 2295  expires July 1, 2024.
 2296         Section 79. In order to implement the appropriations and
 2297  reappropriations authorized in the 2023-2024 General
 2298  Appropriations Act, paragraph (d) of subsection (11) of section
 2299  216.181, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2300         216.181 Approved budgets for operations and fixed capital
 2301  outlay.—
 2302         (11)
 2303         (d) Notwithstanding paragraph (b) and paragraph (2)(b), and
 2304  for the 2023-2024 2022-2023 fiscal year only, the Legislative
 2305  Budget Commission may approve budget amendments for new fixed
 2306  capital outlay projects or increase the amounts appropriated to
 2307  state agencies for fixed capital outlay projects. This paragraph
 2308  expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 2309  
 2310  The provisions of this subsection are subject to the notice and
 2311  objection procedures set forth in s. 216.177.
 2312         Section 80. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 2313  2792 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, subsection (4)
 2314  of section 350.0614, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2315         350.0614 Public Counsel; compensation and expenses.—
 2316         (4) Notwithstanding subsection (1), the operating budget,
 2317  as approved jointly by the President of the Senate and the
 2318  Speaker of the House of Representatives from the moneys
 2319  appropriated to the Public Counsel by the Legislature,
 2320  constitutes the allocation under which the Public Counsel will
 2321  manage the duties of his or her office. The Public Counsel:
 2322         (a) Shall submit an annual budget request to the
 2323  Legislature in the format, detail, and schedule determined by
 2324  the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 2325  Representatives.
 2326         (b) May employ technical and clerical personnel and retain
 2327  additional counsel and experts, including expert witnesses. In
 2328  employing such personnel, retaining additional counsel and
 2329  experts, and exercising all other administrative duties of the
 2330  office, the Public Counsel must follow applicable provisions of
 2331  the most recent version of the Joint Policies and Procedures of
 2332  the Presiding Officers. Any guidance for administrative issues
 2333  not addressed by the Joint Policies and Procedures of the
 2334  Presiding Officers requires consultation and joint agreement of
 2335  the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 2336  Representatives.
 2337  
 2338  This subsection expires July 1, 2024 2023.
 2339         Section 81. In order to implement the salaries and
 2340  benefits, expenses, other personal services, contracted
 2341  services, special categories, and operating capital outlay
 2342  categories of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act,
 2343  paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section 216.292, Florida
 2344  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2345         216.292 Appropriations nontransferable; exceptions.—
 2346         (2) The following transfers are authorized to be made by
 2347  the head of each department or the Chief Justice of the Supreme
 2348  Court whenever it is deemed necessary by reason of changed
 2349  conditions:
 2350         (a) The transfer of appropriations funded from identical
 2351  funding sources, except appropriations for fixed capital outlay,
 2352  and the transfer of amounts included within the total original
 2353  approved budget and plans of releases of appropriations as
 2354  furnished pursuant to ss. 216.181 and 216.192, as follows:
 2355         1. Between categories of appropriations within a budget
 2356  entity, if no category of appropriation is increased or
 2357  decreased by more than 5 percent of the original approved budget
 2358  or $250,000, whichever is greater, by all action taken under
 2359  this subsection.
 2360         2. Between budget entities within identical categories of
 2361  appropriations, if no category of appropriation is increased or
 2362  decreased by more than 5 percent of the original approved budget
 2363  or $250,000, whichever is greater, by all action taken under
 2364  this subsection.
 2365         3. Any agency exceeding salary rate established pursuant to
 2366  s. 216.181(8) on June 30th of any fiscal year shall not be
 2367  authorized to make transfers pursuant to subparagraphs 1. and 2.
 2368  in the subsequent fiscal year.
 2369         4. Notice of proposed transfers under subparagraphs 1. and
 2370  2. shall be provided to the Executive Office of the Governor and
 2371  the chairs of the legislative appropriations committees at least
 2372  3 days prior to agency implementation in order to provide an
 2373  opportunity for review. The review shall be limited to ensuring
 2374  that the transfer is in compliance with the requirements of this
 2375  paragraph.
