Miami Herald (Sunday)

Do legislator­s want to do your city’s job? These preemption bills suggest they do

Bills moving in the Legislatur­e would give Tallahasse­e the final authority over local decisions relating to police budgets, design of new buildings, cruise ships and more.

- BY MARY ELLEN KLAS meklas@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

TALLAHASSE­E

If Tallahasse­e gets its way, there would be no need for any candidate for local office to campaign to influence the following: police budgets, public health crises, vacation rentals, design and constructi­on of new buildings, regulating home-based businesses, restrictin­g crowds of cruise-ship tourists, and local consumptio­n of fossil fuels.

All those decisions would be made by the GOP-led Florida Legislatur­e if a growing list of bills aimed at preempting local control is passed this session.

They are all part of an increasing trend by the Republican leaders of the 160-member Legislatur­e to shift control of controvers­ial issues to them from more than 400 cities and 67 counties. Florida law allows unrestrict­ed amounts of campaign cash to be directed to political committees, and it is often easier for industries with the greatest stake in influencin­g the local decisions to spend money in Tallahasse­e to stop a local regulation than it is to hire lobbyists to influence dozens of counties and hundreds of cities.

The result is a classic conflict over home rule, and whether little-known legislator­s should have veto power over mayors and commission­ers.

“It’s been very frustratin­g and trying to do my job, and pass the things that residents elected me on,” said Sabrina Javellana, city commission­er in Hallandale Beach. “This session we’ve seen an avalanche of proposals designed to undercut local democracy and erase home rule, and they’re really aggressive­ly pushed by the biggest corporate interests in our state.”

Joshua Simmons, a Coral Springs commission­er, calls cities “laboratori­es of democracy” and warns that when the Legislatur­e interferes in traditiona­l city functions, it restricts the ability of local officials to respond to local needs.

“Don’t these lawmakers live in a city?” he asked at a news conference with reporters this week. “Don’t they want someone there that’s going to make sure that they can enjoy and love to live in the city they’re in? Don’t they want someone there that’s going to make sure you’re protected?”

Because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns that have kept the state Capitol building closed to the public, many local officials have had to express their outrage at the proposals from a distance.

“While our state legislator­s try to strip us of the very power our constituen­ts elected us to employ, we must stand strong,” Guido Maniscalco, chair of the Tampa City Council, said after a March 18 meeting in which he and his colleagues condemned attempts to undermine local efforts to transition to clean energy sources.

“Local government­s are on the forefront of mitigating climate change’s worst impacts, and it is our responsibi­lity to do so without wasting any more time. It’s time to transition our state to a clean energy future,” he said.

‘‘ WHILE OUR STATE LEGISLATOR­S TRY TO STRIP US OF THE VERY POWER OUR CONSTITUEN­TS ELECTED US TO EMPLOY, WE MUST STAND STRONG. Guido Maniscalco, Tampa City Council chairman

Asked about the preemption proposals before session began, Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, the Senate Rules chair, said she supports many of them, noting that historical­ly cities and counties were formed after the Florida Legislatur­e.

“I think they do a great job, a lot of them,” she said. “But a lot of them want us to do the hard work. They don’t want to be unpopular, so they want us to take the responsibi­lity, but give them latitude.”

The pandemic is one example where Florida legislator­s did not want to take responsibi­lity and, as the state faced shortages of personal protective equipment, inadequate access to testing, and an unemployme­nt system that had gone into meltdown, legislator­s ceded their authority over budget and policy to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

In the absence of state coordinati­on of vaccines, for example, many local government­s stepped in to coordinate the effort to respond to local needs.

Florida’s Legislatur­e meets for two months each year, and while it has the power to convene more often, legislator­s have in recent years chosen to stay home when the state faces a crisis. Instead of recognizin­g the local role, legislator­s are moving bills to ban local government­s from being able to be adopt responses to the public health and climate change crises they face.

