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Article
Courtesy of Florida Politics
By Jesse Scheckner
Published April 29, 2025
‘This is landmark legislation that
finally does provide the relief, the financial relief, that
all of our condo owners deserve.’
A bill to further update Florida’s condo safety laws and
give unit owners more options when covering the cost of
inspections and repairs is en route to the Senate after
clearing the House floor.
House members voted 113-2 for HB 913, which makes numerous
changes to laws passed after the 2021 collapse of the
Champlain Towers South condo in Surfside.
It’s the most recent bill to tackle the issue by Miami
Republican Rep. Vicki Lopez, who has received praise for
legislation she previously passed with Fleming Island
Republican Sen. Jennifer Bradley, along with some criticism
about cost difficulties that prompted some unit owners to
sell their homes.
HB 913 and its Senate analog (SB 1742) aim to address that
issue by enabling condo associations to use lines of credit
to pay for pricey structural integrity reserve studies
(SIRS) and clarifying that only buildings with three
habitable stories must comply with SIRS and milestone
inspection requirements.
“I did not come to the House to become a housing expert, but
here we find ourselves,” said Lopez, who has been
affectionately dubbed the House’s “Condo Queen” for her
focus on the issue.
“(I am) prepared to continue to do the work to make sure
that we have listened. I’m telling you this is landmark
legislation that finally does provide the relief, the
financial relief, that all of our condo owners deserve.”
Like its predecessors, HB 913 does a lot. It guarantees
condo associations a route to voting online, requires the
Department of Business and Professional Regulation to create
a standard form for SIRS and set criteria for determining
the useful life of condo components, and allows more
flexibility for excluding certain low-cost repairs or
replacements from the SIRS total.
It also mandates that the minutes of a condo board’s
meetings from the past year must be available online to
association members, requires more transparency from hotels
that also contain condos and prohibits the person or company
that conducted the SIRS from having a financial interest in
the person or company that conducts the repairs.
Democratic Reps. Robin Bartleman of Weston and Felicia
Robinson of Miami Gardens lauded Lopez for her efforts and
responsiveness and thanked her for visiting their districts
to speak with condo owners there.
Lopez made herself available “at all hours of the evening
(and) early in the morning,” Bartleman said, adding, “It
just shows what a great member you are and how you really
try to meet the needs of everybody.”
Other Democrats in the chamber, including Reps. Anna
Eskamani of Orlando, Mitch Rosenwald of Oakland Park and
Marie Woodson of Hollywood, offered similar plaudits.
Rep. Dianne Hart, a Tampa Democrat, asked Lopez if she’d be
willing to amend her item to require condo associations to
allow electronic voting rather than what it currently does,
which is require condo boards to create a ballot question on
doing so for the association’s next election if 25% of unit
owners call for it. Lopez said she would prefer to see how
her bill works before making additional changes.
Lopez credited a woman she spoke with while visiting
Bartleman and Robinson’s districts with giving her the idea
for the line of credit option. Miami Beach Republican Rep.
Fabián Basabe improved the bill’s hotel condo aspect, she
said, and a constituent of Stuart Republican Rep. John
Snyder’s proposed requiring the uniform SIRS form.
“When the Speaker says that this is a member-driven process,
it most certainly is,” Lopez said. “And this bill
demonstrates how we do that.”
A contentious section in the bill’s first draft would have
blocked Florida’s state-run insurer of last resort, Citizens
Property Insurance, from issuing or renewing policies for
condo owners and associations that don’t comply with
building inspection requirements. The provision was a
response to the fact that, as of last month, most of the
more than 11,000 condo buildings with three or more levels
that must comply with relatively new rules set in recent
Sessions hadn’t done so by the Dec. 31 deadline.
Lopez deleted the section in the bill’s final committee stop
last week.
The two House members who voted “no” on HB 913 were
Republican Reps. Mike Caruso of Delray Beach and Kiyan
Michael of Jacksonville. Neither debated its merits
Wednesday, the first time either had a chance to vote on the
measure.
HB 913 is now likely to be taken up alongside SB 1742 when
the Senate bill faces a floor vote Thursday.
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