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The Now and Future in Structural Engineering

Florida House Bill 1021

(penalties for building Inspection violations)

CS/CS/CS/HB 1021 — Community Associations

 

by Commerce Committee; State Administration & Technology Appropriations Subcommittee; Regulatory Reform & Economic Development Subcommittee; and Rep. Lopez, V. and others (CS/CS/CS/SB 1178 by Fiscal Policy Committee; Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government; Regulated Industries Committee; and Senators Bradley, Pizzo, Osgood, Rodriguez, Garcia, and Jones)

 

This summary is provided for information only and does not represent the opinion of any Senator, Senate Officer, or Senate Office.

 

Prepared by: Regulated Industries Committee (RI)

 

The bill relates to the governance of condominium and cooperative associations and the practice of community association management.

 

 

Community Association Managers

 

The bill requires community association managers (CAMs) and CAM firms to return all community association records in their possession within 20 business days of termination of a services agreement or a written request whichever occurs first, with license suspension and civil penalties for noncompliance, except that the time frames applicable to timeshare plans apply to the records of a timeshare plan.

The bill provides conflict of interest disclosure requirements and a process for associations to follow when approving contracts with CAMs and CAM firms, or a relative, that may present a conflict of interest. The requirements are similar to the conflicts of interest provisions for condominium associations and their officers and directors, including:

  • Providing that, if the association receives and considers a bid to provide a good or service that exceeds $2,500, other than community association management services, from a CAM or CAM firm, including directors, officers, persons with a financial interest in a CAM firm, or a relative of such persons, the association must also solicit multiple bids from other third-party providers of such good or service.
  • Requiring that the proposed activity that may be a conflict of interest must be listed on, and all contracts and transactional documents related to the proposed activity must be attached to, the board’s meeting agenda and entered into the meeting minutes.
  • Requiring the board must approve the contracts with a potential conflict of interest, and all management contracts, by an affirmative vote of two-thirds of all directors present.

 

Milestone Inspections

 

Currently, single-family, two-family, and three-family dwellings are exempt from the milestone inspection requirements. The bill exempts four-family dwellings with three or fewer habitable stories above ground.

 

 

Official Records – Condominiums

 

Regarding access to the official records of a condominium association, the bill:

  • Provides that, if records are lost or destroyed, there is a good faith obligation to obtain and recover the records as is reasonably possible.
  • Allows e-mail addresses and facsimile numbers to be accessible to unit owners if consent to receive notice by electronic transmission has been provided.
  • Prohibits the sale or sharing of such personal information to third parties.
  • Effective January 1, 2026, decreases from 150 units to 25 units the threshold requirement for an association to maintain specified records available on the association’s website or on a mobile device.
  • Requires official records to be provided to the unit owner at no charge if the Division of Condominium, Timeshares, and Mobile Homes (division) within the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) subpoenas records an association has failed to timely provide in response to a unit owner’s written request.
  • Requires associations to maintain additional financial records (e.g., invoices and other documentation that substantiates any receipt or expenditure).
  • Requires associations to respond to a records request with a checklist of all records provided.
  • Authorizes the division to request access to an association’s website to investigate complaints related to unit owner access to official records on such website.

 

Criminal Violations – Condominiums

 

The bill provides the following criminal penalties related to condominium associations, and the official records of the association:

  • Second degree misdemeanor for any director or member of the board or association to knowingly, willfully, and repeatedly violate (two or more violations within a 12-month period) any specified requirements relating to inspection and copying of official records of an association;
  • First degree misdemeanor for knowingly and intentionally defacing or destroying required accounting records, or failing to create or maintain required accounting records, with the intent of causing harm to the association or one or more of its members;
  • Third degree felony to willfully and knowingly refuse to release or produce association records, with the intent to avoid or escape detection, arrest, trial, or punishment for the commission of a crime, or to assist another person with such avoidance or escape;
  • Third degree felony for an officer, director, or manager of a condominium association to knowingly solicit, offer to accept, or accept a kickback; and
  • First degree misdemeanor for engaging in specified fraudulent voting activity, and knowingly aiding, abetting, or advising a person in the commission of a fraudulent voting activity related to association elections.

