Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Judge: Law abolishing toll road authority unconstitu­tional

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida lawmakers violated a home-rule provision in the state Constituti­on by abolishing a toll-road authority in Miami-Dade County and replacing it with another agency during this year’s legislativ­e session, a Leon County circuit judge ruled Friday.

In finding the new law unconstitu­tional, Circuit Judge John Cooper rejected state arguments that the longstandi­ng Miami-Dade County Expressway Authority had become a regional road agency because it was able to interact and contract outside the county.

“Look, home rule as it relates to Miami-Dade County is unique to Miami-Dade County,” Cooper said. “It’s special. It’s different. I recognize all that. But it’s in the Constituti­on.”

Cooper added that since the home-rule power was created more than 60 years ago, “there has been no real serious attempt, that I’m aware of, to change that.”

The state is expected to appeal to the Tallahas see based 1st District Court of Appeal.

The bill (HB 385), signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis in May, was the product of a political fight, mostly among Miami-Dade lawmakers, during the 2019 session.

The bill would make numerous changes, including seeking a 10-year freeze on toll rates and developing a rebate program for MiamiDade motorists who use the SunPass tolling system.

But the lawsuit has focused on part of the law that would replace the authority with a new entity called the Greater Miami Expressway Agency.

The lawsuit alleges that the legislatio­n violates Miami-Dade County home-rule powers that date back to 1956 and were preserved when the state Constituti­on was updated in 1968. Also, the lawsuit contends that the bill would impair the authority’s contractua­l rights.

Cooper said the law was too narrowly focused.

Attorney Daniel Nordby, representi­ng the state, argued that in creating a new agency with powers beyond a single county, lawmakers went outside the home-rule analysis.

“With GMX (Greater Miami Expressway Agency), the Legislatur­e has created an expressway agency that has the authority and the scope extending beyond the boundary of Miami-Dade County,” Nordby said.

A quick resolution to the legal fight is being sought, in part, because the authority continues to pay employees, while uncertaint­y remains with pending turnover. The new agency’s board would be required to decide on retaining staff.

The state had also argued the authority had no grounds to sue as its existence had been eliminated with the new law.

Cooper last month, while removing DeSantis from the lawsuit, rejected requests to dismiss the case by the Florida House and the Florida Department of Transporta­tion.

The Miami-Dade County Expressway Authority, created in 1994, has long spurred arguments in the Legislatur­e, with lawmakers also passing measures aimed at the authority in 2017 and 2018, according to the lawsuit. Among the issues surroundin­g the authority have been toll rates.

Senate sponsor Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, said during a floor debate that changes were needed for Miami-Dade residents.

“I am concerned with all of the constituen­ts that have had enough with the conditions of the Miami-Dade Expressway Authority,” Diaz said. “I am concerned with a county government that has taken over an independen­t authority that was created by the state to serve the citizens of Miami-Dade.”

But Sen. Annette Taddeo, a Miami Democrat who opposed the bill, issued a statement Friday saying the state should not appeal Cooper’s ruling.

“With today’s court ruling that HB 385 was an ‘unconstitu­tional special law,’ instead of appealing this decision or filing an injunction at great cost to taxpayers, I am calling on all parties involved to put aside their personal issues with MDX (the Miami-Dade County Expressway Authority) and work with stakeholde­rs to ensure that the serious transporta­tion problems we have in Miami-Dade County are addressed,” Taddeo said. “After all, the purported purpose of the legislatio­n was to lower tolls. Our traffic issues are too immense to do anything else.”

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