Florida Senate - 2025                                    SB 1582
       
       
        
       By Senator Davis
       
       
       
       
       
       5-00318A-25                                           20251582__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to elections; amending s. 20.10, F.S.;
    3         requiring that the Secretary of State be elected
    4         rather than appointed and serve a specified term;
    5         specifying when such election must occur; amending s.
    6         20.32, F.S.; requiring the Florida Commission on
    7         Offender Review to develop and maintain a database for
    8         a specified purpose; specifying database requirements;
    9         requiring specified entities to provide specified
   10         information to the commission on a monthly basis;
   11         requiring the Department of Management Services,
   12         acting through the Florida Digital Service, to provide
   13         technical assistance to the commission in developing
   14         and maintaining the database; authorizing the
   15         Department of Management Services to adopt rules;
   16         requiring the commission to make the database publicly
   17         available on a website by a specified date; requiring
   18         the commission to update the database monthly;
   19         requiring the commission to publish certain
   20         instructions on the website; requiring the commission
   21         to submit a certain comprehensive plan to the Governor
   22         and the Legislature by a specified date; specifying
   23         requirements for the comprehensive plan; providing
   24         that certain persons who register to vote are
   25         prohibited from being charged with certain crimes as a
   26         result of such registration or voting; requiring the
   27         commission to adopt rules; amending s. 97.021, F.S.;
   28         defining terms; providing construction; repealing s.
   29         97.022, F.S., relating to the Office of Election
   30         Crimes and Security; repealing s. 97.0291, F.S.,
   31         relating to prohibiting the use of private funds for
   32         election-related expenses; creating s. 97.0556, F.S.;
   33         authorizing a person who meets certain requirements to
   34         register to vote at an early voting site or at his or
   35         her polling place and to cast a ballot immediately
   36         thereafter; amending s. 97.057, F.S.; authorizing the
   37         Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles to
   38         preregister certain individuals to vote; providing
   39         that driver license or identification card
   40         applications, driver license or identification card
   41         renewal applications, and applications for changes of
   42         address for existing driver licenses or identification
   43         cards submitted to the department serve as voter
   44         registration applications; providing that an applicant
   45         is deemed to have consented to the use of his or her
   46         signature for voter registration purposes unless a
   47         declination is made; requiring that specified
   48         applications include a voter registration component,
   49         subject to approval by the Department of State;
   50         providing requirements for the voter registration
   51         component; requiring the Department of Highway Safety
   52         and Motor Vehicles to transmit voter registration
   53         information electronically to the Department of State
   54         within a specified timeframe; requiring the Department
   55         of State to provide such information to supervisors of
   56         elections; deleting provisions prohibiting persons
   57         providing voter registration services for a driver
   58         license office from making changes to an applicant’s
   59         party affiliation without the applicant’s consent and
   60         separate signature; deleting obsolete language; making
   61         technical changes; amending s. 97.0575, F.S.; revising
   62         the information a third-party voter registration
   63         organization is required to provide to the Division of
   64         Elections of the Department of State; deleting a
   65         provision that provides for the expiration of such
   66         organization’s registration at the conclusion of the
   67         general election cycle for which the organization is
   68         registered; deleting provisions requiring such
   69         organizations to provide a specified receipt to
   70         applicants; revising the timeframe within which such
   71         organizations must deliver completed applications to
   72         the division or a supervisor of elections; revising
   73         certain penalties; revising the aggregate limit of
   74         such penalties; deleting provisions providing criminal
   75         penalties for the unlawful copying of voter
   76         registration applications or retaining of a voter’s
   77         personal information; deleting provisions providing
   78         criminal and administrative penalties; deleting
   79         provisions requiring the division to adopt certain
   80         rules; deleting provisions that prohibit providing
   81         applicants a pre-filled voter registration application
   82         and a specified fine for such action; deleting
   83         provisions providing for retroactive application;
   84         creating part III of ch. 97, F.S., entitled “Florida
   85         Voting Rights Act”; creating s. 97.21, F.S.;
   86         prohibiting local governments, state agencies, and
   87         state officials from implementing, imposing, or
   88         enforcing election policies, practices, or actions
   89         that result in, will result in, or are intended to
   90         result in specified disparities or impairments;
   91         providing that it is not a violation if such entities
   92         demonstrate by a specified evidentiary standard
   93         certain conditions; providing that it is always a
   94         violation if specified circumstances exist;
   95         prohibiting local governments from employing methods
   96         of election that have the effect, will likely have the
   97         effect, or are motivated in part by the intent of
   98         diluting the vote of protected class members;
   99         providing the requirements to establish a violation;
  100         providing the relevant factors to evaluate the
  101         totality of circumstances related to voter suppression
  102         and vote dilution; providing construction; providing
  103         that such factors are most probative under a specified
  104         condition; providing the circumstances used to
  105         determine whether elections in the local government
  106         exhibit racially polarized voting; providing
  107         construction; providing the circumstances that are
  108         never relevant to violations of specified provisions;
  109         providing that a state interest in preventing voter
  110         fraud or bolstering voter confidence in the integrity
  111         of elections is relevant under specified
  112         circumstances; providing that evidence concerning the
  113         intent of electors, elected officials, and public
  114         officials is not required for such violations;
  115         providing that voting habits of protected class
  116         members may be relevant to certain violations;
  117         requiring a prospective plaintiff, before filing a
  118         certain action against a local government, to send a
  119         notification letter, by specified means, to the local
  120         government; prohibiting a party from filing an action
  121         under specified circumstances; authorizing a local
  122         government to adopt a specified resolution within a
  123         specified timeframe; providing that if the proposed
  124         remedy in such resolution is barred by state or local
  125         law, or a legislative body lacks the authority or the
  126         local government is a covered jurisdiction, the
  127         proposed remedy may be approved by the Florida Voting
  128         Rights Act Commission if certain conditions are met;
  129         authorizing a party that sent a notification letter to
  130         seek reimbursement from the local government under
  131         specified circumstances; authorizing a party to bring
  132         a cause of action for a specified violation under
  133         specified circumstances; requiring local governments
  134         to take certain action; requiring the commission to
  135         post notification letters and resolutions on its
  136         website; authorizing the commission to adopt certain
  137         rules; prohibiting local governments from asserting
  138         specified defenses; authorizing specified entities to
  139         file certain enforcement actions; prohibiting certain
  140         entities from being compelled to disclose the identity
  141         of a member; providing construction; creating s.
  142         97.22, F.S.; creating the Florida Voting Rights Act
  143         Commission within the Department of State; providing
  144         that such commission is a separate budget entity and
  145         must submit a budget in accordance with specified
  146         provisions; providing duties and responsibilities of
  147         the commission; providing for the composition of the
  148         commission; providing that such commissioners serve
  149         staggered terms; requiring that commissioners be
  150         compensated at a specified hourly rate; requiring the
  151         formation of a nominating committee; providing for the
  152         appointment and removal of nominating committee
  153         members; requiring the nominating committee to select
  154         a chair; requiring that commissioners be selected
  155         using a specified process; requiring that
  156         commissioners initially be selected by lot and
  157         randomly assigned term lengths for purposes of
  158         achieving staggered terms; authorizing the commission
  159         to take specified actions in any action or
  160         investigation to enforce specified provisions;
  161         authorizing the commission to hire staff and make
  162         expenditures for a specified purpose; authorizing the
  163         commission to adopt rules; creating s. 97.23, F.S.;
  164         requiring the commission to enter into agreements with
  165         one or more postsecondary educational institutions to
  166         create the Florida Voting and Elections Database and
  167         Institute for a specified purpose; requiring the
  168         parties to the agreement to enter into a memorandum of
  169         understanding that includes the process for selecting
  170         a director; authorizing the database and institute to
  171         perform specified actions; requiring the database and
  172         institute to make election and voting data records for
  173         a specified timeframe available to the public at no
  174         cost and to maintain such records in an electronic
  175         format; requiring the database and institute to use
  176         certain methodologies when preparing estimates;
  177         specifying the data and records that must be
  178         maintained; requiring state agencies and local
  179         governments to provide any information requested by
  180         the director of the database and institute; requiring
  181         local governments to transmit specified information to
  182         the database and institute within a certain timeframe;
  183         requiring specified entities to provide data,
  184         statistics, and other information annually to the
  185         database and institute; authorizing specified entities
  186         to file enforcement actions; prohibiting certain
  187         entities from being compelled to disclose the identity
  188         of a member for a certain purpose; providing
  189         construction; providing that enforcement actions may
  190         be filed in accordance with the Florida Rules of Civil
  191         Procedure or in a specified venue; requiring the
  192         database and institute to publish a certain report;
  193         requiring the database and institute to provide
  194         nonpartisan technical assistance to specified
  195         entities; providing that a rebuttable presumption
  196         exists that data, estimates, or other information from
  197         the database and institute is valid; creating s.
  198         97.24, F.S.; defining terms; requiring the Florida
  199         Voting Rights Act Commission to designate languages
  200         other than English for which language assistance must
  201         be provided by a local government, if certain
  202         conditions exist; providing the circumstances under
  203         which the commission must designate languages other
  204         than English for voting and elections; requiring the
  205         commission to publish specified information annually
  206         on its website and distribute such information to
  207         local governments; requiring local governments to
  208         provide language assistance for specified purposes if
  209         the commission makes a certain determination;
  210         specifying the materials that must be provided in such
  211         language; requiring that certain information be given
  212         orally to voters; requiring that translated materials
  213         convey a specified intent and meaning; prohibiting
  214         local governments from relying on automatic
  215         translation services; requiring that live translation
  216         be used if available; requiring the commission to
  217         establish a specified review process; providing
  218         requirements for such review process; authorizing
  219         specified entities to file enforcement actions;
  220         prohibiting certain entities from being compelled to
  221         disclose the identity of a member for a certain
  222         purpose; providing construction; requiring that
  223         enforcement actions be filed in accordance with the
  224         Florida Rules of Civil Procedure or in a specified
  225         venue; creating s. 97.25, F.S.; providing that the
  226         enactment or implementation of a covered policy by a
  227         covered jurisdiction is subject to preclearance by the
  228         commission; specifying actions by a local government
  229         which are covered policies; requiring that if a
  230         covered jurisdiction does not make changes to its
  231         method of election, such method is deemed a covered
  232         policy that must be submitted to the commission;
  233         specifying which local governments are covered
  234         jurisdictions; requiring the commission to determine
  235         and publish annually a list of local governments that
  236         are covered jurisdictions on its website; requiring a
  237         covered jurisdiction, if seeking preclearance, to
  238         submit the covered policy to the commission in
  239         writing; requiring the commission to review the
  240         covered policy and grant or deny preclearance;
  241         providing that the covered jurisdiction bears the
  242         burden of proof in the preclearance process; providing
  243         that the commission may deny preclearance only if it
  244         makes a certain determination; providing that if
  245         preclearance is denied, the covered policy may not be
  246         enacted or implemented; requiring the commission to
  247         provide a written explanation for a denial;
  248         authorizing a covered jurisdiction to immediately
  249         enact or implement a covered policy granted
  250         preclearance; providing that such determination is not
  251         admissible and may not be considered by a court in a
  252         subsequent action challenging the covered policy;
  253         providing that a covered policy is deemed precleared
  254         and may be implemented or enacted by the covered
  255         jurisdiction if the commission fails to approve or
  256         deny the covered policy within specified timeframes;
  257         requiring the commission to grant or deny preclearance
  258         within specified timeframes; authorizing the
  259         commission to invoke a specified number of extensions
  260         of a specified timeframe to determine preclearance;
  261         providing that any denial of preclearance may be
  262         appealed only by the covered jurisdiction in a
  263         specified venue; authorizing specified entities to
  264         enjoin the enactment or implementation of specified
  265         policies and seek sanctions against covered
  266         jurisdictions in specified circumstances; authorizing
  267         specified entities to file enforcement actions;
  268         prohibiting certain entities from being compelled to
  269         disclose the identity of a member for a certain
  270         purpose; providing construction; specifying that
  271         enforcement actions must be filed in accordance with
  272         the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure or in a specified
  273         venue; requiring the commission to adopt rules;
  274         creating s. 97.26, F.S.; prohibiting a person from
  275         engaging in acts of intimidation, deception, or
  276         obstruction or any other tactic that has the effect,
  277         or will reasonably have the effect, of interfering
  278         with another person’s right to vote; specifying acts
  279         that are deemed a violation; providing a rebuttable
  280         presumption; authorizing specified entities to file a
  281         civil action to enforce specified provisions;
  282         prohibiting certain entities from being compelled to
  283         disclose the identity of a member for a certain
  284         purpose; providing construction; requiring that courts
  285         order specified remedies; creating s. 97.27, F.S.;
  286         providing construction; providing applicability;
  287         creating s. 97.28, F.S.; requiring a court to order
  288         specified appropriate remedies for violations of the
  289         act; requiring the court to consider remedies proposed
  290         by specified parties; prohibiting the court from
  291         giving deference to a remedy proposed by the state or
  292         local government; providing that the court is
  293         empowered to require local governments to implement
  294         certain remedies under specified conditions; requiring
  295         the courts to grant a temporary injunction or other
  296         preliminary relief requested under specified
  297         conditions; requiring the court to award attorney fees
  298         and litigation costs in actions to enforce specified
  299         provisions; amending s. 98.045, F.S.; conforming a
  300         cross-reference; amending s. 98.255, F.S.; revising
  301         the standards the Department of State is required to
  302         prescribe by rule for nonpartisan voter education;
  303         requiring that supervisors provide public-facing voter
  304         information in plain language to be understood by
  305         certain persons; creating s. 100.51, F.S.;
  306         establishing General Election Day as a paid holiday;
  307         providing that a voter may absent himself or herself
  308         from service or employment at a specific time on
  309         General Election Day and may not be penalized or have
  310         salary or wages deducted for such absence; creating s.
  311         101.016, F.S.; requiring the Division of Elections to
  312         maintain a strategic elections equipment reserve of
  313         voting systems and other equipment for specified
  314         purposes; requiring that such reserve include
  315         specified equipment; authorizing the division to
  316         contract with specified entities rather than
  317         physically maintain such reserve; repealing s.
  318         101.019, F.S., relating to the prohibition of ranked
  319         choice voting; amending s. 101.048, F.S.; providing
  320         that a voter may cast a provisional ballot at any
  321         precinct in the county in which the voter claims to be
  322         registered; making technical changes; amending s.
  323         101.62, F.S.; providing that a request for a vote-by
  324         mail ballot is valid until the voter cancels the
  325         request; revising the timeframe during which the
  326         supervisor must mail vote-by-mail ballots before
  327         election day; deleting requirements for a person
  328         designated by a voter to pick up the voter’s vote-by
  329         mail ballot; providing for extension of deadlines
  330         under certain conditions; amending s. 101.64, F.S.;
  331         requiring supervisors of elections to enclose a
  332         postage prepaid mailing envelope with each vote-by
  333         mail ballot; providing that vote-by-mail ballot voter
  334         certificates may be signed with the last four digits
  335         of the voter’s social security number; making
  336         technical changes; amending s. 101.65, F.S.; revising
  337         the instructions that must be provided with a vote-by
  338         mail ballot; amending s. 101.68, F.S.; requiring
  339         supervisors of elections to compare the signature or
  340         last four digits of the social security number on a
  341         voter’s certificate with the signature or last four
  342         digits of the social security number in the
  343         registration books or precinct register when
  344         canvassing a vote-by-mail ballot; requiring a
  345         canvassing board to compare the signature or last four
  346         digits of the social security number on a voter’s
  347         certificate or vote-by-mail ballot cure affidavit with
  348         the signature or last four digits of the social
  349         security number in the registration books or precinct
  350         register when canvassing a vote-by-mail ballot;
  351         deleting the authorization for certain persons to file
  352         a protest against the canvass of a ballot; amending s.
  353         101.69, F.S.; deleting provisions providing that
  354         specified secure ballot intake stations be used only
  355         during specified timeframes and be monitored by an
  356         employee of the supervisor’s office; requiring that
  357         secure ballot intake stations be monitored by the
  358         supervisor’s office during specified timeframes
  359         instead of continuously monitored in person by an
  360         employee; deleting a provision authorizing a certain
  361         civil penalty; making technical changes; amending s.
  362         104.42, F.S.; conforming a provision to changes made
  363         by the act; providing an effective date.
