Florida 2022 2022 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S1764 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/23/2022

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Appropriations  
 
BILL: CS/SB 1764  
INTRODUCER:  Appropriations Committee (Recommended by Appropriations Subcommittee on 
Agriculture, Environment, and General Government); and Senator Albritton 
SUBJECT:  Municipal Solid Waste-to-Energy Program 
DATE: February 23, 2022 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Sharon Imhof RI Favorable 
2. Blizzard Betta AEG  Recommend: Fav/CS 
3. Blizzard Sadberry AP Fav/CS 
 
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information: 
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes 
 
I. Summary: 
CS/SB 1764 creates section 377.814, Florida Statutes, to establish the Municipal Solid Waste-to-
Energy Program, within the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (DACS), 
comprised of a financial assistance grant program and an incentive grant program. 
 
The stated purpose of the program is to provide financial assistance grants and incentive grants 
to municipal solid waste-to-energy (MSWE) facilities in order to incentivize the production and 
sale of energy and reduce waste disposed of in landfills. 
 
The bill appropriates $100 million in recurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the 
DACS for the 2022-2023 fiscal year to fund the grant program. The bill appropriates $159,816 
from the General Revenue Fund to the DACS to implement and administer the grant program. 
See Section V. Fiscal Impact Statement. 
 
The bill is effective July 1, 2022. 
REVISED:   BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 2 
 
II. Present Situation: 
Municipal Solid Waste-to-Energy 
Energy recovery from waste is the conversion of non-recyclable waste materials into usable heat, 
electricity, or fuel through processes, including combustion, gasification, pyrolization, anaerobic 
digestion and landfill gas recovery.
1
 This process is often called waste-to-energy (WTE). 
 
Municipal solid waste (MSW), simply garbage or trash, can be used to produce energy at WTE 
plants and landfills.
2
 WTE plants burn MSW to produce steam in a boiler and generate 
electricity.
3
 MSW can contain: 
 Biomass, or biogenic (plant or animal products) materials such as paper, cardboard, food 
waste, grass clippings, leaves, wood, and leather products; 
 Nonbiomass combustible materials such as plastics and other synthetic materials made from 
petroleum; and 
 Noncombustible materials such as glass and metals.
4
 
 
In 2018, about 12 percent of the 292 million tons of MSW produced in the United States was 
burned in WTE plants.
5
 The remaining MSW was managed as follows: 
 50 percent was landfilled; 
 23.6 percent was recycled; 
 8.5 percent was composted; and 
 6.1 percent is listed as “other.”
6
 
 
MSW is usually burned at WTE plants, using heat to make steam for generating electricity.
7
 In 
2020, 65 United States power plants generated around 13.5 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity 
from 25 million tons of MSW.
8
 
 
In addition to producing electricity, WTE is a waste management option, reducing the amount of 
material otherwise buried in landfills by about 87 percent.
9
 A WTE plant can reduce 
2,000 pounds of MSW down to around 300 to 600 pounds of ash.
10
 
 
Energy recovery from waste is important in the development of sustainable energy policies and 
is encouraged by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
11
 Recognized as a 
                                                
1
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Energy Recovery from the Combustion of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), 
https://www.epa.gov/smm/energy-recovery-combustion-municipal-solid-waste-msw (last visited Jan 24, 2022). 
2
 U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Biomass explained, Waste-to-energy (Municipal Solid Waste), Basics, 
https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/biomass/waste-to-energy.php (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
3
 U.S. EIA, Biomass explained, Waste-to-energy (Municipal Solid Waste), In Depth, How waste-to-energy plants work, 
https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/biomass/waste-to-energy-in-depth.php (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
4
 U.S. EIA, supra note 2. 
5
 Id. 
6
 Id. 
7
 Id. 
8
 Id. 
9
 Id.  
10
 Id. 
11
 U.S. EPA, supra note 1.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 3 
 
renewable energy source, WTE facilities produce relatively clean, renewable energy through the 
combustion of municipal solid waste in specially designed power plants equipped with pollution 
control equipment to clean emissions. 
 