 2376         5.For the 2023-2024 fiscal year, the review shall ensure
 2377  that transfers proposed pursuant to this paragraph comply with
 2378  this chapter, maximize the use of available and appropriate
 2379  trust funds, and are not contrary to legislative policy and
 2380  intent. This subparagraph expires July 1, 2024.
 2381         Section 82. In order to implement appropriations in the
 2382  2023-2024 General Appropriations Act for the acquisitions of
 2383  motor vehicles, and notwithstanding chapter 287, Florida
 2384  Statutes, relating to the purchase of motor vehicles from a
 2385  state term contract, state agencies may purchase vehicles from
 2386  nonstate term contract vendors without prior approval from the
 2387  Department of Management Services, provided the cost of the
 2388  motor vehicle is equal to or less than the cost of a similar
 2389  class of vehicle found on a state term contract and provided the
 2390  funds for the purchase have been specifically appropriated. This
 2391  section expires July 1, 2024.
 2392         Section 83. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 2393  2871 in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, and
 2394  notwithstanding s. 255.25(3)(a), Florida Statutes, the
 2395  Department of Management Services, the Executive Office of the
 2396  Governor, the Commissioner of Agriculture, the Chief Financial
 2397  Officer, and the Attorney General are authorized to enter into a
 2398  lease as a lessee for the use of space in a privately owned
 2399  building, even if such space is 5,000 square feet or more,
 2400  without having to advertise or receive competitive
 2401  solicitations. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2402         Section 84. Effective upon this act becoming a law, and in
 2403  order to implement section 146 of the 2023-2024 General
 2404  Appropriations Act:
 2405         (1) The Department of Environmental Protection shall use
 2406  the funds provided in section 146 of the 2023-2024 General
 2407  Appropriations Act to negotiate and, upon a mutual agreement
 2408  with any willing seller, purchase lands or interests in lands,
 2409  subject to appraisals and pursuant to chapter 253, Florida
 2410  Statutes, within the following land areas:
 2411         (a) The Caloosahatchee Big Cypress Corridor, which consists
 2412  of approximately 75,000 acres in Hendry and Collier Counties
 2413  connecting the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge and the
 2414  Big Cypress National Preserve to the Dinner Island Wildlife
 2415  Management Area, the Okaloacoochee Slough State Forest, and the
 2416  Corkscrew Regional Ecosystem Watershed Wildlife and
 2417  Environmental Area; and
 2418         (b) The Ocala-to-Osceola Wildlife Corridor, which consists
 2419  of approximately 1.6 million acres in Alachua, Baker, Bradford,
 2420  Clay, Columbia, Duval, Hamilton, Lake, Marion, Putnam, Union,
 2421  and Volusia Counties connecting the Osceola National Forest to
 2422  the Ocala National Forest.
 2423         (2) To reduce the state’s land management costs, the
 2424  Department of Environmental Protection shall offer, at the
 2425  selling property owner’s option, negotiated terms for each
 2426  property owner within the Caloosahatchee Big Cypress Corridor to
 2427  lease all or a portion of the property for fair market value for
 2428  agricultural purposes for 10-year terms.
 2429         (a) Each lease must include, at the option of the lessee,
 2430  at least two 5-year extensions, so long as the lessee is in
 2431  compliance with the lease terms.
 2432         (b) Any agricultural uses authorized may not be more
 2433  intensive than historical or existing uses and must be
 2434  authorized by any applicable agricultural land use designations.
