Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H1307 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 01/30/2024

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 1307    Housing Developments 
SPONSOR(S): Redondo 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 1552 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Local Administration, Federal Affairs & Special 
Districts Subcommittee 
 	Darden Darden 
2) Ways & Means Committee    
3) State Affairs Committee    
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
State affordable housing programs are administered by the Florida Housing Finance Corporation (FHFC). 
Among the programs operated by FHFC is the State Apartment Incentive Loan (SAIL) Program. FHFC draws 
and administers funds from federal programs through federal tax credits, United States Department of Housing 
and Urban Development grants, and from the state through the State Housing Trust Fund and Local 
Government Housing Trust Fund.  Both state trust funds are funded by documentary stamp taxes, ad hoc 
individual legislative appropriations, and through program income, which consists primarily of funds from 
successful loan repayments that are recycled into the program from which they originate. 
 
The bill amends the definition of “urban infill” in the Community Planning Act to include the development or 
redevelopment of mobile home parks and manufactured home communities that otherwise meet the criteria to 
be considered urban infill. 
 
The bill revises eligibility criteria for grants under the Resilient Florida Grant Program and the Statewide 
Flooding and Sea Level Rise Resilience Plan to allow community development districts that were authorized to 
fund the construction or reconstruction of critical assets, either in the enabling ordinance that created the 
district or by a county or municipal development order, to be added to the list of governmental entities eligible 
for grants. 
 
The bill makes the following changes to affordable housing programs: 
 Amends the definition of “moderate income persons” to include households with incomes up to the 
greater of 140 percent of the statewide median income or area median income in counties with a 
population in excess of 1,000,000; 
 Requires FHFC to review certain projects based on plans presented by the developer which includes 
factors related to existing or proposed zoning, financing, and the housing supply needs of the county in 
which the project is located; 
 Provides that projects funded under the Live Local Program and general revenue service charge funds 
redirected to the SAIL program may not be required to use federal low-income housing tax credits or 
tax-exempt bond financing as part of the financing structure for the project; and 
 Revises eligibility for the property tax exemption for the use of property in certain multifamily projects as 
affordable housing to apply to properties used for moderate-income housing. 
 
This bill may be a county or municipality mandate requiring a two-thirds vote of the membership of the 
House. See Section III.A.1 of the analysis.   STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
Present Situation 
 
Community Planning Act 
 
The Community Planning Act
1
 provides counties and municipalities with the power to plan for future 
development by adopting comprehensive plans.
2
 Each county and municipality must maintain a 
comprehensive plan to guide future development.
3
 
 
All development, both public and private, and all development orders approved by local governments 
must be consistent with the local government’s comprehensive plan.
4
 A comprehensive plan is 
intended to provide for the future use of land, which contemplates a gradual and ordered growth and 
establishes a long-range maximum limit on the possible intensity of land use.  
 
A locality’s comprehensive plan lays out the locations for future public facilities, including roads, water 
and sewer facilities, neighborhoods, parks, schools, and commercial and industrial developments. A 
comprehensive plan is made up of 10 required elements, each laying out regulations for a different 
facet of development.
5
 
 
Resilient Florida Grant Program 
 
Established within the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) in 2021, the Resilient Florida 
Program enhances efforts to protect Florida’s inland waterways, coastlines, and shores, which serve as 
invaluable natural defenses against sea level rise (SLR).
6
 The program includes a selection of grants 
that are available to counties, municipalities, water management districts, flood control districts, and 
regional resilience entities.
7
 To effectively address the impacts of flooding and SLR that the state faces, 
eligible applicants may receive funding assistance to analyze and plan for vulnerabilities as well as 
implement projects for adaptation and mitigation. The Resilient Florida Program creates grant funding 
opportunities under the Resilient Florida Grant Program and the Statewide Flooding and Sea Level 
Rise Resilience Plan.
8
  