  364  
  365         WHEREAS, Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore were the first
  366  true civil rights activists of the modern civil rights era in
  367  this state, and
  368         WHEREAS, the Moores, and the organizations they helped
  369  found and lead, were instrumental in registering more than
  370  100,000 black voters in this state, and
  371         WHEREAS, the Moores paid the ultimate price for the
  372  freedoms they fought to secure for their community when members
  373  of the Ku Klux Klan bombed their home in Mims on Christmas Day
  374  in 1951, and
  375         WHEREAS, at the time of their death, Florida had the most
  376  registered black voters, outpacing any other state in the South,
  377  and
  378         WHEREAS, the purpose of this act is to encourage maximum
  379  participation of all eligible voters in this state’s electoral
  380  process, and
  381         WHEREAS, electoral systems that deny race, color, or
  382  language minority groups an equal opportunity to elect
  383  candidates of their choice and influence the outcome of an
  384  election are inconsistent with the right to equal treatment
  385  before the law as provided in Articles I and II of the State
  386  Constitution as well as protections found in the 14th and 15th
  387  Amendments to the United States Constitution, and
  388         WHEREAS, this act expands voting rights granted under the
  389  federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 and reaffirms the well
  390  established principle of “one person, one vote,” and
  391         WHEREAS, following decisions by the United States Supreme
  392  Court in Shelby County v. Holder and Brnovich v. Democratic
  393  National Committee, the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965 has
  394  been severely diminished in its ability to protect the freedom
  395  and opportunity of black and brown voters to participate fully
  396  in the political process of our democratic republic, and
  397         WHEREAS, this act builds on the historical work of the
  398  named and nameless Floridians who fought for their right to the
  399  elective franchise, NOW, THEREFORE,
  400  
  401  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  402  
  403         Section 1. Subsection (1) of section 20.10, Florida
  404  Statutes, is amended to read:
  405         20.10 Department of State.—There is created a Department of
  406  State.
  407         (1) The head of the Department of State is the Secretary of
  408  State. The Secretary of State shall be elected at the statewide
  409  general election at which the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and
  410  Cabinet officers are elected as provided in s. 5, Art. IV of the
  411  State Constitution, and shall serve a term of 4 years beginning
  412  on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January of the
  413  year following such election appointed by the Governor, subject
  414  to confirmation by the Senate, and shall serve at the pleasure
  415  of the Governor. The Secretary of State shall perform the
  416  functions conferred by the State Constitution upon the custodian
  417  of state records.
  418         Section 2. Subsection (4) is added to section 20.32,
  419  Florida Statutes, to read:
  420         20.32 Florida Commission on Offender Review.—
  421         (4)(a)For the purpose of assisting a person who has been
  422  disqualified from voting based on a felony conviction, other
  423  than a conviction for murder or a felony sexual offense, in
  424  determining whether he or she has met the requirements under s.
  425  98.0751 to have his or her voting rights restored pursuant to s.
  426  4, Art. VI of the State Constitution, the commission shall
  427  develop and maintain a database that contains for each such
  428  person all of the following information:
  429         1.His or her name and any other personal identifying
  430  information.
  431         2.The remaining length of any term of supervision,
  432  including, but not limited to, probation, community control, or
  433  parole, ordered by a court as part of his or her sentence.
  434         3.The remaining amount of any restitution he or she owes
  435  to a victim as ordered by a court as part of his or her
  436  sentence.
  437         4.The remaining amount due of any fines or fees that were
  438  initially ordered by a court as part of his or her sentence or
  439  as a condition of any form of supervision, including, but not
  440  limited to, probation, community control, or parole.
  441         5.The completion status of any other term ordered by a
  442  court as a part of his or her sentence.
  443         6.Any other information needed to determine whether he or
  444  she has met the requirements for restoration of voting rights
  445  under s. 98.0751.
  446         (b)The Department of State, the Department of Corrections,
  447  the clerks of the circuit court, the county comptrollers, and
  448  the Board of Executive Clemency shall provide to the commission
  449  on a monthly basis any information required under paragraph (a).
  450         (c)The Department of Management Services, acting through
  451  the Florida Digital Service, shall provide any technical
  452  assistance necessary for the commission to develop and maintain
  453  the database. The Department of Management Services may adopt
  454  rules governing the provision of such assistance.
  455         (d)By July 1, 2027, the commission shall make the database
  456  available on a public website. The commission must update the
  457  database monthly with the information received from each
  458  governmental entity under paragraph (b). The commission shall
  459  publish on the website clear instructions that a person who has
  460  been disqualified from voting based on a felony conviction,
  461  other than for murder or a felony sexual offense, may follow to
  462  have his or her voting rights restored and to register to vote.
  463         (e)By July 1, 2025, the commission shall provide a
  464  comprehensive plan to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
  465  and the Speaker of the House of Representatives which includes
  466  all of the following:
  467         1.The governmental entities from which and the methods by
  468  which the commission shall collect, centralize, analyze, and
  469  secure the information required to be included in the database.
  470         2.A description of any infrastructure and services,
  471  including, but not limited to, software, hardware, and
  472  information technology services, which may be necessary to
  473  create and maintain the database.
  474         3.The anticipated number of additional employees necessary
  475  for:
  476         a.The commission to develop and maintain the database.
  477         b.A governmental entity to provide the information
  478  required under paragraph (b).
  479         c.The Florida Digital Service to provide the assistance
  480  required under paragraph (c).
  481         4.The anticipated initial cost to develop the database;
  482  the annual cost to maintain the database; and the annual
  483  appropriation required to fund the anticipated costs incurred by
  484  the commission, each governmental entity, and the Florida
  485  Digital Service.
  486         5.Any legal authority necessary for the commission to
  487  develop and maintain the database.
  488         6.Draft legislation to implement the comprehensive plan.
  489         (f)Notwithstanding any other law, a person who registers
  490  to vote or who votes in reasonable reliance on information
  491  contained in the database indicating that his or her voting
  492  rights have been restored pursuant to s. 4, Art. VI of the State
  493  Constitution has an affirmative right to register and to vote
  494  and may not be charged with a violation of any criminal law of
  495  this state related to fraudulently voting or registering to
  496  vote.
  497         (g)The commission shall adopt rules to implement this
  498  subsection.
  499         Section 3. Section 97.021, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  500  read:
  501         97.021 Definitions.—For the purposes of this code, except
  502  where the context clearly indicates otherwise, the term:
  503         (1) “Absent elector” means any registered and qualified
  504  voter who casts a vote-by-mail ballot.
  505         (2) “Absent uniformed services voter” means:
  506         (a) A member of a uniformed service on active duty who, by
  507  reason of such active duty, is absent from the place of
  508  residence where the member is otherwise qualified to vote;
  509         (b) A member of the merchant marine who, by reason of
  510  service in the merchant marine, is absent from the place of
  511  residence where the member is otherwise qualified to vote; or
  512         (c) A spouse or dependent of a member referred to in
  513  paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) who, by reason of the active duty
  514  or service of the member, is absent from the place of residence
  515  where the spouse or dependent is otherwise qualified to vote.
  516         (3) “Address of legal residence” means the legal
  517  residential address of the elector and includes all information
  518  necessary to differentiate one residence from another,
  519  including, but not limited to, a distinguishing apartment,
  520  suite, lot, room, or dormitory room number or other identifier.
  521         (4) “Alternative formats” has the meaning ascribed in the
  522  Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101-336, 42
  523  U.S.C. ss. 12101 et seq., including specifically the technical
  524  assistance manuals promulgated thereunder, as amended.
  525         (5) “Automatic tabulating equipment” means an apparatus
  526  that automatically examines, counts, and records votes.
  527         (6) “Ballot” or “official ballot” when used in reference
  528  to:
  529         (a) “Electronic or electromechanical devices” means a
  530  ballot that is voted by the process of electronically
  531  designating, including by touchscreen, or marking with a marking
  532  device for tabulation by automatic tabulating equipment or data
  533  processing equipment.
  534         (b) “Marksense ballots” means that printed sheet of paper,
  535  used in conjunction with an electronic or electromechanical vote
  536  tabulation voting system, containing the names of candidates, or
  537  a statement of proposed constitutional amendments or other
  538  questions or propositions submitted to the electorate at any
  539  election, on which sheet of paper an elector casts his or her
  540  vote.
  541         (7) “Candidate” means any person to whom any one or more of
  542  the following applies:
  543         (a) Any person who seeks to qualify for nomination or
  544  election by means of the petitioning process.
  545         (b) Any person who seeks to qualify for election as a
  546  write-in candidate.
  547         (c) Any person who receives contributions or makes
  548  expenditures, or gives his or her consent for any other person
  549  to receive contributions or make expenditures, with a view to
  550  bringing about his or her nomination or election to, or
  551  retention in, public office.
  552         (d) Any person who appoints a treasurer and designates a
  553  primary depository.
  554         (e) Any person who files qualification papers and
  555  subscribes to a candidate’s oath as required by law.
  556  
  557  However, this definition does not include any candidate for a
  558  political party executive committee.
  559         (8) “Database and institute” means the Florida Voting and
  560  Elections Database and Institute.
  561         (9) “Department” means the Department of State.
  562         (10)(9) “Division” means the Division of Elections of the
  563  Department of State.
  564         (11)(10) “Early voting” means casting a ballot prior to
  565  election day at a location designated by the supervisor of
  566  elections and depositing the voted ballot in the tabulation
  567  system.
  568         (12)(11) “Early voting area” means the area designated by
  569  the supervisor of elections at an early voting site at which
  570  early voting activities occur, including, but not limited to,
  571  lines of voters waiting to be processed, the area where voters
  572  check in and are processed, and the area where voters cast their
  573  ballots.
  574         (13)(12) “Early voting site” means those locations
  575  specified in s. 101.657 and the building in which early voting
  576  occurs.
  577         (14)(13) “Election” means any primary election, special
  578  primary election, special election, general election, or
  579  presidential preference primary election.
  580         (15)(14) “Election board” means the clerk and inspectors
  581  appointed to conduct an election.
  582         (16)(15) “Election costs” shall include, but not be limited
  583  to, expenditures for all paper supplies such as envelopes,
  584  instructions to voters, affidavits, reports, ballot cards,
  585  ballot booklets for vote-by-mail voters, postage, notices to
  586  voters; advertisements for registration book closings, testing
  587  of voting equipment, sample ballots, and polling places; forms
  588  used to qualify candidates; polling site rental and equipment
  589  delivery and pickup; data processing time and supplies; election
  590  records retention; and labor costs, including those costs
  591  uniquely associated with vote-by-mail ballot preparation, poll
  592  workers, and election night canvass.
  593         (17)“Election policy or practice” includes any
  594  qualification to be an elector, prerequisite to voting, or
  595  method of election, as well as any law, statute, ordinance,
  596  resolution, charter code or provision, regulation, rule, policy,
  597  practice, procedure, standard, or action, with respect to voting
  598  or the administration or schedule of elections.
  599         (18)(16) “Elector” is synonymous with the word “voter” or
  600  “qualified elector or voter,” except where the word is used to
  601  describe presidential electors.
  602         (19)“Federal Voting Rights Act” means the federal Voting
  603  Rights Act of 1965, 52 U.S.C. s. 10301 et seq., as amended.
  604         (20)“FLVRA Commission” means the Florida Voting Rights Act
  605  Commission.
  606         (21)(17) “General election” means an election held on the
  607  first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the even
  608  numbered years, for the purpose of filling national, state,
  609  county, and district offices and for voting on constitutional
  610  amendments not otherwise provided for by law.
  611         (22)“Government enforcement action” means any denial of
  612  administrative or judicial preclearance by the state or the
  613  Federal Government; pending litigation filed by a state or
  614  federal entity; or final judgment or adjudication, consent
  615  decree, or other similar formal action.
  616         (23)“Legislative body” means the commission, council,
  617  school board, or other similar body, by whatever name known, of
  618  local government.
  619         (24)(18) “Lists of registered electors” means names and
  620  associated information of registered electors maintained by the
  621  department in the statewide voter registration system or
  622  generated or derived from the statewide voter registration
  623  system. Lists may be produced in printed or electronic format.
  624         (25)“Local government” means any county, municipality,
  625  school district, special district, supervisor of elections or
  626  other governmental entity that administers elections, or any
  627  other political subdivision in this state in which elections are
  628  conducted.
  629         (26)(19) “Member of the Merchant Marine” means an
  630  individual, other than a member of a uniformed service or an
  631  individual employed, enrolled, or maintained on the Great Lakes
  632  for the inland waterways, who is:
  633         (a) Employed as an officer or crew member of a vessel
  634  documented under the laws of the United States, a vessel owned
  635  by the United States, or a vessel of foreign-flag registry under
  636  charter to or control of the United States; or
  637         (b) Enrolled with the United States for employment or
  638  training for employment, or maintained by the United States for
  639  emergency relief service, as an officer or crew member of such
  640  vessel.
  641         (27)“Method of election” means the method by which
  642  candidates are elected to a governmental body of a local
  643  government, and includes any at-large, district-based, share
  644  based, or other method of election, as well as any districting
  645  or redistricting plan used to elect candidates to the
  646  governmental body. Methods of election include:
  647         (a)“At-large method of election” means a method of
  648  election in which candidates are voted on by all voters in the
  649  local government’s jurisdiction, voters are allowed or required
  650  to cast as many votes as there are seats to fill, and voters may
  651  not cast more than one vote for a given candidate.
  652         (b)“District-based method of election” means a method of
  653  election in which the local government is divided into
  654  districts, each district is represented by a single
  655  representative, and a candidate is voted on only by voters
  656  residing in his or her district.
  657         (c)“Other method of election” means a method of election
  658  other than an at-large, district-based, or share-based method of
  659  election, or any combination of methods of election.
  660         (d)“Share-based method of election” means a method of
  661  election in which more than one candidate is to be elected and
  662  different groups of voters may each elect their preferred
  663  candidates to the seats to fill based on their relative share of
  664  the votes cast. Share-based methods of election include, but are
  665  not limited to, the single transferable vote, cumulative voting,
  666  limited voting, and party-list or state-list systems.
  667         (28)(20) “Minor political party” is any group as specified
  668  in s. 103.095 which on January 1 preceding a primary election
  669  does not have registered as members 5 percent of the total
  670  registered electors of the state.
  671         (29)(21) “Newspaper of general circulation” means a
  672  newspaper printed in the language most commonly spoken in the
  673  area within which it circulates and which is readily available
  674  for purchase by all inhabitants in the area of circulation, but
  675  does not include a newspaper intended primarily for members of a
  676  particular professional or occupational group, a newspaper the
  677  primary function of which is to carry legal notices, or a
  678  newspaper that is given away primarily to distribute
  679  advertising.
  680         (30)(22) “Nominal value” means having a retail value of $10
  681  or less.
  682         (31)(23) “Nonpartisan office” means an office for which a
  683  candidate is prohibited from campaigning or qualifying for
  684  election or retention in office based on party affiliation.
  685         (32)(24) “Office that serves persons with disabilities”
  686  means any state office that takes applications either in person
  687  or over the telephone from persons with disabilities for any
  688  program, service, or benefit primarily related to their
  689  disabilities.
  690         (33)“Organization” means a person other than an
  691  individual.
  692         (34)(25) “Overseas voter” means:
  693         (a) An absent uniformed services voter who, by reason of
  694  active duty or service, is absent from the United States on the
  695  date of the election involved;
  696         (b) A person who resides outside the United States and is
  697  qualified to vote in the last place in which the person was
  698  domiciled before leaving the United States; or
  699         (c) A person who resides outside the United States and, but
  700  for such residence, would be qualified to vote in the last place
  701  in which the person was domiciled before leaving the United
  702  States.
  703         (35)(26) “Overvote” means that the elector marks or
  704  designates more names than there are persons to be elected to an
  705  office or designates more than one answer to a ballot question,
  706  and the tabulator records no vote for the office or question.
  707         (36)(27) “Persons with disabilities” means individuals who
  708  have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
  709  one or more major life activities.
  710         (37)(28) “Petition circulator” means an entity or
  711  individual who collects signatures for compensation for the
  712  purpose of qualifying a proposed constitutional amendment for
  713  ballot placement.
  714         (38)(29) “Polling place” is the building which contains the
  715  polling room where ballots are cast.
  716         (39)(30) “Polling room” means the actual room in which
  717  ballots are cast on election day and during early voting.
  718         (40)(31) “Primary election” means an election held
  719  preceding the general election for the purpose of nominating a
  720  party nominee to be voted for in the general election to fill a
  721  national, state, county, or district office.
  722         (41)“Protected class” means a class of citizens who are
  723  members of a race, color, or language minority group, as
  724  referenced in the federal Voting Rights Act.
  725         (42)(32) “Provisional ballot” means a conditional ballot,
  726  the validity of which is determined by the canvassing board.
  727         (43)(33) “Public assistance” means assistance provided
  728  through the food assistance program under the federal
  729  Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program; the Medicaid program;
  730  the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and
  731  Children; and the Temporary Cash Assistance Program.
  732         (44)(34) “Public office” means any federal, state, county,
  733  municipal, school, or other district office or position which is
  734  filled by vote of the electors.
  735         (45)(35) “Qualifying educational institution” means any
  736  public or private educational institution receiving state
  737  financial assistance which has, as its primary mission, the
  738  provision of education or training to students who are at least
  739  18 years of age, provided such institution has more than 200
  740  students enrolled in classes with the institution and provided
  741  that the recognized student government organization has
  742  requested this designation in writing and has filed the request
  743  with the office of the supervisor of elections in the county in
  744  which the institution is located.
  745         (46)“Racially polarized voting” means voting in which the
  746  candidate or electoral choice preferred by protected class
  747  members diverges from the candidate or electoral choice
  748  preferred by voters who are not protected class members.
  749         (47)(36) “Special election” is a special election called
  750  for the purpose of voting on a party nominee to fill a vacancy
  751  in the national, state, county, or district office.
  752         (48)(37) “Special primary election” is a special nomination
  753  election designated by the Governor, called for the purpose of
  754  nominating a party nominee to be voted on in a general or
  755  special election.
