Florida 2023 2023 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0359 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/15/2023

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h0359.LFS 
DATE: 2/15/2023 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 359    Local Government Comprehensive Plans 
SPONSOR(S): Duggan 
TIED BILLS:    IDEN./SIM. BILLS:   
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Local Administration, Federal Affairs & Special 
Districts Subcommittee 
 	Roy Darden 
2) Civil Justice Subcommittee    
3) State Affairs Committee    
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
 
The Community Planning Act (Act) governs community and land development in Florida by providing how local 
governments create, adopt, maintain, and amend their comprehensive plans, which in turn impact property 
rights and land uses within their respective jurisdictions. The Act requires each local government to adopt a 
comprehensive plan to provide for orderly and balanced future economic, social, physical, environmental, and 
fiscal development while taking into account projected population growth, public facility needs, development 
over a five-year and 10-year period, comprehensive plans of adjacent local governments, and future land use. 
A comprehensive plan amendment may be classified as a small-scale amendment if the amendment involves 
less than 50 acres of land, does not impact land located in an area of critical state concern, preserves the 
internal consistency of the overall local comprehensive plan, and does not require substantive changes to the 
text of the plan.  
 
Every comprehensive plan must provide a capital improvements element on the need and location of public 
facilities, including a five-year schedule of necessary capital improvements. This element must be reviewed 
annually by the local government. Modifications updating the five-year capital improvement schedule may be 
done by ordinance and are not deemed to be amendments to the local comprehensive plan. 
 
Any affected person may challenge whether the plan or plan amendments, including small scale plan 
amendments, comply with the Act, by petitioning the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH) for a hearing. 
Attorney fees are awarded in proceedings before DOAH only if the non-prevailing adverse party participated in 
the proceedings for an improper purpose. A local government decision on a development order that materially 
alters the use, density or intensity of particular real property as inconsistent with the plan may be challenged in 
court, but if the local government adopted an ordinance establishing certain statutory requirements, the 
decision may only be challenged by a petition for certiorari in the circuit court. 
 
The bill revises the process for modifying the five-year capital improvement schedule, allowing the schedule to 
be updated administratively if all the projects have been adopted by the appropriate project board. The bill 
provides that for challenges to the comprehensive plan and plan amendments, including small scale plan 
amendments, the prevailing party is entitled to recover attorney fees and costs. Lastly, the bill revises the 
standing to seek review of a local government decision to grant or deny a development order by removing the 
requirement that the decision must be inconsistent with the comprehensive plan. 
 
The bill may have a positive fiscal impact both on local governments and private parties to the extent they may 
recover attorney fees and costs as prevailing parties in certain challenges to comprehensive plans and plan 
amendments. The bill may also have a negative fiscal impact on the same parties to the extent they are found 
responsible and must pay such fees and costs.  
 
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FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
 
Present Situation 
 
As required by the Community Planning Act (Act),
1
 a comprehensive plan is a set of principles, 
guidelines, standards, and strategies for the orderly and balanced future economic, social, physical, 
environmental, and fiscal development of the area that reflects community commitments to implement 
the plan and its elements.
2
 These principles and strategies must guide future decisions in a consistent 
manner and must contain programs and activities to ensure comprehensive plans are implemented. 
The plan must establish meaningful and predictable standards for the use and development of land and 
provide meaningful guidelines for the content of more detailed land development and use regulations.
3
 
A comprehensive plan contains mandatory and optional elements, all based upon relevant and 
appropriate data and an analysis by the local government that may include, but not be limited to, 
surveys, studies, community goals and vision, and other data available at the time of adoption of the 
comprehensive plan or plan amendment.
4
 
 
The comprehensive plan must contain a capital improvements element designed to consider the need 
for and the location of public facilities in order to encourage the efficient use of such facilities.
5
  The 
capital improvements element must include: 
 A component outlining principles for construction, extension or increase in capacity, as well as a 
component outlining principles for correcting existing facility deficiencies, both of which must 
cover a five-year period; 
 Estimated public facility costs, including a delineation of when facilities will be needed, the 
general location of the facilities, and projected revenue sources to fund the facilities; 
 Standards to ensure the availability of public facilities and the adequacy of those facilities to 
meet established acceptable levels of service; 
 A schedule of capital improvements which includes any publicly funded projects of federal, 
state, or local government, and which may include privately funded projects for which the local 
government has no fiscal responsibility. Projects necessary to ensure that any adopted level-of-
service standards are achieved and maintained for the five-year period must be identified as 
either funded or unfunded and given a level of priority for funding; and 
 The schedule must include transportation improvements included in the applicable metropolitan 
planning organization’s transportation improvement program to the extent that such 
improvements are relied upon to ensure concurrency and financial feasibility. The schedule 
must be coordinated with the applicable metropolitan planning organization’s long-range 
transportation plan. 
 