 
Under the Resilient Florida Grant Program, subject to appropriation, the DEP may provide grants to a 
county or municipality to fund: 
 Costs of community resilience planning and necessary data collection for such planning, 
including comprehensive plan amendments and necessary corresponding analyses that 
address Peril of Flood requirements; 
 Vulnerability assessments that identify or address risks of inland or coastal flooding and SLR;
9
 
 The development of projects, plans, and policies that allow communities to prepare for threats 
from flooding and SLR; and 
 Preconstruction activities for projects to be submitted for inclusion in the Statewide Flooding and 
Sea Level Rise Resilience Plan that are located in a municipality that has a population of 10,000 
or fewer or a county that has a population of 50,000 or fewer.
10
  
Affordable Housing 
                                                
1
 Ch. 163, part II F.S. 
2
 S. 163.3167(1), F.S. 
3
 S. 163.3167(2), F.S.  
4
 S. 163.3194(3), F.S 
5
 S. 163.3177(6), F.S.  
6
 DEP, Resilient Florida Program, https://floridadep.gov/ResilientFlorida (last visited Jan. 29, 2024).  
7
 DEP, Resilient Florida Grants, https://floridadep.gov/Resilient-Florida-Program/Grants (last visited Jan. 29, 2024).  
8
 Ss. 380.093(3) and 380.093(5), F.S.  
9
 Ss. 380.093(3)(b)(2) and 380.093(3)(c), F.S.  
10
 S. 380.093(3), F.S.   STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
 
Housing is considered affordable when it costs less than 30 percent of a family’s gross income.
11
 A 
family paying more than 30 percent of its income for housing is considered “cost burdened,” while those 
paying more than 50 percent are considered “extremely cost burdened.” Severely cost burdened 
households are more likely to sacrifice other necessities such as healthy food and healthcare to pay for 
housing, and to experience unstable housing situations such as eviction. 
 
Affordable housing is defined in terms of household income. Resident eligibility for Florida’s state and 
federally-funded housing programs is governed by area median income (AMI) or statewide median 
family income,
12
 published annually by the United States Department of Housing and Urban 
Development (HUD).
13
 The following are standard household income level definitions and their 
relationship to the 2023 Florida statewide AMI of $85,500 for a family of four (as family size changes, 
the income range also varies):
14
 
 Extremely low income – earning up to 30 percent AMI (at or below $ 24,850);
15
 
 Very low income – earning from 30.01 to 50 percent AMI ($24,851 to $41,450);
16
 
 Low income – earning from 50.01 to 80 percent AMI ($41,451 to $66,350);
 17
 and 
 Moderate income – earning from 80.01 to 120 percent of AMI ($66,351 to $102,600).
18
 
 
Florida Housing Finance Corporation
19
 
 
The Florida Housing Finance Corporation (FHFC) was created in 1997 as a public-private entity to 
assist in providing a range of affordable housing opportunities for Floridians.
20
 FHFC is a corporation 
held by the state and housed within the Department of Commerce. FHFC is a separate budget entity 
and its operations are not subject to control, supervision, or direction by the department.
21
  
 
The goal of FHFC is to increase the supply of safe, affordable housing for individuals and families with 
very low to moderate incomes by stimulating investment of private capital and encouraging public and 
private sector housing partnerships. As a financial institution, FHFC administers federal and state 
resources to finance the development and preservation of affordable rental housing and assist 
homebuyers with financing and down payment assistance.
22
 
 
State Apartment Incentive Loan (SAIL) Program 
 
The SAIL program is administered by FHFC and provides low-interest loans on a competitive basis to 
multifamily affordable housing developers.
23
 These funds often serve to bridge the gap between the 
                                                