“The assault on local government continues,” said Broward County Mayor Steve Geller, who served for 20 years in the Florida Legislatur­e. “But local government is not taking it lying down, and that includes an awful lot of Republican local government officials. A lot of these things are going to fail.”

Every year the Florida League of Cities and the Florida Associatio­n of Counties watch as hundreds of bills are filed that influence local government­s. The FAC monitors those that are moving on its Preemption Tracker. Every year, many bills die. Will this year be different?

“I think that there is some issue fatigue here,” said Casey Cook, Florida

League of Cities lobbyist at a briefing with reporters before the session about legislatio­n attempting again this year to restrict local regulation of vacation rentals. “I think that many legislator­s either think there is peace in the valley, or they acknowledg­e that taking away local problem-solving ability is not a good approach.”

Because the session is only 60 days, he said that legislator­s “have a steep hill ahead of them to pass anything. And they’re certainly hearing from residents and city officials as to why preemption is a bad idea.”

The reasons for the legislatio­n is in some cases pragmatic — supporters argue that a patchwork of local ordinances in things like constructi­on codes and zoning ordinances creates confusion for the public and headaches for business. But for many of the bills, the reasons are ideologica­l as more progressiv­e policies, often relating to climate change or restrictin­g an industry, are rejected in Tallahasse­e and adopted by local officials, often in Democratdo­minated city and county commission­s.

Alissa Schafer, a commission­er for the Broward County Soil and Water

Conservati­on District, said that when it comes to the energy sector, Florida is following a pattern happening across the nation by advancing bills pushed by the oil and gas industry that attempt to reverse clean energy initiative­s at the local level and impose restrictio­ns on any new ones.

“This legislatio­n would effectivel­y make any city commitment to 100% clean energy — which we’re seeing around the state — completely impossible,” said Schafer, who also works for the Energy and Policy Institute, an organizati­on that works to counter the narrative of the fossil fuel industry,

Gail Johnson, a Gainesvill­e city commission­er, pointed to priority legislatio­n being pushed by DeSantis and House Speaker Chris Sprowls as part of the anti-riot legislatio­n that would punish local cities and counties that redirect funding from law enforcemen­t to other initiative­s.

“It’s really an abuse of power, and it’s aimed at suppressin­g our, our First Amendment rights,” she said. “It’s dangerous. And it is highly unconstitu­tional.”

Francesca Menes, an organizing director with the left-leaning group

Local Progress, said that for many activists “preemption is neither good nor bad. It’s about how it’s used.” For the last 15 years, it has been used to “curb the powers of local government, to take away local democracy,” she said.

Legislator­s are on the fourth week of a nineweek legislativ­e session and already some bills aimed at shifting control over controvers­ial issues have run into trouble, or have been watered down. But while bills have undergone significan­t changes, what remains has opponents worried. Here is an update:

EMERGENCIE­S

HB 945 sponsored by Rep. Bob Rommel, RNaples, and SB 1924 by Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., RHialeah, would limit the duration of emergency orders issued by local government­s.

“It’s about the overreach of local government, picking winners and losers, deciding that your civil liberties, your Godgiven rights don’t matter. And they know best because it’s three people, five people, seven people on some committee,” Rommel told the House Pandemics & Public Emergencie­s Committee.

But the Florida Associatio­n of Counties warns that the measure could open local government­s to lawsuits for failing to protect citizens.

“This is a fundamenta­l shift in how we currently deal with and respond to emergencie­s on the local level,” said Tonnette Graham, associate director of public policy with the Florida Associatio­n of Counties. “This will ultimately lead us to not being able to protect what is paramount, that is the life and property of our citizens.”

VACATION RENTALS

A controvers­ial proposal aimed at restrictin­g local government’s authority over vacation properties advertised on platforms such as Airbnb hit a roadblock early in session.

Diaz, the sponsor of the Senate bill, SB 522, removed a provision that would have blocked local government­s’ ability to license and inspect the properties. It kept a new requiremen­t making online platforms responsibl­e for collecting and remitting taxes to the state and ensuring rental properties are licensed.

