Florida Senate - 2012                          SENATOR AMENDMENT
       Bill No. CS/CS/CS/HB 599, 1st Eng.
       
       
       
       
       
       
                                Barcode 689242                          
       
                              LEGISLATIVE ACTION                        
                    Senate             .             House              
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                Floor: 2/AD/2R         .         Floor: SENA2/C         
             03/09/2012 11:01 PM       .      03/09/2012 11:51 PM       
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       Senator Dean moved the following:
       
    1         Senate Amendment (with title amendment)
    2  
    3         Delete line 567
    4  and insert:
    5         Section 6. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (5) of
    6  section 20.23, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
    7         20.23 Department of Transportation.—There is created a
    8  Department of Transportation which shall be a decentralized
    9  agency.
   10         (5)(a) The operations of the department shall be organized
   11  into seven districts, each headed by a district secretary, and a
   12  turnpike enterprise and a rail enterprise, each enterprise
   13  headed by an executive director. The district secretaries and
   14  the executive directors shall be registered professional
   15  engineers in accordance with the provisions of chapter 471 or
   16  the laws of another state, or, in lieu of professional engineer
   17  registration, a district secretary or executive director may
   18  hold an advanced degree in an appropriate related discipline,
   19  such as a Master of Business Administration. The headquarters of
   20  the districts shall be located in Polk, Columbia, Washington,
   21  Broward, Volusia, Miami-Dade, and Hillsborough Counties. The
   22  headquarters of the turnpike enterprise shall be located in
   23  Orange County. The headquarters of the rail enterprise shall be
   24  located in Leon County. In order to provide for efficient
   25  operations and to expedite the decisionmaking process, the
   26  department shall provide for maximum decentralization to the
   27  districts.
   28         (b) Each district secretary may appoint up to three
   29  district directors or, until July 1, 2005, each district
   30  secretary may appoint up to four district directors. These
   31  positions are exempt from part II of chapter 110.
   32         Section 7. Paragraph (c) of subsection (4) of section
   33  206.41, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   34         206.41 State taxes imposed on motor fuel.—
   35         (4)
   36         (c)1. Any person who uses any motor fuel for agricultural,
   37  aquacultural, commercial fishing, or commercial aviation
   38  purposes on which fuel the tax imposed by paragraph (1)(e),
   39  paragraph (1)(f), or paragraph (1)(g) has been paid is entitled
   40  to a refund of such tax.
   41         2. For the purposes of this paragraph, “agricultural and
   42  aquacultural purposes” means motor fuel used in any tractor,
   43  vehicle, or other farm equipment which is used exclusively on a
   44  farm or for processing farm products on the farm, and no part of
   45  which fuel is used in any vehicle or equipment driven or
   46  operated upon the public highways of this state. This
   47  restriction does not apply to the movement of a farm vehicle, or
   48  farm equipment, citrus harvesting equipment, or citrus fruit
   49  loaders between farms. The transporting of bees by water and the
   50  operating of equipment used in the apiary of a beekeeper shall
   51  be also deemed an agricultural purpose.
   52         3. For the purposes of this paragraph, “commercial fishing
   53  and aquacultural purposes” means motor fuel used in the
   54  operation of boats, vessels, or equipment used exclusively for
   55  the taking of fish, crayfish, oysters, shrimp, or sponges from
   56  salt or fresh waters under the jurisdiction of the state for
   57  resale to the public, and no part of which fuel is used in any
   58  vehicle or equipment driven or operated upon the highways of
   59  this state; however, the term may in no way be construed to
   60  include fuel used for sport or pleasure fishing.
   61         4. For the purposes of this paragraph, “commercial aviation
   62  purposes” means motor fuel used in the operation of aviation
   63  ground support vehicles or equipment, no part of which fuel is
   64  used in any vehicle or equipment driven or operated upon the
   65  public highways of this state.
   66         Section 8. Chapter 311, Florida Statutes, is retitled
   67  “SEAPORT PROGRAMS AND FACILITIES.”
   68         Section 9. Section 311.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to
   69  read:
   70         311.07 Florida seaport transportation and economic
   71  development funding.—
   72         (1) There is created the Florida Seaport Transportation and
   73  Economic Development Program within the Department of
   74  Transportation to finance port transportation or port facilities
   75  projects that will improve the movement and intermodal
   76  transportation of cargo or passengers in commerce and trade and
   77  that will support the interests, purposes, and requirements of
   78  all ports listed in s. 311.09 located in this state.
   79         (2) A minimum of $15 $8 million per year shall be made
   80  available from the State Transportation Trust Fund to fund the
   81  Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development Program.
   82  The Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development
   83  Council created in s. 311.09 shall develop guidelines for
   84  project funding. Council staff, the Department of
   85  Transportation, and the Department of Economic Opportunity shall
   86  work in cooperation to review projects and allocate funds in
   87  accordance with the schedule required for the Department of
   88  Transportation to include these projects in the tentative work
   89  program developed pursuant to s. 339.135(4).
   90         (3)(a) Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
   91  Development Program funds shall be used to fund approved
   92  projects on a 50-50 matching basis with any of the deepwater
   93  ports, as listed in s. 311.09 s. 403.021(9)(b), which is
   94  governed by a public body or any other deepwater port which is
   95  governed by a public body and which complies with the water
   96  quality provisions of s. 403.061, the comprehensive master plan
   97  requirements of s. 163.3178(2)(k), and the local financial
   98  management and reporting provisions of part III of chapter 218.
   99  However, program funds used to fund projects that involve the
  100  rehabilitation of wharves, docks, berths, bulkheads, or similar
  101  structures shall require a 25-percent match of funds. Program
  102  funds also may be used by the Seaport Transportation and
  103  Economic Development Council for data and analysis that to
  104  develop trade data information products which will assist
  105  Florida’s seaports and international trade.
  106         (b) Projects eligible for funding by grants under the
  107  program are limited to the following port facilities or port
  108  transportation projects:
  109         1. Transportation facilities within the jurisdiction of the
  110  port.
  111         2. The dredging or deepening of channels, turning basins,
  112  or harbors.
  113         3. The construction or rehabilitation of wharves, docks,
  114  structures, jetties, piers, storage facilities, cruise
  115  terminals, automated people mover systems, or any facilities
  116  necessary or useful in connection with any of the foregoing.
  117         4. The acquisition of vessel tracking systems, container
  118  cranes, or other mechanized equipment used in the movement of
  119  cargo or passengers in international commerce.
  120         5. The acquisition of land to be used for port purposes.
  121         6. The acquisition, improvement, enlargement, or extension
  122  of existing port facilities.
  123         7. Environmental protection projects which are necessary
  124  because of requirements imposed by a state agency as a condition
  125  of a permit or other form of state approval; which are necessary
  126  for environmental mitigation required as a condition of a state,
  127  federal, or local environmental permit; which are necessary for
  128  the acquisition of spoil disposal sites and improvements to
  129  existing and future spoil sites; or which result from the
  130  funding of eligible projects listed in this paragraph.
  131         8. Transportation facilities as defined in s. 334.03(30) s.
  132  334.03(31) which are not otherwise part of the Department of
  133  Transportation’s adopted work program.
  134         9. Seaport Intermodal access projects identified in the 5
  135  year Florida Seaport Mission Plan as provided in s. 311.09(3).
  136         10. Construction or rehabilitation of port facilities as
  137  defined in s. 315.02, excluding any park or recreational
  138  facilities, in ports listed in s. 311.09(1) with operating
  139  revenues of $5 million or less, provided that such projects
  140  create economic development opportunities, capital improvements,
  141  and positive financial returns to such ports.
  142         11. Seaport master plan or strategic plan development or
  143  updates, including the purchase of data to support such plans.
  144         (c) To be eligible for consideration by the council
  145  pursuant to this section, a project must be consistent with the
  146  port comprehensive master plan which is incorporated as part of
  147  the approved local government comprehensive plan as required by
  148  s. 163.3178(2)(k) or other provisions of the Community Planning
  149  Act, part II of chapter 163.
  150         (4) A port eligible for matching funds under the program
  151  may receive a distribution of not more than $7 million during
  152  any 1 calendar year and a distribution of not more than $30
  153  million during any 5-calendar-year period.
  154         (4)(5) Any port which receives funding under the program
  155  shall institute procedures to ensure that jobs created as a
  156  result of the state funding shall be subject to equal
  157  opportunity hiring practices in the manner provided in s.
  158  110.112.
  159         (5)(6) The Department of Transportation may shall subject
  160  any project that receives funds pursuant to this section and s.
  161  320.20 to a final audit. The department may adopt rules and
  162  perform such other acts as are necessary or convenient to ensure
  163  that the final audits are conducted and that any deficiency or
  164  questioned costs noted by the audit are resolved.
  165         Section 10. Subsections (4) through (13) of section 311.09,
  166  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  167         311.09 Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  168  Development Council.—
  169         (4) The council shall adopt rules for evaluating projects
  170  which may be funded under ss. 311.07 and 320.20. The rules shall
  171  provide criteria for evaluating the potential project,
  172  including, but not limited to, such factors as consistency with
  173  appropriate plans, economic benefit, readiness for construction,
  174  noncompetition with other Florida ports, and capacity within the
  175  seaport system economic benefit of the project, measured by the
  176  potential for the proposed project to maintain or increase cargo
  177  flow, cruise passenger movement, international commerce, port
  178  revenues, and the number of jobs for the port’s local community.
  179         (5) The council shall review and approve or disapprove each
  180  project eligible to be funded pursuant to the Florida Seaport
  181  Transportation and Economic Development Program. The council
  182  shall annually submit to the Secretary of Transportation and the
  183  executive director of the Department of Economic Opportunity, or
  184  his or her designee, a list of projects which have been approved
  185  by the council. The list shall specify the recommended funding
  186  level for each project; and, if staged implementation of the
  187  project is appropriate, the funding requirements for each stage
  188  shall be specified.
  189         (6) The Department of Community Affairs shall review the
  190  list of projects approved by the council to determine
  191  consistency with approved local government comprehensive plans
  192  of the units of local government in which the port is located
  193  and consistency with the port master plan. The Department of
  194  Community Affairs shall identify and notify the council of those
  195  projects which are not consistent, to the maximum extent
  196  feasible, with such comprehensive plans and port master plans.
  197         (6)(7) The Department of Transportation shall review the
  198  list of project applications projects approved by the council
  199  for consistency with the Florida Transportation Plan, the
  200  Statewide Seaport and Waterways System Plan, and the
  201  department’s adopted work program. In evaluating the consistency
  202  of a project, the department shall assess the transportation
  203  impacts and economic benefits for each project determine whether
  204  the transportation impact of the proposed project is adequately
  205  handled by existing state-owned transportation facilities or by
  206  the construction of additional state-owned transportation
  207  facilities as identified in the Florida Transportation Plan and
  208  the department’s adopted work program. In reviewing for
  209  consistency a transportation facility project as defined in s.
  210  334.03(31) which is not otherwise part of the department’s work
  211  program, the department shall evaluate whether the project is
  212  needed to provide for projected movement of cargo or passengers
  213  from the port to a state transportation facility or local road.
  214  If the project is needed to provide for projected movement of
  215  cargo or passengers, the project shall be approved for
  216  consistency as a consideration to facilitate the economic
  217  development and growth of the state in a timely manner. The
  218  Department of Transportation shall identify those projects which
  219  are inconsistent with the Florida Transportation Plan, the
  220  Statewide Seaport and Waterways System Plan, or and the adopted
  221  work program and shall notify the council of projects found to
  222  be inconsistent.
  223         (7)(8) The Department of Economic Opportunity shall review
  224  the list of project applications projects approved by the
  225  council to evaluate the economic benefit of the project and to
  226  determine whether the project is consistent with the Florida
  227  Seaport Mission Plan and with state economic development goals
  228  and policies. The Department of Economic Opportunity shall
  229  review the proposed project’s consistency with state, regional,
  230  and local plans, as appropriate, and the economic benefits of
  231  each project based upon the rules adopted pursuant to subsection
  232  (4). The Department of Economic Opportunity shall identify those
  233  projects which it has determined do not offer an economic
  234  benefit to the state, are not consistent with an appropriate
  235  plan, or are not consistent with the Florida Seaport Mission
  236  Plan or state economic development goals and policies and shall
  237  notify the council of its findings.
  238         (8)(9) The council shall review the findings of the
  239  Department of Economic Opportunity and the Department of
  240  Transportation. Projects found to be inconsistent pursuant to
  241  subsections (6), or (7), and (8) or and projects which have been
  242  determined not to offer an economic benefit to the state
  243  pursuant to subsection (7) (8) may shall not be included in the
  244  list of projects to be funded.
  245         (9)(10) The Department of Transportation shall include no
  246  less than $15 million per year in its annual legislative budget
  247  request for the a Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  248  Development grant Program funded under s. 311.07 for expenditure
  249  of funds of not less than $8 million per year. Such budget shall
  250  include funding for projects approved by the council which have
  251  been determined by each agency to be consistent and which have
  252  been determined by the Department of Economic Opportunity to be
  253  economically beneficial. The department shall include the
  254  specific approved Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  255  Development Program seaport projects to be funded under s.
  256  311.07 this section during the ensuing fiscal year in the
  257  tentative work program developed pursuant to s. 339.135(4). The
  258  total amount of funding to be allocated to Florida Seaport
  259  Transportation and Economic Development Program seaport projects
  260  under s. 311.07 during the successive 4 fiscal years shall also
  261  be included in the tentative work program developed pursuant to
  262  s. 339.135(4). The council may submit to the department a list
  263  of approved projects that could be made production-ready within
  264  the next 2 years. The list shall be submitted by the department
  265  as part of the needs and project list prepared pursuant to s.
  266  339.135(2)(b). However, the department shall, upon written
  267  request of the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  268  Development Council, submit work program amendments pursuant to
  269  s. 339.135(7) to the Governor within 10 days after the later of
  270  the date the request is received by the department or the
  271  effective date of the amendment, termination, or closure of the
  272  applicable funding agreement between the department and the
  273  affected seaport, as required to release the funds from the
  274  existing commitment. Notwithstanding s. 339.135(7)(c), any work
  275  program amendment to transfer prior year funds from one approved
  276  seaport project to another seaport project is subject to the
  277  procedures in s. 339.135(7)(d). Notwithstanding any provision of
  278  law to the contrary, the department may transfer unexpended
  279  budget between the seaport projects as identified in the
  280  approved work program amendments.
  281         (10)(11) The council shall meet at the call of its
  282  chairperson, at the request of a majority of its membership, or
  283  at such times as may be prescribed in its bylaws. However, the
  284  council must meet at least semiannually. A majority of voting
  285  members of the council constitutes a quorum for the purpose of
  286  transacting the business of the council. All members of the
  287  council are voting members. A vote of the majority of the voting
  288  members present is sufficient for any action of the council,
  289  except that a member representing the Department of
  290  Transportation or the Department of Economic Opportunity may
  291  vote to overrule any action of the council approving a project
  292  pursuant to subsection (5). The bylaws of the council may
  293  require a greater vote for a particular action.
  294         (11)(12) Members of the council shall serve without
  295  compensation but are entitled to receive reimbursement for per
  296  diem and travel expenses as provided in s. 112.061. The council
  297  may elect to provide an administrative staff to provide services
  298  to the council on matters relating to the Florida Seaport
  299  Transportation and Economic Development Program and the council.
  300  The cost for such administrative services shall be paid by all
  301  ports that receive funding from the Florida Seaport
  302  Transportation and Economic Development Program, based upon a
  303  pro rata formula measured by each recipient’s share of the funds
  304  as compared to the total funds disbursed to all recipients
  305  during the year. The share of costs for administrative services
  306  shall be paid in its total amount by the recipient port upon
  307  execution by the port and the Department of Transportation of a
  308  joint participation agreement for each council-approved project,
  309  and such payment is in addition to the matching funds required
  310  to be paid by the recipient port. Except as otherwise exempted
  311  by law, all moneys derived from the Florida Seaport
  312  Transportation and Economic Development Program shall be
  313  expended in accordance with the provisions of s. 287.057.
  314  Seaports subject to competitive negotiation requirements of a
  315  local governing body shall abide by the provisions of s.
  316  287.055.
  317         (12)(13) Until July 1, 2014, Citrus County may apply for a
  318  grant through the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  319  Development Council to perform a feasibility study regarding the
  320  establishment of a port in Citrus County. The council shall
  321  evaluate such application pursuant to subsections (5)-(8) (5)
  322  (9) and, if approved, the Department of Transportation shall
  323  include the feasibility study in its budget request pursuant to
  324  subsection (9) (10). If the study determines that a port in
  325  Citrus County is not feasible, the membership of Port Citrus on
  326  the council shall terminate.
  327         Section 11. Section 311.10, Florida Statutes, is created to
  328  read:
  329         311.10 Strategic Port Investment Initiative.—
  330         (1) There is created the Strategic Port Investment
  331  Initiative within the Department of Transportation. Beginning in
  332  fiscal year 2012-2013, a minimum of $35 million annually shall
  333  be made available from the State Transportation Trust Fund to
  334  fund the Strategic Port Investment Initiative. The Department of
  335  Transportation shall work with the deepwater ports listed in s.
  336  311.09 to develop and maintain a priority list of strategic
  337  investment projects. Project selection shall be based on
  338  projects that meet the state’s economic development goal of
  339  becoming a hub for trade, logistics, and export-oriented
  340  activities by:
  341         (a) Providing important access and major on-port capacity
  342  improvements;
  343         (b) Providing capital improvements to strategically
  344  position the state to maximize opportunities in international
  345  trade, logistics, or the cruise industry;
  346         (c) Achieving state goals of an integrated intermodal
  347  transportation system; and
  348         (d) Demonstrating the feasibility and availability of
  349  matching funds through local or private partners.
  350         (2) Prior to making final project allocations, the
  351  Department of Transportation shall schedule a publicly noticed
  352  workshop with the Department of Economic Opportunity and the
  353  deepwater ports listed in s. 311.09 to review the proposed
  354  projects. After considering the comments received, the
  355  Department of Transportation shall finalize a prioritized list
  356  of potential projects.
  357         (3) The Department of Transportation shall, to the maximum
  358  extent feasible, include the seaport projects proposed to be
  359  funded under this section in the tentative work program
  360  developed under s. 339.135(4).
  361         Section 12. Section 311.101, Florida Statutes, is created
  362  to read:
  363         311.101 Intermodal Logistics Center Infrastructure Support
  364  Program.—
  365         (1) There is created within the Department of
  366  Transportation the Intermodal Logistics Center Infrastructure
  367  Support Program. The purpose of the program is to provide funds
  368  for roads, rail facilities, or other means for the conveyance or
  369  shipment of goods through a seaport, thereby enabling the state
  370  to respond to private sector market demands and meet the state’s
  371  economic development goal of becoming a hub for trade,
  372  logistics, and export-oriented activities. The department may
  373  provide funds to assist with local government projects or
  374  projects performed by private entities that meet the public
  375  purpose of enhancing transportation facilities for the
  376  conveyance or shipment of goods through a seaport to or from an
  377  intermodal logistics center.
  378         (2) For the purposes of this section, “intermodal logistics
  379  center,” including, but not limited to, an “inland port,” means
  380  a facility or group of facilities serving as a point of
  381  intermodal transfer of freight in a specific area physically
  382  separated from a seaport where activities relating to transport,
  383  logistics, goods distribution, consolidation, or value-added
  384  activities are carried out and whose activities and services are
  385  designed to support or be supported by conveyance or shipping
  386  through one or more seaports listed in s. 311.09.
  387         (3) The department must consider, but is not limited to,
  388  the following criteria when evaluating projects for Intermodal
  389  Logistics Center Infrastructure Support Program assistance:
  390         (a) The ability of the project to serve a strategic state
  391  interest.
  392         (b) The ability of the project to facilitate the cost
  393  effective and efficient movement of goods.
  394         (c) The extent to which the project contributes to economic
  395  activity, including job creation, increased wages, and revenues.
  396         (d) The extent to which the project efficiently interacts
  397  with and supports the transportation network.
  398         (e) A commitment of a funding match.
  399         (f) The amount of investment or commitments made by the
  400  owner or developer of the existing or proposed facility.
  401         (g) The extent to which the owner has commitments,
  402  including memorandums of understanding or memorandums of
  403  agreements, with private sector businesses planning to locate
  404  operations at the intermodal logistics center.
  405         (h) Demonstrated local financial support and commitment to
  406  the project.
  407         (4) The department shall coordinate and consult with the
  408  Department of Economic Opportunity in the selection of projects
  409  to be funded by this program.
  410         (5) The department is authorized to administer contracts on
  411  behalf of the entity selected to receive funding for a project
  412  under this section.
  413         (6) The department shall provide up to 50 percent of
  414  project costs for eligible projects.
  415         (7) Beginning in fiscal year 2012-2013, up to $5 million
  416  per year shall be made available from the State Transportation
  417  Trust Fund for the program. The Department of Transportation
  418  shall include projects proposed to be funded under this section
  419  in the tentative work program developed pursuant so s.
  420  339.135(4).
  421         (8) The Department of Transportation is authorized to adopt
  422  rules to implement this section.
  423         Section 13. Section 311.106, Florida Statutes, is created
  424  to read:
  425         311.106 Seaport stormwater permitting and mitigation.—A
  426  seaport listed in s. 403.021(9)(b) is authorized to provide for
  427  onsite or offsite stormwater treatment for water quality impacts
  428  caused by a proposed port activity that requires a permit and
  429  that causes or contributes to pollution from stormwater runoff.
  430  Offsite stormwater treatment may occur outside of the
  431  established boundaries of the port, but must be within the same
  432  drainage basin in which the port activity occurs. A port offsite
  433  stormwater treatment project must be constructed and maintained
  434  by the seaport or by the seaport in conjunction with an adjacent
  435  local government. In order to limit stormwater treatment from
  436  individual parcels within a port, a seaport may provide for a
  437  regional stormwater treatment facility that must be constructed
  438  and maintained by the seaport or by the seaport in conjunction
  439  with an adjacent local government.
  440         Section 14. Section 311.14, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  441  read:
  442         311.14 Seaport planning.—
  443         (1) The Department of Transportation shall develop, in
  444  coordination with the ports listed in s. 311.09(1) and other
  445  partners, a Statewide Seaport and Waterways System Plan. This
  446  plan shall be consistent with the goals of the Florida
  447  Transportation Plan developed pursuant to s. 339.155 and shall
  448  consider needs identified in individual port master plans and
  449  those from the seaport strategic plans required under this
  450  section. The plan will identify 5-year, 10-year, and 20-year
  451  needs for the seaport system and will include seaport, waterway,
  452  road, and rail projects that are needed to ensure the success of
  453  the transportation system as a whole in supporting state
  454  economic development goals The Florida Seaport Transportation
  455  and Economic Development Council, in cooperation with the Office
  456  of the State Public Transportation Administrator within the
  457  Department of Transportation, shall develop freight-mobility and
  458  trade-corridor plans to assist in making freight-mobility
  459  investments that contribute to the economic growth of the state.
  460  Such plans should enhance the integration and connectivity of
  461  the transportation system across and between transportation
  462  modes throughout Florida for people and freight.
  463         (2) The Office of the State Public Transportation
  464  Administrator shall act to integrate freight-mobility and trade
  465  corridor plans into the Florida Transportation Plan developed
  466  pursuant to s. 339.155 and into the plans and programs of
  467  metropolitan planning organizations as provided in s. 339.175.
  468  The office may also provide assistance in expediting the
  469  transportation permitting process relating to the construction
  470  of seaport freight-mobility projects located outside the
  471  physical borders of seaports. The Department of Transportation
  472  may contract, as provided in s. 334.044, with any port listed in
  473  s. 311.09(1) or any such other statutorily authorized seaport
  474  entity to act as an agent in the construction of seaport
  475  freight-mobility projects.
  476         (2)(3) Each port shall develop a strategic plan with a 10
  477  year horizon. Each plan must include the following:
  478         (a) An economic development component that identifies
  479  targeted business opportunities for increasing business and
  480  attracting new business for which a particular facility has a
  481  strategic advantage over its competitors, identifies financial
  482  resources and other inducements to encourage growth of existing
  483  business and acquisition of new business, and provides a
  484  projected schedule for attainment of the plan’s goals.
  485         (b) An infrastructure development and improvement component
  486  that identifies all projected infrastructure improvements within
  487  the plan area which require improvement, expansion, or
  488  development in order for a port to attain a strategic advantage
  489  for competition with national and international competitors.
  490         (c) A component that identifies all intermodal
  491  transportation facilities, including sea, air, rail, or road
  492  facilities, which are available or have potential, with
  493  improvements, to be available for necessary national and
  494  international commercial linkages and provides a plan for the
  495  integration of port, airport, and railroad activities with
  496  existing and planned transportation infrastructure.
  497         (d) A component that identifies physical, environmental,
  498  and regulatory barriers to achievement of the plan’s goals and
  499  provides recommendations for overcoming those barriers.
  500         (e) An intergovernmental coordination component that
  501  specifies modes and methods to coordinate plan goals and
  502  missions with the missions of the Department of Transportation,
  503  other state agencies, and affected local, general-purpose
  504  governments.
  505  
  506  To the extent feasible, the port strategic plan must be
  507  consistent with the local government comprehensive plans of the
  508  units of local government in which the port is located. Upon
  509  approval of a plan by the port’s board, the plan shall be
  510  submitted to the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  511  Development Council.
  512         (3)(4) The Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
  513  Development Council shall review the strategic plans submitted
  514  by each port and prioritize strategic needs for inclusion in the
  515  Florida Seaport Mission Plan prepared pursuant to s. 311.09(3).
  516         Section 15. Subsection (21) of section 316.003, Florida
  517  Statutes, is amended to read:
  518         316.003 Definitions.—The following words and phrases, when
  519  used in this chapter, shall have the meanings respectively
  520  ascribed to them in this section, except where the context
  521  otherwise requires:
  522         (21) MOTOR VEHICLE.—Except when used in s. 316.1001, any
  523  self-propelled vehicle not operated upon rails or guideway, but
  524  not including any bicycle, motorized scooter, electric personal
  525  assistive mobility device, or moped. For purposes of s.
  526  316.1001, “motor vehicle” has the same meaning as in s.
  527  320.01(1)(a).
  528         Section 16. Subsection (4) of section 316.091, Florida
  529  Statutes, is amended, subsection (5) is renumbered as subsection
  530  (7), and new subsections (5) and (6) are added to that section,
  531  to read:
  532         316.091 Limited access facilities; interstate highways; use
  533  restricted.—
  534         (4) No person shall operate a bicycle or other human
  535  powered vehicle on the roadway or along the shoulder of a
  536  limited access highway, including bridges, unless official signs
  537  and a designated, marked bicycle lane are present at the
  538  entrance of the section of highway indicating that such use is
  539  permitted pursuant to a pilot program of the Department of
  540  Transportation an interstate highway.
  541         (5) The Department of Transportation and expressway
  542  authorities are authorized to designate use of shoulders of
  543  limited access facilities and interstate highways under their
  544  jurisdiction for such vehicular traffic determined to improve
  545  safety, reliability, and transportation system efficiency.
  546  Appropriate traffic signs or dynamic lane control signals shall
  547  be erected along those portions of the facility affected to give
  548  notice to the public of the action to be taken, clearly
  549  indicating when the shoulder is open to designated vehicular
  550  traffic. This section may not be deemed to authorize such
  551  designation in violation of any federal law or any covenant
  552  established in a resolution or trust indenture relating to the
  553  issuance of turnpike bonds, expressway authority bonds, or other
  554  bonds.
  555         (6) The Department of Transportation shall establish a 2
  556  year pilot program, in three separate urban areas, in which it
  557  shall erect signs and designate marked bicycle lanes indicating
  558  highway approaches and bridge segments of limited access
  559  highways as open to use by operators of bicycles and other
  560  human-powered vehicles, under the following conditions:
  561         (a) The limited access highway approaches and bridge
  562  segments chosen must cross a river, lake, bay, inlet, or surface
  563  water where no street or highway crossing the water body is
  564  available for use within 2 miles of the entrance to the limited
  565  access facility measured along the shortest public right-of-way.
  566         (b) The Department of Transportation, with the concurrence
  567  of the Federal Highway Administration on the interstate
  568  facilities, shall establish the three highway approaches and
  569  bridge segments for the pilot project by October 1, 2012. In
  570  selecting the highway approaches and bridge segments, the
  571  Department of Transportation shall consider, without limitation,
  572  a minimum size of population in the urban area within 5 miles of
  573  the highway approach and bridge segment, the lack of bicycle
  574  access by other means, cost, safety, and operational impacts.
  575         (c) The Department of Transportation shall begin the pilot
  576  program by erecting signs and designating marked bicycle lanes
  577  indicating highway approaches and bridge segments of limited
  578  access highways, as qualified by the conditions described in
  579  this subsection, as open to use by operators of bicycles and
  580  other human-powered vehicles no later than March 1, 2013.
  581         (d) The Department of Transportation shall conduct the
  582  pilot program for a minimum of 2 years following the
  583  implementation date.
  584         (e) The Department of Transportation shall submit a report
  585  of its findings and recommendations from the pilot program to
  586  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
  587  the House of Representatives by September 1, 2015. The report
  588  shall include, at a minimum, bicycle crash data occurring in the
  589  designated segments of the pilot program, usage by operators of
  590  bicycles and other human-powered vehicles, enforcement issues,
  591  operational impacts, and the cost of the pilot program.