11
 S. 420.0004(3), F.S. 
12
 The 2023 Florida SMI for a family of four was $ 85,500. U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, Income Limits, Access 
Individual Income Limits Areas, available at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/il.html#2022 (last visited Jan. 29, 2024). 
13
 HUD User, Office of Policy Development and Research, “Income Limits,” available at 
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/il.html#2022 (last visited Jan. 29, 2024) (SMI and AMI available under the "Access Individual 
Income Limits Area” dataset).  
14
 U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, Income Limits, Access Individual Income Limits Areas, available at 
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/il.html#2023 (last visited Jan. 29, 2024). 
15
 S. 420.0004(9), F.S. 
16
 S. 420.0004(17), F.S. 
17
 S. 420.0004(11), F.S. 
18
 S. 420.0004(12), F.S. 
19
 See generally National Council of State Housing Agencies, About HFAs,  https://www.ncsha.org/about-us/about-hfas/ (last visited 
Jan. 29, 2024); See generally State of Florida Auditor General, Florida Housing Finance Corporation Audit Performed Pursuant to 
Chapter 2013-83, Laws of Florida, available at https://flauditor.gov/pages/pdf_files/2017-047.pdf (last visited Jan. 29, 2024) (pursuant to 
Ch. 2013-83, Laws of Fla., codified as s. 420.511(5), F.S., the Florida Auditor General conducted an operational audit of the accounts 
and records of FHFC in November 2016).  
20
 Ch. 97-167, Laws of Fla. From 1980 through 1997, the former Florida Housing Finance Agency, placed within the former Department 
of Community Affairs, performed similar duties. 
21
 S. 420.504(1), F.S. 
22
 See Fla. Housing Finance Corp., About Florida Housing, https://www.floridahousing.org/about-florida-housing (last visited Jan. 29, 
2024). 
23
 S. 420.5087, F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
development’s primary financing and the total cost of the development. SAIL program dollars are 
available for developers proposing to construct or substantially rehabilitate multifamily rental housing.
24
 
 
At a minimum, developments financed by the SAIL program must set aside 20 percent of units for 
households at or below 50 percent of AMI, or if the development also receives Low Income Housing 
Tax Credits
25
 (LIHTC), 40 percent of units for households up to 60 percent of AMI.
26
 Loan interest rates 
are set at 0 percent for those developments that maintain 80 percent of their occupancy for 
farmworkers, commercial fishing workers, or homeless people. The interest rates are set at 1 percent 
for all other developments. Generally, loans are issued for 15 years and cover approximately 25 to 35 
percent of the total development cost.  
 
SAIL program funding is distributed by FHFC through a competitive solicitation process.
27
 Each year 
FHFC issues several requests for application, formal offers of funding that require aspirant developers 
to give FHFC detailed information related to the development. These requests for application vary by 
geography and the needs of the community, based on a statewide market study.
28
 Applications are 
then reviewed and scored by FHFC based on a number of criteria, and awards are made from the 
highest scoring applications.
29
 
 
Set-asides for affordable housing set two limits on an apartment: the rent is limited to make the 
apartment affordable to someone at the target income, and potential renters must submit proof of 
income beneath the target before becoming eligible renters. Set-asides are generally governed by a 
Land Use Restrictive Agreement (LURA), which is recorded by the county clerk’s office and runs with 
the land. A LURA can also include a time period associated with restriction compliance enforced by the 
Internal Revenue Service (IRS), HUD, or other housing authority.
30
 Both FHFC and local governments 
utilize LURAs to enforce requirements that developers receiving funding do go on to provide affordable 
housing. 
 
The same competitive solicitation process is used to distribute many different types of funding routed 
through FHFC. FHFC is the state’s administrator for all federal affordable housing programs, which 
include LIHTC, HOME Investment Partnerships Programs, the National Housing Trust Fund program 
through HUD, and Multifamily Mortgage Revenue Bonds. The process is also used for other state 
programs such as the Elderly Housing Community Loan Program.
31
 Certain funding sources can also 
be paired to ensure a greater number of projects are funded. 
 
Funding for Affordable Housing 
 
FHFC draws and administers funds from federal programs through federal tax credits and HUD
32
 and 
from the state through the State Housing Trust Fund and Local Government Housing Trust Fund.
33
 
Both state trust funds are funded by documentary stamp taxes, ad hoc individual legislative 
appropriations, and through program income, which consists primarily of funds from successful loan 
repayments that are recycled into the program from which they originate. 
 