The capital improvements element must be reviewed by the local government on an annual basis. 
Modifications to update the five-year capital improvement schedule may be accomplished by ordinance 
and may not be deemed to be amendments to the local comprehensive plan.
6
 
 
Any affected person may challenge whether a plan or plan amendment complies with the Act by 
petitioning the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH) for a formal hearing. An administrative law 
judge must hold a hearing in the affected local jurisdiction on whether the plan or plan amendment is in 
compliance.
7
  
 
                                                
1
 Ss. 163.3161-163.3253, F.S. 
2
 S. 163.3177, F.S. 
3
 Id. 
4
 S. 163.3177(1)(f), F.S. 
5
 S. 163.3177(3)(a), F.S. 
6
 S. 163.3177(3)(b), F.S. 
7
 S. 163.3184(5)(c), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h0359.LFS 	PAGE: 3 
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A comprehensive plan amendment may be classified as a small-scale amendment if the amendment 
involves less than 50 acres of land, does not impact land located in an area of critical state concern, 
preserves the internal consistency of the overall local comprehensive plan, and does not require 
substantive changes to the text of the plan.
8
 Any affected person may challenge a small scale plan 
amendment by petitioning DOAH for a hearing. An administrative law judge must hold a hearing in the 
affected jurisdiction.
9
 Attorney fees and costs are awarded in administrative proceedings before DOAH 
only if the non-prevailing adverse party participated in the proceedings for an improper purpose.
10
 
 
An aggrieved or adversely affected party
11
 may bring an action for declaratory, injunctive, or other relief 
against a local government to challenge a decision granting or denying an application for, or to prevent 
such local government from taking any action on, a development order, which materially alters the use 
or density or intensity of use on a particular piece of property which is not consistent with the 
comprehensive plan. However, if a local government adopts an ordinance establishing certain statutory 
requirements, the sole method by which a decision granting or denying an application for a 
development order, which materially alters the use or density or intensity of use on a particular piece of 
property, on the basis that it is not consistent with the comprehensive plan, is by an appeal filed by a 
petition for writ of certiorari filed in circuit court. An action for injunctive or other relief may be joined with 
the petition for certiorari.
12
 
 
Effects of Proposed Changes 
 
The bill amends the process for modifying the five-year capital improvement schedule. The schedule 
may be updated either by ordinance or administratively if all the projects have been adopted by the 
project’s appropriate board. 
 
In proceedings before DOAH challenging a plan or plan amendments, including small scale plan 
amendments, the bill allows the prevailing party to recover attorney fees and costs, including 
reasonable appellate attorney fees and costs. 
 
The bill removes the requirement that a challenge by petition of certiorari to a local government 
decision on a development order that materially alters the use or density or intensity of use on a 
particular piece of property must show the decision was inconsistent with the comprehensive plan. The 
bill also makes technical changes to the language regarding standing to enforce local comprehensive 
plans through development orders. 
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
 
Section 1: Amends s. 163.3177, F.S., to authorize administrative approval of modifications to 
update the capital improvements component of a plan if all projects are adopted by 
appropriate board. 
 
Section 2: Amends s. 163.3184, F.S., to permit the prevailing party in administrative challenges to a 
comprehensive plan or plan amendment to recover attorney fees and costs including 
reasonable appellate attorney fees and costs. 
 
                                                
8
 S. 163.3187(1), F.S. If the amendment involves a site within an area of rural opportunity, the proposed small scale amendment may 
involve up to 100 acres. S. 163.3187(3), F.S. 
9
 S. 163.3187(5)(a), F.S. 
10
 S. 120.595(1)(b), F.S. “Improper purpose” is defined as participating “in a proceeding pursuant to s. 120.57(1) primarily to harass or 
to cause unnecessary delay or for frivolous purpose or to needlessly increase the cost of litigation, licensing, or securing the approval of 
an activity.” S. 120.595(1)(e)1., F.S. 
11
 Defined as any person or local government that will suffer an adverse effect to an interest protected or furthered by the local 
government comprehensive plan, including interests related to health and safety, police and fire protection service systems, densities or 
intensities of development, transportation facilities, health care facilities, equipment or services, and environmental or natural resources. 
The alleged adverse interest may be shared in common with other members of the community at large but must exceed in degree the 
general interest in community good shared by all persons. The term includes the owner, developer, or applicant for a development 
order. S. 163.3215(2), F.S. 
12
 S. 163.3215(4), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h0359.LFS 	PAGE: 4 
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Section 3: Amends s. 163.3187, F.S., to permit the prevailing party in small scale plan amendment 
claims to recover attorney fees and costs including reasonable appellate attorney fees 
and costs. 
 
Section 4: Amends s. 163.3215, F.S., to revise a requirement for petitioning for certiorari review of 
a local government decision on a development order and makes other technical 
changes. 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
None. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
The bill may have an indeterminate fiscal impact on county and municipal governments to the extent 
those governments are engaged in litigation concerning their comprehensive plan and whether those 
governments are the prevailing party in those actions. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
Not Applicable. This bill does not appear to require counties or municipalities to spend funds or take 
action requiring the expenditures of funds; reduce the authority that counties or municipalities have 
to raise revenues in the aggregate; or reduce the percentage of state tax shared with counties or 
municipalities. 
 
 2. Other: 
None 
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B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
The bill neither provides authority for nor requires rulemaking by executive branch agencies. 
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None. 
 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES