Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0479 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 06/27/2024

                     
This document does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF FINAL BILL ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: CS/HB 479    Alternative Mobility Funding Systems 
SPONSOR(S): Commerce Committee; Robinson, W., and others 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: CS/SB 688 
 
 
 
 
FINAL HOUSE FLOOR ACTION: 115 Y’s 
 
0 N’s GOVERNOR’S ACTION: Approved 
 
 
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
CS/HB 479 passed the House on February 28, 2024, as amended, and subsequently passed the Senate on 
March 4, 2024. 
 
Counties and municipalities are required to plan for future development and growth by adopting, implementing, 
and amending as necessary a comprehensive plan. All elements of a plan or plan amendment must be based 
on relevant, appropriate data and an analysis by the local government. Each comprehensive plan must include 
a transportation element addressing traffic circulation, including the types, locations, and extent of existing and 
proposed major thoroughfares and transportation routes, including bicycle and pedestrian ways.  
 
Certain public facilities and services must be in place and available to serve new development no later than the 
issuance of a certificate of occupancy or its functional equivalent by a local government. Local governments 
may extend this concurrency requirement to additional public facilities such as transportation. Local 
governments electing to repeal transportation concurrency are encouraged to adopt an alternative mobility 
funding system. One method of funding local government transportation concurrency requirements is through 
the adoption and imposition of impact fees to fund the infrastructure needed to expand local services to meet 
the demands of population growth caused by new growth. Local governments may increase impact fees only 
under limited circumstances, including upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances.  
 
In 2013, the concept of a mobility fee-based funding system was added to the comprehensive planning 
statutes as an encouraged alternative to transportation concurrency. 
 
The bill defines “mobility fee” and “mobility plan” for use within the Community Planning Act.  
 
The bill requires counties and municipalities that charge developers a fee for transportation capacity impacts to 
enter interlocal agreements to coordinate the mitigation of their respective transportation capacity impacts, 
provides criteria for the agreements, and establishes alternative processes to follow if local governments fail to 
enter into such agreements by October 1, 2025.  
 
The bill provides that local governments adopting and collecting impact fees by ordinance or resolution must 
base impact fee calculations on a study using the most recent and localized data available within four years of 
the current impact fee update, unless the impact fee is increased, in which case the new study must be 
adopted by the local government within 12 months of the initiation. The bill provides that a local government 
must credit against the collection of the impact fee any contribution identified in the development order or any 
form of exaction, including monetary contributions.    
 
The bill does not have a fiscal impact on state or local government. 
 
The bill was approved by the Governor on June 25, 2024, ch. 2024-266, L.O.F., and will become effective on 
October 1, 2024. 
    
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I. SUBSTANTIVE INFORMATION 
 
A. EFFECT OF CHANGES:  
 
Present Situation 
 
Every local government, defined as any county and municipality,
1
 is required to plan for future 
development and growth by adopting, implementing, and amending as necessary a comprehensive 
plan.
2
 All elements of a plan or plan amendment must be based on relevant, appropriate data
3
 and an 
analysis by the local government that may include surveys, studies, aspirational goals, and other data 
available at the time of adopting the plan or amendment.
4
 The data supporting a plan or amendment 
must be taken from professionally accepted sources
5
 and must be based on permanent and seasonal 
population estimates and projections.
6
  
 
Each comprehensive plan must include a transportation element, the purpose of which is to plan for a 
multimodal transportation system emphasizing feasible public transportation, addressing mobility issues 
pertinent to the size and character of the local government, and designed to support all other elements 
of the comprehensive plan.
7
 The transportation element must address traffic circulation, including the 
types, locations, and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares and transportation routes, 
including bicycle and pedestrian ways.
8
 The plan of a local government with a population exceeding 
50,000 that is not within the planning area of a metropolitan planning organization (MPO)
9
 also must 
address mass transit, ports, and aviation
10
 and related facilities.
11
 The transportation planning element 
for a local government with a population exceeding 50,000 located within the area of a MPO specifically 
must address the following: 
 All alternative modes of travel, including public transportation, pedestrian, and bicycle. 
 Aviation, rail, and seaport facilities, access to those facilities, and intermodal transportation. 
 Capability to evacuate coastal population prior to a natural disaster. 
 Airports, projected airport and aviation development, and land use around airports. 
 Identification of land use densities, building intensities, and transportation management 
programs to promote public transportation.
12
 