  592         Section 17. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
  593  316.1001, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  594         316.1001 Payment of toll on toll facilities required;
  595  penalties.—
  596         (2)
  597         (b) A citation issued under this subsection may be issued
  598  by mailing the citation by first-class mail or by certified
  599  mail, return receipt requested, to the address of the registered
  600  owner of the motor vehicle involved in the violation. Mailing
  601  Receipt of the citation to such address constitutes
  602  notification. In the case of joint ownership of a motor vehicle,
  603  the traffic citation must be mailed to the first name appearing
  604  on the registration, unless the first name appearing on the
  605  registration is a business organization, in which case the
  606  second name appearing on the registration may be used. A
  607  citation issued under this paragraph must be mailed to the
  608  registered owner of the motor vehicle involved in the violation
  609  within 14 days after the date of issuance of the citation. In
  610  addition to the citation, notification must be sent to the
  611  registered owner of the motor vehicle involved in the violation
  612  specifying remedies available under ss. 318.14(12) and
  613  318.18(7).
  614         Section 18. Subsection (5) of section 316.2068, Florida
  615  Statutes, is amended to read:
  616         316.2068 Electric personal assistive mobility devices;
  617  regulations.—
  618         (5) A county or municipality may regulate prohibit the
  619  operation of electric personal assistive mobility devices on any
  620  road, street, sidewalk, or bicycle path under its jurisdiction
  621  if the governing body of the county or municipality determines
  622  that regulation such a prohibition is necessary in the interest
  623  of safety.
  624         Section 19. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) and paragraphs
  625  (a) and (c) of subsection (5) of section 316.515, Florida
  626  Statutes, are amended to read:
  627         316.515 Maximum width, height, length.—
  628         (3) LENGTH LIMITATION.—Except as otherwise provided in this
  629  section, length limitations apply solely to a semitrailer or
  630  trailer, and not to a truck tractor or to the overall length of
  631  a combination of vehicles. No combination of commercial motor
  632  vehicles coupled together and operating on the public roads may
  633  consist of more than one truck tractor and two trailing units.
  634  Unless otherwise specifically provided for in this section, a
  635  combination of vehicles not qualifying as commercial motor
  636  vehicles may consist of no more than two units coupled together;
  637  such nonqualifying combination of vehicles may not exceed a
  638  total length of 65 feet, inclusive of the load carried thereon,
  639  but exclusive of safety and energy conservation devices approved
  640  by the department for use on vehicles using public roads.
  641  Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a truck
  642  tractor-semitrailer combination engaged in the transportation of
  643  automobiles or boats may transport motor vehicles or boats on
  644  part of the power unit; and, except as may otherwise be mandated
  645  under federal law, an automobile or boat transporter semitrailer
  646  may not exceed 50 feet in length, exclusive of the load;
  647  however, the load may extend up to an additional 6 feet beyond
  648  the rear of the trailer. The 50-feet length limitation does not
  649  apply to non-stinger-steered automobile or boat transporters
  650  that are 65 feet or less in overall length, exclusive of the
  651  load carried thereon, or to stinger-steered automobile or boat
  652  transporters that are 75 feet or less in overall length,
  653  exclusive of the load carried thereon. For purposes of this
  654  subsection, a “stinger-steered automobile or boat transporter”
  655  is an automobile or boat transporter configured as a semitrailer
  656  combination wherein the fifth wheel is located on a drop frame
  657  located behind and below the rearmost axle of the power unit.
  658  Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b), any straight truck or
  659  truck tractor-semitrailer combination engaged in the
  660  transportation of horticultural trees may allow the load to
  661  extend up to an additional 10 feet beyond the rear of the
  662  vehicle, provided said trees are resting against a retaining bar
  663  mounted above the truck bed so that the root balls of the trees
  664  rest on the floor and to the front of the truck bed and the tops
  665  of the trees extend up over and to the rear of the truck bed,
  666  and provided the overhanging portion of the load is covered with
  667  protective fabric.
  668         (a) Straight trucks.A No straight truck may not exceed a
  669  length of 40 feet in extreme overall dimension, exclusive of
  670  safety and energy conservation devices approved by the
  671  department for use on vehicles using public roads. A straight
  672  truck may tow no more than one trailer, and the overall length
  673  of the truck-trailer combination may not exceed 68 feet such
  674  trailer may not exceed a length of 28 feet. However, such
  675  trailer limitation does not apply if the overall length of the
  676  truck-trailer combination is 65 feet or less, including the load
  677  thereon. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, a
  678  truck-trailer combination engaged in the transportation of
  679  boats, or boat trailers whose design dictates a front-to-rear
  680  stacking method may shall not exceed the length limitations of
  681  this paragraph exclusive of the load; however, the load may
  682  extend up to an additional 6 feet beyond the rear of the
  683  trailer.
  684         (5) IMPLEMENTS OF HUSBANDRY AND FARM EQUIPMENT;
  685  AGRICULTURAL TRAILERS; FORESTRY EQUIPMENT; SAFETY REQUIREMENTS.—
  686         (a) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, straight
  687  trucks, agricultural tractors, citrus harvesting equipment,
  688  citrus fruit loaders, and cotton module movers, not exceeding 50
  689  feet in length, or any combination of up to and including three
  690  implements of husbandry, including the towing power unit, and
  691  any single agricultural trailer with a load thereon or any
  692  agricultural implements attached to a towing power unit, or a
  693  self-propelled agricultural implement or an agricultural
  694  tractor, is authorized for the purpose of transporting peanuts,
  695  grains, soybeans, citrus, cotton, hay, straw, or other
  696  perishable farm products from their point of production to the
  697  first point of change of custody or of long-term storage, and
  698  for the purpose of returning to such point of production, or for
  699  the purpose of moving such tractors, movers, and implements from
  700  one point of agricultural production to another, by a person
  701  engaged in the production of any such product or custom hauler,
  702  if such vehicle or combination of vehicles otherwise complies
  703  with this section. The Department of Transportation may issue
  704  overlength permits for cotton module movers greater than 50 feet
  705  but not more than 55 feet in overall length. Such vehicles shall
  706  be operated in accordance with all safety requirements
  707  prescribed by law and rules of the Department of Transportation.
  708         (c) The width and height limitations of this section do not
  709  apply to farming or agricultural equipment, whether self
  710  propelled, pulled, or hauled, when temporarily operated during
  711  daylight hours upon a public road that is not a limited access
  712  facility as defined in s. 334.03(12) s. 334.03(13), and the
  713  width and height limitations may be exceeded by such equipment
  714  without a permit. To be eligible for this exemption, the
  715  equipment shall be operated within a radius of 50 miles of the
  716  real property owned, rented, or leased by the equipment owner.
  717  However, equipment being delivered by a dealer to a purchaser is
  718  not subject to the 50-mile limitation. Farming or agricultural
  719  equipment greater than 174 inches in width must have one warning
  720  lamp mounted on each side of the equipment to denote the width
  721  and must have a slow-moving vehicle sign. Warning lamps required
  722  by this paragraph must be visible from the front and rear of the
  723  vehicle and must be visible from a distance of at least 1,000
  724  feet.
  725         Section 20. Subsection (42) of section 320.01, Florida
  726  Statutes, is amended to read:
  727         320.01 Definitions, general.—As used in the Florida
  728  Statutes, except as otherwise provided, the term:
  729         (42) “Low-speed vehicle” means any four-wheeled electric
  730  vehicle whose top speed is greater than 20 miles per hour but
  731  not greater than 25 miles per hour, including, but not limited
  732  to, neighborhood electric vehicles. Low-speed vehicles must
  733  comply with the safety standards in 49 C.F.R. s. 571.500 and s.
  734  316.2122.
  735         Section 21. Section 332.08, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  736  read:
  737         332.08 Additional powers.—
  738         (1) In addition to the general powers in ss. 332.01-332.12
  739  conferred and without limitation thereof, a municipality which
  740  has established or may hereafter establish airports, restricted
  741  landing areas, or other air navigation facilities, or which has
  742  acquired or set apart or may hereafter acquire or set apart real
  743  property for such purposes, is hereby authorized:
  744         (a)(1) To vest authority for the construction, enlargement,
  745  improvement, maintenance, equipment, operation, and regulation
  746  thereof in an officer, a board or body of such municipality by
  747  ordinance or resolution which shall prescribe the powers and
  748  duties of such officer, board or body. The expense of such
  749  construction, enlargement, improvement, maintenance, equipment,
  750  operation, and regulation shall be a responsibility of the
  751  municipality.
  752         (b)1.(2)(a) To adopt and amend all needful rules,
  753  regulations, and ordinances for the management, government, and
  754  use of any properties under its control, whether within or
  755  without the territorial limits of the municipality; to appoint
  756  airport guards or police, with full police powers; to fix by
  757  ordinance or resolution, as may be appropriate, penalties for
  758  the violation of such said rules, regulations, and ordinances,
  759  and enforce such said penalties in the same manner in which
  760  penalties prescribed by other rules, regulations, and ordinances
  761  of the municipality are enforced.
  762         2.(b) Provided, Where a county operates one or more
  763  airports, its regulations for the government thereof shall be by
  764  resolution of the board of county commissioners, shall be
  765  recorded in the minutes of the board, and promulgated by posting
  766  a copy at the courthouse and at every such airport for 4
  767  consecutive weeks or by publication once a week in a newspaper
  768  published in the county for the same period. Such regulations
  769  shall be enforced as are the criminal laws. Violation thereof
  770  shall be a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as
  771  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
  772         (c)(3) To lease for a term not exceeding 30 years such
  773  airports or other air navigation facilities, or real property
  774  acquired or set apart for airport purposes, to private parties,
  775  any municipal or state government or the national government, or
  776  any department of either thereof, for operation; to lease or
  777  assign for a term not exceeding 30 years to private parties, any
  778  municipal or state government or the national government, or any
  779  department of either thereof, for operation or use consistent
  780  with the purposes of ss. 332.01-332.12, space, area,
  781  improvements, or equipment on such airports; to sell any part of
  782  such airports, other air navigation facilities, or real property
  783  to any municipal or state government, or the United States or
  784  any department or instrumentality thereof, for aeronautical
  785  purposes or purposes incidental thereto, and to confer the
  786  privileges of concessions of supplying upon its airports goods,
  787  commodities, things, services, and facilities; provided, that in
  788  each case in so doing the public is not deprived of its rightful
  789  equal and uniform use thereof.
  790         (d)(4) To sell or lease any property, real or personal,
  791  acquired for airport purposes and belonging to the municipality,
  792  which, in the judgment of its governing body, may not be
  793  required for aeronautic purposes, in accordance with the laws of
  794  this state, or the provisions of the charter of the
  795  municipality, governing the sale or leasing of similar
  796  municipally owned property.
  797         (e)(5) To exercise all powers necessarily incidental to the
  798  exercise of the general and special powers herein granted, and
  799  is specifically authorized to assess and shall assess against
  800  and collect from the owner or operator of each and every
  801  airplane using such airports a sufficient fee or service charge
  802  to cover the cost of the service furnished airplanes using such
  803  airports, including the liquidation of bonds or other
  804  indebtedness for construction and improvements.
  805         (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
  806  municipality participating in the Federal Aviation
  807  Administration’s Airport Privatization Pilot Program pursuant to
  808  49 U.S.C. s. 47134 may lease or sell an airport or other air
  809  navigation facility or real property, together with improvements
  810  and equipment, acquired or set apart for airport purposes to a
  811  private party under such terms and conditions as negotiated by
  812  the municipality. If state funds were provided to the
  813  municipality pursuant to s. 332.007, the municipality must
  814  obtain approval of the agreement from the Department of
  815  Transportation, which is authorized to approve the agreement if
  816  it determines the state’s investment has been adequately
  817  considered and protected consistent with the applicable
  818  conditions specified in 49 U.S.C. s. 47134.
  819         Section 22. Subsections (11) through (37) of section
  820  334.03, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (10)
  821  through (36), respectively, and present subsections (10), (11),
  822  and (25) of that section are amended to read:
  823         334.03 Definitions.—When used in the Florida Transportation
  824  Code, the term:
  825         (10) “Florida Intrastate Highway System” means a system of
  826  limited access and controlled access facilities on the State
  827  Highway System which have the capacity to provide high-speed and
  828  high-volume traffic movements in an efficient and safe manner.
  829         (10)(11) “Functional classification” means the assignment
  830  of roads into systems according to the character of service they
  831  provide in relation to the total road network using procedures
  832  developed by the Federal Highway Administration. Basic
  833  functional categories include arterial roads, collector roads,
  834  and local roads which may be subdivided into principal, major,
  835  or minor levels. Those levels may be additionally divided into
  836  rural and urban categories.
  837         (24)(25) “State Highway System” means the following, which
  838  shall be facilities to which access is regulated:
  839         (a) the interstate system and all other roads within the
  840  state which were under the jurisdiction of the state on June 10,
  841  1995, and roads constructed by an agency of the state for the
  842  State Highway System, plus roads transferred to the state’s
  843  jurisdiction after that date by mutual consent with another
  844  governmental entity, but not including roads so transferred from
  845  the state’s jurisdiction. These facilities shall be facilities
  846  to which access is regulated.;
  847         (b) All rural arterial routes and their extensions into and
  848  through urban areas;
  849         (c) All urban principal arterial routes; and
  850         (d) The urban minor arterial mileage on the existing State
  851  Highway System as of July 1, 1987, plus additional mileage to
  852  comply with the 2-percent requirement as described below.
  853  
  854  However, not less than 2 percent of the public road mileage of
  855  each urbanized area on record as of June 30, 1986, shall be
  856  included as minor arterials in the State Highway System.
  857  Urbanized areas not meeting the foregoing minimum requirement
  858  shall have transferred to the State Highway System additional
  859  minor arterials of the highest significance in which case the
  860  total minor arterials in the State Highway System from any
  861  urbanized area shall not exceed 2.5 percent of that area’s total
  862  public urban road mileage.
  863         Section 23. Subsections (11), (13), and (26) of section
  864  334.044, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (33) is
  865  added to that section, to read:
  866         334.044 Department; powers and duties.—The department shall
  867  have the following general powers and duties:
  868         (11) To establish a numbering system for public roads, and
  869  to functionally classify such roads, and to assign
  870  jurisdictional responsibility.
  871         (13) To designate existing and to plan proposed
  872  transportation facilities as part of the State Highway System,
  873  and to construct, maintain, and operate such facilities.
  874         (26) To provide for the enhancement of environmental
  875  benefits, including air and water quality; to prevent roadside
  876  erosion; to conserve the natural roadside growth and scenery;
  877  and to provide for the implementation and maintenance of
  878  roadside conservation, enhancement, and stabilization programs.
  879  No less than 1.5 percent of the amount contracted for
  880  construction projects shall be allocated by the department on a
  881  statewide basis for the purchase of plant materials. Department
  882  districts may not expend funds for landscaping in connection
  883  with any project that is limited to resurfacing existing lanes
  884  unless the expenditure has been approved by the department’s
  885  secretary or the secretary’s designee., with, To the greatest
  886  extent practical, a minimum of 50 percent of the these funds
  887  allocated under this subsection shall be allocated for large
  888  plant materials and the remaining funds for other plant
  889  materials. All such plant materials shall be purchased from
  890  Florida commercial nursery stock in this state on a uniform
  891  competitive bid basis. The department shall will develop grades
  892  and standards for landscaping materials purchased through this
  893  process. To accomplish these activities, the department may
  894  contract with nonprofit organizations having the primary purpose
  895  of developing youth employment opportunities.
  896         (33) To develop, in coordination with its partners and
  897  stakeholders, a Freight Mobility and Trade Plan to assist in
  898  making freight mobility investments that contribute to the
  899  economic growth of the state. Such plan should enhance the
  900  integration and connectivity of the transportation system across
  901  and between transportation modes throughout the state. The
  902  department shall deliver the Freight Mobility and Trade Plan to
  903  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
  904  the House of Representatives by July 1, 2013.
  905         (a) The Freight Mobility and Trade Plan shall include, but
  906  need not be limited to, proposed policies and investments that
  907  promote the following:
  908         1. Increasing the flow of domestic and international trade
  909  through the state’s seaports and airports, including specific
  910  policies and investments that will recapture cargo currently
  911  shipped through seaports and airports located outside the state.
  912         2. Increasing the development of intermodal logistic
  913  centers in the state, including specific strategies, policies,
  914  and investments that capitalize on the empty backhaul trucking
  915  and rail market in the state.
  916         3. Increasing the development of manufacturing industries
  917  in the state, including specific policies and investments in
  918  transportation facilities that will promote the successful
  919  development and expansion of manufacturing facilities.
  920         4. Increasing the implementation of compressed natural gas
  921  (CNG), liquefied natural gas (LNG), and propane energy policies
  922  that reduce transportation costs for businesses and residents
  923  located in the state.
  924         (b) Freight issues and needs shall also be given emphasis
  925  in all appropriate transportation plans, including the Florida
  926  Transportation Plan and the Strategic Intermodal System Plan.
  927         Section 24. Section 334.047, Florida Statutes, is amended
  928  to read:
  929         334.047 Prohibition.—Notwithstanding any other provision of
  930  law to the contrary, the Department of Transportation may not
  931  establish a cap on the number of miles in the State Highway
  932  System or a maximum number of miles of urban principal arterial
  933  roads, as defined in s. 334.03, within a district or county.
  934         Section 25. Subsection (5) is added to section 335.074,
  935  Florida Statutes, to read:
  936         335.074 Safety inspection of bridges.—
  937         (5) Upon receipt of an inspection report that recommends
  938  reducing the weight, size, or speed limit on a bridge, the
  939  governmental entity having maintenance responsibility for the
  940  bridge must reduce the maximum limits for the bridge in
  941  accordance with the inspection report and post the limits in
  942  accordance with s. 316.555. The governmental entity must, within
  943  30 days after receipt of an inspection report recommending lower
  944  limits, notify the department that the limitations have been
  945  implemented and the bridge has been posted accordingly. If the
  946  required actions are not taken within 30 days after receipt of
  947  an inspection report, the department shall post the bridge in
  948  accordance with the recommendations in the inspection report.
  949  All costs incurred by the department in connection with
  950  providing notice of the bridge’s limitations or restrictions
  951  shall be assessed against and collected from the governmental
  952  entity having maintenance responsibility for the bridge. If an
  953  inspection report recommends closure of a bridge, the bridge
  954  shall be immediately closed. If the governmental entity does not
  955  close the bridge immediately upon receipt of an inspection
  956  report recommending closure, the department shall close the
  957  bridge. All costs incurred by the department in connection with
  958  the bridge closure shall be assessed against and collected from
  959  the governmental entity having maintenance responsibility for
  960  the bridge. Nothing in this subsection alters existing
  961  jurisdictional responsibilities for the operation and
  962  maintenance of bridges.
  963         Section 26. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 335.17,
  964  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  965         335.17 State highway construction; means of noise
  966  abatement.—
  967         (1) The department shall make use of noise-control methods
  968  as part of highway construction projects involving new location
  969  or capacity expansion in the construction of all new state
  970  highways, with particular emphasis on those highways located in
  971  or near urban-residential developments which abut such highway
  972  rights-of-way.
  973         (2) All highway projects by the department, regardless of
  974  funding source, shall be developed in conformity with federal
  975  standards for noise abatement as contained in 23 C.F.R. 772 as
  976  such regulations existed on July 13, 2011 March 1, 1989. The
  977  department shall, at a minimum, comply with federal requirements
  978  in the following areas:
  979         (a) Analysis of traffic noise impacts and abatement
  980  measures;
  981         (b) Noise abatement;
  982         (c) Information for local officials;
  983         (d) Traffic noise prediction; and
  984         (e) Construction noise.
  985         Section 27. Subsection (5) of section 336.021, Florida
  986  Statutes, is amended to read:
  987         336.021 County transportation system; levy of ninth-cent
  988  fuel tax on motor fuel and diesel fuel.—
  989         (5) All impositions of the tax shall be levied before
  990  October July 1 of each year to be effective January 1 of the
  991  following year. However, levies of the tax which were in effect
  992  on July 1, 2002, and which expire on August 31 of any year may
  993  be reimposed at the current authorized rate to be effective
  994  September 1 of the year of expiration. All impositions shall be
  995  required to end on December 31 of a year. A decision to rescind
  996  the tax shall not take effect on any date other than December 31
  997  and shall require a minimum of 60 days’ notice to the department
  998  of such decision.
  999         Section 28. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1),
 1000  paragraph (a) of subsection (5), and subsection (7) of section
 1001  336.025, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1002         336.025 County transportation system; levy of local option
 1003  fuel tax on motor fuel and diesel fuel.—
 1004         (1)(a) In addition to other taxes allowed by law, there may
 1005  be levied as provided in ss. 206.41(1)(e) and 206.87(1)(c) a 1
 1006  cent, 2-cent, 3-cent, 4-cent, 5-cent, or 6-cent local option
 1007  fuel tax upon every gallon of motor fuel and diesel fuel sold in
 1008  a county and taxed under the provisions of part I or part II of
 1009  chapter 206.
 1010         1. All impositions and rate changes of the tax shall be
 1011  levied before October July 1 to be effective January 1 of the
 1012  following year for a period not to exceed 30 years, and the
 1013  applicable method of distribution shall be established pursuant
 1014  to subsection (3) or subsection (4). However, levies of the tax
 1015  which were in effect on July 1, 2002, and which expire on August
 1016  31 of any year may be reimposed at the current authorized rate
 1017  effective September 1 of the year of expiration. Upon
 1018  expiration, the tax may be relevied provided that a
 1019  redetermination of the method of distribution is made as
 1020  provided in this section.
 1021         2. County and municipal governments shall utilize moneys
 1022  received pursuant to this paragraph only for transportation
 1023  expenditures.
 1024         3. Any tax levied pursuant to this paragraph may be
 1025  extended on a majority vote of the governing body of the county.
 1026  A redetermination of the method of distribution shall be
 1027  established pursuant to subsection (3) or subsection (4), if,
 1028  after July 1, 1986, the tax is extended or the tax rate changed,
 1029  for the period of extension or for the additional tax.
 1030         (b) In addition to other taxes allowed by law, there may be
 1031  levied as provided in s. 206.41(1)(e) a 1-cent, 2-cent, 3-cent,
 1032  4-cent, or 5-cent local option fuel tax upon every gallon of
 1033  motor fuel sold in a county and taxed under the provisions of
 1034  part I of chapter 206. The tax shall be levied by an ordinance
 1035  adopted by a majority plus one vote of the membership of the
 1036  governing body of the county or by referendum.
 1037         1. All impositions and rate changes of the tax shall be
 1038  levied before October July 1, to be effective January 1 of the
 1039  following year. However, levies of the tax which were in effect
 1040  on July 1, 2002, and which expire on August 31 of any year may
 1041  be reimposed at the current authorized rate effective September
 1042  1 of the year of expiration.
 1043         2. The county may, prior to levy of the tax, establish by
 1044  interlocal agreement with one or more municipalities located
 1045  therein, representing a majority of the population of the
 1046  incorporated area within the county, a distribution formula for
 1047  dividing the entire proceeds of the tax among county government
 1048  and all eligible municipalities within the county. If no
 1049  interlocal agreement is adopted before the effective date of the
 1050  tax, tax revenues shall be distributed pursuant to the
 1051  provisions of subsection (4). If no interlocal agreement exists,
 1052  a new interlocal agreement may be established prior to June 1 of
 1053  any year pursuant to this subparagraph. However, any interlocal
 1054  agreement agreed to under this subparagraph after the initial
 1055  levy of the tax or change in the tax rate authorized in this
 1056  section shall under no circumstances materially or adversely
 1057  affect the rights of holders of outstanding bonds which are
 1058  backed by taxes authorized by this paragraph, and the amounts
 1059  distributed to the county government and each municipality shall
 1060  not be reduced below the amount necessary for the payment of
 1061  principal and interest and reserves for principal and interest
 1062  as required under the covenants of any bond resolution
 1063  outstanding on the date of establishment of the new interlocal
 1064  agreement.
 1065         3. County and municipal governments shall use moneys
 1066  received pursuant to this paragraph for transportation
 1067  expenditures needed to meet the requirements of the capital
 1068  improvements element of an adopted comprehensive plan or for
 1069  expenditures needed to meet immediate local transportation
 1070  problems and for other transportation-related expenditures that
 1071  are critical for building comprehensive roadway networks by
 1072  local governments. For purposes of this paragraph, expenditures
 1073  for the construction of new roads, the reconstruction or
 1074  resurfacing of existing paved roads, or the paving of existing
 1075  graded roads shall be deemed to increase capacity and such
 1076  projects shall be included in the capital improvements element
 1077  of an adopted comprehensive plan. Expenditures for purposes of
 1078  this paragraph shall not include routine maintenance of roads.
 1079         (5)(a) By October July 1 of each year, the county shall
 1080  notify the Department of Revenue of the rate of the taxes levied
 1081  pursuant to paragraphs (1)(a) and (b), and of its decision to
 1082  rescind or change the rate of a tax, if applicable, and shall
 1083  provide the department with a certified copy of the interlocal
 1084  agreement established under subparagraph (1)(b)2. or
 1085  subparagraph (3)(a)1. with distribution proportions established
 1086  by such agreement or pursuant to subsection (4), if applicable.
 1087  A decision to rescind a tax may shall not take effect on any
 1088  date other than December 31 and requires shall require a minimum
 1089  of 60 days’ notice to the Department of Revenue of such
 1090  decision.
 1091         (7) For the purposes of this section, “transportation
 1092  expenditures” means expenditures by the local government from
 1093  local or state shared revenue sources, excluding expenditures of
 1094  bond proceeds, for the following programs:
 1095         (a) Public transportation operations and maintenance.
 1096         (b) Roadway and right-of-way maintenance and equipment and
 1097  structures used primarily for the storage and maintenance of
 1098  such equipment.
 1099         (c) Roadway and right-of-way drainage.
 1100         (d) Street lighting installation, operation, maintenance,
 1101  and repair.
 1102         (e) Traffic signs, traffic engineering, signalization, and
 1103  pavement markings, installation, operation, maintenance, and
 1104  repair.
 1105         (f) Bridge maintenance and operation.
 1106         (g) Debt service and current expenditures for
 1107  transportation capital projects in the foregoing program areas,
 1108  including construction or reconstruction of roads and sidewalks.
 1109         Section 29. Subsection (4) of section 337.111, Florida
 1110  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1111         337.111 Contracting for monuments and memorials to military
 1112  veterans at rest areas.—The Department of Transportation is
 1113  authorized to enter into contract with any not-for-profit group
 1114  or organization that has been operating for not less than 2
 1115  years for the installation of monuments and memorials honoring
 1116  Florida’s military veterans at highway rest areas around the
 1117  state pursuant to the provisions of this section.
 1118         (4) The group or organization making the proposal shall
 1119  provide an annual renewable a 10-year bond, an irrevocable
 1120  letter of credit, or another form of security as approved by the
 1121  department’s comptroller, for the purpose of securing the cost
 1122  of removal of the monument and any modifications made to the
 1123  site as part of the placement of the monument should the
 1124  Department of Transportation determine it necessary to remove or
 1125  relocate the monument. Such removal or relocation shall be
 1126  approved by the committee described in subsection (1). Prior to
 1127  expiration, the bond shall be renewed for another 10-year period
 1128  if the memorial is to remain in place.
 1129         Section 30. Subsection (1) of section 337.125, Florida
 1130  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1131         337.125 Socially and economically disadvantaged business
 1132  enterprises; notice requirements.—
 1133         (1) When contract goals are established, in order to
 1134  document that a subcontract is with a certified socially and
 1135  economically disadvantaged business enterprise, the prime
 1136  contractor must either submit a disadvantaged business
 1137  enterprise utilization form which has been signed by the
 1138  socially and economically disadvantaged business enterprise and
 1139  the prime contractor, or submit the written or oral quotation of
 1140  the socially and economically disadvantaged business enterprise,
 1141  and information contained in the quotation must be confirmed as
 1142  determined by the department by rule.
 1143         Section 31. Section 337.137, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 1144         Section 32. Section 337.139, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1145  to read:
 1146         337.139 Efforts to encourage awarding contracts to
 1147  disadvantaged business enterprises.—In implementing chapter 90
 1148  136, Laws of Florida, the Department of Transportation shall
 1149  institute procedures to encourage the awarding of contracts for
 1150  professional services and construction to disadvantaged business
 1151  enterprises. For the purposes of this section, the term
 1152  “disadvantaged business enterprise” means a small business
 1153  concern certified by the Department of Transportation to be
 1154  owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged
 1155  individuals as defined by the Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
 1156  Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users
 1157  (SAFETEA-LU) Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Act
 1158  of 1987. The Department of Transportation shall develop and
 1159  implement activities to encourage the participation of
 1160  disadvantaged business enterprises in the contracting process.
 1161  Such efforts may include:
 1162         (1) Presolicitation or prebid meetings for the purpose of
 1163  informing disadvantaged business enterprises of contracting
 1164  opportunities.
 1165         (2) Written notice to disadvantaged business enterprises of
 1166  contract opportunities for commodities or contractual and
 1167  construction services which the disadvantaged business provides.
 1168         (3) Provision of adequate information to disadvantaged
 1169  business enterprises about the plans, specifications, and
 1170  requirements of contracts or the availability of jobs.
 1171         (4) Breaking large contracts into several single-purpose
 1172  contracts of a size which may be obtained by certified
 1173  disadvantaged business enterprises.
 1174         Section 33. Subsection (1) of section 337.14, Florida
 1175  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1176         337.14 Application for qualification; certificate of
 1177  qualification; restrictions; request for hearing.—
 1178         (1) Any person desiring to bid for the performance of any
 1179  construction contract in excess of $250,000 which the department
 1180  proposes to let must first be certified by the department as
 1181  qualified pursuant to this section and rules of the department.
