| Week of March 9th-13th, 2026 |
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Florida Maintains Economic Momentum Following Conclusion of 2026 60-Day Regular Legislative Session Despite Discord
The Florida Chamber sees the passage of major public sector union collective bargaining reforms while defeating several anti-business bills, including lawsuit abuse reform rollbacks; Competitiveness decisions remain on outstanding budget and tax issues
Florida’s Regular Legislative Session by the Numbers:
- 1,788 Bills and PCBs filed; approximately 185 general bills passed both chambers
- Florida Chamber of Commerce testified approximately 100 times on legislation impacting job creators
- Florida Chamber is analyzing approximately 4,000 regular session votes cast by lawmakers and will release its annual Legislative Report Card with our forthcoming How They Voted publication
- $1.4 billion difference in House and Senate budgets, requiring a special session before June 30
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (March 13, 2026) – At the conclusion of the 2026 regular legislative session, Florida has maintained its economic momentum, marking another year of measured progress for job creators without any major steps backward in Florida’s competitiveness.
“Florida continues to outpace much of the nation because of a united business community that is focused on the right things happening in Florida,” said Mark Wilson, President & CEO of the Florida Chamber of Commerce. “This year, lawmakers took incremental steps in strengthening Florida’s business climate without backtracking on policies that have led to Florida’s nationally-recognized pro-business environment, ensuring job creators and families can continue to thrive.”
Throughout the 2026 session, the Florida Chamber remained focused on the issues that furthered Florida’s economic competitiveness and aligned with our Florida 2030 Blueprint. Key priorities championed by the Florida Chamber included:
- Protecting taxpayers and putting students first with further public sector union transparency and accountability: Continues the work from 2023 to strengthen collective bargaining processes by requiring a higher threshold to ensure the entire bargaining class is represented and protects taxpayers by preventing taxpayer dollars from being used on union or political activity. When 43 percent of third graders are unable to read at grade level, the focus should be on the classroom and not on union activities.
- Creating clarity to benefit job creators and employees: Provides certainty and clarity on the statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit under the Florida Civil Rights Act when either the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission or Florida Commission on Human Relations is performing an investigation of an alleged violation.
- Expanding affordable workforce housing options and opportunities: Continues the work of “Live Local” to address additional workforce housing needs by restricting local governments from circumventing Live Local requirements through excessive regulations and authorizing residential housing on property owned by local governments.
- Lowering costs on new development: Provides clarity, consistency, and prevents abuse in the way local governments calculate impact fees by defining “extraordinary circumstances,” ensuring these fees are truly being used to pay for future infrastructure needs.
- Expanding opportunities to address healthcare workforce shortages: Expands the successful Linking Industry to Nursing Education (LINE) matching grant fund to allow greater opportunity and flexibility for Florida's higher education institutions to partner with stakeholders to grow their nursing education and other related health science programs that provide direct care and diagnostic services to patients.
- Strengthening resiliency of Florida’s coastal and inland communities: Promotes public-private partnerships and investment in resiliency projects while also expediting permitting for the construction and hardening of critical infrastructure to protect against extreme weather, flooding, and coastal erosion.
- Streamlining Florida’s building permit process: Provides clarity, enhances predictability, and modernizes the permitting process by establishing a statewide uniform permit application for residential and commercial projects while also relaxing minor projects from permitting, and prevents delays in construction by encouraging private provider options and preventing duplicate inspections.
- Furthering Florida’s leadership in mobility innovation: Advances the Florida Chamber Autonomous Florida goal of making Florida the global capital of mobility innovation by investing in Florida’s advanced air mobility industry and adds vertiports and charging stations to the list of qualified public-private partnerships.
- Attracting high-value economic development projects: Creates a framework for Florida to continue to compete for the attraction and development of large-scale data centers – and the economic benefits and revenue generation they offer - while ensuring Florida ratepayers, water and communities remain protected.