 2435  All agricultural practices must be conducted in compliance with
 2436  the applicable best management practices adopted by the
 2437  Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
 2438         (3) The Department of Environmental Protection, in
 2439  consultation with the other state lead land managers, shall
 2440  perform a review of all land management activities, including
 2441  costs, for state-owned conservation lands, including, but not
 2442  limited to, prescribed burns, invasive plant and animal control,
 2443  restoration and maintenance of natural habitats, mowing,
 2444  recreation visitor services, capital improvements, and
 2445  reforestation. The department shall analyze the costs,
 2446  efficiencies, duplications of effort, or conflicts among
 2447  managing entities and shall recommend whether the process
 2448  including the funding for land management activities should be
 2449  revised. The recommendations must include any statutory changes
 2450  necessary to implement the recommendations. The department shall
 2451  submit a report on its review and recommendations to the
 2452  President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 2453  Representatives by January 1, 2024.
 2454         (4) This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2455         Section 85. In order to implement Specific Appropriation
 2456  146 of the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act, a county or
 2457  municipal government may not adopt or amend a fertilizer
 2458  management ordinance, pursuant to s. 403.9337, Florida Statutes,
 2459  which provides for a prohibited application period not in
 2460  existence on June 30, 2023. This section expires July 1, 2024.
 2461         Section 86. Any section of this act which implements a
 2462  specific appropriation or specifically identified proviso
 2463  language in the 2023-2024 General Appropriations Act is void if
 2464  the specific appropriation or specifically identified proviso
 2465  language is vetoed. Any section of this act which implements
 2466  more than one specific appropriation or more than one portion of
 2467  specifically identified proviso language in the 2023-2024
 2468  General Appropriations Act is void if all the specific
 2469  appropriations or portions of specifically identified proviso
 2470  language are vetoed.
 2471         Section 87. If any other act passed during the 2023 Regular
 2472  Session of the Legislature contains a provision that is
 2473  substantively the same as a provision in this act, but that
 2474  removes or is otherwise not subject to the future repeal applied
 2475  to such provision by this act, the Legislature intends that the
 2476  provision in the other act takes precedence and continues to
 2477  operate, notwithstanding the future repeal provided by this act.
 2478         Section 88. If any provision of this act or its application
 2479  to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity
 2480  does not affect other provisions or applications of the act
 2481  which can be given effect without the invalid provision or
 2482  application, and to this end the provisions of this act are
 2483  severable.
 2484         Section 89. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
 2485  act and except for this section, which shall take effect upon
 2486  this act becoming a law, this act shall take effect July 1,
 2487  2023, or, if this act fails to become a law until after that
 2488  date, it shall take effect upon becoming a law and shall operate
 2489  retroactively to July 1, 2023.
 2490  
 2491  ================= T I T L E  A M E N D M E N T ================
 2492  And the title is amended as follows:
 2493         Delete everything before the enacting clause
 2494  and insert:
 2495                        A bill to be entitled                      
 2496         An act implementing the 2023-2024 General
 2497         Appropriations Act; providing legislative intent;
 2498         incorporating by reference certain calculations of the
 2499         Florida Education Finance Program; amending s.
 2500         1009.895, F.S.; deleting definitions; requiring the
 2501         Open Door Grant Program to be administered by
 2502         specified entities; providing eligibility
 2503         requirements; providing what costs the grant award may
 2504         cover; providing requirements for the distribution of
 2505         funds; requiring institutions to make specified
 2506         reports to the Department of Education; deleting the
 2507         requirement to distribute a specified grant in certain
 2508         ratios; providing for the future expiration and
 2509         reversion of specified statutory text; amending s.
