Senate Bill sb0382e1
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1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to growth management; amending
3 s. 163.3174, F.S.; requiring that the
4 membership of all local planning agencies or
5 equivalent agencies that review comprehensive
6 plan amendments and rezonings include a
7 nonvoting representative of the district school
8 board; amending s. 163.3177, F.S.; revising
9 elements of comprehensive plans; providing for
10 intergovernmental coordination between local
11 governments and district school boards where a
12 public-school-facilities element has been
13 adopted; requiring certain local governments to
14 prepare an inventory of service-delivery
15 interlocal agreements; requiring local
16 governments to provide the Legislature with
17 recommendations regarding annexation; requiring
18 local governments to consider water-supply data
19 and analysis in their potable-water and
20 conservation elements; repealing s. 163.31775,
21 F.S., which provides for intergovernmental
22 coordination element rules; creating s.
23 163.31776, F.S.; providing legislative intent
24 and findings with respect to a public
25 educational facilities element; providing for
26 certain municipalities to be exempt; requiring
27 that the public educational facilities element
28 include certain provisions; providing
29 requirements for future land-use maps;
30 providing a process for adopting the public
31 educational facilities element; creating
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1 s.163.31777, F.S.; requiring certain local
2 governments and school boards to enter into a
3 public schools interlocal agreement; providing
4 a schedule; providing for the content of the
5 interlocal agreement; providing a waiver
6 procedure associated with school districts
7 having decreasing student population; providing
8 a procedure for adoption and administrative
9 challenge; providing sanctions for the failure
10 to enter an interlocal agreement; providing
11 that a public school's interlocal agreement may
12 only establish interlocal coordination
13 procedures unless specific goals, objectives,
14 and policies contained in the agreement are
15 incorporated into the plan; amending s.
16 163.3180, F.S.; providing an exemption from
17 concurrency for certain urban infill areas;
18 amending s. 163.3184, F.S.; revising
19 definitions; revising provisions governing the
20 process for adopting comprehensive plans and
21 plan amendments; amending s. 163.3187, F.S.;
22 authorizing the adoption of a public
23 educational facilities element, notwithstanding
24 certain limitations; amending s. 163.3191,
25 F.S., relating to evaluation and appraisal of
26 comprehensive plans; conforming provisions to
27 changes made by the act; requiring an
28 evaluation of whether the potable-water element
29 considers the appropriate water management
30 district's regional water supply plan and
31 includes a workplan for building new water
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1 supply facilities; amending s. 186.504, F.S.;
2 adding an elected school board member to the
3 membership of each regional planning council;
4 amending s. 212.055, F.S.; providing for the
5 levy of the infrastructure sales surtax and the
6 school capital outlay surtax by a super
7 majority vote and requiring certain educational
8 facility planning prior to the levy of the
9 school capital outlay surtax; providing for the
10 uses of the surtax proceeds; amending s.
11 235.002, F.S.; revising legislative intent;
12 reenacting and amending s. 235.15, F.S.;
13 revising requirements for educational plant
14 surveys; revising requirements for review and
15 validation of such surveys; amending s.
16 235.175, F.S.; requiring school districts to
17 adopt educational facilities plans; amending s.
18 235.18, F.S., relating to capital outlay
19 budgets of school boards; conforming
20 provisions; amending s. 235.185, F.S.;
21 requiring school district educational
22 facilities plans; providing definitions;
23 specifying projections and other information to
24 be included in the plans; providing
25 requirements for the plans; requiring district
26 school boards to submit a tentative plan to the
27 local government; providing for adopting and
28 executing the plans; amending s. 235.188, F.S.;
29 conforming provisions; amending s. 235.19,
30 F.S.; providing that site planning and
31 selection must be consistent with interlocal
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1 agreements entered between local governments
2 and school boards; amending s. 235.193, F.S.;
3 requiring school districts to enter certain
4 interlocal agreements with local governments;
5 providing a schedule; providing for the content
6 of the interlocal agreement; providing a waiver
7 procedure associated with school districts
8 having decreasing student population; providing
9 a procedure for adoption and administrative
10 challenge; providing sanctions for failure to
11 enter an agreement; providing that a public
12 school's interlocal agreement may not be used
13 by a local government as the sole basis for
14 denying a comprehensive plan amendment or
15 development order; providing requirements for
16 preparing a district educational facilities
17 report; repealing s. 235.194, F.S., relating to
18 the general educational facilities report;
19 amending s. 235.218, F.S.; requiring the SMART
20 Schools Clearinghouse to adopt measures for
21 evaluating the school district educational
22 facilities plans; amending s. 235.2197, F.S.;
23 correcting a statutory cross-reference;
24 amending ss. 235.321, 236.25, F.S.; conforming
25 provisions; amending s. 380.06, F.S.; revising
26 provisions governing substantial-deviation
27 standards for developments of regional impact;
28 providing for designation of a lead regional
29 planning council; amending s. 380.0651, F.S.;
30 revising standards for determining the
31 necessity for a development-of-regional-impact
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1 review; providing legislative intent with
2 respect to the inapplicability of specified
3 portions of the act to pending litigation or
4 future appeals; providing a legislative finding
5 that the act is a matter of great public
6 importance; providing an effective date.
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8 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
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10 Section 1. Subsection (1) of section 163.3174, Florida
11 Statutes, is amended to read:
12 163.3174 Local planning agency.--
13 (1) The governing body of each local government,
14 individually or in combination as provided in s. 163.3171,
15 shall designate and by ordinance establish a "local planning
16 agency," unless the agency is otherwise established by law.
17 Notwithstanding any special act to the contrary, all local
18 planning agencies or equivalent agencies that first review
19 rezoning and comprehensive plan amendments in each
20 municipality and county shall include a representative of the
21 school district appointed by the school board as a nonvoting
22 member of the local planning agency or equivalent agency to
23 attend those meetings at which the agency considers
24 comprehensive plan amendments and rezonings that would, if
25 approved, increase residential density on the property that is
26 the subject of the application. However, this subsection does
27 not prevent the governing body of the local government from
28 granting voting status to the school board member. The
29 governing body may designate itself as the local planning
30 agency pursuant to this subsection with the addition of a
31 nonvoting school board representative. The governing body
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1 shall notify the state land planning agency of the
2 establishment of its local planning agency. All local planning
3 agencies shall provide opportunities for involvement by
4 district school boards and applicable community college
5 boards, which may be accomplished by formal representation,
6 membership on technical advisory committees, or other
7 appropriate means. The local planning agency shall prepare the
8 comprehensive plan or plan amendment after hearings to be held
9 after public notice and shall make recommendations to the
10 governing body regarding the adoption or amendment of the
11 plan. The agency may be a local planning commission, the
12 planning department of the local government, or other
13 instrumentality, including a countywide planning entity
14 established by special act or a council of local government
15 officials created pursuant to s. 163.02, provided the
16 composition of the council is fairly representative of all the
17 governing bodies in the county or planning area; however:
18 (a) If a joint planning entity is in existence on the
19 effective date of this act which authorizes the governing
20 bodies to adopt and enforce a land use plan effective
21 throughout the joint planning area, that entity shall be the
22 agency for those local governments until such time as the
23 authority of the joint planning entity is modified by law.
24 (b) In the case of chartered counties, the planning
25 responsibility between the county and the several
26 municipalities therein shall be as stipulated in the charter.
27 Section 2. Subsection (4) and paragraphs (a), (c),
28 (d), and (h) of subsection (6) of section 163.3177, Florida
29 Statutes, are amended to read:
30 163.3177 Required and optional elements of
31 comprehensive plan; studies and surveys.--
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1 (4)(a) Coordination of the local comprehensive plan
2 with the comprehensive plans of adjacent municipalities, the
3 county, adjacent counties, or the region; with the appropriate
4 water management district's regional water supply plans
5 approved pursuant to s. 373.0361; with adopted rules
6 pertaining to designated areas of critical state concern; and
7 with the state comprehensive plan shall be a major objective
8 of the local comprehensive planning process. To that end, in
9 the preparation of a comprehensive plan or element thereof,
10 and in the comprehensive plan or element as adopted, the
11 governing body shall include a specific policy statement
12 indicating the relationship of the proposed development of the
13 area to the comprehensive plans of adjacent municipalities,
14 the county, adjacent counties, or the region and to the state
15 comprehensive plan, as the case may require and as such
16 adopted plans or plans in preparation may exist.
17 (b) When all or a portion of the land in a local
18 government jurisdiction is or becomes part of a designated
19 area of critical state concern, the local government shall
20 clearly identify those portions of the local comprehensive
21 plan that shall be applicable to the critical area and shall
22 indicate the relationship of the proposed development of the
23 area to the rules for the area of critical state concern.
24 (6) In addition to the requirements of subsections
25 (1)-(5), the comprehensive plan shall include the following
26 elements:
27 (a) A future land use plan element designating
28 proposed future general distribution, location, and extent of
29 the uses of land for residential uses, commercial uses,
30 industry, agriculture, recreation, conservation, education,
31 public buildings and grounds, other public facilities, and
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1 other categories of the public and private uses of land. The
2 future land use plan shall include standards to be followed in
3 the control and distribution of population densities and
4 building and structure intensities. The proposed
5 distribution, location, and extent of the various categories
6 of land use shall be shown on a land use map or map series
7 which shall be supplemented by goals, policies, and measurable
8 objectives. Each land use category shall be defined in terms
9 of the types of uses included and specific standards for the
10 density or intensity of use. The future land use plan shall
11 be based upon surveys, studies, and data regarding the area,
12 including the amount of land required to accommodate
13 anticipated growth; the projected population of the area; the
14 character of undeveloped land; the availability of public
15 services; the need for redevelopment, including the renewal of
16 blighted areas and the elimination of nonconforming uses which
17 are inconsistent with the character of the community; and, in
18 rural communities, the need for job creation, capital
19 investment, and economic development that will strengthen and
20 diversify the community's economy. The future land use plan
21 may designate areas for future planned development use
22 involving combinations of types of uses for which special
23 regulations may be necessary to ensure development in accord
24 with the principles and standards of the comprehensive plan
25 and this act. In addition, for rural communities, the amount
26 of land designated for future planned industrial use shall be
27 based upon surveys and studies that reflect the need for job
28 creation, capital investment, and the necessity to strengthen
29 and diversify the local economies, and shall not be limited
30 solely by the projected population of the rural community. The
31 future land use plan of a county may also designate areas for
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1 possible future municipal incorporation. The land use maps or
2 map series shall generally identify and depict historic
3 district boundaries and shall designate historically
4 significant properties meriting protection. The future land
5 use element must clearly identify the land use categories in
6 which public schools are an allowable use. When delineating
7 the land use categories in which public schools are an
8 allowable use, a local government shall include in the
9 categories sufficient land proximate to residential
10 development to meet the projected needs for schools in
11 coordination with public school boards and may establish
12 differing criteria for schools of different type or size.
13 Each local government shall include lands contiguous to
14 existing school sites, to the maximum extent possible, within
15 the land use categories in which public schools are an
16 allowable use. All comprehensive plans must comply with the
17 school siting requirements of this paragraph no later than
18 October 1, 1999. The failure by a local government to comply
19 with these school siting requirements by October 1, 1999, will
20 result in the prohibition of the local government's ability to
21 amend the local comprehensive plan, except for plan amendments
22 described in s. 163.3187(1)(b), until the school siting
23 requirements are met. Amendments An amendment proposed by a
24 local government for purposes of identifying the land use
25 categories in which public schools are an allowable use or for
26 adopting or amending the school-siting maps pursuant to s.
27 163.31776(3) are is exempt from the limitation on the
28 frequency of plan amendments contained in s. 163.3187. The
29 future land use element shall include criteria that which
30 encourage the location of schools proximate to urban
31 residential areas to the extent possible and shall require
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1 that the local government seek to collocate public facilities,
2 such as parks, libraries, and community centers, with schools
3 to the extent possible and to encourage the use of elementary
4 schools as focal points for neighborhoods. For schools serving
5 predominantly rural counties, defined as a county with a
6 population of 100,000 or fewer, an agricultural land use
7 category shall be eligible for the location of public school
8 facilities if the local comprehensive plan contains school
9 siting criteria and the location is consistent with such
10 criteria.
11 (c) A general sanitary sewer, solid waste, drainage,
12 potable water, and natural groundwater aquifer recharge
13 element correlated to principles and guidelines for future
14 land use, indicating ways to provide for future potable water,
15 drainage, sanitary sewer, solid waste, and aquifer recharge
16 protection requirements for the area. The element may be a
17 detailed engineering plan including a topographic map
18 depicting areas of prime groundwater recharge. The element
19 shall describe the problems and needs and the general
20 facilities that will be required for solution of the problems
21 and needs. The element shall also include a topographic map
22 depicting any areas adopted by a regional water management
23 district as prime groundwater recharge areas for the Floridan
24 or Biscayne aquifers, pursuant to s. 373.0395. These areas
25 shall be given special consideration when the local government
26 is engaged in zoning or considering future land use for said
27 designated areas. For areas served by septic tanks, soil
28 surveys shall be provided which indicate the suitability of
29 soils for septic tanks. By January 1, 2005, or the Evaluation
30 and Appraisal Report adoption deadline established for the
31 local government pursuant to s. 163.3191(a), whichever date
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1 occurs first, the element must consider the appropriate water
2 management district's regional water supply plan approved
3 pursuant to s. 373.0361. The element must include a workplan,
4 covering at least a 10-year planning period, for building
5 water supply facilities that are identified in the element as
6 necessary to serve existing and new development and for which
7 the local government is responsible.
8 (d) A conservation element for the conservation, use,
9 and protection of natural resources in the area, including
10 air, water, water recharge areas, wetlands, waterwells,
11 estuarine marshes, soils, beaches, shores, flood plains,
12 rivers, bays, lakes, harbors, forests, fisheries and wildlife,
13 marine habitat, minerals, and other natural and environmental
14 resources. Local governments shall assess their current, as
15 well as projected, water needs and sources for at least a
16 10-year period, considering the appropriate regional water
17 supply plan approved pursuant to s. 373.0361, or, in the
18 absence of an approved regional water supply plan, the
19 district water management plan adopted pursuant to s.
20 373.036(2). This information shall be submitted to the
21 appropriate agencies. The land use map or map series
22 contained in the future land use element shall generally
23 identify and depict the following:
24 1. Existing and planned waterwells and cones of
25 influence where applicable.
26 2. Beaches and shores, including estuarine systems.
27 3. Rivers, bays, lakes, flood plains, and harbors.
28 4. Wetlands.
29 5. Minerals and soils.
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1 The land uses identified on such maps shall be consistent with
2 applicable state law and rules.
3 (h)1. An intergovernmental coordination element
4 showing relationships and stating principles and guidelines to
5 be used in the accomplishment of coordination of the adopted
6 comprehensive plan with the plans of school boards and other
7 units of local government providing services but not having
8 regulatory authority over the use of land, with the
9 comprehensive plans of adjacent municipalities, the county,
10 adjacent counties, or the region, and with the state
11 comprehensive plan and with the applicable regional water
12 supply plan approved pursuant to s. 373.0361, as the case may
13 require and as such adopted plans or plans in preparation may
14 exist. This element of the local comprehensive plan shall
15 demonstrate consideration of the particular effects of the
16 local plan, when adopted, upon the development of adjacent
17 municipalities, the county, adjacent counties, or the region,
18 or upon the state comprehensive plan, as the case may require.
19 a. The intergovernmental coordination element shall
20 provide for procedures to identify and implement joint
21 planning areas, especially for the purpose of annexation,
22 municipal incorporation, and joint infrastructure service
23 areas.
24 b. The intergovernmental coordination element shall
25 provide for recognition of campus master plans prepared
26 pursuant to s. 240.155.
27 c. The intergovernmental coordination element may
28 provide for a voluntary dispute resolution process as
29 established pursuant to s. 186.509 for bringing to closure in
30 a timely manner intergovernmental disputes. A local
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1 government may develop and use an alternative local dispute
2 resolution process for this purpose.
3 2. The intergovernmental coordination element shall
4 further state principles and guidelines to be used in the
5 accomplishment of coordination of the adopted comprehensive
6 plan with the plans of school boards and other units of local
7 government providing facilities and services but not having
8 regulatory authority over the use of land. In addition, the
9 intergovernmental coordination element shall describe joint
10 processes for collaborative planning and decisionmaking on
11 population projections and public school siting, the location
12 and extension of public facilities subject to concurrency, and
13 siting facilities with countywide significance, including
14 locally unwanted land uses whose nature and identity are
15 established in an agreement. Within 1 year of adopting their
16 intergovernmental coordination elements, each county, all the
17 municipalities within that county, the district school board,
18 and any unit of local government service providers in that
19 county shall establish by interlocal or other formal agreement
20 executed by all affected entities, the joint processes
21 described in this subparagraph consistent with their adopted
22 intergovernmental coordination elements.