Documentary Stamp Tax 
 
                                                
24
 See Florida Housing Finance Corporation, State Apartment Incentive Loan, available at 
https://floridahousing.org/programs/developers-multifamily-programs/state-apartment-incentive-loan (last visited Jan. 29, 2024). 
25
 Low Income Housing Tax Credits are a financial instrument administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development that 
provide financing for low income housing developments. Credits are allocated to states on a per capita basis and state-level 
administration is performed by FHFC. Eligible developments are income-limited similarly to SAIL requirements. 
26
 S. 420.5087(2), F.S. 
27
 S. 420.5087(1), F.S. 
28
 Id., see also Fla. Admin. Code R. Ch. 67-60. 
29
 For the full list of statutory criteria, see s. 420.5087(6)(c), F.S. Additional criteria and scoring mechanics can be set by FHFC. 
30
 Commercial Real Estate Finance Company of America, Multifamily Housing – Land Use Restrictive Agreement (LURA) LIHTC, 
available at https://www.crefcoa.com/land-use-restrictive-agreement.html (last visited Jan. 29, 2023). 
31
 See generally Florida Housing Finance Corporation, 2021 Annual Report, Jan. 30, 2022, available at 
https://issuu.com/fhfc/docs/2021_annual_report (last visited Jan. 29, 2024). 
32
 See ss. 420.507(33) and 159.608, F.S. 
33
 S. 201.15, F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
The documentary stamp tax imposes an excise tax on deeds or other documents that convey an 
interest in Florida real property. The tax comprises two taxes imposed on different bases at different tax 
rates. The first tax rate is 70 cents on each $100 of consideration for deeds, instruments, or writings 
whereby lands, tenements, or other real property or interests are granted, assigned, transferred, 
conveyed, or vested in a purchaser.
34
 The second tax rate is 35 cents per each $100 of consideration 
for certificates of indebtedness, promissory notes, wage assignments, and retail charge account 
agreements.
35
 Revenue collected from the documentary stamp tax is divided between the General 
Revenue Fund and various trust funds
36
 according to the statutory formula in ch. 201, F.S.  
 
Housing Trust Funds 
 
The State Housing Trust Fund, administered by FHFC,
37
 is “to be used for new construction and 
substantial rehabilitation of housing, to improve the state’s ability to serve first-time homebuyers, and to 
increase the affordability and availability of the housing stock in the State of Florida.”
38
 The 1992 
Sadowski Act increased documentary stamp tax rates and provided for a certain proportion of 
documentary stamp tax revenues to be distributed to the State Housing Trust Fund. A large portion of 
these funds are utilized in the State Apartment Incentive Loan (SAIL) Program. 
 
The Local Government Housing Trust Fund, administered by FHFC,
39
 is used to fund the State 
Housing Initiatives Partnership (SHIP) Program, which was created “for the purpose of providing funds 
to local governments as an incentive for the creation of partnerships to produce and preserve 
affordable housing.”
40
 A certain proportion of documentary stamp tax revenues are distributed to the 
Local Government Housing Trust Fund. 
 
General Revenue Service Charge 
 
Current law prescribes the distribution of revenues from the excise tax on documents.
41
 After payments 
on certain outstanding bonds and a distribution to the Land Acquisition Trust Fund, 8 percent of total 
collections are deducted as the General Revenue service charge.
42
 This charge is intended to 
represent a share of the cost of general government. The remaining revenues from the excise tax on 
documents are distributed to various trust funds, including the State Housing and Local Government 
Housing Trust Funds.
43
  
 
However, for fiscal years 2023-2024 through 2032-2033, up to $150 million of the General Revenue 
service charge is redirected to the State Housing Trust Fund for use in the SAIL program.
44
 For those 
years, after documentary stamp tax revenue is distributed to the Land Acquisition Trust Fund, the State 
Housing Trust Fund must receive the lesser of 8 percent of the remainder or $150 million. If 8 percent 
of the remainder is greater than $150 million, the amount in excess must be paid into the General 
Revenue Fund. FHFC must use 70 percent of the redirected funds to issue competitive requests for 
applications to finance projects that: 
 Redevelop an existing affordable housing development while also allowing for the construction 
of a new development within close proximity to the existing development to be rehabilitated. 
This process entails first constructing a new affordable housing development, then relocating 
the tenants from the existing development to the new development, and finally demolishing the 
existing development to allow for reconstruction of an affordable housing development with 
more overall units and affordable units; 
                                                