  756         (49)(38) “Supervisor” means the supervisor of elections.
  757         (50)(39) “Tactile input device” means a device that
  758  provides information to a voting system by means of a voter
  759  touching the device, such as a keyboard, and that complies with
  760  the requirements of s. 101.56062(1)(k) and (l).
  761         (51)(40) “Third-party registration organization” means any
  762  person, entity, or organization soliciting or collecting voter
  763  registration applications. A third-party voter registration
  764  organization does not include:
  765         (a) A person who seeks only to register to vote or collect
  766  voter registration applications from that person’s spouse,
  767  child, or parent; or
  768         (b) A person engaged in registering to vote or collecting
  769  voter registration applications as an employee or agent of the
  770  division, supervisor of elections, Department of Highway Safety
  771  and Motor Vehicles, or a voter registration agency.
  772         (52)(41) “Undervote” means that the elector does not
  773  properly designate any choice for an office or ballot question,
  774  and the tabulator records no vote for the office or question.
  775         (53)(42) “Uniformed services” means the Army, Navy, Air
  776  Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard, the
  777  commissioned corps of the Public Health Service, and the
  778  commissioned corps of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
  779  Administration.
  780         (54)“Vote” or “voting” includes any action necessary to
  781  cast a ballot and make such ballot effective in any election or
  782  primary election, which actions include, but are not limited to,
  783  registering to vote, requesting a vote-by-mail ballot, and any
  784  other action required by law as a prerequisite to casting a
  785  ballot and having such ballot counted, canvassed, or certified
  786  properly and included in the appropriate totals of votes cast
  787  with respect to candidates for election or nomination and to
  788  referendum questions.
  789         (55)(43) “Voter interface device” means any device that
  790  communicates voting instructions and ballot information to a
  791  voter and allows the voter to select and vote for candidates and
  792  issues. A voter interface device may not be used to tabulate
  793  votes. Any vote tabulation must be based upon a subsequent scan
  794  of the marked marksense ballot or the voter-verifiable paper
  795  output after the voter interface device process has been
  796  completed.
  797         (56)(44) “Voter registration agency” means any office that
  798  provides public assistance, any office that serves persons with
  799  disabilities, any center for independent living, or any public
  800  library.
  801         (57)(45) “Voter registration official” means any supervisor
  802  of elections or individual authorized by the Secretary of State
  803  to accept voter registration applications and execute updates to
  804  the statewide voter registration system.
  805         (58)(46) “Voting booth” or “booth” means that booth or
  806  enclosure wherein an elector casts his or her ballot for
  807  tabulation by an electronic or electromechanical device.
  808         (59)(47) “Voting system” means a method of casting and
  809  processing votes that functions wholly or partly by use of
  810  electromechanical or electronic apparatus or by use of marksense
  811  ballots and includes, but is not limited to, the procedures for
  812  casting and processing votes and the programs, operating
  813  manuals, supplies, printouts, and other software necessary for
  814  the system’s operation.
  815  
  816  Terms used in this code which are not defined in this section
  817  but are used in the federal Voting Rights Act and interpreted in
  818  relevant case law, including, but not limited to, “political
  819  process” and “prerequisite to voting,” must be construed in a
  820  manner consistent with such usage and interpretation.
  821         Section 4. Section 97.022, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
  822         Section 5. Section 97.0291, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
  823         Section 6. Section 97.0556, Florida Statutes, is created to
  824  read:
  825         97.0556Same-day voter registration.—A person who meets the
  826  qualifications specified in s. 97.041 to register to vote and
  827  who provides the information required under s. 97.052 for the
  828  uniform statewide voter registration application may register at
  829  an early voting site or at his or her polling place and
  830  immediately thereafter cast a ballot.
  831         Section 7. Section 97.057, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  832  read:
  833         97.057 Voter registration by the Department of Highway
  834  Safety and Motor Vehicles.—
  835         (1)(a)Each of the following serves as an application The
  836  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles shall provide
  837  the opportunity to preregister to vote, register to vote, or to
  838  update a voter registration record when submitted to the
  839  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles to each
  840  individual who comes to an office of that department to:
  841         1.(a)An application for or renewal of Apply for or renew a
  842  driver license;
  843         2.(b)An application for or renewal of Apply for or renew
  844  an identification card pursuant to chapter 322; or
  845         3.(c)An application for a change of an address on an
  846  existing driver license or identification card.
  847         (b)Unless the applicant declines to register or
  848  preregister to vote, he or she is deemed to have consented to
  849  the use of the signature from his or her driver license or
  850  identification card application for voter registration purposes.
  851         (2) An application for a driver license or an
  852  identification card must include a voter registration component.
  853  The voter registration component must be approved by the
  854  Department of State and must include all of the following:
  855         (a)The minimum amount of information necessary to prevent
  856  duplicate voter registrations and to preserve the ability of the
  857  department and supervisors of elections to assess the
  858  eligibility of the applicant and administer voter registration
  859  and other provisions of this code.
  860         (b)A statement setting forth voter eligibility
  861  requirements.
  862         (c)An explanation that the applicant is consenting to the
  863  use of his or her signature from the applicant’s driver license
  864  or identification card application for voter registration
  865  purposes. By consenting to the use of his or her signature, the
  866  applicant is deemed to have subscribed to the oaths required by
  867  s. 3, Art. VI of the State Constitution and s. 97.051 and to
  868  have sworn and affirmed that the voter registration information
  869  contained in the application is true under penalty for false
  870  swearing pursuant to s. 104.011.
  871         (d)An option that allows the applicant to choose or update
  872  a party affiliation. An applicant who is initially registering
  873  to vote and does not exercise such option must be sent a notice
  874  by the supervisor of elections in accordance with s.
  875  97.053(5)(b).
  876         (e)An option that allows the applicant to decline to
  877  register to vote or preregister to vote. The Department of
  878  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles shall note any such
  879  declination in its records and forward the declination to the
  880  Department of State. A declination may be used only for voter
  881  registration purposes and is confidential and exempt from public
  882  records requirements as provided in s. 97.0585.
  883         (3)The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  884  shall:
  885         (a)Develop a voter registration component for applications
  886  which meets the requirements set forth in subsection (2).
  887         (b)Electronically transmit the voter registration
  888  component of an applicant’s driver license or identification
  889  card application to the Department of State within 24 hours
  890  after receipt. Upon receipt of the voter registration component,
  891  the Department of State shall provide the information to the
  892  supervisor of the county in which the applicant is registering
  893  or preregistering to vote or updating his or her voter
  894  registration record.
  895         (2) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  896  shall:
  897         (a) Notify each individual, orally or in writing, that:
  898         1. Information gathered for the completion of a driver
  899  license or identification card application, renewal, or change
  900  of address can be automatically transferred to a voter
  901  registration application;
  902         2. If additional information and a signature are provided,
  903  the voter registration application will be completed and sent to
  904  the proper election authority;
  905         3. Information provided can also be used to update a voter
  906  registration record, except that party affiliation will not be
  907  changed unless the individual designates a change in party
  908  affiliation and separately consents to such change in writing;
  909         4. All declinations will remain confidential and may be
  910  used only for voter registration purposes; and
  911         5. The particular driver license office in which the person
  912  applies to register to vote or updates a voter registration
  913  record will remain confidential and may be used only for voter
  914  registration purposes.
  915         (b) Require a driver license examiner to inquire orally or,
  916  if the applicant is hearing impaired, inquire in writing whether
  917  the applicant wishes to register to vote or update a voter
  918  registration record during the completion of a driver license or
  919  identification card application, renewal, or change of address.
  920         1. If the applicant chooses to register to vote or to
  921  update a voter registration record:
  922         a. All applicable information received by the Department of
  923  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles in the course of filling out
  924  the forms necessary under subsection (1) must be transferred to
  925  a voter registration application.
  926         b. The additional necessary information must be obtained by
  927  the driver license examiner and must not duplicate any
  928  information already obtained while completing the forms required
  929  under subsection (1).
  930         c. A voter registration application with all of the
  931  applicant’s voter registration information required to establish
  932  the applicant’s eligibility pursuant to s. 97.041 must be
  933  presented to the applicant to review and verify the voter
  934  registration information received and provide an electronic
  935  signature affirming the accuracy of the information provided.
  936         d. The voter registration application may not be used to
  937  change the party affiliation of the applicant unless the
  938  applicant designates a change in party affiliation and provides
  939  a separate signature consenting to the party affiliation change.
  940         e. After verifying the voter registration information and
  941  providing his or her electronic signature, the applicant must be
  942  provided with a printed receipt that includes such information
  943  and documents any change in party affiliation.
  944         2. If the applicant declines to register to vote, update
  945  the applicant’s voter registration record, or change the
  946  applicant’s address by either orally declining or by failing to
  947  sign the voter registration application, the Department of
  948  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles must note such declination on
  949  its records and shall forward the declination to the statewide
  950  voter registration system.
  951         (3) For the purpose of this section, the Department of
  952  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, with the approval of the
  953  Department of State, shall prescribe:
  954         (a) A voter registration application that is the same in
  955  content, format, and size as the uniform statewide voter
  956  registration application prescribed under s. 97.052; and
  957         (b) A form that will inform applicants under subsection (1)
  958  of the information contained in paragraph (2)(a).
  959         (4) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  960  must electronically transmit completed voter registration
  961  applications within 24 hours after receipt to the statewide
  962  voter registration system. Completed paper voter registration
  963  applications received by the Department of Highway Safety and
  964  Motor Vehicles shall be forwarded within 5 days after receipt to
  965  the supervisor of the county where the office that processed or
  966  received that application is located.
  967         (5) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  968  must send, with each driver license renewal extension
  969  application authorized pursuant to s. 322.18(8), a uniform
  970  statewide voter registration application, the voter registration
  971  application prescribed under paragraph (3)(a), or a voter
  972  registration application developed especially for the purposes
  973  of this subsection by the Department of Highway Safety and Motor
  974  Vehicles, with the approval of the Department of State, which
  975  must meet the requirements of s. 97.052.
  976         (4)(6) A person providing voter registration services for a
  977  driver license office may not:
  978         (a) Make any change to an applicant’s party affiliation
  979  unless the applicant provides a separate signature consenting to
  980  the party affiliation change or discuss or Seek to influence an
  981  applicant’s political preference or party registration;
  982         (b) Display any political preference or party allegiance;
  983         (c) Make any statement to an applicant or take any action
  984  the purpose or effect of which is to discourage the applicant
  985  from registering to vote; or
  986         (d) Disclose any applicant’s voter registration information
  987  except as needed for the administration of voter registration.
  988         (5)(7) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  989  shall collect data determined necessary by the Department of
  990  State for program evaluation and reporting to the Election
  991  Assistance Commission pursuant to federal law.
  992         (6)(8) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  993  shall must ensure that all voter registration services provided
  994  by driver license offices are in compliance with the federal
  995  Voting Rights Act of 1965.
  996         (7)(9) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  997  shall retain complete records of voter registration information
  998  received, processed, and submitted to the Department of State
  999  statewide voter registration system by the Department of Highway
 1000  Safety and Motor Vehicles. The retention of such These records
 1001  is shall be for the explicit purpose of supporting audit and
 1002  accounting controls established to ensure accurate and complete
 1003  electronic transmission of records between the Department of
 1004  State statewide voter registration system and the Department of
 1005  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
 1006         (8)(10) The Department of State shall provide the
 1007  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles with an
 1008  electronic database of street addresses valid for use as the
 1009  address of legal residence as required in s. 97.053(5). The
 1010  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles shall compare
 1011  the address provided by the applicant against the database of
 1012  valid street addresses. If the address provided by the applicant
 1013  does not match a valid street address in the database, the
 1014  applicant will be asked to verify the address provided. The
 1015  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles may shall not
 1016  reject any application for voter registration for which a valid
 1017  match cannot be made.
 1018         (9)(11) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
 1019  shall enter into an agreement with the Department of State to
 1020  match information in the statewide voter registration system
 1021  with information in the database of the Department of Highway
 1022  Safety and Motor Vehicles to the extent required to verify the
 1023  accuracy of the driver license number, Florida identification
 1024  number, or last four digits of the social security number
 1025  provided on applications for voter registration as required in
 1026  s. 97.053.
 1027         (10)(12) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor
 1028  Vehicles shall enter into an agreement with the Commissioner of
 1029  Social Security as required by the Help America Vote Act of 2002
 1030  to verify the last four digits of the social security number
 1031  provided in applications for voter registration as required in
 1032  s. 97.053.
 1033         (11)(13) The Department of Highway Safety and Motor
 1034  Vehicles shall must assist the Department of State in regularly
 1035  identifying changes in residence address on the driver license
 1036  or identification card of a voter. The Department of State shall
 1037  must report each such change to the appropriate supervisor of
 1038  elections who must change the voter’s registration records in
 1039  accordance with s. 98.065(4).
 1040         (14)The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
 1041  shall ensure that information technology processes and updates
 1042  do not alter an applicant’s party affiliation without the
 1043  written consent of the applicant.
 1044         Section 8. Section 97.0575, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 1045  read:
 1046         97.0575 Third-party voter registration organizations.—
 1047         (1) Before engaging in any voter registration activities, a
 1048  third-party voter registration organization must register and
 1049  provide to the division, in an electronic format, the following
 1050  information:
 1051         (a) The names of the officers of the organization and the
 1052  name and permanent address of the organization.
 1053         (b) The name and address of the organization’s registered
 1054  agent in the state.
 1055         (c) The names, permanent addresses, and temporary
 1056  addresses, if any, of each registration agent registering
 1057  persons to vote in this state on behalf of the organization.
 1058  This paragraph does not apply to persons who only solicit
 1059  applications and do not collect or handle voter registration
 1060  applications.
 1061         (d) Beginning November 6, 2024, the specific general
 1062  election cycle for which the third-party voter registration
 1063  organization is registering persons to vote.
 1064         (e) An affirmation that each person collecting or handling
 1065  voter registration applications on behalf of the third-party
 1066  voter registration organization has not been convicted of a
 1067  felony violation of the Election Code, a felony violation of an
 1068  offense specified in s. 825.103, a felony offense specified in
 1069  s. 98.0751(2)(b) or (c), or a felony offense specified in
 1070  chapter 817, chapter 831, or chapter 837. A third-party voter
 1071  registration organization is liable for a fine in the amount of
 1072  $50,000 for each such person who has been convicted of a felony
 1073  violation of the Election Code, a felony violation of an offense
 1074  specified in s. 825.103, a felony offense specified in s.
 1075  98.0751(2)(b) or (c), or a felony offense specified in chapter
 1076  817, chapter 831, or chapter 837 who is collecting or handling
 1077  voter registration applications on behalf of the third-party
 1078  voter registration organization.
 1079         (f) An affirmation that each person collecting or handling
 1080  voter registration applications on behalf of the third-party
 1081  voter registration organization is a citizen of the United
 1082  States of America. A third-party voter registration organization
 1083  is liable for a fine in the amount of $50,000 for each such
 1084  person who is not a citizen and is collecting or handling voter
 1085  registration applications on behalf of the third-party voter
 1086  registration organization.
 1087         (2) Beginning November 6, 2024, the registration of a
 1088  third-party voter registration organization automatically
 1089  expires at the conclusion of the specific general election cycle
 1090  for which the third-party voter registration organization is
 1091  registered.
 1092         (3) The division or the supervisor of elections shall make
 1093  voter registration forms available to third-party voter
 1094  registration organizations. All such forms must contain
 1095  information identifying the organization to which the forms are
 1096  provided. The division shall maintain a database of all third
 1097  party voter registration organizations and the voter
 1098  registration forms assigned to the third-party voter
 1099  registration organization. Each supervisor of elections shall
 1100  provide to the division information on voter registration forms
 1101  assigned to and received from third-party voter registration
 1102  organizations. The information must be provided in a format and
 1103  at times as required by the division by rule. The division shall
 1104  update information on third-party voter registrations daily and
 1105  make the information publicly available.
 1106         (4) A third-party voter registration organization that
 1107  collects voter registration applications shall provide a receipt
 1108  to an applicant upon accepting possession of his or her
 1109  application. The division shall adopt by rule a uniform format
 1110  for the receipt by October 1, 2023. The format must include, but
 1111  need not be limited to, the name of the applicant, the date the
 1112  application is received, the name of the third-party voter
 1113  registration organization, the name of the registration agent,
 1114  the applicant’s political party affiliation, and the county in
 1115  which the applicant resides.
 1116         (3)(a)(5)(a) A third-party voter registration organization
 1117  that collects voter registration applications serves as a
 1118  fiduciary to the applicant and shall ensure that any voter
 1119  registration application entrusted to the organization,
 1120  irrespective of party affiliation, race, ethnicity, or gender,
 1121  is promptly delivered to the division or the supervisor of
 1122  elections in the county in which the applicant resides within 14
 1123  10 days after the application is completed by the applicant, but
 1124  not after registration closes for the next ensuing election. If
 1125  a voter registration application collected by any third-party
 1126  voter registration organization is not promptly delivered to the
 1127  division or supervisor of elections in the county in which the
 1128  applicant resides, the third-party voter registration
 1129  organization is liable for the following fines:
 1130         1. A fine in the amount of $50 per each day late, up to
 1131  $2,500, for each application received by the division or the
 1132  supervisor of elections in the county in which the applicant
 1133  resides more than 10 days after the applicant delivered the
 1134  completed voter registration application to the third-party
 1135  voter registration organization or any person, entity, or agent
 1136  acting on its behalf. A fine in the amount of $250 $2,500 for
 1137  each application received if the third-party voter registration
 1138  organization or person, entity, or agency acting on its behalf
 1139  acted willfully.