23 3. To foster coordination between special districts
24 and local general-purpose governments as local general-purpose
25 governments implement local comprehensive plans, each
26 independent special district must submit a public facilities
27 report to the appropriate local government as required by s.
28 189.415.
29 4.a. Local governments adopting a public educational
30 facilities element pursuant to s. 163.31776 must execute an
31 interlocal agreement with the district school board, the
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1 county, and nonexempt municipalities, as defined by s.
2 163.31776(3), which includes the items listed in s.
3 163.31777(2). The local government shall amend the
4 intergovernmental coordination element to provide that
5 coordination between the local government and school board is
6 pursuant to the agreement and shall state the obligations of
7 the local government under the agreement.
8 b. Plan amendments that comply with this subparagraph
9 are exempt from the provisions of s. 163.3187(1).
10 5. The state land planning agency shall establish a
11 schedule for phased completion and transmittal of plan
12 amendments to implement subparagraphs 1., 2., and 3. from all
13 jurisdictions so as to accomplish their adoption by December
14 31, 1999. A local government may complete and transmit its
15 plan amendments to carry out these provisions prior to the
16 scheduled date established by the state land planning agency.
17 The plan amendments are exempt from the provisions of s.
18 163.3187(1).
19 6. By January 1, 2004, any county having a population
20 greater than 100,000, and the municipalities and special
21 districts within that county, shall submit a report to the
22 Department of Community Affairs which:
23 a. Identifies all existing or proposed interlocal
24 service-delivery agreements regarding the following:
25 education; sanitary sewer; public safety; solid waste;
26 drainage; potable water; parks and recreation; and
27 transportation facilities.
28 b. Identifies any deficits or duplication in the
29 provision of services within its jurisdiction, whether capital
30 or operational. Upon request, the Department of Community
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1 Affairs shall provide technical assistance to the local
2 governments in identifying deficits or duplication.
3 7. Within 6 months after submission of the report, the
4 Department of Community Affairs shall, through the appropriate
5 regional planning council, coordinate a meeting of all local
6 governments within the regional planning area to discuss the
7 reports and potential strategies to remedy any identified
8 deficiencies or duplications.
9 8. Each local government shall update its
10 intergovernmental coordination element based upon the findings
11 in the report submitted pursuant to subparagraph 6. The report
12 may be used as supporting data and analysis for the
13 intergovernmental coordination element.
14 9. By February 1, 2003, representatives of
15 municipalities and counties shall provide to the Legislature
16 recommended statutory changes for annexation, including any
17 changes that address the delivery of local government services
18 in areas planned for annexation.
19 Section 3. Section 163.31775, Florida Statutes, is
20 repealed.
21 Section 4. Section 163.31776, Florida Statutes, is
22 created to read:
23 163.31776 Public educational facilities element.--
24 (1) A county, in conjunction with the municipalities
25 within the county, may adopt an optional public educational
26 facilities element in cooperation with the applicable school
27 district. In order to enact an optional public educational
28 facilities element, the county and each municipality, unless
29 the municipality is exempt as defined in this subsection, must
30 adopt a consistent public educational facilities element and
31 enter the interlocal agreement pursuant to ss.
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1 163.3177(6)(h)4. and 163.31777(2). A municipality is exempt if
2 it has no established need for a new school facility and it
3 meets the following criteria:
4 (a) The municipality has no public schools located
5 within its boundaries; and
6 (b) The district school board's 5-year facilities work
7 program and the long-term 10-year work program, as provided in
8 s. 235.185, demonstrate that no new school facility is needed
9 in the municipality. In addition, the district school board
10 must verify in writing that no new school facility will be
11 needed in the municipality within the 5-year and 10-year
12 timeframes.
13 (2) The public educational facilities element must be
14 based on data and analysis, including the interlocal agreement
15 defined by ss. 163.3177(6)(h)4. and 163.31777(2), and on the
16 educational facilities plan required by s. 235.185. Each local
17 government public educational facilities element within a
18 county must be consistent with the other elements and must
19 address:
20 (a) The need for, strategies for, and commitments to
21 addressing improvements to infrastructure, safety, and
22 community conditions in areas proximate to existing public
23 schools.
24 (b) The need for and strategies for providing adequate
25 infrastructure necessary to support proposed schools,
26 including potable water, wastewater, drainage, solid waste,
27 transportation, and means by which to assure safe access to
28 schools, including sidewalks, bicycle paths, turn lanes, and
29 signalization.
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1 (c) Colocation of other public facilities, such as
2 parks, libraries, and community centers, in proximity to
3 public schools.
4 (d) Location of schools proximate to residential areas
5 and to complement patterns of development, including using
6 elementary schools as focal points for neighborhoods.
7 (e) Use of public schools to serve as emergency
8 shelters.
9 (f) Consideration of the existing and planned capacity
10 of public schools when reviewing comprehensive plan amendments
11 and rezonings that are likely to increase residential
12 development and that are reasonably expected to have an impact
13 on the demand for public school facilities, with the review to
14 be based on uniform, level-of-service standards, availability
15 standards for public schools, and the financially feasible
16 5-year district facilities work program adopted by the school
17 board pursuant to s. 235.185.
18 (g) A uniform methodology for determining school
19 capacity consistent with the interlocal agreement entered
20 pursuant to ss. 163.3177(6)(h)4. and 163.31777(2).
21 (3) The future land-use map series must incorporate
22 maps that are the result of a collaborative process for
23 identifying school sites in the educational facilities plan
24 adopted by the school board pursuant to s. 235.185 and must
25 show the locations of existing public schools and the general
26 locations of improvements to existing schools or new schools
27 anticipated over the 5-year, 10-year, and 20-year time
28 periods, or such maps must constitute data and analysis in
29 support of the future land-use map series. Maps indicating
30 general locations of future schools or school improvements
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1 should not prescribe a land use on a particular parcel of
2 land.
3 (4) The process for adopting a public educational
4 facilities element is as provided in s. 163.3184. The state
5 land planning agency shall submit a copy of the proposed pubic
6 school facilities element pursuant to the procedures outlined
7 in s. 163.3184(4) to the Office of Educational Facilities and
8 SMART Schools Clearinghouse of the Commissioner of Education
9 for review and comment.
10 (5) Plan amendments to adopt a public educational
11 facilities element are exempt from the provisions of s.
12 163.3187(1).
13 Section 5. Section 163.31777, Florida Statutes, is
14 created to read:
15 163.31777 Public schools interlocal agreement.--
16 (1)(a) The county and municipalities located within
17 the geographic area of a school district shall enter into an
18 interlocal agreement with the district school board which
19 jointly establishes the specific ways in which the plans and
20 processes of the district school board and the local
21 governments are to be coordinated. The interlocal agreements
22 shall be submitted to the state land planning agency and the
23 Office of Educational Facilities and the SMART Schools
24 Clearinghouse in accordance with a schedule published by the
25 state land planning agency.
26 (b) The schedule must establish staggered due dates
27 for submission of interlocal agreements that are executed by
28 both the local government and district school board,
29 commencing on March 1, 2003 and concluding by December 1,
30 2004, and must set the same date for all governmental entities
31 within a school district. The schedule must begin with those
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1 areas where both the number of districtwide capital-outlay
2 full-time-equivalent students equals 80 percent or more of the
3 current year's school capacity and the projected 5-year
4 student growth is 1,000 or greater, or where the projected
5 5-year student growth rate is 10 percent or greater.
6 (c) If the student population has declined over the
7 5-year period preceding the due date for submittal of an
8 updated interlocal agreement to the local government and the
9 district school board, the local government and the district
10 school board may petition the state land planning agency for a
11 waiver of one or more requirements of subsection (2). The
12 waiver must be granted if the procedures called for in
13 subsection (2) are unnecessary because of the school
14 district's declining school age population, considering the
15 5-year work program in the educational facilities plan
16 prepared pursuant to s. 235.185. The state land planning
17 agency may modify or revoke the waiver upon a finding that the
18 conditions upon which the waiver was granted no longer exist.
19 The district school board and local governments must submit an
20 interlocal agreement within 1 year after notification by the
21 state land planning agency that the conditions for a waiver no
22 longer exist.
23 (d) Interlocal agreements between local governments
24 and district school boards adopted pursuant to s. 163.3177
25 before the effective date of this section must be updated and
26 executed pursuant to the requirements of this section, if
27 necessary. Amendments to interlocal agreements adopted
28 pursuant to this section must be submitted to the state land
29 planning agency within 30 days after execution by the parties
30 for review consistent with this section. Local governments and
31 the district school board in each school district are
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1 encouraged to adopt a single interlocal agreement to which all
2 join as parties. The state land planning agency shall assemble
3 and make available model interlocal agreements meeting the
4 requirements of this section and notify local governments and,
5 jointly with the Department of Education, the district school
6 boards of the requirements of this section, the dates for
7 compliance, and the sanctions for noncompliance. The state
8 land planning agency shall be available to informally review
9 proposed interlocal agreements. If the state land planning
10 agency has not received a proposed interlocal agreement for
11 informal review, the state land planning agency shall, at
12 least 60 days before the deadline for submission of the
13 executed agreement, renotify the local government and the
14 district school board of the upcoming deadline and the
15 potential for sanctions.
16 (2) At a minimum, the interlocal agreement must
17 address the following issues:
18 (a) A process by which each local government and the
19 district school board agree and base their plans on consistent
20 projections of the amount, type, and distribution of
21 population growth and student enrollment. The geographic
22 distribution of jurisdiction-wide growth forecasts is a major
23 objective of the process.
24 (b) A process to coordinate and share information
25 relating to existing and planned public school facilities,
26 including school renovations and closures, and local
27 government plans for development and redevelopment.
28 (c) Participation by affected local governments with
29 the district school board in the process of determining school
30 closures, significant renovations to existing schools, and new
31 school site selection before land acquisition. Local
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1 governments shall advise the district school board as to the
2 consistency of the proposed closure, renovation, or new site
3 with the local comprehensive plan, including appropriate
4 circumstances and criteria under which a district school board
5 may request an amendment to the comprehensive plan for school
6 siting.
7 (d) A process for determining the need for and timing
8 of on-site and off-site improvements to support new, proposed
9 expansion, or redevelopment of existing schools. The process
10 must address identification of the party or parties
11 responsible for the improvements.
12 (e) A process for the school board to inform the local
13 government regarding school capacity. The capacity reporting
14 must be consistent with statutes and rules regarding
15 measurement of school facility capacity. It must also identify
16 how the district school board will meet the public school
17 demand based on the facilities work program adopted pursuant
18 to s. 235.185.
19 (f) Participation of the local governments in the
20 preparation of the annual update to the district school
21 board's 5-year district facilities work program and
22 educational plant survey prepared pursuant to s. 235.185.
23 (g) A process for determining where and how joint use
24 of either school board or local government facilities can be
25 shared for mutual benefit and efficiency.
26 (h) A procedure for the resolution of disputes between
27 the district school board and local governments, which may
28 include the dispute-resolution processes contained in chapters
29 164 and 186.
30
31
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1 (i) An oversight process, including an opportunity for
2 public participation, for the implementation of the interlocal
3 agreement.
4
5 A signatory to the interlocal agreement may elect not to
6 include a provision meeting the requirements of paragraph (e).
7 Such a decision must occur after a public hearing on such
8 election, which may include the public hearing in which a
9 district school board or a local government adopts the
10 interlocal agreement. An interlocal agreement entered into
11 pursuant to this section must be consistent with the adopted
12 comprehensive plan and land development regulations of any
13 local government that is a signatory.
14 (3)(a) The Office of Educational Facilities and SMART
15 Schools Clearinghouse shall submit any comments or concerns
16 regarding the executed interlocal agreement to the state land
17 planning agency within 30 days after receipt of the executed
18 interlocal agreement. The state land planning agency shall
19 review the executed interlocal agreement to determine whether
20 it is consistent with the requirements of subsection (2), the
21 adopted local government comprehensive plan, and other
22 requirements of law. Within 60 days after receipt of an
23 executed interlocal agreement, the state land planning agency
24 shall publish a notice of intent in the Florida Administrative
25 Weekly and shall post a copy of the notice on the agency's
26 Internet site. The notice of intent must state whether the
27 interlocal agreement is consistent or inconsistent with the
28 requirements of subsection (2) and this subsection, as
29 appropriate.
30 (b) The state land planning agency's notice is subject
31 to challenge under chapter 120; however, an affected person,
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1 as defined in 163.3184(1)(a), has standing to initiate the
2 administrative proceeding, and this proceeding is the sole
3 means available to challenge the consistency of an interlocal
4 agreement required by this section with the criteria contained
5 in subsection (2) and this subsection. In order to have
6 standing, each person must have submitted oral or written
7 comments, recommendations, or objections to the local
8 government or the school board before the adoption of the
9 interlocal agreement by the school board and local government.
10 The district school board and local governments are parties to
11 any such proceeding. In this proceeding, when the state land
12 planning agency finds the interlocal agreement to be
13 consistent with the criteria in subsection (2) and this
14 subsection, the interlocal agreement shall be determined to be
15 consistent with subsection (2) and this subsection if the
16 local government's and school board's determination of
17 consistency is fairly debatable. When the state planning
18 agency finds the interlocal agreement to be inconsistent with
19 the requirements of subsection (2) and this subsection, the
20 local government's and school board's determination of
21 consistency shall be sustained unless it is shown by a
22 preponderance of the evidence that the interlocal agreement is
23 inconsistent.
24 (c) If the state land planning agency enters a final
25 order that finds that the interlocal agreement is inconsistent
26 with the requirements of subsection (2) or this subsection, it
27 shall forward it to the Administration Commission, which may
28 impose sanctions against the local government pursuant to s.
29 163.3184(11) and may impose sanctions against the district
30 school board by directing the Department of Education to
31 withhold from the district school board an equivalent amount
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1 of funds for school construction available pursuant to ss.
2 235.187, 235.216, 235.2195, and 235.42.
3 (4) If an executed interlocal agreement is not timely
4 submitted to the state land planning agency for review, the
5 state land planning agency shall, within 15 working days after
6 the deadline for submittal, issue to the local government and
7 the district school board a Notice to Show Cause why sanctions
8 should not be imposed for failure to submit an executed
9 interlocal agreement by the deadline established by the
10 agency. The agency shall forward the notice and the responses
11 to the Administration Commission, which may enter a final
12 order citing the failure to comply and imposing sanctions
13 against the local government and district school board by
14 directing the appropriate agencies to withhold at least 5
15 percent of state funds pursuant to s. 163.3184(11) and by
16 directing the Department of Education to withhold at least 5
17 percent of funds for school construction available pursuant to
18 ss. 235.187, 235.216, 235.2195, 235.42 from the district
19 school board.
20 (5) Any local government transmitting a public school
21 element to implement school concurrency pursuant to the
22 requirements of s. 163.3180 before the effective date of this
23 section is not required to amend the element or any interlocal
24 agreement to conform with the provisions of this section if
25 the element is adopted prior to or within 1 year after the
26 effective date of this section and remains in effect.
27 (6) Except as provided in subsection (7),
28 municipalities having no established need for a new school
29 facility and meeting the following criteria are exempt from
30 the requirements of subsections (1), (2), and (3):
31
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1 (a) The municipality has no public schools located
2 within its boundaries.
3 (b) The district school board's 5-year facilities work
4 program and the long-term 10-year and 20-year work programs,
5 as provided in s. 235.185, demonstrate that no new school
6 facility is needed in the municipality. In addition, the
7 district school board must verify in writing that no new
8 school facility will be needed in the municipality within the
9 5-year and 10-year timeframes.
10 (7) At the time of the evaluation and appraisal
11 report, each exempt municipality shall assess the extent to
12 which it continues to meet the criteria for exemption under
13 subsection (6). If the municipality continues to meet these
14 criteria and the district school board verifies in writing
15 that no new school facilities will be needed within the 5-year
16 and 10-year timeframes, the municipality shall continue to be
17 exempt from the interlocal-agreement requirement. Each
18 municipality exempt under subsection (6) must comply with the
19 provisions of this section within 1 year after the district
20 school board proposes, in its 5-year district facilities work
21 program, a new school within the municipality's jurisdiction.
22 Section 6. Subsection (4) of section 163.3180, Florida
23 Statutes, is amended to read:
24 163.3180 Concurrency.--
25 (4)(a) The concurrency requirement as implemented in
26 local comprehensive plans applies to state and other public
27 facilities and development to the same extent that it applies
28 to all other facilities and development, as provided by law.
