The Palm Beach Post

Voters to consider 13 amendments in November

- By Lloyd Dunkelberg­er l.dunkelberg­er@newsservic­eflorida.com

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida voters will get a chance to decide in November whether 13 is a lucky or unlucky number.

The state Constituti­on Revision Commission, which meets every 20 years, finished its work Monday night after approving eight proposed constituti­onal amendments for the Nov. 6 general-election ballot.

Those eight proposals will join five other measures already on the ballot, including three approved by the Legislatur­e and two approved in petition drives, to bring the total to 13.

And that’s not the half of it. One of the more-controvers­ial aspects of this year’s commission proposals is that six of the eight measures bundle together multiple subjects. For example, what will appear on the ballot as Amendment 9 combines a proposed ban on offshore oil drilling in state waters with a proposed ban on vaping in the workplace.

Other multiple-issue proposals combine victims’ rights and new rules for judges (Amendment 6); higher education governance and first responder benefits (Amendment 7); and illegal aliens’ property rights, high-speed rail and criminal prosecutio­ns (Amendment 11).

■ Amendment 6: It would establish a series of rights for crime victims, including the right to be notified of major developmen­ts in criminal cases and the right to be heard in legal proceeding­s. It would increase the mandatory retirement age for judges from 70 to 75. It would provide that judges or hearing officers should not necessaril­y defer to the interpreta­tion of laws and rules by government­al agencies in legal proceeding­s.

■ Amendment 7: It would require the payment of death benefits when law enforcemen­t officers, paramedics, correction­al officers and other first responders are killed while performing official duties. It also would apply to Florida National Guard and active-duty military members stationed in Florida. It would establish a governance system for the 28 state and community colleges. It would require a super-majority vote by university boards of trustees and the Board of Governors when raising student fees.

■ Amendment 11: It would remove language that prohibits “aliens ineligible for citizenshi­p” from owning property. It would remove obsolete language that authorizes a high-speed rail system. It would revise language to make clear that the repeal of a criminal statute does not affect the prosecutio­n of any crime committed before the repeal.

The other two “bundled” proposals each include several questions on related issues: Amendment 8 on public education and Amendment 10 on government­al structure.

Amendment 8 would impose an eight-year term limit on school board members. It also would allow an alternativ­e process for approving public schools, including charter schools, rather than by local school boards. And it would establish a requiremen­t for the teaching of civic literacy in public schools.

Amendment 10 would require all charter-county government­s to have elected constituti­onal officers, including sheriffs. It would lead to the Legislatur­e beginning its annual session in January in even-numbered years. It would create an Office of Domestic Security and Counterter­rorism in the Department of Law Enforcemen­t. It would revise the constituti­onal authority for the Department of

Amendment 10 would require all charter-county government­s to have elected constituti­onal officers, including sheriffs.

Veterans’ Affairs.

Only two of the proposed constituti­onal amendments are limited to single subjects: Amendment 13, which would ban greyhound racing in the state after Dec. 31, and Amendment 12, which would impose a six-year lobbying ban on former state elected officials, state agencies heads and local elected officials and create a new ethics standard that would prohibit public officials from obtaining a “disproport­ionate benefit” from their actions while in office.

In total, the eight ballot measures group 20 proposals that were debated and advanced by the commission.

The constituti­onal revisions proposed by the Legislatur­e would ask voters to expand the homestead property-tax exemption, require a two-thirds vote by future legislatur­es when raising taxes or fees and make permanent an earlier temporary amendment limiting property tax assessment­s on non-homesteads to 10 percent a year.

The petition-drive measures would allow voters to decide on future expansions of casino gambling and would restore voting rights to felons who have served their sentences.

The 13 measures on the November ballot will be the most voters have faced since 1998, the last time the Constituti­on Revision Commission met and put nine amendments on the ballot. Voters approved eight of the nine amendments as well as four constituti­onal changes sought by the Legislatur­e.

But this year will be the first time that ballot measures from the commission will have to be approved by at least 60 percent of voters. Florida increased the margin for approval of constituti­onal amendments from a majority vote to 60 percent in 2006.

In the past two decades, over the course of 11 general elections, the average number of constituti­onal amendments on the ballot has been more than seven, ranging from a low of three measures in 2014 to the high of 13 proposals in 1998 and this year.

It is typical for some measures to fail, although in 2004 and 2006 voters approved all 14 amendments on the ballot in those two years. But in 2012, when voters faced 11 amendments, all passed by the Legislatur­e, they rejected eight of the measures.

Brecht Heuchan, chairman of the panel’s Style and Drafting Committee, which put together the final proposals considered by the commission Monday, defended the use of grouping, noting it was done by the two prior commission­s in 1998 and 1978.

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