 1182  The rules of the department shall address the qualification of
 1183  persons to bid on construction contracts in excess of $250,000
 1184  and shall include requirements with respect to the equipment,
 1185  past record, experience, financial resources, and organizational
 1186  personnel of the applicant necessary to perform the specific
 1187  class of work for which the person seeks certification. The
 1188  department may is authorized to limit the dollar amount of any
 1189  contract upon which a person is qualified to bid or the
 1190  aggregate total dollar volume of contracts such person is
 1191  allowed to have under contract at any one time. Each applicant
 1192  seeking qualification to bid on construction contracts in excess
 1193  of $250,000 shall furnish the department a statement under oath,
 1194  on such forms as the department may prescribe, setting forth
 1195  detailed information as required on the application. Each
 1196  application for certification shall be accompanied by the latest
 1197  annual financial statement of the applicant completed within the
 1198  last 12 months. If the application or the annual financial
 1199  statement shows the financial condition of the applicant more
 1200  than 4 months prior to the date on which the application is
 1201  received by the department, then an interim financial statement
 1202  must be submitted and be accompanied by an updated application.
 1203  The interim financial statement must cover the period from the
 1204  end date of the annual statement and must show the financial
 1205  condition of the applicant no more than 4 months prior to the
 1206  date the interim financial statement is received by the
 1207  department. However, upon request by the applicant, an
 1208  application and accompanying annual or interim financial
 1209  statement received by the department within 15 days after either
 1210  4-month period under this subsection shall be considered timely.
 1211  Each required annual or interim financial statement must be
 1212  audited and accompanied by the opinion of a certified public
 1213  accountant or a public accountant approved by the department. An
 1214  applicant desiring to bid exclusively for the performance of
 1215  construction contracts with proposed budget estimates of less
 1216  than $1 million may submit reviewed annual or reviewed interim
 1217  financial statements prepared by a certified public accountant.
 1218  The information required by this subsection is confidential and
 1219  exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1). The department shall
 1220  act upon the application for qualification within 30 days after
 1221  the department determines that the application is complete. The
 1222  department may waive the requirements of this subsection for
 1223  projects having a contract price of $500,000 or less if the
 1224  department determines that the project is of a noncritical
 1225  nature and the waiver will not endanger public health, safety,
 1226  or property.
 1227         Section 34. Subsection (3) of section 337.29, Florida
 1228  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1229         337.29 Vesting of title to roads; liability for torts.—
 1230         (3) Title to all roads transferred in accordance with the
 1231  provisions of s. 335.0415 shall be in the governmental entity to
 1232  which such roads have been transferred, upon the recording of a
 1233  deed or a right-of-way map by the appropriate governmental
 1234  entity in the public land records of the county or counties in
 1235  which such rights-of-way are located. To the extent that
 1236  sovereign immunity has been waived, liability for torts shall be
 1237  in the governmental entity having operation and maintenance
 1238  responsibility as provided in s. 335.0415. Except as otherwise
 1239  provided by law, a municipality shall have the same
 1240  governmental, corporate, and proprietary powers with relation to
 1241  any public road or right-of-way within the municipality which
 1242  has been transferred to another governmental entity pursuant to
 1243  s. 335.0415 that the municipality has with relation to other
 1244  public roads and rights-of-way within the municipality.
 1245         Section 35. Section 337.403, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1246  to read:
 1247         337.403 Interference caused by relocation of utility;
 1248  expenses.—
 1249         (1) If a Any utility that is heretofore or hereafter placed
 1250  upon, under, over, or along any public road or publicly owned
 1251  rail corridor that is found by the authority to be unreasonably
 1252  interfering in any way with the convenient, safe, or continuous
 1253  use, or the maintenance, improvement, extension, or expansion,
 1254  of such public road or publicly owned rail corridor, the utility
 1255  owner shall, upon 30 days’ written notice to the utility or its
 1256  agent by the authority, initiate the work necessary to alleviate
 1257  the interference be removed or relocated by such utility at its
 1258  own expense except as provided in paragraphs (a)-(g) (a)-(f).
 1259  The work must be completed within such reasonable time as stated
 1260  in the notice or such time as agreed to by the authority and the
 1261  utility owner.
 1262         (a) If the relocation of utility facilities, as referred to
 1263  in s. 111 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, Pub. L. No.
 1264  627 of the 84th Congress, is necessitated by the construction of
 1265  a project on the federal-aid interstate system, including
 1266  extensions thereof within urban areas, and the cost of the
 1267  project is eligible and approved for reimbursement by the
 1268  Federal Government to the extent of 90 percent or more under the
 1269  Federal Aid Highway Act, or any amendment thereof, then in that
 1270  event the utility owning or operating such facilities shall
 1271  perform any necessary work relocate the facilities upon notice
 1272  from order of the department, and the state shall pay the entire
 1273  expense properly attributable to such work relocation after
 1274  deducting therefrom any increase in the value of a the new
 1275  facility and any salvage value derived from an the old facility.
 1276         (b) When a joint agreement between the department and the
 1277  utility is executed for utility improvement, relocation, or
 1278  removal work to be accomplished as part of a contract for
 1279  construction of a transportation facility, the department may
 1280  participate in those utility work improvement, relocation, or
 1281  removal costs that exceed the department’s official estimate of
 1282  the cost of the work by more than 10 percent. The amount of such
 1283  participation shall be limited to the difference between the
 1284  official estimate of all the work in the joint agreement plus 10
 1285  percent and the amount awarded for this work in the construction
 1286  contract for such work. The department may not participate in
 1287  any utility work improvement, relocation, or removal costs that
 1288  occur as a result of changes or additions during the course of
 1289  the contract.
 1290         (c) When an agreement between the department and utility is
 1291  executed for utility improvement, relocation, or removal work to
 1292  be accomplished in advance of a contract for construction of a
 1293  transportation facility, the department may participate in the
 1294  cost of clearing and grubbing necessary to perform such work.
 1295         (d) If the utility facility being removed or relocated was
 1296  initially installed to exclusively serve the authority or
 1297  department, its tenants, or both, the authority department shall
 1298  bear the costs of the removing or relocating that utility work
 1299  facility. However, the authority department is not responsible
 1300  for bearing the cost of utility work related to removing or
 1301  relocating any subsequent additions to that facility for the
 1302  purpose of serving others.
 1303         (e) If, under an agreement between a utility and the
 1304  authority entered into after July 1, 2009, the utility conveys,
 1305  subordinates, or relinquishes a compensable property right to
 1306  the authority for the purpose of accommodating the acquisition
 1307  or use of the right-of-way by the authority, without the
 1308  agreement expressly addressing future responsibility for the
 1309  cost of necessary utility work removing or relocating the
 1310  utility, the authority shall bear the cost of removal or
 1311  relocation. This paragraph does not impair or restrict, and may
 1312  not be used to interpret, the terms of any such agreement
 1313  entered into before July 1, 2009.
 1314         (f) If the utility is an electric facility being relocated
 1315  underground in order to enhance vehicular, bicycle, and
 1316  pedestrian safety and in which ownership of the electric
 1317  facility to be placed underground has been transferred from a
 1318  private to a public utility within the past 5 years, the
 1319  department shall incur all costs of the necessary utility work
 1320  relocation.
 1321         (g) An authority may bear the costs of utility work
 1322  required to eliminate an unreasonable interference when the
 1323  utility is not able to establish that it has a compensable
 1324  property right in the particular property where the utility is
 1325  located if:
 1326         1. The utility was physically located on the particular
 1327  property before the authority acquired rights in the property;
 1328         2. The utility demonstrates that it has a compensable
 1329  property right in all adjacent properties along the alignment of
 1330  the utility; and
 1331         3. The information available to the authority does not
 1332  establish the relative priorities of the authority’s and the
 1333  utility’s interests in the particular property.
 1334         (2) If such utility work removal or relocation is
 1335  incidental to work to be done on such road or publicly owned
 1336  rail corridor, the notice shall be given at the same time the
 1337  contract for the work is advertised for bids, or no less than 30
 1338  days before prior to the commencement of such work by the
 1339  authority, whichever occurs later.
 1340         (3) Whenever a notice from an order of the authority
 1341  requires such utility work removal or change in the location of
 1342  any utility from the right-of-way of a public road or publicly
 1343  owned rail corridor, and the owner thereof fails to perform the
 1344  work remove or change the same at his or her own expense to
 1345  conform to the order within the time stated in the notice or
 1346  such other time as agreed to by the authority and the utility
 1347  owner, the authority shall proceed to cause the utility work to
 1348  be performed to be removed. The expense thereby incurred shall
 1349  be paid out of any money available therefor, and such expense
 1350  shall, except as provided in subsection (1), be charged against
 1351  the owner and levied and collected and paid into the fund from
 1352  which the expense of such relocation was paid.
 1353         Section 36. Subsection (1) of section 337.404, Florida
 1354  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1355         337.404 Removal or relocation of utility facilities; notice
 1356  and order; court review.—
 1357         (1) Whenever it becomes shall become necessary for the
 1358  authority to perform utility work remove or relocate any utility
 1359  as provided in s. 337.403 the preceding section, the owner of
 1360  the utility, or the owner’s chief agent, shall be given notice
 1361  that the authority will perform of such work removal or
 1362  relocation and, after the work is completed, shall be given an
 1363  order requiring the payment of the cost thereof, and a shall be
 1364  given reasonable time, which may shall not be less than 20 or
 1365  nor more than 30 days, in which to appear before the authority
 1366  to contest the reasonableness of the order. Should the owner or
 1367  the owner’s representative not appear, the determination of the
 1368  cost to the owner shall be final. Authorities considered
 1369  agencies for the purposes of chapter 120 shall adjudicate
 1370  removal or relocation of utilities pursuant to chapter 120.
 1371         Section 37. Subsections (1), (4), and (5) of section
 1372  337.408, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1373         337.408 Regulation of bus stops, benches, transit shelters,
 1374  street light poles, waste disposal receptacles, and modular news
 1375  racks within rights-of-way.—
 1376         (1) Benches or transit shelters, including advertising
 1377  displayed on benches or transit shelters, may be installed
 1378  within the right-of-way limits of any municipal, county, or
 1379  state road, except a limited access highway, provided that such
 1380  benches or transit shelters are for the comfort or convenience
 1381  of the general public or are at designated stops on official bus
 1382  routes and provided that written authorization has been given to
 1383  a qualified private supplier of such service by the municipal
 1384  government within whose incorporated limits such benches or
 1385  transit shelters are installed or by the county government
 1386  within whose unincorporated limits such benches or transit
 1387  shelters are installed. A municipality or county may authorize
 1388  the installation, without public bid, of benches and transit
 1389  shelters together with advertising displayed thereon within the
 1390  right-of-way limits of such roads. All installations shall be in
 1391  compliance with all applicable laws and rules, including,
 1392  without limitation, the Americans with Disabilities Act.
 1393  Municipalities and counties that authorize or have authorized a
 1394  bench or transit shelter to be installed within the right-of-way
 1395  limits of any road on the State Highway System shall be
 1396  responsible for ensuring that the bench or transit shelter
 1397  complies with all applicable laws and rules, including, without
 1398  limitation, the Americans with Disabilities Act, or shall remove
 1399  the bench or transit shelter. The department shall have no
 1400  liability for any claims, losses, costs, charges, expenses,
 1401  damages, liabilities, attorney fees, or court costs relating to
 1402  the installation, removal, or relocation of any benches or
 1403  transit shelters authorized by a municipality or county. On and
 1404  after July 1, 2012, a municipality or county that authorizes a
 1405  bench or transit shelter to be installed within the right-of-way
 1406  limits of any road on the State Highway System must require the
 1407  qualified private supplier, or any other person under contract
 1408  to install the bench or transit shelter, to indemnify, defend,
 1409  and hold harmless the department from any suits, actions,
 1410  proceedings, claims, losses, costs, charges, expenses, damages,
 1411  liabilities, attorney fees, and court costs relating to the
 1412  installation, removal, or relocation of such installations, and
 1413  shall annually certify to the department in a notarized signed
 1414  statement that this requirement has been met. The certification
 1415  shall include the name and address of each person responsible
 1416  for indemnifying the department for an authorized installation.
 1417  Municipalities and counties that have authorized the
 1418  installation of benches or transit shelters within the right-of
 1419  way limits of any road on the State Highway System must remove
 1420  or relocate, or cause the removal or relocation of, the
 1421  installation at no cost to the department within 60 days after
 1422  written notice by the department that the installation is
 1423  unreasonably interfering in any way with the convenient, safe,
 1424  or continuous use of or the maintenance, improvement, extension,
 1425  or expansion of the State Highway System road. Any contract for
 1426  the installation of benches or transit shelters or advertising
 1427  on benches or transit shelters which was entered into before
 1428  April 8, 1992, without public bidding is ratified and affirmed.
 1429  Such benches or transit shelters may not interfere with right
 1430  of-way preservation and maintenance. Any bench or transit
 1431  shelter located on a sidewalk within the right-of-way limits of
 1432  any road on the State Highway System or the county road system
 1433  shall be located so as to leave at least 36 inches of clearance
 1434  for pedestrians and persons in wheelchairs. Such clearance shall
 1435  be measured in a direction perpendicular to the centerline of
 1436  the road.
 1437         (4) The department has the authority to direct the
 1438  immediate relocation or removal of any bus stop, bench, transit
 1439  shelter, waste disposal receptacle, public pay telephone, or
 1440  modular news rack that endangers life or property or that is
 1441  otherwise not in compliance with applicable laws and rules,
 1442  except that transit bus benches that were placed in service
 1443  before April 1, 1992, are not required to comply with bench size
 1444  and advertising display size requirements established by the
 1445  department before March 1, 1992. Any transit bus bench that was
 1446  in service before April 1, 1992, may be replaced with a bus
 1447  bench of the same size or smaller, if the bench is damaged or
 1448  destroyed or otherwise becomes unusable. The department may
 1449  adopt rules relating to the regulation of bench size and
 1450  advertising display size requirements. If a municipality or
 1451  county within which a bench is to be located has adopted an
 1452  ordinance or other applicable regulation that establishes bench
 1453  size or advertising display sign requirements different from
 1454  requirements specified in department rule, the local government
 1455  requirement applies within the respective municipality or
 1456  county. Placement of any bench or advertising display on the
 1457  National Highway System under a local ordinance or regulation
 1458  adopted under this subsection is subject to approval of the
 1459  Federal Highway Administration.
 1460         (5) A bus stop, bench, transit shelter, waste disposal
 1461  receptacle, public pay telephone, or modular news rack, or
 1462  advertising thereon, may not be erected or placed on the right
 1463  of-way of any road in a manner that conflicts with the
 1464  requirements of federal law, regulations, or safety standards,
 1465  thereby causing the state or any political subdivision the loss
 1466  of federal funds. Competition among persons seeking to provide
 1467  bus stop, bench, transit shelter, waste disposal receptacle,
 1468  public pay telephone, or modular news rack services or
 1469  advertising on such benches, shelters, receptacles, public pay
 1470  telephone, or news racks may be regulated, restricted, or denied
 1471  by the appropriate local government entity consistent with this
 1472  section.
 1473         Section 38. Chapter 338, Florida Statutes, is retitled
 1474  “LIMITED ACCESS AND TOLL FACILITIES.”
 1475         Section 39. Section 338.001, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 1476         Section 40. Present subsections (1) through (6) of section
 1477  338.01, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (2)
 1478  through (7), respectively, and new subsections (1) and (8) are
 1479  added to that section to read:
 1480         338.01 Authority to establish and regulate limited access
 1481  facilities.—
 1482         (1) The department may establish limited access facilities
 1483  as provided in s. 335.02. The primary function of such limited
 1484  access facilities shall be to allow high-speed and high-volume
 1485  traffic movements within the state. Access to abutting land is
 1486  subordinate to this function, and such access must be prohibited
 1487  or highly regulated.
 1488         (8) The department, or other governmental entity
 1489  responsible for the collection of tolls, may pursue the
 1490  collection of unpaid tolls and associated fees and other amounts
 1491  to which it is entitled by contracting with a private attorney
 1492  who is a member in good standing with The Florida Bar or a
 1493  collection agent who is registered and in good standing pursuant
 1494  to chapter 559. A collection fee in an amount that is reasonable
 1495  within the collection industry, including any reasonable
 1496  attorney fees, may be added to the delinquent amount collected
 1497  by any attorney or collection agent retained by the department
 1498  or other governmental entity. The requirements of s. 287.059 do
 1499  not apply to private attorney services procured under this
 1500  section.
 1501         Section 41. Section 338.151, Florida Statutes, is created
 1502  to read:
 1503         338.151 Authority of the department to establish tolls on
 1504  the State Highway System.—Notwithstanding s. 338.165(8), the
 1505  department may establish tolls on new limited access facilities
 1506  on the State Highway System, lanes added to existing limited
 1507  access facilities on the State Highway System, new major bridges
 1508  on the State Highway System over waterways, and replacements for
 1509  existing major bridges on the State Highway System over
 1510  waterways to pay, fully or partially, for the cost of such
 1511  projects. Except for high-occupancy vehicle lanes, express
 1512  lanes, the turnpike system, and as otherwise authorized by law,
 1513  the department may not establish tolls on lanes of limited
 1514  access facilities that exist on July 1, 2012, unless tolls were
 1515  in effect for the lanes prior to that date. The authority
 1516  provided in this section is in addition to the authority
 1517  provided under the Florida Turnpike Enterprise Law and s.
 1518  338.166.
 1519         Section 42. Subsection (1) of section 338.155, Florida
 1520  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1521         338.155 Payment of toll on toll facilities required;
 1522  exemptions.—
 1523         (1) A person may not No persons are permitted to use any
 1524  toll facility without payment of tolls, except employees of the
 1525  agency operating the toll project when using the toll facility
 1526  on official state business, state military personnel while on
 1527  official military business, handicapped persons as provided in
 1528  this section, persons exempt from toll payment by the
 1529  authorizing resolution for bonds issued to finance the facility,
 1530  and persons exempt on a temporary basis where use of such toll
 1531  facility is required as a detour route. Any law enforcement
 1532  officer operating a marked official vehicle is exempt from toll
 1533  payment when on official law enforcement business. Any person
 1534  operating a fire vehicle when on official business or a rescue
 1535  vehicle when on official business is exempt from toll payment.
 1536  Any person participating in the funeral procession of a law
 1537  enforcement officer or firefighter killed in the line of duty is
 1538  exempt from toll payment. The secretary, or the secretary’s
 1539  designee, may suspend the payment of tolls on a toll facility
 1540  when necessary to assist in emergency evacuation. The failure to
 1541  pay a prescribed toll constitutes a noncriminal traffic
 1542  infraction, punishable as a moving violation as provided in
 1543  pursuant to s. 318.18. The department may is authorized to adopt
 1544  rules relating to the payment, collection, and enforcement of
 1545  tolls, as authorized in chapters 316, 318, 320, 322, and 338,
 1546  including, but not limited to, rules for the implementation of
 1547  video or other image billing and variable pricing. With respect
 1548  to toll facilities managed by the department, the revenues of
 1549  which are not pledged to repayment of bonds, the department may
 1550  by rule allow the use of such facilities by public transit
 1551  vehicles or by vehicles participating in a funeral procession
 1552  for an active-duty military service member without the payment
 1553  of tolls.
 1554         Section 43. Paragraph (c) is added to subsection (3) of
 1555  section 338.161, Florida Statutes, to read:
 1556         338.161 Authority of department or toll agencies to
 1557  advertise and promote electronic toll collection; expanded uses
 1558  of electronic toll collection system; studies authorized;
 1559  authority of department to collect tolls, fares, and fees for
 1560  private and public entities.—
 1561         (3)
 1562         (c) If the department finds that it can increase nontoll
 1563  revenues or add convenience or other value for its customers,
 1564  the department is authorized to enter into agreements with
 1565  private or public entities for the department’s use of its
 1566  electronic toll collection and video billing systems to collect
 1567  tolls, fares, administrative fees, and other applicable charges
 1568  imposed in connection with transportation facilities of the
 1569  private or public entities that become interoperable with the
 1570  department’s electronic toll collection system. The department
 1571  may modify its rules regarding toll collection procedures and
 1572  the imposition of administrative charges to be applicable to
 1573  toll facilities that are not part of the turnpike system or
 1574  otherwise owned by the department. This paragraph may not be
 1575  construed to limit the authority of the department under any
 1576  other provision of law or under any agreement entered into prior
 1577  to July 1, 2012.
 1578         Section 44. Section 338.166, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1579  to read:
 1580         338.166 High-occupancy toll lanes or express lanes.—
 1581         (1) Under s. 11, Art. VII of the State Constitution, the
 1582  department may request the Division of Bond Finance to issue
 1583  bonds secured by toll revenues collected on high-occupancy toll
 1584  lanes or express lanes established on facilities owned by the
 1585  department located on Interstate 95 in Miami-Dade and Broward
 1586  Counties.
 1587         (2) The department may continue to collect the toll on the
 1588  high-occupancy toll lanes or express lanes after the discharge
 1589  of any bond indebtedness related to such project. All tolls so
 1590  collected shall first be used to pay the annual cost of the
 1591  operation, maintenance, and improvement of the high-occupancy
 1592  toll lanes or express lanes project or associated transportation
 1593  system.
 1594         (3) Any remaining toll revenue from the high-occupancy toll
 1595  lanes or express lanes shall be used by the department for the
 1596  construction, maintenance, or improvement of any road on the
 1597  State Highway System within the county or counties in which the
 1598  toll revenues were collected or to support express bus service
 1599  on the facility where the toll revenues were collected.
 1600         (4) The department may implement variable rate tolls on
 1601  high-occupancy toll lanes or express lanes.
 1602         (5) Except for high-occupancy toll lanes or express lanes,
 1603  tolls may not be charged for use of an interstate highway where
 1604  tolls were not charged as of July 1, 1997.
 1605         (6) This section does not apply to the turnpike system as
 1606  defined under the Florida Turnpike Enterprise Law.
 1607         Section 45. Paragraph (a) of subsection (8) of section
 1608  338.221, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1609         338.221 Definitions of terms used in ss. 338.22-338.241.—As
 1610  used in ss. 338.22-338.241, the following words and terms have
 1611  the following meanings, unless the context indicates another or
 1612  different meaning or intent:
 1613         (8) “Economically feasible” means:
 1614         (a) For a proposed turnpike project, that, as determined by
 1615  the department before the issuance of revenue bonds for the
 1616  project, the estimated net revenues of the proposed turnpike
 1617  project, excluding feeder roads and turnpike improvements, will
 1618  be sufficient to pay at least 50 percent of the annual debt
 1619  service on the bonds associated with the project by the end of
 1620  the 12th year of operation and to pay at least 100 percent of
 1621  the debt service on the bonds by the end of the 30th 22nd year
 1622  of operation. In implementing this paragraph, up to 50 percent
 1623  of the adopted work program costs of the project may be funded
 1624  from turnpike revenues.
 1625  
 1626  This subsection does not prohibit the pledging of revenues from
 1627  the entire turnpike system to bonds issued to finance or
 1628  refinance a turnpike project or group of turnpike projects.
 1629         Section 46. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) of
 1630  section 338.223, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1631         338.223 Proposed turnpike projects.—
 1632         (1)(a) Any proposed project to be constructed or acquired
 1633  as part of the turnpike system and any turnpike improvement
 1634  shall be included in the tentative work program. A No proposed
 1635  project or group of proposed projects may not shall be added to
 1636  the turnpike system unless such project or projects are
 1637  determined to be economically feasible and a statement of
 1638  environmental feasibility has been completed for such project or
 1639  projects and such projects are determined to be consistent, to
 1640  the maximum extent feasible, with approved local government
 1641  comprehensive plans of the local governments in which such
 1642  projects are located. The department may authorize engineering
 1643  studies, traffic studies, environmental studies, and other
 1644  expert studies of the location, costs, economic feasibility, and
 1645  practicality of proposed turnpike projects throughout the state
 1646  and may proceed with the design phase of such projects. The
 1647  department may shall not request legislative approval of a
 1648  proposed turnpike project until the design phase of that project
 1649  is at least 30 60 percent complete. If a proposed project or
 1650  group of proposed projects is found to be economically feasible,
 1651  consistent, to the maximum extent feasible, with approved local
 1652  government comprehensive plans of the local governments in which
 1653  such projects are located, and a favorable statement of
 1654  environmental feasibility has been completed, the department,
 1655  with the approval of the Legislature, shall, after the receipt
 1656  of all necessary permits, construct, maintain, and operate such
 1657  turnpike projects.
 1658         (b) Any proposed turnpike project or improvement shall be
 1659  developed in accordance with the Florida Transportation Plan and
 1660  the work program pursuant to s. 339.135. Turnpike projects that
 1661  add capacity, alter access, affect feeder roads, or affect the
 1662  operation of the local transportation system shall be included
 1663  in the transportation improvement plan of the affected
 1664  metropolitan planning organization. If such turnpike project
 1665  does not fall within the jurisdiction of a metropolitan planning
 1666  organization, the department shall notify the affected county
 1667  and provide for public hearings in accordance with s.
 1668  339.155(5)(c) s. 339.155(6)(c).
 1669         Section 47. Subsection (4) of section 338.227, Florida
 1670  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1671         338.227 Turnpike revenue bonds.—
 1672         (4) The Department of Transportation and the Department of
 1673  Management Services shall create and implement an outreach
 1674  program designed to enhance the participation of minority
 1675  persons and minority business enterprises in all contracts
 1676  entered into by their respective departments for services
 1677  related to the financing of department projects for the
 1678  Strategic Intermodal System Plan developed pursuant to s. 339.64
 1679  Florida Intrastate Highway System Plan. These services shall
 1680  include, but are not be limited to, bond counsel and bond
 1681  underwriters.
 1682         Section 48. Subsection (2) of section 338.2275, Florida
 1683  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1684         338.2275 Approved turnpike projects.—
 1685         (2) The department may is authorized to use turnpike
 1686  revenues, the State Transportation Trust Fund moneys allocated
 1687  for turnpike projects pursuant to s. 339.65 s. 338.001, federal
 1688  funds, and bond proceeds, and shall use the most cost-efficient
 1689  combination of such funds, in developing a financial plan for
 1690  funding turnpike projects. The department must submit a report
 1691  of the estimated cost for each ongoing turnpike project and for
 1692  each planned project to the Legislature 14 days before the
 1693  convening of the regular legislative session. Verification of
 1694  economic feasibility and statements of environmental feasibility
 1695  for individual turnpike projects must be based on the entire
 1696  project as approved. Statements of environmental feasibility are
 1697  not required for those projects listed in s. 12, chapter 90-136,
 1698  Laws of Florida, for which the Project Development and
 1699  Environmental Reports were completed by July 1, 1990. All
 1700  required environmental permits must be obtained before the
 1701  department may advertise for bids for contracts for the
 1702  construction of any turnpike project.
 1703         Section 49. Section 338.228, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1704  to read:
 1705         338.228 Bonds not debts or pledges of credit of state.
 1706  Turnpike revenue bonds issued under the provisions of ss.
 1707  338.22-338.241 are not debts of the state or pledges of the
 1708  faith and credit of the state. Such bonds are payable
 1709  exclusively from revenues pledged for their payment. All such
 1710  bonds shall contain a statement on their face that the state is
 1711  not obligated to pay the same or the interest thereon, except
 1712  from the revenues pledged for their payment, and that the faith
 1713  and credit of the state is not pledged to the payment of the
 1714  principal or interest of such bonds. The issuance of turnpike
 1715  revenue bonds under the provisions of ss. 338.22-338.241 does
 1716  not directly, indirectly, or contingently obligate the state to
 1717  levy or to pledge any form of taxation whatsoever, or to make
 1718  any appropriation for their payment. Except as provided in ss.
 1719  338.001, 338.223, and 338.2275, and 339.65, no state funds may
 1720  not shall be used on any turnpike project or to pay the
 1721  principal or interest of any bonds issued to finance or
 1722  refinance any portion of the turnpike system, and all such bonds
 1723  shall contain a statement on their face to this effect.
 1724         Section 50. Paragraph (c) is added to subsection (3) of
 1725  section 338.231, Florida Statutes, to read:
 1726         338.231 Turnpike tolls, fixing; pledge of tolls and other
 1727  revenues.—The department shall at all times fix, adjust, charge,
 1728  and collect such tolls and amounts for the use of the turnpike
 1729  system as are required in order to provide a fund sufficient
 1730  with other revenues of the turnpike system to pay the cost of
 1731  maintaining, improving, repairing, and operating such turnpike
 1732  system; to pay the principal of and interest on all bonds issued
 1733  to finance or refinance any portion of the turnpike system as
 1734  the same become due and payable; and to create reserves for all
 1735  such purposes.
 1736         (3)
 1737         (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 1738  contrary, any prepaid toll account of any kind which has
 1739  remained inactive for 3 years shall be presumed unclaimed and
 1740  its disposition shall be handled by the Department of Financial
 1741  Services in accordance with all applicable provisions of chapter
 1742  717 relating to the disposition of unclaimed property, and the
 1743  prepaid toll account shall be closed by the department.
 1744         Section 51. Subsection (2) of section 338.234, Florida
 1745  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1746         338.234 Granting concessions or selling along the turnpike
 1747  system; immunity from taxation.—
 1748         (2) The effectuation of the authorized purposes of the
 1749  Strategic Intermodal System, created under ss. 339.61-339.65,
 1750  Florida Intrastate Highway System and Florida Turnpike
 1751  Enterprise, created under this chapter, is for the benefit of
 1752  the people of the state, for the increase of their commerce and
 1753  prosperity, and for the improvement of their health and living
 1754  conditions; and, because the system and enterprise perform
 1755  essential government functions in effectuating such purposes,
 1756  neither the turnpike enterprise nor any nongovernment lessee or
 1757  licensee renting, leasing, or licensing real property from the
 1758  turnpike enterprise, pursuant to an agreement authorized by this
 1759  section, are required to pay any commercial rental tax imposed
 1760  under s. 212.031 on any capital improvements constructed,
 1761  improved, acquired, installed, or used for such purposes.