29 (b) The concurrency requirement as implemented in
30 local comprehensive plans does not apply to public transit
31 facilities. For the purposes of this paragraph, public
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1 transit facilities include transit stations and terminals,
2 transit station parking, park-and-ride lots, intermodal public
3 transit connection or transfer facilities, and fixed bus,
4 guideway, and rail stations. As used in this paragraph, the
5 terms "terminals" and "transit facilities" do not include
6 airports or seaports or commercial or residential development
7 constructed in conjunction with a public transit facility.
8 (c) The concurrency requirement as implemented in
9 local government comprehensive plans may be waived by a local
10 government for urban infill and redevelopment areas designated
11 pursuant to s. 163.2517 if such a waiver does not endanger
12 public health or safety as defined by the local government in
13 its local government comprehensive plan.
14 Section 7. Subsections (1), (3), (4), (6), (7), (8),
15 and (15) and paragraph (d) of subsection (16) of section
16 163.3184, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
17 163.3184 Process for adoption of comprehensive plan or
18 plan amendment.--
19 (1) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section, the term:
20 (a) "Affected person" includes the affected local
21 government; persons owning property, residing, or owning or
22 operating a business within the boundaries of the local
23 government whose plan is the subject of the review; owners of
24 real property abutting real property that is the subject of a
25 proposed change to a future land-use map; and adjoining local
26 governments that can demonstrate that the plan or plan
27 amendment will produce substantial impacts on the increased
28 need for publicly funded infrastructure or substantial impacts
29 on areas designated for protection or special treatment within
30 their jurisdiction. Each person, other than an adjoining local
31 government, in order to qualify under this definition, shall
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1 also have submitted oral or written comments, recommendations,
2 or objections to the local government during the period of
3 time beginning with the transmittal hearing for the plan or
4 plan amendment and ending with the adoption of the plan or
5 plan amendment.
6 (b) "In compliance" means consistent with the
7 requirements of ss. 163.3177, 163.31776, when a local
8 government adopts an educational facilities element, 163.3178,
9 163.3180, 163.3191, and 163.3245, with the state comprehensive
10 plan, with the appropriate strategic regional policy plan, and
11 with chapter 9J-5, Florida Administrative Code, where such
12 rule is not inconsistent with this part and with the
13 principles for guiding development in designated areas of
14 critical state concern.
15 (3) LOCAL GOVERNMENT TRANSMITTAL OF PROPOSED PLAN OR
16 AMENDMENT.--
17 (a) Each local governing body shall transmit the
18 complete proposed comprehensive plan or plan amendment to the
19 state land planning agency, the appropriate regional planning
20 council and water management district, the Department of
21 Environmental Protection, the Department of State, and the
22 Department of Transportation, and, in the case of municipal
23 plans, to the appropriate county, and, in the case of county
24 plans, to the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and
25 the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services,
26 immediately following a public hearing pursuant to subsection
27 (15) as specified in the state land planning agency's
28 procedural rules. The local governing body shall also transmit
29 a copy of the complete proposed comprehensive plan or plan
30 amendment to any other unit of local government or government
31 agency in the state that has filed a written request with the
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1 governing body for the plan or plan amendment. The local
2 government may request a review by the state land planning
3 agency pursuant to subsection (6) at the time of the
4 transmittal of an amendment.
5 (b) A local governing body shall not transmit portions
6 of a plan or plan amendment unless it has previously provided
7 to all state agencies designated by the state land planning
8 agency a complete copy of its adopted comprehensive plan
9 pursuant to subsection (7) and as specified in the agency's
10 procedural rules. In the case of comprehensive plan
11 amendments, the local governing body shall transmit to the
12 state land planning agency, the appropriate regional planning
13 council and water management district, the Department of
14 Environmental Protection, the Department of State, and the
15 Department of Transportation, and, in the case of municipal
16 plans, to the appropriate county, and, in the case of county
17 plans, to the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and
18 the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the
19 materials specified in the state land planning agency's
20 procedural rules and, in cases in which the plan amendment is
21 a result of an evaluation and appraisal report adopted
22 pursuant to s. 163.3191, a copy of the evaluation and
23 appraisal report. Local governing bodies shall consolidate all
24 proposed plan amendments into a single submission for each of
25 the two plan amendment adoption dates during the calendar year
26 pursuant to s. 163.3187.
27 (c) A local government may adopt a proposed plan
28 amendment previously transmitted pursuant to this subsection,
29 unless review is requested or otherwise initiated pursuant to
30 subsection (6).
31
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1 (d) In cases in which a local government transmits
2 multiple individual amendments that can be clearly and legally
3 separated and distinguished for the purpose of determining
4 whether to review the proposed amendment, and the state land
5 planning agency elects to review several or a portion of the
6 amendments and the local government chooses to immediately
7 adopt the remaining amendments not reviewed, the amendments
8 immediately adopted and any reviewed amendments that the local
9 government subsequently adopts together constitute one
10 amendment cycle in accordance with s. 163.3187(1).
11 (4) INTERGOVERNMENTAL REVIEW.--If review of a proposed
12 comprehensive plan amendment is requested or otherwise
13 initiated pursuant to subsection (6), the state land planning
14 agency within 5 working days of determining that such a review
15 will be conducted shall transmit a copy of the proposed plan
16 amendment to various government agencies, as appropriate, for
17 response or comment, including, but not limited to, the
18 Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of
19 Transportation, the water management district, and the
20 regional planning council, and, in the case of municipal
21 plans, to the county land planning agency. The These
22 governmental agencies specified in paragraph (3)(a) shall
23 provide comments to the state land planning agency within 30
24 days after receipt by the state land planning agency of the
25 complete proposed plan amendment. If the plan or plan
26 amendment includes or relates to the public school facilities
27 element pursuant to s. 163.31776, the state land planning
28 agency shall submit a copy to the Office of Educational
29 Facilities of the Commissioner of Education for review and
30 comment. The appropriate regional planning council shall also
31 provide its written comments to the state land planning agency
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1 within 30 days after receipt by the state land planning agency
2 of the complete proposed plan amendment and shall specify any
3 objections, recommendations for modifications, and comments of
4 any other regional agencies to which the regional planning
5 council may have referred the proposed plan amendment. Written
6 comments submitted by the public within 30 days after notice
7 of transmittal by the local government of the proposed plan
8 amendment will be considered as if submitted by governmental
9 agencies. All written agency and public comments must be made
10 part of the file maintained under subsection (2).
11 (6) STATE LAND PLANNING AGENCY REVIEW.--
12 (a) The state land planning agency shall review a
13 proposed plan amendment upon request of a regional planning
14 council, affected person, or local government transmitting the
15 plan amendment. The request from the regional planning council
16 or affected person must be if the request is received within
17 30 days after transmittal of the proposed plan amendment
18 pursuant to subsection (3). The agency shall issue a report
19 of its objections, recommendations, and comments regarding the
20 proposed plan amendment. A regional planning council or
21 affected person requesting a review shall do so by submitting
22 a written request to the agency with a notice of the request
23 to the local government and any other person who has requested
24 notice.
25 (b) The state land planning agency may review any
26 proposed plan amendment regardless of whether a request for
27 review has been made, if the agency gives notice to the local
28 government, and any other person who has requested notice, of
29 its intention to conduct such a review within 35 30 days after
30 receipt of transmittal of the complete proposed plan amendment
31 pursuant to subsection (3).
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1 (c) The state land planning agency shall establish by
2 rule a schedule for receipt of comments from the various
3 government agencies, as well as written public comments,
4 pursuant to subsection (4). If the state land planning agency
5 elects to review the amendment or the agency is required to
6 review the amendment as specified in paragraph (a), the agency
7 shall issue a report giving its objections, recommendations,
8 and comments regarding the proposed amendment within 60 days
9 after receipt of the complete proposed amendment by the state
10 land planning agency. The state land planning agency shall
11 have 30 days to review comments from the various government
12 agencies along with a local government's comprehensive plan or
13 plan amendment. During that period, the state land planning
14 agency shall transmit in writing its comments to the local
15 government along with any objections and any recommendations
16 for modifications. When a federal, state, or regional agency
17 has implemented a permitting program, the state land planning
18 agency shall not require a local government to duplicate or
19 exceed that permitting program in its comprehensive plan or to
20 implement such a permitting program in its land development
21 regulations. Nothing contained herein shall prohibit the
22 state land planning agency in conducting its review of local
23 plans or plan amendments from making objections,
24 recommendations, and comments or making compliance
25 determinations regarding densities and intensities consistent
26 with the provisions of this part. In preparing its comments,
27 the state land planning agency shall only base its
28 considerations on written, and not oral, comments, from any
29 source.
30 (d) The state land planning agency review shall
31 identify all written communications with the agency regarding
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1 the proposed plan amendment. If the state land planning agency
2 does not issue such a review, it shall identify in writing to
3 the local government all written communications received 30
4 days after transmittal. The written identification must
5 include a list of all documents received or generated by the
6 agency, which list must be of sufficient specificity to enable
7 the documents to be identified and copies requested, if
8 desired, and the name of the person to be contacted to request
9 copies of any identified document. The list of documents must
10 be made a part of the public records of the state land
11 planning agency.
12 (7) LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVIEW OF COMMENTS; ADOPTION OF
13 PLAN OR AMENDMENTS AND TRANSMITTAL.--
14 (a) The local government shall review the written
15 comments submitted to it by the state land planning agency,
16 and any other person, agency, or government. Any comments,
17 recommendations, or objections and any reply to them shall be
18 public documents, a part of the permanent record in the
19 matter, and admissible in any proceeding in which the
20 comprehensive plan or plan amendment may be at issue. The
21 local government, upon receipt of written comments from the
22 state land planning agency, shall have 120 days to adopt or
23 adopt with changes the proposed comprehensive plan or s.
24 163.3191 plan amendments. In the case of comprehensive plan
25 amendments other than those proposed pursuant to s. 163.3191,
26 the local government shall have 60 days to adopt the
27 amendment, adopt the amendment with changes, or determine that
28 it will not adopt the amendment. The adoption of the proposed
29 plan or plan amendment or the determination not to adopt a
30 plan amendment, other than a plan amendment proposed pursuant
31 to s. 163.3191, shall be made in the course of a public
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1 hearing pursuant to subsection (15). The local government
2 shall transmit the complete adopted comprehensive plan or
3 adopted plan amendment, including the names and addresses of
4 person compiled pursuant to paragraph (15)(c), to the state
5 land planning agency as specified in the agency's procedural
6 rules within 10 working days after adoption. The local
7 governing body shall also transmit a copy of the adopted
8 comprehensive plan or plan amendment to the regional planning
9 agency and to any other unit of local government or
10 governmental agency in the state that has filed a written
11 request with the governing body for a copy of the plan or plan
12 amendment.
13 (b) If the adopted plan amendment is unchanged from
14 the proposed plan amendment transmitted pursuant to subsection
15 (3) and an affected person as defined in paragraph (1)(a) did
16 not raise any objection, the state land planning agency did
17 not review the proposed plan amendment, and the state land
18 planning agency did not raise any objections during its review
19 pursuant to subsection (6), the local government may state in
20 the transmittal letter that the plan amendment is unchanged
21 and was not the subject of objections.
22 (8) NOTICE OF INTENT.--
23 (a) If the transmittal letter correctly states that
24 the plan amendment is unchanged and was not the subject of
25 review or objections pursuant to paragraph (7)(b), the state
26 land planning agency has 20 days within which to issue a
27 notice of intent that the plan amendment is in compliance.
28 (b)(a) Except as provided in paragraph (a) or in s.
29 163.3187(3), the state land planning agency, upon receipt of a
30 local government's complete adopted comprehensive plan or plan
31 amendment, shall have 45 days for review and to determine if
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1 the plan or plan amendment is in compliance with this act,
2 unless the amendment is the result of a compliance agreement
3 entered into under subsection (16), in which case the time
4 period for review and determination shall be 30 days. If
5 review was not conducted under subsection (6), the agency's
6 determination must be based upon the plan amendment as
7 adopted. If review was conducted under subsection (6), the
8 agency's determination of compliance must be based only upon
9 one or both of the following:
10 1. The state land planning agency's written comments
11 to the local government pursuant to subsection (6); or
12 2. Any changes made by the local government to the
13 comprehensive plan or plan amendment as adopted.
14 (c)(b)1. During the time period provided for in this
15 subsection, the state land planning agency shall issue,
16 through a senior administrator or the secretary, as specified
17 in the agency's procedural rules, a notice of intent to find
18 that the plan or plan amendment is in compliance or not in
19 compliance. A notice of intent shall be issued by publication
20 in the manner provided by this paragraph and by mailing a copy
21 to the local government and to persons who request notice.
22 The required advertisement shall be no less than 2 columns
23 wide by 10 inches long, and the headline in the advertisement
24 shall be in a type no smaller than 12 point. The advertisement
25 shall not be placed in that portion of the newspaper where
26 legal notices and classified advertisements appear. The
27 advertisement shall be published in a newspaper which meets
28 the size and circulation requirements set forth in paragraph
29 (15)(c) and which has been designated in writing by the
30 affected local government at the time of transmittal of the
31 amendment. Publication by the state land planning agency of a
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1 notice of intent in the newspaper designated by the local
2 government shall be prima facie evidence of compliance with
3 the publication requirements of this section.
4 2. For fiscal year 2001-2002 only, the provisions of
5 this subparagraph shall supersede the provisions of
6 subparagraph 1. During the time period provided for in this
7 subsection, the state land planning agency shall issue,
8 through a senior administrator or the secretary, as specified
9 in the agency's procedural rules, a notice of intent to find
10 that the plan or plan amendment is in compliance or not in
11 compliance. A notice of intent shall be issued by publication
12 in the manner provided by this paragraph and by mailing a copy
13 to the local government. The advertisement shall be placed in
14 that portion of the newspaper where legal notices appear. The
15 advertisement shall be published in a newspaper that meets the
16 size and circulation requirements set forth in paragraph
17 (15)(c) and that has been designated in writing by the
18 affected local government at the time of transmittal of the
19 amendment. Publication by the state land planning agency of a
20 notice of intent in the newspaper designated by the local
21 government shall be prima facie evidence of compliance with
22 the publication requirements of this section. The state land
23 planning agency shall post a copy of the notice of intent on
24 the agency's Internet site. The agency shall, no later than
25 the date the notice of intent is transmitted to the newspaper,
26 send by regular mail a courtesy informational statement to
27 persons who provide their names and addresses to the local
28 government at the transmittal hearing or at the adoption
29 hearing where the local government has provided the names and
30 addresses of such persons to the department at the time of
31 transmittal of the adopted amendment. The informational
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1 statements shall include the name of the newspaper in which
2 the notice of intent will appear, the approximate date of
3 publication, the ordinance number of the plan or plan
4 amendment, and a statement that affected persons have 21 days
5 after the actual date of publication of the notice to file a
6 petition. This subparagraph expires July 1, 2002.
7 2. A local government that has an Internet site shall
8 post a copy of the state land planning agency's notice of
9 intent on the site within 5 days after receipt of the mailed
10 copy of the agency's notice of intent.
11 (15) PUBLIC HEARINGS.--
12 (a) The procedure for transmittal of a complete
13 proposed comprehensive plan or plan amendment pursuant to
14 subsection (3) and for adoption of a comprehensive plan or
15 plan amendment pursuant to subsection (7) shall be by
16 affirmative vote of not less than a majority of the members of
17 the governing body present at the hearing. The adoption of a
18 comprehensive plan or plan amendment shall be by ordinance.
19 For the purposes of transmitting or adopting a comprehensive
20 plan or plan amendment, the notice requirements in chapters
21 125 and 166 are superseded by this subsection, except as
22 provided in this part.
23 (b) The local governing body shall hold at least two
24 advertised public hearings on the proposed comprehensive plan
25 or plan amendment as follows:
26 1. The first public hearing shall be held at the
27 transmittal stage pursuant to subsection (3). It shall be
28 held on a weekday at least 7 days after the day that the first
29 advertisement is published.
30 2. The second public hearing shall be held at the
31 adoption stage pursuant to subsection (7). It shall be held
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1 on a weekday at least 5 days after the day that the second
2 advertisement is published.
3 (c) The local government shall provide a sign-in form
4 at the transmittal hearing and at the adoption hearing for
5 persons to provide their names and mailing addresses. The
6 sign-in form must advise that any person providing the
7 requested information will receive a courtesy informational
8 statement concerning publications of the state land planning
9 agency's notice of intent. The local government shall add to
10 the sign-in form the name and address of any person who
11 submits written comments concerning the proposed plan or plan
12 amendment during the time period between the commencement of
13 the transmittal hearing and the end of the adoption hearing.
14 It is the responsibility of the person completing the form or
15 providing written comments to accurately, completely, and
16 legibly provide all information needed in order to receive the
17 courtesy informational statement.
18 (d) The agency shall provide a model sign-in form for
19 providing the list to the agency which may be used by the
20 local government to satisfy the requirements of this
21 subsection.