34
 S. 201.02(1), F.S. 
35
 Ss. 201.07 and 201.08, F.S. 
36
 The Land Acquisition Trust Fund, the State Transportation Trust Fund, the State Economic Enhancement and Development Trust 
Fund, the General Inspection Trust Fund, the Water Protection and Sustainability Program Trust Fund, the Resilient Florida Trust Fund, 
the State Housing Trust Fund, and the Local Government Housing Trust Fund. 
37
 Ch. 92-317, ss. 1-35, Laws of Fla; s. 420.0005, F.S. 
38
 Ch. 88-376, s. 2, Laws of Fla.; s. 420.003(5), F.S. (1988). 
39
 S. 420.9079, F.S 
40
 Ch. 92-317, s. 32, Laws of Fla.; s. 420.9072, F.S. (1992). 
41
 S. 201.15, F.S. 
42
 S. 215.20(1), F.S. 
43
 S. 215.15, F.S. 
44
 S. 210.15(4), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
 Address urban infill, including conversions of vacant, dilapidated, or functionally obsolete 
buildings or the use of underused commercial property; 
 Provide for mixed use of the location, incorporating nonresidential uses, such as retail, office, 
institutional, or other appropriate commercial or nonresidential uses; or 
 Provide housing near military installations in this state.
45
 
 
The remaining 30 percent must be used to finance projects that: 
 Propose using or leasing public lands. Projects that propose to use or lease public lands must 
include a resolution or other agreement with the unit of government owning the land to use the 
land for affordable housing purposes; 
 Address needs of young adults who age out of the foster care system; 
 Meet the needs of elderly persons; or 
 Provide housing to meet the needs in areas of rural opportunity.
46
  
 
FHFC must coordinate with the appropriate state department or agency for each goal, and to prioritize 
projects that provide for mixed-income developments.
47
 Any allocated funds remaining at the end of a 
given fiscal year may be used to supplement future applications for the same types of projects.
48
  
 
Low Income Housing Tax Credits 
 
Of the affordable housing financing options provided by the federal government, LIHTC
49 
are among 
the most commonly used. When a property is financed using LIHTC, the federal government typically 
requires the property be utilized for affordable housing for at least 30 years.
50 
This period is divided into 
the first 15 years, the “initial compliance period,” and the rest, an “extended use period.”  
 
After 14 years, the owner of an affordable housing development may request that FHFC seek a 
purchaser who will continue to operate the affordable portions of the development as affordable 
housing, which is referred to as the “qualified contract process.” Many developments, particularly those 
that receive the most lucrative LIHTC, waive the right to enter this process, and must remain affordable 
housing for the duration of the agreed upon time. After a developer requests a qualified contract, if the 
FHFC is unable to present a buyer during the subsequent one-year period, the extended use period of 
the property as affordable housing will end, and the property can be utilized for market-rate housing.
51
 
 
This “qualified contract process” relies on FHFC marketing the property and returning to the owner with 
a “bona fide contract,” showing that it has found a buyer in order to maintain the affordable housing 
requirement. The price for the affordable housing portion of the sale is set according to a formula 
designed to give the owner an inflation adjusted return on its original equity contribution.
52
 The bona 
fide contract, as provided by administrative rule is: 
 
…a contract for sale signed by the purchaser, which states that acceptance of the contract is 
contingent upon approval by the Corporation, and must provide for an initial earnest money 
deposit (the initial deposit) from the purchaser in the minimum amount of $50,000 and obligate 
the purchaser to make a second earnest money deposit (the second deposit) (the initial and 
second deposits shall be refundable in the event of the seller’s failure to deliver insurable title or 
                                                