The Florida Chamber also worked tirelessly to defeat legislation that would have reversed progress already made toward improving Florida’s legal climate or that would have discouraged innovation and additional business development in Florida. Once again this year, legislation was filed, heard and ultimately defeated that would have undone provisions of the historic 2023 lawsuit abuse reforms. Additionally, legislation was advanced initially that would have effectively barred certain companies or industries from doing business in Florida, despite the beneficial economic impact of these projects.
“Florida’s economic success does not happen by accident,” said David Sweeney, Chairman of the board for RS&H and the Florida Chamber of Commerce. “It requires consistent leadership, data-driven policy and strong partnerships between the private sector and policymakers, and for over 100 years the Florida Chamber has been at the helm steering Florida’s business community to success.”
Further work remains when the legislature returns to Tallahassee to complete work on the budget and outstanding tax policies. The Florida Chamber continues to encourage the legislature to consider adopting provisions of the “Trump Tax Cuts” from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to encourage capital investment and innovation in Florida.
“Florida cannot rest on its laurels but must continue focusing on our economic competitiveness and pro-business environment,” Frank Walker, Executive Vice President of Government & Political Relations said. “As we continue to compete with other states and nations, Florida can send a signal that investment and innovation are welcome in Florida by easing administrative and economic burdens through the adoption of additional pro-business policies that stimulate job creation and unleash pathways to prosperity for all Floridians.”
The Florida Chamber team is analyzing thousands of votes and will release its annual Legislative Report Card with its annual publication How They Voted, highlighting grades earned by all 156 legislators in the Florida House and Senate based on their votes during the 2026 legislative session. The Florida Chamber Legislative Report Card is an annual opportunity to recognize members of the Florida Legislature who placed making Florida more competitive through private-sector job creation above special interests and their attempts to protect the status quo. The Report Card also lets Florida families, small businesses, taxpayers, and voters know who voted in favor of private-sector job creation and a stronger economy. |
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The Florida Chamber’s Florida Business Agenda is guided by our Florida 2030 Blueprint, which outlines our Six Pillars framework, with 39 goals, with the ultimate goal of catapulting Florida from 15th largest economy to 10th largest economy in the world by 2030.
Below is a comprehensive review of legislative activity from the 2026 Legislative Session.
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| Improving Florida’s Talent Pipeline for a Better Workforce |
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Resident Status for Tuition Purposes
Allows inmates to retain residency status for tuition purposes at a Florida postsecondary institution which expands educational opportunities for those that are incarcerated to promote second chances, reduce recidivism and create a pathway toward long-term economic self-sufficiency. |
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SB 720: Sen. Rosalind Osgood
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Advanced Education Options
Expands dual enrollment opportunities for students with an emphasis on STEM courses. Additionally, the legislation provides detailed incentive funding to schools that provide advanced education options. |
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| SB 1676: Sen. Stan McClain |
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Linking Industry to Nursing Education Fund
Modifies the Linking Industry to Nursing Education funding to allow for other related health science professions, allowing higher education institutions greater flexibility to collaborate with their healthcare partners and seek grant funding to combat healthcare workforce shortages. |
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SB 1246: Sen. Tracie Davis
SB 2516: Sen. Gayle Harrell
HB 1325: Rep. Erika Booth |
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Mathematics Education
Allows students to take an applied math course that is tailored to industry training and real-world applications for their algebra credit while still requiring students to take the end-of-course Algebra 1 exam. |
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PASSED
Included in final passage of HB 1279 |
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| Creating Quality Jobs by Diversifying Florida’s Economy |
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Manufacturing
Enhances Florida’s competitiveness in manufacturing by creating the Statewide Office of Manufacturing within the Department of Commerce, led by a Chief Manufacturing Officer, as recommended by the Florida Trade & Logistics 2030 Study, who is responsible for state manufacturing activities and strategy. |
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SB 528: Sen. Keith Truenow
HB 483: Rep. Nan Cobb
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Rural Communities
Seeks to advance the 2030 Blueprint goal of doubling the rural share of state GDP by establishing programs aimed at addressing the challenges rural communities face, such as economic development, transportation and broadband connectivity, healthcare access, education, workforce development, and more. The bill also creates the Office of Rural Prosperity with the purpose of supporting rural communities by helping rural stakeholders navigate available programs and resources and representing rural interests across state government. |