22 (e)(c) If the proposed comprehensive plan or plan
23 amendment changes the actual list of permitted, conditional,
24 or prohibited uses within a future land use category or
25 changes the actual future land use map designation of a parcel
26 or parcels of land, the required advertisements shall be in
27 the format prescribed by s. 125.66(4)(b)2. for a county or by
28 s. 166.041(3)(c)2.b. for a municipality.
29 (16) COMPLIANCE AGREEMENTS.--
30 (d) A local government may adopt a plan amendment
31 pursuant to a compliance agreement in accordance with the
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1 requirements of paragraph (15)(a). The plan amendment shall be
2 exempt from the requirements of subsections (2)-(7). The
3 local government shall hold a single adoption public hearing
4 pursuant to the requirements of subparagraph (15)(b)2. and
5 paragraph (15)(e)(c). Within 10 working days after adoption of
6 a plan amendment, the local government shall transmit the
7 amendment to the state land planning agency as specified in
8 the agency's procedural rules, and shall submit one copy to
9 the regional planning agency and to any other unit of local
10 government or government agency in the state that has filed a
11 written request with the governing body for a copy of the plan
12 amendment, and one copy to any party to the proceeding under
13 ss. 120.569 and 120.57 granted intervenor status.
14 Section 8. Paragraph (k) is added to subsection (1) of
15 section 163.3187, Florida Statutes, to read:
16 163.3187 Amendment of adopted comprehensive plan.--
17 (1) Amendments to comprehensive plans adopted pursuant
18 to this part may be made not more than two times during any
19 calendar year, except:
20 (k) A comprehensive plan amendment to adopt a public
21 educational facilities element pursuant to s. 163.31776 and
22 future land-use-map amendments for school siting may be
23 approved notwithstanding statutory limits on the frequency of
24 adopting plan amendments.
25 Section 9. Paragraph (k) of subsection (2) of section
26 163.3191, Florida Statutes, is amended and paragraph (l) is
27 added to that subsection to read:
28 163.3191 Evaluation and appraisal of comprehensive
29 plan.--
30 (2) The report shall present an evaluation and
31 assessment of the comprehensive plan and shall contain
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1 appropriate statements to update the comprehensive plan,
2 including, but not limited to, words, maps, illustrations, or
3 other media, related to:
4 (k) The coordination of the comprehensive plan with
5 existing public schools and those identified in the applicable
6 educational 5-year school district facilities plan work
7 program adopted pursuant to s. 235.185. The assessment shall
8 address, where relevant, the success or failure of the
9 coordination of the future land use map and associated planned
10 residential development with public schools and their
11 capacities, as well as the joint decisionmaking processes
12 engaged in by the local government and the school board in
13 regard to establishing appropriate population projections and
14 the planning and siting of public school facilities. If the
15 issues are not relevant, the local government shall
16 demonstrate that they are not relevant.
17 (l) The evaluation must consider the appropriate water
18 management district's regional water supply plan approved
19 pursuant to s. 373.0361. The potable water element must be
20 revised to include a work plan, covering at least a 10-year
21 planning period, for building any water supply facilities that
22 are identified in the element as necessary to serve existing
23 and new development and for which the local government is
24 responsible.
25 Section 10. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) and
26 subsection (3) of section 186.504, Florida Statutes, are
27 amended to read:
28 186.504 Regional planning councils; creation;
29 membership.--
30 (2) Membership on the regional planning council shall
31 be as follows:
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1 (c) Representatives appointed by the Governor from the
2 geographic area covered by the regional planning council,
3 including an elected school board member from the geographic
4 area covered by the regional planning council, to be nominated
5 by the Florida School Board Association.
6 (3) Not less than two-thirds of the representatives
7 serving as voting members on the governing bodies of such
8 regional planning councils shall be elected officials of local
9 general-purpose governments chosen by the cities and counties
10 of the region, provided each county shall have at least one
11 vote. The remaining one-third of the voting members on the
12 governing board shall be appointed by the Governor, to include
13 one elected school board member, subject to confirmation by
14 the Senate, and shall reside in the region. No two appointees
15 of the Governor shall have their places of residence in the
16 same county until each county within the region is represented
17 by a Governor's appointee to the governing board. Nothing
18 contained in this section shall deny to local governing bodies
19 or the Governor the option of appointing either locally
20 elected officials or lay citizens provided at least two-thirds
21 of the governing body of the regional planning council is
22 composed of locally elected officials.
23 Section 11. Paragraphs (a) and (d) of subsection (2)
24 and subsection (6) of section 212.055, Florida Statutes, are
25 amended to read:
26 212.055 Discretionary sales surtaxes; legislative
27 intent; authorization and use of proceeds.--It is the
28 legislative intent that any authorization for imposition of a
29 discretionary sales surtax shall be published in the Florida
30 Statutes as a subsection of this section, irrespective of the
31 duration of the levy. Each enactment shall specify the types
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1 of counties authorized to levy; the rate or rates which may be
2 imposed; the maximum length of time the surtax may be imposed,
3 if any; the procedure which must be followed to secure voter
4 approval, if required; the purpose for which the proceeds may
5 be expended; and such other requirements as the Legislature
6 may provide. Taxable transactions and administrative
7 procedures shall be as provided in s. 212.054.
8 (2) LOCAL GOVERNMENT INFRASTRUCTURE SURTAX.--
9 (a)1. The governing authority in each county may levy
10 a discretionary sales surtax of 0.5 percent or 1 percent. The
11 levy of the surtax shall be pursuant to ordinance enacted by a
12 supermajority majority of the members of the county governing
13 authority or pursuant to ordinance enacted by a majority of
14 the members of the county governing authority and approved by
15 a majority of the electors of the county voting in a
16 referendum on the surtax. If the governing bodies of the
17 municipalities representing a majority of the county's
18 population adopt uniform resolutions establishing the rate of
19 the surtax and calling for a referendum on the surtax, the
20 levy of the surtax shall be placed on the ballot and shall
21 take effect if approved by a majority of the electors of the
22 county voting in the referendum on the surtax.
23 2. If the surtax was levied pursuant to a referendum
24 held before July 1, 1993, the surtax may not be levied beyond
25 the time established in the ordinance, or, if the ordinance
26 did not limit the period of the levy, the surtax may not be
27 levied for more than 15 years. The levy of such surtax may be
28 extended only by approval of a majority of the electors of the
29 county voting in a referendum on the surtax or pursuant to
30 ordinance enacted by a supermajority vote of the members of
31 the county governing authority.
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1
2 For purposes of this paragraph, the term "supermajority vote"
3 means an affirmative vote of a majority of the membership of
4 the governing authority plus one.
5 (d)1. The proceeds of the surtax authorized by this
6 subsection and approved by referendum and any interest accrued
7 thereto shall be expended by the school district or within the
8 county and municipalities within the county, or, in the case
9 of a negotiated joint county agreement, within another county,
10 to finance, plan, and construct infrastructure and to acquire
11 land for public recreation or conservation or protection of
12 natural resources and to finance the closure of county-owned
13 or municipally owned solid waste landfills that are already
14 closed or are required to close by order of the Department of
15 Environmental Protection. Any use of such proceeds or interest
16 for purposes of landfill closure prior to July 1, 1993, is
17 ratified. Neither the proceeds nor any interest accrued
18 thereto shall be used for operational expenses of any
19 infrastructure, except that any county with a population of
20 less than 75,000 that is required to close a landfill by order
21 of the Department of Environmental Protection may use the
22 proceeds or any interest accrued thereto for long-term
23 maintenance costs associated with landfill closure. Counties,
24 as defined in s. 125.011(1), and charter counties may, in
25 addition, use the proceeds and any interest accrued thereto to
26 retire or service indebtedness incurred for bonds issued prior
27 to July 1, 1987, for infrastructure purposes, and for bonds
28 subsequently issued to refund such bonds. Any use of such
29 proceeds or interest for purposes of retiring or servicing
30 indebtedness incurred for such refunding bonds prior to July
31 1, 1999, is ratified.
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1 2. The proceeds of the surtax where the surtax is
2 levied by a supermajority vote of the governing body of the
3 county and any interest accrued thereto shall be expended by
4 the school district or within the county and municipalities
5 within the county for infrastructure located within the urban
6 service area that is identified in the local government
7 comprehensive plan of the county or municipality and is
8 identified in that local government's capital improvements
9 element adopted pursuant to s. 163.3177(3) or that is
10 identified in the school district's educational facilities
11 plan adopted pursuant to s. 235.185.
12 3.2. For the purposes of this paragraph,
13 "infrastructure" means:
14 a. Any fixed capital expenditure or fixed capital
15 outlay associated with the construction, reconstruction, or
16 improvement of public facilities which have a life expectancy
17 of 5 or more years and any land acquisition, land improvement,
18 design, and engineering costs related thereto.
19 b. A fire department vehicle, an emergency medical
20 service vehicle, a sheriff's office vehicle, a police
21 department vehicle, or any other vehicle, and such equipment
22 necessary to outfit the vehicle for its official use or
23 equipment that has a life expectancy of at least 5 years.
24 4.3. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
25 subsection, a discretionary sales surtax imposed or extended
26 after the effective date of this act may provide for an amount
27 not to exceed 15 percent of the local option sales surtax
28 proceeds to be allocated for deposit to a trust fund within
29 the county's accounts created for the purpose of funding
30 economic development projects of a general public purpose
31 targeted to improve local economies, including the funding of
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1 operational costs and incentives related to such economic
2 development. If applicable, the ballot statement must indicate
3 the intention to make an allocation under the authority of
4 this subparagraph.
5 (6) SCHOOL CAPITAL OUTLAY SURTAX.--
6 (a) The school board in each county may levy, pursuant
7 to resolution conditioned to take effect only upon approval by
8 a majority vote of the electors of the county voting in a
9 referendum, a discretionary sales surtax at a rate that may
10 not exceed 0.5 percent.
11 (b) The resolution shall include a statement that
12 provides a brief and general description of the school capital
13 outlay projects to be funded by the surtax. If applicable, the
14 resolution must state that the district school board has been
15 recognized by the State Board of Education as having a Florida
16 Frugal Schools Program. The statement shall conform to the
17 requirements of s. 101.161 and shall be placed on the ballot
18 by the governing body of the county. The following question
19 shall be placed on the ballot:
20
21 ....FOR THE ....CENTS TAX
22 ....AGAINST THE ....CENTS TAX
23
24 (c) As an alternative method of levying the
25 discretionary sales surtax, the district school board may
26 levy, pursuant to resolution adopted by a supermajority of the
27 members of the school board, a discretionary sales surtax at a
28 rate not to exceed 0.5 percent when the following conditions
29 are met:
30 1. The district school board and local governments in
31 the county where the school district is located have adopted
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1 the interlocal agreement and public educational facilities
2 element required by s. 163.31776;
3 2. The district school board has adopted a district
4 educational facilities plan pursuant to s. 235.185; and
5 3. The district's use of surtax proceeds for new
6 construction must not exceed the cost-per-student criteria
7 established for the SIT Program in s. 235.216(2).
8
9 For purposes of this paragraph, the term "supermajority vote"
10 means an affirmative vote of a majority of the membership of
11 the school board plus one.
12 (d)(c) The resolution providing for the imposition of
13 the surtax shall set forth a plan for use of the surtax
14 proceeds for fixed capital expenditures or fixed capital costs
15 associated with the construction, reconstruction, or
16 improvement of school facilities and campuses which have a
17 useful life expectancy of 5 or more years, and any land
18 acquisition, land improvement, design, and engineering costs
19 related thereto. Additionally, the plan shall include the
20 costs of retrofitting and providing for technology
21 implementation, including hardware and software, for the
22 various sites within the school district. Surtax revenues may
23 be used for the purpose of servicing bond indebtedness to
24 finance projects authorized by this subsection, and any
25 interest accrued thereto may be held in trust to finance such
26 projects. Neither the proceeds of the surtax nor any interest
27 accrued thereto shall be used for operational expenses. If the
28 district school board has been recognized by the State Board
29 of Education as having a Florida Frugal Schools Program, the
30 district's plan for use of the surtax proceeds must be
31
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1 consistent with this subsection and with uses assured under
2 the Florida Frugal Schools Program.
3 (e)(d) Any school board imposing the surtax shall
4 implement a freeze on noncapital local school property taxes,
5 at the millage rate imposed in the year prior to the
6 implementation of the surtax, for a period of at least 3 years
7 from the date of imposition of the surtax. This provision
8 shall not apply to existing debt service or required state
9 taxes.
10 (f)(e) Surtax revenues collected by the Department of
11 Revenue pursuant to this subsection shall be distributed to
12 the school board imposing the surtax in accordance with law.
13 Section 12. Section 235.002, Florida Statutes, is
14 amended to read:
15 235.002 Intent.--
16 (1) The intent of the Legislature is to:
17 (a) To provide each student in the public education
18 system the availability of an educational environment
19 appropriate to his or her educational needs which is
20 substantially equal to that available to any similar student,
21 notwithstanding geographic differences and varying local
22 economic factors, and to provide facilities for the Florida
23 School for the Deaf and the Blind and other educational
24 institutions and agencies as may be defined by law.
25 (a)(b) To Encourage the use of innovative designs,
26 construction techniques, and financing mechanisms in building
27 educational facilities for the purposes purpose of reducing
28 costs to the taxpayer, creating a more satisfactory
29 educational environment, and reducing the amount of time
30 necessary for design and construction to fill unmet needs, and
31
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1 permitting the on-site and off-site improvements required by
2 law.
3 (b)(c) To Provide a systematic mechanism whereby
4 educational facilities construction plans can meet the current
5 and projected needs of the public education system population
6 as quickly as possible by building uniform, sound educational
7 environments and to provide a sound base for planning for
8 educational facilities needs.
9 (c)(d) To Provide proper legislative support for as
10 wide a range of fiscally sound financing methodologies as
11 possible for the delivery of educational facilities and, where
12 appropriate, for their construction, operation, and
13 maintenance.
14 (d) Establish a systematic process of sharing
15 information between school boards and local governments on the
16 growth and development trends in their communities in order to
17 forecast future enrollment and school needs.
18 (e) Establish a systematic process by which school
19 boards and local governments can cooperatively plan for the
20 provision of educational facilities to meet the current and
21 projected needs of the public education system, including the
22 needs placed on the public education system as a result of
23 growth and development decisions by local governments.
24 (f) Establish a systematic process by which local
25 governments and school boards can cooperatively identify and
26 meet the infrastructure needs of public schools.
27 (2) The Legislature finds and declares that:
28 (a) Public schools are a linchpin to the vitality of
29 our communities and play a significant role in the thousands
30 of individual housing decisions that result in community
31 growth trends.
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1 (b)(a) Growth and development issues transcend the
2 boundaries and responsibilities of individual units of
3 government, and often no single unit of government can plan or
4 implement policies to deal with these issues without affecting
5 other units of government.
6 (c)(b) The effective and efficient provision of public
7 educational facilities and services enhances is essential to
8 preserving and enhancing the quality of life of the people of
9 this state.
10 (d)(c) The provision of educational facilities often
11 impacts community infrastructure and services. Assuring
12 coordinated and cooperative provision of such facilities and
13 associated infrastructure and services is in the best interest
14 of the state.
15 Section 13. Notwithstanding subsection (7) of section
16 3 of chapter 2000-321, Laws of Florida, section 235.15,
17 Florida Statutes, shall not stand repealed on January 7, 2003,
18 as scheduled by that act, but that section is reenacted and
19 amended to read:
20 235.15 Educational plant survey; localized need
21 assessment; PECO project funding.--
22 (1) At least every 5 years, each board, including the
23 Board of Regents, shall arrange for an educational plant
24 survey, to aid in formulating plans for housing the
25 educational program and student population, faculty,
26 administrators, staff, and auxiliary and ancillary services of
27 the district or campus, including consideration of the local
28 comprehensive plan. The Office Division of Workforce and
29 Economic Development shall document the need for additional
30 career and adult education programs and the continuation of
31 existing programs before facility construction or renovation
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1 related to career or adult education may be included in the
2 educational plant survey of a school district or community
3 college that delivers career or adult education programs.
4 Information used by the Office Division of Workforce and
5 Economic Development to establish facility needs must include,
6 but need not be limited to, labor market data, needs analysis,
7 and information submitted by the school district or community
8 college.
9 (a) Survey preparation and required data.--Each survey
10 shall be conducted by the board or an agency employed by the
11 board. Surveys shall be reviewed and approved by the board,
12 and a file copy shall be submitted to the Office of
13 Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse within
14 the Office of the Commissioner of Education. The survey report
15 shall include at least an inventory of existing educational
16 and ancillary plants, including safe access facilities;
17 recommendations for existing educational and ancillary plants;
18 recommendations for new educational or ancillary plants,
19 including the general location of each in coordination with
20 the land use plan and safe access facilities; campus master
21 plan update and detail for community colleges; the utilization
22 of school plants based on an extended school day or year-round
23 operation; and such other information as may be required by
24 the rules of the Florida State Board of Education. This report
25 may be amended, if conditions warrant, at the request of the
26 board or commissioner.