Municipal Solid Waste-to-Energy in Florida 
For over 30 years, WTE has been an integral component of Florida’s solid waste management 
program.
12
 In the 1993 revisions to the 1988 Solid Waste Management Act, the Legislature 
recognized the need to use an integrated approach to municipal solid waste management by using 
waste reduction, recycling, WTE facilities, and landfills.
13
  
 
Section 403.7061, F.S., relating to the requirements for review of new WTE facility capacity by 
the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), defines the term “waste-to-energy facility” 
as: 
 
[A] facility that uses an enclosed device using controlled combustion to 
thermally break down solid, liquid, or gaseous combustible solid waste to 
an ash residue that contains little or no combustible material and that 
produces electricity, steam, or other energy as a result. The term does not 
include facilities that primarily burn fuels other than solid waste even if such 
facilities also burn some solid waste as a fuel supplement. The term also 
does not include facilities that burn vegetative, agricultural, or silvicultural 
wastes, bagasse, clean dry wood, methane or other landfill gas, wood fuel 
derived from construction or demolition debris, or waste tires, alone or in 
combination with fossil fuels. 
 
Florida has the largest MSW burn capacity in the country.
14
 The state went from having one 
small WTE plant in 1982 to having 12 operating facilities.
15
 The following counties have at least 
one facility: 
 Bay; 
 Broward; 
 Miami-Dade; 
 Hillsborough; 
 Lake; 
 Palm Beach; 
 Pasco; and 
 Pinellas.
16
 
 
                                                
12
 See s. 403.7061(1), F.S. 
13
 Id. 
14
 Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), Waste-to-Energy, https://floridadep.gov/waste/permitting-
compliance-assistance/content/waste-energy (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
15
 Id. 
16
 DEP, Florida Waste-to-Energy Facilities, https://floridadep.gov/sites/default/files/WTE_Contacts-2016.pdf (last visited 
Jan. 24, 2022).  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 4 
 
These counties are among Florida’s most populous, accounting for 48 percent of Florida’s 
population.
17
 
 
Florida Public Service Commission 
The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) is an arm of the legislative branch of 
government.
18
 The role of the PSC is to ensure that Florida’s consumers receive utility services, 
including electric, natural gas, telephone, water, and wastewater, in a safe, reasonable, and 
reliable manner.
19
 In order to do so, the PSC exercises authority over public utilities in one or 
more of the following areas: (1) Rate or economic regulation; (2) Market competition oversight; 
and/or (3) Monitoring of safety, reliability, and service issues.
20
 
 
Public Utilities 
A public utility includes any person or legal entity supplying electricity or gas, including natural, 
manufactured, or similar gaseous substance, to or for the public within the state.
21
 The term does 
not include municipal electric utilities and rural electric cooperatives.
22
 Therefore, the PSC does 
not regulate the rates of publicly owned municipal or cooperative electric utilities.
23
 
 
There are five investor-owned electric utility companies (IOU) in Florida: Florida Power & Light 
Company (FPL), Duke Energy Florida (Duke), Tampa Electric Company (TECO), Gulf Power 
Company (Gulf), and Florida Public Utilities Corporation.
24
 IOU rates and revenues are 
regulated by the PSC.
25
 These utilities must file periodic earnings reports, which allow the PSC 
to monitor earnings levels on an ongoing basis and adjust customer rates quickly if a company 
appears to be overearning.
26
 
 
Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act 
In 1978, the federal government enacted the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA),
27
 
which required promotion of energy efficiency and use of renewables. The PURPA requires 
utilities to purchase power, at the utility’s full avoided cost, from “qualifying facilities,” (QF)
 28
 
which fall into two categories: qualifying small power production facilities and qualifying 
cogeneration facilities.
29
 The PURPA directed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to 
                                                