 1140         2. A fine in the amount of $100 per each day late, up to
 1141  $5,000, for each application collected by a third-party voter
 1142  registration organization or any person, entity, or agent acting
 1143  on its behalf, before book closing for any given election for
 1144  federal or state office and received by the division or the
 1145  supervisor of elections in the county in which the applicant
 1146  resides after the book-closing deadline for such election. A
 1147  fine in the amount of $500 $5,000 for each application received
 1148  if the third-party voter registration organization or any
 1149  person, entity, or agency acting on its behalf acted willfully.
 1150         3. A fine in the amount of $500 for each application
 1151  collected by a third-party voter registration organization or
 1152  any person, entity, or agent acting on its behalf, which is not
 1153  submitted to the division or supervisor of elections in the
 1154  county in which the applicant resides. A fine in the amount of
 1155  $1,000 $5,000 for any application not submitted if the third
 1156  party voter registration organization or person, entity, or
 1157  agency acting on its behalf acted willfully.
 1158  
 1159  The aggregate fine which may be assessed pursuant to this
 1160  paragraph against a third-party voter registration organization,
 1161  including affiliate organizations, for violations committed in a
 1162  calendar year is $1,000 $250,000.
 1163         (b) A showing by the third-party voter registration
 1164  organization that the failure to deliver the voter registration
 1165  application within the required timeframe is based upon force
 1166  majeure or impossibility of performance shall be an affirmative
 1167  defense to a violation of this subsection. The secretary may
 1168  waive the fines described in this subsection upon a showing that
 1169  the failure to deliver the voter registration application
 1170  promptly is based upon force majeure or impossibility of
 1171  performance.
 1172         (6) If a person collecting voter registration applications
 1173  on behalf of a third-party voter registration organization
 1174  alters the voter registration application of any other person,
 1175  without the other person’s knowledge and consent, in violation
 1176  of s. 104.012(4) and is subsequently convicted of such offense,
 1177  the applicable third-party voter registration organization is
 1178  liable for a fine in the amount of $5,000 for each application
 1179  altered.
 1180         (7) If a person collecting voter registration applications
 1181  on behalf of a third-party voter registration organization
 1182  copies a voter’s application or retains a voter’s personal
 1183  information, such as the voter’s Florida driver license number,
 1184  Florida identification card number, social security number, or
 1185  signature, for any reason other than to provide such application
 1186  or information to the third-party voter registration
 1187  organization in compliance with this section, the person commits
 1188  a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s.
 1189  775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
 1190         (4)(8) If the Secretary of State reasonably believes that a
 1191  person has committed a violation of this section, the secretary
 1192  may refer the matter to the Attorney General for enforcement.
 1193  The Attorney General may institute a civil action for a
 1194  violation of this section or to prevent a violation of this
 1195  section. An action for relief may include a permanent or
 1196  temporary injunction, a restraining order, or any other
 1197  appropriate order.
 1198         (9) The division shall adopt by rule a form to elicit
 1199  specific information concerning the facts and circumstances from
 1200  a person who claims to have been registered to vote by a third
 1201  party voter registration organization but who does not appear as
 1202  an active voter on the voter registration rolls. The division
 1203  shall also adopt rules to ensure the integrity of the
 1204  registration process, including controls to ensure that all
 1205  completed forms are promptly delivered to the division or a
 1206  supervisor in the county in which the applicant resides.
 1207         (5)(10) The date on which an applicant signs a voter
 1208  registration application is presumed to be the date on which the
 1209  third-party voter registration organization received or
 1210  collected the voter registration application.
 1211         (11) A third-party voter registration organization may not
 1212  mail or otherwise provide a voter registration application upon
 1213  which any information about an applicant has been filled in
 1214  before it is provided to the applicant. A third-party voter
 1215  registration organization that violates this section is liable
 1216  for a fine in the amount of $50 for each such application.
 1217         (12) The requirements of this section are retroactive for
 1218  any third-party voter registration organization registered with
 1219  the department as of July 1, 2023, and must be complied with
 1220  within 90 days after the department provides notice to the
 1221  third-party voter registration organization of the requirements
 1222  contained in this section. Failure of the third-party voter
 1223  registration organization to comply with the requirements within
 1224  90 days after receipt of the notice shall automatically result
 1225  in the cancellation of the third-party voter registration
 1226  organization’s registration.
 1227         Section 9. Part III of chapter 97, Florida Statutes,
 1228  consisting of sections 97.21-97.28, Florida Statutes, is created
 1229  and entitled “Florida Voting Rights Act.”
 1230         Section 10. Section 97.21, Florida Statutes, is created to
 1231  read:
 1232         97.21Prohibitions on voter suppression and vote dilution.—
 1233         (1)PROHIBITING VOTER SUPPRESSION.—
 1234         (a)A local government, state agency, or state official may
 1235  not implement, impose, or enforce any election policy or
 1236  practice, or take any other action or fail to take any action,
 1237  which results in, will result in, or is intended to result in
 1238  any of the following:
 1239         1.A material disparity in voter participation, access to
 1240  voting opportunities, or the opportunity or ability to
 1241  participate in the political process between protected class
 1242  members and other members of the electorate.
 1243         2.Based on the totality of the circumstances, an
 1244  impairment of the equal opportunity or ability of protected
 1245  class members to participate in any stage of the political
 1246  process.
 1247         (b)It is not a violation of paragraph (a) if a local
 1248  government, state agency, or state official demonstrates by
 1249  clear and convincing evidence that:
 1250         1.The election policy or practice is necessary to
 1251  significantly further an important and particularized
 1252  governmental interest; and
 1253         2.There is no alternative election policy or practice that
 1254  results in a smaller disparity between protected class members
 1255  and other members of the electorate.
 1256         (c)Notwithstanding paragraph (b), a violation always
 1257  exists under paragraph (a) if:
 1258         1.The local government, state agency, or state official
 1259  takes action intended to result in a material disparity; or
 1260         2.The material disparity results from:
 1261         a.The closure, relocation, or consolidation of, or failure
 1262  to provide, one or more polling places, early voting sites, or
 1263  secure ballot intake stations; or the reassignment of voters to
 1264  precincts or polling places or of precincts to polling places;
 1265         b.The local government’s selection of or change to the
 1266  time or date of an election;
 1267         c.The local government conducting elections on dates that
 1268  do not align with federal or state elections;
 1269         d.The date the local government selects for a special
 1270  election, and there exists an alternate date in a reasonable
 1271  timeframe in which the disparity would be materially less
 1272  significant; or
 1273         e.The failure to schedule a special election in a
 1274  reasonable timeframe, allowing a vacancy in an office where
 1275  protected class members are generally able to elect candidates
 1276  of their choice.
 1277         (2)PROHIBITING VOTE DILUTION.—
 1278         (a)A local government may not employ an at-large method of
 1279  election, a district-based method of election, a share-based
 1280  method of election, or other method of election for any office
 1281  which has the effect, will likely have the effect, or is
 1282  motivated in part by the intent of diluting the vote of
 1283  protected class members.
 1284         (b)To establish a violation under paragraph (a), it must
 1285  be established that:
 1286         1.a.Elections in the local government exhibit racially
 1287  polarized voting resulting in an impairment of the equal
 1288  opportunity or ability of protected class members to nominate or
 1289  elect candidates of their choice; or
 1290         b.Based on the totality of the circumstances, the equal
 1291  opportunity or ability of protected class members to nominate or
 1292  elect candidates of their choice is impaired; and
 1293         2.Another method of election or changes to the existing
 1294  method of election which could be constitutionally adopted or
 1295  ordered under s. 97.28 would likely mitigate the impairment. For
 1296  the purpose of satisfying such requirement, it is not necessary
 1297  for the total number or share of protected class members to
 1298  exceed any numerical threshold in any district or in the local
 1299  government as a whole.
 1300         (3)GUIDELINES AND RELEVANT CIRCUMSTANCES FOR EVALUATING
 1301  VOTER SUPPRESSION AND VOTE DILUTION.—
 1302         (a)1.To evaluate the totality of circumstances under
 1303  subparagraph (1)(a)2. or sub-subparagraph (2)(b)1.b., the
 1304  following factors may be relevant:
 1305         a.The history of discrimination;
 1306         b.The extent to which the protected class members have
 1307  been elected to office;
 1308         c.The use of any election policy or practice that may
 1309  enhance the dilutive effective of a method of election in the
 1310  local government.
 1311         d.The extent to which protected class members or
 1312  candidates experienced any history of unequal access to
 1313  election-administration or campaign finance processes that
 1314  determine which candidates will receive access to the ballot or
 1315  receive financial or other support in a given election for an
 1316  office of the local government;
 1317         e.The extent to which protected class members have
 1318  historically made expenditures as defined in s. 106.011 at lower
 1319  rates than other voters;
 1320         f.The extent to which protected class members vote at
 1321  lower rates than other voters;
 1322         g.The extent to which protected class members are
 1323  disadvantaged or otherwise bear the effects of public or private
 1324  discrimination in areas that may hinder their ability to
 1325  participate effectively in any stage of the political process,
 1326  such as education, employment, health, criminal justice,
 1327  housing, transportation, land use, or environmental protection;
 1328         h.The use of overt or subtle racial appeals in political
 1329  campaigns by governmental officials or in connection with the
 1330  adoption or maintenance of the election policy or practice;
 1331         i.The extent to which candidates face hostility or
 1332  barriers while campaigning due to their membership in a
 1333  protected class;
 1334         jThe lack of responsiveness by elected officials to the
 1335  particular needs of protected class members or a community of
 1336  protected class members;
 1337         k.Whether the election policy or practice was designed to
 1338  advance, and does materially advance, a valid and substantial
 1339  state interest; and
 1340         l.Other factors deemed relevant.
 1341         2.A set number or combination of the factors in
 1342  subparagraph 1. are not required to determine that a violation
 1343  occurred.
 1344         3.Evidence of these factors is most probative if it
 1345  relates to the local government in which the alleged violation
 1346  occurred, but still holds probative value if it relates to the
 1347  geographic region in which the local government is located or to
 1348  this state.
 1349         (b)To determine whether elections in the local government
 1350  exhibit racially polarized voting under sub-subparagraph
 1351  (2)(b)1.a.:
 1352         1.Racially polarized voting must be assessed based on
 1353  relevant election results, which may include, but are not
 1354  limited to, elections for offices of the local government;
 1355  elections held in the local government for other offices, such
 1356  as state or federal offices; ballot measures; and other
 1357  electoral choices that bear on the rights and privileges of the
 1358  protected class.
 1359         a.A set number or combination of elections may not be
 1360  required to establish the existence of racially polarized
 1361  voting.
 1362         b.Evidence of nonpolarized voting in election for offices
 1363  outside the local government may not preclude a finding of
 1364  racially polarized voting based on elections for offices of the
 1365  local government.
 1366         c.Nonstatistical or nonquantitative evidence may not
 1367  preclude a finding of racially polarized voting based on
 1368  statistical or quantitative evidence.
 1369         d.Low turnout or registration rates among protected class
 1370  members may not preclude a finding of racially polarized voting.
 1371         2.Racially polarized voting may be assessed based only on
 1372  the combined electoral preferences of members of a protected
 1373  class or classes. There is no requirement that the electoral
 1374  preferences of each protected class or any subgroup within a
 1375  protected class be separately polarized from those of other
 1376  voters.
 1377         3.The causes of or reasons for racially polarized voting,
 1378  including partisan explanations or discriminatory intent, are
 1379  not relevant.
 1380         (c)1.If evaluating whether a violation of subsection (1)
 1381  or subsection (2) is present, the following circumstances are
 1382  never relevant to such a violation:
 1383         a.The total number or share of protected class members on
 1384  whom the election policy or practice does not impose a material
 1385  burden;
 1386         b.The degree to which the election policy or practice has
 1387  a long pedigree or was in widespread use at some earlier date;
 1388         c.The use of an identical or similar election policy or
 1389  practice in other jurisdictions;
 1390         d.The availability of forms of voting unimpacted by the
 1391  election policy or practice.
 1392         2.A state interest in preventing voter fraud or bolstering
 1393  voter confidence in the integrity of elections is not relevant
 1394  to an evaluation of whether a violation of subsection (1) or
 1395  subsection (2) occurred unless there is substantial evidence of
 1396  a number of instances that criminal activity by individual
 1397  electors has occurred in the local government and the connection
 1398  between the election policy or practice and a state interest in
 1399  preventing voter fraud or bolstering voter confidence in the
 1400  integrity of elections is supported by substantial evidence.
 1401         3.Evidence concerning the intent of electors, elected
 1402  officials, or public officials to discriminate against protected
 1403  class members is never required under subsections (1) and (2).
 1404         4.Whether protected class members typically elect
 1405  candidates of their choice to the governmental body of a local
 1406  government in approximate proportion to their total number or
 1407  share of the population may be relevant under subsection (2).
 1408         (4)Before filing an action against a local government
 1409  pursuant to this section, a prospective plaintiff must send, by
 1410  certified mail, return receipt requested, a notification letter
 1411  to the local government asserting that the local government may
 1412  be in violation of the provisions of this act. Such letter must
 1413  be referred to as an “FLVRA notification letter.”
 1414         (a)Except as noted in paragraph (e), a party may not file
 1415  an action against a local government pursuant to this section
 1416  earlier than 50 days after sending an FLVRA notification letter
 1417  to the local government.
 1418         (b)Before receiving an FLVRA notification letter, or not
 1419  later than 50 days after any FLVRA notification letter is sent
 1420  to a local government, a local government may adopt a resolution
 1421  that must be referred to as the “FLVRA Resolution” and that does
 1422  all of the following:
 1423         1.Identifies a potential violation of this section by the
 1424  local government.
 1425         2.Identifies a specific remedy to the potential violation.
 1426         3.Affirms the local government’s intent to enact and
 1427  implement a remedy for a potential violation.
 1428         4.Sets forth specific measures the local government will
 1429  take to enact and implement the remedy.
 1430         5.Provides a schedule for the enactment and implementation
 1431  of the remedy.
 1432         (c)Except as noted in paragraph (e), a party that has sent
 1433  an FLVRA notification letter may not file an action pursuant to
 1434  this section earlier than 90 days after the adoption of an FLVRA
 1435  Resolution.
 1436         (d)If the remedy identified in an FLVRA Resolution is
 1437  barred by state or local law, or a legislative body of a local
 1438  government lacks authority under state or local law to enact or
 1439  implement a remedy identified in an FLVRA Resolution within 90
 1440  days after the adoption of such resolution, or if the local
 1441  government is a covered jurisdiction under s. 97.25, the local
 1442  government may nonetheless enact and implement the remedy
 1443  identified in such resolution upon approval of the FLVRA
 1444  Commission, which may provide approval only if it finds that the
 1445  local government may be in violation of this act, the proposed
 1446  remedy would address a potential violation, and implementation
 1447  of the proposed remedy is feasible. The approval of a remedy by
 1448  the FLVRA Commission does not bar an action to challenge the
 1449  remedy.
 1450         (e)If, pursuant to this subsection, a local government
 1451  enacts or implements a remedy or the FLVRA Commission approves a
 1452  proposed remedy, a party that sent an FLVRA notification letter
 1453  may submit a claim for reimbursement from the local government
 1454  for the costs associated with producing and sending such
 1455  notification letter. The party must submit the claim in writing
 1456  and substantiate the claim with financial documentation,
 1457  including a detailed invoice for any demography services or
 1458  analysis of voting patterns in the local government. If a party
 1459  and local government fail to agree to a reimbursement amount,
 1460  either the party or local government may file an action for a
 1461  declaratory judgment for a clarification of rights.
 1462         (f)Notwithstanding this subsection, a party may bring a
 1463  cause of action for a violation of this section under any of the
 1464  following circumstances:
 1465         1.The action is commenced within 1 year after the adoption
 1466  of a challenged method of election, ordinance, resolution, rule,
 1467  policy, standard, regulation, procedure, or law.
 1468         2.The prospect of obtaining relief under this section
 1469  would be futile.
 1470         3.Another party has already submitted a notification
 1471  letter under this subsection alleging a substantially similar
 1472  violation and that party is eligible to bring a cause of action
 1473  under this subsection.
 1474         4.Following the party’s submission of an FLVRA
 1475  notification letter, the local government has adopted an FLVRA
 1476  Resolution that identifies a remedy that would not cure the
 1477  violation identified in the notification letter.
 1478         5.The party is seeking preliminary relief with respect to
 1479  an upcoming election in accordance with s. 97.28.
