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Article
Courtesy of The Florida Phoenix
By Jackie Llanos
Published May 6, 2025
Lawmakers in both chambers of the Florida Legislature
voted unanimously Wednesday to pass a bill addressing rising fees for
condominium owners, which is one of the items that has sprouted criticism
from Gov. Ron DeSantis.
With the scheduled end of the session looming mere days away, the
Legislature approved a bill, HB 913, that allows condominium associations to
secure credit lines and invest funds to pay for building repairs instead of
immediately raising large amounts of cash from owners.
But lawmakers sponsoring the legislation acknowledged that they will likely
have to continue making changes in the future in light of escalating fees
following last year’s deadline for condominiums to complete studies
detailing how much each needs to save to pay for roof and structural
maintenance.
“This incredible bill addressing the condominium crisis we have all heard
about for the last year gives a lot of financial relief,” Miami Republican
Rep. Vicki Lopez said. She’s the bill’s main sponsor in the House. Fleming
Island Republican Sen. Jennifer Bradley filed the Senate’s proposal.
Lawmakers passed legislation requiring those studies and milestone
inspections 30 years after a building’s construction, following the 2021
collapse in Surfside of a 12-story condo that killed 98 people.
The passage comes amid DeSantis’ continued bashing of the Legislature, with
emphasis on the House, over their inaction on condos. He called lawmakers to
Tallahassee at the beginning of the year for a special session on
immigration, condos, hurricane relief, and citizen-led constitutional
amendments. The Legislature ended up only addressing immigration ahead of
their scheduled session opening in March.
“We have this condo issue, that legislation that caused these crushing
assessments,” DeSantis said during a Wednesday press conference about Hope
Florida in Fruitland Park. “We know people need relief from that. We’ve
gotta do it. The Senate’s got a great product that can do it.”
What changed and what remained?
Senators waited a week to take up the House’s proposal, with changes
requiring both chambers to make concessions. For example, Bradley’s idea to
allow condo associations to invest money meant for repairs is still in the
bill, but the compromise limits those investments to certificates of
deposit. The House’s push to allow associations to pay for repairs with
credits will also require support from the majority of owners of condo
units.
The legislation provides some flexibility for associations, carving out
condos with only three residential stories from the building inspection
requirements and letting associations pause contributions to reserve funds
for repairs for up to two years after a milestone inspection, required 30
years after the buildings’ construction.
With the bill headed to the governor’s desk, DeSantis could still harbor
objections to it, particularly regarding electronic voting. A quarter of
condo owners could petition their association to hold an electronic vote
under the bill, which DeSantis has said would incite fraud.
Still, one provision that intensified disagreement between the sponsors
early made its way to the Senate floor’s discussion despite the House
abandoning the idea earlier in the process. Lopez originally wanted to
prohibit Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state’s property insurer of
last resort, from issuing or renewing policies for condominium buildings
that haven’t completed their building inspections.
“Obviously, ensuring compliance is important, but such a provision would
devastate owners in an already weak condo market,” Bradley said, adding that
she brought up the removed provision because other senators still raised
concerns about it.
Both Lopez and Bradley received compliments from their colleagues. Senators
made multiple references to constituents yelling at them over the heightened
fees.
“Condo meetings are not where you wanna go with a thin skin. I assure you of
that,” Bradley said.
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