Orlando Sentinel

Housing bill heads to DeSantis

$711M legislatio­n provides incentives to build more affordable workforce units

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — With final approval Friday from the Florida House, Senate President Kathleen Passidomo’s $711 million effort to help make housing more affordable for working Floridians is headed to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The House voted 103-6 to pass a bill (SB 102) dubbed the Live Local Act. The bill would provide incentives for private investment in affordable housing and encourage mixed-use developmen­t in struggling commercial areas.

It also bars local rent control laws, which Orange County considered last year, and pre-empts local government rules on zoning, density and building heights in certain circumstan­ces.

Passidomo, R-Naples, said the measure aims to end “affordable housing stereotype­s” in creating options needed by the workforce.

House sponsor Demi Busatta Cabrera, R-Coral Gables, said innovative concepts in the proposal would allow Floridians to live close to where they work.

“As our state continues to grow, we need to make sure that Floridians can live close to good jobs, schools and hospitals and other centers of their communitie­s that fit within their household budgets, no matter their stage of life or income,” Busatta Cabrera said.

The Senate unanimousl­y passed the measure on March 8.

Among other things, the bill would create tax exemptions for developmen­ts that set aside at least 70 units for affordable housing and would speed permits and developmen­t orders for affordable-housing projects.

Some Democrats expressed concerns about parts of the bill that would prohibit rent controls and impose certain local government pre-emptions.

Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Or

lando, pointed to Orange County voters last year approving a referendum to enact rent control because of a lack of affordable housing and rising rents.

“I do feel like parts of the bill are going to do a lot of good. It won’t be immediate. It’ll take time,” said Eskamani, who voted against the measure. “But my constituen­ts are seeking immediate relief. They’re seeking renter protection­s.”

Orange County’s rent-control plan hasn’t taken effect because of a legal challenge by the industry groups Florida Realtors and the Florida Apartment Associatio­n.

Rep. Ashley Gantt, D-Miami, said local government pre-emptions in the bill would limit public engagement in some South Florida communitie­s facing developmen­t pressures.

“Overtown, Allapattah, Liberty City, these historical­ly discrimina­ted-against and systemical­ly discrimina­ted-against areas are now areas of interest for developmen­t because they are above sea level. And provisions in this bill remove the local government’s authority to address issues that are particular to these communitie­s,” Gantt said.

“In particular, the removal of the public notice and the hearing process is especially concerning for me and my constituen­ts because at these hearings is when our community has the opportunit­y to vocalize what we want our neighborho­od to look like.”

For other Democrats, those concerns were outweighed by increases in funding for housing and rental assistance.

“I’m part of a nonprofit that is building an affordable housing community,” Rep. Allison Tant, D-Tallahasse­e, said. “What I’ve learned through this process, besides the huge need there is for everybody out there for housing, is that it’s really hard to go get affordable housing dollars.”

The bill would provide money for a series of programs, including $252 million for the longstandi­ng State Housing Initiative­s Partnershi­p, or SHIP, program, $150 million a year for the State Apartment Incentive Loan, or SAIL, program, and an additional $100 million for the Hometown Heroes program, which is designed to help teachers, health-care workers and police officers buy homes.

The state budget for the current year includes $362.7 million for affordable housing.

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