27 (b) Required need assessment criteria for district,
28 community college, college and state university plant
29 surveys.--Each Educational plant surveys survey completed
30 after December 31, 1997, must use uniform data sources and
31 criteria specified in this paragraph. Each educational plant
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1 survey completed after June 30, 1995, and before January 1,
2 1998, must be revised, if necessary, to comply with this
3 paragraph. Each revised educational plant survey and each new
4 educational plant survey supersedes previous surveys.
5 1. The school district's survey must be submitted as a
6 part of the district educational facilities plan defined in s.
7 235.185. Each school district's educational plant survey must
8 reflect the capacity of existing satisfactory facilities as
9 reported in the Florida Inventory of School Houses.
10 Projections of facility space needs may not exceed the norm
11 space and occupant design criteria established by the State
12 Requirements for Educational Facilities. Existing and
13 projected capital outlay full-time equivalent student
14 enrollment must be consistent with data prepared by the
15 department and must include all enrollment used in the
16 calculation of the distribution formula in s. 235.435(3). All
17 satisfactory relocatable classrooms, including those owned,
18 lease-purchased, or leased by the school district, shall be
19 included in the school district inventory of gross capacity of
20 facilities and must be counted at actual student capacity for
21 purposes of the inventory. For future needs determination,
22 student capacity shall not be assigned to any relocatable
23 classroom that is scheduled for elimination or replacement
24 with a permanent educational facility in the adopted 5-year
25 educational plant survey and in the district facilities work
26 program adopted under s. 235.185. Those relocatables clearly
27 identified and scheduled for replacement in a school board
28 adopted financially feasible 5-year district facilities work
29 program shall be counted at zero capacity at the time the work
30 program is adopted and approved by the school board. However,
31 if the district facilities work program is changed or altered
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1 and the relocatables are not replaced as scheduled in the work
2 program, they must then be reentered into the system for
3 counting at actual capacity. Relocatables may not be
4 perpetually added to the work program and continually extended
5 for purposes of circumventing the intent of this section. All
6 remaining relocatable classrooms, including those owned,
7 lease-purchased, or leased by the school district, shall be
8 counted at actual student capacity. The educational plant
9 survey shall identify the number of relocatable student
10 stations scheduled for replacement during the 5-year survey
11 period and the total dollar amount needed for that
12 replacement. All district educational plant surveys revised
13 after July 1, 1998, shall include information on leased space
14 used for conducting the district's instructional program, in
15 accordance with the recommendations of the department's report
16 authorized in s. 235.056. A definition of satisfactory
17 relocatable classrooms shall be established by rule of the
18 department.
19 2. Each survey of a special facility, joint-use
20 facility, or cooperative vocational education facility must be
21 based on capital outlay full-time equivalent student
22 enrollment data prepared by the department for school
23 districts, community colleges, colleges and universities by
24 the Division of Community Colleges for community colleges, and
25 by the Board of Regents for state universities. A survey of
26 space needs of a joint-use facility shall be based upon the
27 respective space needs of the school districts, community
28 colleges, colleges and universities, as appropriate.
29 Projections of a school district's facility space needs may
30 not exceed the norm space and occupant design criteria
31
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1 established by the State Requirements for Educational
2 Facilities.
3 3. Each community college's survey must reflect the
4 capacity of existing facilities as specified in the inventory
5 maintained by the Division of Community Colleges. Projections
6 of facility space needs must comply with standards for
7 determining space needs as specified by rule of the Florida
8 State Board of Education. The 5-year projection of capital
9 outlay student enrollment must be consistent with the annual
10 report of capital outlay full-time student enrollment prepared
11 by the Division of Community Colleges.
12 4. Each college and state university's survey must
13 reflect the capacity of existing facilities as specified in
14 the inventory maintained and validated by the Division of
15 Colleges and Universities Board of Regents. Projections of
16 facility space needs must be consistent with standards for
17 determining space needs approved by the Division of Colleges
18 and Universities Board of Regents. The projected capital
19 outlay full-time equivalent student enrollment must be
20 consistent with the 5-year planned enrollment cycle for the
21 State University System approved by the Division of Colleges
22 and Universities Board of Regents.
23 5. The district educational facilities plan
24 educational plant survey of a school district and the
25 educational plant survey of a, community college, or college
26 or state university may include space needs that deviate from
27 approved standards for determining space needs if the
28 deviation is justified by the district or institution and
29 approved by the department or the Board of Regents, as
30 appropriate, as necessary for the delivery of an approved
31 educational program.
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1 (c) Review and validation.--The Office of Educational
2 Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse department shall
3 review and validate the surveys of school districts, and
4 community colleges, and colleges and universities, and any
5 amendments thereto for compliance with the requirements of
6 this chapter and, when required by the State Constitution,
7 shall recommend those in compliance for approval by the
8 Florida State Board of Education.
9 (2) Only the superintendent, or the college president,
10 or the university president shall certify to the Office of
11 Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse
12 department a project's compliance with the requirements for
13 expenditure of PECO funds prior to release of funds.
14 (a) Upon request for release of PECO funds for
15 planning purposes, certification must be made to the Office of
16 Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse
17 department that the need for and location of the facility are
18 in compliance with the board-approved survey recommendations,
19 and that the project meets the definition of a PECO project
20 and the limiting criteria for expenditures of PECO funding,
21 and that the plan is consistent with the local government
22 comprehensive plan.
23 (b) Upon request for release of construction funds,
24 certification must be made to the Office of Educational
25 Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse department that the
26 need and location of the facility are in compliance with the
27 board-approved survey recommendations, that the project meets
28 the definition of a PECO project and the limiting criteria for
29 expenditures of PECO funding, and that the construction
30 documents meet the requirements of the Florida State Uniform
31
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1 Building Code for Educational Facilities Construction or other
2 applicable codes as authorized in this chapter.
3 Section 14. Subsection (3) of section 235.175, Florida
4 Statutes, is amended to read:
5 235.175 SMART schools; Classrooms First; legislative
6 purpose.--
7 (3) SCHOOL DISTRICT EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES PLAN WORK
8 PROGRAMS.--It is the purpose of the Legislature to create s.
9 235.185, requiring each school district annually to adopt an
10 educational facilities plan that provides an integrated
11 long-range facilities plan, including the survey of projected
12 needs and the a district facilities 5-year work program. The
13 purpose of the educational facilities plan district facilities
14 work program is to keep the school board, local governments,
15 and the public fully informed as to whether the district is
16 using sound policies and practices that meet the essential
17 needs of students and that warrant public confidence in
18 district operations. The educational facilities plan district
19 facilities work program will be monitored by the Office of
20 Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse, which
21 will also apply performance standards pursuant to s. 235.218.
22 Section 15. Section 235.18, Florida Statutes, is
23 amended to read:
24 235.18 Annual capital outlay budget.--Each board,
25 including the Board of Regents, shall, each year, adopt a
26 capital outlay budget for the ensuing year in order that the
27 capital outlay needs of the board for the entire year may be
28 well understood by the public. This capital outlay budget
29 shall be a part of the annual budget and shall be based upon
30 and in harmony with the board's capital outlay plan
31 educational plant and ancillary facilities plan. This budget
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1 shall designate the proposed capital outlay expenditures by
2 project for the year from all fund sources. The board may not
3 expend any funds on any project not included in the budget, as
4 amended. Each district school board must prepare its tentative
5 district education facilities plan facilities work program as
6 required by s. 235.185 before adopting the capital outlay
7 budget.
8 Section 16. Section 235.185, Florida Statutes, is
9 amended to read:
10 235.185 School district educational facilities plan
11 work program; definitions; preparation, adoption, and
12 amendment; long-term work programs.--
13 (1) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section, the term:
14 (a) "Adopted educational facilities plan" means the
15 comprehensive planning document that is adopted annually by
16 the district school board as provided in subsection (2) and
17 that contains the educational plant survey.
18 (a) "Adopted district facilities work program" means
19 the 5-year work program adopted by the district school board
20 as provided in subsection (3).
21 (b) "Tentative District facilities work program" means
22 the 5-year listing of capital outlay projects adopted by the
23 district school board as provided in subparagraph (2)(a)2. and
24 paragraph (2)(b) as part of the district educational
25 facilities plan, which is required in order to:
26 1. To Properly maintain the educational plant and
27 ancillary facilities of the district.
28 2. To Provide an adequate number of satisfactory
29 student stations for the projected student enrollment of the
30 district in K-12 programs in accordance with the goal in s.
31 235.062.
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1 (c) "Tentative educational facilities plan" means the
2 comprehensive planning document prepared annually by the
3 district school board and submitted to the Office of
4 Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse and the
5 affected general-purpose local governments.
6 (2) PREPARATION OF TENTATIVE DISTRICT EDUCATIONAL
7 FACILITIES PLAN WORK PROGRAM.--
8 (a) Annually, prior to the adoption of the district
9 school budget, each school board shall prepare a tentative
10 district educational facilities plan that includes long-range
11 planning for facilities needs over 5-year, 10-year, and
12 20-year periods. The plan must be developed in coordination
13 with the general-purpose local governments and be consistent
14 with the local government comprehensive plans. The school
15 board's plan for provision of new schools must meet the needs
16 of all growing communities in the district, ranging from small
17 rural communities to large urban cities. The plan must include
18 work program that includes:
19 1. Projected student populations apportioned
20 geographically at the local level. The projections must be
21 based on information produced by the demographic, revenue, and
22 education estimating conferences pursuant to s. 216.136, where
23 available, as modified by the district based on development
24 data and agreement with the local governments and the Office
25 of Educational Facilities and SMART Schools Clearinghouse. The
26 projections must be apportioned geographically with assistance
27 from the local governments using local development trend data
28 and the school district student enrollment data.
29 2. An inventory of existing school facilities. Any
30 anticipated expansions or closures of existing school sites
31 over the 5-year, 10-year, and 20-year periods must be
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1 identified. The inventory must include an assessment of areas
2 proximate to existing schools and identification of the need
3 for improvements to infrastructure, safety, including safe
4 access routes, and conditions in the community. The plan must
5 also provide a listing of major repairs and renovation
6 projects anticipated over the period of the plan.
7 3. Projections of facilities space needs, which may
8 not exceed the norm space and occupant design criteria
9 established in the State Requirements for Educational
10 Facilities.
11 4. Information on leased, loaned, and donated space
12 and relocatables used for conducting the district's
13 instructional programs.
14 5. The general location of public schools proposed to
15 be constructed over the 5-year, 10-year, and 20-year time
16 periods, including a listing of the proposed schools' site
17 acreage needs and anticipated capacity and maps showing the
18 general locations. The school board's identification of
19 general locations of future school sites must be based on the
20 school siting requirements of s. 163.3177(6)(a) and policies
21 in the comprehensive plan which provide guidance for
22 appropriate locations for school sites.
23 6. The identification of options deemed reasonable and
24 approved by the school board which reduce the need for
25 additional permanent student stations. Such options may
26 include, but need not be limited to:
27 a. Acceptable capacity;
28 b. Redistricting;
29 c. Busing;
30 d. Year-round schools;
31 e. Charter schools;
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1 f. Magnet schools; and
2 g. Public-private partnerships.
3 7. The criteria and method, jointly determined by the
4 local government and the school board, for determining the
5 impact of proposed development to public school capacity.
6 (b) The plan must also include a financially feasible
7 district facilities work program for a 5-year period. The work
8 program must include:
9 1. A schedule of major repair and renovation projects
10 necessary to maintain the educational facilities plant and
11 ancillary facilities of the district.
12 2. A schedule of capital outlay projects necessary to
13 ensure the availability of satisfactory student stations for
14 the projected student enrollment in K-12 programs. This
15 schedule shall consider:
16 a. The locations, capacities, and planned utilization
17 rates of current educational facilities of the district. The
18 capacity of existing satisfactory facilities, as reported in
19 the Florida Inventory of School Houses must be compared to the
20 capital outlay full-time-equivalent student enrollment as
21 determined by the department, including all enrollment used in
22 the calculation of the distribution formula in s. 235.435(3).
23 b. The proposed locations of planned facilities,
24 whether those locations are consistent with the comprehensive
25 plans of all affected local governments, and recommendations
26 for infrastructure and other improvements to land adjacent to
27 existing facilities. The provisions of ss. 235.19 and
28 235.193(12), (13), and (14) must be addressed for new
29 facilities planned within the first 3 years of the work plan,
30 as appropriate.
31
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1 c. Plans for the use and location of relocatable
2 facilities, leased facilities, and charter school facilities.
3 d. Plans for multitrack scheduling, grade level
4 organization, block scheduling, or other alternatives that
5 reduce the need for additional permanent student stations.
6 e. Information concerning average class size and
7 utilization rate by grade level within the district which that
8 will result if the tentative district facilities work program
9 is fully implemented. The average shall not include
10 exceptional student education classes or prekindergarten
11 classes.
12 f. The number and percentage of district students
13 planned to be educated in relocatable facilities during each
14 year of the tentative district facilities work program. For
15 determining future needs, student capacity may not be assigned
16 to any relocatable classroom that is scheduled for elimination
17 or replacement with a permanent educational facility in the
18 current year of the adopted district educational facilities
19 plan and in the district facilities work program adopted under
20 this section. Those relocatable classrooms clearly identified
21 and scheduled for replacement in a school-board-adopted,
22 financially feasible, 5-year district facilities work program
23 shall be counted at zero capacity at the time the work program
24 is adopted and approved by the school board. However, if the
25 district facilities work program is changed and the
26 relocatable classrooms are not replaced as scheduled in the
27 work program, the classrooms must be reentered into the system
28 and be counted at actual capacity. Relocatable classrooms may
29 not be perpetually added to the work program or continually
30 extended for purposes of circumventing this section. All
31 relocatable classrooms not identified and scheduled for
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1 replacement, including those owned, lease-purchased, or leased
2 by the school district, must be counted at actual student
3 capacity. The district educational facilities plan must
4 identify the number of relocatable student stations scheduled
5 for replacement during the 5-year survey period and the total
6 dollar amount needed for that replacement.
7 g. Plans for the closure of any school, including
8 plans for disposition of the facility or usage of facility
9 space, and anticipated revenues.
10 h. Projects for which capital outlay and debt service
11 funds accruing under s. 9(d), Art. XII of the State
12 Constitution are to be used shall be identified separately in
13 priority order on a project priority list within the district
14 facilities work program.
15 3. The projected cost for each project identified in
16 the tentative district facilities work program. For proposed
17 projects for new student stations, a schedule shall be
18 prepared comparing the planned cost and square footage for
19 each new student station, by elementary, middle, and high
20 school levels, to the low, average, and high cost of
21 facilities constructed throughout the state during the most
22 recent fiscal year for which data is available from the
23 Department of Education.
24 4. A schedule of estimated capital outlay revenues
25 from each currently approved source which is estimated to be
26 available for expenditure on the projects included in the
27 tentative district facilities work program.
28 5. A schedule indicating which projects included in
29 the tentative district facilities work program will be funded
30 from current revenues projected in subparagraph 4.
31
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1 6. A schedule of options for the generation of
2 additional revenues by the district for expenditure on
3 projects identified in the tentative district facilities work
4 program which are not funded under subparagraph 5. Additional
5 anticipated revenues may include effort index grants, SIT
6 Program awards, and Classrooms First funds.
7 (c)(b) To the extent available, the tentative district
8 educational facilities plan work program shall be based on
9 information produced by the demographic, revenue, and
10 education estimating conferences pursuant to s. 216.136.
11 (d)(c) Provision shall be made for public comment
12 concerning the tentative district educational facilities plan
13 work program.
14 (e) The district school board shall coordinate with
15 each affected local government to ensure consistency between
16 the tentative district educational facilities plan and the
17 local government comprehensive plans of the affected local
18 governments during the development of the tentative district
19 educational facilities plan.
20 (f) Commencing on October 1, 2002, and not less than
21 once every 5 years thereafter, the district school board shall
22 contract with a qualified, independent third party to conduct
23 a financial management and performance audit of the
24 educational planning and construction activities of the
25 district. An audit conducted by the Office of Program Policy
26 Analysis and Government Accountability and the Auditor General
27 pursuant to s. 230.23025 satisfies this requirement.
28 (3) SUBMITTAL OF TENTATIVE DISTRICT EDUCATIONAL
29 FACILITIES PLAN TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT.--The district school
30 board shall submit a copy of its tentative district
31 educational facilities plan to all affected local governments
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1 prior to adoption by the board. The affected local governments
2 shall review the tentative district educational facilities
3 plan and comment to the district school board on the
4 consistency of the plan with the local comprehensive plan,
5 whether a comprehensive plan amendment will be necessary for
6 any proposed educational facility, and whether the local
7 government supports a necessary comprehensive plan amendment.