 
The transportation planning element for a municipality with a population exceeding 50,000, or a county 
with a population exceeding 75,000, must provide for moving people by mass transit, including: 
 Providing efficient, safe, and convenient public transit, including accommodation for the 
transportation disadvantaged. 
 Plans for port, aviation, and related facilities. 
                                                
1
 S. 163.3164(29), F.S. For the purpose of the act, the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District may exercise the powers of a 
municipality for the area under its jurisdiction. S. 163.3167(6), F.S.; see also ch. 2023-5, Laws of Fla. (renaming the Reedy Creek 
Improvement District to the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District). 
2
 Ss. 163.3167(2) and 163.3177(2), F.S. 
3
 “To be based on data means to react to it in an appropriate way and to the extent necessary indicated by the data available on that 
particular subject at the time of adoption of the plan or plan amendment at issue.” S. 163.3177(1)(f), F.S. 
4
 S. 163.3177(1)(f), F.S. 
5
 S. 163.3177(1)(f)2., F.S. The statute does not further define “professionally accepted sources.” 
6
 S. 163.3177(1)(f)3., F.S. Population estimates may be those published by the Office of Economic and Demographic Research or may 
be generated by the local government based upon a professionally acceptable methodology. Id. 
7
 S. 163.3177(6)(b), F.S. 
8
 S. 163.3177(6)(b)1., F.S. 
9
 An MPO must be designated as provided in 23 U.S.C. s. 450.310(a) for each urbanized area with a population of more than 50,000. 
S. 339.175(2), F.S. Florida MPOs are intended specifically to develop plans and programs in metropolitan areas for the development 
and management of transportation systems and facilities, including pedestrian walkways and bicycle transportation facilities to function 
as an intermodal transportation system. S. 339.175(1), F.S. 
10
 All local governments have the option to include within the transportation element an airport master plan, incorporated into the plan 
through the comprehensive plan amendment process. S. 163.3177(6)(b)4., F.S. 
11
 S. 163.3177(6)(b), F.S. 
12
 S. 163.3177(6)(b)2., F.S.   
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 Plans for circulation of recreational traffic, including bicycle and riding facilities and exercise 
trails.
13
 
 
In addition to the general requirements for data supporting a comprehensive plan or amendment, the 
transportation planning element must include one or more maps showing the general location of 
existing and proposed transportation system features and data, analyses, and associated principles 
pertaining to: 
 Existing transportation system levels of service and system needs and availability of 
transportation facilities and services. 
 Growth trends and travel patterns, as well as interactions between land use and transportation; 
 Current and projected intermodal
14
 deficiencies and needs. 
 Projected transportation system levels of service and system needs. 
 How the local government will correct existing facility deficiencies, meet the needs of the 
projected transportation system, and advance the transportation purposes of the plan.
15
 
 
Generally, local government transportation and mobility planning should address providing mobility 
options, such as automobile, bicycle, pedestrian, or mass transit, that minimize environmental impacts, 
expand transportation options, and increase connectivity between destinations.
16
 
 
Transportation Concurrency 
 
Certain public facilities and services must be in place and available to serve new development no later 
than the issuance of a certificate of occupancy or its functional equivalent by a local government.
17
 
Local governments may extend this concurrency requirement to additional public facilities such as 
transportation.
18
 Where concurrency is applied to transportation, the local government comprehensive 
plan must provide the principles, guidelines, standards, and strategies, including adopted levels of 
service, to guide its application.
19
 The plan must show that the included levels of service may 
reasonably be met.
20
 Local governments utilizing transportation concurrency must use professionally 
accepted studies to evaluate levels of service and techniques to measure such levels of service when 
evaluating potential impacts of proposed developments.
21
 While local governments implementing a 
transportation concurrency system are encouraged to develop and use certain tools and guidelines, 
such as addressing potential negative impacts on urban infill and redevelopment
22
 and adopting long-
term multimodal strategies,
23
 such local governments must follow specific concurrency requirements 
including consulting with the Florida Department of Transportation if proposed amendments to the plan 
affect the Strategic Intermodal System, exempting public transit facilities from concurrency 
                                                