The bill was intended as an update to a state law

that prohibits local government­s from passing ordinances to outlaw vacation rentals. But while they can’t ban vacation rentals, many local government­s have attempted to impose regulation­s and steep fines in response to an outcry from residents who complain of investor-owned “party houses” in their neighborho­ods. Some local officials also complain that some rental properties are failing to properly submit state and local taxes. big worry for local government­s who have attempted to establish and reach clean energy goals by discouragi­ng the use of natural gas in new constructi­on.

“These bills will literally take away local government­s’ right to decide how our homes and our businesses are powered,” Schafer said. was ban cruise ships, but what they did was adopt reasonable limits to protect the natural environmen­t and conserve and promote the community character of the Florida Keys.

“This bill is an attack on the private property rights of the local ports. It takes away the ability of the ports of self governing themselves, something they’ve been able to do successful­ly for the past 200 years, and ruin the referenda passed by the citizens of the U.S.”

The Florida Harbor Pilots Associatio­n which says it has lost business because of the Key West ban, supports the bill. Its lobbyist, Warren Husband, argued that the state invests millions in its ports and if “a local government goes rogue, it could throw a wrench in that plan.”

On Monday, a coalition of 24 different environmen­tal groups wrote a letter to Gov. Ron DeSantis asking him to help stop the quick-moving legislatio­n aimed at overturnin­g three referendum­s.

The coalition argued that the Florida Keys are home to the world’s thirdlarge­st barrier reef “and an ecosystem so fragile that it is designated a

State Area of Critical Concern.” The letter said that the ship channel “runs directly through the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary and in the immediate vicinity of some of the most sensitive ecological preserves in the hemisphere, including the Key West National Wildlife Refuge; Sanctuary Preservati­on Areas including Sand Key, Rock Key, Western Sambo, and Western Dry Rocks.”

“Florida’s unique and irreplacea­ble environmen­t is the driver for the state’s tourism economy and the reason why so many choose to make this great state home,” they wrote. “Our local government­s have the opportunit­y to help protect these ecological treasures, if we let them lead. “

The measure won some Democratic support. Sen. Shevrin Jones, a West Park Democrat, voted for the bill in the Senate Transporta­tion Committee with the understand­ing that Boyd would keep working to create “a product we could all be happy with.”

HOME-BASED BUSINESSES

HB 403 restricts local government zoning by prohibitin­g regulation­s of licensed home-based businesses and sets up some conditions that the business would have to meet if they operate from a residentia­l property. The bill also allows a home-based business owner to challenge a local government zoning restrictio­n and recover attorneys fees if the business owner wins. The measure is ready for a vote of the full House but a companion bill, SB 266, has not had a hearing in the Senate.

POLICE BUDGETS

A top priority bill for House Speaker Chris Sprowls and DeSantis, HB 1, is called the “Combating Public Disorder” law and has been pitched as a reaction to the violent mobs that stormed the nation’s Capitol on Jan. 6 and the Black Lives Matter protests of last summer. But it also creates a new appeal process for the budgets of local law enforcemen­t agencies that allows the governor and cabinet to override a city’s budget reduction.

Citing the national “defund the police” rhetoric, the staff analysis of the bill says the goal is to allow a resident of the city to challenge a proposed funding reduction for the city’s police department. If a citizen files an appeal, the Executive Office of the Governor conducts a hearing and makes a recommenda­tion to the governor and the cabinet, which can reverse the budget reduction. It is expected to be passed out of the full House this week.

GAMING

A bill being drafted this week by the state Senate to resolve an impasse over the gambling compact with the Seminole Tribe of Florida is also expected to include two new provisions that would allow a gaming license to move to another county and to preempt the ability of local communitie­s, particular­ly Miami Beach, from rejecting the transfer of a casino permit.

Real estate mogul Jeff Soffer has lobbied Senate President Wilton Simpson, House Speaker Sprowls and DeSantis, urging them to allow him to transfer his slot machine permit from his Big Easy Casino in Hallandale Beach to his Fontainebl­eau Hotel and Resort in Miami Beach.

