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The 60-day Florida legislative session will begin next week. | Sam Thomas, Fresh Take Florida

10 issues to watch during Florida’s legislative session

Published on February 25, 2025 at 11:03 am
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Florida lawmakers next week will start the annual legislative session, which will include considering hundreds of bills. Here are 10 issues to watch during the 60-day session:

BUDGET: Gov. Ron DeSantis has proposed a $115.6 billion budget for the fiscal year that will start July 1. Lawmakers will consider DeSantis’ proposal as they negotiate a final budget. Leaders say the end of federal pandemic money could lead to less spending on local projects.

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CONDOMINIUMS: Lawmakers face pressure to revise condominium laws as residents and condo associations grapple with increased costs. The higher costs stem, at least in part, from requirements passed after the deadly 2021 collapse of a Surfside condominium building.

EDUCATION: Among numerous education issues that lawmakers could address, House and Senate bills would repeal requirements aimed at later daily start times for high schools. Many districts are concerned about issues such as bus schedules. Districts must comply by July 2026.

ELECTIONS: DeSantis is pushing lawmakers to make it harder to put proposed constitutional amendments on the ballot. The push comes after DeSantis helped defeat November ballot initiatives on recreational use of marijuana and enshrining abortion rights in the Constitution.

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GAMBLING: The House has started moving forward with a proposal that would eliminate a requirement that the state’s two remaining thoroughbred horse tracks hold races to be able to offer other types of gambling, such as poker. The horse breeding industry is fighting the idea.

GUNS: Lawmakers could consider repealing a law that prevents people under age 21 from buying rifles and other long guns. The law passed after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018. The National Rifle Association is challenging the law in court.

HURRICANES: With areas such as hard-hit Taylor County struggling to recover, lawmakers could consider proposals to provide hurricane-related assistance, including to the agricultural industry. Three hurricanes hit the state in 2024, with two making landfall in rural Taylor County.

RURAL FLORIDA: Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, has made a priority of what he calls the “Rural Renaissance” plan. The plan includes trying to bolster health care, education, roads and economic development in rural areas. The Senate said it would affect 31 counties.

TAXES: DeSantis has proposed a series of tax cuts, including the elimination over two years of a tax that businesses pay on commercial leases. He also has proposed sales tax “holidays,” including a new tax-free shopping period from Memorial Day to July 4 on ammunition and guns.

WATER: The Senate has started moving forward with a plan that would make wide-ranging changes in the state’s water management districts and address Everglades restoration. The Senate says the plan, in part, would help districts focus on flood control and add “transparency.”


author image Reporter, News Service of Florida email Jim has been executive editor of the News Service of Florida since 2013 and has covered state government and politics in Florida since 1998. Jim came to the News Service in 2011 after stints as Tallahassee bureau chief for The Florida Times-Union, The Daytona Beach News-Journal and Health News Florida.

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