13
 S. 163.3177(6)(b)3., F.S. 
14
 “Intermodal transportation” is not defined in the statute but generally means the transportation by or involving more than one form of 
carrier in a single journey, particularly for moving cargo. See “intermodal,” available at https://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/intermodal (last visited Jan. 14, 2024); “intermodal transport,” available at 
https://www.ups.com/us/en/supplychain/insights/knowledge/glossary-term/intermodal-transport.page (last visited Jan. 14, 2024). Part of 
the intent in creating the Florida Strategic Intermodal System is to address the increased demands placed on the entire statewide 
transportation system by economic and population growth and projected increases in freight movement, international trade, and tourism 
designing and operating a strategic intermodal system to meet the mobility needs of the state. See s. 339.61(2), F.S. 
15
 S. 163.3177(6)(b)1., F.S. 
16
 Dept. of Commerce, “Transportation Planning,” available at https://www.floridajobs.org/community-planning-and-
development/programs/community-planning-table-of-contents/transportation-planning (last visited Jan. 14, 2024), herein Commerce 
Transportation Planning. 
17
 S. 163.1380(2), F.S. The only such services for which concurrency is mandatory are sanitary sewer, solid waste, drainage, and 
potable water supplies. 
18
 S. 163.3180(1), F.S. 
19
 Ss. 163.3180(1)(a) and 163.3180(5)(a), F.S. See Commerce Transportation Planning, supra n. 16. 
20
 S. 163.3180(1)(b), F.S. 
21
 S. 163.3180(5)(b)-(c), F.S. 
22
 S. 163.3180(5)(e), F.S. 
23
 S. 163.3180(f), F.S.   
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requirements, and allowing a developer to contribute a proportionate share to mitigate transportation 
impacts for a specific development.
24
  
 
An applicant for a development-of-regional-impact development order, development agreement, 
rezoning, or other land use development permit satisfies the requirements for transportation 
concurrency if the applicant in good faith offers to enter into a binding agreement to pay for or construct 
its proportionate share of transportation improvements required to mitigate the impact of the proposed 
development and the proffered proportionate share contribution or construction is sufficient to 
accomplish one or more mobility improvements benefitting a regionally significant transportation 
facility.
25
 The plan for transportation concurrency must provide the basis on which landowners will be 
assessed a proportionate share,
26
 which must include a compliant formula for calculating the 
proportionate share.
27
 The proportionate share may not include additional costs to reduce or eliminate 
existing transportation deficiencies.
28
 
 
Local governments electing to repeal transportation concurrency are encouraged to adopt an 
alternative mobility funding system. Such an alternative system may not be used to restrict or deny 
certain development approval applications provided the developer agrees to pay for the development’s 
transportation impacts using the funding mechanism implemented by the local government. Local 
government mobility fee systems must comply with all requirements for adopting and implementing 
impact fees. An alternative funding system that is not mobility fee based may not impose on new 
development any responsibility for funding existing transportation deficiencies.
29
 
 
Impact Fees 
 
One method of funding local government transportation concurrency requirements is through the 
adoption and imposition of impact fees on new development. Local governments impose impact fees to 
fund infrastructure
30
 needed to expand local services to meet the demands of population growth caused 
by new growth.
31
 Impact fees must meet the following minimum criteria when adopted: 
 The fee must be calculated using the most recent and localized data.
32
 
 The local government adopting the impact fee must account for and report impact fee 
collections and expenditures. If the fee is imposed for a specific infrastructure need, the local 
government must account for those revenues and expenditures in a separate accounting fund.
33
 
 Charges imposed for the collection of impact fees must be limited to the actual costs.
34
 
 All local governments must give notice of a new or increased impact fee at least 90 days before 
the new or increased fee takes effect, but need not wait 90 days before decreasing, suspending, 
or eliminating an impact fee. Unless the result reduces total mitigation costs or impact fees on 
an applicant, new or increased impact fees may not apply to current or pending applications 
                                                