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SB 250: Sen. Corey Simon
HB 723: Rep. Shane Abbott
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Research and Development Tax Credit
Makes progress towards the 2030 Blueprint goal of being a top 3 state for research and development funding by increasing the R&D tax credit cap to attract and incentivize companies to perform R&D in Florida. |
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SB 1076: Sen. Alexis Calatayud
HB 847: Rep. Doug Bankson |
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Space Florida
Promotes Florida’s space industry by exempting defense and aerospace businesses partnering with Space Florida from property taxes, use taxes, and sales tax. |
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| SB 1512: Sen. Danny Burgess |
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Data Centers
Allows for the development of data centers in Florida while ensuring that appropriate safeguards are in place, protecting ratepayers and Florida’s water resources. |
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SB 484: Sen. Bryan Avila
HB 1007: Rep. Griff Griffitts |
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| Preparing Florida's Infrastructure for Smart Growth and Development |
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Tax Credits for Contributions to Assist Homebuyers
Incentivizes employers to assist employees in purchasing a home by creating an optional tax credit program for downpayment assistance. |
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SB 1672: Sen. Stan McClain
HB 311: Rep. Tae Edmonds
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Housing
As part of an all-of-the-above strategy to addresses affordable workforce housing challenges, requires local governments to adopt ordinances that allow accessory dwelling units in single-family residential areas to create more housing options. |
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SB 48: Sen. Don Gaetz
HB 313: Rep. Danny Nix, Jr.
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Former Phosphate Mining Lands
Encourages economic development and smart growth by creating a process to put safe former phosphate mine sites to productive economic use. |
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Land Use and Development Regulations
Streamlines the permitting application process by providing clarity in how “compatibility” is assessed.
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SB 208: Sen. Stan McClain
HB 399: Rep. David Borrero |
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Growth Management
Lowers costs on new development by preventing local governments from abusing the calculation of impact fees by defining “extraordinary circumstances” to justify increases. |
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SB 548: Sen. Stan McClain
HB 1139: Rep. Richard Gentry |
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PASSED
Included in final passage of HB 1329. |
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Commercial Construction Projects
Enhances predictability in the permitting process by establishing a statewide uniform permit application and reduces costs through a uniform fee reduction when private provider services are used. |
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SB 526: Sen. Erin Grall
HB 405: Rep. Griff Griffitts |
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Cybersecurity Standards and Liabilities
Strengthens critical infrastructure by protecting local governments, companies, and third-party providers from liability in a cyber-attack when the entity has adopted a qualified cybersecurity program. |
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SB 692: Sen. Tom Leek
HB 635: Rep. Mike Giallombardo
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Electric Vehicle Registration Fees
Supports the maintenance of Florida’s roadways by establishing a reasonable fee for electric vehicles to help offset lost revenues from the collection of gas taxes. |
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| SB 804: Sen. Keith Truenow |
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Infrastructure and Resiliency
Strengthens resiliency efforts by expanding eligibility for public-private partnerships to include coastal resiliency projects. |
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| HB 751: Rep. Chip LaMarca |
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PASSED
Included in final passage of HB 1417. |
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Local Goverment Land Development Regulations and Orders
Addresses attainable workforce housing challenges by providing greater flexibility in the minimum lot size requirements for housing to allow for more units. |
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SB 948: Sen. Stan McClain
HB 1143: Rep. Danny Nix |
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Building Permits and Inspections
Streamlines the building permit process for single family dwellings by relaxing minor projects from permitting, creating a uniform building application, and preventing delays in construction by encouraging private provider options and preventing duplicate inspections. |
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SB 1234: Sen. Nick DiCeglie
HB 803: Rep. Dana Trabulsy |
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Public Employee Housing Benefits
Increases access to affordable workforce housing by creating an alternative method to assist public employees with buying homes through the optional “Heroes Reward Program.” |