17
 Florida Waste-to-Energy Coalition, Fact Sheet, (on file with the Senate Committee on Regulated Industries). 
18
 Section 350.001, F.S. 
19
 See Florida Public Service Commission (PSC), The PSC’s Role, http://www.psc.state.fl.us (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
20
 Id.  
21
 Section 366.02(1), F.S. 
22
 Id. 
23
 See PSC, Florida PSC 2020 Annual Report, p. 13, 
http://www.psc.state.fl.us/Files/PDF/Publications/Reports/General/Annualreports/2020.pdf (last visited Jan.24, 2022). 
24
 Id. Florida Power & Light (FPL) acquired Gulf Power (Gulf) in 2019 and merged as of January 3, 2022. 
25
 Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Electric Utilities, https://www.fdacs.gov/Energy/Florida-
Energy-Clearinghouse/Electric-Utilities (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
26
 PSC, supra note 23, at p. 6. 
27
 16 U.S.C. s. 2601 et seq. 
28
 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, PURPA Qualifying Facilities, https://www.ferc.gov/qf (last visited 
Jan. 24, 2022). 
29
 Id.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 5 
 
implement the provisions, which in turn directed the states to implement the provisions. In 
response, the Florida Legislature created s. 366.051, F.S.,
30
 directing utilities to purchase power 
from cogenerators or small power producers.
31
 
 
Full Avoided Costs 
A utility’s full avoided cost is the incremental costs of electric energy or capacity, which, but for 
the purchase from cogenerators or small power producers, the utility would have to generate 
itself or purchase from another source.
32
 Traditionally, the PSC has approved electric utility 
power purchase contracts that include provisions for payment, capacity, and energy based upon 
either the utility’s cost to construct and operate its next planned generating unit or the cost of 
purchasing capacity and energy from generating units owned by other utilities in the interchange 
market.
33
 
 
Power Purchase Agreements 
Standard Offer Contract 
IOUs must annually establish and file with the PSC a standard offer contract
34
 with terms, 
conditions, and payments based on projected costs for each fossil-fueled generating unit type 
identified in the IOU’s 10-year site plan.
35
 Payment terms and conditions for QFs are based on 
the projected cost to construct and operate the IOU’s next planned generation unit.
36
 Essentially, 
the next planned unit becomes an avoided unit and the basis for the avoided costs. 
 
Negotiated Contracts 
The standard offer contract provides a basis for developing negotiated contracts.
37
 
Rule 25-17.240 of the Florida Administrative Code encourages IOUs and generating facilities to 
negotiate contracts for firm capacity and energy to provide fuel diversity, fuel price stability, and 
energy security. 
 
The PSC addresses petitions by IOUs for approval of cost recovery of negotiated contracts 
between the IOU and the QFs.
38
  The PSC’s review considers various matters including whether 
                                                
30
 Chapter 89-292, s. 4, Laws of Fla. 
31
 Rule 25-17.082 of the Florida Administrative Code, is the PSC’s rule on the utility’s obligation to purchase. 
32
 Section 366.051, F.S. 
33
 PSC, States’ Electric Restructuring Activities Update: Wholesale Sales 
http://www.psc.state.fl.us/Publications/ElectricRestructuringDetails#4 (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
34
 The following are the most recent PSC orders approving the standard offer contracts for the following investor owned 
electric utility companies (IOUs): FPL: http://www.floridapsc.com/library/filings/2021/07682-2021/07682-2021.pdf; Duke 
Energy Florida (Duke): http://www.floridapsc.com/library/filings/2021/08111-2021/08111-2021.pdf; Tampa Electric 
Company (TECO): http://www.floridapsc.com/library/filings/2021/08419-2021/08419-2021.pdf; and Gulf: 
http://www.floridapsc.com/library/filings/2021/07681-2021/07681-2021.pdf (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
35
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.250. Each electric utility must submit a 10-year site plan to the PSC, estimating the utility’s 
power generating needs and general locations for proposed power plant sites over a 10-year planning horizon. 
Section 186.801, F.S.; PSC, Review of The 2021 Ten-Year Site Plan of Florida’s Electric Utilities, p. 9, 
http://www.psc.state.fl.us/Files/PDF/Utilities/Electricgas/TenYearSitePlans/2021/Review.pdf (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
36
 See PSC, 2022 Legislative Bill Analysis for SB 1764, p. 1 (Jan. 20, 2022) (on file with the Senate Committee on Regulated 
Industries). 
37
 Id. 
38
 Id.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 6 
 