24
 S. 163.3180(5)(h), F.S. See Commerce Transportation Planning, supra n. 16. 
25
 S. 163.3180(5)(h)1.c., F.S. 
26
 S. 163.3180(5)(h)1.d., F.S. 
27
 S. 163.3180(5(h)2.a.-d., F.S. 
28
 S. 163.3180(5)(h)2., F.S. For purposes of s. 163.3180(5), F.S., “transportation deficiency” means a facility or facilities on which the 
level of service standard adopted in the comprehensive plan is exceeded by the number of existing, projected, or vested trips together 
with additional trips originating from any source other than the development project under review, and trips forecast by established 
traffic standards. S. 163.3180(5)(h)4., F.S. Local governments may resolve existing transportation deficiencies within an identified 
transportation deficiency area by creating a transportation development authority with specific powers to implement a transportation 
sufficiency plan funded through a formula of tax increment funding. Adopting a transportation sufficiency plan is deemed as meeting 
transportation level of service standards, and proportionate fair-share mitigation is limited to ensure developments within the 
transportation deficiency area are not responsible for additional costs to eliminate deficiencies. S. 163.3182, F.S. 
29
 S. 163.3180(5)(i), F.S. 
30
 “Infrastructure” means the fixed capital expenditure or outlay for the construction, reconstruction, or improvement of public facilities 
with a life expectancy of five or more years, together with specific other costs required to bring the public facility into service but 
excluding the costs of repairs or maintenance. The term also includes specific equipment. S. 163.31801(3), F.S.  
31
 S. 163.31801(2), F.S. Water and sewer connection fees are not impact fees. S. 163.31801(12), F.S. 
32
 S. 163.31801(4)(a), F.S. 
33
 S. 163.31801(4)(b), F.S. 
34
 S. 163.31801(4)(c), F.S.   
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submitted before the effective date of an ordinance or resolution imposing a new or increased 
impact fee.
35
 
 A local government may not require payment of the impact fee before the date of issuing a 
building permit for the property that is subject to the fee.
36
 
 The impact fee must be reasonably connected to, or have a rational nexus with, the need for 
additional capital facilities and the increased impact generated by the new residential or 
commercial construction.
37
 
 The impact fee must be reasonably connected to, or have a rational nexus with, the 
expenditures of the revenues generated and the benefits accruing to the new residential or 
commercial construction.
38
 
 The local government must specifically earmark revenues generated by the impact fee to 
acquire, construct, or improve capital facilities to benefit new users.
39
 
 The local government may not use revenues generated by the impact fee to pay existing debt or 
for previously approved projects unless the expenditure is reasonably connected to, or has a 
rational nexus with, the increased impact generated by the new residential or commercial 
construction.
40
 
 
The types of impact fees charged and the timing of their collection after issuing a building permit are 
within the discretion of the local government or special district authorities choosing to impose the fees.
41
 
In general, a building permit must be obtained before the construction, erection, modification, repair, or 
demolition of any building.
42
 A development permit pertains to any building permit, zoning permit, 
subdivision approval, rezoning, certification, special exception, variance, or any other official action of 
local government having the effect of permitting the development of land.
43
 Local governments 
providing an exception or waiver of impact fees for the development or construction of affordable 
housing are not required to use any revenues to offset the impact of such development.
44
 
 
Local governments must credit against impact fee collections any contribution related to public facilities 
or infrastructure on a dollar-for-dollar basis at fair market value for the general category or class of 
public facilities or infrastructure for which the contribution was made. If no impact fee is collected for 
that category of public facility or infrastructure for which the contribution is made, no credit may be 
applied.
45
 Credits for impact fees may be assigned or transferred at any time once established, from 
one development or parcel to another within the same impact fee zone or district or within an adjoining 
impact fee zone or district within the same local government jurisdiction.
46
  
 
Local governments may increase impact fees only under limited circumstances. A fee may be 
increased no more than once every four years, may not be increased retroactively, the increase may 
not exceed 50 percent of the current impact fee amount, and any increase must be consistent with a 
statutorily-compliant plan for the imposition, collection, and use of the fees. An increase not exceeding 
25 percent of the current fee amount must be implemented in two equal annual increments, while an 
increase greater than 25 percent but not exceeding 50 percent of the current amount must be 
implemented in four equal annual installments. However, a local government may increase a fee more 
than once in four years or for more than 50 percent of a current impact fee amount if it has: 
                                                