8 If the local government does not support a comprehensive plan
9 amendment for a proposed educational facility, the matter
10 shall be resolved pursuant to the interlocal agreement when
11 required by ss. 163.3177(6)(h), 163.31777, and 235.193(2). The
12 process for the submittal and review shall be detailed in the
13 interlocal agreement when required pursuant to ss.
14 163.3177(6)(h), 163.31777, and 235.193(2).
15 (4)(3) ADOPTED DISTRICT EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES PLAN
16 WORK PROGRAM.--Annually, the district school board shall
17 consider and adopt the tentative district educational
18 facilities plan work program completed pursuant to subsection
19 (2). Upon giving proper public notice to the public and local
20 governments and opportunity for public comment, the district
21 school board may amend the plan program to revise the priority
22 of projects, to add or delete projects, to reflect the impact
23 of change orders, or to reflect the approval of new revenue
24 sources which may become available. The adopted district
25 educational facilities plan work program shall:
26 (a) Be a complete, balanced, and financially feasible
27 capital outlay financial plan for the district.
28 (b) Set forth the proposed commitments and planned
29 expenditures of the district to address the educational
30 facilities needs of its students and to adequately provide for
31 the maintenance of the educational plant and ancillary
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1 facilities, including safe access ways from neighborhoods to
2 schools.
3 (5)(4) EXECUTION OF ADOPTED DISTRICT EDUCATIONAL
4 FACILITIES PLAN WORK PROGRAM.--The first year of the adopted
5 district educational facilities plan work program shall
6 constitute the capital outlay budget required in s. 235.18.
7 The adopted district educational facilities plan work program
8 shall include the information required in subparagraphs
9 (2)(b)1., 2., and 3. (2)(a)1., 2., and 3., based upon projects
10 actually funded in the plan program.
11 (5) 10-YEAR AND 20-YEAR WORK PROGRAMS.--In addition to
12 the adopted district facilities work program covering the
13 5-year work program, the district school board shall adopt
14 annually a 10-year and a 20-year work program which include
15 the information set forth in subsection (2), but based upon
16 enrollment projections and facility needs for the 10-year and
17 20-year periods. It is recognized that the projections in the
18 10-year and 20-year timeframes are tentative and should be
19 used only for general planning purposes.
20 Section 17. Section 235.188, Florida Statutes, is
21 amended to read:
22 235.188 Full bonding required to participate in
23 programs.--Any district with unused bonding capacity in its
24 Capital Outlay and Debt Service Trust Fund allocation that
25 certifies in its district educational facilities plan work
26 program that it will not be able to meet all of its need for
27 new student stations within existing revenues must fully bond
28 its Capital Outlay and Debt Service Trust Fund allocation
29 before it may participate in Classrooms First, the School
30 Infrastructure Thrift (SIT) Program, or the Effort Index
31 Grants Program.
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1 Section 18. Section 235.19, Florida Statutes, is
2 amended to read:
3 235.19 Site planning and selection.--
4 (1) Before acquiring property for sites, each board
5 shall determine the location of proposed educational centers
6 or campuses for the board. In making this determination, the
7 board shall consider existing and anticipated site needs and
8 the most economical and practicable locations of sites. The
9 board shall coordinate with the long-range or comprehensive
10 plans of local, regional, and state governmental agencies to
11 assure the consistency compatibility of such plans with site
12 planning. Boards are encouraged to locate district educational
13 facilities schools proximate to urban residential areas to the
14 extent possible, and shall seek to collocate district
15 educational facilities schools with other public facilities,
16 such as parks, libraries, and community centers, to the extent
17 possible, and to encourage using elementary schools as focal
18 points for neighborhoods.
19 (2) Each new site selected must be adequate in size to
20 meet the educational needs of the students to be served on
21 that site by the original educational facility or future
22 expansions of the facility through renovation or the addition
23 of relocatables. The Commissioner of Education shall prescribe
24 by rule recommended sizes for new sites according to
25 categories of students to be housed and other appropriate
26 factors determined by the commissioner. Less-than-recommended
27 site sizes are allowed if the board, by a two-thirds majority,
28 recommends such a site and finds that it can provide an
29 appropriate and equitable educational program on the site.
30 (3) Sites recommended for purchase, or purchased, in
31 accordance with chapter 230 or chapter 240 must meet standards
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1 prescribed therein and such supplementary standards as the
2 commissioner prescribes to promote the educational interests
3 of the students. Each site must be well drained and suitable
4 for outdoor educational purposes as appropriate for the
5 educational program or collocated with facilities to serve
6 this purpose. As provided in s. 333.03, the site must not be
7 located within any path of flight approach of any airport.
8 Insofar as is practicable, the site must not adjoin a
9 right-of-way of any railroad or through highway and must not
10 be adjacent to any factory or other property from which noise,
11 odors, or other disturbances, or at which conditions, would be
12 likely to interfere with the educational program. To the
13 extent practicable, sites must be chosen which will provide
14 safe access from neighborhoods to schools.
15 (4) It shall be the responsibility of the board to
16 provide adequate notice to appropriate municipal, county,
17 regional, and state governmental agencies for requested
18 traffic control and safety devices so they can be installed
19 and operating prior to the first day of classes or to satisfy
20 itself that every reasonable effort has been made in
21 sufficient time to secure the installation and operation of
22 such necessary devices prior to the first day of classes. It
23 shall also be the responsibility of the board to review
24 annually traffic control and safety device needs and to
25 request all necessary changes indicated by such review.
26 (5) Each board may request county and municipal
27 governments to construct and maintain sidewalks and bicycle
28 trails within a 2-mile radius of each educational facility
29 within the jurisdiction of the local government. When a board
30 discovers or is aware of an existing hazard on or near a
31 public sidewalk, street, or highway within a 2-mile radius of
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1 a school site and the hazard endangers the life or threatens
2 the health or safety of students who walk, ride bicycles, or
3 are transported regularly between their homes and the school
4 in which they are enrolled, the board shall, within 24 hours
5 after discovering or becoming aware of the hazard, excluding
6 Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, report such hazard to
7 the governmental entity within the jurisdiction of which the
8 hazard is located. Within 5 days after receiving notification
9 by the board, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
10 holidays, the governmental entity shall investigate the
11 hazardous condition and either correct it or provide such
12 precautions as are practicable to safeguard students until the
13 hazard can be permanently corrected. However, if the
14 governmental entity that has jurisdiction determines upon
15 investigation that it is impracticable to correct the hazard,
16 or if the entity determines that the reported condition does
17 not endanger the life or threaten the health or safety of
18 students, the entity shall, within 5 days after notification
19 by the board, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
20 holidays, inform the board in writing of its reasons for not
21 correcting the condition. The governmental entity, to the
22 extent allowed by law, shall indemnify the board from any
23 liability with respect to accidents or injuries, if any,
24 arising out of the hazardous condition.
25 (6) If the school board and local government have
26 entered into an interlocal agreement pursuant to s. 235.193(2)
27 and either s. 163.3177(6)(h)4. or s. 163.31777 or have
28 developed a process to ensure consistency between the local
29 government comprehensive plan and the school district
30 educational facilities plan, site planning and selection must
31 be consistent with the interlocal agreements and the plans.
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1 Section 19. Section 235.193, Florida Statutes, is
2 amended to read:
3 235.193 Coordination of planning with local governing
4 bodies.--
5 (1) It is the policy of this state to require the
6 coordination of planning between boards and local governing
7 bodies to ensure that plans for the construction and opening
8 of public educational facilities are facilitated and
9 coordinated in time and place with plans for residential
10 development, concurrently with other necessary services. Such
11 planning shall include the integration of the educational
12 facilities plan plant survey and applicable policies and
13 procedures of a board with the local comprehensive plan and
14 land development regulations of local governments governing
15 bodies. The planning must include the consideration of
16 allowing students to attend the school located nearest their
17 homes when a new housing development is constructed near a
18 county boundary and it is more feasible to transport the
19 students a short distance to an existing facility in an
20 adjacent county than to construct a new facility or transport
21 students longer distances in their county of residence. The
22 planning must also consider the effects of the location of
23 public education facilities, including the feasibility of
24 keeping central city facilities viable, in order to encourage
25 central city redevelopment and the efficient use of
26 infrastructure and to discourage uncontrolled urban sprawl. In
27 addition, all parties to the planning process must consult
28 with state and local road departments to assist in
29 implementing the Safe Paths to Schools program administered by
30 the Department of Transportation.
31
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1 (2)(a) The school board, county, and nonexempt
2 municipalities located within the geographic area of a school
3 district shall enter into an interlocal agreement that jointly
4 establishes the specific ways in which the plans and processes
5 of the district school board and the local governments are to
6 be coordinated. The interlocal agreements shall be submitted
7 to the state land planning agency and the Office of
8 Educational Facilities and the SMART Schools Clearinghouse in
9 accordance with a schedule published by the state land
10 planning agency.
11 (b) The schedule must establish staggered due dates
12 for submission of interlocal agreements that are executed by
13 both the local government and district school board,
14 commencing on March 1, 2003, and concluding by December 1,
15 2004, and must set the same date for all governmental entities
16 within a school district. The schedule must begin with those
17 areas where both the number of districtwide capital-outlay
18 full-time-equivalent students equals 80 percent or more of the
19 current year's school capacity and the projected 5-year
20 student growth rate is 10 percent or greater.
21 (c) If the student population has declined over the
22 5-year period preceding the due date for submittal of an
23 updated interlocal agreement to the local government and the
24 district school board, the local government and district
25 school board may petition the state land planning agency for a
26 waiver of one or more of the requirements of subsection (3).
27 The waiver must be granted if the procedures called for in
28 subsection (3) are unnecessary because of the school
29 district's declining school age population, considering the
30 5-year work program in the educational facilities plan
31 prepared pursuant to s. 235.185. The state land planning
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1 agency may modify or revoke the waiver upon a finding that the
2 conditions upon which the waiver was granted no longer exist.
3 The district school board and local governments must submit an
4 interlocal agreement within 1 year after notification by the
5 state land planning agency that the conditions for a waiver no
6 longer exist.
7 (d) Interlocal agreements between local governments
8 and district school boards adopted pursuant to s. 163.3177
9 before the effective date of subsections (2)-(9) must be
10 updated and executed pursuant to the requirements of
11 subsections (2)-(9), if necessary. Amendments to interlocal
12 agreements adopted pursuant to subsections (2)-(9) must be
13 submitted to the state land planning agency within 30 days
14 after execution by the parties for review consistent with
15 subsections (3) and (4). Local governments and the district
16 school board in each school district are encouraged to adopt a
17 single interlocal agreement to which all join as parties. The
18 state land planning agency shall assemble and make available
19 model interlocal agreements meeting the requirements of
20 subsections (2)-(9) and shall notify local governments and,
21 jointly with the Department of Education, the district school
22 boards of the requirements of subsections (2)-(9), the dates
23 for compliance, and the sanctions for noncompliance. The state
24 land planning agency shall be available to informally review
25 proposed interlocal agreements. If the state land planning
26 agency has not received a proposed interlocal agreement for
27 informal review, the state land planning agency shall, at
28 least 60 days before the deadline for submission of the
29 executed agreement, renotify the local government and the
30 district school board of the upcoming deadline and the
31 potential for sanctions.
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1 (3) At a minimum, the interlocal agreement must
2 address the following issues:
3 (a) A process by which each local government and the
4 district school board agree and base their plans on consistent
5 projections of the amount, type, and distribution of
6 population growth and student enrollment. The geographic
7 distribution of jurisdiction-wide growth forecasts is a major
8 objective of the process.
9 (b) A process to coordinate and share information
10 relating to existing and planned public school facilities,
11 including school renovations and closures, and local
12 government plans for development and redevelopment.
13 (c) Participation by affected local governments with
14 the district school board in the process of determining school
15 closures, significant renovations to existing schools, and new
16 school site selection before land acquisition. Local
17 governments shall advise the district school board as to the
18 consistency of the proposed closure, renovation, or new site
19 with the local comprehensive plan, including appropriate
20 circumstances and criteria under which a district school board
21 may request an amendment to the comprehensive plan for school
22 siting.
23 (d) A process for determining the need for and timing
24 of on-site and off-site improvements to support new, proposed
25 expansion, or redevelopment of existing schools. The process
26 shall address identification of the party or parties
27 responsible for the improvements.
28 (e) A process for the school board to inform the local
29 government regarding school capacity. The capacity reporting
30 must be consistent with statutes and rules regarding
31 measurement of school facility capacity. It must also identify
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1 how the district school board will meet the public school
2 demand based on the facilities work program adopted pursuant
3 to s. 235.185.
4 (f) Participation of the local governments in the
5 preparation of the annual update to the school board's 5-year
6 district facilities work program and educational plant survey
7 prepared pursuant to s. 235.185.
8 (g) A process for determining where and how joint use
9 of either school board or local government facilities can be
10 shared for mutual benefit and efficiency.
11 (h) A procedure for the resolution of disputes between
12 the district school board and local governments, which may
13 include the dispute-resolution processes contained in chapters
14 164 and 186.
15 (i) An oversight process, including an opportunity for
16 public participation, for the implementation of the interlocal
17 agreement.
18
19 A signatory to the interlocal agreement may elect not to
20 include a provision meeting the requirements of paragraph (e).
21 Such a decision must occur after a public hearing on such
22 election, which may include the public hearing in which a
23 district school board or a local government adopts the
24 interlocal agreement. An interlocal agreement entered into
25 pursuant to this section must be consistent with the adopted
26 comprehensive plan and land development regulations of any
27 local government that is a signatory.
28 (4)(a) The Office of Educational Facilities and SMART
29 Schools Clearinghouse shall submit any comments or concerns
30 regarding the executed interlocal agreement to the state land
31 planning agency within 30 days after receipt of the executed
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1 interlocal agreement. The state land planning agency shall
2 review the executed interlocal agreement to determine whether
3 it is consistent with the requirements of subsection (3), the
4 adopted local government comprehensive plan, and other
5 requirements of law. Within 60 days after receipt of an
6 executed interlocal agreement, the state land planning agency
7 shall publish a notice of intent in the Florida Administrative
8 Weekly and shall post a copy of the notice on the agency's
9 Internet site. The notice of intent must state that the
10 interlocal agreement is consistent or inconsistent with the
11 requirements of subsection (3) and this subsection as
12 appropriate.
13 (b) The state land planning agency's notice is subject
14 to challenge under chapter 120; however, an affected person,
15 as defined in s. 163.3184(1)(a), has standing to initiate the
16 administrative proceeding, and this proceeding is the sole
17 means available to challenge the consistency of an interlocal
18 agreement required by this section with the criteria contained
19 in subsection (3) and this subsection. In order to have
20 standing, each person must have submitted oral or written
21 comments, recommendations, or objections to the local
22 government or the school board before the adoption of the
23 interlocal agreement by the district school board and local
24 government. The district school board and local governments
25 are parties to any such proceeding. In this proceeding, when
26 the state land planning agency finds the interlocal agreement
27 to be consistent with the criteria in subsection (3) and this
28 subsection, the interlocal agreement must be determined to be
29 consistent with subsection (3) and this subsection if the
30 local government's and school board's determination of
31 consistency is fairly debatable. When the state land planning
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1 agency finds the interlocal agreement to be inconsistent with
2 the requirements of subsection (3) and this subsection, the
3 local government's and school board's determination of
4 consistency shall be sustained unless it is shown by a
5 preponderance of the evidence that the interlocal agreement is
6 inconsistent.
7 (c) If the state land planning agency enters a final
8 order that finds that the interlocal agreement is inconsistent
9 with the requirements of subsection (3) or this subsection, it
10 shall forward it to the Administration Commission, which may
11 impose sanctions against the local government pursuant to s.
12 163.3184(11) and may impose sanctions against the district
13 school board by directing the Department of Education to
14 withhold an equivalent amount of funds for school construction
15 available pursuant to ss. 235.187, 235.216, 235.2195, and
16 235.42.
17 (5) If an executed interlocal agreement is not timely
18 submitted to the state land planning agency for review, the
19 state land planning agency shall, within 15 working days after
20 the deadline for submittal, issue to the local government and
21 the district school board a Notice to Show Cause why sanctions
22 should not be imposed for failure to submit an executed
23 interlocal agreement by the deadline established by the
24 agency. The agency shall forward the notice and the responses
25 to the Administration Commission, which may enter a final
26 order citing the failure to comply and imposing sanctions
27 against the local government and district school board by
28 directing the appropriate agencies to withhold at least 5
29 percent of state funds pursuant to s. 163.3184(11) and by
30 directing the Department of Education to withhold at least 5
31 percent of funds for school construction available pursuant to
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1 ss. 235.187, 235.216, 235.2195, and 235.42 from the district
2 school board.