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SB 1432: Sen. Alexis Calatayud
HB 1065: Rep. J.J. Grow |
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Vertiports
Encourages progress toward the Autonomous Florida goal of becoming the mobility innovation capital of the world and encourages the growth of Advanced Air Mobility by adding “vertiports and charging systems” as qualified projects for public-private partnerships and allows the Florida Department of Transportation to fund public vertiport costs up to 100% in some cases. |
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SB 1362: Sen. Gayle Harrell
HB 1093: Rep. Leonard Spencer
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Affordable Housing
Strengthens the Live Local Act, creating more affordable workforce housing options by allowing multifamily and mixed-use residential housing on locally owned and certain religious institution property and prevents local governments from circumventing the Live Local Act through new regulations and bureaucratic technicalities |
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SB 1548: Sen. Alexis Calatayud
HB 1389: Rep. Mike Redondo
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Delivery of Commercial Goods by Autonomous Vehicles
While Florida has been a national leader in the safe deployment bill of autonomous vehicles through Autonomous Florida, this bill moves Florida backward by blanket prohibiting the use of autonomous vehicles for commercial deliveries without a licensed human operator. |
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SB 1258: Sen. Tracie Davis
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Autonomous Vehicle Safety
While Florida has been a national leader in the safe deployment bill of autonomous vehicles through Autonomous Florida, this bill moves Florida backward by blanket prohibiting the use of autonomous vehicles from engaging in interstate commerce or transporting passengers or goods for hire without a licensed human operator. |
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HB 1469: Rep. Angela Nixon
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| Building the Perfect Climate for Business |
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Local Business Taxes
Reduces taxes on local businesses and allows for the reinvestment of that capital into employees, communities or the business itself by eliminating the local business tax. |
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SB 122: Sen. Keith Truenow
HB 103: Rep. Adam Botana
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Rates for Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Coverage
Advances the goal of having a competitive and stable private insurance market by ensuring actuarially sound rates for Citizens insurance policies, reducing the likelihood of assessments or “hurricane taxes” on Floridians, and reinforcing efforts to return Citizens to insurer of last resort. |
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SB 634: Sen. Nick DiCeglie
HB 275: Rep. Jose Alvarez |
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Products Liability Actions Under the Florida Pesticide Law
Protects Florida’s agriculture industry and the reliability of the food supply chain by preventing product liability lawsuits unless the business did not follow governmental use and application guidelines in using certain agricultural products. |
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SB 518: Sen. Keith Truenow
HB 443: Rep. J.J. Grow
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Rate Fillings for Property Insures
Caps the amount of future insurance rate increases, discouraging new and existent insurance companies from doing business in Florida by disregarding free market principles. |
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SB 30: Sen. Barbara Sharief
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Corporate Income Tax
By establishing a mandatory unitary combined reporting approach for corporate income tax, this bill hurts certain businesses in Florida by requiring a consolidated return and excluding certain deductions that are currently allowable for corporate income tax purposes. |
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| SB 238: Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith |
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Rating Factors for Automobile Liability Insurers
Limits the ability of insurers to develop actuarially sound auto insurance rates by prohibiting certain risk factors from being included in rates. |
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SB 224: Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith
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Motor Vehicle Insurance
Repeals Florida’s No-Fault Motor Vehicle Law and increases insurance requirements, which will result in higher premiums, an increased uninsured motorist rate, and a rise in litigation under a pure liability system. |
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SB 522: Sen. Erin Grall
HB 769: Rep. Meg Weinberger |
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Division of Labor Standards
Negatively impacts Florida’s business-friendly climate by creating the Division of Labor standards, which establishes new layers of government bureaucracy that interfere in the employer-employee relationship. |
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SB 358: Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith
HB 987: Rep. Angela Nixon |
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Multifamily Residential Properties
Eliminates a key-provision of the Florida Chamber-led lawsuit abuse reforms from 2023 by removing a presumption against liability for multifamily property owners for certain intentional acts on the property. |