 1762         Section 52. Subsections (1), (2), and (3) of section
 1763  339.0805, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1764         339.0805 Funds to be expended with certified disadvantaged
 1765  business enterprises; specified percentage to be expended;
 1766  construction management development program; bond guarantee
 1767  program.—It is the policy of the state to meaningfully assist
 1768  socially and economically disadvantaged business enterprises
 1769  through a program that will provide for the development of
 1770  skills through construction and business management training, as
 1771  well as by providing contracting opportunities and financial
 1772  assistance in the form of bond guarantees, to primarily remedy
 1773  the effects of past economic disparity.
 1774         (1)(a) Except to the extent that the head of the department
 1775  determines otherwise, The department shall expend not less than
 1776  10 percent of federal-aid highway funds as defined in 49 C.F.R.
 1777  part 26 s. 23.63(a) and state matching funds with small business
 1778  concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically
 1779  disadvantaged individuals as defined by the Safe, Accountable,
 1780  Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
 1781  Users (SAFETEA-LU) Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation
 1782  Assistance Act of 1987.
 1783         (b) Upon a determination by the department of past and
 1784  continuing discrimination in nonfederally funded projects on the
 1785  basis of race, color, creed, national origin, or sex, the
 1786  department may implement a program tailored to address specific
 1787  findings of disparity. The program may include the establishment
 1788  of annual goals for expending a percentage of state-administered
 1789  highway funds with small business concerns. The department may
 1790  utilize set-asides for small business concerns to assist in
 1791  achieving goals established pursuant to this subsection. For the
 1792  purpose of this subsection, the term “small business concern”
 1793  means a business owned and controlled by socially and
 1794  economically disadvantaged individuals as defined by the Safe,
 1795  Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
 1796  Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) Surface Transportation and Uniform
 1797  Relocation Assistance Act of 1987. The head of the department
 1798  may elect to set goals only when significant disparity is
 1799  documented. The findings of a disparity study shall be
 1800  considered in determining the program goals for each group
 1801  qualified to participate. Such a study shall be conducted or
 1802  updated by the department or its designee at a minimum of every
 1803  5 years. The department shall adopt rules to implement this
 1804  subsection on or before October 1, 1993.
 1805         (c) The department shall certify a socially and
 1806  economically disadvantaged business enterprise, which
 1807  certification shall be valid for 12 months, or as prescribed by
 1808  49 C.F.R. part 26 23. The department’s initial application for
 1809  certification for a socially and economically disadvantaged
 1810  business enterprise shall require sufficient information to
 1811  determine eligibility as a small business concern owned and
 1812  controlled by a socially and economically disadvantaged
 1813  individual. For continuing eligibility recertification of a
 1814  disadvantaged business enterprise, the department may accept an
 1815  affidavit, which meets department criteria as to form and
 1816  content, certifying that the business remains qualified for
 1817  certification in accordance with program requirements. A firm
 1818  which does not fulfill all the department’s criteria for
 1819  certification may shall not be considered a disadvantaged
 1820  business enterprise. An applicant who is denied certification
 1821  may not reapply within 12 6 months after issuance of the denial
 1822  letter or the final order, whichever is later. The application
 1823  and financial information required by this section are
 1824  confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1).
 1825         (2) The department shall remove revoke the certification of
 1826  a disadvantaged business enterprise upon receipt of notification
 1827  of any change in ownership which results in the disadvantaged
 1828  individual or individuals used to qualify the business as a
 1829  disadvantaged business enterprise, no longer owning at least 51
 1830  percent of the business enterprise. Such notification shall be
 1831  made to the department by certified mail within 30 10 days after
 1832  the change in ownership, and such business shall be removed from
 1833  the certified disadvantaged business list until a new
 1834  application is submitted and approved by the department. Failure
 1835  to notify the department of the change in the ownership which
 1836  qualifies the business as a disadvantaged business enterprise
 1837  will also result in removal revocation of certification and
 1838  subject the business to the provisions of s. 337.135. In
 1839  addition, the department may, for good cause, deny or remove
 1840  suspend the certification of a disadvantaged business
 1841  enterprise. As used in this subsection, the term “good cause”
 1842  includes, but is not limited to, the disadvantaged business
 1843  enterprise:
 1844         (a) No longer meeting the certification standards set forth
 1845  in department rules;
 1846         (b) Making a false, deceptive, or fraudulent statement in
 1847  its application for certification or in any other information
 1848  submitted to the department;
 1849         (c) Failing to maintain the records required by department
 1850  rules;
 1851         (d) Failing to perform a commercially useful function on
 1852  projects for which the enterprise was used to satisfy contract
 1853  goals;
 1854         (e) Failing to fulfill its contractual obligations with
 1855  contractors;
 1856         (f) Failing to respond with a statement of interest to
 1857  requests for bid quotations from contractors for three
 1858  consecutive lettings;
 1859         (g) Subcontracting to others more than 49 percent of the
 1860  amount of any single subcontract that was used by the prime
 1861  contractor to meet a contract goal;
 1862         (g)(h) Failing to provide notarized certification of
 1863  payments received on specific projects to the prime contractor
 1864  when required to do so by contract specifications;
 1865         (h)(i) Failing to schedule an onsite review upon request of
 1866  the department; or
 1867         (i)(j) Becoming insolvent or the subject of a bankruptcy
 1868  proceeding.
 1869         (3) The head of the department may is authorized to expend
 1870  up to 6 percent of the funds specified in subsection (1) which
 1871  are designated to be expended on small business firms owned and
 1872  controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged
 1873  individuals to conduct, by contract or otherwise, a construction
 1874  management development program. Participation in the program
 1875  will be limited to those firms which are certified under the
 1876  provisions of subsection (1) by the department or the federal
 1877  Small Business Administration or to any firm which meets the
 1878  definition of a small business in 49 C.F.R. s. 26.65 has annual
 1879  gross receipts not exceeding $2 million averaged over a 3-year
 1880  period. The program shall will consist of classroom instruction
 1881  and on-the-job instruction. To the extent feasible, the
 1882  registration fee shall be set to cover the cost of instruction
 1883  and overhead. No Salary may not will be paid to any participant.
 1884         Section 53. Paragraph (c) of subsection (4) and paragraph
 1885  (e) of subsection (7) of section 339.135, Florida Statutes, are
 1886  amended to read:
 1887         339.135 Work program; legislative budget request;
 1888  definitions; preparation, adoption, execution, and amendment.—
 1889         (4) FUNDING AND DEVELOPING A TENTATIVE WORK PROGRAM.—
 1890         (c)1. For purposes of this section, the board of county
 1891  commissioners shall serve as the metropolitan planning
 1892  organization in those counties which are not located in a
 1893  metropolitan planning organization and shall be involved in the
 1894  development of the district work program to the same extent as a
 1895  metropolitan planning organization.
 1896         2. The district work program shall be developed
 1897  cooperatively from the outset with the various metropolitan
 1898  planning organizations of the state and include, to the maximum
 1899  extent feasible, the project priorities of metropolitan planning
 1900  organizations which have been submitted to the district by
 1901  October 1 of each year pursuant to s. 339.175(8)(b); however,
 1902  the department and a metropolitan planning organization may, in
 1903  writing, cooperatively agree to vary this submittal date. To
 1904  assist the metropolitan planning organizations in developing
 1905  their lists of project priorities, the district shall disclose
 1906  to each metropolitan planning organization any anticipated
 1907  changes in the allocation or programming of state and federal
 1908  funds which may affect the inclusion of metropolitan planning
 1909  organization project priorities in the district work program.
 1910         3. Prior to submittal of the district work program to the
 1911  central office, the district shall provide the affected
 1912  metropolitan planning organization with written justification
 1913  for any project proposed to be rescheduled or deleted from the
 1914  district work program which project is part of the metropolitan
 1915  planning organization’s transportation improvement program and
 1916  is contained in the last 4 years of the previous adopted work
 1917  program. By no later than 14 days after submittal of the
 1918  district work program to the central office, the affected
 1919  metropolitan planning organization may file an objection to such
 1920  rescheduling or deletion. When an objection is filed with the
 1921  secretary, the rescheduling or deletion may shall not be
 1922  included in the district work program unless the inclusion of
 1923  such rescheduling or deletion is specifically approved by the
 1924  secretary. The Florida Transportation Commission shall include
 1925  such objections in its evaluation of the tentative work program
 1926  only when the secretary has approved the rescheduling or
 1927  deletion.
 1928         (7) AMENDMENT OF THE ADOPTED WORK PROGRAM.—
 1929         (e) The department may amend the adopted work program to
 1930  transfer fixed capital outlay appropriations for projects within
 1931  the same appropriations category or between appropriations
 1932  categories, including the following amendments which shall be
 1933  subject to the procedures in paragraph (f):
 1934         1. Any amendment which deletes any project or project phase
 1935  estimated to cost over $150,000;
 1936         2. Any amendment which adds a project estimated to cost
 1937  over $500,000 $150,000 in funds appropriated by the Legislature;
 1938         3. Any amendment which advances or defers to another fiscal
 1939  year, a right-of-way phase, a construction phase, or a public
 1940  transportation project phase estimated to cost over $1.5 million
 1941  $500,000 in funds appropriated by the Legislature, except an
 1942  amendment advancing a phase by 1 year to the current fiscal year
 1943  or deferring a phase for a period of 90 days or less; or
 1944         4. Any amendment which advances or defers to another fiscal
 1945  year, any preliminary engineering phase or design phase
 1946  estimated to cost over $500,000 $150,000 in funds appropriated
 1947  by the Legislature, except an amendment advancing a phase by 1
 1948  year to the current fiscal year or deferring a phase for a
 1949  period of 90 days or less.
 1950  
 1951  Beginning July 1, 2013, the department shall index the budget
 1952  amendment threshold amounts established in this paragraph to the
 1953  Consumer Price Index or similar inflation indicators. Threshold
 1954  adjustments for inflation under this paragraph may be made no
 1955  more frequently than once a year. Adjustments for inflation are
 1956  subject to the notice and review procedures contained in s.
 1957  216.177.
 1958         Section 54. Section 339.155, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1959  to read:
 1960         339.155 Transportation planning.—
 1961         (1) THE FLORIDA TRANSPORTATION PLAN.—The department shall
 1962  develop and annually update a statewide transportation plan, to
 1963  be known as the Florida Transportation Plan. The plan shall be
 1964  designed so as to be easily read and understood by the general
 1965  public. The plan shall consider the needs of the entire state
 1966  transportation system and examine the use of all modes of
 1967  transportation to effectively and efficiently meet such needs.
 1968  The purpose of the Florida Transportation Plan is to establish
 1969  and define the state’s long-range transportation goals and
 1970  objectives to be accomplished over a period of at least 20 years
 1971  within the context of the State Comprehensive Plan, and any
 1972  other statutory mandates and authorizations and based upon the
 1973  prevailing principles of:
 1974         (a) Preserving the existing transportation infrastructure.
 1975         (b) Enhancing Florida’s economic competitiveness.
 1976         (c) Improving travel choices to ensure mobility.
 1977         (d) Expanding the state’s role as a hub for trade and
 1978  investment.
 1979         (2) SCOPE OF PLANNING PROCESS.—The department shall carry
 1980  out a transportation planning process in conformance with s.
 1981  334.046(1) and 23 U.S.C. s. 135. which provides for
 1982  consideration of projects and strategies that will:
 1983         (a) Support the economic vitality of the United States,
 1984  Florida, and the metropolitan areas, especially by enabling
 1985  global competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency;
 1986         (b) Increase the safety and security of the transportation
 1987  system for motorized and nonmotorized users;
 1988         (c) Increase the accessibility and mobility options
 1989  available to people and for freight;
 1990         (d) Protect and enhance the environment, promote energy
 1991  conservation, and improve quality of life;
 1992         (e) Enhance the integration and connectivity of the
 1993  transportation system, across and between modes throughout
 1994  Florida, for people and freight;
 1995         (f) Promote efficient system management and operation; and
 1996         (g) Emphasize the preservation of the existing
 1997  transportation system.
 1998         (3) FORMAT, SCHEDULE, AND REVIEW.—The Florida
 1999  Transportation Plan shall be a unified, concise planning
 2000  document that clearly defines the state’s long-range
 2001  transportation goals and objectives and documents the
 2002  department’s short-range objectives developed to further such
 2003  goals and objectives. The plan shall:
 2004         (a) Include a glossary that clearly and succinctly defines
 2005  any and all phrases, words, or terms of art included in the
 2006  plan, with which the general public may be unfamiliar. and shall
 2007  consist of, at a minimum, the following components:
 2008         (b)(a)Document A long-range component documenting the
 2009  goals and long-term objectives necessary to implement the
 2010  results of the department’s findings from its examination of the
 2011  criteria specified listed in subsection (2) and s. 334.046(1)
 2012  and 23 U.S.C. s. 135. The long-range component must
 2013         (c) Be developed in cooperation with the metropolitan
 2014  planning organizations and reconciled, to the maximum extent
 2015  feasible, with the long-range plans developed by metropolitan
 2016  planning organizations pursuant to s. 339.175. The plan must
 2017  also
 2018         (d) Be developed in consultation with affected local
 2019  officials in nonmetropolitan areas and with any affected Indian
 2020  tribal governments. The plan must
 2021         (e) Provide an examination of transportation issues likely
 2022  to arise during at least a 20-year period. The long-range
 2023  component shall
 2024         (f) Be updated at least once every 5 years, or more often
 2025  as necessary, to reflect substantive changes to federal or state
 2026  law.
 2027         (b) A short-range component documenting the short-term
 2028  objectives and strategies necessary to implement the goals and
 2029  long-term objectives contained in the long-range component. The
 2030  short-range component must define the relationship between the
 2031  long-range goals and the short-range objectives, specify those
 2032  objectives against which the department’s achievement of such
 2033  goals will be measured, and identify transportation strategies
 2034  necessary to efficiently achieve the goals and objectives in the
 2035  plan. It must provide a policy framework within which the
 2036  department’s legislative budget request, the strategic
 2037  information resource management plan, and the work program are
 2038  developed. The short-range component shall serve as the
 2039  department’s annual agency strategic plan pursuant to s.
 2040  186.021. The short-range component shall be developed consistent
 2041  with available and forecasted state and federal funds. The
 2042  short-range component shall also be submitted to the Florida
 2043  Transportation Commission.
 2044         (4) ANNUAL PERFORMANCE REPORT.—The department shall develop
 2045  an annual performance report evaluating the operation of the
 2046  department for the preceding fiscal year. The report shall also
 2047  include a summary of the financial operations of the department
 2048  and shall annually evaluate how well the adopted work program
 2049  meets the short-term objectives contained in the short-range
 2050  component of the Florida Transportation Plan. This performance
 2051  report shall be submitted to the Florida Transportation
 2052  Commission and the legislative appropriations and transportation
 2053  committees.
 2054         (4)(5) ADDITIONAL TRANSPORTATION PLANS.—
 2055         (a) Upon request by local governmental entities, the
 2056  department may in its discretion develop and design
 2057  transportation corridors, arterial and collector streets,
 2058  vehicular parking areas, and other support facilities which are
 2059  consistent with the plans of the department for major
 2060  transportation facilities. The department may render to local
 2061  governmental entities or their planning agencies such technical
 2062  assistance and services as are necessary so that local plans and
 2063  facilities are coordinated with the plans and facilities of the
 2064  department.
 2065         (b) Each regional planning council, as provided for in s.
 2066  186.504, or any successor agency thereto, shall develop, as an
 2067  element of its strategic regional policy plan, transportation
 2068  goals and policies. The transportation goals and policies must
 2069  be prioritized to comply with the prevailing principles provided
 2070  in subsection (1) (2) and s. 334.046(1). The transportation
 2071  goals and policies shall be consistent, to the maximum extent
 2072  feasible, with the goals and policies of the metropolitan
 2073  planning organization and the Florida Transportation Plan. The
 2074  transportation goals and policies of the regional planning
 2075  council will be advisory only and shall be submitted to the
 2076  department and any affected metropolitan planning organization
 2077  for their consideration and comments. Metropolitan planning
 2078  organization plans and other local transportation plans shall be
 2079  developed consistent, to the maximum extent feasible, with the
 2080  regional transportation goals and policies. The regional
 2081  planning council shall review urbanized area transportation
 2082  plans and any other planning products stipulated in s. 339.175
 2083  and provide the department and respective metropolitan planning
 2084  organizations with written recommendations, which the department
 2085  and the metropolitan planning organizations shall take under
 2086  advisement. Further, the regional planning councils shall
 2087  directly assist local governments that which are not part of a
 2088  metropolitan area transportation planning process in the
 2089  development of the transportation element of their comprehensive
 2090  plans as required by s. 163.3177.
 2091         (c) Regional transportation plans may be developed in
 2092  regional transportation areas in accordance with an interlocal
 2093  agreement entered into pursuant to s. 163.01 by two or more
 2094  contiguous metropolitan planning organizations; one or more
 2095  metropolitan planning organizations and one or more contiguous
 2096  counties, none of which is a member of a metropolitan planning
 2097  organization; a multicounty regional transportation authority
 2098  created by or pursuant to law; two or more contiguous counties
 2099  that are not members of a metropolitan planning organization; or
 2100  metropolitan planning organizations comprised of three or more
 2101  counties.
 2102         (d) The interlocal agreement must, at a minimum, identify
 2103  the entity that will coordinate the development of the regional
 2104  transportation plan; delineate the boundaries of the regional
 2105  transportation area; provide the duration of the agreement and
 2106  specify how the agreement may be terminated, modified, or
 2107  rescinded; describe the process by which the regional
 2108  transportation plan will be developed; and provide how members
 2109  of the entity will resolve disagreements regarding
 2110  interpretation of the interlocal agreement or disputes relating
 2111  to the development or content of the regional transportation
 2112  plan. Such interlocal agreement shall become effective upon its
 2113  recordation in the official public records of each county in the
 2114  regional transportation area.
 2115         (e) The regional transportation plan developed pursuant to
 2116  this section must, at a minimum, identify regionally significant
 2117  transportation facilities located within a regional
 2118  transportation area and contain a prioritized list of regionally
 2119  significant projects. The projects shall be adopted into the
 2120  capital improvements schedule of the local government
 2121  comprehensive plan pursuant to s. 163.3177(3).
 2122         (5)(6) PROCEDURES FOR PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IN
 2123  TRANSPORTATION PLANNING.—
 2124         (a) During the development of the long-range component of
 2125  the Florida Transportation Plan and prior to substantive
 2126  revisions, the department shall provide citizens, affected
 2127  public agencies, representatives of transportation agency
 2128  employees, other affected employee representatives, private
 2129  providers of transportation, and other known interested parties
 2130  with an opportunity to comment on the proposed plan or
 2131  revisions. These opportunities shall include, at a minimum,
 2132  publishing a notice in the Florida Administrative Weekly and
 2133  within a newspaper of general circulation within the area of
 2134  each department district office.
 2135         (b) During development of major transportation
 2136  improvements, such as those increasing the capacity of a
 2137  facility through the addition of new lanes or providing new
 2138  access to a limited or controlled access facility or
 2139  construction of a facility in a new location, the department
 2140  shall hold one or more hearings prior to the selection of the
 2141  facility to be provided; prior to the selection of the site or
 2142  corridor of the proposed facility; and prior to the selection of
 2143  and commitment to a specific design proposal for the proposed
 2144  facility. Such public hearings shall be conducted so as to
 2145  provide an opportunity for effective participation by interested
 2146  persons in the process of transportation planning and site and
 2147  route selection and in the specific location and design of
 2148  transportation facilities. The various factors involved in the
 2149  decision or decisions and any alternative proposals shall be
 2150  clearly presented so that the persons attending the hearing may
 2151  present their views relating to the decision or decisions that
 2152  which will be made.
 2153         (c) Opportunity for design hearings:
 2154         1. The department, prior to holding a design hearing, shall
 2155  duly notify all affected property owners of record, as recorded
 2156  in the property appraiser’s office, by mail at least 20 days
 2157  prior to the date set for the hearing. The affected property
 2158  owners shall be:
 2159         a. Those whose property lies in whole or in part within 300
 2160  feet on either side of the centerline of the proposed facility.
 2161         b. Those who whom the department determines will be
 2162  substantially affected environmentally, economically, socially,
 2163  or safetywise.
 2164         2. For each subsequent hearing, the department shall
 2165  publish notice prior to the hearing date in a newspaper of
 2166  general circulation for the area affected. These notices must be
 2167  published twice, with the first notice appearing at least 15
 2168  days, but no later than 30 days, before the hearing.
 2169         3. A copy of the notice of opportunity for the hearing must
 2170  be furnished to the United States Department of Transportation
 2171  and to the appropriate departments of the state government at
 2172  the time of publication.
 2173         4. The opportunity for another hearing shall be afforded in
 2174  any case when proposed locations or designs are so changed from
 2175  those presented in the notices specified above or at a hearing
 2176  as to have a substantially different social, economic, or
 2177  environmental effect.
 2178         5. The opportunity for a hearing shall be afforded in each
 2179  case in which the department is in doubt as to whether a hearing
 2180  is required.
 2181         Section 55. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2), paragraph (a)
 2182  of subsection (4), and paragraph (b) of subsection (8) of
 2183  section 339.175, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2184         339.175 Metropolitan planning organization.—
 2185         (2) DESIGNATION.—
 2186         (a)1. An M.P.O. shall be designated for each urbanized area
 2187  of the state; however, this does not require that an individual
 2188  M.P.O. be designated for each such area. Such designation shall
 2189  be accomplished by agreement between the Governor and units of
 2190  general-purpose local government representing at least 75
 2191  percent of the population of the urbanized area; however, the
 2192  unit of general-purpose local government that represents the
 2193  central city or cities within the M.P.O. jurisdiction, as
 2194  defined by the United States Bureau of the Census, must be a
 2195  party to such agreement.
 2196         2. To the extent possible, only one M.P.O. shall be
 2197  designated for each urbanized area or group of contiguous
 2198  urbanized areas. More than one M.P.O. may be designated within
 2199  an existing urbanized metropolitan planning area only if the
 2200  Governor and the existing M.P.O. determine that the size and
 2201  complexity of the existing urbanized metropolitan planning area
 2202  makes the designation of more than one M.P.O. for the area
 2203  appropriate.
 2204  
 2205  Each M.P.O. required under this section must be fully operative
 2206  no later than 6 months following its designation.
 2207         (4) APPORTIONMENT.—
 2208         (a) The Governor shall, with the agreement of the affected
 2209  units of general-purpose local government as required by federal
 2210  rules and regulations, apportion the membership on the
 2211  applicable M.P.O. among the various governmental entities within
 2212  the area. At the request of a majority of the affected units of
 2213  general-purpose local government comprising an M.P.O., the
 2214  Governor and a majority of units of general-purpose local
 2215  government serving on an M.P.O. shall cooperatively agree upon
 2216  and prescribe who may serve as an alternate member and a method
 2217  for appointing alternate members who may vote at any M.P.O.
 2218  meeting that an alternate member attends in place of a regular
 2219  member. The method shall be set forth as a part of the
 2220  interlocal agreement describing the M.P.O.’s membership or in
 2221  the M.P.O.’s operating procedures and bylaws. The governmental
 2222  entity so designated shall appoint the appropriate number of
 2223  members to the M.P.O. from eligible officials. Representatives
 2224  of the department shall serve as nonvoting advisers to members
 2225  of the M.P.O. governing board. Additional nonvoting advisers may
 2226  be appointed by the M.P.O. as deemed necessary; however, to the
 2227  maximum extent feasible, each M.P.O. shall seek to appoint
 2228  nonvoting representatives of various multimodal forms of
 2229  transportation not otherwise represented by voting members of
 2230  the M.P.O. An M.P.O. shall appoint nonvoting advisers
 2231  representing major military installations located within the
 2232  jurisdictional boundaries of the M.P.O. upon the request of the
 2233  aforesaid major military installations and subject to the
 2234  agreement of the M.P.O. All nonvoting advisers may attend and
 2235  participate fully in governing board meetings but may shall not
 2236  have a vote or and shall not be members of the governing board.
 2237  The Governor shall review the composition of the M.P.O.
 2238  membership in conjunction with the decennial census as prepared
 2239  by the United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the
 2240  Census, and reapportion it as necessary to comply with
 2241  subsection (3).
 2242         (8) TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.—Each M.P.O. shall,
 2243  in cooperation with the state and affected public transportation
 2244  operators, develop a transportation improvement program for the
 2245  area within the jurisdiction of the M.P.O. In the development of
 2246  the transportation improvement program, each M.P.O. must provide
 2247  the public, affected public agencies, representatives of
 2248  transportation agency employees, freight shippers, providers of
 2249  freight transportation services, private providers of
 2250  transportation, representatives of users of public transit, and
 2251  other interested parties with a reasonable opportunity to
 2252  comment on the proposed transportation improvement program.
 2253         (b) Each M.P.O. annually shall prepare a list of project
 2254  priorities and shall submit the list to the appropriate district
 2255  of the department by October 1 of each year; however, the
 2256  department and a metropolitan planning organization may, in
 2257  writing, agree to vary this submittal date. Where more than one
 2258  M.P.O. exists in an urbanized area, the M.P.O.’s shall
 2259  coordinate in the development of regionally significant project
 2260  priorities. The list of project priorities must be formally
 2261  reviewed by the technical and citizens’ advisory committees, and
 2262  approved by the M.P.O., before it is transmitted to the
 2263  district. The approved list of project priorities must be used
 2264  by the district in developing the district work program and must
 2265  be used by the M.P.O. in developing its transportation
 2266  improvement program. The annual list of project priorities must
 2267  be based upon project selection criteria that, at a minimum,
 2268  consider the following:
 2269         1. The approved M.P.O. long-range transportation plan;
 2270         2. The Strategic Intermodal System Plan developed under s.
 2271  339.64.
 2272         3. The priorities developed pursuant to s. 339.2819(4).
 2273         4. The results of the transportation management systems;
 2274  and
 2275         5. The M.P.O.’s public-involvement procedures.
 2276         Section 56. Subsections (1), (2), (3), and (4) of section
 2277  339.2819, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2278         339.2819 Transportation Regional Incentive Program.—
 2279         (1) There is created within the Department of
 2280  Transportation a Transportation Regional Incentive Program for
 2281  the purpose of providing funds to improve regionally significant
 2282  transportation facilities in regional transportation areas
 2283  created pursuant to s. 339.155(4) s. 339.155(5).
 2284         (2) The percentage of matching funds provided from the
 2285  Transportation Regional Incentive Program shall be up to 50
 2286  percent of project costs.
 2287         (3) The department shall allocate funding available for the
 2288  Transportation Regional Incentive Program to the districts based
 2289  on a factor derived from equal parts of population and motor
 2290  fuel collections for eligible counties in regional
 2291  transportation areas created pursuant to s. 339.155(4) s.
 2292  339.155(5).
 2293         (4)(a) Projects to be funded with Transportation Regional
 2294  Incentive Program funds shall, at a minimum:
 2295         1. Support those transportation facilities that Serve
 2296  national, statewide, or regional functions and function as part
 2297  of an integrated regional transportation system.
 2298         2. Be identified in the capital improvements element of a
 2299  comprehensive plan that has been determined to be in compliance
 2300  with part II of chapter 163, after July 1, 2005. Further, the
 2301  project shall be in compliance with local government
 2302  comprehensive plan policies relative to corridor management.
 2303         3. Be consistent with the Strategic Intermodal System Plan
 2304  developed under s. 339.64.
 2305         4. Have a commitment for local, regional, or private
 2306  financial matching funds as a percentage of the overall project
 2307  cost.
 2308         (b) Projects funded under this section shall be included in
 2309  the department’s work program developed pursuant to s. 339.135.
 2310  The department may not program a project to be funded under this
 2311  section unless the project meets the requirements of this
 2312  section. In allocating Transportation Regional Incentive Program
 2313  funds, priority shall be given to projects that:
 2314         (c) The department shall give priority to projects that:
 2315         1. Provide connectivity to the Strategic Intermodal System
 2316  developed under s. 339.64.
 2317         2. Support economic development and the movement of goods
 2318  in rural areas of critical economic concern designated under s.
 2319  288.0656(7).
 2320         3. Are subject to a local ordinance that establishes
 2321  corridor management techniques, including access management
 2322  strategies, right-of-way acquisition and protection measures,
 2323  appropriate land use strategies, zoning, and setback
 2324  requirements for adjacent land uses.
 2325         4. Improve connectivity between military installations and
 2326  the Strategic Highway Network or the Strategic Rail Corridor
 2327  Network.
 2328  
 2329  The department shall also consider the extent to which local
 2330  matching funds are available to be committed to the project.
 2331         Section 57. Subsections (1) and (6) of section 339.62,
 2332  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2333         339.62 System components.—The Strategic Intermodal System
 2334  shall consist of appropriate components of:
 2335         (1) Highway corridors The Florida Intrastate Highway System
 2336  established under s. 339.65 s. 338.001.
 2337         (6) Other existing or planned corridors that serve a
 2338  statewide or interregional purpose.
 2339         Section 58. Subsection (2) of section 339.63, Florida
 2340  Statutes, is amended, and subsection (5) is added to that
 2341  section, to read:
 2342         339.63 System facilities designated; additions and
 2343  deletions.—
 2344         (2) The Strategic Intermodal System and the Emerging
 2345  Strategic Intermodal System include five four different types of
 2346  facilities that each form one component of an interconnected
 2347  transportation system which types include:
 2348         (a) Existing or planned hubs that are ports and terminals
 2349  including airports, seaports, spaceports, passenger terminals,
 2350  and rail terminals serving to move goods or people between
 2351  Florida regions or between Florida and other markets in the
 2352  United States and the rest of the world.
 2353         (b) Existing or planned corridors that are highways, rail
 2354  lines, waterways, and other exclusive-use facilities connecting
 2355  major markets within Florida or between Florida and other states
 2356  or nations.