the contract is at or below the IOU’s avoided cost and will be considered prudent if it can be 
reasonably expected to defer or avoid an additional generation unit.
39
 
 
As-available contract 
“As-available” (AA) energy contracts are an option for QFs, including municipal solid waste-to-
energy (MSWE) facilities.
40
 These contracts are not subject to the PSC’s approval but must be 
filed with the PSC within ten working days of being signed.
41
 As-available energy is energy 
produced and sold on an hour-by-hour basis for which contractual commitments regarding the 
quantity and time of delivery are not required.
42
 As-available energy is purchased at a rate equal 
to the utility’s hourly incremental system fuel cost, which reflects the highest fuel cost of 
generation each hour.
43
  
 
According to the PSC, the following four facilities receive as-available energy cost payments 
from FPL: 
 Broward County Resource Recovery – South AA QF; 
 Brevard County; 
 Miami Dade Resource Recovery; and 
 Lee County Solid Waste. 
 
Firm Capacity Payments 
If a QF can meet certain contractual provisions as to the quantity, time, and electricity delivery 
reliability, it is eligible for both capacity payments and energy payments under a firm contract.
44
 
Capacity is the maximum electric output, in megawatts, that an electricity generator can produce 
under ideal conditions.
45
 
 
To promote alternative and renewable energy generation, the PSC requires IOUs to offer 
multiple capacity payment options, including early payments or levelized payments.
46
 The 
different payment options allow QFs flexibility to best meet their financial needs.
47
 If an early 
capacity payment option is selected, then the QF will begin receiving capacity payments earlier 
than the in-service date of the avoided unit and payments will generally be lower in the later 
years of the contract.
48
 
 
According to the PSC, the following six facilities are operating under active firm contracts with 
their host IOU: 
 Pinellas County Resource Recovery, with Duke, ending December 2024; 
                                                
39
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.240; PSC, supra note 36, at p. 2. 
40
 PSC, supra note 36, at p. 1. 
41
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.0825(1)(b); PSC, supra note 36, at p. 2. 
42
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.0825. 
43
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.0825(2)(a); PSC, supra note 36, at p. 2. 
44
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-17.0832(1); PSC, supra note 36, at p. 1. 
45
 See U.S. EIA, What is the difference between electricity generation capacity and electricity generation?, 
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=101&t=3 (last visited Jan. 24, 2022). 
46
 PSC, supra note 36, at p. 1. 
47
 Id. 
48
 See Notice of Proposed Agency Action Order Approving Revised Standard Offer Contract, p. 2, 
http://www.floridapsc.com/library/filings/2021/07682-2021/07682-2021.pdf (last visited Jan. 24, 2022).  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 7 
 
 Pasco County Resource Recovery, with Duke, ending December 2024; 
 Broward County Resource Recovery – South QF, with FPL, ending December 2026; 
 Palm Beach County Solid Waste Authority 1,with FPL, ending March 2034; 
 Palm Beach County Solid Waste Authority 2, with FPL, ending March 2034; and 
 Bay County/Engen LLC, with FPL/Gulf, ending July 2023.
49
 
 
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
The bill provides a preamble stating: 
 It is in the public interest to promote the development of renewable energy resources in 
Florida, under s. 366.91, F.S.; 
 Municipal solid waste-to-energy (MSWE) facilities using biomass as fuel or an energy 
source are deemed to be producing renewable energy, under s. 366.91, F.S.; 
 MSWE facilities provide a practical and sustainable solution to reducing landfill waste, 
reducing volume by about 87 percent; 
 The Legislature recognizes the benefits that MSWE facilities contribute to Florida and its 
local communities; and 
 The Legislature intends to incentivize the production and sale of energy from MSWE 
facilities through grant programs. 
 