35
 S. 163.31801(4)(d), F.S. 
36
 S. 163.31801(4)(e), F.S. 
37
 S. 163.31801(4)(f), F.S.  
38
 S. 163.31801(4)(g), F.S. 
39
 S. 163.31801(4)(h), F.S. 
40
 S. 163.31801(4)(i), F.S. 
41
 See s. 163.31801(2), F.S. 
42
 S. 553.79, F.S. 
43
 S. 163.3164(16), F.S. 
44
 S. 163.31801(11), F.S. 
45
 S. 163.31801(5), F.S. 
46
 S. 163.31801(10), F.S. In an action challenging an impact fee or a failure to provide proper credits, the local government has the 
burden of proof to establish the imposition of the fee or the credit complies with the statute, and the court may not defer to the decision 
or expertise of the government. S. 163.31801(9), F.S.   
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 Prepared a demonstrated-need study within 12 months before adopting the increase showing 
extraordinary circumstances necessitating the need for the increase. 
 Conducted at least two publicly noticed workshops on the extraordinary circumstances 
justifying the increase. 
 Approved the increase by at least a two-thirds vote of the governing body.
47
  
 
A local government that increases an impact fee must still provide the holder of any impact fee credit 
the full benefit of the density and intensity prepaid by the credit balance.
48
  
 
With each annual financial report or audit filed
49
 a local government must report specific information on 
impact fees imposed, including the specific purpose of the fee, the impact fee schedule describing the 
method of calculating the fee, the amount assessed for each purpose and for each type of dwelling, the 
total amount of fees charged by type of dwelling, and each exception or waiver to the imposition of 
impact fees provided for construction of affordable housing.
50
 Additionally, the chief financial officer or 
executive officer (if there is no chief financial officer) must submit with the annual financial report an 
affidavit attesting that all impact fees were collected and expended by the local government, or on its 
behalf, in full compliance with the spending period provisions in the local ordinance and that funds 
expended from each impact fee account were used to acquire, construct, or improve those specific 
infrastructure needs.
51
 
 
Mobility Plans and Fees 
 
In the Community Renewal Act
52
 of 2009 (Act), the Legislature found that the concept and application 
of transportation concurrency was “complex, inequitable, lack(ed) uniformity among jurisdictions, (was) 
too focused on roadways to the detriment of desired land use patterns and transportation alternatives, 
and frequently prevent(ed) the attainment of important growth management goals.”
53
 The Act required 
completion and submission of a mobility fee methodology study
54
 and stated the Legislature’s intent 
that a mobility fee “should be designed to provide for mobility needs, ensure that development provides 
mitigation for its impacts on the transportation system in approximate proportionality to those impacts, 
fairly distribute the fee among the governmental entities responsible for maintaining the impacted 
roadways, and promote compact, mixed-use, and energy-efficient development.”
55
 In 2013, the concept 
of a mobility fee-based funding system was added to the comprehensive planning statutes as an 
encouraged alternative to transportation concurrency.
56
 
 
Alternative mobility funding systems using a mobility fee are encouraged to incorporate one or more of 
the statutory tools and techniques, including: 
 Adoption of long-term strategies to facilitate development patterns that support multimodal 
solutions, including urban design, appropriate land use mixes, intensity and density. 
 Adoption of an area wide level of service not dependent on any single road segment function. 
 Exempting or discounting impacts of locally desired development. 
 Assigning secondary priority to vehicle mobility and primary priority to ensuring a safe, 
comfortable, and attractive pedestrian environment with convenient interconnection to transit; 
                                                
47
 S. 163.31801(6), F.S. 
48
 S. 163.31801(7), F.S.  
49
 See ss. 218.32 and 218.39, F.S. 
50
 S. 163.31801(13), F.S. 
51
 S. 163.31801(8), F.S. 
52
 Ch. 2009-96, s. 1, Laws of Fla. 
53
 Ch. 2009-96, s. 13(1)(a), Laws of Fla. 
54
 Center for Urban Transportation Research, Evaluation of the Mobility Fee Concept Final Report, University of South Florida (Nov. 
2009), available at https://cutr.usf.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Evaluation-of-the-Mobility-Fee-Concept-CUTR-Webcast-
04.21.11.pdf (last visited Jan. 14, 2024).  
55
 Ch. 2009-96, s. 13(1)(b), Laws of Fla. 
56
 Ch. 2013-78, s. 1, Laws of Fla.   
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 Establishing multimodal level of service standards that rely primarily on non-vehicular modes of 
transportation where existing or planned community design will provide adequate a level of 
mobility. 
 Reducing impact fees or local access fees to promote development within urban areas, 
multimodal transportation districts, and a balance of mixed-use development in certain areas or 
districts, or for affordable or workforce housing.
57
 