45
 S. 420.50871(1), F.S. 
46
 S. 420.50871(2), F.S. 
47
 S. 420.50871(3), F.S. 
48
 S. 420.50871(4), F.S. 
49
 Low Income Housing Tax Credits are provided by the federal government to rental housing developers in exchange for a commitment 
to provide affordable rents and are usually sold to investors to raise project equity. The LIHTC program is governed by the U.S. 
Department of Treasury and Florida’s allocation is administered by Florida Housing. Under the LIHTC program, successful applicants 
are provided with a dollar-for-dollar reduction in federal tax liability in exchange for the development or rehabilitation of units to be 
occupied by very low- and low-income households. 
50
 Internal Revenue Code Section 42(h)(6)(A). 
51
 Internal Revenue Code Section 42(h)(6)(E)(i)(II). 
52
 Internal Revenue Code Section 42(h)(6)(F).  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
in the event of seller’s default, otherwise the deposits shall be non-refundable) equal to three (3) 
percent of the qualified contract price.
53
 
 
If FHFC is able to secure a purchaser and present the owner with a bona fide contract within the one-
year period, regardless of whether the owner accepts, rejects, or fails to act upon the contract, the 
property continues to be subject to its extended use agreement as affordable housing.
54
 If the owner 
accepts the offer, the property is sold to the purchaser. If the owner rejects the offer or fails to act upon 
the offer, the owner continues to be subject to the extended use agreement and cannot submit another 
qualified contract request for the development. 
 
Live Local Program 
 
In 2023, the Legislature established the Live Local Program, a tax credit program benefiting the SAIL 
program.
55
 Under the Live Local Program, businesses that make monetary donations to FHFC to fund 
the SAIL program may receive a dollar-for-dollar credit against either corporate income or insurance 
premium taxes.
56
 The annual tax credit cap for all credits under the program is $100 million. 
 
FHFC must expend all of the contributions received under the Live Local Program for the SAIL 
program.
57
 From the amount received, FHFC may use up to $25 million to provide loans for the 
construction of large-scale projects of significant regional impact. These projects must include a 
substantial civic, educational, or health care component, and may incorporate commercial use. These 
loans must be made in accordance with the practices and policies of the SAIL program, through a 
competitive application process, and must not exceed 25 percent of the development’s total costs. 
FHFC must find that the loan provides a unique opportunity for investment alongside local government 
participation that enables the creation of a significant amount of affordable and workforce housing. 
 
Affordable Housing Property Tax Exemption 
 
Current law provides that the use of property in certain multifamily projects for affordable housing will 
be considered a charitable purpose and qualify for an exemption from ad valorem taxation beginning on 
January 1 of the year following the 15th completed year from the earliest of: 
 The effective date of the recorded agreement with the FHFC; 
 The first day of the first taxable year in which the property was placed in service as an 
affordable housing property; or 
 The date such property received a certificate of occupancy, or certificate of substantial 
completion, as applicable, and could be used to provide affordable housing.
58
 
 
To qualify, a multifamily project must: 
 Provide affordable housing to natural persons or families meeting the extremely-low, very-low, 
or low-income limits specified in s. 420.0004, F.S.; 
 Contain more than 70 units used to provide affordable housing to the above group; and 
 Be subject to an agreement with the Florida Housing Finance Corporation to provide affordable 
housing to the above group, recorded in the official records of the county in which the property 
is located.
59
 
 
The exemption terminates when the property is no longer serving extremely-low, very-low, or low-
income persons pursuant to the recorded agreement.  
 
Effect of Proposed Changes 
 
                                                
53
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 67-48.031. 
54
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 67-48.031(11). 
55
 Ch. 2023-17, s. 34, Laws of Fla., codified as s. 420.50872, F.S. 
56
 S. 420.50872(3), F.S. 
57
 S. 420.50872(2), F.S. 
58
 S. 196.1978(2)(a), F.S. 
59
 S. 196.1978(2)(b), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
Definitions 
 
The bill amends the definition of “urban infill” in the Community Planning Act to include the 
development or redevelopment of mobile home parks and manufactured home communities that 
otherwise meet the criteria to be considered urban infill. 
 