 2510         1002.68, F.S.; revising requirements relating to the
 2511         Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program; providing
 2512         for the future expiration and reversion of specified
 2513         statutory text; authorizing the Agency for Health Care
 2514         Administration, in consultation with the Department of
 2515         Health, to submit a budget amendment to realign
 2516         funding for specified purposes; specifying
 2517         requirements for such realignment; authorizing the
 2518         Agency for Health Care Administration to request
 2519         nonoperating budget authority for transferring certain
 2520         federal funds to the Department of Health; authorizing
 2521         the Agency for Health Care Administration to submit a
 2522         budget amendment to realign Medicaid funding for
 2523         specified purposes, subject to certain limitations;
 2524         authorizing the Agency for Health Care Administration
 2525         and the Department of Health to each submit a budget
 2526         amendment to realign funding within the Florida
 2527         Kidcare program appropriation categories or increase
 2528         budget authority for certain purposes; specifying the
 2529         time period within which each budget amendment must be
 2530         submitted; amending s. 381.986, F.S.; extending for 1
 2531         fiscal year the exemption of certain rules pertaining
 2532         to the medical use of marijuana from certain
 2533         rulemaking requirements; amending s. 14(1), chapter
 2534         2017-232, Laws of Florida; exempting certain rules
 2535         pertaining to medical marijuana adopted to replace
 2536         emergency rules from specified rulemaking
 2537         requirements; providing for the future expiration and
 2538         reversion of specified law; authorizing the Agency for
 2539         Health Care Administration to submit budget amendments
 2540         seeking additional spending authority to implement
 2541         specified programs and payments; requiring
 2542         institutions participating in a specified workforce
 2543         expansion and education program to provide quarterly
 2544         reports to the agency; specifying that certain Letters
 2545         of Agreement remain in effect for a specified time;
 2546         authorizing intergovernmental transfer amounts in such
 2547         letters to be modified in a specified manner;
 2548         authorizing the Agency for Health Care Administration
 2549         to submit a budget amendment seeking additional
 2550         spending authority to implement the Low Income Pool
 2551         component of the Florida Managed Medical Assistance
 2552         Demonstration; requiring a signed attestation and
 2553         acknowledgment for entities relating to the Low Income
 2554         Pool; authorizing the Agency for Health Care
 2555         Administration to submit a budget amendment to
 2556         implement certain payments and specified programs;
 2557         specifying that certain Letters of Agreement remain in
 2558         effect for a specified time; authorizing
 2559         intergovernmental transfer amounts in such letters to
 2560         be modified in a specified manner; authorizing the
 2561         Agency for Health Care Administration to submit a
 2562         budget amendment requesting additional spending
 2563         authority to implement a specified program;
 2564         authorizing the Department of Children and Families to
 2565         submit a budget amendment to realign funding within
 2566         the specified areas of the department based on
 2567         implementation of the Guardianship Assistance Program;
 2568         authorizing the Department of Children and Families,
 2569         Department of Health, and Agency for Health Care
 2570         Administration to submit budget amendments to increase
 2571         budget authority to support certain refugee programs;
 2572         requiring the Department of Children and Families to
 2573         submit quarterly reports to the Executive Office of
 2574         the Governor and the Legislature; authorizing the
 2575         Department of Children and Families to submit budget
 2576         amendments to increase budget authority to support
 2577         specified federal grant programs; authorizing the
 2578         Department of Health to submit a budget amendment to
 2579         increase budget authority for the Supplemental
 2580         Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children
 2581         (WIC) and the Child Care Food Program if a certain
 2582         condition is met; authorizing the Department of Health
 2583         to submit a budget amendment to increase budget
 2584         authority for the HIV/AIDS Prevention and Treatment
 2585         Program if a certain condition is met; authorizing the
 2586         Department of Health to submit a budget amendment to
 2587         increase budget authority for the department if
 2588         additional federal revenues specific to COVID-19
 2589         relief funds become available; requiring the Agency
 2590         for Health Care Administration to replace the Florida
 2591         Medicaid Management Information System (FMMIS) and
 2592         fiscal agent operations with a specified new system;
 2593         specifying items that may not be included in the new
 2594         system; providing directives to the Agency for Health
 2595         Care Administration related to the new system, the
 2596         Florida Health Care Connection (FX) system; requiring
 2597         the Agency for Health Care Administration to meet
 2598         certain requirements in replacing FMMIS and the
 2599         current Medicaid fiscal agent; requiring the Agency
 2600         for Health Care Administration to implement a project
 2601         governance structure that includes an executive
 2602         steering committee; providing procedures for use by
 2603         the executive steering committee; providing
 2604         responsibilities of the executive steering committee;
 2605         requiring the Agency for Health Care Administration,
 2606         in consultation with the Department of Health, the
 2607         Agency for Persons with Disabilities, the Department
 2608         of Children and Families, and the Department of
 2609         Corrections, to competitively procure a contract with
 2610         a vendor to negotiate prices for certain prescribed
 2611         drugs and biological products; providing requirements
 2612         for such contract; authorizing the Agency for Persons
 2613         with Disabilities to submit budget amendments to
 2614         transfer funding from the Salaries and Benefits
 2615         appropriation categories for a specified purpose;
 2616         amending s. 409.915, F.S.; revising the definition of
 2617         the term “state Medicaid expenditures”; amending s.