 1480         (g) Any local government that receives an FLVRA
 1481  notification letter or adopts an FLVRA Resolution must provide a
 1482  copy to the FLVRA Commission within 1 day after receipt or
 1483  adoption. The FLVRA Commission shall promptly post all FLVRA
 1484  notification letters and FLVRA Resolutions on its website. The
 1485  FLVRA Commission may adopt rules identifying other materials and
 1486  information that must be provided to the FLVRA Commission by
 1487  local governments, as well as procedures for transmittal of
 1488  materials and information from local governments to the FLVRA
 1489  Commission.
 1490         (5)A local government may not assert the doctrine of
 1491  laches as a defense to claims brought under this section. A
 1492  local government may not assert that plaintiffs have failed to
 1493  comply with any notice, exhaustion, or other procedural
 1494  requirements under state law, other than the requirements in
 1495  this section, as a defense to claims brought under this section.
 1496         (6)An individual or entity aggrieved by a violation of
 1497  this section, the Attorney General, or the FLVRA Commission may
 1498  file an action alleging a violation of this section to enforce
 1499  compliance with this section. An entity aggrieved by a violation
 1500  of this section includes, but is not limited to, any entity
 1501  whose membership includes individuals aggrieved by a violation
 1502  of this section or whose mission would be frustrated by a
 1503  violation of this section, including, but not limited to, an
 1504  entity that would expend or divest resources to fulfill its
 1505  mission as a result of such violation or must expend greater
 1506  resources or efforts to advocate before an elected body that is
 1507  less responsible to the entity or its members due to the alleged
 1508  violation. An entity may not be compelled to disclose the
 1509  identity of any specific member to pursue a claim on behalf of
 1510  its members. This subsection shall be liberally construed to
 1511  confer standing as broadly as the State Constitution allows.
 1512  Such a claim may be filed pursuant to the Florida Rules of Civil
 1513  Procedure or in the Second Judicial Circuit of Florida. Members
 1514  of two or more protected classes that are politically cohesive
 1515  in a local government may jointly file an action. In an action
 1516  involving a districting plan, any individual who resides in the
 1517  defendant jurisdiction and is a member of the affected class or
 1518  classes, whether he or she resides in any particular district,
 1519  may challenge the districting plan as a whole.
 1520         Section 11. Section 97.22, Florida Statutes, is created to
 1521  read:
 1522         97.22 Florida Voting Rights Act Commission.—
 1523         (1)There is created the Florida Voting Rights Act (FLVRA)
 1524  Commission within the Department of State. The FLVRA Commission
 1525  is a separate budget entity, as provided in the General
 1526  Appropriations Act, and shall prepare and submit a budget
 1527  request in accordance with chapter 216. The FLVRA Commission is
 1528  responsible for administering the Florida Voting Rights Act. The
 1529  FLVRA Commission must have its own staff, including management,
 1530  research, and enforcement personnel, and is not subject to
 1531  control, supervision, or direction by the Department of State.
 1532         (2)(a)The FLVRA Commission shall be composed of five
 1533  commissioners, each of whom shall serve a staggered 5-year term.
 1534  Commissioners must be compensated for their actual time spent on
 1535  the FLVRA Commission’s business at an hourly rate equivalent to
 1536  the rate of an assistant attorney general.
 1537         1.A nominating committee shall identify qualified
 1538  candidates to serve as commissioners. The nominating committee
 1539  shall be composed of nominating organizations that are selected
 1540  as follows:
 1541         a.Organizations may apply to the Secretary of State to be
 1542  certified as organizational nominators for 5-year terms, after
 1543  which the organizations may be recertified. The Secretary of
 1544  State must certify any organization that applies to be an
 1545  organizational nominator if it meets all of the following
 1546  qualifications:
 1547         (I)Has demonstrated commitment to the purposes of this act
 1548  and securing the voting rights of protected class members, such
 1549  as referencing such class members in the organization’s mission
 1550  statement, involvement in numerous voting rights cases brought
 1551  in this state on behalf of members of protected classes, or
 1552  advocacy in support of this act.
 1553         (II)Is registered as a nonprofit corporation with the
 1554  Secretary of State.
 1555         (III)Has been in continuous operation as a nonprofit
 1556  organization under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code or
 1557  as a nonprofit corporation registered with the Secretary of
 1558  State for at least 20 years.
 1559         b.If the Secretary of State fails to timely certify an
 1560  organization that satisfies the qualifications specified in sub
 1561  subparagraph a. following the organization’s application as an
 1562  organizational nominator, the organization may file an action
 1563  against the Secretary of State for a declaratory judgment
 1564  certifying the organization as an organizational nominator.
 1565         2.An organizational nominator may be removed for cause by
 1566  a majority vote of all fellow nominators.
 1567         3.If there are fewer than 16 organizational nominators
 1568  certified by the Secretary of State, the nominating committee
 1569  must be composed of all such organizational nominators. If there
 1570  are 16 or more organizational nominators certified by the
 1571  Secretary of State, the nominating committee must be composed of
 1572  15 organizational nominators randomly selected from all the
 1573  nominators by lot on an annual basis.
 1574         4.The nominating committee shall select its own chair to
 1575  preside over meetings and votes.
 1576         (b)Commissioners shall be selected as follows:
 1577         1.The nominating committee shall solicit applications to
 1578  serve on the FLVRA Commission from across this state. A
 1579  commissioner must satisfy all of the following criteria:
 1580         a.Is a resident of this state.
 1581         b.Is a member in good standing of The Florida Bar with at
 1582  least 5 years of legal experience.
 1583         c.Has experience representing or advocating on behalf of
 1584  members of protected classes.
 1585         d.Has not served in elected office within the preceding 5
 1586  years.
 1587         e.Is not currently serving in any governmental office or
 1588  holding any political party office.
 1589         2.The nominating committee shall maintain a qualified
 1590  candidate pool composed of 30 candidates to serve on the FLVRA
 1591  Commission. Individuals may be added to the qualified applicant
 1592  pool only upon a vote of three-fifths of the nominating
 1593  committee.
 1594         3.All members of the FLVRA Commission must be randomly
 1595  selected from the qualified candidate pool. Upon the initial
 1596  formation of the FLVRA Commission, five commissioners must be
 1597  selected by lot from the qualified candidate pool and randomly
 1598  assigned to term lengths of 5 years, 4 years, 3 years, 2 years,
 1599  and 1 year. At least 60 days in advance of the conclusion of
 1600  each commissioner’s term, a new commissioner must be randomly
 1601  selected by lot from the qualified candidate pool to serve a 5
 1602  year term upon the conclusion of the commissioner’s term. If a
 1603  vacancy occurs, a new commissioner must be randomly selected by
 1604  lot from the qualified candidate pool within 30 days after the
 1605  vacancy occurring to complete the vacated term.
 1606         (3)In any action or investigation to enforce this section,
 1607  the FLVRA Commission may subpoena witnesses; administer oaths;
 1608  examine individuals under oath; determine material facts; and
 1609  compel the production of records, books, papers, contracts, and
 1610  other documents in accordance with the Florida Rules of Civil
 1611  Procedure.
 1612         (4)The FLVRA Commission may hire any staff and make any
 1613  expenditure necessary to fulfill its responsibilities.
 1614         (5)The FLVRA Commission may adopt rules to administer and
 1615  enforce this part.
 1616         Section 12. Section 97.23, Florida Statutes, is created to
 1617  read:
 1618         97.23 Statewide database and institute.—
 1619         (1)The FLVRA Commission shall enter into an agreement with
 1620  one or more postsecondary educational institutions in this state
 1621  to create the Florida Voting and Elections Database and
 1622  Institute, to maintain and administer a central repository of
 1623  elections and voting data available to the public from all local
 1624  governments in this state, and to foster, pursue, and sponsor
 1625  research on existing laws and best practices in voting and
 1626  elections. The parties to that agreement shall enter into a
 1627  memorandum of understanding that includes the process for
 1628  selecting the director of the database and institute.
 1629         (2)The database and institute shall provide a center for
 1630  research, training, and information on voting systems and
 1631  election administration. The database and institute may do any
 1632  of the following:
 1633         (a)Conduct noncredit classes and classes for credit.
 1634         (b)Organize interdisciplinary groups of scholars to
 1635  research voting and elections in this state.
 1636         (c)Conduct seminars involving voting and elections.
 1637         (d)Establish a nonpartisan centralized database in order
 1638  to collect, archive, and make publicly available, at no cost,
 1639  accessible data pertaining to elections, voter registration, and
 1640  ballot access in this state.
 1641         (e)Assist in the dissemination of election data to the
 1642  public.
 1643         (f)Publish books and periodicals on voting and elections
 1644  in this state.
 1645         (g)Provide nonpartisan technical assistance to local
 1646  governments, scholars, and the general public seeking to use the
 1647  resources of the database and institute.
 1648         (3)The database and institute shall make available, and
 1649  maintain in an electronic format, all relevant election and
 1650  voting data and records for at least the previous 12-year
 1651  period. The data, information, and estimates maintained by the
 1652  database and institute must be posted online and made available
 1653  to the public at no cost. Maps, polling places, and vote-by-mail
 1654  ballot secure intake stations must be made available in a
 1655  geospatial file format. The database and institute shall prepare
 1656  any estimates made under this section by applying the most
 1657  advanced and validated peer-reviewed methodologies available.
 1658  Data and records that must be maintained include, but are not
 1659  limited to, all of the following:
 1660         (a)Estimates of the total population, voting age
 1661  population, and citizen voting age population by racial, color,
 1662  or language minority group and disability status, broken down by
 1663  precinct level on a year-by-year basis, for every local
 1664  government in this state, based on data from the United States
 1665  Census Bureau or the American Community Survey or data of
 1666  comparable quality collected by a public office.
 1667         (b)Election results at the precinct level for every
 1668  federal, state, and local election held in every local
 1669  government in this state.
 1670         (c)Contemporaneous voter registration lists, voter history
 1671  files, polling places, and vote-by-mail secure ballot intake
 1672  stations for every election in every local government in this
 1673  state.
 1674         (d)Contemporaneous maps or other documentation of the
 1675  configuration of precincts.
 1676         (e)Lists of polling places, including, but not limited to,
 1677  lists of precincts assigned to each polling place, if
 1678  applicable.
 1679         (f)Adopted district or redistricting plans for every
 1680  election in every local government in this state.
 1681         (g)A current record, updated monthly, of persons eligible
 1682  to register to vote who have a prior criminal conviction and
 1683  whose eligibility has been restored in compliance with s.
 1684  98.0751.
 1685         (h)Any other data that the director of the database and
 1686  institute considers necessary to maintain in furtherance of the
 1687  purposes of the database and institute.
 1688         (4)All state agencies and local governments shall timely
 1689  provide the director of the database and institute with any
 1690  information requested by the director. No later than 90 days
 1691  after an election, each local government shall transmit to the
 1692  database and institute copies of all of the following:
 1693         (a)Election results at the precinct level.
 1694         (b)Contemporaneous voter registration lists.
 1695         (c)Voter history files.
 1696         (d)Maps, descriptions, and shapefiles for election
 1697  districts.
 1698         (e)Lists of polling places, shapefiles, or descriptions of
 1699  the precincts assigned to each polling place.
 1700         (f)Any other data as requested by the database and
 1701  institute.
 1702         (5)Any state entity identified by the director of the
 1703  database and institute as possessing data, statistics, or other
 1704  information required by the database and institute to carry out
 1705  its duties and responsibilities shall provide such data,
 1706  statistics, or information annually to the database and
 1707  institute at the request of the director.
 1708         (6)If a state agency or local government fails to provide
 1709  any information to the database and institute as required by
 1710  this section, the director of the database and institute, the
 1711  Attorney General, or the FLVRA Commission may file an action to
 1712  enforce compliance with this section. An entity aggrieved by a
 1713  violation of this section includes, but is not limited to, any
 1714  entity whose membership includes individuals aggrieved by this
 1715  section or whose mission would be frustrated by a violation of
 1716  this section, including, but not limited to, an entity that
 1717  would expend or divest resources to fulfill its mission as a
 1718  result of such violation or must expend greater resources or
 1719  efforts to advocate before an elected body that is less
 1720  responsive to the entity or its members due to the alleged
 1721  violation. An entity may not be compelled to disclose the
 1722  identity of any specific member to pursue a claim on behalf of
 1723  its members. This section must be liberally construed to confer
 1724  standing as broadly as the State Constitution allows. Such claim
 1725  may be filed pursuant to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure or
 1726  in the Second Judicial Circuit.
 1727         (7)No later than 90 days after the end of each state
 1728  fiscal year, the database and institute shall publish a report
 1729  on the priorities and finances of the database and institute.
 1730         (8)The database and institute shall provide nonpartisan
 1731  technical assistance to local governments, researchers, and
 1732  members of the public seeking to use the resources of the
 1733  database.
 1734         (9)There is a rebuttable presumption that the data,
 1735  estimates, or other information maintained by the database and
 1736  institute is valid.
 1737         Section 13. Section 97.24, Florida Statutes, is created to
 1738  read:
 1739         97.24Language access.—
 1740         (1)As used in this section, the term:
 1741         (a)“Limited English proficient individual” means an
 1742  individual who does not speak English as his or her primary
 1743  language and who speaks, reads, or understands the English
 1744  language other than “very well” in accordance with United States
 1745  Census Bureau data or data of comparable quality collected by a
 1746  governmental entity.
 1747         (b)“Native American” includes any person recognized by the
 1748  United States Census Bureau or the state as “American Indian.”
 1749         (2)The FLVRA Commission must designate one or more
 1750  languages, other than English, for which assistance in voting
 1751  and elections must be provided in a local government if the
 1752  FLVRA Commission finds that a significant and substantial need
 1753  exists for such assistance.
 1754         (3)Based on the best available data, which may include
 1755  information from the United States Census Bureau’s American
 1756  Community Survey or data of comparable quality collected by a
 1757  governmental entity, the FLVRA Commission must find that a
 1758  significant and substantial need exists if:
 1759         (a)More than 2 percent, but no fewer than 200 citizens of
 1760  voting age, of a local government speak a language other than
 1761  English and are limited English proficient individuals.
 1762         (b)More than 4,000 citizens of voting age of a local
 1763  government speak a language other than English and are limited
 1764  English proficient individuals.
 1765         (4)In the case of a local government that contains any
 1766  part of a Native American reservation, if more than 2 percent of
 1767  the Native American citizens of voting age within the Native
 1768  American reservation are proficient in a language other than
 1769  English and are limited English proficient individuals, the
 1770  local government must provide materials in such language.
 1771         (5)(a)On an annual basis, the FLVRA Commission shall
 1772  publish on its website a list of all of the following:
 1773         1.Each local government in which assistance in voting and
 1774  elections in a language other than English must be provided.
 1775         2.Each language in which such assistance must be provided
 1776  in each local government.
 1777         (b)The FLVRA Commission’s determinations under this
 1778  section are effective upon publication, and the FLVRA Commission
 1779  must distribute this information to each affected local
 1780  government.
 1781         (6)Each local government described in paragraph (5)(a)
 1782  must provide assistance in voting and elections, including
 1783  related materials, in any language designated by the FLVRA
 1784  Commission under paragraph (5)(a) to voters in a local
 1785  government who are limited English proficient individuals.
 1786         (7)Whenever the FLVRA Commission determines that, pursuant
 1787  to this section, language assistance must be provided by a local
 1788  government, the local government must provide competent
 1789  assistance in each designated language and provide related
 1790  materials in English and in each designated language, including
 1791  voter registration or voting notices, forms, instructions,
 1792  assistance, ballots, or other materials or information relating
 1793  to the electoral process. However, in the case of a language
 1794  that is oral or unwritten, including historically unwritten
 1795  languages, as may be the case for some Native Americans, a local
 1796  government may provide only oral instructions, assistance, or
 1797  other information on the electoral process in such language. All
 1798  materials provided in a designated language must be of an equal
 1799  quality to the corresponding English materials. All provided
 1800  translations must convey the intent and essential meaning of the
 1801  original text or communication and may not rely solely on
 1802  automatic translation services. If available, language
 1803  assistance must include live translation.
 1804         (8)The FLVRA Commission shall establish a review process
 1805  under which the FLVRA Commission determines, upon receipt of a
 1806  request submitted under this subsection, whether a significant
 1807  and substantial need exists in a local government for a language
 1808  to be designated for language access and assistance in voting
 1809  and elections if such need has not been found under subsection
 1810  (3) or subsection (4). Such process, at a minimum, must include
 1811  an opportunity for any voter or entity to submit a request for
 1812  the commission to consider designating a language in a local
 1813  government; an opportunity for public comment; and a procedure
 1814  for determining that a local government must provide language
 1815  assistance.
