The Palm Beach Post

Scott signs renewable-energy bill, boosting solar

Governor also signed health care bill tied to budget.

- By Jim Saunders News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Gov. Rick Scott late Friday signed 13 bills, including a measure that will carry out a constituti­onal amendment aimed at boosting the use of solar energy in the state.

Lawmakers passed the renewable-energy bill (SB 90), after nearly 73 percent of voters approved the constituti­onal amendment during last August’s primary elections. The amendment called for extending a renewable-energy tax break to commercial and industrial properties and making renewable-energy equipment exempt from state tangible personal property taxes.

The amendment, which had widespread support from business and environmen­tal groups, needed lawmakers to approve a bill to carry it out.

Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican who sponsored the bill during this spring’s legislativ­e session, said in a prepared statement that Scott “answered the will of the voters” in signing the measure Friday.

“I look forward to continuing our work to diversify Florida’s energy economy, so we can live up to our title as the Sunshine State and lead in renewable energy,” Brandes said.

Scott on Friday also signed a 59-page health care bill (SB 2514) that is linked to the new state budget. The so-called “conforming” bill includes issues such as a plan for moving forward with up to $1.5 billion in funding for the Low Income Pool program, which provides extra money to hospitals that serve large numbers of poor and uninsured patients.

Lawmakers did not include the Low Income Pool, or LIP, money in the budget because state and federal officials continue working out details. But the bill signed Friday sets up a process for the state Agency for Health Care Administra­tion to ask legislativ­e leaders to release the money after a final agreement is reached with the federal government.

The wide-ranging bill also deals with issues such as revamping the way nursing homes will be paid in the future in the Medicaid program. The issue, known as moving to a “prospectiv­e payment” system, drew debate during this spring’s legislativ­e session, at least in part because of disagreeme­nts in the nursing-home industry.

Among the other bills signed Friday was a measure (SB 118) that includes sealing criminal-history records in situations when people are arrested but not found guilty of crimes. That could apply, for example, when charges are dropped or defendants are acquitted at trial.

Lawmakers unanimousl­y passed the bill, but the First Amendment Foundation open-government group asked Scott to veto it.

Another bill signed Friday (SB 1726) directs the Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services to oversee industrial-hemp pilot projects at the University of Florida and Florida A&M University. The bill said the purpose of the projects is to “cultivate, process, test, research, create, and market safe and effective commercial applicatio­ns for industrial hemp in the agricultur­al sector in this state.”

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