 2618         216.262, F.S.; extending for 1 fiscal year the
 2619         authority of the Department of Corrections to submit a
 2620         budget amendment for additional positions and
 2621         appropriations under certain circumstances; requiring
 2622         review and approval by the Legislative Budget
 2623         Commission; amending s. 215.18, F.S.; extending for 1
 2624         fiscal year the authority and related repayment
 2625         requirements for temporary trust fund loans to the
 2626         state court system which are sufficient to meet the
 2627         system’s appropriation; requiring the Department of
 2628         Juvenile Justice to review county juvenile detention
 2629         payments to determine whether a county has met
 2630         specified financial responsibilities; requiring
 2631         amounts owed by the county for such financial
 2632         responsibilities to be deducted from certain county
 2633         funds; requiring the Department of Revenue to transfer
 2634         withheld funds to a specified trust fund; requiring
 2635         the Department of Revenue to ensure that such
 2636         reductions in amounts distributed do not reduce
 2637         distributions below amounts necessary for certain
 2638         payments due on bonds and to comply with bond
 2639         covenants; requiring the Department of Revenue to
 2640         notify the Department of Juvenile Justice if bond
 2641         payment requirements mandate a reduction in deductions
 2642         for amounts owed by a county; reenacting s. 27.40(1),
 2643         (2)(a), (3)(a), (5), (6), and (7), F.S., relating to
 2644         court-appointed counsel; extending for 1 fiscal year
 2645         provisions governing the appointment of court
 2646         appointed counsel; providing for the future expiration
 2647         and reversion of specified statutory text; reenacting
 2648         and amending s. 27.5304, F.S.; revising compensation
 2649         limits for representation pursuant to a court
 2650         appointment for specified proceedings; extending for 1
 2651         fiscal year limitations on compensation for
 2652         representation in criminal proceedings; providing for
 2653         the future expiration and reversion of specified
 2654         statutory text; requiring the Department of Management
 2655         Services to use tenant broker services to renegotiate
 2656         or reprocure certain private lease agreements for
 2657         office or storage space; requiring the Department of
 2658         Management Services to provide a report to the
 2659         Governor and the Legislature by a specified date;
 2660         prohibiting an agency from transferring funds from a
 2661         data processing category to another category that is
 2662         not a data processing category; authorizing the
 2663         Executive Office of the Governor to transfer funds
 2664         between departments for purposes of aligning amounts
 2665         paid for risk management insurance and for human
 2666         resources services purchased per statewide contract;
 2667         authorizing the Department of Management Services to
 2668         use certain facility disposition funds from the
 2669         Architects Incidental Trust Fund to pay for certain
 2670         relocation expenses; authorizing the Department of
 2671         Management Services to submit budget amendments for
 2672         certain purposes related to the relocation;
 2673         authorizing the Department of Management Services to
 2674         acquire additional state-owned office buildings or
 2675         property for inclusion in the Florida Facilities Pool;
 2676         requiring the Department of Financial Services to
 2677         replace specified components of the Florida Accounting
 2678         Information Resource Subsystem (FLAIR) and the Cash
 2679         Management Subsystem (CMS); specifying certain actions
 2680         to be taken by the Department of Financial Services
 2681         regarding FLAIR and CMS replacement; providing for the
 2682         composition of an executive steering committee to
 2683         oversee FLAIR and CMS replacement; prescribing duties
 2684         and responsibilities of the executive steering
 2685         committee; reenacting s. 282.709(3), F.S., relating to
 2686         the state agency law enforcement radio system and
 2687         interoperability network; providing for future
 2688         expiration and reversion of specified statutory text;
 2689         authorizing state agencies and other eligible users of
 2690         the Statewide Law Enforcement Radio System to use the
 2691         Department of Management Services contract to purchase
 2692         equipment and services; requiring a specified
 2693         transaction fee percentage for use of the online
 2694         procurement system; amending s. 24.105, F.S.;
 2695         specifying how Department of the Lottery rules are to
 2696         be adopted, except certain rules for 1 fiscal year
 2697         regarding the commission for lottery ticket sales;
 2698         limiting additional retailer compensation in a
 2699         specified manner; providing for the future expiration
 2700         and reversion of specified statutory text; amending s.