The bill provides that officers and directors charged with a criminal violation under ch. 718, F.S., are deemed removed from office and a vacancy declared.

 

 

Budgets, Financial Reporting, and Reserves – Condominiums and Cooperatives

 

Regarding condominium association budgets, financial reporting, and reserves, the bill:

  • Prohibits associations from reducing the required type of financial statement (compiled, reviewed, or audited financial statements) for consecutive years.
  • Requires associations to provide unit owners with a notice that the structural integrity reserve study (SIRS) is available for inspection and copying within 45 days of completion of the study. The notice may be provided electronically.
  • Allows associations to temporarily pause the funding of reserves or a reduce reserve funding if the entire condominium building is uninhabitable due to a natural emergency, as determined by the local enforcement agency, upon majority approval of the members.

Condominium and cooperative associations must notify the division within 45 days after the SIRS is completed. By January 1, 2025, the division must create a database of associations that have completed the SIRS. After December 31, 2024, the division must include in its annual report a list of all associations that have completed the SIRS.

 

 

Meetings of Condominium Associations

 

The bill requires:

  • Associations of 10 or more units to meet quarterly and four times each year the agenda must allow members to ask questions concerning the status of construction or repair projects, revenues and expenditures, and other condominium issues; and
  • The notice for meetings on assessments must include the cost and purpose of assessments and a copy of any proposed contract.

 

Director Education – Condominiums

 

The bill provides education requirements for the officers and directors of condominium associations to require:

  • Newly elected or appointed directors to submit both the written certification that they have read the association’s governing documents, will work to uphold the documents to the best of their ability and faithfully discharge their duties, and submit a certificate of completion of an approved condominium education course;
  • Four hours of training which includes instruction on milestone inspections, SIRS, elections, recordkeeping, financial literacy and transparency, levying of fines, and meeting requirements;
  • Directors to annually complete at least one hour of continuing education about recent changes to the condominium laws and rules during the past year; and
  • Association directors, excluding directors for a timeshare condominium, to certify, on a form provided by the division, that all directors have completed the required written certification and educational certificate requirements.

 

Voting in Condominium and Cooperative Associations

 

Regarding voting in condominium and cooperative associations, the bill:

  • Requires associations to notify a condominium unit owner or member that his or her voting rights may be suspended due to nonpayment of a fee or other monetary obligation at least 90 days before an election.
  • Allows cooperative and condominium owners to consent to electronic voting in elections by using an electronic means of consent.
  • Provides that if the cooperative and condominium board authorizes online voting, the board must honor a unit owner's request to vote electronically at all subsequent elections, unless the unit owner opts out.

 

Hurricane Protections – Condominiums

 

The bill revises the requirements for the installation of hurricane protection in a condominium building, including:

  • Creating a uniform definition for “hurricane protection;”
  • Requiring condominium declarations to delineate the responsibilities of unit owners and associations for the costs of maintenance, repair, and replacement of hurricane protections, exterior doors, windows, and glass apertures;
  • Providing a uniform procedure for approval of hurricane protection; and
  • Providing that unit owners are not responsible for the cost of removal and reinstallation of hurricane protection if the removal is necessary to repair condominium property.

 

SLAPP and Defamation Suits

 

The bill revises the prohibitions against “strategic lawsuits against public participation” or “SLAPP suits,” which occur when association members are sued by individuals, business entities, or governmental entities for matters arising out of a unit owner's appearance and presentation before a governmental entity on matters related to the condominium association.