3 (6) Any local government transmitting a public school
4 element to implement school concurrency pursuant to the
5 requirements of s. 163.3180 before the effective date of this
6 section is not required to amend the element or any interlocal
7 agreement to conform with the provisions of subsections
8 (2)-(8) if the element is adopted prior to or within 1 year
9 after the effective date of subsections (2)-(8) and remains in
10 effect.
11 (7) Except as provided in subsection (8),
12 municipalities having no established need for a new facility
13 and meeting the following criteria are exempt from the
14 requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4):
15 (a) The municipality has no public schools located
16 within its boundaries.
17 (b) The district school board's 5-year facilities work
18 program and the long-term 10-year and 20-year work programs,
19 as provided in s. 235.185, demonstrate that no new school
20 facility is needed in the municipality. In addition, the
21 district school board must verify in writing that no new
22 school facility will be needed in the municipality within the
23 5-year and 10-year timeframes.
24 (8) At the time of the evaluation and appraisal
25 report, each exempt municipality shall assess the extent to
26 which it continues to meet the criteria for exemption under
27 subsection (7). If the municipality continues to meet these
28 criteria and the district school board verifies in writing
29 that no new school facilities will be needed within the 5-year
30 and 10-year timeframes, the municipality shall continue to be
31 exempt from the interlocal-agreement requirement. Each
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1 municipality exempt under subsection (7) must comply with the
2 provisions of subsections (2)-(8) within 1 year after the
3 district school board proposes, in its 5-year district
4 facilities work program, a new school within the
5 municipality's jurisdiction.
6 (9)(2) A school board and the local governing body
7 must share and coordinate information related to existing and
8 planned public school facilities; proposals for development,
9 redevelopment, or additional development; and infrastructure
10 required to support the public school facilities, concurrent
11 with proposed development. A school board shall use
12 information produced by the demographic, revenue, and
13 education estimating conferences pursuant to s. 216.136
14 Department of Education enrollment projections when preparing
15 the 5-year district educational facilities plan work program
16 pursuant to s. 235.185, as modified and agreed to by the local
17 governments, when provided by interlocal agreement, and the
18 Office of Educational Facilities and SMART Schools
19 Clearinghouse, in and a school board shall affirmatively
20 demonstrate in the educational facilities report consideration
21 of local governments' population projections, to ensure that
22 the district educational facilities plan 5-year work program
23 not only reflects enrollment projections but also considers
24 applicable municipal and county growth and development
25 projections. The projections must be apportioned
26 geographically with assistance from the local governments
27 using local government trend data and the school district
28 student enrollment data. A school board is precluded from
29 siting a new school in a jurisdiction where the school board
30 has failed to provide the annual educational facilities plan
31
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1 report for the prior year required pursuant to s. 235.185 s.
2 235.194 unless the failure is corrected.
3 (10)(3) The location of public educational facilities
4 shall be consistent with the comprehensive plan of the
5 appropriate local governing body developed under part II of
6 chapter 163 and consistent with the plan's implementing land
7 development regulations, to the extent that the regulations
8 are not in conflict with or the subject regulated is not
9 specifically addressed by this chapter or the State Uniform
10 Building Code, unless mutually agreed by the local government
11 and the board.
12 (11)(4) To improve coordination relative to potential
13 educational facility sites, a board shall provide written
14 notice to the local government that has regulatory authority
15 over the use of the land consistent with an interlocal
16 agreement entered pursuant to subsections (2)-(8) at least 60
17 days prior to acquiring or leasing property that may be used
18 for a new public educational facility. The local government,
19 upon receipt of this notice, shall notify the board within 45
20 days if the site proposed for acquisition or lease is
21 consistent with the land use categories and policies of the
22 local government's comprehensive plan. This preliminary
23 notice does not constitute the local government's
24 determination of consistency pursuant to subsection (13) (5).
25 (12)(5) As early in the design phase as feasible and
26 consistent with an interlocal agreement entered pursuant to
27 subsections (2)-(8), but no later than 90 days before
28 commencing construction, the district school board shall in
29 writing request a determination of consistency with the local
30 government's comprehensive plan. but at least before
31 commencing construction of a new public educational facility,
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1 The local governing body that regulates the use of land shall
2 determine, in writing within 45 90 days after receiving the
3 necessary information and a school board's request for a
4 determination, whether a proposed public educational facility
5 is consistent with the local comprehensive plan and consistent
6 with local land development regulations, to the extent that
7 the regulations are not in conflict with or the subject
8 regulated is not specifically addressed by this chapter or the
9 State Uniform Building Code, unless mutually agreed. If the
10 determination is affirmative, school construction may commence
11 proceed and further local government approvals are not
12 required, except as provided in this section. Failure of the
13 local governing body to make a determination in writing within
14 90 days after a school board's request for a determination of
15 consistency shall be considered an approval of the school
16 board's application.
17 (13)(6) A local governing body may not deny the site
18 applicant based on adequacy of the site plan as it relates
19 solely to the needs of the school. If the site is consistent
20 with the comprehensive plan's future land use policies and
21 categories in which public schools are identified as allowable
22 uses, the local government may not deny the application but it
23 may impose reasonable development standards and conditions in
24 accordance with s. 235.34(1) and consider the site plan and
25 its adequacy as it relates to environmental concerns, health,
26 safety and welfare, and effects on adjacent property.
27 Standards and conditions may not be imposed which conflict
28 with those established in this chapter or the Florida State
29 Uniform Building Code, unless mutually agreed and consistent
30 with the interlocal agreement required by subsections (2)-(8).
31
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1 (14)(7) This section does not prohibit a local
2 governing body and district school board from agreeing and
3 establishing an alternative process for reviewing a proposed
4 educational facility and site plan, and offsite impacts,
5 pursuant to an interlocal agreement adopted in accordance with
6 subsections (2)-(8).
7 (15)(8) Existing schools shall be considered
8 consistent with the applicable local government comprehensive
9 plan adopted under part II of chapter 163. The collocation of
10 a new proposed public educational facility with an existing
11 public educational facility, or the expansion of an existing
12 public educational facility is not inconsistent with the local
13 comprehensive plan, if the site is consistent with the
14 comprehensive plan's future land use policies and categories
15 in which public schools are identified as allowable uses, and
16 levels of service adopted by the local government for any
17 facilities affected by the proposed location for the new
18 facility are maintained. If a board submits an application to
19 expand an existing school site, the local governing body may
20 impose reasonable development standards and conditions on the
21 expansion only, and in a manner consistent with s. 235.34(1).
22 Standards and conditions may not be imposed which conflict
23 with those established in this chapter or the Florida State
24 Uniform Building Code, unless mutually agreed. Local
25 government review or approval is not required for:
26 (a) The placement of temporary or portable classroom
27 facilities; or
28 (b) Proposed renovation or construction on existing
29 school sites, with the exception of construction that changes
30 the primary use of a facility, includes stadiums, or results
31
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1 in a greater than 5 percent increase in student capacity, or
2 as mutually agreed.
3 Section 20. Section 235.194, Florida Statutes, is
4 repealed.
5 Section 21. Section 235.218, Florida Statutes, is
6 amended to read:
7 235.218 School district educational facilities plan
8 work program performance and productivity standards;
9 development; measurement; application.--
10 (1) The Office of Educational Facilities and SMART
11 Schools Clearinghouse shall develop and adopt measures for
12 evaluating the performance and productivity of school district
13 educational facilities plans work programs. The measures may
14 be both quantitative and qualitative and must, to the maximum
15 extent practical, assess those factors that are within the
16 districts' control. The measures must, at a minimum, assess
17 performance in the following areas:
18 (a) Frugal production of high-quality projects.
19 (b) Efficient finance and administration.
20 (c) Optimal school and classroom size and utilization
21 rate.
22 (d) Safety.
23 (e) Core facility space needs and cost-effective
24 capacity improvements that consider demographic projections.
25 (f) Level of district local effort.
26 (2) The office clearinghouse shall establish annual
27 performance objectives and standards that can be used to
28 evaluate district performance and productivity.
29 (3) The office clearinghouse shall conduct ongoing
30 evaluations of district educational facilities program
31 performance and productivity, using the measures adopted under
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1 this section. If, using these measures, the office
2 clearinghouse finds that a district failed to perform
3 satisfactorily, the office clearinghouse must recommend to the
4 district school board actions to be taken to improve the
5 district's performance.
6 Section 22. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
7 235.2197, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
8 235.2197 Florida Frugal Schools Program.--
9 (2) The "Florida Frugal Schools Program" is created to
10 recognize publicly each district school board that agrees to
11 build frugal yet functional educational facilities and that
12 implements "best financial management practices" when
13 planning, constructing, and operating educational facilities.
14 The Florida State Board of Education shall recognize a
15 district school board as having a Florida Frugal Schools
16 Program if the district requests recognition and satisfies two
17 or more of the following criteria:
18 (c) The district school board submits a plan to the
19 Commissioner of Education certifying how the revenues
20 generated by the levy of the capital outlay sales surtax
21 authorized by s. 212.055(6) will be spent. The plan must
22 include at least the following assurances about the use of the
23 proceeds of the surtax and any accrued interest:
24 1. The district school board will use the surtax and
25 accrued interest only for the fixed capital outlay purposes
26 identified by s. 212.055(6)(d) which will reduce school
27 overcrowding that has been validated by the Department of
28 Education, or for the repayment of bonded indebtedness related
29 to such capital outlay purposes.
30 2. The district school board will not spend the surtax
31 or accrued interest to pay for operational expenses or for the
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1 construction, renovation, or remodeling of any administrative
2 building or any other ancillary facility that is not directly
3 related to the instruction, feeding, or transportation of
4 students enrolled in the public schools.
5 3. The district school board's use of the surtax and
6 accrued interest will be consistent with the best financial
7 management practices identified and approved under s.
8 230.23025.
9 4. The district school board will apply the
10 educational facilities contracting and construction techniques
11 authorized by s. 235.211 or other construction management
12 techniques to reduce the cost of educational facilities.
13 5. The district school board will discontinue the
14 surtax levy when the district has provided the
15 survey-recommended educational facilities that were determined
16 to be necessary to relieve school overcrowding; when the
17 district has satisfied any bonded indebtedness incurred for
18 such educational facilities; or when the district's other
19 sources of capital outlay funds are sufficient to provide such
20 educational facilities, whichever occurs first.
21 6. The district school board will use any excess
22 surtax collections or accrued interest to reduce the
23 discretionary outlay millage levied under s. 236.25(2).
24 Section 23. Section 235.321, Florida Statutes, is
25 amended to read:
26 235.321 Changes in construction requirements after
27 award of contract.--The board may, at its option and by
28 written policy duly adopted and entered in its official
29 minutes, authorize the superintendent or president or other
30 designated individual to approve change orders in the name of
31 the board for preestablished amounts. Approvals shall be for
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1 the purpose of expediting the work in progress and shall be
2 reported to the board and entered in its official minutes. For
3 accountability, the school district shall monitor and report
4 the impact of change orders on its district educational
5 facilities plan work program pursuant to s. 235.185.
6 Section 24. Paragraph (d) of subsection (5) of section
7 236.25, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
8 236.25 District school tax.--
9 (5)
10 (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
11 subsection, if through its adopted educational facilities plan
12 work program a district has clearly identified the need for an
13 ancillary plant, has provided opportunity for public input as
14 to the relative value of the ancillary plant versus an
15 educational plant, and has obtained public approval, the
16 district may use revenue generated by the millage levy
17 authorized by subsection (2) for the acquisition,
18 construction, renovation, remodeling, maintenance, or repair
19 of an ancillary plant.
20
21 A district that violates these expenditure restrictions shall
22 have an equal dollar reduction in funds appropriated to the
23 district under s. 236.081 in the fiscal year following the
24 audit citation. The expenditure restrictions do not apply to
25 any school district that certifies to the Commissioner of
26 Education that all of the district's instructional space needs
27 for the next 5 years can be met from capital outlay sources
28 that the district reasonably expects to receive during the
29 next 5 years or from alternative scheduling or construction,
30 leasing, rezoning, or technological methodologies that exhibit
31 sound management.
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1 Section 25. Subsection (12), paragraph (c) of
2 subsection (15) and subsections (18) and (19) of section
3 380.06, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
4 380.06 Developments of regional impact.--
5 (12) REGIONAL REPORTS.--
6 (a) Within 50 days after receipt of the notice of
7 public hearing required in paragraph (11)(c), the regional
8 planning agency, if one has been designated for the area
9 including the local government, shall prepare and submit to
10 the local government a report and recommendations on the
11 regional impact of the proposed development. In preparing its
12 report and recommendations, the regional planning agency shall
13 identify regional issues based upon the following review
14 criteria and make recommendations to the local government on
15 these regional issues, specifically considering whether, and
16 the extent to which:
17 1. The development will have a favorable or
18 unfavorable impact on state or regional resources or
19 facilities identified in the applicable state or regional
20 plans. For the purposes of this subsection, "applicable state
21 plan" means the state comprehensive plan. For the purposes of
22 this subsection, "applicable regional plan" means an adopted
23 comprehensive regional policy plan until the adoption of a
24 strategic regional policy plan pursuant to s. 186.508, and
25 thereafter means an adopted strategic regional policy plan.
26 2. The development will significantly impact adjacent
27 jurisdictions. At the request of the appropriate local
28 government, regional planning agencies may also review and
29 comment upon issues that affect only the requesting local
30 government.
31
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1 3. As one of the issues considered in the review in
2 subparagraphs 1. and 2., the development will favorably or
3 adversely affect the ability of people to find adequate
4 housing reasonably accessible to their places of employment.
5 The determination should take into account information on
6 factors that are relevant to the availability of reasonably
7 accessible adequate housing. Adequate housing means housing
8 that is available for occupancy and that is not substandard.
9 (b) At the request of the regional planning agency,
10 other appropriate agencies shall review the proposed
11 development and shall prepare reports and recommendations on
12 issues that are clearly within the jurisdiction of those
13 agencies. Such agency reports shall become part of the
14 regional planning agency report; however, the regional
15 planning agency may attach dissenting views. When water
16 management district and Department of Environmental Protection
17 permits have been issued pursuant to chapter 373 or chapter
18 403, the regional planning council may comment on the regional
19 implications of the permits but may not offer conflicting
20 recommendations.
21 (c) The regional planning agency shall afford the
22 developer or any substantially affected party reasonable
23 opportunity to present evidence to the regional planning
24 agency head relating to the proposed regional agency report
25 and recommendations.
26 (d) When the location of a proposed development
27 involves land within the boundaries of multiple regional
28 planning councils, the state land planning agency shall
29 designate a lead regional planning council. The lead regional
30 planning council shall prepare the regional report.
31 (15) LOCAL GOVERNMENT DEVELOPMENT ORDER.--
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1 (c) The development order shall include findings of
2 fact and conclusions of law consistent with subsections (13)
3 and (14). The development order:
4 1. Shall specify the monitoring procedures and the
5 local official responsible for assuring compliance by the
6 developer with the development order.
7 2. Shall establish compliance dates for the
8 development order, including a deadline for commencing
9 physical development and for compliance with conditions of
10 approval or phasing requirements, and shall include a
11 termination date that reasonably reflects the time required to
12 complete the development.
13 3. Shall establish a date until which the local
14 government agrees that the approved development of regional
15 impact shall not be subject to downzoning, unit density
16 reduction, or intensity reduction, unless the local government
17 can demonstrate that substantial changes in the conditions
18 underlying the approval of the development order have occurred
19 or the development order was based on substantially inaccurate
20 information provided by the developer or that the change is
21 clearly established by local government to be essential to the
22 public health, safety, or welfare.
23 4. Shall specify the requirements for the biennial
24 annual report designated under subsection (18), including the
25 date of submission, parties to whom the report is submitted,
26 and contents of the report, based upon the rules adopted by
27 the state land planning agency. Such rules shall specify the
28 scope of any additional local requirements that may be
29 necessary for the report.
30
31
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1 5. May specify the types of changes to the development
2 which shall require submission for a substantial deviation
3 determination under subsection (19).
4 6. Shall include a legal description of the property.
5 (18) BIENNIAL ANNUAL REPORTS.--The developer shall
6 submit a biennial an annual report on the development of
7 regional impact to the local government, the regional planning
8 agency, the state land planning agency, and all affected
9 permit agencies in alternate years on the date specified in
10 the development order, unless the development order by its
11 terms requires more frequent monitoring. If the biennial
12 annual report is not received, the regional planning agency or
13 the state land planning agency shall notify the local
14 government. If the local government does not receive the
15 biennial annual report or receives notification that the
16 regional planning agency or the state land planning agency has
17 not received the report, the local government shall request in
18 writing that the developer submit the report within 30 days.