 2357         (c) Existing or planned intermodal connectors that are
 2358  highways, rail lines, waterways or local public transit systems
 2359  serving as connectors between the components listed in
 2360  paragraphs (a) and (b).
 2361         (d) Existing or planned military access facilities that are
 2362  highways or rail lines linking Strategic Intermodal System
 2363  corridors to the state’s strategic military installations.
 2364         (e)(d) Existing or planned facilities that significantly
 2365  improve the state’s competitive position to compete for the
 2366  movement of additional goods into and through this state.
 2367         (5)(a) The Secretary of Transportation shall designate a
 2368  planned facility as part of the Strategic Intermodal System upon
 2369  request of the facility if it meets the criteria and thresholds
 2370  established by the department pursuant to subsection (4), meets
 2371  the definition of an “intermodal logistics center” as defined in
 2372  s. 311.101(2), and has been designated in a local comprehensive
 2373  plan or local government development order as an intermodal
 2374  logistics center or an equivalent planning term.
 2375         (b) A facility designated part of the Strategic Intermodal
 2376  System pursuant to paragraph (a) that is within the jurisdiction
 2377  of a local government that maintains a transportation
 2378  concurrency system shall receive a waiver of transportation
 2379  concurrency requirements applicable to Strategic Intermodal
 2380  System facilities in order to accommodate any development at the
 2381  facility which occurs pursuant to a building permit issued on or
 2382  before December 31, 2017, but only if such facility is located:
 2383         1. Within an area designated pursuant to s. 288.0656(7) as
 2384  a rural area of critical economic concern;
 2385         2. Within a rural enterprise zone as defined in s.
 2386  290.004(5); or
 2387         3. Within 15 miles of the boundary of a rural area of
 2388  critical economic concern or a rural enterprise zone.
 2389         Section 59. Section 339.64, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2390  read:
 2391         339.64 Strategic Intermodal System Plan.—
 2392         (1) The department shall develop, in cooperation with
 2393  metropolitan planning organizations, regional planning councils,
 2394  local governments, the Statewide Intermodal Transportation
 2395  Advisory Council and other transportation providers, a Strategic
 2396  Intermodal System Plan. The plan shall be consistent with the
 2397  Florida Transportation Plan developed pursuant to s. 339.155 and
 2398  shall be updated at least once every 5 years, subsequent to
 2399  updates of the Florida Transportation Plan.
 2400         (2) In association with the continued development of the
 2401  Strategic Intermodal System Plan, the Florida Transportation
 2402  Commission, as part of its work program review process, shall
 2403  conduct an annual assessment of the progress that the department
 2404  and its transportation partners have made in realizing the goals
 2405  of economic development, improved mobility, and increased
 2406  intermodal connectivity of the Strategic Intermodal System. The
 2407  Florida Transportation Commission shall coordinate with the
 2408  department, the Statewide Intermodal Transportation Advisory
 2409  Council, and other appropriate entities when developing this
 2410  assessment. The Florida Transportation Commission shall deliver
 2411  a report to the Governor and Legislature no later than 14 days
 2412  after the regular session begins, with recommendations as
 2413  necessary to fully implement the Strategic Intermodal System.
 2414         (3)(a) During the development of updates to the Strategic
 2415  Intermodal System Plan, the department shall provide
 2416  metropolitan planning organizations, regional planning councils,
 2417  local governments, transportation providers, affected public
 2418  agencies, and citizens with an opportunity to participate in and
 2419  comment on the development of the update.
 2420         (b) The department also shall coordinate with federal,
 2421  regional, and local partners the planning for the Strategic
 2422  Highway Network and the Strategic Rail Corridor Network
 2423  transportation facilities that either are included in the
 2424  Strategic Intermodal System or that provide a direct connection
 2425  between military installations and the Strategic Intermodal
 2426  System. In addition, the department shall coordinate with
 2427  regional and local partners to determine whether the roads road
 2428  and other transportation infrastructure that connect military
 2429  installations to the Strategic Intermodal System, the Strategic
 2430  Highway Network, or the Strategic Rail Corridor are is
 2431  regionally significant and should be included in the Strategic
 2432  Intermodal System Plan.
 2433         (4) The Strategic Intermodal System Plan shall include the
 2434  following:
 2435         (a) A needs assessment.
 2436         (b) A project prioritization process.
 2437         (c) A map of facilities designated as Strategic Intermodal
 2438  System facilities; facilities that are emerging in importance
 2439  and that are likely to become part of the system in the future;
 2440  and planned facilities that will meet the established criteria.
 2441         (d) A finance plan based on reasonable projections of
 2442  anticipated revenues, including both 10-year and at least 20
 2443  year cost-feasible components.
 2444         (e) An assessment of the impacts of proposed improvements
 2445  to Strategic Intermodal System corridors on military
 2446  installations that are either located directly on the Strategic
 2447  Intermodal System or located on the Strategic Highway Network or
 2448  Strategic Rail Corridor Network.
 2449         (5) STATEWIDE INTERMODAL TRANSPORTATION ADVISORY COUNCIL.—
 2450         (a) The Statewide Intermodal Transportation Advisory
 2451  Council is created to advise and make recommendations to the
 2452  Legislature and the department on policies, planning, and
 2453  funding of intermodal transportation projects. The council’s
 2454  responsibilities shall include:
 2455         1. Advising the department on the policies, planning, and
 2456  implementation of strategies related to intermodal
 2457  transportation.
 2458         2. Providing advice and recommendations to the Legislature
 2459  on funding for projects to move goods and people in the most
 2460  efficient and effective manner for the State of Florida.
 2461         (b) MEMBERSHIP.—Members of the Statewide Intermodal
 2462  Transportation Advisory Council shall consist of the following:
 2463         1. Six intermodal industry representatives selected by the
 2464  Governor as follows:
 2465         a. One representative from an airport involved in the
 2466  movement of freight and people from their airport facility to
 2467  another transportation mode.
 2468         b. One individual representing a fixed-route, local
 2469  government transit system.
 2470         c. One representative from an intercity bus company
 2471  providing regularly scheduled bus travel as determined by
 2472  federal regulations.
 2473         d. One representative from a spaceport.
 2474         e. One representative from intermodal trucking companies.
 2475         f. One representative having command responsibilities of a
 2476  major military installation.
 2477         2. Three intermodal industry representatives selected by
 2478  the President of the Senate as follows:
 2479         a. One representative from major-line railroads.
 2480         b. One representative from seaports listed in s. 311.09(1)
 2481  from the Atlantic Coast.
 2482         c. One representative from an airport involved in the
 2483  movement of freight and people from their airport facility to
 2484  another transportation mode.
 2485         3. Three intermodal industry representatives selected by
 2486  the Speaker of the House of Representatives as follows:
 2487         a. One representative from short-line railroads.
 2488         b. One representative from seaports listed in s. 311.09(1)
 2489  from the Gulf Coast.
 2490         c. One representative from intermodal trucking companies.
 2491  In no event may this representative be employed by the same
 2492  company that employs the intermodal trucking company
 2493  representative selected by the Governor.
 2494         (c) Initial appointments to the council must be made no
 2495  later than 30 days after the effective date of this section.
 2496         1. The initial appointments made by the President of the
 2497  Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall
 2498  serve terms concurrent with those of the respective appointing
 2499  officer. Beginning January 15, 2005, and for all subsequent
 2500  appointments, council members appointed by the President of the
 2501  Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall
 2502  serve 2-year terms, concurrent with the term of the respective
 2503  appointing officer.
 2504         2. The initial appointees, and all subsequent appointees,
 2505  made by the Governor shall serve 2-year terms.
 2506         3. Vacancies on the council shall be filled in the same
 2507  manner as the initial appointments.
 2508         (d) Each member of the council shall be allowed one vote.
 2509  The council shall select a chair from among its membership.
 2510  Meetings shall be held at the call of the chair, but not less
 2511  frequently than quarterly. The members of the council shall be
 2512  reimbursed for per diem and travel expenses as provided in s.
 2513  112.061.
 2514         (e) The department shall provide administrative staff
 2515  support and shall ensure that council meetings are
 2516  electronically recorded. Such recordings and all documents
 2517  received, prepared for, or used by the council in conducting its
 2518  business shall be preserved pursuant to chapters 119 and 257.
 2519         Section 60. Section 339.65, Florida Statutes, is created to
 2520  read:
 2521         339.65 Strategic Intermodal System highway corridors.—
 2522         (1) The department shall plan and develop Strategic
 2523  Intermodal System highway corridors, including limited and
 2524  controlled access facilities, allowing for high-speed and high
 2525  volume traffic movements within the state. The primary function
 2526  of the corridors is to provide such traffic movements. Access to
 2527  abutting land is subordinate to this function, and such access
 2528  must be prohibited or highly regulated.
 2529         (2) Strategic Intermodal System highway corridors shall
 2530  include facilities from the following components of the State
 2531  Highway System that meet the criteria adopted by the department
 2532  pursuant to s. 339.63:
 2533         (a) Interstate highways.
 2534         (b) The Florida Turnpike System.
 2535         (c) Interregional and intercity limited access facilities.
 2536         (d) Existing interregional and intercity arterial highways
 2537  previously upgraded or upgraded in the future to limited access
 2538  or controlled access facility standards.
 2539         (e) New limited access facilities necessary to complete a
 2540  balanced statewide system.
 2541         (3) The department shall adhere to the following policy
 2542  guidelines in the development of Strategic Intermodal System
 2543  highway corridors. The department shall:
 2544         (a) Make capacity improvements to existing facilities where
 2545  feasible to minimize costs and environmental impacts.
 2546         (b) Identify appropriate arterial highways in major
 2547  transportation corridors for inclusion in a program to bring
 2548  these facilities up to limited access or controlled access
 2549  facility standards.
 2550         (c) Coordinate proposed projects with appropriate limited
 2551  access projects undertaken by expressway authorities and local
 2552  governmental entities.
 2553         (d) Maximize the use of limited access facility standards
 2554  when constructing new arterial highways.
 2555         (e) Identify appropriate new limited access highways for
 2556  inclusion as a part of the Florida Turnpike System.
 2557         (f) To the maximum extent feasible, ensure that proposed
 2558  projects are consistent with approved local government
 2559  comprehensive plans of the local jurisdictions in which such
 2560  facilities are to be located and with the transportation
 2561  improvement program of any metropolitan planning organization
 2562  where such facilities are to be located.
 2563         (4) The department shall develop and maintain a plan of
 2564  Strategic Intermodal System highway corridor projects that are
 2565  anticipated to be let to contract for construction within a time
 2566  period of at least 20 years. The plan shall also identify when
 2567  segments of the corridor will meet the standards and criteria
 2568  developed pursuant to subsection (5).
 2569         (5) The department shall establish the standards and
 2570  criteria for the functional characteristics and design of
 2571  facilities proposed as part of Strategic Intermodal System
 2572  highway corridors.
 2573         (6) For the purposes of developing the proposed Strategic
 2574  Intermodal System highway corridors, beginning in fiscal year
 2575  2012-2013 and for each fiscal year thereafter, the minimum
 2576  amount allocated shall be based on the fiscal year 2003-2004
 2577  allocation of $450 million adjusted annually by the change in
 2578  the Consumer Price Index for the prior fiscal year compared to
 2579  the Consumer Price Index for fiscal year 2003-2004.
 2580         (7) Any project to be constructed as part of a Strategic
 2581  Intermodal System highway corridor shall be included in the
 2582  department’s adopted work program. Any Strategic Intermodal
 2583  System highway corridor projects that are added to or deleted
 2584  from the previous adopted work program, or any modification to
 2585  Strategic Intermodal System highway corridor projects contained
 2586  in the previous adopted work program, shall be specifically
 2587  identified and submitted as a separate part of the tentative
 2588  work program.
 2589         Section 61. Section 341.840, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2590  to read:
 2591         341.840 Tax exemption.—
 2592         (1) The exercise of the powers granted under ss. 341.8201
 2593  341.842 by this act will be in all respects for the benefit of
 2594  the people of this state, for the increase of their commerce,
 2595  welfare, and prosperity, and for the improvement of their health
 2596  and living conditions. The design, construction, operation,
 2597  maintenance, and financing of a high-speed rail system by the
 2598  enterprise authority, its agent, or the owner or lessee thereof,
 2599  as herein authorized, constitutes the performance of an
 2600  essential public function.
 2601         (2)(a) For the purposes of this section, the term
 2602  “enterprise authority” does not include agents of the enterprise
 2603  authority other than contractors who qualify as such pursuant to
 2604  subsection (7).
 2605         (b) For the purposes of this section, any item or property
 2606  that is within the definition of the term “associated
 2607  development” in s. 341.8203(1) may shall not be considered to be
 2608  part of the high-speed rail system as defined in s.
 2609  341.8203(3)(6).
 2610         (3)(a) Purchases or leases of tangible personal property or
 2611  real property by the enterprise authority, excluding agents of
 2612  the enterprise authority, are exempt from taxes imposed by
 2613  chapter 212 as provided in s. 212.08(6). Purchases or leases of
 2614  tangible personal property that is incorporated into the high
 2615  speed rail system as a component part thereof, as determined by
 2616  the enterprise authority, by agents of the enterprise authority
 2617  or the owner of the high-speed rail system are exempt from sales
 2618  or use taxes imposed by chapter 212. Leases, rentals, or
 2619  licenses to use real property granted to agents of the
 2620  enterprise authority or the owner of the high-speed rail system
 2621  are exempt from taxes imposed by s. 212.031 if the real property
 2622  becomes part of such system. The exemptions granted in this
 2623  subsection do not apply to sales, leases, or licenses by the
 2624  enterprise authority, agents of the authority, or the owner of
 2625  the high-speed rail system.
 2626         (b) The exemption granted in paragraph (a) to purchases or
 2627  leases of tangible personal property by agents of the enterprise
 2628  authority or by the owner of the high-speed rail system applies
 2629  only to property that becomes a component part of such system.
 2630  It does not apply to items, including, but not limited to,
 2631  cranes, bulldozers, forklifts, other machinery and equipment,
 2632  tools and supplies, or other items of tangible personal property
 2633  used in the construction, operation, or maintenance of the high
 2634  speed rail system when such items are not incorporated into the
 2635  high-speed rail system as a component part thereof.
 2636         (4) Any bonds or other security, and all notes, mortgages,
 2637  security agreements, letters of credit, or other instruments
 2638  that arise out of or are given to secure the repayment of bonds
 2639  or other security, issued by the enterprise authority, or on
 2640  behalf of the enterprise authority, their transfer, and the
 2641  income therefrom, including any profit made on the sale thereof,
 2642  shall at all times be free from taxation of every kind by the
 2643  state, the counties, and the municipalities and other political
 2644  subdivisions in the state. This subsection, however, does not
 2645  exempt from taxation or assessment the leasehold interest of a
 2646  lessee in any project or any other property or interest owned by
 2647  the lessee. The exemption granted by this subsection is not
 2648  applicable to any tax imposed by chapter 220 on interest income
 2649  or profits on the sale of debt obligations owned by
 2650  corporations.
 2651         (5) When property of the enterprise authority is leased to
 2652  another person or entity, the property shall be exempt from ad
 2653  valorem taxation only if the use by the lessee qualifies the
 2654  property for exemption under s. 196.199.
 2655         (6) A leasehold interest held by the enterprise authority
 2656  is not subject to intangible tax. However, if a leasehold
 2657  interest held by the enterprise authority is subleased to a
 2658  nongovernmental lessee, such subleasehold interest shall be
 2659  deemed to be an interest described in s. 199.023(1)(d), Florida
 2660  Statutes 2005, and is subject to the intangible tax.
 2661         (7)(a) In order to be considered an agent of the enterprise
 2662  authority for purposes of the exemption from sales and use tax
 2663  granted by subsection (3) for tangible personal property
 2664  incorporated into the high-speed rail system, a contractor of
 2665  the enterprise authority that purchases or fabricates such
 2666  tangible personal property must be certified by the enterprise
 2667  authority as provided in this subsection.
 2668         (b)1. A contractor must apply for a renewal of the
 2669  exemption not later than December 1 of each calendar year.
 2670         2. A contractor must apply to the enterprise authority on
 2671  the application form adopted by the enterprise authority, which
 2672  shall develop the form in consultation with the Department of
 2673  Revenue.
 2674         3. The enterprise authority shall review each submitted
 2675  application and determine whether it is complete. The enterprise
 2676  authority shall notify the applicant of any deficiencies in the
 2677  application within 30 days. Upon receipt of a completed
 2678  application, the enterprise authority shall evaluate the
 2679  application for exemption under this subsection and issue a
 2680  certification that the contractor is qualified to act as an
 2681  agent of the enterprise authority for purposes of this section
 2682  or a denial of such certification within 30 days. The enterprise
 2683  authority shall provide the Department of Revenue with a copy of
 2684  each certification issued upon approval of an application. Upon
 2685  receipt of a certification from the enterprise authority, the
 2686  Department of Revenue shall issue an exemption permit to the
 2687  contractor.
 2688         (c)1. The contractor may extend a copy of its exemption
 2689  permit to its vendors in lieu of paying sales tax on purchases
 2690  of tangible personal property qualifying for exemption under
 2691  this section. Possession of a copy of the exemption permit
 2692  relieves the seller of the responsibility of collecting tax on
 2693  the sale, and the Department of Revenue shall look solely to the
 2694  contractor for recovery of tax upon a determination that the
 2695  contractor was not entitled to the exemption.
 2696         2. The contractor may extend a copy of its exemption permit
 2697  to real property subcontractors supplying and installing
 2698  tangible personal property that is exempt under subsection (3).
 2699  Any such subcontractor may is authorized to extend a copy of the
 2700  permit to the subcontractor’s vendors in order to purchase
 2701  qualifying tangible personal property tax-exempt. If the
 2702  subcontractor uses the exemption permit to purchase tangible
 2703  personal property that is determined not to qualify for
 2704  exemption under subsection (3), the Department of Revenue may
 2705  assess and collect any tax, penalties, and interest that are due
 2706  from either the contractor holding the exemption permit or the
 2707  subcontractor that extended the exemption permit to the seller.
 2708         (d) Any contractor authorized to act as an agent of the
 2709  enterprise authority under this section shall maintain the
 2710  necessary books and records to document the exempt status of
 2711  purchases and fabrication costs made or incurred under the
 2712  permit. In addition, an authorized contractor extending its
 2713  exemption permit to its subcontractors shall maintain a copy of
 2714  the subcontractor’s books, records, and invoices indicating all
 2715  purchases made by the subcontractor under the authorized
 2716  contractor’s permit. If, in an audit conducted by the Department
 2717  of Revenue, it is determined that tangible personal property
 2718  purchased or fabricated claiming exemption under this section
 2719  does not meet the criteria for exemption, the amount of taxes
 2720  not paid at the time of purchase or fabrication shall be
 2721  immediately due and payable to the Department of Revenue,
 2722  together with the appropriate interest and penalty, computed
 2723  from the date of purchase, in the manner prescribed by chapter
 2724  212.
 2725         (e) If a contractor fails to apply for a high-speed rail
 2726  system exemption permit, or if a contractor initially determined
 2727  by the enterprise authority to not qualify for exemption is
 2728  subsequently determined to be eligible, the contractor shall
 2729  receive the benefit of the exemption in this subsection through
 2730  a refund of previously paid taxes for transactions that
 2731  otherwise would have been exempt. A refund may not be made for
 2732  such taxes without the issuance of a certification by the
 2733  enterprise authority that the contractor was authorized to make
 2734  purchases tax-exempt and a determination by the Department of
 2735  Revenue that the purchases qualified for the exemption.
 2736         (f) The enterprise authority may adopt rules governing the
 2737  application process for exemption of a contractor as an
 2738  authorized agent of the enterprise authority.
 2739         (g) The Department of Revenue may adopt rules governing the
 2740  issuance and form of high-speed rail system exemption permits,
 2741  the audit of contractors and subcontractors using such permits,
 2742  the recapture of taxes on nonqualified purchases, and the manner
 2743  and form of refund applications.
 2744         Section 62. Subsection (3) of section 343.52, Florida
 2745  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2746         343.52 Definitions.—As used in this part, the term:
 2747         (3) “Area served” means Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach
 2748  Counties. However, this area may be expanded by mutual consent
 2749  of the authority and the board of county commissioners of Monroe
 2750  County representing the proposed expansion area. The authority
 2751  may not expand into any additional counties without the
 2752  department’s prior written approval.
 2753         Section 63. Section 343.53, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2754  read:
 2755         343.53 South Florida Regional Transportation Authority.—
 2756         (1) There is created and established a body politic and
 2757  corporate, an agency of the state, to be known as the “South
 2758  Florida Regional Transportation Authority,” hereinafter referred
 2759  to as the “authority.”
 2760         (2) The governing board of the authority shall consist of
 2761  10 nine voting members, as follows:
 2762         (a) The county commissions of Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm
 2763  Beach Counties shall each elect a commissioner as that
 2764  commission’s representative on the board. The commissioner must
 2765  be a member of the county commission when elected and for the
 2766  full extent of his or her term.
 2767         (b) The county commissions of Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm
 2768  Beach Counties shall each appoint a citizen member to the board
 2769  who is not a member of the county commission but who is a
 2770  resident of the county from which he or she is appointed and a
 2771  qualified elector of that county. Insofar as practicable, the
 2772  citizen member shall represent the business and civic interests
 2773  of the community.
 2774         (c) The secretary of the Department of Transportation shall
 2775  appoint one of the district secretaries, or his or her designee,
 2776  for the districts within which the area served by the South
 2777  Florida Regional Transportation Authority is located, who shall
 2778  serve ex officio as a voting member.
 2779         (d) If the authority’s service area is expanded pursuant to
 2780  s. 343.54(5), the county containing the new service area shall
 2781  have two three members appointed to the board as follows:
 2782         1. The county commission of the county shall elect a
 2783  commissioner as that commission’s representative on the board.
 2784  The commissioner must be a member of the county commission when
 2785  elected and for the full extent of his or her term.
 2786         2. The county commission of the county shall appoint a
 2787  citizen member to the board who is not a member of the county
 2788  commission but who is a resident and a qualified elector of that
 2789  county. Insofar as is practicable, the citizen member shall
 2790  represent the business and civic interests of the community.
 2791         2.3. The Governor shall appoint a citizen member to the
 2792  board who is not a member of the county commission but who is a
 2793  resident and a qualified elector of that county.
 2794         (e) The Governor shall appoint three two members to the
 2795  board who are residents and qualified electors in the area
 2796  served by the authority but who are not residents of the same
 2797  county and also not residents of the county in which the
 2798  district secretary who was appointed pursuant to paragraph (c)
 2799  is a resident.
 2800         (3)(a) Members of the governing board of the authority
 2801  shall be appointed to serve 4-year staggered terms, except that
 2802  the terms of the appointees of the Governor shall be concurrent.
 2803         (b) The terms of the board members currently serving on the
 2804  authority that is being succeeded by this act shall expire July
 2805  30, 2003, at which time the terms of the members appointed
 2806  pursuant to subsection (2) shall commence. The Governor shall
 2807  make his or her appointments to the board within 30 days after
 2808  July 30, 2003.
 2809         (4) A vacancy during a term shall be filled by the
 2810  respective appointing authority in the same manner as the
 2811  original appointment and only for the balance of the unexpired
 2812  term.
 2813         (5) The members of the authority shall serve without
 2814  compensation, but are entitled to reimbursement for travel
 2815  expenses actually incurred in their duties as provided by law.
 2816         Section 64. Paragraph (q) is added to subsection (3) of
 2817  section 343.54, Florida Statutes, and subsection (5) of that
 2818  section is amended, to read:
 2819         343.54 Powers and duties.—
 2820         (3) The authority may exercise all powers necessary,
 2821  appurtenant, convenient, or incidental to the carrying out of
 2822  the aforesaid purposes, including, but not limited to, the
 2823  following rights and powers:
 2824         (q) To privatize any of the administrative functions of the
 2825  authority existing as of July 1, 2012, by contracting with a
 2826  private entity or entities to perform any or all of those
 2827  functions, which shall require a two-thirds vote of the entire
 2828  membership of the board.
 2829         (5) The authority, by a resolution of its governing board,
 2830  may expand its service area into Monroe County and enter into a
 2831  partnership with any county that is contiguous to the service
 2832  area of the authority. The board shall determine the conditions
 2833  and terms of the partnership, except as provided herein.
 2834  However, the authority may not expand its service area without
 2835  the consent of the board of county commissioners representing
 2836  the proposed expansion area, and a county may not be added to
 2837  the service area except in the year that federal reauthorization
 2838  legislation for transportation funds is enacted. The authority
 2839  shall not expand into any county other than Monroe County
 2840  without the department’s prior written approval.
 2841         Section 65. Section 343.56, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2842  read:
 2843         343.56 Bonds not debts or pledges of credit of state.
 2844  Revenue bonds issued under the provisions of this part are not
 2845  debts of the state or pledges of the faith and credit of the
 2846  state. Such bonds are payable exclusively from revenues pledged
 2847  for their payment. All such bonds shall contain a statement on
 2848  their face that the state is not obligated to pay the same or
 2849  the interest thereon, except from the revenues pledged for their
 2850  payment, and that the faith and credit of the state is not
 2851  pledged to the payment of the principal or interest of such
 2852  bonds. The issuance of revenue bonds under the provisions of
 2853  this part does not directly, indirectly, or contingently
 2854  obligate the state to levy or to pledge any form of taxation
 2855  whatsoever, or to make any appropriation for their payment. No
 2856  state funds shall be used or pledged to pay the principal or
 2857  interest of any bonds issued to finance or refinance any portion
 2858  of the South Florida Regional Transportation Authority transit
 2859  system, and all such bonds shall contain a statement on their
 2860  face to this effect. However, federal funds being passed through
 2861  the department to the South Florida Regional Transportation
 2862  Authority and those state matching funds required by the United
 2863  States Department of Transportation as a condition of federal
 2864  funding may be used to pay principal and interest of any bonds
 2865  issued.
 2866         Section 66. Section 343.57, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2867  read:
 2868         343.57 Pledge to bondholders not to restrict certain rights
 2869  of authority.—The state pledges to and agrees with the holders
 2870  of the bonds issued pursuant to this part that the state will
 2871  not limit or restrict the rights vested in the authority to
 2872  construct, reconstruct, maintain, and operate any project as
 2873  defined in this part, to establish and collect such fees or
 2874  other charges as may be convenient or necessary to produce
 2875  sufficient revenues to meet the expenses of maintenance and
 2876  operation of the system, and to fulfill the terms of any
 2877  agreements made with the holders of bonds authorized by this
 2878  part. The state further pledges that it will not in any way
 2879  impair the rights or remedies of the holders of such bonds until
 2880  the bonds, together with interest thereon, are fully paid and
 2881  discharged. Nothing in this section or in any agreement between
 2882  the authority and the Department of Transportation shall be
 2883  construed to require the Legislature to make or continue any
 2884  appropriation of state funds to the authority, including, but
 2885  not limited to, the amounts specified in s. 343.58(4), nor shall
 2886  any holder of bonds have any right to require the Legislature to
 2887  make or continue any appropriation of state funds.
 2888         Section 67. Subsection (4) of section 343.58, Florida
 2889  Statutes, is amended, and subsection (6) is added to that
 2890  section, to read:
 2891         343.58 County funding for the South Florida Regional
 2892  Transportation Authority.—
 2893         (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 2894  contrary and effective July 1, 2010, until as provided in
 2895  paragraph (d), the department shall transfer annually from the
 2896  State Transportation Trust Fund to the South Florida Regional
 2897  Transportation Authority the amounts specified in subparagraph
 2898  (a)1. or subparagraph (a)2.
 2899         (a)1. If the authority becomes responsible for maintaining
 2900  and dispatching the South Florida Rail Corridor:
 2901         a. $15 million from the State Transportation Trust Fund to
 2902  the South Florida Regional Transportation Authority for
 2903  operations, maintenance, and dispatch; and
 2904         b. An amount no less than the work program commitments
 2905  equal to $27.1 million for fiscal year 2010-2011, as of July 1,
 2906  2009, for operating assistance to the authority and corridor
 2907  track maintenance and contract maintenance for the South Florida
 2908  Rail Corridor.
 2909         2. If the authority does not become responsible for
 2910  maintaining and dispatching the South Florida Rail Corridor:
 2911         a. $13.3 million from the State Transportation Trust Fund
 2912  to the South Florida Regional Transportation Authority for
 2913  operations; and
 2914         b. An amount no less than the work program commitments
 2915  equal to $17.3 million for fiscal year 2010-2011, as of July 1,
 2916  2009, for operating assistance to the authority.
 2917         (b) Funding required by this subsection may not be provided
 2918  from the funds dedicated to the Florida Rail Enterprise under s.
 2919  201.15(1)(c)1.d.
 2920         (c)1. Funds provided to the authority by the department
 2921  under this subsection may not be committed by the authority
 2922  without the approval of the department, which may not be
 2923  unreasonably withheld. At least 90 days before advertising any
 2924  procurement or renewing any existing contract that will rely on
 2925  state funds for payment, the authority shall notify the
 2926  department of the proposed procurement or renewal and the
 2927  proposed terms thereof. If the department, within 60 days after
 2928  receipt of notice, objects in writing to the proposed
 2929  procurement or renewal, specifying its reasons for objection,
 2930  the authority may not proceed with the proposed procurement or
 2931  renewal. Failure of the department to object in writing within
 2932  60 days after notice shall be deemed consent. This requirement
 2933  does not impair or cause the authority to cancel contracts that
 2934  exist as of June 30, 2012.
 2935         2. To enable the department to evaluate the authority’s
 2936  proposed uses of state funds, the authority shall annually
 2937  provide the department with its proposed budget for the
 2938  following authority fiscal year and shall provide the department
 2939  with any additional documentation or information required by the
 2940  department for its evaluation of the proposed uses of the state
 2941  funds.