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SB 956: Sen. Jennifer Bradley
HB 1423: Rep. Michelle Salzman
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Remedies for Violations of the Florida Civil Rights Act
Creates clarity on the statute of limitations for alleged violations of the Florida Civil Rights Act, benefitting both the employer and employee and ensuring claims are resolved in a timely manner. |
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SB 1096: Sen. Danny Burgess
HB 1407: Wyman Duggan |
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Homeowner’s Insurance Premium Reductions
Discourages a competitive and stable insurance market and companies writing policies in Florida by instituting government-mandated price controls lowering premiums charged by insurance companies. |
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SB 1476: Sen. Mack Bernard
HB 775: Rep. Jervonte Edmonds |
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Restrictions on Employer-owned Life Insurance Policies
Creates a new private cause of action and adds state regulations around employer-owned life insurance policies that are already regulated at the federal level. |
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SB 894: Sen. Jonathan Martin
HB 261: Rep. Peggy Gossett-Seidman
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Attorney Fees and Costs for Motor Vehicle Personal Injury Protections Benefits
Worsens Florida’s Lawsuit abuse climate by reinstating attorney fee awards in Florida’s Personal Injury protection system, which will increase frivolous litigation and auto insurance rates for consumers. |
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SB 926: Sen. Jonathan Martin
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Coverage by Citizens Property Insurance Corporation
Increases the probability of assessments or “hurricane taxes” on Floridians by increasing the eligibility for Citizens’ Insurance policies and further capping rate increases in specified counties, ensuring premiums are not actuarially sound and anti-competitive with the private market. |
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SB 1024: Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez
HB 909: Rep. Jim Mooney |
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Assessed Value of Nonhomestead Property
Creates parity for non-homestead properties and lessens the property tax burden on renters and local businesses by reducing the cap on the annual increase in the assessed value of property to match the cap on homestead properties. |
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Litigation Financing
In order to further improve Florida’s legal climate, supports efforts to create transparency around and accountability for third party financers who invest in Florida's lawsuits for economic gain. |
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SB 1396: Sen. Colleen Burton
HB 1157: Rep. Fabián Basabe |
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Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund
Increases the risk of hurricane taxes on all Florida policyholders by shifting storm risk away from the private market to the public market via the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund. |
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SB 1448: Sen. Nick DiCeglie
HB 1349: Rep. Hillary Cassel |
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Awards of Attorney Fees in Insurance Claims
Worsens Florida's lawsuit abuse climate by reinstituting attorney fees that were eliminated in 2022 & 2023 for insurance cases- reopening a legal mechanism that led to fraud and abuse and drove up insurance rates for all Floridians. While these bills are not identical, the intent of both is to undo the 2022-2023 reforms. |
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SB 1268: Sen. Tracie Davis
HB 1269: Rep. Michael Gottlieb
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Admissible Evidence in Personal Injury or Wrongful Death
Eliminates a key provision of the Florida Chamber-led 2023 lawsuit abuse reform by shifting the burden on the defense to rebut damages instead of the plaintiff proving the actual cost of medical damages owed. |
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SB 1558: Sen. Ralph Massullo
HB 1553: Rep. Robert Brackett
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Pricing Based on Collection of Consumer Information
Creates a new private right of action that enhances billboard trial attorneys’ efforts to increase litigation, worsening our lawsuit abuse climate in Florida and is duplicative to the data privacy laws already passed. |
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SB 1746: Sen. Tracie Davis
HB 1499: Rep. Dotie Joseph
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Corporate Income Tax "Piggyback"
Adopts the Federal Internal Revenue Code and decouples from the positive corporate income tax provisions from the federal One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). |
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SB 7048: Sen. Bryan Avila
HB 7031: Rep. Wyman Duggan
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Civil Litigation
Attempts to address jury anchoring and reduce the cost of litigation by requiring the court to consider additional information in the award of noneconomic damages. |
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| SB 1506: Sen. Clay Yarborough |
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Prohibition on Levying Ad Valorem Taxes on Tangible Personal Property