 2701         717.123, F.S.; requiring the Department of Financial
 2702         Services to retain certain funds relating to unclaimed
 2703         property and make specified payments; amending s.
 2704         627.351, F.S.; authorizing the Citizens Property
 2705         Insurance Corporation to adopt certain policy forms;
 2706         authorizing the corporation to contract with the
 2707         Division of Administrative Hearings to conduct certain
 2708         proceedings and resolve specified disputes; amending
 2709         s. 934.50, F.S.; creating the drone replacement grant
 2710         program within the Department of Law Enforcement;
 2711         providing requirements for the program and grant funds
 2712         relating to the program; requiring the department to
 2713         develop an application process for the program;
 2714         authorizing the department to adopt rules; defining
 2715         the term “law enforcement agency”; requiring the
 2716         department to provide drones received through the
 2717         program to the Florida Center for Cybersecurity;
 2718         requiring the center to analyze the drones and provide
 2719         findings or recommendations to the Department of
 2720         Management Services; authorizing the Department of Law
 2721         Enforcement to adopt emergency rules; providing that
 2722         such emergency rules are effective for a specified
 2723         period of time; authorizing such emergency rules to be
 2724         renewed under certain circumstances; amending s.
 2725         120.80, F.S.; specifying that certain rules adopted by
 2726         the Florida Public Service Commission in a certain
 2727         fiscal year are not subject to specified provisions;
 2728         amending s. 215.18, F.S.; extending for 1 fiscal year
 2729         the authority of the Governor, if there is a specified
 2730         temporary deficiency in a land acquisition trust fund
 2731         in the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
 2732         Services, the Department of Environmental Protection,
 2733         the Department of State, or the Fish and Wildlife
 2734         Conservation Commission, to transfer funds from other
 2735         trust funds in the State Treasury as a temporary loan
 2736         to such trust fund; providing a deadline for the
 2737         repayment of a temporary loan; requiring the
 2738         Department of Environmental Protection to transfer
 2739         designated proportions of the revenues deposited in
 2740         the Land Acquisition Trust Fund within the department
 2741         to land acquisition trust funds in the Department of
 2742         Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Department of
 2743         State, and the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 2744         Commission according to specified parameters and
 2745         calculations; defining the term “department”;
 2746         requiring the Department of Environmental Protection
 2747         to make transfers to land acquisition trust funds
 2748         monthly; specifying the method of determining transfer
 2749         amounts; authorizing the Department of Environmental
 2750         Protection to advance funds from its land acquisition
 2751         trust fund to the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
 2752         Commission’s land acquisition trust fund for specified
 2753         purposes; amending s. 259.105, F.S.; providing for the
 2754         distribution of proceeds from the Florida Forever
 2755         Trust Fund for the 2023-2024 fiscal year; reenacting
 2756         s. 570.93(1)(a), F.S., relating to the agricultural
 2757         water conservation program of the Department of
 2758         Agriculture and Consumer Services; extending for 1
 2759         fiscal year provisions governing administration of a
 2760         cost-share program; providing for the future
 2761         expiration and reversion of specified statutory text;
 2762         reenacting s. 376.3071(15)(g), F.S., relating to the
 2763         Inland Protection Trust Fund; exempting specified
 2764         costs incurred by certain petroleum storage system
 2765         owners or operators during a specified period from the
 2766         prohibition against making payments in excess of
 2767         amounts approved by the Department of Environmental
 2768         Protection; providing for the future expiration and
 2769         reversion of specified statutory text; requiring the
 2770         Department of Citrus to enter into agreements to