 2942         (d) Funding required by this subsection shall cease upon
 2943  commencement of an alternate dedicated local funding source
 2944  sufficient for the authority to meet its responsibilities for
 2945  operating, maintaining, and dispatching the South Florida Rail
 2946  Corridor. The authority and the department shall cooperate in
 2947  the effort to identify and implement such an alternate dedicated
 2948  local funding source before July 1, 2019. Upon commencement of
 2949  the alternate dedicated local funding source, the department
 2950  shall convey to the authority a perpetual commuter rail easement
 2951  in the South Florida Rail Corridor and all of the department’s
 2952  right, title, and interest in rolling stock, equipment, tracks,
 2953  and other personal property owned and used by the department for
 2954  the operation and maintenance of the commuter rail operations in
 2955  the South Florida Rail Corridor.
 2956         (6) Before the authority undertakes any new capital
 2957  projects or transit system improvements not approved by the
 2958  authority board, and not identified in the authority’s 5-year
 2959  capital program, on or before July 1, 2012, the authority shall
 2960  ensure that the funding available to the authority under this
 2961  section, together with any revenues available to the authority,
 2962  are currently, and are anticipated to continue to be, sufficient
 2963  for the authority to meet its obligations under any agreement
 2964  through which federal funds have been or are anticipated to be
 2965  received by the authority.
 2966         Section 68. Section 347.215, Florida Statutes, is created
 2967  to read:
 2968         347.215 Operation of ferries by joint agreement between
 2969  public and private entities.—The county commission of any county
 2970  that has granted a license to operate a ferry in the county may
 2971  authorize the operation of such ferry by a single party or
 2972  multiple parties under a joint agreement between the appropriate
 2973  public entities and one or more private corporations conducting
 2974  business in the state.
 2975         Section 69. Paragraph (c) of subsection (4) of section
 2976  348.0003, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2977         348.0003 Expressway authority; formation; membership.—
 2978         (4)
 2979         (c) Members of each expressway authority, transportation
 2980  authority, bridge authority, or toll authority, created pursuant
 2981  to this chapter, chapter 343, or chapter 349 or any other
 2982  general law, legislative enactment shall comply with the
 2983  applicable financial disclosure requirements of s. 8, Art. II of
 2984  the State Constitution. This paragraph does not subject any
 2985  statutorily created authority, other than an expressway
 2986  authority created under this part, to any other requirement of
 2987  this part except the requirement of this paragraph.
 2988         Section 70. Section 348.7645, Florida Statutes, is created
 2989  to read:
 2990         348.7645 Exit sign to university.—Notwithstanding any
 2991  provision of law to the contrary, the authority, upon request by
 2992  a university described in this section, shall erect signage at
 2993  the most convenient, existing exit directing traffic to a
 2994  university with at least 6,000 full-time students which is
 2995  located within 5 miles of a roadway operated by the authority.
 2996  Any such university shall pay to the authority the actual costs
 2997  of any signage erected.
 2998         Section 71. Subsection (3) of section 349.03, Florida
 2999  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3000         349.03 Jacksonville Transportation Authority.—
 3001         (3)(a) The terms of appointed members shall be for 4 years
 3002  deemed to have commenced on June 1 of the year in which they are
 3003  appointed. Each member shall hold office until a successor has
 3004  been appointed and has qualified. A vacancy during a term shall
 3005  be filled by the respective appointing authority only for the
 3006  balance of the unexpired term. Any member appointed to the
 3007  authority for two consecutive full terms shall not be eligible
 3008  for appointment to the next succeeding term. One of the members
 3009  so appointed shall be designated annually by the members as
 3010  chair of the authority, one member shall be designated annually
 3011  as the vice chair of the authority, one member shall be
 3012  designated annually as the secretary of the authority, and one
 3013  member shall be designated annually as the treasurer of the
 3014  authority. The members of the authority shall not be entitled to
 3015  compensation, but shall be reimbursed for travel expenses or
 3016  other expenses actually incurred in their duties as provided by
 3017  law. Four voting members of the authority shall constitute a
 3018  quorum, and no resolution adopted by the authority shall become
 3019  effective unless with the affirmative vote of at least four
 3020  members. Members of the authority shall file as their mandatory
 3021  financial disclosure a statement of financial interest with the
 3022  Commission on Ethics as provided in s. 112.3145.
 3023         (b) The authority shall employ an executive director, and
 3024  the executive director may hire such staff, permanent or
 3025  temporary, as he or she may determine and may organize the staff
 3026  of the authority into such departments and units as he or she
 3027  may determine. The executive director may appoint department
 3028  directors, deputy directors, division chiefs, and staff
 3029  assistants to the executive director, as he or she may
 3030  determine. In so appointing the executive director, the
 3031  authority may fix the compensation of such appointee, who shall
 3032  serve at the pleasure of the authority. All employees of the
 3033  authority shall be exempt from the provisions of part II of
 3034  chapter 110. The authority may employ such financial advisers
 3035  and consultants, technical experts, engineers, and agents and
 3036  employees, permanent or temporary, as it may require and may fix
 3037  the compensation and qualifications of such persons, firms, or
 3038  corporations. The authority may delegate to one or more of its
 3039  agents or employees such of its powers as it shall deem
 3040  necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter, subject
 3041  always to the supervision and control of the governing body of
 3042  the authority.
 3043         Section 72. Subsection (8) is added to section 349.04,
 3044  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3045         349.04 Purposes and powers.—
 3046         (8) The authority may conduct public meetings and workshops
 3047  by means of communications media technology, as provided in s.
 3048  120.54(5). However, a resolution, rule, or formal action is not
 3049  binding unless a quorum is physically present at the noticed
 3050  meeting location, and only members physically present may vote
 3051  on any item.
 3052         Section 73. Subsection (6) is added to section 373.118,
 3053  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3054         373.118 General permits; delegation.—
 3055         (6) By July 1, 2012, the department shall initiate
 3056  rulemaking to adopt a general permit for stormwater management
 3057  systems serving airside activities at airports. The general
 3058  permit applies statewide and shall be administered by any water
 3059  management district or any delegated local government pursuant
 3060  to the operating agreements applicable to part IV, with no
 3061  additional rulemaking required. Such rules are not subject to
 3062  any special rulemaking requirements related to small business.
 3063         Section 74. Subsection (6) is added to section 373.413,
 3064  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3065         373.413 Permits for construction or alteration.—
 3066         (6) It is the intent of the Legislature that the governing
 3067  board or department exercise flexibility in the permitting of
 3068  stormwater management systems associated with the construction
 3069  or alteration of systems serving state transportation projects
 3070  and facilities. Because of the unique limitations of linear
 3071  facilities, the governing board or department shall balance the
 3072  expenditure of public funds for stormwater treatment for state
 3073  transportation projects and facilities with the benefits to the
 3074  public in providing the most cost-efficient and effective method
 3075  of achieving the treatment objectives. In consideration thereof,
 3076  the governing board or department shall allow alternatives to
 3077  onsite treatment, including, but not limited to, regional
 3078  stormwater treatment systems. The Department of Transportation
 3079  is responsible for treating stormwater generated from state
 3080  transportation projects but is not responsible for the abatement
 3081  of pollutants and flows entering its stormwater management
 3082  systems from offsite sources; however, this subsection does not
 3083  prohibit the Department of Transportation from receiving and
 3084  managing such pollutants and flows when cost effective and
 3085  prudent. Further, in association with right-of-way acquisition
 3086  for state transportation projects, the Department of
 3087  Transportation is responsible for providing stormwater treatment
 3088  and attenuation for the acquired right-of-way but is not
 3089  responsible for modifying permits for adjacent lands affected by
 3090  right-of-way acquisition when it is not the permittee. The
 3091  governing board or department may establish, by rule, specific
 3092  criteria to implement the management and treatment alternatives
 3093  and activities under this subsection.
 3094         Section 75. Section 479.28, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 3095         Section 76. The Department of Transportation may seek
 3096  Federal Highway Administration approval of a tourist-oriented
 3097  commerce sign pilot program for small businesses, as defined in
 3098  s. 288.703, Florida Statutes, in rural areas of critical
 3099  economic concern, as defined by s. 288.0656(2)(d) and (e),
 3100  Florida Statutes. Upon Federal Highway Administration approval,
 3101  the department shall submit the pilot program for legislative
 3102  approval in the next regular legislative session.
 3103         Section 77. There is established a pilot program for the
 3104  Palm Beach County school district to recognize its business
 3105  partners. The district may recognize its business partners by
 3106  publicly displaying such business partners’ names on school
 3107  district property in the unincorporated areas of the county.
 3108  Project graduation and athletic sponsorships are examples of
 3109  appropriate recognition. The district shall make every effort to
 3110  display its business partners’ names in a manner that is
 3111  consistent with the county standards for uniformity in size,
 3112  color, and placement of signs. If the provisions of this section
 3113  are inconsistent with county ordinances or regulations relating
 3114  to signs in the unincorporated areas of the county or
 3115  inconsistent with chapter 125 or chapter 166, Florida Statutes,
 3116  the provisions of this section prevail. The pilot program
 3117  expires June 30, 2014.
 3118         Section 78. Effective upon this act becoming a law, all
 3119  administrative rules adopted by the former Pilotage Rate Review
 3120  Board, which were in effect upon the effective date of ss. 5 and
 3121  6, chapter 2010-225, Laws of Florida, are transferred by a type
 3122  two transfer, as defined in s. 20.06(2), Florida Statutes, to
 3123  the Pilotage Rate Review Committee of the Board of Pilot
 3124  Commissioners and shall apply retroactively to the effective
 3125  date of ss. 5 and 6, chapter 2010-225, Laws of Florida.
 3126         Section 79. The Florida Transportation Commission shall
 3127  conduct a study of the potential for cost savings that might be
 3128  realized through increased efficiencies through the sharing of
 3129  resources for the accomplishment of design, construction, and
 3130  maintenance activities by or on behalf of expressway authorities
 3131  in the state. The commission may retain such experts as are
 3132  reasonably necessary to complete the study, and the department
 3133  shall pay the expenses of such experts. The commission shall
 3134  complete the study and provide a written report of its findings
 3135  and conclusions to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
 3136  the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the chairs of
 3137  each of the appropriations committees of the Legislature by
 3138  December 31, 2012. In conducting the study, the commission shall
 3139  seek input from the existing expressway authorities.
 3140         Section 80. Notwithstanding s. 120.569, s. 120.57, or s.
 3141  373.427, Florida Statutes, or any other provision of law to the
 3142  contrary, a challenge to a consolidated environmental resource
 3143  permit or any associated variance or any sovereign submerged
 3144  lands authorization proposed or issued by the Department of
 3145  Environmental Protection in connection with the state’s
 3146  deepwater ports, as listed in s. 403.021(9), Florida Statutes,
 3147  shall be conducted pursuant to the summary hearing provisions of
 3148  s. 120.574, Florida Statutes; however, the summary proceeding
 3149  shall be conducted within 30 days after a party files a motion
 3150  for a summary hearing, regardless of whether the parties agree
 3151  to the summary proceeding, and the administrative law judge’s
 3152  decision shall be in the form of a recommended order and does
 3153  not constitute final agency action of the department. The
 3154  Department of Environmental Protection shall issue the final
 3155  order within 45 working days after receipt of the administrative
 3156  law judge’s recommended order. The summary hearing provisions of
 3157  this section apply to pending administrative proceedings;
 3158  however, s. 120.574(1)(b) and (d) and (2)(a)3. and 5., Florida
 3159  Statutes, do not apply to pending administrative proceedings.
 3160  This section shall take effect upon this act becoming a law.
 3161         Section 81. It is the intent of the Legislature to
 3162  encourage and facilitate a review by the Pinellas Suncoast
 3163  Transit Authority (PSTA) and the Hillsborough Area Regional
 3164  Transit Authority (HART) in order to achieve improvements in
 3165  regional transit connectivity and implementation of operational
 3166  efficiencies and service enhancements that are consistent with
 3167  the regional approach to transit identified in the Tampa Bay
 3168  Area Regional Transportation Authority’s (TBARTA’s) Regional
 3169  Transportation Master Plan. The Legislature finds that such
 3170  improvements and efficiencies can best be achieved through a
 3171  joint review, evaluation, and recommendations by the Pinellas
 3172  Suncoast Transit Authority and the Hillsborough Area Regional
 3173  Transit Authority.
 3174         (1) The governing bodies or a designated subcommittee of
 3175  both the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority and the
 3176  Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority shall hold a joint
 3177  meeting within 30 days after July 1, 2012, and as often as
 3178  deemed necessary thereafter, in order to consider and identify
 3179  opportunities for greater efficiency and service improvements,
 3180  including specific methods for increasing service connectivity
 3181  between the jurisdictions of each agency. The elements to be
 3182  reviewed must also include:
 3183         (a) Governance structure, including governing board
 3184  membership, terms, responsibilities, officers, powers, duties,
 3185  and responsibilities;
 3186         (b) Funding options and implementation;
 3187         (c) Facilities ownership and management;
 3188         (d) Current financial obligations and resources; and
 3189         (e) Actions to be taken that are consistent with the Tampa
 3190  Bay Area Regional Transportation Authority’s master plan.
 3191         (2) The Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority and the
 3192  Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority shall jointly
 3193  submit a report to the Speaker of the House of Representatives
 3194  and the President of the Senate on the elements described in
 3195  this section by February 1, 2013. The report must include
 3196  proposed legislation to implement each recommendation and
 3197  specific recommendations concerning the reorganization of each
 3198  agency, the organizational merger of both agencies, or the
 3199  consolidation of functions within and between each agency.
 3200         (3) The Tampa Bay Area Regional Transportation Authority
 3201  shall assist and facilitate the Pinellas Suncoast Transit
 3202  Authority and the Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority
 3203  in carrying out the purposes of this section. The Tampa Bay Area
 3204  Regional Transportation Authority shall provide technical
 3205  assistance and information regarding its master plan, make
 3206  recommendations for achieving consistency and improved regional
 3207  connectivity, and provide support to the Pinellas Suncoast
 3208  Transit Authority and the Hillsborough Area Regional Transit
 3209  Authority in the preparation of their joint report and
 3210  recommendations to the Legislature. For this purpose, the
 3211  Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority and the Hillsborough Area
 3212  Regional Transit Authority shall reimburse the Tampa Bay Area
 3213  Regional Transportation Authority for necessary and reasonable
 3214  expense in a total amount not to exceed $100,000.
 3215         Section 82. Subsection (7) of section 215.616, Florida
 3216  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3217         215.616 State bonds for federal aid highway construction.—
 3218         (7) Up to $325 million in bonds may be issued for the
 3219  Mobility 2000 Initiative with emphasis on the Florida Intrastate
 3220  Highway System to advance projects in the most cost-effective
 3221  manner and to support emergency evacuation, improved access to
 3222  urban areas, or the enhancement of trade and economic growth
 3223  corridors of statewide and regional significance which promote
 3224  Florida’s economic growth.
 3225         Section 83. Subsection (3) of section 288.063, Florida
 3226  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3227         288.063 Contracts for transportation projects.—
 3228         (3) With respect to any contract executed pursuant to this
 3229  section, the term “transportation project” means a
 3230  transportation facility as defined in s. 334.03(30) s.
 3231  334.03(31) which is necessary in the judgment of the department
 3232  to facilitate the economic development and growth of the state.
 3233  Such transportation projects shall be approved only as a
 3234  consideration to attract new employment opportunities to the
 3235  state or expand or retain employment in existing companies
 3236  operating within the state, or to allow for the construction or
 3237  expansion of a state or federal correctional facility in a
 3238  county having with a population of 75,000 or less that creates
 3239  new employment opportunities or expands or retains employment in
 3240  the county. The department shall institute procedures to ensure
 3241  that small and minority businesses have equal access to funding
 3242  provided under this section. Funding for approved transportation
 3243  projects may include any expenses, other than administrative
 3244  costs and equipment purchases specified in the contract,
 3245  necessary for new, or improvement to existing, transportation
 3246  facilities. Funds made available pursuant to this section may
 3247  not be expended in connection with the relocation of a business
 3248  from one community to another community in this state unless the
 3249  department determines that without such relocation the business
 3250  will move outside this state or determines that the business has
 3251  a compelling economic rationale for the relocation which creates
 3252  additional jobs. Subject to appropriation for projects under
 3253  this section, any appropriation greater than $10 million shall
 3254  be allocated to each of the districts of the Department of
 3255  Transportation to ensure equitable geographical distribution.
 3256  Such allocated funds that remain uncommitted by the third
 3257  quarter of the fiscal year shall be reallocated among the
 3258  districts based on pending project requests.
 3259         Section 84. Subsection (2) of section 311.22, Florida
 3260  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3261         311.22 Additional authorization for funding certain
 3262  dredging projects.—
 3263         (2) The council shall adopt rules for evaluating the
 3264  projects that may be funded pursuant to this section. The rules
 3265  must provide criteria for evaluating the economic benefit of the
 3266  project. The rules must include the creation of an
 3267  administrative review process by the council which is similar to
 3268  the process described in s. 311.09(5)-(11) s. 311.09(5)-(12),
 3269  and provide for a review by the Department of Transportation and
 3270  the Department of Economic Opportunity of all projects submitted
 3271  for funding under this section.
 3272         Section 85. Section 316.2122, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3273  to read:
 3274         316.2122 Operation of a low-speed vehicle or mini truck on
 3275  certain roadways.—The operation of a low-speed vehicle as
 3276  defined in s. 320.01(42) or a mini truck as defined in s.
 3277  320.01(45) on any road as defined in s. 334.03(15) or (33) is
 3278  authorized with the following restrictions:
 3279         (1) A low-speed vehicle or mini truck may be operated only
 3280  on streets where the posted speed limit is 35 miles per hour or
 3281  less. This does not prohibit a low-speed vehicle or mini truck
 3282  from crossing a road or street at an intersection where the road
 3283  or street has a posted speed limit of more than 35 miles per
 3284  hour.
 3285         (2) A low-speed vehicle must be equipped with headlamps,
 3286  stop lamps, turn signal lamps, taillamps, reflex reflectors,
 3287  parking brakes, rearview mirrors, windshields, seat belts, and
 3288  vehicle identification numbers.
 3289         (3) A low-speed vehicle or mini truck must be registered
 3290  and insured in accordance with s. 320.02 and titled pursuant to
 3291  chapter 319.
 3292         (4) Any person operating a low-speed vehicle or mini truck
 3293  must have in his or her possession a valid driver’s license.
 3294         (5) A county or municipality may prohibit the operation of
 3295  low-speed vehicles or mini trucks on any road under its
 3296  jurisdiction if the governing body of the county or municipality
 3297  determines that such prohibition is necessary in the interest of
 3298  safety.
 3299         (6) The Department of Transportation may prohibit the
 3300  operation of low-speed vehicles or mini trucks on any road under
 3301  its jurisdiction if it determines that such prohibition is
 3302  necessary in the interest of safety.
 3303         Section 86. Section 318.12, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 3304  read:
 3305         318.12 Purpose.—It is the legislative intent in the
 3306  adoption of this chapter to decriminalize certain violations of
 3307  chapter 316, the Florida Uniform Traffic Control Law; chapter
 3308  320, Motor Vehicle Licenses; chapter 322, Drivers’ Licenses;
 3309  chapter 338, Limited Access Florida Intrastate Highway System
 3310  and Toll Facilities; and chapter 1006, Support of Learning,
 3311  thereby facilitating the implementation of a more uniform and
 3312  expeditious system for the disposition of traffic infractions.
 3313         Section 87. Subsections (3) and (4) of section 320.20,
 3314  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3315         320.20 Disposition of license tax moneys.—The revenue
 3316  derived from the registration of motor vehicles, including any
 3317  delinquent fees and excluding those revenues collected and
 3318  distributed under the provisions of s. 320.081, must be
 3319  distributed monthly, as collected, as follows:
 3320         (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law except
 3321  subsections (1) and (2), on July 1, 1996, and annually
 3322  thereafter, $15 million shall be deposited in the State
 3323  Transportation Trust Fund solely for the purposes of funding the
 3324  Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development Program
 3325  as provided for in chapter 311. Such revenues shall be
 3326  distributed on a 50-50 matching basis to any port listed in s.
 3327  311.09(1) to be used for funding projects as described in s.
 3328  311.07(3)(b). Such revenues may be assigned, pledged, or set
 3329  aside as a trust for the payment of principal or interest on
 3330  bonds, tax anticipation certificates, or any other form of
 3331  indebtedness issued by an individual port or appropriate local
 3332  government having jurisdiction thereof, or collectively by
 3333  interlocal agreement among any of the ports, or used to purchase
 3334  credit support to permit such borrowings. However, such debt
 3335  shall not constitute a general obligation of the State of
 3336  Florida. The state does hereby covenant with holders of such
 3337  revenue bonds or other instruments of indebtedness issued
 3338  hereunder that it will not repeal or impair or amend in any
 3339  manner which will materially and adversely affect the rights of
 3340  such holders so long as bonds authorized by this section are
 3341  outstanding. Any revenues which are not pledged to the repayment
 3342  of bonds as authorized by this section may be utilized for
 3343  purposes authorized under the Florida Seaport Transportation and
 3344  Economic Development Program. This revenue source is in addition
 3345  to any amounts provided for and appropriated in accordance with
 3346  s. 311.07. The Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 3347  Development Council shall approve distribution of funds to ports
 3348  for projects which have been approved pursuant to s. 311.09(5)
 3349  (8) s. 311.09(5)-(9). The council and the Department of
 3350  Transportation may are authorized to perform such acts as are
 3351  required to facilitate and implement the provisions of this
 3352  subsection. To better enable the ports to cooperate to their
 3353  mutual advantage, the governing body of each port may exercise
 3354  powers provided to municipalities or counties in s. 163.01(7)(d)
 3355  subject to the provisions of chapter 311 and special acts, if
 3356  any, pertaining to a port. The use of funds provided pursuant to
 3357  this subsection are limited to eligible projects listed in this
 3358  subsection. Income derived from a project completed with the use
 3359  of program funds, beyond operating costs and debt service, shall
 3360  be restricted to further port capital improvements consistent
 3361  with maritime purposes and for no other purpose. Use of such
 3362  income for nonmaritime purposes is prohibited. The provisions of
 3363  s. 311.07(4) do not apply to any funds received pursuant to this
 3364  subsection. The revenues available under this subsection shall
 3365  not be pledged to the payment of any bonds other than the
 3366  Florida Ports Financing Commission Series 1996 and Series 1999
 3367  Bonds currently outstanding; provided, however, such revenues
 3368  may be pledged to secure payment of refunding bonds to refinance
 3369  the Florida Ports Financing Commission Series 1996 and Series
 3370  1999 Bonds. No refunding bonds secured by revenues available
 3371  under this subsection may be issued with a final maturity later
 3372  than the final maturity of the Florida Ports Financing
 3373  Commission Series 1996 and Series 1999 Bonds or which provide
 3374  for higher debt service in any year than is currently payable on
 3375  such bonds. Any revenue bonds or other indebtedness issued after
 3376  July 1, 2000, other than refunding bonds shall be issued by the
 3377  Division of Bond Finance at the request of the Department of
 3378  Transportation pursuant to the State Bond Act.
 3379         (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law except
 3380  subsections (1), (2), and (3), on July 1, 1999, and annually
 3381  thereafter, $10 million shall be deposited in the State
 3382  Transportation Trust Fund solely for the purposes of funding the
 3383  Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development Program
 3384  as provided in chapter 311 and for funding seaport intermodal
 3385  access projects of statewide significance as provided in s.
 3386  341.053. Such revenues shall be distributed to any port listed
 3387  in s. 311.09(1), to be used for funding projects as follows:
 3388         (a) For any seaport intermodal access projects that are
 3389  identified in the 1997-1998 Tentative Work Program of the
 3390  Department of Transportation, up to the amounts needed to offset
 3391  the funding requirements of this section.
 3392         (b) For seaport intermodal access projects as described in
 3393  s. 341.053(5) that are identified in the 5-year Florida Seaport
 3394  Mission Plan as provided in s. 311.09(3). Funding for such
 3395  projects shall be on a matching basis as mutually determined by
 3396  the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development
 3397  Council and the Department of Transportation, provided a minimum
 3398  of 25 percent of total project funds shall come from any port
 3399  funds, local funds, private funds, or specifically earmarked
 3400  federal funds.
 3401         (c) On a 50-50 matching basis for projects as described in
 3402  s. 311.07(3)(b).
 3403         (d) For seaport intermodal access projects that involve the
 3404  dredging or deepening of channels, turning basins, or harbors;
 3405  or the rehabilitation of wharves, docks, or similar structures.
 3406  Funding for such projects shall require a 25 percent match of
 3407  the funds received pursuant to this subsection. Matching funds
 3408  shall come from any port funds, federal funds, local funds, or
 3409  private funds.
 3410  
 3411  Such revenues may be assigned, pledged, or set aside as a trust
 3412  for the payment of principal or interest on bonds, tax
 3413  anticipation certificates, or any other form of indebtedness
 3414  issued by an individual port or appropriate local government
 3415  having jurisdiction thereof, or collectively by interlocal
 3416  agreement among any of the ports, or used to purchase credit
 3417  support to permit such borrowings. However, such debt shall not
 3418  constitute a general obligation of the state. This state does
 3419  hereby covenant with holders of such revenue bonds or other
 3420  instruments of indebtedness issued hereunder that it will not
 3421  repeal or impair or amend this subsection in any manner which
 3422  will materially and adversely affect the rights of holders so
 3423  long as bonds authorized by this subsection are outstanding. Any
 3424  revenues that are not pledged to the repayment of bonds as
 3425  authorized by this section may be utilized for purposes
 3426  authorized under the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 3427  Development Program. This revenue source is in addition to any
 3428  amounts provided for and appropriated in accordance with s.
 3429  311.07 and subsection (3). The Florida Seaport Transportation
 3430  and Economic Development Council shall approve distribution of
 3431  funds to ports for projects that have been approved pursuant to
 3432  s. 311.09(5)-(8) s. 311.09(5)-(9), or for seaport intermodal
 3433  access projects identified in the 5-year Florida Seaport Mission
 3434  Plan as provided in s. 311.09(3) and mutually agreed upon by the
 3435  Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development FSTED
 3436  Council and the Department of Transportation. All contracts for
 3437  actual construction of projects authorized by this subsection
 3438  must include a provision encouraging employment of participants
 3439  in the welfare transition program. The goal for employment of
 3440  participants in the welfare transition program is 25 percent of
 3441  all new employees employed specifically for the project, unless
 3442  the Department of Transportation and the Florida Seaport
 3443  Transportation and Economic Development Council demonstrate that
 3444  such a requirement would severely hamper the successful
 3445  completion of the project. In such an instance, Workforce
 3446  Florida, Inc., shall establish an appropriate percentage of
 3447  employees that must be participants in the welfare transition
 3448  program. The council and the Department of Transportation may
 3449  are authorized to perform such acts as are required to
 3450  facilitate and implement the provisions of this subsection. To
 3451  better enable the ports to cooperate to their mutual advantage,
 3452  the governing body of each port may exercise powers provided to
 3453  municipalities or counties in s. 163.01(7)(d) subject to the
 3454  provisions of chapter 311 and special acts, if any, pertaining
 3455  to a port. The use of funds provided pursuant to this subsection
 3456  is limited to eligible projects listed in this subsection. The
 3457  provisions of s. 311.07(4) do not apply to any funds received
 3458  pursuant to this subsection. The revenues available under this
 3459  subsection shall not be pledged to the payment of any bonds
 3460  other than the Florida Ports Financing Commission Series 1996
 3461  and Series 1999 Bonds currently outstanding; provided, however,
 3462  such revenues may be pledged to secure payment of refunding
 3463  bonds to refinance the Florida Ports Financing Commission Series
 3464  1996 and Series 1999 Bonds. No refunding bonds secured by
 3465  revenues available under this subsection may be issued with a
 3466  final maturity later than the final maturity of the Florida
 3467  Ports Financing Commission Series 1996 and Series 1999 Bonds or
 3468  which provide for higher debt service in any year than is
 3469  currently payable on such bonds. Any revenue bonds or other
 3470  indebtedness issued after July 1, 2000, other than refunding
 3471  bonds shall be issued by the Division of Bond Finance at the
 3472  request of the Department of Transportation pursuant to the
 3473  State Bond Act.
 3474         Section 88. Subsection (3) of section 335.02, Florida
 3475  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3476         335.02 Authority to designate transportation facilities and
 3477  rights-of-way and establish lanes; procedure for redesignation
 3478  and relocation; application of local regulations.—
 3479         (3) The department may establish standards for lanes on the
 3480  State Highway System, including the Strategic Intermodal System
 3481  highway corridors Florida Intrastate Highway System established
 3482  pursuant to s. 339.65 s. 338.001. In determining the number of
 3483  lanes for any regional corridor or section of highway on the
 3484  State Highway System to be funded by the department with state
 3485  or federal funds, the department shall evaluate all alternatives
 3486  and seek to achieve the highest degree of efficient mobility for
 3487  corridor users. In conducting the analysis, the department must
 3488  give consideration to the following factors consistent with
 3489  sound engineering principles:
 3490         (a) Overall economic importance of the corridor as a trade
 3491  or tourism corridor.
 3492         (b) Safety of corridor users, including the importance of
 3493  the corridor for evacuation purposes.
 3494         (c) Cost-effectiveness of alternative methods of increasing
 3495  the mobility of corridor users.
 3496         (d) Current and projected traffic volumes on the corridor.
 3497         (e) Multimodal alternatives.
 3498         (f) Use of intelligent transportation technology in
 3499  increasing the efficiency of the corridor.
 3500         (g) Compliance with state and federal policies related to
 3501  clean air, environmental impacts, growth management, livable
 3502  communities, and energy conservation.