Section 1 creates s. 377.814, F.S., establishing the MSWE Program, within the Department of 
Agriculture and Consumer Services (DACS), comprised of a financial assistance grant program 
and an incentive grant program. 
 
The stated purpose of the program is to provide financial assistance grants and incentive grants 
to MSWE facilities in order to incentivize the production and sale of energy and reduce waste 
disposed of in landfills. 
 
The bill defines the following terms as follows: 
 “Department” to mean the DACS. 
  “Municipal solid waste-to-energy facility” to mean publicly owned or government affiliate-
owned facilities using an enclosed device with controlled combustion to thermally break 
down solid waste to an ash residue containing little or no combustible material, producing 
electricity, steam, or other energy. It does not include facilities primarily burning fuels other 
than solid waste; nor facilities primarily burning vegetative, agricultural, or silvicultural 
wastes, bagasse, clean dry wood, methane or other landfill gas, wood fuel derived from 
construction or demolition debris, or waste tires, alone or in combination with fossil fuels. 
 
The Financial Assistance Grant will provide qualifying MSWE facilities with annual financial 
assistance at a rate of two cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity purchased by an electric utility 
during the preceding state fiscal year, not to exceed the difference between the total capacity and 
energy payment the MSWE facility received during the last year of the power purchase 
agreement entered into before January 1, 2022, and the total of the capacity and energy payment 
the MSWE facility received under a new or amended power purchase agreement during the 
                                                
49
 PSC, supra n. 36, p. 2.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 8 
 
preceding state fiscal year.  If funds are insufficient to cover every qualifying kilowatt-hour from 
all qualifying applicants, the DACS must prorate the available funds on an equitable basis, taking 
into consideration the commercial retail rate within the applicable service territory. 
 
To qualify, the facility must have previously entered into a power purchase agreement with an 
electric utility before January 1, 2022, that included capacity and energy payments, and the 
owner of the facility has entered into a new or amended power purchase agreement that either no 
longer includes capacity payments or includes capacity and energy payments in an amount less 
than the total of the capacity and energy payments the MSWE facility received under the power 
purchase agreement entered into before January 1, 2022. 
 
To apply for the grant, the facility owner must submit an application to the DACS, including the 
MSWE facility’s name, the name of the utility purchasing the electric power from the facility, 
the total capacity and energy payment the facility received during the last year of the power 
purchase agreement entered into before January 1, 2022, and the amount of energy delivered to 
and the total amount paid for such power by the utility pursuant to the new or amended power 
purchase agreement during the preceding state fiscal year. 
 
The bill requires the DACS to establish a process in coordination with the Public Service 
Commission (PSC) to verify eligibility and the amount of energy purchased from the facility. 
 
The incentive grant will provide facilities with matching funds on a dollar-for-dollar basis to 
assist with planning and design for constructing, upgrading, or expanding MSWE facilities, 
including necessary legal or administrative expenses. 
 
To qualify, the facility owner must apply to the DACS and demonstrate that the project is cost-
effective, permittable, and implementable and complies with s. 403.7061, F.S., which establishes 
the requirements for review of new waste-to-energy (WTE) facility capacity by the Department 
of Environmental Protection (DEP). 
 
The bill requires the DEP to assist the DACS with determining eligibility and with establishing 
requirements to ensure long-term and efficient operation and maintenance of such facilities. 
 