 
Some local governments have adopted mobility plans and mobility fees.
58
 
 
Effect of the Bill 
 
The bill revises provisions concerning impact fees and concurrency while providing additional guidance 
concerning mobility fees. For purposes of the Community Planning Act,
59
 the bill defines: 
 “Mobility fee” to mean a local government fee schedule established by ordinance and based on 
the projects included in the local government's adopted mobility plan. 
 “Mobility plan” to mean an alternative transportation system mobility study developed by using a 
plan-based methodology and adopted into a local government comprehensive plan that 
promotes a compact, mixed use, and interconnected development served by a multimodal 
transportation system in an area that is urban in character, or designated to be urban in 
character.  
 
The bill requires agreements between local governments that implement a transportation concurrency 
system and applicants for a development-of-regional-impact development order, development 
agreement, rezoning, or other land use development permit concerning the applicants offer to pay for or 
construct its proportionate share of required improvements to provide that, after the applicant makes its 
contribution or constructs its proportionate share, the project must be considered to have mitigated its 
transportation impacts and must be allowed to proceed if the applicant has satisfied all other local 
government development requirements for the project. The bill provides that local governments may not 
prevent a single applicant from proceeding after the applicant has satisfied its proportionate-share 
contribution and all other local government development requirements for the project. 
 
If a county and municipality both charge the developer of a new development or redevelopment a fee 
for transportation capacity impacts, the bill requires the county and municipality to create and execute 
an interlocal agreement to coordinate the mitigation of their respective transportation impacts. The 
interlocal agreement must: 
 Ensure any new development or redevelopment is not charged twice for the same 
transportation capacity impact. 
 Establish a plan-based methodology for determining the legally permissible fee to be charged 
to a new development or redevelopment. 
 Require the county or municipality issuing the building permit to collect the fee, unless 
otherwise agreed to by the parties. 
 Provide a method for the proportionate distribution of the revenue collected by the county or 
municipality to address transportation capacity impacts or assigning responsibility for the 
mitigation of transportation capacity impacts. 
 
If a county and municipality fail to execute an interlocal agreement by October 1, 2025, the bill provides 
that: 
 The fee charged to a new development or redevelopment must be based on the transportation 
capacity impacts apportioned to the county and municipality as identified in the developer's 
                                                
57
 S. 163.3180(5)(f), F.S. 
58
 See Hillsborough County Code of County Ordinances, ch. 40, art. III, div. 2, Mobility Fees; Pasco County Code of Ordinances, Land 
Development Code, ch. 1300, s. 1302.2; City of Port St. Lucie Code of Ordinances, Title XV, ch. 159, s. 159.101, Port St. Lucie Mobility 
Fee Ordinance. 
59
 The Community Planning Act is part II of ch. 163, F.S.   
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traffic impact study or the mobility plan adopted by the county or municipality, subject to a 10 
percent reduction in the total owed by the developer. 
 The county or municipality issuing the building permit must collect the fee and distribute the 
proceeds of the fee to the county and municipality within 60 days after the developer's payment. 
  
The bill provides that the interlocal agreement requirement does not apply to a county as defined in s. 
125.011(1), F.S., or a county or municipality that has entered into or has otherwise updated an existing 
interlocal agreement to coordinate the mitigation of transportation impacts for the duration of such 
agreement. 
 
Impact Fees 
 
The bill provides that local governments adopting and collecting impact fees must base impact fee 
calculations on a study using the most recent and localized data available within four years of the 
current impact fee update, unless the impact fee is increased, in which case the new study must be 
adopted by the local government within 12 months of the initiation. The bill provides that a local 
government must credit against the collection of the impact fee any contribution identified in the 
development order or any form of exaction, including monetary contributions.  
 
The bill provides that holders of transportation or road impact fee credits granted under s. 163.3180 or 
s. 380.06, F.S., along with other provisions, which existed before the adoption of the alternative 
transportation system, is entitled to the full benefit of the intensity and density prepaid by the credit 
balance as of the date it was first establish. 
 
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: 
 
None.