 3503         (h) Addition of special use lanes, such as exclusive truck
 3504  lanes, high-occupancy-vehicle toll lanes, and exclusive
 3505  interregional traffic lanes.
 3506         (i) Availability and cost of rights-of-way, including
 3507  associated costs, and the most effective use of existing rights
 3508  of-way.
 3509         (j) Regional economic and transportation objectives, where
 3510  articulated.
 3511         (k) The future land use plan element of local government
 3512  comprehensive plans, as appropriate, including designated urban
 3513  infill and redevelopment areas.
 3514         (l) The traffic circulation element, if applicable, of
 3515  local government comprehensive plans, including designated
 3516  transportation corridors and public transportation corridors.
 3517         (m) The approved metropolitan planning organization’s long
 3518  range transportation plan, as appropriate.
 3519  
 3520  This subsection does not preclude a number of lanes in excess of
 3521  10 lanes, but an additional factor that must be considered
 3522  before the department may determine that the number of lanes
 3523  should be more than 10 is the capacity to accommodate in the
 3524  future alternative forms of transportation within existing or
 3525  potential rights-of-way.
 3526         Section 89. Subsection (2) of section 338.222, Florida
 3527  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3528         338.222 Department of Transportation sole governmental
 3529  entity to acquire, construct, or operate turnpike projects;
 3530  exception.—
 3531         (2) The department may contract with any local governmental
 3532  entity as defined in s. 334.03(13) s. 334.03(14) for the design,
 3533  right-of-way acquisition, or construction of any turnpike
 3534  project which the Legislature has approved. Local governmental
 3535  entities may negotiate with the department for the design,
 3536  right-of-way acquisition, and construction of any section of the
 3537  turnpike project within areas of their respective jurisdictions
 3538  or within counties with which they have interlocal agreements.
 3539         Section 90. Subsection (6) of section 339.285, Florida
 3540  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3541         339.285 Enhanced Bridge Program for Sustainable
 3542  Transportation.—
 3543         (6) Preference shall be given to bridge projects located on
 3544  corridors that connect to the Strategic Intermodal System,
 3545  created under s. 339.64, and that have been identified as
 3546  regionally significant in accordance with s. 339.155(4)(c), (d),
 3547  and (e) s. 339.155(5)(c), (d), and (e).
 3548         Section 91. Subsection (2) of section 341.053, Florida
 3549  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3550         341.053 Intermodal Development Program; administration;
 3551  eligible projects; limitations.—
 3552         (2) In recognition of the department’s role in the economic
 3553  development of this state, the department shall develop a
 3554  proposed intermodal development plan to connect Florida’s
 3555  airports, deepwater seaports, rail systems serving both
 3556  passenger and freight, and major intermodal connectors to the
 3557  Strategic Intermodal System highway corridors Florida Intrastate
 3558  Highway System facilities as the primary system for the movement
 3559  of people and freight in this state in order to make the
 3560  intermodal development plan a fully integrated and
 3561  interconnected system. The intermodal development plan must:
 3562         (a) Define and assess the state’s freight intermodal
 3563  network, including airports, seaports, rail lines and terminals,
 3564  intercity bus lines and terminals, and connecting highways.
 3565         (b) Prioritize statewide infrastructure investments,
 3566  including the acceleration of current projects, which are found
 3567  by the Freight Stakeholders Task Force to be priority projects
 3568  for the efficient movement of people and freight.
 3569         (c) Be developed in a manner that will assure maximum use
 3570  of existing facilities and optimum integration and coordination
 3571  of the various modes of transportation, including both
 3572  government-owned and privately owned resources, in the most
 3573  cost-effective manner possible.
 3574         Section 92. Subsection (2) of section 341.8225, Florida
 3575  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3576         341.8225 Department of Transportation sole governmental
 3577  entity to acquire, construct, or operate high-speed rail
 3578  projects; exception.—
 3579         (2) Local governmental entities, as defined in s.
 3580  334.03(13) s. 334.03(14), may negotiate with the department for
 3581  the design, right-of-way acquisition, and construction of any
 3582  component of the high-speed rail system within areas of their
 3583  respective jurisdictions or within counties with which they have
 3584  interlocal agreements.
 3585         Section 93. Subsection (2) of section 403.7211, Florida
 3586  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3587         403.7211 Hazardous waste facilities managing hazardous
 3588  wastes generated offsite; federal facilities managing hazardous
 3589  waste.—
 3590         (2) The department may shall not issue any permit under s.
 3591  403.722 for the construction, initial operation, or substantial
 3592  modification of a facility for the disposal, storage, or
 3593  treatment of hazardous waste generated offsite which is proposed
 3594  to be located in any of the following locations:
 3595         (a) Any area where life-threatening concentrations of
 3596  hazardous substances could accumulate at any residence or
 3597  residential subdivision as the result of a catastrophic event at
 3598  the proposed facility, unless each such residence or residential
 3599  subdivision is served by at least one arterial road or urban
 3600  minor arterial road, as determined under the procedures
 3601  referenced in s. 334.03(10) defined in s. 334.03, which provides
 3602  safe and direct egress by land to an area where such life
 3603  threatening concentrations of hazardous substances could not
 3604  accumulate in a catastrophic event. Egress by any road leading
 3605  from any residence or residential subdivision to any point
 3606  located within 1,000 yards of the proposed facility is unsafe
 3607  for the purposes of this paragraph. In determining whether
 3608  egress proposed by the applicant is safe and direct, the
 3609  department shall also consider, at a minimum, the following
 3610  factors:
 3611         1. Natural barriers such as water bodies, and whether any
 3612  road in the proposed evacuation route is impaired by a natural
 3613  barrier such as a water body.;
 3614         2. Potential exposure during egress and potential increases
 3615  in the duration of exposure.;
 3616         3. Whether any road in a proposed evacuation route passes
 3617  in close proximity to the facility.; and
 3618         4. Whether any portion of the evacuation route is
 3619  inherently directed toward the facility.
 3620         (b) Any location within 1,500 yards of any hospital,
 3621  prison, school, nursing home facility, day care facility,
 3622  stadium, place of assembled worship, or any other similar site
 3623  where individuals are routinely confined or assembled in such a
 3624  manner that reasonable access to immediate evacuation is likely
 3625  to be unavailable.;
 3626         (c) Any location within 1,000 yards of any residence.; or
 3627         (d) Any location which is inconsistent with rules adopted
 3628  by the department under this part.
 3629  
 3630  For the purposes of this subsection, all distances shall be
 3631  measured from the outer limit of the active hazardous waste
 3632  management area. “Substantial modification” includes: any
 3633  physical change in, change in the operations of, or addition to
 3634  a facility which could increase the potential offsite impact, or
 3635  risk of impact, from a release at that facility; and any change
 3636  in permit conditions which is reasonably expected to lead to
 3637  greater potential impacts or risks of impacts, from a release at
 3638  that facility. “Substantial modification” does not include a
 3639  change in operations, structures, or permit conditions which
 3640  does not substantially increase either the potential impact
 3641  from, or the risk of, a release. Physical or operational changes
 3642  to a facility related solely to the management of nonhazardous
 3643  waste at the facility is shall not be considered a substantial
 3644  modification. The department shall, by rule, adopt criteria to
 3645  determine whether a facility has been substantially modified.
 3646  “Initial operation” means the initial commencement of operations
 3647  at the facility.
 3648         Section 94. Subsection (27) of section 479.01, Florida
 3649  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3650         479.01 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
 3651         (27) “Urban area” has the same meaning as defined in s.
 3652  334.03(31) s. 334.03(32).
 3653         Section 95. Subsection (1) of section 479.07, Florida
 3654  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3655         479.07 Sign permits.—
 3656         (1) Except as provided in ss. 479.105(1)(e) and 479.16, a
 3657  person may not erect, operate, use, or maintain, or cause to be
 3658  erected, operated, used, or maintained, any sign on the State
 3659  Highway System outside an urban area, as defined in s.
 3660  334.03(31) s. 334.03(32), or on any portion of the interstate or
 3661  federal-aid primary highway system without first obtaining a
 3662  permit for the sign from the department and paying the annual
 3663  fee as provided in this section. As used in this section, the
 3664  term “on any portion of the State Highway System, interstate, or
 3665  federal-aid primary system” means a sign located within the
 3666  controlled area which is visible from any portion of the main
 3667  traveled way of such system.
 3668         Section 96. Subsection (5) of section 479.261, Florida
 3669  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3670         479.261 Logo sign program.—
 3671         (5) At a minimum, permit fees for businesses that
 3672  participate in the program must be established in an amount
 3673  sufficient to offset the total cost to the department for the
 3674  program, including contract costs. The department shall provide
 3675  the services in the most efficient and cost-effective manner
 3676  through department staff or by contracting for some or all of
 3677  the services. The department shall adopt rules that set
 3678  reasonable rates based upon factors such as population, traffic
 3679  volume, market demand, and costs for annual permit fees.
 3680  However, annual permit fees for sign locations inside an urban
 3681  area, as defined in s. 334.03(31) s. 334.03(32), may not exceed
 3682  $3,500, and annual permit fees for sign locations outside an
 3683  urban area, as defined in s. 334.03(31) s. 334.03(32), may not
 3684  exceed $2,000. After recovering program costs, the proceeds from
 3685  the annual permit fees shall be deposited into the State
 3686  Transportation Trust Fund and used for transportation purposes.
 3687         Section 97. Pembroke Park Boulevard designated; Department
 3688  of Transportation to erect suitable markers.—
 3689         (1) That portion of State Road 858/Hallandale Beach
 3690  Boulevard between Interstate 95/State Road 9 and S.W. 56th
 3691  Avenue in Broward County is designated as “Pembroke Park
 3692  Boulevard.”
 3693         (2) The Department of Transportation is directed to erect
 3694  suitable markers designating Pembroke Park Boulevard as
 3695  described in subsection (1).
 3696         Section 98. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
 3697  316.0083, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3698         316.0083 Mark Wandall Traffic Safety Program;
 3699  administration; report.—
 3700         (1)
 3701         (d)1. The owner of the motor vehicle involved in the
 3702  violation is responsible and liable for paying the uniform
 3703  traffic citation issued for a violation of s. 316.074(1) or s.
 3704  316.075(1)(c)1. when the driver failed to stop at a traffic
 3705  signal, unless the owner can establish that:
 3706         a. The motor vehicle passed through the intersection in
 3707  order to yield right-of-way to an emergency vehicle or as part
 3708  of a funeral procession;
 3709         b. The motor vehicle passed through the intersection at the
 3710  direction of a law enforcement officer;
 3711         c. The motor vehicle was, at the time of the violation, in
 3712  the care, custody, or control of another person; or
 3713         d. A uniform traffic citation was issued by a law
 3714  enforcement officer to the driver of the motor vehicle for the
 3715  alleged violation of s. 316.074(1) or s. 316.075(1)(c)1.; or
 3716         e. The motor vehicle’s owner was deceased on or before the
 3717  date that the uniformed traffic citation was issued as
 3718  established by an affidavit submitted by the representative of
 3719  the motor vehicle owner’s estate or other designated person or
 3720  family member.
 3721         2. In order to establish such facts, the owner of the motor
 3722  vehicle shall, within 30 days after the date of issuance of the
 3723  traffic citation, furnish to the appropriate governmental entity
 3724  an affidavit setting forth detailed information supporting an
 3725  exemption as provided in this paragraph.
 3726         a. An affidavit supporting an exemption under sub
 3727  subparagraph 1.c. must include the name, address, date of birth,
 3728  and, if known, the driver’s license number of the person who
 3729  leased, rented, or otherwise had care, custody, or control of
 3730  the motor vehicle at the time of the alleged violation. If the
 3731  vehicle was stolen at the time of the alleged offense, the
 3732  affidavit must include the police report indicating that the
 3733  vehicle was stolen.
 3734         b. If a traffic citation for a violation of s. 316.074(1)
 3735  or s. 316.075(1)(c)1. was issued at the location of the
 3736  violation by a law enforcement officer, the affidavit must
 3737  include the serial number of the uniform traffic citation.
 3738         c. If the motor vehicle’s owner to whom a traffic citation
 3739  has been issued is deceased, the affidavit must include a
 3740  certified copy of the owner’s death certificate showing that the
 3741  date of death occurred on or before the issuance of the uniform
 3742  traffic citation and one of the following:
 3743         (I) A bill of sale or other document showing that the
 3744  deceased owner’s motor vehicle was sold after his or her death
 3745  but on or before the date of the alleged violation.
 3746         (II) Documentary proof that the registered license plate
 3747  belonging to the deceased owner’s vehicle was returned to the
 3748  department or any branch office or authorized agent of the
 3749  department on or before the date of the alleged violation.
 3750         (III) A copy of a police report showing the deceased
 3751  owner’s registered license plate or motor vehicle was stolen
 3752  after the owner’s death but on or before the date of the alleged
 3753  violation.
 3754  
 3755  Upon receipt of the affidavit and documentation required under
 3756  this sub-subparagraph, the governmental entity must dismiss the
 3757  citation and provide proof of such dismissal to the person that
 3758  submitted the affidavit.
 3759         3. Upon receipt of an affidavit, the person designated as
 3760  having care, custody, and control of the motor vehicle at the
 3761  time of the violation may be issued a traffic citation for a
 3762  violation of s. 316.074(1) or s. 316.075(1)(c)1. when the driver
 3763  failed to stop at a traffic signal. The affidavit is admissible
 3764  in a proceeding pursuant to this section for the purpose of
 3765  providing proof that the person identified in the affidavit was
 3766  in actual care, custody, or control of the motor vehicle. The
 3767  owner of a leased vehicle for which a traffic citation is issued
 3768  for a violation of s. 316.074(1) or s. 316.075(1)(c)1. when the
 3769  driver failed to stop at a traffic signal is not responsible for
 3770  paying the traffic citation and is not required to submit an
 3771  affidavit as specified in this subsection if the motor vehicle
 3772  involved in the violation is registered in the name of the
 3773  lessee of such motor vehicle.
 3774         4. The submission of a false affidavit is a misdemeanor of
 3775  the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s.
 3776  775.083.
 3777         Section 99. Section 320.089, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3778  to read:
 3779         320.089 Members of National Guard and active United States
 3780  Armed Forces reservists; former prisoners of war; survivors of
 3781  Pearl Harbor; Purple Heart medal recipients; Operation Iraqi
 3782  Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom Veterans; Combat Infantry
 3783  Badge or Combat Action Badge recipients; special license plates;
 3784  fee.—
 3785         (1)(a) Each owner or lessee of an automobile or truck for
 3786  private use or recreational vehicle as specified in s.
 3787  320.08(9)(c) or (d), which is not used for hire or commercial
 3788  use, who is a resident of the state and an active or retired
 3789  member of the Florida National Guard, a survivor of the attack
 3790  on Pearl Harbor, a recipient of the Purple Heart medal, or an
 3791  active or retired member of any branch of the United States
 3792  Armed Forces Reserve, or a recipient of the Combat Infantry
 3793  Badge or Combat Action Badge shall, upon application to the
 3794  department, accompanied by proof of active membership or retired
 3795  status in the Florida National Guard, proof of membership in the
 3796  Pearl Harbor Survivors Association or proof of active military
 3797  duty in Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, proof of being a
 3798  Purple Heart medal recipient, or proof of active or retired
 3799  membership in any branch of the Armed Forces Reserve, or proof
 3800  of membership in the Combat Infantrymen’s Association, Inc., or
 3801  other proof of being a recipient of the Combat Infantry Badge or
 3802  Combat Action Badge, and upon payment of the license tax for the
 3803  vehicle as provided in s. 320.08, be issued a license plate as
 3804  provided by s. 320.06, upon which, in lieu of the serial numbers
 3805  prescribed by s. 320.06, shall be stamped the words “National
 3806  Guard,” “Pearl Harbor Survivor,” “Combat-wounded veteran,” or
 3807  “U.S. Reserve,” “Combat Infantry Badge,” or “Combat Action
 3808  Badge” as appropriate, followed by the serial number of the
 3809  license plate. Additionally, the Purple Heart plate may have the
 3810  words “Purple Heart” stamped on the plate and the likeness of
 3811  the Purple Heart medal appearing on the plate.
 3812         (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 3813  contrary, beginning with fiscal year 2002-2003 and annually
 3814  thereafter, the first $100,000 in general revenue generated from
 3815  the sale of license plates issued under this section shall be
 3816  deposited into the Grants and Donations Trust Fund, as described
 3817  in s. 296.38(2), to be used for the purposes established by law
 3818  for that trust fund. Any additional general revenue generated
 3819  from the sale of such plates shall be deposited into the State
 3820  Homes for Veterans Trust Fund and used solely to construct,
 3821  operate, and maintain domiciliary and nursing homes for
 3822  veterans, subject to the requirements of chapter 216.
 3823         (c) Notwithstanding any provisions of law to the contrary,
 3824  an applicant for a Pearl Harbor Survivor license plate or a
 3825  Purple Heart license plate who also qualifies for a disabled
 3826  veteran’s license plate under s. 320.084 shall be issued the
 3827  appropriate special license plate without payment of the license
 3828  tax imposed by s. 320.08.
 3829         (2) Each owner or lessee of an automobile or truck for
 3830  private use, truck weighing not more than 7,999 pounds, or
 3831  recreational vehicle as specified in s. 320.08(9)(c) or (d),
 3832  which is not used for hire or commercial use, who is a resident
 3833  of the state and who is a former prisoner of war, or their
 3834  unremarried surviving spouse, shall, upon application therefor
 3835  to the department, be issued a license plate as provided in s.
 3836  320.06, on which license plate are stamped the words “Ex-POW”
 3837  followed by the serial number. Each application shall be
 3838  accompanied by proof that the applicant meets the qualifications
 3839  specified in paragraph (a) or paragraph (b).
 3840         (a) A citizen of the United States who served as a member
 3841  of the Armed Forces of the United States or the armed forces of
 3842  a nation allied with the United States who was held as a
 3843  prisoner of war at such time as the Armed Forces of the United
 3844  States were engaged in combat, or their unremarried surviving
 3845  spouse, may be issued the special license plate provided for in
 3846  this subsection without payment of the license tax imposed by s.
 3847  320.08.
 3848         (b) A person who was serving as a civilian with the consent
 3849  of the United States Government, or a person who was a member of
 3850  the Armed Forces of the United States who was not a United
 3851  States citizen and was held as a prisoner of war when the Armed
 3852  Forces of the United States were engaged in combat, or their
 3853  unremarried surviving spouse, may be issued the special license
 3854  plate provided for in this subsection upon payment of the
 3855  license tax imposed by s. 320.08.
 3856         (3) Each owner or lessee of an automobile or truck for
 3857  private use, truck weighing not more than 7,999 pounds, or
 3858  recreational vehicle as specified in s. 320.08(9)(c) or (d),
 3859  which is not used for hire or commercial use, who is a resident
 3860  of this state and who is the unremarried surviving spouse of a
 3861  recipient of the Purple Heart medal shall, upon application
 3862  therefor to the department, with the payment of the required
 3863  fees, be issued a license plate as provided in s. 320.06, on
 3864  which license plate are stamped the words “Purple Heart” and the
 3865  likeness of the Purple Heart medal followed by the serial
 3866  number. Each application shall be accompanied by proof that the
 3867  applicant is the unremarried surviving spouse of a recipient of
 3868  the Purple Heart medal.
 3869         (4) The owner or lessee of an automobile or truck for
 3870  private use, a truck weighing not more than 7,999 pounds, or a
 3871  recreational vehicle as specified in s. 320.08(9)(c) or (d)
 3872  which automobile, truck, or recreational vehicle is not used for
 3873  hire or commercial use who is a resident of the state and a
 3874  current or former member of the United States military who was
 3875  deployed and served in Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom or in
 3876  Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom shall, upon
 3877  application to the department, accompanied by proof of active
 3878  membership or former active duty status during one of these
 3879  operations, and upon payment of the license tax for the vehicle
 3880  as provided in s. 320.08, be issued a license plate as provided
 3881  by s. 320.06 upon which, in lieu of the registration license
 3882  number prescribed by s. 320.06, shall be stamped the words
 3883  “Operation Iraqi Freedom” or “Operation Enduring Freedom,” as
 3884  appropriate, followed by the registration license number of the
 3885  plate.
 3886         Section 100. Subsection (10) is added to section 338.165,
 3887  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3888         338.165 Continuation of tolls.—
 3889         (10) The department’s Beachline-East Expressway may be
 3890  transferred by the department and become part of the turnpike
 3891  system under the Florida Turnpike Enterprise Law. Any funds
 3892  expended by Florida Turnpike Enterprise for the acquisition of
 3893  the Beachline-East Expressway shall be deposited into the State
 3894  Transportation Trust Fund, and, notwithstanding any other law to
 3895  the contrary, such funds shall first be allocated by the
 3896  department to fund the department’s obligation to construct the
 3897  Wekiva Parkway. The term “Wekiva Parkway” means a limited access
 3898  highway or expressway constructed between State Road 429 and
 3899  Interstate 4 specifically incorporating the corridor alignment
 3900  recommended by Recommendation 2 of the Wekiva River Basin Area
 3901  Task Force final report dated January 15, 2003, and the
 3902  recommendations of the SR 429 Working Group which were adopted
 3903  January 16, 2004, and related transportation facilities.
 3904         Section 101. Section 348.7546, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3905  to read:
 3906         348.7546 Wekiva Parkway, construction authorized;
 3907  financing.—Notwithstanding s. 338.2275,
 3908         (1) The Orlando-Orange County Expressway Authority is
 3909  hereby authorized to exercise its condemnation powers and to,
 3910  construct, finance, operate, own, and maintain those portions of
 3911  the Wekiva Parkway which are identified by agreement between the
 3912  authority and the department and which are included as part of
 3913  the authority’s long-range capital improvement plan. The “Wekiva
 3914  Parkway” means any limited access highway or expressway
 3915  constructed between State Road 429 and Interstate 4 specifically
 3916  incorporating the corridor alignment recommended by
 3917  Recommendation 2 of the Wekiva River Basin Area Task Force final
 3918  report dated January 15, 2003, and the recommendations of the SR
 3919  429 Working Group which that were adopted January 16, 2004. This
 3920  project may be financed with any funds available to the
 3921  authority for such purpose or revenue bonds issued by the
 3922  authority under s. 11, Art. VII of the State Constitution and s.
 3923  348.755(1)(b). This section does not invalidate the exercise by
 3924  the authority of its condemnation powers or the acquisition of
 3925  any property for the Wekiva Parkway before July 1, 2012.
 3926         (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 3927  contrary, in order to ensure that funds are available to the
 3928  department for its portion of the Wekiva Parkway, beginning July
 3929  1, 2012, the authority shall repay the expenditures by the
 3930  department for costs of operation and maintenance of the
 3931  Orlando-Orange County Expressway System in accordance with the
 3932  terms of the memorandum of understanding between the authority
 3933  and the department ratified by the authority board on February
 3934  22, 2012, which requires the authority to pay the department $10
 3935  million on July 1, 2012, and $20 million on each successive July
 3936  1 until the department has been fully reimbursed for all costs
 3937  of the Orlando-Orange County Expressway System which were paid,
 3938  advanced, or reimbursed to the authority by the department, with
 3939  a final payment in the amount of the balance remaining.
 3940  Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the funds paid to
 3941  the department pursuant to this subsection shall be allocated by
 3942  the department for construction of the Wekiva Parkway.
 3943         (3) The department’s obligation to construct its portions
 3944  of the Wekiva Parkway is contingent upon the timely payment by
 3945  the authority of the annual payments required of the authority
 3946  and receipt of all required environmental permits and approvals
 3947  by the Federal Government.
 3948         Section 102. Subsections (6) is added to section 348.755,
 3949  Florida Statutes, to read:
 3950         348.755 Bonds of the authority.—
 3951         (6) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 3952  contrary, on and after July 1, 2012, the authority may not issue
 3953  any bonds except as permitted under the terms of the memorandum
 3954  of understanding between the authority and the department
 3955  ratified by the authority board on February 22, 2012.
 3956         Section 103. Subsections (8) and (9) are added to section
 3957  348.757, Florida Statutes, to read:
 3958         348.757 Lease-purchase agreement.—
 3959         (8) The only lease-purchase agreement authorized by this
 3960  section is the lease-purchase agreement between the department
 3961  and the authority dated December 23, 1985, as supplemented by a
 3962  first supplement to the lease-purchase agreement dated November
 3963  25, 1986, and a second supplement to the lease-purchase
 3964  agreement dated October 27, 1988.
 3965         (9) Upon the earlier of the defeasance, redemption, or
 3966  payment in full of the authority bonds issued before July 1,
 3967  2012, or the earlier date to which the purchasers of the
 3968  authority bonds have consented:
 3969         (a) The obligations of the department under the lease-
 3970  purchase agreement with the authority, including any obligation
 3971  to pay any cost of operation, maintenance, repair, or
 3972  rehabilitation of the expressway system, terminate;
 3973         (b) The lease purchase agreement terminates;
 3974         (c) The expressway system remains the property of the
 3975  authority and may not be transferred to the department; and
 3976         (d) The authority remains obligated to reimburse the
 3977  department in accordance with the terms of the memorandum of
 3978  understanding between the authority and the department ratified
 3979  by the authority board on February 22, 2012.
 3980         Section 104. Subsections (2) and (5) of section 369.317,
 3981  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3982         369.317 Wekiva Parkway.—
 3983         (2) The Wekiva Parkway and related transportation
 3984  facilities shall follow the design criteria contained in the
 3985  recommendations of the Wekiva River Basin Area Task Force
 3986  adopted by reference by the Wekiva River Basin Coordinating
 3987  Committee in its final report of March 16, 2004, and the
 3988  recommendations of the Wekiva Coordinating Committee contained
 3989  in its final report of March 16, 2004, subject to reasonable
 3990  environmental, economic, and engineering considerations. For
 3991  those activities associated with the Wekiva Parkway and related
 3992  transportation facilities which require authorization pursuant
 3993  to part IV of chapter 373, the Department of Environmental
 3994  Protection is the exclusive permitting authority.
 3995         (5) In Seminole County, the Seminole County Expressway
 3996  Authority, the Department of Transportation, and the Florida
 3997  Turnpike Enterprise shall locate the precise corridor and
 3998  interchanges for the Wekiva Parkway consistent with the
 3999  legislative intent expressed in this act and other provisions of
 4000  this act.
 4001         Section 105. Vehicles equipped with autonomous technology;
 4002  intent.—
 4003         (1) As used in this section, the term “autonomous
 4004  technology” means technology installed on a motor vehicle that
 4005  has the capability to drive the vehicle on which the technology
 4006  is installed without the active control or monitoring by a human
 4007  operator. The term excludes a motor vehicle enabled with active
 4008  safety systems or driver assistance systems, including, without
 4009  limitation, a system to provide electronic blind spot
 4010  assistance, crash avoidance, emergency braking, parking
 4011  assistance, adaptive cruise control, lane keep assistance, lane
 4012  departure warning, or traffic jam and queuing assistant, unless
 4013  any such system alone or in combination with other systems
 4014  enables the vehicle on which the technology is installed to
 4015  drive without the active control or monitoring by a human
 4016  operator.
 4017         (2) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage the
 4018  safe development, testing, and operation of motor vehicles with
 4019  autonomous technology on the public roads of the state. The
 4020  Legislature finds that the state does not prohibit or
 4021  specifically regulate the testing or operation of autonomous
 4022  technology in motor vehicles on public roads.
 4023         Section 106. Subsection (89) is added to section 316.003,
 4024  Florida Statutes, to read:
 4025         316.003 Definitions.—The following words and phrases, when
 4026  used in this chapter, shall have the meanings respectively
 4027  ascribed to them in this section, except where the context
 4028  otherwise requires:
 4029         (89) AUTONOMOUS VEHICLE.—Any vehicle equipped with
 4030  autonomous technology. The term “autonomous technology” means
 4031  technology installed on a motor vehicle that has the capability
 4032  to drive the vehicle on which the technology is installed
 4033  without the active control or monitoring by a human operator.
 4034  The term excludes a motor vehicle enabled with active safety
 4035  systems or driver assistance systems, including, without
 4036  limitation, a system to provide electronic blind spot
 4037  assistance, crash avoidance, emergency braking, parking
 4038  assistance, adaptive cruise control, lane keep assistance, lane
 4039  departure warning, or traffic jam and queuing assistant, unless
 4040  any such system alone or in combination with other systems
 4041  enables the vehicle on which the technology is installed to
 4042  drive without the active control or monitoring by a human
 4043  operator.
 4044         Section 107. Section 316.85, Florida Statutes, is created
 4045  to read:
 4046         316.85 Autonomous vehicles; operation.—
 4047         (1) A person who possesses a valid driver license may
 4048  operate an autonomous vehicle in autonomous mode.
 4049         (2) For purposes of this chapter, unless the context
 4050  otherwise requires, a person shall be deemed to be the operator
 4051  of an autonomous vehicle operating in autonomous mode when the
 4052  person causes the vehicle’s autonomous technology to engage,
 4053  regardless of whether the person is physically present in the
 4054  vehicle while the vehicle is operating in autonomous mode.
 4055         Section 108. Section 319.145, Florida Statutes, is created
 4056  to read:
 4057         319.145 Autonomous vehicles.—
 4058         (1) An autonomous vehicle registered in this state must
 4059  continue to meet federal standards and regulations for a motor
 4060  vehicle. The vehicle shall:
 4061         (a) Have a means to engage and disengage the autonomous
 4062  technology which is easily accessible to the operator.
 4063         (b) Have a means, inside the vehicle, to visually indicate
 4064  when the vehicle is operating in autonomous mode.
 4065         (c) Have a means to alert the operator of the vehicle if a
 4066  technology failure affecting the ability of the vehicle to
 4067  safely operate autonomously is detected while the vehicle is
 4068  operating autonomously in order to indicate to the operator to
 4069  take control of the vehicle.