 1816         (9)Any individual or entity aggrieved by a violation of
 1817  this section, the Attorney General, or the FLVRA Commission may
 1818  file an action alleging a violation of this section. An entity
 1819  aggrieved by a violation of this section includes, but is not
 1820  limited to, any entity whose membership includes individuals
 1821  aggrieved by this section or whose mission would be frustrated
 1822  by a violation of this section, including, but not limited to,
 1823  an entity that would expend or divest resources to fulfill its
 1824  mission as a result of such violation or must expend greater
 1825  resources or efforts to advocate before an elected body that is
 1826  less responsive to the entity or its members due to the alleged
 1827  violation. An entity may not be compelled to disclose the
 1828  identity of any specific member to pursue a claim on behalf of
 1829  its members. This section must be liberally construed to confer
 1830  standing as broadly as the State Constitution allows. Such a
 1831  claim may be filed pursuant to the Florida Rules of Civil
 1832  Procedure or in the Second Judicial Circuit.
 1833         Section 14. Section 97.25, Florida Statutes, is created to
 1834  read:
 1835         97.25Preclearance.—
 1836         (1)The enactment or implementation of a covered policy by
 1837  a covered jurisdiction is subject to preclearance by the FLVRA
 1838  Commission.
 1839         (2)For purposes of this section, a covered policy includes
 1840  any new or modified:
 1841         (a)Election policy or practice.
 1842         (b)Method of election, including districting or
 1843  redistricting.
 1844         (c)Form of government.
 1845         (d)Annexation, incorporation, dissolution, consolidation,
 1846  or division of a local government.
 1847         (e)Removal of individuals from registry lists or
 1848  enrollment lists and other activities concerning any such list.
 1849         (f)Hours of any early voting site, or location or number
 1850  of early voting sites, polling places, or secure ballot intake
 1851  stations.
 1852         (g)Assignment of voting precincts to polling places or
 1853  secure ballot intake station locations.
 1854         (h)Assistance offered to protected class members.
 1855         (i)Any additional subject matter the FLVRA Commission may
 1856  identify for inclusion in this subsection, pursuant to FLVRA
 1857  Commission rule, if the FLVRA Commission determines that any
 1858  election policy or practice may have the effect of diminishing
 1859  the right to vote of any protected class member or have the
 1860  effect of violating this act.
 1861         (3)Following each decennial census, if a covered
 1862  jurisdiction does not make changes to its method of election,
 1863  including, but not limited to, maintaining an at-large method of
 1864  election or not making revisions to a district-based method of
 1865  election, the method of election must be deemed a covered policy
 1866  and must be submitted to the FLVRA Commission pursuant to this
 1867  section.
 1868         (4)A covered jurisdiction includes any of the following:
 1869         (a)A local government that, within the preceding 25 years,
 1870  has been subject to a court order, government enforcement
 1871  action, court-approved consent decree, or other settlement in
 1872  which the local government conceded liability, based upon a
 1873  violation of this act, the federal Voting Rights Act, the 15th
 1874  Amendment to the United States Constitution, a voting-related
 1875  violation of the 14th Amendment to the United States
 1876  Constitution, or any violation of any other state or federal
 1877  election law, concerning discrimination against members of a
 1878  protected class.
 1879         (b)A local government that, within the preceding 25 years,
 1880  has been subject to any court order, government enforcement
 1881  action, court-approved consent decree, or any other settlement
 1882  in which the local government conceded liability, based upon a
 1883  violation of any state or federal civil rights law or the 14th
 1884  Amendment to the United States Constitution, concerning
 1885  discrimination against members of a protected class.
 1886         (c)A local government that, during the preceding 3 years,
 1887  has failed to comply with its obligation to provide data or
 1888  information to the database pursuant to s. 97.23.
 1889         (d)A local government that, during the preceding 25 years,
 1890  was found to have enacted or implemented a covered policy
 1891  without obtaining preclearance for that policy pursuant to this
 1892  section.
 1893         (e)A local government that contains at least 1,000
 1894  eligible voters of any protected class, or in which members of
 1895  any protected class constitute at least 10 percent of the
 1896  eligible voter population of the local government, and in which,
 1897  in any year in the preceding 10 years, the percentage of voters
 1898  of any protected class in a local government which participated
 1899  in any general election for any local government office was at
 1900  least 10 percentage points lower than the percentage of all
 1901  voters in the local government who participated in such
 1902  election.
 1903         (f) A local government that contains at least 1,000
 1904  eligible voters of any protected class, or in which members of
 1905  any protected class constitute at least 10 percent of the
 1906  eligible voter population of the local government, and in which,
 1907  in any year in the preceding 10 years, the percentage of
 1908  eligible voters of that protected class who were registered to
 1909  vote was at least 10 percentage points lower than the percentage
 1910  of all eligible voters in the local government who registered to
 1911  vote.
 1912         (g) A local government that contains at least 1,000
 1913  eligible voters of any protected class, or in which members of
 1914  any protected class constitute at least 10 percent of the
 1915  eligible voter population of the local government, and in which,
 1916  in any year in the preceding 10 years, based on data made
 1917  available by the United States Census, the dissimilarity index
 1918  of such protected class, calculated using census tracts, was in
 1919  excess of 50 percent with respect to the race, color, or
 1920  language minority group that comprises a plurality within the
 1921  local government.
 1922         (h) A local government that contains at least 1,000
 1923  eligible voters of any protected class, or in which members of
 1924  any protected class constitute at least 10 percent of the
 1925  eligible voter population of the local government, and in which,
 1926  in any year in the preceding 10 years, the poverty rate among
 1927  the population of such protected class exceeded the poverty rate
 1928  among the population of the local government as a whole by at
 1929  least 10 percentage points.
 1930         (i) A county that contains at least 1,000 eligible voters
 1931  of any protected class, or in which members of any protected
 1932  class constitute at least 10 percent of the eligible voter
 1933  population of the county, and in which, in any year in the
 1934  preceding 10 years, the arrest rate among members of such
 1935  protected class exceeded the arrest rate among the population of
 1936  the county as a whole by at least 10 percentage points.
 1937         (j)Any school district that contains at least 1,000
 1938  eligible voters of any protected class, or in which members of
 1939  any protected class constitute at least 10 percent of the
 1940  eligible voter population of the school district, and in which,
 1941  in any year in the preceding 10 years, the graduation rate of
 1942  such protected class was lower than the graduation rate of the
 1943  entire district student population by at least 10 percentage
 1944  points.
 1945         (5)The FLVRA Commission shall determine on an annual basis
 1946  which local governments are covered jurisdictions and publish a
 1947  list of such jurisdictions on its website.
 1948         (6)If a covered jurisdiction seeks preclearance from the
 1949  FLVRA Commission for the adoption or implementation of any
 1950  covered policy, the covered jurisdiction must submit the covered
 1951  policy to the FLVRA Commission in writing and may obtain
 1952  preclearance in accordance with this section.
 1953         (a)The FLVRA Commission shall review the covered policy
 1954  submitted for preclearance, including any comments submitted by
 1955  members of the public, and make a determination to grant or deny
 1956  preclearance. The covered jurisdiction bears the burden of proof
 1957  in any preclearance determinations.
 1958         (b)1.The FLVRA Commission may deny preclearance to a
 1959  submitted covered policy only if it determines that:
 1960         a.The covered policy is more likely than not to diminish
 1961  the opportunity or ability of protected class members to
 1962  participate in the political process and elect candidates of
 1963  their choice or otherwise influence the outcome of elections; or
 1964         b.The covered policy is more likely than not to violate
 1965  this act.
 1966         2.If the FLVRA Commission denies preclearance, the
 1967  applicable covered jurisdiction may not enact or implement the
 1968  covered policy. The FLVRA Commission shall provide a written
 1969  explanation for a denial.
 1970         (c)If the FLVRA Commission grants preclearance to a
 1971  covered policy, the covered jurisdiction may immediately enact
 1972  or implement the covered policy. A determination by the FLVRA
 1973  Commission to grant preclearance is not admissible in, and may
 1974  not be considered by, a court in any subsequent action
 1975  challenging the covered policy. If the FLVRA Commission fails to
 1976  deny or grant preclearance to a submitted covered policy within
 1977  the time periods set forth in paragraph (d), the covered policy
 1978  is deemed to be precleared, and the covered jurisdiction may
 1979  enact or implement the covered policy.
 1980         (d)If a covered policy concerns the method of election for
 1981  a legislative body, districting or redistricting, the number of
 1982  seats on the legislative body, or annexation, incorporation,
 1983  dissolution, consolidation, or division of a local government,
 1984  the FLVRA Commission must review the covered policy, including
 1985  any comments submitted by members of the public, and make a
 1986  determination to deny or grant preclearance within 60 days after
 1987  the submission of the covered policy. The FLVRA Commission may
 1988  invoke up to two extensions of 90 days each to make such a
 1989  determination. For all other covered policies, the FLVRA
 1990  Commission shall review the covered policy, including any public
 1991  comment, and make a determination to deny or grant preclearance
 1992  within 30 days after the submission of the covered policy. The
 1993  FLVRA Commission may invoke an extension of 60 days to make such
 1994  a determination.
 1995         (e)Any denial of preclearance under this section may be
 1996  appealed only by the covered jurisdiction and must be filed in
 1997  the Second Judicial Circuit. Other parties may not file an
 1998  action to appeal a denial of preclearance or intervene in any
 1999  such action brought by the covered jurisdiction.
 2000         (7)If any covered jurisdiction enacts or implements any
 2001  covered policy without obtaining preclearance for such covered
 2002  policy in accordance with this section, any individual or entity
 2003  aggrieved by such a violation, the director of the database and
 2004  institute, the Attorney General, or the FLVRA Commission may
 2005  file an action to enjoin enactment or implementation and seek
 2006  sanctions against the covered jurisdiction for violations of
 2007  this section. An entity aggrieved by a violation of this section
 2008  includes, but is not limited to, any entity whose membership
 2009  includes individuals aggrieved by this section or whose mission
 2010  would be frustrated by a violation of this section, including,
 2011  but not limited to, an entity that would expend or divest
 2012  resources to fulfill its mission as a result of such violation
 2013  or must expend greater resources or efforts to advocate before
 2014  an elected body that is less responsive to the entity or its
 2015  members due to the alleged violation. An entity may not be
 2016  compelled to disclose the identity of any specific member to
 2017  pursue a claim on behalf of its members. This section must be
 2018  liberally construed to confer standing as broadly as the State
 2019  Constitution allows. Such a claim may be filed pursuant to the
 2020  Florida Rules of Civil Procedure or in the Second Judicial
 2021  Circuit. A claim under this subsection does not preclude, bar,
 2022  or limit in any way any other claims that may be brought
 2023  regarding the covered policy, including claims brought under
 2024  other sections of this act.
 2025         (8)If the FLVRA Commission approves preclearance for a
 2026  covered policy in violation of this section, identifies or fails
 2027  to identify a list of local governments that are covered
 2028  jurisdictions in violation of this section, or otherwise fails
 2029  to properly implement this section, any individual or entity
 2030  aggrieved by such a violation may file an action seeking
 2031  appropriate relief, including, but not limited to, injunctive
 2032  relief on the FLVRA Commission or any other party, as the court
 2033  deems necessary to enforce this section. An entity aggrieved by
 2034  a violation of this section includes, but is not limited to, any
 2035  entity whose membership includes individuals aggrieved by this
 2036  section or whose mission would be frustrated by a violation of
 2037  this section, including, but not limited to, an entity that
 2038  would expend or divest resources to fulfill its mission as a
 2039  result of such violation or must expend greater resources or
 2040  efforts to advocate before an elected body that is less
 2041  responsive to the entity or its members due to the alleged
 2042  violation. An entity may not be compelled to disclose the
 2043  identity of any specific member to pursue a claim on behalf of
 2044  its members. This section must be liberally construed to confer
 2045  standing as broadly as the State Constitution allows. Such a
 2046  claim may be filed pursuant to the Florida Rules of Civil
 2047  Procedure or in the Second Judicial Circuit. A claim under this
 2048  subsection does not preclude, bar, or limit any other claims
 2049  that may be brought regarding any covered policy, including
 2050  claims brought under other sections of this act.
 2051         (9)The FLVRA Commission shall adopt rules to implement
 2052  this section, including rules concerning the content of and
 2053  procedure for preclearance submission, procedures for public
 2054  comment and transparency regarding preclearance determinations,
 2055  and procedures for expedited and emergency preclearance
 2056  determinations which deviate from the timelines provided in
 2057  paragraph (6)(d), provided that such preclearance determinations
 2058  are preliminary.
 2059         Section 15. Section 97.26, Florida Statutes, is created to
 2060  read:
 2061         97.26Voter intimidation, deception, and obstruction.—
 2062         (1)A person may not, whether acting under color of law or
 2063  otherwise, engage in acts of intimidation, deception, or
 2064  obstruction, or any other tactic that has the effect of or may
 2065  reasonably have the effect of interfering with another person’s
 2066  right to vote.
 2067         (2)A violation of subsection (1) includes any of the
 2068  following:
 2069         (a)The use of force or threats to use force, or the use of
 2070  any other conduct to practice intimidation, which causes or will
 2071  reasonably have the effect of causing interference with an
 2072  individual’s right to vote.
 2073         (b)Knowingly using a deceptive or fraudulent device,
 2074  contrivance, or communication that causes or will reasonably
 2075  have the effect of causing interference with an individual’s
 2076  right to vote.
 2077         (c)The obstruction of, impediment to, or interference with
 2078  access to any early voting site, polling place, secure ballot
 2079  intake station, or office of the supervisor of elections in a
 2080  manner that causes or will reasonably have the effect of causing
 2081  interference with an individual’s right to vote or causing any
 2082  delay in voting or the voting process.
 2083         (3)(a)In any action to enforce this section, there is a
 2084  rebuttable presumption that a person has violated this section
 2085  if he or she openly carries or brandishes a firearm, an
 2086  imitation firearm, a toy gun, a machete, an axe, a sword, or any
 2087  weapon as defined in s. 790.001 while:
 2088         1. Interacting with or observing any person voting or
 2089  attempting to vote;
 2090         2. Urging or aiding any person to vote or attempt to vote,
 2091  whether as part of official election administration activities
 2092  or unofficial activities; or
 2093         3. Exercising any power or duty in administering elections,
 2094  including, but not limited to, vote counting, canvassing, or
 2095  certifying returns.
 2096         (b) Law enforcement officers acting within the scope of
 2097  their official duties are not subject to the presumption under
 2098  paragraph (a), but a court may nonetheless consider a law
 2099  enforcement officer’s possession of a firearm in determining
 2100  whether the officer violated this section.
 2101         (4) Any individual or entity aggrieved by a violation of
 2102  this section, the Attorney General, or the FLVRA Commission may
 2103  file a civil action alleging a violation of this section. An
 2104  entity aggrieved by a violation of this section includes, but is
 2105  not limited to, any entity whose membership includes individuals
 2106  aggrieved by this section or whose mission would be frustrated
 2107  by a violation of this section, including, but not limited to,
 2108  an entity that would expend or divest resources to fulfill its
 2109  mission as a result of such violation or must expend greater
 2110  resources or efforts to advocate before an elected body that is
 2111  less responsive to the entity or its members due to the alleged
 2112  violation. An entity may not be compelled to disclose the
 2113  identity of any specific member to pursue a claim on behalf of
 2114  its members. This section must be liberally construed to confer
 2115  standing as broadly as the State Constitution allows. Such a
 2116  claim may be filed pursuant to the Florida Rules of Civil
 2117  Procedure or in the Second Judicial Circuit.
 2118         (5)In addition to any remedies that may be imposed under
 2119  s. 97.28, if the court finds a violation of this section, the
 2120  court must order appropriate remedies that are tailored to
 2121  addressing the violation, including, but not limited to,
 2122  providing for additional time for individuals to vote in an
 2123  election, a primary, or a referendum and awarding nominal
 2124  damages for any violation and compensatory or punitive damages
 2125  for any willful violation.
 2126         Section 16. Section 97.27, Florida Statutes, is created to
 2127  read:
 2128         97.27Democracy canon.—
 2129         (1)Any provision of this code and any regulation, charter,
 2130  home rule ordinance, or other enactment of the state or any
 2131  local government relating to the right to vote must be liberally
 2132  construed in favor of the rights enumerated in paragraphs (a)
 2133  (e), as follows:
 2134         (a)Protecting the right to cast a ballot and make the
 2135  ballot valid.
 2136         (b)Ensuring eligible individuals seeking voter
 2137  registration are not impaired in being registered.
 2138         (c)Ensuring voters are not impaired in voting, including,
 2139  but not limited to, having their votes counted.
 2140         (d)Making the fundamental right to vote more accessible to
 2141  eligible voters.
 2142         (e)Ensuring equitable access for protected class members
 2143  to opportunities to be registered to vote and to vote.
 2144         (2)It is the policy of the state that courts should
 2145  exercise their discretion on any issue, including, but not
 2146  limited to, questions of discovery, procedure, admissibility of
 2147  evidence, or remedies, in favor of the rights enumerated in
 2148  paragraphs (1)(a)-(e) to the extent allowable by law.
 2149  Furthermore, it is the policy of the state to promote the free
 2150  flow of documents and information concerning the intent of
 2151  public officials in actions concerning the right to vote.
 2152  Accordingly, in any action under this act, the federal Voting
 2153  Rights Act, or a voting-related claim under the State
 2154  Constitution or the United States Constitution, sovereign,
 2155  governmental, executive, legislative, or deliberative immunities
 2156  and privileges, including any evidentiary privileges, may not be
 2157  asserted. However, this section does not apply to any attorney
 2158  client or attorney work-product privileges.