Prohibits local governments from levying ad valorem taxes on tangible personal property, providing annual savings on the taxation of office equipment, machinery, vehicles, livestock, and personal items for local businesses, money that they can invest back in their business, their employees, or in their local communities. |
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SB 552 & SB 550: Sen. Mack Bernard
HB 1277 & HB 1275: Rep. Chip LaMarca |
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| Making Government and Civics more Efficient and Effective |
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Local Government Enforcements Actions
Ensures local governments are applying rules and regulations uniformly and provides legal remedies for businesses to challenge enforcement actions that are unreasonable or arbitrary. |
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SB 588: Sen. Stan McClain
HB 105: Rep. Robert Brackett |
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Regulation of Auxiliary Containers
Improves Florida's regulatory climate by strengthening a Florida Chamber-backed preemption preventing a patchwork of local ordinances on packaging materials used by food service or retail establishments. |
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SB 766: Sen. Jonathan Martin
HB 629: Rep. Tiffany Esposito |
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Threshold for Voter Approval of Constitutional Amendments
Further exposes Florida voters to out-of-state and special interests attempting to thwart the legislative process through amending Florida’s foundational document— lowering the threshold to pass a constitutional amendment or revision from 60% to 50%. |
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SB 1406: Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith
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Public Employees Relations Commission
Ensures transparency and accountability in the collective bargaining process while also promoting the fiscal health of our state by limiting the ability of public sector workers to use government-paid time for union activities. |
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SB 1296: Sen. Jonathan Martin
HB 995: Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka |
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| Championing Florida’s Quality of Life |
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Social Work Licensure Interstate Compact
As recommended in the Florida Chamber Health Council’s Mental Health Report, this legislation would allow licensed social workers to practice across member states under the Social Work Licensure Compact, improving access to behavioral health services. |
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SB 74: Sen. Gayle Harrell
HB 13: Rep. Christine Hunschofsky
HB 693: Rep. Mike Redondo |
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Advanced Practice Registered Nurse Autonomous Practice
Expands access to behavioral health services by authorizing psychiatric mental health APRNs to provide mental health services through telehealth at the level they are already licensed and trained to serve. |
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SB 138: Sen. Keith Truenow
HB 301: Rep. Jason Shoaf |
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Recovery of Damages for Medical Negligence Resulting in Death
Vetoed previously by Governor Ron DeSantis following the 2025 Legislative Session, this legislation would drive up medical malpractice insurance rates by broadening the scope of who is allowed to recover non-economic damages in medical negligence claims. Florida has the highest-in-the-nation medical malpractice insurance costs which place an undue burden on physicians wanting to practice in Florida and ultimately limits the availability of quality and affordable care. |
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SB 1700: Sen. Erin Grall
HB 6003: Rep. Dana Trabusly |
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Advertisement of a Harmful Vaccine
Creates a new cause of action, increasing Florida’s already litigious environment and opens drug companies to endless lawsuits for side-effects they already disclose to consumers in their advertisements. |
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SB 408: Sen. Erin Grall
HB 339: Rep. Monique Miller |
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Coordinated Access Model Pilot Program
Creates a pilot program public-private partnership between the Department of Children and Families, a state university system institution and qualified contracted entities to provide timely and better access to behavioral health services through a single point of entry. |
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SB 1618: Sen. Tom Leek
HB 783: Rep. Judson Sapp |
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Leadership Conference on Safety, Health + Sustainability
May 14-15
Disney’s Contemporary Resort |
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40th Annual Environmental Permitting Summer School
July 21-24
JW Marriott Marco Island Beach Resort |
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Florida Prosperity & Economic Opportunity Solution Summit
June 9
Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay |
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Florida Technology & Innovation Solution Summit
August 11
Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay |
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Florida Learners to Earners Workforce Solution Summit
June 23
Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay |
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Future of Florida Forum (F3) & Florida Chamber Annual Meeting
October 27-28
Grand JW Marriott Bonnet Creek Resort & Spa |
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