19 The failure to submit the report after 30 days shall result in
20 the temporary suspension of the development order by the local
21 government. If no additional development pursuant to the
22 development order has occurred since the submission of the
23 previous report, a letter from the developer stating that no
24 development has occurred satisfies the requirement for a
25 report. Development orders that require annual reports may be
26 amended to require biennial reports at the option of the local
27 government.
28 (19) SUBSTANTIAL DEVIATIONS.--
29 (a) Any proposed change to a previously approved
30 development which creates a reasonable likelihood of
31 additional regional impact, or any type of regional impact
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1 created by the change not previously reviewed by the regional
2 planning agency, shall constitute a substantial deviation and
3 shall cause the development to be subject to further
4 development-of-regional-impact review. There are a variety of
5 reasons why a developer may wish to propose changes to an
6 approved development of regional impact, including changed
7 market conditions. The procedures set forth in this
8 subsection are for that purpose.
9 (b) Any proposed change to a previously approved
10 development of regional impact or development order condition
11 which, either individually or cumulatively with other changes,
12 exceeds any of the following criteria shall constitute a
13 substantial deviation and shall cause the development to be
14 subject to further development-of-regional-impact review
15 without the necessity for a finding of same by the local
16 government:
17 1. An increase in the number of parking spaces at an
18 attraction or recreational facility by 5 percent or 300
19 spaces, whichever is greater, or an increase in the number of
20 spectators that may be accommodated at such a facility by 5
21 percent or 1,000 spectators, whichever is greater.
22 2. A new runway, a new terminal facility, a 25-percent
23 lengthening of an existing runway, or a 25-percent increase in
24 the number of gates of an existing terminal, but only if the
25 increase adds at least three additional gates. However, if an
26 airport is located in two counties, a 10-percent lengthening
27 of an existing runway or a 20-percent increase in the number
28 of gates of an existing terminal is the applicable criteria.
29 3. An increase in the number of hospital beds by 5
30 percent or 60 beds, whichever is greater.
31
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1 4. An increase in industrial development area by 5
2 percent or 32 acres, whichever is greater.
3 5. An increase in the average annual acreage mined by
4 5 percent or 10 acres, whichever is greater, or an increase in
5 the average daily water consumption by a mining operation by 5
6 percent or 300,000 gallons, whichever is greater. An increase
7 in the size of the mine by 5 percent or 750 acres, whichever
8 is less.
9 6. An increase in land area for office development by
10 5 percent or 6 acres, whichever is greater, or an increase of
11 gross floor area of office development by 5 percent or 60,000
12 gross square feet, whichever is greater.
13 7. An increase in the storage capacity for chemical or
14 petroleum storage facilities by 5 percent, 20,000 barrels, or
15 7 million pounds, whichever is greater.
16 8. An increase of development at a waterport of wet
17 storage for 20 watercraft, dry storage for 30 watercraft, or
18 wet/dry storage for 60 watercraft in an area identified in the
19 state marina siting plan as an appropriate site for additional
20 waterport development or a 5-percent increase in watercraft
21 storage capacity, whichever is greater.
22 9. An increase in the number of dwelling units by 5
23 percent or 50 dwelling units, whichever is greater.
24 10. An increase in commercial development by 6 acres
25 of land area or by 50,000 square feet of gross floor area, or
26 of parking spaces provided for customers for 300 cars or a
27 5-percent increase of either any of these, whichever is
28 greater.
29 11. An increase in hotel or motel facility units by 5
30 percent or 75 units, whichever is greater.
31
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1 12. An increase in a recreational vehicle park area by
2 5 percent or 100 vehicle spaces, whichever is less.
3 13. A decrease in the area set aside for open space of
4 5 percent or 20 acres, whichever is less.
5 14. A proposed increase to an approved multiuse
6 development of regional impact where the sum of the increases
7 of each land use as a percentage of the applicable substantial
8 deviation criteria is equal to or exceeds 100 percent. The
9 percentage of any decrease in the amount of open space shall
10 be treated as an increase for purposes of determining when 100
11 percent has been reached or exceeded.
12 15. A 15-percent increase in the number of external
13 vehicle trips generated by the development above that which
14 was projected during the original
15 development-of-regional-impact review.
16 16. Any change which would result in development of
17 any area which was specifically set aside in the application
18 for development approval or in the development order for
19 preservation or special protection of endangered or threatened
20 plants or animals designated as endangered, threatened, or
21 species of special concern and their habitat, primary dunes,
22 or archaeological and historical sites designated as
23 significant by the Division of Historical Resources of the
24 Department of State. The further refinement of such areas by
25 survey shall be considered under sub-subparagraph (e)5.b.
26
27 The substantial deviation numerical standards in subparagraphs
28 4., 6., 10., 14., excluding residential uses, and 15., are
29 increased by 100 percent for a project certified under s.
30 403.973 which creates jobs and meets criteria established by
31 the Office of Tourism, Trade, and Economic Development as to
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1 its impact on an area's economy, employment, and prevailing
2 wage and skill levels. The substantial deviation numerical
3 standards in subparagraphs 4., 6., 9., 10., 11., and 14. are
4 increased by 50 percent for a project located wholly within an
5 urban infill and redevelopment area designated on the
6 applicable adopted local comprehensive plan future land use
7 map and not located within the coastal high hazard area.
8 (c) An extension of the date of buildout of a
9 development, or any phase thereof, by 7 or more years shall be
10 presumed to create a substantial deviation subject to further
11 development-of-regional-impact review. An extension of the
12 date of buildout, or any phase thereof, of 5 years or more but
13 less than 7 years shall be presumed not to create a
14 substantial deviation. These presumptions may be rebutted by
15 clear and convincing evidence at the public hearing held by
16 the local government. An extension of less than 5 years is
17 not a substantial deviation. For the purpose of calculating
18 when a buildout, phase, or termination date has been exceeded,
19 the time shall be tolled during the pendency of administrative
20 or judicial proceedings relating to development permits. Any
21 extension of the buildout date of a project or a phase thereof
22 shall automatically extend the commencement date of the
23 project, the termination date of the development order, the
24 expiration date of the development of regional impact, and the
25 phases thereof by a like period of time.
26 (d) A change in the plan of development of an approved
27 development of regional impact resulting from requirements
28 imposed by the Department of Environmental Protection or any
29 water management district created by s. 373.069 or any of
30 their successor agencies or by any appropriate federal
31 regulatory agency shall be submitted to the local government
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1 pursuant to this subsection. The change shall be presumed not
2 to create a substantial deviation subject to further
3 development-of-regional-impact review. The presumption may be
4 rebutted by clear and convincing evidence at the public
5 hearing held by the local government.
6 (e)1. A proposed change which, either individually or,
7 if there were previous changes, cumulatively with those
8 changes, is equal to or exceeds 40 percent of any numerical
9 criterion in subparagraphs (b)1.-15., but which does not
10 exceed such criterion, shall be presumed not to create a
11 substantial deviation subject to further
12 development-of-regional-impact review. The presumption may be
13 rebutted by clear and convincing evidence at the public
14 hearing held by the local government pursuant to subparagraph
15 (f)5.
16 2. Except for a development order rendered pursuant to
17 subsection (22) or subsection (25), a proposed change to a
18 development order that individually or cumulatively with any
19 previous change is less than 40 percent of any numerical
20 criterion contained in subparagraphs (b)1.-15. and does not
21 exceed any other criterion, or that involves an extension of
22 the buildout date of a development, or any phase thereof, of
23 less than 5 years is not a substantial deviation, is not
24 subject to the public hearing requirements of subparagraph
25 (f)3., and is not subject to a determination pursuant to
26 subparagraph (f)5. Notice of the proposed change shall be
27 made to the regional planning council and the state land
28 planning agency. Such notice shall include a description of
29 previous individual changes made to the development, including
30 changes previously approved by the local government, and shall
31 include appropriate amendments to the development order.
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1 2. The following changes, individually or cumulatively
2 with any previous changes, are not substantial deviations:
3 a. Changes in the name of the project, developer,
4 owner, or monitoring official.
5 b. Changes to a setback that do not affect noise
6 buffers, environmental protection or mitigation areas, or
7 archaeological or historical resources.
8 c. Changes to minimum lot sizes.
9 d. Changes in the configuration of internal roads that
10 do not affect external access points.
11 e. Changes to the building design or orientation that
12 stay approximately within the approved area designated for
13 such building and parking lot, and which do not affect
14 historical buildings designated as significant by the Division
15 of Historical Resources of the Department of State.
16 f. Changes to increase the acreage in the development,
17 provided that no development is proposed on the acreage to be
18 added.
19 g. Changes to eliminate an approved land use, provided
20 that there are no additional regional impacts.
21 h. Changes required to conform to permits approved by
22 any federal, state, or regional permitting agency, provided
23 that these changes do not create additional regional impacts.
24 i. Any other change which the state land planning
25 agency agrees in writing is similar in nature, impact, or
26 character to the changes enumerated in sub-subparagraphs a.-h.
27 and which does not create the likelihood of any additional
28 regional impact.
29
30 This subsection does not require a development order amendment
31 for any change listed in sub-subparagraphs a.-i. unless such
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1 issue is addressed either in the existing development order or
2 in the application for development approval, but, in the case
3 of the application, only if, and in the manner in which, the
4 application is incorporated in the development order.
5 3. Except for the change authorized by
6 sub-subparagraph 2.f., any addition of land not previously
7 reviewed or any change not specified in paragraph (b) or
8 paragraph (c) shall be presumed to create a substantial
9 deviation. This presumption may be rebutted by clear and
10 convincing evidence.
11 4. Any submittal of a proposed change to a previously
12 approved development shall include a description of individual
13 changes previously made to the development, including changes
14 previously approved by the local government. The local
15 government shall consider the previous and current proposed
16 changes in deciding whether such changes cumulatively
17 constitute a substantial deviation requiring further
18 development-of-regional-impact review.
19 5. The following changes to an approved development of
20 regional impact shall be presumed to create a substantial
21 deviation. Such presumption may be rebutted by clear and
22 convincing evidence.
23 a. A change proposed for 15 percent or more of the
24 acreage to a land use not previously approved in the
25 development order. Changes of less than 15 percent shall be
26 presumed not to create a substantial deviation.
27 b. Except for the types of uses listed in subparagraph
28 (b)16., any change which would result in the development of
29 any area which was specifically set aside in the application
30 for development approval or in the development order for
31 preservation, buffers, or special protection, including
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1 habitat for plant and animal species, archaeological and
2 historical sites, dunes, and other special areas.
3 c. Notwithstanding any provision of paragraph (b) to
4 the contrary, a proposed change consisting of simultaneous
5 increases and decreases of at least two of the uses within an
6 authorized multiuse development of regional impact which was
7 originally approved with three or more uses specified in s.
8 380.0651(3)(c), (d), (f), and (g) and residential use.
9 (f)1. The state land planning agency shall establish
10 by rule standard forms for submittal of proposed changes to a
11 previously approved development of regional impact which may
12 require further development-of-regional-impact review. At a
13 minimum, the standard form shall require the developer to
14 provide the precise language that the developer proposes to
15 delete or add as an amendment to the development order.
16 2. The developer shall submit, simultaneously, to the
17 local government, the regional planning agency, and the state
18 land planning agency the request for approval of a proposed
19 change.
20 3. No sooner than 30 days but no later than 45 days
21 after submittal by the developer to the local government, the
22 state land planning agency, and the appropriate regional
23 planning agency, the local government shall give 15 days'
24 notice and schedule a public hearing to consider the change
25 that the developer asserts does not create a substantial
26 deviation. This public hearing shall be held within 90 days
27 after submittal of the proposed changes, unless that time is
28 extended by the developer.
29 4. The appropriate regional planning agency or the
30 state land planning agency shall review the proposed change
31 and, no later than 45 days after submittal by the developer of
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1 the proposed change, unless that time is extended by the
2 developer, and prior to the public hearing at which the
3 proposed change is to be considered, shall advise the local
4 government in writing whether it objects to the proposed
5 change, shall specify the reasons for its objection, if any,
6 and shall provide a copy to the developer. A change which is
7 subject to the substantial deviation criteria specified in
8 sub-subparagraph (e)5.c. shall not be subject to this
9 requirement.
10 5. At the public hearing, the local government shall
11 determine whether the proposed change requires further
12 development-of-regional-impact review. The provisions of
13 paragraphs (a) and (e), the thresholds set forth in paragraph
14 (b), and the presumptions set forth in paragraphs (c) and (d)
15 and subparagraph (e)3. subparagraphs (e)1. and 3. shall be
16 applicable in determining whether further
17 development-of-regional-impact review is required.
18 6. If the local government determines that the
19 proposed change does not require further
20 development-of-regional-impact review and is otherwise
21 approved, or if the proposed change is not subject to a
22 hearing and determination pursuant to subparagraphs 3. and 5.
23 and is otherwise approved, the local government shall issue an
24 amendment to the development order incorporating the approved
25 change and conditions of approval relating to the change. The
26 decision of the local government to approve, with or without
27 conditions, or to deny the proposed change that the developer
28 asserts does not require further review shall be subject to
29 the appeal provisions of s. 380.07. However, the state land
30 planning agency may not appeal the local government decision
31 if it did not comply with subparagraph 4. The state land
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1 planning agency may not appeal a change to a development order
2 made pursuant to subparagraph (e)1. or 2. for developments of
3 regional impact approved after January 1, 1980, unless the
4 change would result in a significant impact to a regionally
5 significant archaeological, historical, or natural resource
6 not previously identified in the original
7 development-of-regional-impact review.
8 (g) If a proposed change requires further
9 development-of-regional-impact review pursuant to this
10 section, the review shall be conducted subject to the
11 following additional conditions:
12 1. The development-of-regional-impact review conducted
13 by the appropriate regional planning agency shall address only
14 those issues raised by the proposed change except as provided
15 in subparagraph 2.
16 2. The regional planning agency shall consider, and
17 the local government shall determine whether to approve,
18 approve with conditions, or deny the proposed change as it
19 relates to the entire development. If the local government
20 determines that the proposed change, as it relates to the
21 entire development, is unacceptable, the local government
22 shall deny the change.
23 3. If the local government determines that the
24 proposed change, as it relates to the entire development,
25 should be approved, any new conditions in the amendment to the
26 development order issued by the local government shall address
27 only those issues raised by the proposed change.
28 4. Development within the previously approved
29 development of regional impact may continue, as approved,
30 during the development-of-regional-impact review in those
31
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1 portions of the development which are not affected by the
2 proposed change.
3 (h) When further development-of-regional-impact review
4 is required because a substantial deviation has been
5 determined or admitted by the developer, the amendment to the
6 development order issued by the local government shall be
7 consistent with the requirements of subsection (15) and shall
8 be subject to the hearing and appeal provisions of s. 380.07.
9 The state land planning agency or the appropriate regional
10 planning agency need not participate at the local hearing in
11 order to appeal a local government development order issued
12 pursuant to this paragraph.
13 Section 26. Paragraphs (d) and (f) of subsection (3)
14 of section 380.0651, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
15 380.0651 Statewide guidelines and standards.--
16 (3) The following statewide guidelines and standards
17 shall be applied in the manner described in s. 380.06(2) to
18 determine whether the following developments shall be required
19 to undergo development-of-regional-impact review:
20 (d) Office development.--Any proposed office building
21 or park operated under common ownership, development plan, or
22 management that:
23 1. Encompasses 300,000 or more square feet of gross
24 floor area; or
25 2. Has a total site size of 30 or more acres; or
26 2.3. Encompasses more than 600,000 square feet of
27 gross floor area in a county with a population greater than
28 500,000 and only in a geographic area specifically designated
29 as highly suitable for increased threshold intensity in the
30 approved local comprehensive plan and in the strategic
31 regional policy plan.
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1 (f) Retail and service development.--Any proposed
2 retail, service, or wholesale business establishment or group
3 of establishments which deals primarily with the general
4 public onsite, operated under one common property ownership,
5 development plan, or management that:
6 1. Encompasses more than 400,000 square feet of gross
7 area; or
8 2. Occupies more than 40 acres of land; or
9 2.3. Provides parking spaces for more than 2,500 cars.
10 Section 27. It is the intent of the Legislature that
11 section 5 or section 19 of this act shall not affect the
12 outcome of any litigation pending on the effective date of
13 this act, including any future appeals. It is the further
14 intent of the Legislature that section 5 or section 19 of this
15 act do not serve as legal authority support of any party to
16 such litigation or any appeal thereof.
17 Section 28. The Legislature finds that the integration
18 of the growth management system and the planning of public
19 educational facilities is a matter of great public importance.
20 Section 29. This act shall take effect upon becoming a
21 law.
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