The bill expands the definition of “moderate income persons” for affordable housing programs in a 
county with a population of 1,000,000 or more to include households with incomes up to the greater of 
140 percent of statewide median family income or 140 percent of AMI.  
 
Resilient Florida Grant Program 
 
The bill adds community development districts that were authorized to fund the construction or 
reconstruction of critical assets in the enabling ordinance that created the district or by a county or 
municipal development order to the list of governmental entities eligible for grants under the Resilient 
Florida Grant Program and the Statewide Flooding and Sea Level Rise Resilience Plan. 
 
General Revenue Service Charge Funds 
 
The bill provides that when FHFC reviews a proposal to redevelop an existing affordable housing 
development while also allowing for the construction of a new development within close proximity to the 
existing development to be rehabilitated, the consideration of the total number of units which includes 
more overall and affordable units must be based on plans presented by the developer which include 
factors related to existing or proposed zoning, financing, and the housing supply needs of the county in 
which the project is located. 
 
The bill provides that urban infill projects using redirected funds must use the definition of urban infill 
provided in the Community Planning Act. 
 
The bill also provides that a project financed using the redirected funds may not be required to use 
federal low-income housing tax credits or tax-exempt bond financing as part of the financing structure 
for the project. 
 
Live Local Program 
 
The bill authorizes FHFC to use funds set aside for the construction of large-scale projects of significant 
regional impact to be used for new construction projects that have received development assistance 
from the federal government to replace obsolete homes in mobile home parks and manufactured home 
communities based on a comprehensive redevelopment plan. 
 
The bill provides that a project financed as part of the Live Local Program may not be required to use 
federal low-income housing tax credits or tax-exempt bond financing as part of the financing structure 
for the project. 
 
Affordable Housing Property Exemption 
 
The bill revises eligibility for the property tax exemption for the use of property in certain multifamily 
projects as affordable housing to apply to properties used for moderate-income housing. 
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1: Amends s. 163.3164, F.S., relating to the Community Planning Act. 
 
Section 2: Amends s. 196.1978, F.S., relating to affordable housing property exemption. 
 
Section 3: Amends s. 380.093, F.S., relating to Resilient Florida Grant Program. 
 
Section 4: Amends s. 420.0004, F.S., relating to definitions.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
 
Section 5: Amends s. 420.50871, F.S., relating to allocation of increased revenues derived from 
amendments to s. 201.15, F.S. made by ch. 2023-17, Laws of Fla. 
 
Section 6: Amends s. 420.50872, F.S., relating to Live Local Program. 
 
Section 7:  Provides an effective date of July 1, 2024. 
 
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: 
The bill may reduce local government revenues by expanding the eligibility for a property tax 
exemption for the use of property in certain multifamily projects as affordable housing to apply to 
properties used for moderate-income housing. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
None. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
None. 
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
The county/municipality mandates provision of Art. VII, s. 18(b) of the Florida Constitution may 
apply because the provision in the bill that provides a property tax exception for certain property 
used to provide affordable housing may reduce county and municipal government authority to raise 
revenue. The bill does not appear to qualify under any exemption or exception. If the bill does qualify 
as a mandate, final passage must be approved by two-thirds of the membership of each house of the 
Legislature. 
 
 2. Other: 
None. 
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
The bill neither provides authority for, nor requires rulemaking by executive branch agencies.  STORAGE NAME: h1307.LFS 	PAGE: 10 
DATE: 1/30/2024 
  
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
Lines 42-68 of the bill provide that property in certain multifamily projects used for affordable housing 
may be eligible for an ad valorem tax exemption at the earliest of the date of a recording agreement 
between the developer and FHFC, the first day of the taxable year in which the property was placed 
into service as affordable housing, or the date the property received a certificate of occupancy. The bill 
does not, however, amend other provisions contained in the same section which require the property to 
be subject to an agreement between the developer and FHFC to be eligible for the agreement.  
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
Not applicable.