 2159         Section 17. Section 97.28, Florida Statutes, is created to
 2160  read:
 2161         97.28Remedies.—
 2162         (1)If a court finds a violation of this act, the court
 2163  must order appropriate remedies that are tailored to address
 2164  such violation and to ensure protected class members have
 2165  equitable opportunities to fully participate in the political
 2166  process and that the remedies can be implemented in a manner
 2167  that will not unduly disrupt the administration of an ongoing or
 2168  imminent election. Appropriate remedies include, but need not be
 2169  limited to, any of the following:
 2170         (a)Another method of election or changes to the existing
 2171  method of election.
 2172         (b)Elimination of staggered elections so that all members
 2173  of the legislative body are elected at the same time.
 2174         (c)Reasonably increasing the size of the legislative body.
 2175         (d)Additional voting days or hours.
 2176         (e)Additional polling places and early voting sites.
 2177         (f)Additional opportunities to return ballots.
 2178         (g)Holding special elections.
 2179         (h)Expanded opportunities for voter registration.
 2180         (i)Additional voter education.
 2181         (j)The restoration or addition of individuals to registry
 2182  lists.
 2183         (k)Retaining jurisdiction for such a period of time as the
 2184  court deems appropriate.
 2185         (2)The court shall consider remedies proposed by any party
 2186  to the action or by interested nonparties. The court may not
 2187  give deference or priority to a proposed remedy because it is
 2188  proposed by the state or local government.
 2189         (3)If necessary to remedy a violation of this act, the
 2190  court is empowered to require a local government to implement
 2191  remedies that are inconsistent with any other law and any
 2192  special act, charter or home rule ordinance, or other enactment
 2193  of the state or local government.
 2194         (4)Notwithstanding the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure or
 2195  any other law, the court must grant a temporary injunction and
 2196  any other preliminary relief requested under this section with
 2197  respect to an upcoming election if the court determines that the
 2198  party is more likely than not to succeed on the merits and that
 2199  it is possible to implement an appropriate temporary remedy that
 2200  would resolve the violation alleged under this section before
 2201  the next general election.
 2202         (5)In any action to enforce this act, the court shall
 2203  award reasonable attorney fees and litigation costs, including,
 2204  but not limited to, expert witness fees and expenses, to the
 2205  party that filed an action, other than a state or local
 2206  government, and that prevailed in such action. The party that
 2207  filed the action is deemed to have prevailed when, as a result
 2208  of litigation, the party against whom the action was filed has
 2209  yielded some or all of the relief sought in the action. In the
 2210  case of a party against whom an action was filed and who
 2211  prevailed, the court may not award the party any costs unless
 2212  the court finds the action to be frivolous, unreasonable, or
 2213  without foundation.
 2214         Section 18. Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section
 2215  98.045, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2216         98.045 Administration of voter registration.—
 2217         (4) STATEWIDE ELECTRONIC DATABASE OF VALID RESIDENTIAL
 2218  STREET ADDRESSES.—
 2219         (b) The department shall make the statewide database of
 2220  valid street addresses available to the Department of Highway
 2221  Safety and Motor Vehicles as provided in s. 97.057(8) s.
 2222  97.057(10). The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
 2223  shall use the database for purposes of validating the legal
 2224  residential addresses provided in voter registration
 2225  applications received by the Department of Highway Safety and
 2226  Motor Vehicles.
 2227         Section 19. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 98.255,
 2228  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2229         98.255 Voter education programs.—
 2230         (1) The Department of State shall adopt rules prescribing
 2231  minimum standards for nonpartisan voter education. The standards
 2232  shall, at a minimum, address:
 2233         (a) Voter registration;
 2234         (b) Balloting procedures, by mail and polling place;
 2235         (c) Voter rights and responsibilities;
 2236         (d) Distribution of sample ballots; and
 2237         (e) Public service announcements; and
 2238         (f)Plain writing standards consistent with official
 2239  federal guidelines for the Plain Writing Act of 2010 and United
 2240  States Election Assistance Commission best practices for
 2241  designing effective voter education materials.
 2242         (2) Each county supervisor shall implement the minimum
 2243  voter education standards, and shall conduct additional
 2244  nonpartisan education efforts as necessary to ensure that voters
 2245  have a working knowledge of the voting process. This includes
 2246  providing, as far as possible, public-facing voter information
 2247  in plain language reasonably calculated to be understood by
 2248  persons with an 8th grade reading level or lower.
 2249         Section 20. Section 100.51, Florida Statutes, is created to
 2250  read:
 2251         100.51General Election Day paid holiday.—In order to
 2252  encourage civic participation, enable more individuals to serve
 2253  as poll workers, and provide additional time for the resolution
 2254  of any issue that arises while a voter is casting his or her
 2255  ballot, General Election Day shall be a paid holiday. A voter is
 2256  entitled to absent himself or herself from any service or
 2257  employment in which he or she is engaged or employed during the
 2258  time the polls are open on General Election Day. A voter who
 2259  absents himself or herself under this section may not be
 2260  penalized in any way, and a deduction may not be made from his
 2261  or her usual salary or wages, on account of his or her absence.
 2262         Section 21. Section 101.016, Florida Statutes, is created
 2263  to read:
 2264         101.016Strategic elections equipment reserve.—The Division
 2265  of Elections shall maintain a strategic elections equipment
 2266  reserve of voting systems that may be deployed in the event of
 2267  an emergency as defined in s. 101.732 or upon the occurrence of
 2268  equipment capacity issues due to unexpected voter turnout. The
 2269  reserve must include tabulation equipment and any other
 2270  necessary equipment, including, but not limited to, printers,
 2271  which are in use by each supervisor of elections. In lieu of
 2272  maintaining a physical reserve of such equipment, the division
 2273  may contract with a vendor of voting equipment to provide such
 2274  equipment on an as-needed basis.
 2275         Section 22. Section 101.019, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 2276         Section 23. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 101.048,
 2277  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2278         101.048 Provisional ballots.—
 2279         (1) At all elections, a voter claiming to be properly
 2280  registered in this the state and eligible to vote at the
 2281  precinct in the election but whose eligibility cannot be
 2282  determined, a person whom an election official asserts is not
 2283  eligible, including, but not limited to, a person to whom notice
 2284  has been sent pursuant to s. 98.075(7), but for whom a final
 2285  determination of eligibility has not been made, and other
 2286  persons specified in the code shall be entitled to vote a
 2287  provisional ballot at any precinct in the county in which the
 2288  voter claims to be registered. Once voted, the provisional
 2289  ballot must be placed in a secrecy envelope and thereafter
 2290  sealed in a provisional ballot envelope. The provisional ballot
 2291  must be deposited in a ballot box. All provisional ballots must
 2292  remain sealed in their envelopes for return to the supervisor of
 2293  elections. The department shall prescribe the form of the
 2294  provisional ballot envelope. A person casting a provisional
 2295  ballot has the right to present written evidence supporting his
 2296  or her eligibility to vote to the supervisor of elections by not
 2297  later than 5 p.m. on the second day following the election.
 2298         (2)(a) The county canvassing board shall examine each
 2299  Provisional Ballot Voter’s Certificate and Affirmation to
 2300  determine if the person voting that ballot was entitled to vote
 2301  in the county in which at the precinct where the person cast a
 2302  vote in the election and that the person had not already cast a
 2303  ballot in the election. In determining whether a person casting
 2304  a provisional ballot is entitled to vote, the county canvassing
 2305  board shall review the information provided in the Voter’s
 2306  Certificate and Affirmation, written evidence provided by the
 2307  person pursuant to subsection (1), information provided in any
 2308  cure affidavit and accompanying supporting documentation
 2309  pursuant to subsection (6), any other evidence presented by the
 2310  supervisor, and, in the case of a challenge, any evidence
 2311  presented by the challenger. A ballot of a person casting a
 2312  provisional ballot must shall be canvassed pursuant to paragraph
 2313  (b) unless the canvassing board determines by a preponderance of
 2314  the evidence that the person was not entitled to vote.
 2315         (b) If it is determined that the person was registered and
 2316  entitled to vote in the county in which at the precinct where
 2317  the person cast a vote in the election, the canvassing board
 2318  must compare the signature on the Provisional Ballot Voter’s
 2319  Certificate and Affirmation or the provisional ballot cure
 2320  affidavit with the signature on the voter’s registration or
 2321  precinct register. A provisional ballot may be counted only if:
 2322         1. The signature on the voter’s certificate or the cure
 2323  affidavit matches the elector’s signature in the registration
 2324  books or the precinct register; however, in the case of a cure
 2325  affidavit, the supporting identification listed in subsection
 2326  (6) must also confirm the identity of the elector; or
 2327         2. The cure affidavit contains a signature that does not
 2328  match the elector’s signature in the registration books or the
 2329  precinct register, but the elector has submitted a current and
 2330  valid Tier 1 form of identification confirming his or her
 2331  identity pursuant to subsection (6).
 2332  
 2333  For purposes of this paragraph, any canvassing board finding
 2334  that signatures do not match must be by majority vote and beyond
 2335  a reasonable doubt.
 2336         (c) Any provisional ballot not counted must remain in the
 2337  envelope containing the Provisional Ballot Voter’s Certificate
 2338  and Affirmation, and the envelope must shall be marked “Rejected
 2339  as Illegal.”
 2340         (d) If a provisional ballot is validated following the
 2341  submission of a cure affidavit, the supervisor must make a copy
 2342  of the affidavit, affix it to a voter registration application,
 2343  and immediately process it as a valid request for a signature
 2344  update pursuant to s. 98.077.
 2345         Section 24. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and paragraphs
 2346  (c) and (d) of subsection (3) of section 101.62, Florida
 2347  Statutes, are amended, and subsection (7) is added to that
 2348  section, to read:
 2349         101.62 Request for vote-by-mail ballots.—
 2350         (1) REQUEST.—
 2351         (a) The supervisor shall accept a request for a vote-by
 2352  mail ballot only from a voter or, if directly instructed by the
 2353  voter, a member of the voter’s immediate family or the voter’s
 2354  legal guardian. A request may be made in person, in writing, by
 2355  telephone, or through the supervisor’s website. The department
 2356  shall prescribe by rule by October 1, 2023, a uniform statewide
 2357  application to make a written request for a vote-by-mail ballot
 2358  which includes fields for all information required in this
 2359  subsection. One request is deemed sufficient to receive a vote
 2360  by-mail ballot for all elections until the voter or the voter’s
 2361  designee notifies the supervisor that the voter cancels such
 2362  request through the end of the calendar year of the next
 2363  regularly scheduled general election, unless the voter or the
 2364  voter’s designee indicates at the time the request is made the
 2365  elections within such period for which the voter desires to
 2366  receive a vote-by-mail ballot. The supervisor must cancel a
 2367  request for a vote-by-mail ballot when any first-class mail or
 2368  nonforwardable mail sent by the supervisor to the voter is
 2369  returned as undeliverable. If the voter requests a vote-by-mail
 2370  ballot thereafter, the voter must provide or confirm his or her
 2371  current residential address.
 2372         (3) DELIVERY OF VOTE-BY-MAIL BALLOTS.—
 2373         (c) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (a) or
 2374  paragraph (b), the supervisor shall mail vote-by-mail ballots
 2375  within 2 business days after receiving a request for such a
 2376  ballot, but no later than the 11th 10th day before election day.
 2377  The deadline to submit a request for a ballot to be mailed is 5
 2378  p.m. local time on the 12th day before an upcoming election.
 2379         (d) Upon a request for a vote-by-mail ballot, the
 2380  supervisor shall provide a vote-by-mail ballot to each voter by
 2381  whom a request for that ballot has been made, by one of the
 2382  following means:
 2383         1. By nonforwardable, return-if-undeliverable mail to the
 2384  voter’s current mailing address on file with the supervisor or
 2385  any other address the voter specifies in the request. The
 2386  envelopes must be prominently marked “Do Not Forward.”
 2387         2. By forwardable mail, e-mail, or facsimile machine
 2388  transmission to absent uniformed services voters and overseas
 2389  voters. The absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter
 2390  may designate in the vote-by-mail ballot request the preferred
 2391  method of transmission. If the voter does not designate the
 2392  method of transmission, the vote-by-mail ballot must be mailed.
 2393         3. By personal delivery to the voter after vote-by-mail
 2394  ballots have been mailed and up to 7 p.m. on election day upon
 2395  presentation of the identification required in s. 101.043.
 2396         4. By delivery to the voter’s designee after vote-by-mail
 2397  ballots have been mailed and up to 7 p.m. on election day. Any
 2398  voter may designate in writing a person to pick up the ballot
 2399  for the voter; however, the person designated may not pick up
 2400  more than two vote-by-mail ballots per election, other than the
 2401  designee’s own ballot, except that additional ballots may be
 2402  picked up for members of the designee’s immediate family. The
 2403  designee shall provide to the supervisor the written
 2404  authorization by the voter and a picture identification of the
 2405  designee and must complete an affidavit. The designee shall
 2406  state in the affidavit that the designee is authorized by the
 2407  voter to pick up that ballot and shall indicate if the voter is
 2408  a member of the designee’s immediate family and, if so, the
 2409  relationship. The department shall prescribe the form of the
 2410  affidavit. If the supervisor is satisfied that the designee is
 2411  authorized to pick up the ballot and that the signature of the
 2412  voter on the written authorization matches the signature of the
 2413  voter on file, the supervisor must give the ballot to that
 2414  designee for delivery to the voter.
 2415         5. Except as provided in s. 101.655, the supervisor may not
 2416  deliver a vote-by-mail ballot to a voter or a voter’s designee
 2417  pursuant to subparagraph 3. or subparagraph 4., respectively,
 2418  during the mandatory early voting period and up to 7 p.m. on
 2419  election day, unless there is an emergency, to the extent that
 2420  the voter will be unable to go to a designated early voting site
 2421  in his or her county or to his or her assigned polling place on
 2422  election day. If a vote-by-mail ballot is delivered, the voter
 2423  or his or her designee must execute an affidavit affirming to
 2424  the facts which allow for delivery of the vote-by-mail ballot.
 2425  The department shall adopt a rule providing for the form of the
 2426  affidavit.
 2427         (7)DEADLINE EXTENSION.—If a deadline under this section
 2428  falls on a day when the office of the supervisor is scheduled to
 2429  be closed, the deadline must be extended until the next business
 2430  day.
 2431         Section 25. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and subsections
 2432  (2) and (4) of section 101.64, Florida Statutes, are amended to
 2433  read:
 2434         101.64 Delivery of vote-by-mail ballots; envelopes; form.—
 2435         (1)(a) The supervisor shall enclose with each vote-by-mail
 2436  ballot two envelopes: a secrecy envelope, into which the absent
 2437  voter must elector shall enclose his or her marked ballot; and a
 2438  postage prepaid mailing envelope, into which the absent voter
 2439  must elector shall then place the secrecy envelope, which must
 2440  shall be addressed to the supervisor and also bear on the back
 2441  side a certificate in substantially the following form:
 2442           Note: Please Read Instructions Carefully Before         
 2443         Marking Ballot and Completing Voter’s Certificate.        
 2444                         VOTER’S CERTIFICATE                       
 2445         I, ...., do solemnly swear or affirm that I am a qualified
 2446  and registered voter of .... County, Florida, and that I have
 2447  not and will not vote more than one ballot in this election. I
 2448  understand that if I commit or attempt to commit any fraud in
 2449  connection with voting, vote a fraudulent ballot, or vote more
 2450  than once in an election, I can be convicted of a felony of the
 2451  third degree and fined up to $5,000 and/or imprisoned for up to
 2452  5 years. I also understand that failure to sign this certificate
 2453  will invalidate my ballot.
 2454  ...(Date)...	
 2455  ...(Voter’s Signature or Last Four Digits of Social Security
 2456  Number)...
 2457  ...(E-Mail Address)...	...(Home Telephone Number)...
 2458  ...(Mobile Telephone Number)...
 2459         (2) The certificate must shall be arranged on the back of
 2460  the mailing envelope so that the line for the signature or last
 2461  four digits of the social security number of the voter absent
 2462  elector is across the seal of the envelope; however, a no
 2463  statement may not shall appear on the envelope which indicates
 2464  that a signature or the last four digits of the social security
 2465  number of the voter must cross the seal of the envelope. The
 2466  voter must absent elector shall execute the certificate on the
 2467  envelope.
 2468         (4) The supervisor shall mark, code, indicate on, or
 2469  otherwise track the precinct of the voter absent elector for
 2470  each vote-by-mail ballot.
 2471         Section 26. Section 101.65, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2472  read:
 2473         101.65 Instructions to absent electors.—The supervisor
 2474  shall enclose with each vote-by-mail ballot separate printed
 2475  instructions in substantially the following form; however, where
 2476  the instructions appear in capitalized text, the text of the
 2477  printed instructions must be in bold font:
 2478  
 2479                  READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY                
 2480                       BEFORE MARKING BALLOT.                      
 2481  
 2482         1. VERY IMPORTANT. In order to ensure that your vote-by
 2483  mail ballot will be counted, it should be completed and returned
 2484  as soon as possible so that it can reach the supervisor of
 2485  elections of the county in which your precinct is located no
 2486  later than 7 p.m. on the day of the election. However, if you
 2487  are an overseas voter casting a ballot in a presidential
 2488  preference primary or general election, your vote-by-mail ballot
 2489  must be postmarked or dated no later than the date of the
 2490  election and received by the supervisor of elections of the
 2491  county in which you are registered to vote no later than 10 days
 2492  after the date of the election. Note that the later you return
 2493  your ballot, the less time you will have to cure any signature
 2494  deficiencies, which may cause your ballot not to be counted is
 2495  authorized until 5 p.m. on the 2nd day after the election.