The DACS must perform adequate overview of applications and awards, including technical 
review, regular inspections, disbursement approvals, and auditing. If the DACS determines that 
program requirements are not being met, the bill requires termination or repayment of incentive 
grant funds. 
 
The bill prohibits funds awarded under the incentive grant program from being used to promote, 
establish, or convert a residential collection system that does not provide for the separate 
collection of residential solid waste from recovered materials that have a recycling potential, 
such as metal, paper, glass, plastic, textile, or rubber materials. 
 
The bill requires appropriated funds to be used first for financial assistance grants and then 
remaining funds may be used for incentive grants. 
  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 9 
 
The bill requires the DACS to adopt rules to implement and administer the program. The rules 
must: 
 Establish an application processes for both grant types;  
 Include application deadlines; and 
 Establish supporting documentation to be provided to the DACS. 
 
Rules for the financial assistance grant program must be developed by the DACS in consultation 
with the PSC. Rules for the incentive grant program must be developed by the DACS in 
consultation with the DEP. 
 
Section 2 appropriates $100 million in recurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the 
DACS for the 2022-2023 fiscal year for the MSWE Grant Program. Funds appropriated for the 
MSWE Grant Program which are not disbursed by the end of the fiscal year in which the funds 
were appropriated, may be carried forward for up to five years. 
 
Section 3 appropriates the sums of $149,832 in recurring funds and $9,984 in nonrecurring funds 
from the General Revenue Fund, and authorizes two full-time equivalent positions to the DACS 
to administer the MSWE grant program. 
 
Section 4 provides that the bill is effective July 1, 2022. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 10 
 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
The bill may result in a positive impact to private companies that own a government 
affiliated waste-to-energy facility and qualify for a grant. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
The bill may result in a positive impact to counties that own a municipal solid waste-to-
energy facility that qualify for funds under the grant program. 
 
The bill appropriates $100 million in recurring general revenue to the Department of 
Agriculture and Consumer Services (DACS) to fund the Municipal Solid Waste-to-
Energy Grant Program. Funds appropriated for the program which are not disbursed by 
the end of the fiscal year in which the funds were appropriated, may be carried forward 
for up to five years. 
 
Per the DACS, two positions and expenses totaling $159,816 from the General Revenue 
Fund will be necessary to carry out the provisions of the bill.
50
 The bill appropriates 
$149,832 in recurring funds and $9,984 in nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue 
Fund, and authorizes two full-time equivalent positions to the DACS to implement and 
administer the grant program. 
 
The Public Service Commission (PSC) is required to assist the DACS to aid in the 
verification of grant eligibility and award amounts. The PSC anticipates any additional 
workload can be handled by existing staff.
51
 
 
The bill requires the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to assist the DACS 
with determining eligibility and establishing requirements to ensure long-term and 
efficient operation and maintenance of the waste-to-energy facilities. The DEP has 
indicated this assistance can be absorbed within existing resources. 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill creates section 377.814 of the Florida Statutes. 
                                                
50
 Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Bill Analysis of SB 1764 (Jan. 24, 2022) (on file with the Senate 
Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government). 
51
 PSC, supra note 36, at p. 4.  BILL: CS/SB 1764   	Page 11 
 
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Substantial Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
CS  by Appropriations on February 21, 2022: 
The committee substitute: 
 Clarifies grant eligibility and more accurately determines amounts eligible for 
distribution to qualifying applicants; 
 Allows funds appropriated for the Municipal Solid Waste-to-Energy Program that are 
not disbursed by the end of the fiscal year in which they were appropriated, to be 
carried forward for up to five years;  
 Appropriates $159,816 from the General Revenue Fund, and authorizes two full-time 
equivalent positions to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to 
administer the grant program; and 
 Prohibits funds awarded under the grant program from being used to promote, 
establish, or convert a residential collection system that does not provide for the 
separate collection of residential solid waste from recovered materials that have 
recycling potential, such as metal, paper, glass, plastic, textile, or rubber materials. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.