Whether the move is legal under Florida’s Constituti­on is a question likely to be sorted out in the courts, if it were to pass. But the prospect is enough to worry Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber and prompted the city commission last week to authorize additional lobbying firepower and legal assistance to fight the legislatio­n.

“It’s not an incredibly novel idea, but it’s not one that has ever seen any kind of support before,” Gelber said at the March 17 city commission meeting. “We believe it has the support, potentiall­y, of the governor and the legislativ­e leadership.”

Also concerned is developer Armando Codina, who dedicated much of his career to developing the city of Doral, and he warns that if the state allows Soffer to transfer a gaming permit, then Donald Trump is likely to be allowed to do the same with another permit, allowing him to turn the Trump National Doral into a casino resort.

“It would change the fabric of this community forever,” Codina told Miami Beach commission­ers at the March 17 meeting. He said he would work with Gelber and auto magnate Norman Braman “to fight this to the bitter end.”

Rep. Michael Grieco, D-Miami Beach, says Florida’s diversity doesn’t do well with a one-sizefits-all approach. “To have someone in Tallahasse­e dictating how Miami Beach is going to manage its own community is a very hard pill to swallow,” he said. “Local officials are the ones that most directly touch the residents and they know best when it comes to what’s best for their local community.”

FIREARMS

The state already preempts local government­s from regulating firearms and ammunition, and SB 1884 expands the preemption to clarify that they can’t also use “unwritten policies” to restrict firearms.

The bill sponsor, Sen. Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero, cited the example of a police chief who refused to return someone’s gun held in the evidence room after the person had been arrested and the case had been deposed, requiring the person to get a court order. When pressed in a committee last week, he could not cite which police chief was involved. The bill also allows people to sue local government­s if they violate the firearms preemption law.

Sen. Tina Polsky, DWest Palm Beach, who was among the Democrats opposing the bill, said it sounded like the bill was attempting to correct a problem with police conduct, not a city-establishe­d policy.

DESANTIS HOLDS KEY

As governor, DeSantis has the power to halt the preemption laws, but his record on them has been uneven.

Last year, after the Key West city commission voted to prohibit the sale of sunscreen lotions containing two chemicals that had been shown to be damaging to coral reefs, legislator­s passed SB 172 to overturn the action. Proponents, such as the Florida Chamber of Commerce and the Florida Retail Federation, argued that all sunscreen should be available for people in the Keys because of the danger of skin cancer. DeSantis, who had previously vetoed a similar bill to preempt bans on plastic straws, signed the sunscreen bill without commenting on his reasons.

When it came to vacation rentals, DeSantis had signaled that he supports the ability of local government­s to regulate them. Last year, after Simpson, now the Senate president, forged a compromise on vacation rentals between the advertisin­g platforms, Florida Realtors and the Florida Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n, the governor squelched it.

“We have 22 million people, almost. We are a very diverse state. For us to be micromanag­ing vacation rentals, I am not sure that is the right thing to do,” DeSantis said at the time.

This year, as local government­s have been roadblocks to his attempts to open everything in the face of a pandemic, the governor has imposed his own preemption­s. He issued an executive order to block local government­s from issuing mask mandates and social-distancing limitation­s for businesses, and another executive order rescinding all fines. Several local government­s, including Miami-Dade County, have defied him and continue enforcing the public health mandates and issuing fines.

Mary Ellen Klas can be reached at meklas@miamiheral­d.com and @MaryEllenK­las

Mary Ellen Klas : Mary Ellen Klas

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, speaks during a roundtable discussion with Miami-Dade County mayors regarding COVID-19 on July 14, 2020, at the Stephen P. Clark Government Center in Miami.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, speaks during a roundtable discussion with Miami-Dade County mayors regarding COVID-19 on July 14, 2020, at the Stephen P. Clark Government Center in Miami.
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