 2771         expedite the increased production of certain citrus
 2772         trees and commercialize certain technologies;
 2773         specifying a timeframe for entering into such
 2774         agreements; requiring a specified certification;
 2775         amending s. 161.101, F.S.; extending for 1 fiscal year
 2776         the authority of the Department of Environmental
 2777         Protection to waive or reduce certain match
 2778         requirements for specified counties; amending s. 10,
 2779         chapter 2022-272, Laws of Florida; extending the
 2780         Hurricane Restoration Reimbursement Grant Program for
 2781         1 fiscal year; revising requirements to receive
 2782         financial assistance grants under the program;
 2783         revising cost-sharing requirements; amending s.
 2784         321.04, F.S.; extending for 1 fiscal year the
 2785         requirement that the Department of Highway Safety and
 2786         Motor Vehicles assign one or more patrol officers to
 2787         the office of Lieutenant Governor for security
 2788         purposes, upon request of the Governor; extending for
 2789         1 fiscal year the requirement that the Department of
 2790         Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles assign a patrol
 2791         officer to a Cabinet member under certain
 2792         circumstances; amending s. 288.80125, F.S.; extending
 2793         for 1 fiscal year a requirement that funds in the
 2794         Triumph Gulf Coast Trust Fund be related to Hurricane
 2795         Michael recovery; amending s. 288.8013, F.S.;
 2796         authorizing earnings and interest generated by the
 2797         Triumph Gulf Coast Trust Fund to be retained and used
 2798         to make specified awards or for administrative costs;
 2799         providing for the future expiration and reversion of
 2800         specified statutory text; amending s. 339.08, F.S.;
 2801         appropriating funds to the State Transportation Trust
 2802         Fund from the General Revenue Fund as provided in the
 2803         General Appropriations Act; deleting a requirement
 2804         relating to the department tracking and accounting for
 2805         certain funds; amending s. 339.135, F.S.; extending
 2806         for 1 fiscal year the authority for the chair and vice
 2807         chair of the Legislative Budget Commission to approve
 2808         certain work program amendments under specified
 2809         circumstances; creating s. 250.245, F.S.; establishing
 2810         the Florida National Guard Joint Enlistment
 2811         Enhancement Program within the Department of Military
 2812         Affairs; providing the purpose of the program;
 2813         defining the term “recruiting assistant”; providing
 2814         eligibility requirements for participation in the
 2815         program; requiring the Adjutant General to provide
 2816         specified compensation to recruiting assistants;
 2817         requiring the Department of Military Affairs, in
 2818         cooperation with the Florida National Guard, to adopt
 2819         rules; amending s. 288.0655, F.S.; extending for 1
 2820         fiscal year a requirement that certain appropriated
 2821         funds relating to the Rural Infrastructure Fund be
 2822         distributed in a specified manner; authorizing the
 2823         Division of Emergency Management to submit budget
 2824         amendments to increase budget authority for certain
 2825         project expenditures; amending s. 112.061, F.S.;
 2826         extending for 1 fiscal year the authorization for the
 2827         Lieutenant Governor to designate an alternative
 2828         official headquarters under certain conditions;
 2829         specifying restrictions, limitations, eligibility for
 2830         the subsistence allowance, reimbursement of
 2831         transportation expenses, and payment thereof;
 2832         requiring the Department of Management Services to
 2833         release certain competitive procurements by a
 2834         specified date; providing requirements for such
 2835         procurements; providing legislative intent;
 2836         authorizing the Department of Management Services to
 2837         enter into contracts that may require the payment of
 2838         administrative fees under a specified amount;
 2839         requiring the Department of Management Services to
 2840         maintain and offer the same health insurance options
 2841         for participants of the State Group Health Insurance