 4070         (d) Be capable of being operated in compliance with the
 4071  applicable traffic and motor vehicle laws of this state.
 4072         (2) Federal regulations promulgated by the National Highway
 4073  Traffic Safety Administration shall supersede this section when
 4074  found to be in conflict with this section.
 4075         Section 109. (1) Vehicles equipped with autonomous
 4076  technology may be operated on roads in this state by employees,
 4077  contractors, or other persons designated by manufacturers of
 4078  autonomous technology for the purpose of testing the technology.
 4079  For testing purposes, a human operator shall be present in the
 4080  autonomous vehicle such that he or she has the ability to
 4081  monitor the vehicle’s performance and intervene, if necessary,
 4082  unless the vehicle is being tested or demonstrated on a closed
 4083  course. Prior to the start of testing in this state, the entity
 4084  performing the testing must submit to the Department of Highway
 4085  Safety and Motor Vehicles an instrument of insurance, surety
 4086  bond, or proof of self-insurance acceptable to the department in
 4087  the amount of $5 million.
 4088         (2) The original manufacturer of a vehicle converted by a
 4089  third party into an autonomous vehicle shall not be liable in,
 4090  and shall have a defense to and be dismissed from, any legal
 4091  action brought against the original manufacturer by any person
 4092  injured due to an alleged vehicle defect caused by the
 4093  conversion of the vehicle, or by equipment installed by the
 4094  converter, unless the alleged defect was present in the vehicle
 4095  as originally manufactured.
 4096         (3) By February 12, 2014, the Department of Highway Safety
 4097  and Motor Vehicles shall submit a report to the President of the
 4098  Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
 4099  recommending additional legislative or regulatory action that
 4100  may be required for the safe testing and operation of motor
 4101  vehicles equipped with autonomous technology.
 4102         Section 110. St. Pete Crosstown designated; Department of
 4103  Transportation to erect suitable markers.—
 4104         (1) That portion of 118th Avenue North/County Road 296
 4105  between U.S.19/S.R. 55 and 28th Street North/County Road 683 in
 4106  Pinellas County is designated as the “St. Pete Crosstown.”
 4107         (2) The Department of Transportation is directed to erect
 4108  suitable markers designating the St. Pete Crosstown as described
 4109  in subsection (1).
 4110         Section 111. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
 4111  act and except for this section, which shall take effect upon
 4112  this act becoming a law, this act shall take effect July 1,
 4113  2012.
 4114  
 4115  ================= T I T L E  A M E N D M E N T ================
 4116         And the title is amended as follows:
 4117         Delete lines 37 - 38
 4118  and insert:
 4119         seaport projects to use a mitigation bank; amending s.
 4120         20.23, F.S., relating to the Department of
 4121         Transportation; authorizing district secretaries and
 4122         executive directors to be a professional engineer from
 4123         any state; removing obsolete language relating to
 4124         authority of district secretaries to appoint district
 4125         directors; amending s. 206.41, F.S., relating to
 4126         payment of a tax on fuel under specified provisions;
 4127         providing that a restriction on the use of
 4128         agricultural equipment to qualify for a refund of the
 4129         tax does not apply to citrus harvesting equipment or
 4130         citrus fruit loaders; revising the title of ch. 311,
 4131         F.S.; amending s. 311.07, F.S.; revising provisions
 4132         for the financing of port transportation or port
 4133         facilities projects; increasing funding for the
 4134         Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 4135         Development Program; directing the Florida Seaport
 4136         Transportation and Economic Development Council to
 4137         develop guidelines for project funding; directing
 4138         council staff, the Department of Transportation, and
 4139         the Department of Economic Opportunity to work in
 4140         cooperation to review projects and allocate funds as
 4141         specified; revising certain authorized uses of program
 4142         funds; revising the list of projects eligible for
 4143         funding under the program; removing a cap on
 4144         distribution of program funds; removing a requirement
 4145         for a specified audit; authorizing the Department of
 4146         Transportation to subject projects funded under the
 4147         program to a specified audit; amending s. 311.09,
 4148         F.S.; revising provisions for rules of the council for
 4149         evaluating certain projects; removing provisions for
 4150         review by the Department of Community Affairs of the
 4151         list of projects approved by the council; revising
 4152         provisions for review and evaluation of such projects
 4153         by the Department of Transportation and the Department
 4154         of Economic Opportunity; increasing the amount of
 4155         funding the Department of Transportation is required
 4156         to include in its annual legislative budget request
 4157         for the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 4158         Development Program; revising provisions relating to
 4159         funding to be included in the budget; creating s.
 4160         311.10, F.S.; establishing the Strategic Port
 4161         Investment Initiative within the Department of
 4162         Transportation; providing for a minimum annual amount
 4163         from the State Transportation Trust Fund to fund the
 4164         initiative; directing the department to work with
 4165         deepwater ports to develop and maintain a priority
 4166         list of strategic investment projects; providing
 4167         project selection criteria; requiring the department
 4168         to schedule a publicly noticed workshop with the
 4169         Department of Economic Opportunity and the deepwater
 4170         ports to review the proposed projects; directing the
 4171         department to finalize a prioritized list of potential
 4172         projects after considering comments received in the
 4173         workshop; directing the department to include the
 4174         proposed seaport projects in the tentative work
 4175         program; creating s. 311.101, F.S.; creating the
 4176         Intermodal Logistics Center Infrastructure Support
 4177         Program within the Department of Transportation;
 4178         providing purpose of the program; defining the term
 4179         “intermodal logistics center”; providing criteria for
 4180         consideration by the department when evaluating
 4181         projects for program assistance; directing the
 4182         department to coordinate and consult with the
 4183         Department of Economic Opportunity in the selection of
 4184         projects to be funded; authorizing the department to
 4185         administer contracts on behalf of the entity selected
 4186         to receive funding; providing for the department’s
 4187         share of project costs; providing for a certain amount
 4188         of funds in the State Transportation Trust Fund to be
 4189         made available for eligible projects; directing the
 4190         department to include the proposed projects in the
 4191         tentative work program; authorizing the department to
 4192         adopt rules; creating s. 311.106, F.S., relating to
 4193         seaport stormwater permitting and mitigation;
 4194         authorizing a seaport to provide for onsite and
 4195         offsite stormwater treatment to mitigate the impact of
 4196         port activities; requiring offsite treatment to be
 4197         within the same drainage basin and constructed and
 4198         maintained by the seaport or in conjunction with a
 4199         local government; authorizing the port to provide a
 4200         regional treatment facility constructed and maintained
 4201         by the seaport or in conjunction with a local
 4202         government; amending s. 311.14, F.S., relating to
 4203         seaport planning; directing the department to develop,
 4204         in coordination with certain partners, a Statewide
 4205         Seaport and Waterways System Plan consistent with the
 4206         goals of the Florida Transportation Plan; providing
 4207         requirements for the plan; removing provisions for the
 4208         Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 4209         Development Council to develop freight-mobility and
 4210         trade-corridor plans; removing provisions that require
 4211         the Office of the State Public Transportation
 4212         Administrator to integrate the Florida Transportation
 4213         Plan with certain other plans and programs; removing
 4214         provisions relating to the construction of seaport
 4215         freight-mobility projects; amending s. 316.003, F.S.;
 4216         revising the definition of the term “motor vehicle”
 4217         for purposes of the payment and collection of tolls on
 4218         toll facilities under specified provisions; amending
 4219         s. 316.091, F.S.; permitting the use of shoulders for
 4220         vehicular traffic under certain circumstances;
 4221         requiring notice of where vehicular traffic is
 4222         allowed; providing what may not be deemed as
 4223         authorization; requiring the department to establish a
 4224         pilot program to open certain limited access highways
 4225         and bridges to bicycles and other human-powered
 4226         vehicles; providing requirements for the pilot
 4227         program; providing a timeframe for implementation of
 4228         the program; authorizing the department to continue or
 4229         expand the program; requiring the department to report
 4230         findings and recommendations to the Governor and
 4231         Legislature by a certain date; amending s. 316.1001,
 4232         F.S.; revising requirements for mailing of citations
 4233         for failure to pay a toll; authorizing mailing by
 4234         certified mail in addition to first class mail;
 4235         providing that mailing of the citation to the address
 4236         of the registered motor vehicle owner constitutes
 4237         notification; removing a requirement for a return
 4238         receipt; amending s. 316.2068, F.S.; authorizing a
 4239         county or municipality to regulate the operation of
 4240         electric personal assistive mobility devices on any
 4241         road, street, sidewalk, or bicycle path under its
 4242         jurisdiction if the governing body of the county or
 4243         municipality determines that such regulation is
 4244         necessary in the interest of safety; amending s.
 4245         316.515, F.S.; revising provisions for the maximum
 4246         allowed length of straight truck-trailer combinations;
 4247         revising provisions for operation of implements of
 4248         husbandry and farm equipment on state roads;
 4249         authorizing the operation of citrus harvesting
 4250         equipment and citrus fruit loaders for certain
 4251         purposes; conforming a cross-reference; amending s.
 4252         320.01, F.S.; revising the definition of the term
 4253         “low-speed vehicle” to include vehicles that are not
 4254         electric powered; amending s. 332.08, F.S.;
 4255         authorizing a municipality participating in a federal
 4256         airport privatization pilot program to sell an airport
 4257         or other air navigation facility or certain real
 4258         property, improvements, and equipment; requiring
 4259         department approval of the agreement under certain
 4260         circumstances; providing criteria for department
 4261         approval; amending s. 334.03, F.S.; removing the
 4262         definition of the term “Florida Intrastate Highway
 4263         System” and revising the definitions of the terms
 4264         “functional classification” and “State Highway System”
 4265         for purposes of the Florida Transportation Code;
 4266         amending s. 334.044, F.S.; revising the powers and
 4267         duties of the department relating to jurisdictional
 4268         responsibility, designating facilities, and highway
 4269         landscaping; adding the duty to develop a Freight
 4270         Mobility and Trade Plan; requiring the plan to include
 4271         certain proposed policies and investments; requiring
 4272         the plan to be submitted to the Governor and
 4273         Legislature; requiring freight issues to be emphasized
 4274         in transportation plans; amending s. 334.047, F.S.;
 4275         removing a provision that prohibits the department
 4276         from establishing a maximum number of miles of urban
 4277         principal arterial roads; amending s. 335.074, F.S.,
 4278         relating to bridge safety inspection reports;
 4279         requiring the governmental entity having maintenance
 4280         responsibility for a bridge to reduce the maximum
 4281         weight, size, or speed limit for the bridge or to
 4282         close the bridge upon receipt of a report recommending
 4283         the reduction or closure; requiring the entity to post
 4284         the reduced limits and notify the department;
 4285         requiring the department to post the reduced limits or
 4286         to close the bridge under certain circumstances;
 4287         requiring costs associated with the department posting
 4288         the revised limits or closure of the bridge to be
 4289         assessed against and collected from the governmental
 4290         entity; amending s. 335.17, F.S.; revising provisions
 4291         relating to highway construction noise abatement;
 4292         amending s. 336.021, F.S.; revising the date when
 4293         imposition of the ninth-cent fuel tax will be levied;
 4294         amending s. 336.025, F.S.; revising the date when
 4295         impositions and rate changes of the local option fuel
 4296         tax shall be levied; revising the definition of the
 4297         term “transportation expenditures” for purposes of
 4298         specified provisions that restrict the use of local
 4299         option fuel tax funds by counties and municipalities;
 4300         amending s. 337.111, F.S.; providing additional forms
 4301         of security for the cost of removal of monuments or
 4302         memorials or modifications to an installation site at
 4303         highway rest areas; removing a provision requiring
 4304         renewal of a bond; amending s. 337.125, F.S.; revising
 4305         provisions relating to a prime contractor’s submission
 4306         of a disadvantaged business enterprise utilization
 4307         form; repealing s. 337.137, F.S., relating to
 4308         subcontracting by socially and economically
 4309         disadvantaged business enterprises; amending s.
 4310         337.139, F.S.; providing an updated reference to
 4311         federal law as it relates to socially and economically
 4312         disadvantaged business enterprises; amending s.
 4313         337.14, F.S.; revising provisions for applications for
 4314         qualification to bid on department contracts; amending
 4315         s. 337.29, F.S.; authorizing transfers of right-of-way
 4316         between local governments by deed; amending ss.
 4317         337.403 and 337.404, F.S.; clarifying provisions
 4318         relating to responsibility for the work and costs for
 4319         alleviating interference on a public road or publicly
 4320         owned rail corridor caused by a utility facility;
 4321         requiring the utility owner to initiate and complete
 4322         the work necessary within a certain time period;
 4323         requiring the local governmental authority to bear the
 4324         costs of work on a utility facility that was initially
 4325         installed to serve the governmental entity or its
 4326         tenants; providing that the governmental entity is not
 4327         responsible for the costs of utility work related to
 4328         subsequent additions to the facility; requiring that
 4329         the local governmental authority bear the costs of
 4330         removing or relocating a utility facility under
 4331         certain circumstances; providing for notice to the
 4332         utility; revising provisions for payment of costs;
 4333         revising provisions for completion of work when the
 4334         utility owner does not perform the work; amending s.
 4335         337.408, F.S.; revising provisions for certain
 4336         facilities installed within the right-of-way limits of
 4337         roads on the State Highway System; requiring counties
 4338         and municipalities that have authorized a bench or
 4339         transit shelter to be responsible for determining if
 4340         the facility is compliant with applicable laws and
 4341         rules or remove the bench or transit shelter; limiting
 4342         liability of the department; requiring a municipality
 4343         or county that authorizes a bench or transit shelter
 4344         to be installed to require the supplier or installer
 4345         to indemnify the department and annually certify that
 4346         the requirement has been met; requiring the removal of
 4347         such facilities under certain circumstances;
 4348         authorizing the department to direct a county or
 4349         municipality to remove or relocate a bus stop, bench,
 4350         transit shelter, waste disposal receptacle, public pay
 4351         telephone, or modular news rack that is not in
 4352         compliance with applicable laws or rules; removing a
 4353         provision for the replacement of an unusable transit
 4354         bus bench that was in service before a certain date;
 4355         prohibiting installation of a bus stop that conflicts
 4356         with certain laws and regulations resulting in a loss
 4357         of federal funds; authorizing the appropriate local
 4358         government entity to regulate or deny competition to
 4359         provide a bus stop; revising the title of ch. 338,
 4360         F.S.; repealing s. 338.001, F.S., relating to
 4361         provisions for the Florida Intrastate Highway System
 4362         Plan; amending s. 338.01, F.S.; clarifying provisions
 4363         governing the designation and function of limited
 4364         access facilities; authorizing the department or other
 4365         governmental entities collecting tolls to pursue
 4366         collection of unpaid tolls by contracting with a
 4367         private attorney or collection agency; authorizing a
 4368         collection fee; providing an exception to statutory
 4369         requirements related to private attorney services;
 4370         creating s. 338.151, F.S.; authorizing the department
 4371         to establish tolls on certain transportation
 4372         facilities to pay for the cost of such project;
 4373         prohibiting the department from establishing tolls on
 4374         certain lanes of limited access facilities; providing
 4375         an exception; providing for application; amending s.
 4376         338.155, F.S.; authorizing the department adopt rules
 4377         to allow public transit vehicles and certain military
 4378         service-related funeral processions to use certain
 4379         toll facilities without payment of tolls; amending s.
 4380         338.161, F.S.; authorizing the department to enter
 4381         into agreements for the use of its electronic toll
 4382         collection and video billing system; authorizing
 4383         modification of its rules regarding toll collection
 4384         and an administrative charge; providing for
 4385         construction; amending s. 338.166, F.S.; revising a
 4386         provision for issuance of bonds secured by toll
 4387         revenues collected on high-occupancy toll lanes or
 4388         express lanes; revising authorized uses of such toll
 4389         revenues; providing restrictions on such use; amending
 4390         s. 338.221, F.S.; revising the definition of the term
 4391         “economically feasible” for purposes of proposed
 4392         turnpike projects; amending s. 338.223, F.S.; revising
 4393         provisions for department requests for legislative
 4394         approval of proposed turnpike projects; conforming a
 4395         cross-reference; amending s. 338.227, F.S.; conforming
 4396         provisions to changes made by the act; directing the
 4397         department and the Department of Management Services
 4398         to create and implement a program designed to enhance
 4399         participation of minority businesses in certain
 4400         contracts related to the Strategic Intermodal System
 4401         Plan; amending ss. 338.2275 and 338.228, F.S.,
 4402         relating to turnpike projects; revising cross
 4403         references; amending s. 338.231, F.S.; providing that
 4404         inactive prepaid toll accounts are unclaimed property;
 4405         providing for disposition by the Department of
 4406         Financial Services and closing of the account;
 4407         amending s. 338.234, F.S.; revising provisions that
 4408         exempt certain lessees from payment of commercial
 4409         rental tax; replacing a reference to the Florida
 4410         Intrastate Highway System with a reference to the
 4411         Strategic Intermodal System; amending s. 339.0805,
 4412         F.S.; revising requirements for expenditure of certain
 4413         funds with small business concerns owned and
 4414         controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged
 4415         individuals; revising a definition of the term “small
 4416         business concern”; removing provisions for a periodic
 4417         disparity study; deleting obsolete language; revising
 4418         provisions for certification as a socially and
 4419         economically disadvantaged business enterprise;
 4420         revising requirements that a disadvantaged business
 4421         enterprise notify the department of certain changes in
 4422         ownership; revising criteria for such a business
 4423         enterprise to participate in a construction management
 4424         development program; revising references to federal
 4425         law; amending s. 339.135, F.S.; revising provisions
 4426         for developing the department’s tentative work
 4427         program; revising provisions for a list of project
 4428         priorities submitted by a metropolitan planning
 4429         organization; revising criteria for proposed amendment
 4430         to the department’s adopted work program which
 4431         deletes, advances, or defers a project or project
 4432         phase; revising threshold amounts; directing the
 4433         department to index the budget amendment threshold
 4434         amounts to the rate of inflation; prohibiting such
 4435         adjustments more frequently than once a year;
 4436         subjecting such adjustments to specified notice and
 4437         review procedures; amending s. 339.155, F.S.; revising
 4438         provisions for the Florida Transportation Plan;
 4439         requiring the planning process to conform to specified
 4440         federal provisions; removing provisions for a long
 4441         range component, short-range component, and a report;
 4442         amending s. 339.175, F.S.; providing that to the
 4443         extent possible only one metropolitan planning
 4444         organization be designated in a urbanized area;
 4445         providing that representatives of the department shall
 4446         serve as nonvoting advisers to a metropolitan planning
 4447         organization; authorizing the appointment of
 4448         additional nonvoting advisers; requiring M.P.O.’s to
 4449         coordinate in the development of regionally
 4450         significant project priorities; amending s. 339.2819,
 4451         F.S.; revising the state matching funds requirement
 4452         for the Transportation Regional Incentive Program;
 4453         conforming cross-references; requiring funded projects
 4454         to be in the department’s work program; requiring a
 4455         project to meet the program’s requirements prior to
 4456         being funded; amending s. 339.62, F.S.; removing the
 4457         Florida Intrastate Highway System from and adding
 4458         highway corridors to the list of components of the
 4459         Strategic Intermodal System; providing for other
 4460         corridors to be included in the system; amending s.
 4461         339.63, F.S.; adding military access facilities to the
 4462         types of facilities included in the Strategic
 4463         Intermodal System and the Emerging Strategic
 4464         Intermodal System which form components of an
 4465         interconnected transportation system; providing that
 4466         an intermodal logistics center meeting certain
 4467         criteria shall be designated as part of the Strategic
 4468         Intermodal System; providing for a waiver of
 4469         transportation concurrency for such facility if it is
 4470         located within a described area; amending s. 339.64,
 4471         F.S.; deleting provisions creating the Statewide
 4472         Intermodal Transportation Advisory Council; creating
 4473         s. 339.65, F.S.; requiring the department to plan and
 4474         develop for Strategic Intermodal System highway
 4475         corridors to aid traffic movement around the state;
 4476         providing for components of the corridors; requiring
 4477         the department to follow specified policy guidelines
 4478         when developing the corridors; directing the
 4479         department to establish standards and criteria for
 4480         functional design; providing for appropriations;
 4481         requiring such highway corridor projects to be a part
 4482         of the department’s adopted work program; amending
 4483         341.840, F.S.; relating to the Florida Rail Enterprise
 4484         Act; revising obsolete references to the Florida High
 4485         Speed Rail Authority; providing that certain
 4486         transactions made by or on behalf of the enterprise
 4487         are exempt from specified taxes; providing for certain
 4488         contractors to act as agents on behalf of the
 4489         enterprise for purposes of the tax exemption;
 4490         authorizing the department to adopt rules; amending s.
 4491         343.52, F.S.; revising the definition of the term
 4492         “area served” for purposes of provisions for the South
 4493         Florida Regional Transportation Authority; revising a
 4494         provision for expansion of the area; amending s.
 4495         343.53, F.S.; revising membership of and criteria for
 4496         appointment to the board of the South Florida Regional
 4497         Transportation Authority; amending s. 343.54, F.S.;
 4498         requiring a two-thirds vote of such board to privatize
 4499         certain functions; revising a provision authorizing
 4500         such authority to expand its service area; amending s.
 4501         343.56, F.S., relating to bonds of the authority;
 4502         removing a provision for the use of certain funds for
 4503         payment of principal and interest on bonds; amending
 4504         s. 343.57, F.S., relating to a state pledge to
 4505         bondholders; providing for construction; providing
 4506         that a bondholder shall have no right to require the
 4507         Legislature to make any appropriation of state funds;
 4508         amending s. 343.58, F.S.; providing conditions for
 4509         funds provided to such authority by the department;
 4510         providing for certain funding to cease upon
 4511         commencement of an alternate dedicated local funding
 4512         source; creating s. 347.215, F.S.; providing for the
 4513         operation of ferries by joint agreement between public
 4514         and private entities; amending s. 348.0003, F.S.;
 4515         revising financial disclosure requirements for certain
 4516         transportation authorities; creating s. 348.7645,
 4517         F.S.; requiring the Orlando-Orange County Expressway
 4518         Authority to erect a sign under certain circumstances;
 4519         providing for payment for the cost of the sign;
 4520         amending s. 349.03, F.S.; providing for financial
 4521         disclosure requirements for the Jacksonville
 4522         Transportation Authority; amending s. 349.04, F.S.;
 4523         providing that the Jacksonville Transportation
 4524         Authority may conduct meetings and workshops using
 4525         communications media technology; providing that
 4526         certain actions may not be taken unless a quorum is
 4527         present in person; providing that members must be
 4528         physically present to vote on any item; amending s.
 4529         373.118, F.S.; requiring that the Department of
 4530         Environmental Protection initiate rulemaking to adopt
 4531         a general permit for stormwater management systems
 4532         serving airside activities at airports; providing for
 4533         statewide application of the general permit; providing
 4534         for any water management district or delegated local
 4535         government to administer the general permit; providing
 4536         that the rules are not subject to any special
 4537         rulemaking requirements relating to small business;
 4538         amending s. 373.413, F.S.; providing legislative
 4539         intent regarding flexibility in the permitting of
 4540         stormwater management systems; requiring the cost of
 4541         stormwater treatment for a transportation project to
 4542         be balanced with benefits to the public; requiring
 4543         that alternatives to onsite treatment be allowed;
 4544         specifying responsibilities of the department relating
 4545         to abatement of pollutants and permits for adjacent
 4546         lands impacted by right-of-way acquisition;
 4547         authorizing water management districts and the
 4548         Department of Environmental Protection to adopt rules;
 4549         repealing s. 479.28, F.S., relating to the rest area
 4550         information panel or device program; authorizing the
 4551         department to seek Federal Highway Administration
 4552         approval of a tourist-oriented commerce sign pilot
 4553         program; directing the department to submit the
 4554         approved pilot program for legislative approval;
 4555         establishing a pilot program for the Palm Beach County
 4556         school district to recognize its business partners;
 4557         providing for expiration of the program; providing for
 4558         the transfer of administrative rules of the former
 4559         Pilotage Rate Review Board to the Pilotage Rate Review
 4560         Committee of the Board of Pilot Commissioners;
 4561         providing for retroactive application of such rules;
 4562         requiring the Florida Transportation Commission to
 4563         study the potential costs savings of the department
 4564         being the operating agent for certain expressway
 4565         authorities; providing for certain related expenses to
 4566         be paid by the department; requiring a report to the
 4567         Governor and Legislature; providing that a challenge
 4568         to a consolidated environmental resource permit or
 4569         associated variance or any sovereign submerged lands
 4570         authorization proposed or issued by the Department of
 4571         Environmental Protection in connection with specified
 4572         deepwater ports is subject to specified summary
 4573         hearing provisions; requiring such proceedings to be
 4574         conducted within a certain timeframe; providing that
 4575         the administrative law judge’s decision is a
 4576         recommended order and does not constitute final agency
 4577         action of the Department of Environmental Protection;
 4578         requiring the Department of Environmental Protection
 4579         to issue the final order within a certain timeframe;
 4580         providing applicability of specified provisions;
 4581         providing for a review by the Pinellas Suncoast
 4582         Transit Authority and the Hillsborough Area Regional
 4583         Transit Authority to consider and identify
 4584         opportunities and greater efficiency and service
 4585         improvements for increasing connectivity between each
 4586         authority; requiring a report to the Legislature;
 4587         requiring the Tampa Bay Area Regional Transportation
 4588         Authority to provide assistance; authorizing
 4589         governmental units that regulate the operation of
 4590         vehicles for public hire or other for-hire
 4591         transportation to request and receive criminal history
 4592         record information for the purpose of screening
 4593         applicants; amending ss. 215.616, 288.063, 311.22,
 4594         316.2122, 318.12, 320.20, 335.02, 338.222, 339.285,
 4595         341.053, 341.8225, 403.7211, 479.01, 479.07, and
 4596         479.261, F.S., relating to bonds for federal aid
 4597         highway construction, contracts for transportation
 4598         projects, dredging projects, operation of low-speed
 4599         vehicles or mini-trucks, traffic infractions, license
 4600         tax distribution, standards for lanes, turnpike
 4601         projects, the Enhanced Bridge Program for Sustainable
 4602         Transportation, the Intermodal Development Program,
 4603         high-speed rail projects, hazardous waste facilities,
 4604         outdoor advertising, and the logo sign program,
 4605         respectively; deleting obsolete language; revising
 4606         references to conform to the incorporation of the
 4607         Florida Intrastate Highway System into the Strategic
 4608         Intermodal System and to changes made by the act;
 4609         providing honorary designation of certain
 4610         transportation facilities in specified counties;
 4611         directing the Department of Transportation to erect
 4612         suitable markers; amending s. 316.0083, F.S.,
 4613         providing an additional defense for certain red-light
 4614         traffic infractions; providing for the dismissal of a
 4615         uniform traffic citation for a red-light violation
 4616         when the motor vehicle owner is deceased and an
 4617         affidavit with specified supporting documents is filed
 4618         with the issuing agency; amending s. 320.089, F.S.;
 4619         providing for the issuance of a Combat Infantry Badge
 4620         license plate and a Combat Action Badge license plate;
 4621         providing qualifications and requirements for the
 4622         plate; providing for the use of proceeds from the sale
 4623         of the plate; amending s. 338.165, F.S.; authorizing
 4624         the department to transfer certain transportation
 4625         facilities to the turnpike system; providing for use
 4626         of funds received from Florida Turnpike Enterprise for
 4627         acquisition of such facilities; defining the term
 4628         “Wekiva Parkway”; amending s. 348.7546, F.S.; revising
 4629         provisions for the Orlando-Orange County Expressway
 4630         Authority to construct and maintain the Wekiva
 4631         Parkway; providing for construction of specified
 4632         provisions; directing the authority to make certain
 4633         payments to the department; providing for use of funds
 4634         received by the department; providing that the
 4635         department’s obligation to construct its portions of
 4636         the Wekiva Parkway is contingent upon certain events;
 4637         amending s. 348.755, F.S.; prohibiting the Orlando
 4638         Orange County Expressway Authority from issuing bonds
 4639         except under specified circumstances; amending s.
 4640         348.757, F.S.; revising provisions for the Orlando
 4641         Orange County Expressway Authority to enter into
 4642         lease-purchase agreements with the department;
 4643         amending s. 369.317, F.S.; revising provisions for the
 4644         Wekiva Parkway; providing that the Department of
 4645         Environmental Protection is the exclusive permitting
 4646         authority for certain activities; revising provisions
 4647         for location of the parkway; defining the term
 4648         “autonomous technology”; providing legislative intent
 4649         and findings; amending s. 316.003, F.S.; defining the
 4650         terms “autonomous vehicle” and “autonomous technology”
 4651         when used in provisions for traffic control; creating
 4652         s. 316.85, F.S.; authorizing a person who possesses a
 4653         valid driver license to operate an autonomous vehicle;
 4654         specifying that the person who causes the vehicle’s
 4655         autonomous technology to engage is the operator;
 4656         creating s. 319.145, F.S.; requiring an autonomous
 4657         vehicle registered in this state to meet federal
 4658         standards and regulations for a motor vehicle;
 4659         specifying certain requirements for such vehicle;
 4660         providing for the application of certain federal
 4661         regulations; authorizing the operation of vehicles
 4662         equipped with autonomous technology by certain persons
 4663         for testing purposes under certain conditions;
 4664         requiring an instrument of insurance, surety bond, or
 4665         self-insurance prior to the testing of a vehicle;
 4666         limiting liability of the original manufacturer of a
 4667         vehicle converted to an autonomous vehicle; directing
 4668         the department to prepare a report on the safe testing
 4669         and operation of vehicles equipped with autonomous
 4670         technology and submit the report to the Legislature by
 4671         a certain date; providing an honorary designation of a
 4672         transportation facility in a specified county;
 4673         directing the department to erect suitable markers;
 4674         providing effective dates.