 

The bill includes condominium associations in the SLAPP suit prohibition, and protects unit owners who report complaints to government agencies or law enforcement, or make public statements critical of the operation or management of an association by prohibiting associations from:

  • Retaliating against unit owners, by increasing assessments, threatening to bring an action for possession or other civil action; and
  • Spending association funds in support of defamation, libel, or tortious interference actions against a unit owner.

 

Condominium Officers and Directors

 

The bill provides that the attendance of an officer or director at a meeting of the board is sufficient to constitute a quorum for the meeting and for any vote taken in his or her absence when the director is required to leave the room during the discussion and the taking of a vote on a contract in which the director, or his relative, has an interest.

 

 

Division of Condominium, Timeshares, and Mobile Homes

 

The bill expands the division’s post-turnover jurisdiction to include:

  • Procedures and records related to financial issues, including annual financial reporting, assessments for common expenses, fines, and commingling funds;
  • Elections, including election and voting requirements, and recall of board members;
  • The maintenance of and unit owner access to association records;
  • The procedural aspects of meetings, such as unit owner meetings, quorums, voting requirements, proxies, board of administration meetings, and budget meetings;
  • Disclosure of conflicts of interest;
  • Removal of a board director or officer under ch. 718, F.S.;
  • The procedural completion of structural integrity reserve studies; and
  • Any written inquiries by unit owners to the association.

In addition, the bill:

  • Requires that the division must refer to local law enforcement authorities any person it believes has engaged any criminal activity.
  • Provides that the division and the office of the condominium ombudsman may attend and observe any meeting of the board or any unit owner meeting, for the purpose of performing the duties of the division or the office of the ombudsman.

The division must submit findings by January 1, 2025, to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, of its review and recommendations of the website or application requirements for official records.

 

 

Condominium Ombudsman

 

The bill provides for the appointment of the Condominium Ombudsman by the DBPR secretary instead of the Governor, and deletes the requirement that the ombudsman must be an attorney.

 

 

Limitations on Actions by Condominium and Cooperative Associations

 

The bill provides that the statute of limitations and statute of repose for certain actions available to a condominium association or a cooperative association, will not begin to run until the unit owners have elected a majority of the members of the board of administration.

 

 

Pre-Sale Disclosures and Requirements

 

The bill revises the form in which the prospective purchaser of a condominium unit acknowledges receipt of specified documents to include a copy of the most recent annual financial statement and annual budget of the condominium association.

 

Effective October 1, 2024, the bill also:

  • Includes the annual financial statement and annual budget of the condominium association among the documents a nondeveloper seller of a unit must give to a prospective purchaser of a unit.
  • Allows developers of nonresidential condominiums the option of delivering to the escrow agent a surety bond or an irrevocable letter of credit with specified conditions, and
  • Revises escrow requirements for developers.

 

Condominiums Within a Portion of a Building or Within a Multiple Parcel Building

 

The bill revises the definition for the term “condominium property” to mean “the lands, leaseholds, improvements, any personal property, and all easements and rights appurtenant thereto, regardless of whether contiguous, which are subjected to condominium ownership.”

 

Effective October 1, 2024, the bill provides disclosure requirements for the creation of condominiums within a portion of a building or within a multiple parcel building. The association of a condominium created within a portion of a building or within a multiple parcel building has the right to inspect and copy the books and records upon which the costs for maintaining and operating the shared facilities are based and to receive an annual budget with respect to such costs.

 

 

Florida Building Commission – Water Intrusion Study

 

The bill also requires the Florida Building Commission to submit a report by December 1, 2024, to the Governor, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the chairs of the legislative appropriations committees and appropriate substantive committees with jurisdiction over ch. 718, F.S., of its review of the standards to prevent water intrusion through the tracks of sliding glass doors.

 

 

Appropriation

 

For Fiscal Year 2024-2025, the bill appropriates $6,122,390 in recurring and $1,293,879 in nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, and 65 full-time equivalent positions with an associated salary rate, for the purpose of implementing the provisions of this bill.

 

Vote: Senate 40-0; House 111-0

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