 2842         Program for the 2023-2024 fiscal year as applied in
 2843         the preceding fiscal year; requiring the Department of
 2844         Management Services to assess an administrative health
 2845         insurance assessment on each state agency; providing
 2846         the rate of such assessment; defining the term “state
 2847         agency”; providing how a state agency shall remit
 2848         certain funds; requiring the Department of Management
 2849         Services to take certain actions in case of
 2850         delinquencies; requiring the Chief Financial Officer
 2851         to transfer funds under specified circumstances;
 2852         providing an exception; requiring state agencies to
 2853         provide a list of positions that qualify for such
 2854         exception by a specified date and to update the list
 2855         monthly thereafter; requiring state agencies to
 2856         include the administrative health insurance assessment
 2857         in their indirect cost plan; requiring agencies to
 2858         notify the Department of Management Services regarding
 2859         the approval of their updated indirect cost plans;
 2860         authorizing the Executive Office of the Governor to
 2861         transfer budget authority between agencies in
 2862         specified circumstances; providing that the annual
 2863         salaries of the members of the Legislature be
 2864         maintained at a specified level; reenacting s.
 2865         215.32(2)(b), F.S., relating to the authorization for
 2866         transferring unappropriated cash balances from
 2867         selected trust funds to the Budget Stabilization Fund
 2868         and General Revenue Fund; providing for future
 2869         expiration and reversion of specific statutory text;
 2870         specifying the type of travel which may be used with
 2871         state employee travel funds; providing exceptions;
 2872         providing a monetary cap on lodging costs for state
 2873         employee travel to certain meetings organized or
 2874         sponsored by a state agency or the judicial branch;
 2875         authorizing employees to expend their own funds for
 2876         lodging expenses that exceed the monetary caps;
 2877         amending s. 216.181, F.S.; extending for 1 fiscal year
 2878         the authority of the Legislative Budget Commission to
 2879         approve budget amendments for certain fixed capital
 2880         outlay projects; amending s. 350.0614, F.S.; extending
 2881         for 1 fiscal year specified provisions governing the
 2882         budget of the Public Counsel; amending s. 216.292,
 2883         F.S.; providing requirements for certain transfers;
 2884         authorizing state agencies to purchase vehicles from
 2885         nonstate term contract vendors without prior approval
 2886         from the Department of Management Services under
 2887         certain circumstances; authorizing the Department of
 2888         Management Services, the Executive Office of the
 2889         Governor, the Commissioner of Agriculture, the Chief
 2890         Financial Officer, and the Attorney General to enter
 2891         into specified leases as a lessee without having to
 2892         advertise or receive competitive solicitations;
 2893         requiring the Department of Environmental Protection
 2894         to use specified funds to purchase lands or interests
 2895         in lands within certain areas; requiring the
 2896         Department of Environmental Protection to offer
 2897         specified leases; requiring the Department of
 2898         Environmental Protection to perform a review of land
 2899         management activities in consultation with other state
 2900         lead land managers; requiring the Department of
 2901         Environmental Protection to submit a report on its
 2902         review and recommendations to the Legislature by a
 2903         specified date; prohibiting a county or municipal
 2904         government from adopting or amending certain
 2905         fertilizer management ordinances; providing conditions
 2906         under which the veto of certain appropriations or
 2907         proviso language in the General Appropriations Act
 2908         voids language that implements such appropriation;
 2909         providing for the continued operation of certain
 2910         provisions notwithstanding a future repeal or
 2911         expiration provided by the act; providing
 2912         severability; providing for contingent retroactivity;
 2913         providing effective dates.