 2496         2. Mark your ballot in secret as instructed on the ballot.
 2497  You must mark your own ballot unless you are unable to do so
 2498  because of blindness, disability, or inability to read or write.
 2499         3. Mark only the number of candidates or issue choices for
 2500  a race as indicated on the ballot. If you are allowed to “Vote
 2501  for One” candidate and you vote for more than one candidate,
 2502  your vote in that race will not be counted.
 2503         4. Place your marked ballot in the enclosed secrecy
 2504  envelope.
 2505         5. Insert the secrecy envelope into the enclosed mailing
 2506  envelope which is addressed to the supervisor.
 2507         6. Seal the mailing envelope and completely fill out the
 2508  Voter’s Certificate on the back of the mailing envelope.
 2509         7. VERY IMPORTANT. In order for your vote-by-mail ballot to
 2510  be counted, you must sign your name or print the last four
 2511  digits of your social security number on the line above (Voter’s
 2512  Signature or Last Four Digits of Social Security Number). A
 2513  vote-by-mail ballot will be considered illegal and not be
 2514  counted if the signature or the last four digits of the social
 2515  security number on the voter’s certificate do does not match the
 2516  signature or social security number on record. The signature on
 2517  file at the time the supervisor of elections in the county in
 2518  which your precinct is located receives your vote-by-mail ballot
 2519  is the signature that will be used to verify your signature on
 2520  the voter’s certificate. If you need to update your signature
 2521  for this election, send your signature update on a voter
 2522  registration application to your supervisor of elections so that
 2523  it is received before your vote-by-mail ballot is received.
 2524         8. VERY IMPORTANT. If you are an overseas voter, you must
 2525  include the date you signed the Voter’s Certificate or printed
 2526  the last four digits of your social security number on the line
 2527  above (Date) or your ballot may not be counted.
 2528         9. Mail, deliver, or have delivered the completed mailing
 2529  envelope. Be sure there is sufficient postage if mailed. THE
 2530  COMPLETED MAILING ENVELOPE CAN BE DELIVERED TO THE OFFICE OF THE
 2531  SUPERVISOR OF ELECTIONS OF THE COUNTY IN WHICH YOUR PRECINCT IS
 2532  LOCATED OR DROPPED OFF AT AN AUTHORIZED SECURE BALLOT INTAKE
 2533  STATION, AVAILABLE AT EACH EARLY VOTING LOCATION.
 2534         10. FELONY NOTICE. It is a felony under Florida law to
 2535  accept any gift, payment, or gratuity in exchange for your vote
 2536  for a candidate. It is also a felony under Florida law to vote
 2537  in an election using a false identity or false address, or under
 2538  any other circumstances making your ballot false or fraudulent.
 2539         Section 27. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1),
 2540  paragraph (c) of subsection (2), and paragraphs (a), (c), and
 2541  (d) of subsection (4) of section 101.68, Florida Statutes, are
 2542  amended to read:
 2543         101.68 Canvassing of vote-by-mail ballot.—
 2544         (1)(a) The supervisor of the county where the absent
 2545  elector resides shall receive the voted ballot, at which time
 2546  the supervisor shall compare the signature or the last four
 2547  digits of the social security number of the elector on the
 2548  voter’s certificate with the signature or the last four digits
 2549  of the social security number of the elector in the registration
 2550  books or the precinct register to determine whether the elector
 2551  is duly registered in the county and must record on the
 2552  elector’s registration record that the elector has voted. During
 2553  the signature comparison process, the supervisor may not use any
 2554  knowledge of the political affiliation of the elector whose
 2555  signature is subject to verification.
 2556         (b) An elector who dies after casting a vote-by-mail ballot
 2557  but on or before election day must shall remain listed in the
 2558  registration books until the results have been certified for the
 2559  election in which the ballot was cast. The supervisor shall
 2560  safely keep the ballot unopened in his or her office until the
 2561  county canvassing board canvasses the vote pursuant to
 2562  subsection (2).
 2563         (2)
 2564         (c)1. The canvassing board must, if the supervisor has not
 2565  already done so, compare the signature or the last four digits
 2566  of the social security number of the elector on the voter’s
 2567  certificate or on the vote-by-mail ballot cure affidavit as
 2568  provided in subsection (4) with the signature or last four
 2569  digits of the social security number of the elector in the
 2570  registration books or the precinct register to see that the
 2571  elector is duly registered in the county and to determine the
 2572  legality of that vote-by-mail ballot. A vote-by-mail ballot may
 2573  only be counted if:
 2574         a. The signature or last four digits of the social security
 2575  number on the voter’s certificate or the cure affidavit match
 2576  matches the elector’s signature or last four digits of the
 2577  social security number in the registration books or precinct
 2578  register; however, in the case of a cure affidavit, the
 2579  supporting identification listed in subsection (4) must also
 2580  confirm the identity of the elector; or
 2581         b. The cure affidavit contains a signature or the last four
 2582  digits of a social security number which do that does not match
 2583  the elector’s signature or last four digits of the social
 2584  security number in the registration books or precinct register,
 2585  but the elector has submitted a current and valid Tier 1
 2586  identification pursuant to subsection (4) which confirms the
 2587  identity of the elector.
 2588  
 2589  For purposes of this subparagraph, any canvassing board finding
 2590  that an elector’s signatures or last four digits of the
 2591  elector’s social security number do not match must be by
 2592  majority vote and beyond a reasonable doubt.
 2593         2. The ballot of an elector who casts a vote-by-mail ballot
 2594  shall be counted even if the elector dies on or before election
 2595  day, as long as, before the death of the voter, the ballot was
 2596  postmarked by the United States Postal Service, date-stamped
 2597  with a verifiable tracking number by a common carrier, or
 2598  already in the possession of the supervisor.
 2599         3. A vote-by-mail ballot is not considered illegal if the
 2600  signature or last four digits of the social security number of
 2601  the elector do does not cross the seal of the mailing envelope.
 2602         4. If any elector or candidate present believes that a
 2603  vote-by-mail ballot is illegal due to a defect apparent on the
 2604  voter’s certificate or the cure affidavit, he or she may, at any
 2605  time before the ballot is removed from the envelope, file with
 2606  the canvassing board a protest against the canvass of that
 2607  ballot, specifying the precinct, the voter’s certificate or the
 2608  cure affidavit, and the reason he or she believes the ballot to
 2609  be illegal. A challenge based upon a defect in the voter’s
 2610  certificate or cure affidavit may not be accepted after the
 2611  ballot has been removed from the mailing envelope.
 2612         5. If the canvassing board determines that a ballot is
 2613  illegal, a member of the board must, without opening the
 2614  envelope, mark across the face of the envelope: “rejected as
 2615  illegal.” The cure affidavit, if applicable, the envelope, and
 2616  the ballot therein must shall be preserved in the manner that
 2617  official ballots are preserved.
 2618         (4)(a) As soon as practicable, the supervisor shall, on
 2619  behalf of the county canvassing board, attempt to notify an
 2620  elector who has returned a vote-by-mail ballot that does not
 2621  include the elector’s signature or last four digits of the
 2622  elector’s social security number or contains a signature or the
 2623  last four digits of a social security number that do does not
 2624  match the elector’s signature or last four digits of the
 2625  elector’s social security number in the registration books or
 2626  precinct register by:
 2627         1. Notifying the elector of the signature or last four
 2628  digits of the social security number deficiency by e-mail and
 2629  directing the elector to the cure affidavit and instructions on
 2630  the supervisor’s website;
 2631         2. Notifying the elector of the signature or last four
 2632  digits of the social security number deficiency by text message
 2633  and directing the elector to the cure affidavit and instructions
 2634  on the supervisor’s website; or
 2635         3. Notifying the elector of the signature or last four
 2636  digits of the social security number deficiency by telephone and
 2637  directing the elector to the cure affidavit and instructions on
 2638  the supervisor’s website.
 2639  
 2640  In addition to the notification required under subparagraph 1.,
 2641  subparagraph 2., or subparagraph 3., the supervisor must notify
 2642  the elector of the signature or last four digits of the social
 2643  security number deficiency by first-class mail and direct the
 2644  elector to the cure affidavit and instructions on the
 2645  supervisor’s website. Beginning the day before the election, the
 2646  supervisor is not required to provide notice of the signature
 2647  deficiency by first-class mail, but shall continue to provide
 2648  notice as required under subparagraph 1., subparagraph 2., or
 2649  subparagraph 3.
 2650         (c) The elector must complete a cure affidavit in
 2651  substantially the following form:
 2652  
 2653                 VOTE-BY-MAIL BALLOT CURE AFFIDAVIT                
 2654  
 2655         I, ...., am a qualified voter in this election and
 2656  registered voter of .... County, Florida. I do solemnly swear or
 2657  affirm that I requested and returned the vote-by-mail ballot and
 2658  that I have not and will not vote more than one ballot in this
 2659  election. I understand that if I commit or attempt any fraud in
 2660  connection with voting, vote a fraudulent ballot, or vote more
 2661  than once in an election, I may be convicted of a felony of the
 2662  third degree and fined up to $5,000 and imprisoned for up to 5
 2663  years. I understand that my failure to sign this affidavit means
 2664  that my vote-by-mail ballot will be invalidated.
 2665  
 2666  ...(Voter’s Signature or Last Four Digits of Social Security
 2667  Number)...
 2668  ...(Address)...
 2669  
 2670         (d) Instructions must accompany the cure affidavit in
 2671  substantially the following form:
 2672  
 2673         READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE COMPLETING THE
 2674  AFFIDAVIT. FAILURE TO FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS MAY CAUSE YOUR
 2675  BALLOT NOT TO COUNT.
 2676  
 2677         1. In order to ensure that your vote-by-mail ballot will be
 2678  counted, your affidavit should be completed and returned as soon
 2679  as possible so that it can reach the supervisor of elections of
 2680  the county in which your precinct is located no later than 5
 2681  p.m. on the 2nd day after the election.
 2682         2. You must sign your name or print the last four digits of
 2683  your social security number on the line above (Voter’s Signature
 2684  or Last Four Digits of Social Security Number).
 2685         3. You must make a copy of one of the following forms of
 2686  identification:
 2687         a. Tier 1 identification.—Current and valid identification
 2688  that includes your name and photograph: Florida driver license;
 2689  Florida identification card issued by the Department of Highway
 2690  Safety and Motor Vehicles; United States passport; debit or
 2691  credit card; military identification; student identification;
 2692  retirement center identification; neighborhood association
 2693  identification; public assistance identification; veteran health
 2694  identification card issued by the United States Department of
 2695  Veterans Affairs; a Florida license to carry a concealed weapon
 2696  or firearm; or an employee identification card issued by any
 2697  branch, department, agency, or entity of the Federal Government,
 2698  the state, a county, or a municipality; or
 2699         b. Tier 2 identification.—ONLY IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A TIER 1
 2700  FORM OF IDENTIFICATION, identification that shows your name and
 2701  current residence address: current utility bill, bank statement,
 2702  government check, paycheck, or government document (excluding
 2703  voter information card).
 2704         4. Place the envelope bearing the affidavit into a mailing
 2705  envelope addressed to the supervisor. Insert a copy of your
 2706  identification in the mailing envelope. Mail (if time permits),
 2707  deliver, or have delivered the completed affidavit along with
 2708  the copy of your identification to your county supervisor of
 2709  elections. Be sure there is sufficient postage if mailed and
 2710  that the supervisor’s address is correct. Remember, your
 2711  information MUST reach your county supervisor of elections no
 2712  later than 5 p.m. on the 2nd day after the election, or your
 2713  ballot will not count.
 2714         5. Alternatively, you may fax or e-mail your completed
 2715  affidavit and a copy of your identification to the supervisor of
 2716  elections. If e-mailing, please provide these documents as
 2717  attachments.
 2718         Section 28. Section 101.69, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2719  read:
 2720         101.69 Voting in person; return of vote-by-mail ballot.—
 2721         (1) The provisions of this code may shall not be construed
 2722  to prohibit any voter elector from voting in person at the
 2723  voter’s elector’s precinct on the day of an election or at an
 2724  early voting site, notwithstanding that the voter elector has
 2725  requested a vote-by-mail ballot for that election. A voter An
 2726  elector who has returned a voted vote-by-mail ballot to the
 2727  supervisor, however, is deemed to have cast his or her ballot
 2728  and is not entitled to vote another ballot or to have a
 2729  provisional ballot counted by the county canvassing board. A
 2730  voter An elector who has received a vote-by-mail ballot and has
 2731  not returned the voted ballot to the supervisor, but desires to
 2732  vote in person, shall return the ballot, whether voted or not,
 2733  to the election board in the voter’s elector’s precinct or to an
 2734  early voting site. The returned ballot must shall be marked
 2735  “canceled” by the board and placed with other canceled ballots.
 2736  However, if the voter elector does not return the ballot and the
 2737  election official:
 2738         (a) Confirms that the supervisor has received the voter’s
 2739  elector’s vote-by-mail ballot, the voter may elector shall not
 2740  be allowed to vote in person. If the voter elector maintains
 2741  that he or she has not returned the vote-by-mail ballot or
 2742  remains eligible to vote, the voter must elector shall be
 2743  provided a provisional ballot as provided in s. 101.048.
 2744         (b) Confirms that the supervisor has not received the
 2745  voter’s elector’s vote-by-mail ballot, the voter must elector
 2746  shall be allowed to vote in person as provided in this code. The
 2747  voter’s elector’s vote-by-mail ballot, if subsequently received,
 2748  may shall not be counted and must shall remain in the mailing
 2749  envelope, and the envelope must shall be marked “Rejected as
 2750  Illegal.”
 2751         (c) Cannot determine whether the supervisor has received
 2752  the voter’s elector’s vote-by-mail ballot, the voter elector may
 2753  vote a provisional ballot as provided in s. 101.048.
 2754         (2)(a) The supervisor shall allow a voter an elector who
 2755  has received a vote-by-mail ballot to physically return a voted
 2756  vote-by-mail ballot to the supervisor by placing the return mail
 2757  envelope containing his or her marked ballot in a secure ballot
 2758  intake station. Secure ballot intake stations must shall be
 2759  placed at the main office of the supervisor, at each permanent
 2760  branch office of the supervisor which meets the criteria set
 2761  forth in s. 101.657(1)(a) for branch offices used for early
 2762  voting and which is open for at least the minimum number of
 2763  hours prescribed by s. 98.015(4), and at each early voting site.
 2764  Secure ballot intake stations may also be placed at any other
 2765  site that would otherwise qualify as an early voting site under
 2766  s. 101.657(1). Secure ballot intake stations must be
 2767  geographically located so as to provide all voters in the county
 2768  with an equal opportunity to cast a ballot, insofar as is
 2769  practicable. Except for secure ballot intake stations at an
 2770  office of the supervisor, a secure ballot intake station may
 2771  only be used during the county’s early voting hours of operation
 2772  and must be monitored in person by an employee of the
 2773  supervisor’s office. A secure ballot intake station at an office
 2774  of the supervisor must be continuously monitored in person by an
 2775  employee of the supervisor’s office when the secure ballot
 2776  intake station is accessible for deposit of ballots.
 2777         (b) A supervisor shall designate each secure ballot intake
 2778  station location at least 30 days before an election. The
 2779  supervisor shall provide the address of each secure ballot
 2780  intake station location to the division at least 30 days before
 2781  an election. After a secure ballot intake station location has
 2782  been designated, it may not be moved or changed except as
 2783  approved by the division to correct a violation of this
 2784  subsection.
 2785         (c)1. On each day of early voting, all secure ballot intake
 2786  stations must be emptied at the end of early voting hours and
 2787  all ballots retrieved from the secure ballot intake stations
 2788  must be returned to the supervisor’s office.
 2789         2. For secure ballot intake stations located at an office
 2790  of the supervisor, all ballots must be retrieved before the
 2791  secure ballot intake station is no longer monitored by an
 2792  employee of the supervisor.
 2793         3. Employees of the supervisor must comply with procedures
 2794  for the chain of custody of ballots as required by s.
 2795  101.015(4).
 2796         (3) If any secure ballot intake station is left accessible
 2797  for ballot receipt other than as authorized by this section, the
 2798  supervisor is subject to a civil penalty of $25,000. The
 2799  division is authorized to enforce this provision.
 2800         Section 29. Subsection (1) of section 104.42, Florida
 2801  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2802         104.42 Fraudulent registration and illegal voting;
 2803  investigation.—
 2804         (1) The supervisor of elections is authorized to
 2805  investigate fraudulent registrations and illegal voting and to
 2806  report his or her findings to the local state attorney and the
 2807  Office of Election Crimes and Security.
 2808         Section 30. This act shall take effect July 1, 2025.