2022 Florida Legislative Session Wrap-Up

The 2022 legislative session is over, even if it ran a little long. With a scheduled adjournment on Friday, March 11, lawmakers had to return the following Monday to vote on a massive $112.1 billion budget.

Florida TaxWatch and the state’s taxpayers had a number of successes. Many bills and budget issues supported by our research and recommendations passed. Our research and input that raised concerns with legislation, helped to improve them or fail passage, including changes to the tax audit system and a very costly approach to improving data privacy.

Examples include:

  • Extending VISIT Florida
  • Strengthening sea level rise resiliency
  • Expanding broadband to unserved areas
  • Adding financial literacy to graduation requirements
  • Tax holidays
  • Expanding telehealth
  • Providing education and employment incentives for probationers
  • Expanding criminal record expunction for juveniles who complete a diversion program
  • Extending COVID-19 liability protections for health care providers
  • Affordable housing
  • Proposed constitutional amendment to the November ballot that would create a new $50,000 homestead exemption for teachers, law enforcement, firefighters, EMTS, and other front-line workers.

If there is one word that sums up the 2022 session it might be “money.” There was a lot of it and a lot of it got spent. With state coffers reinforced with billions in federal aid and a rebounding economy that caused tax collections to consistently beat estimates, lawmakers had more money than they knew what to do with. The new budget is a 10.2 percent increase over last year’s, following another 10.2 percent increase in 2021. The $43.7 billion in General Revenue (GR) spending is an increase of nearly 20 percent. The budget is now $20 billion bigger than it was two years ago, not to mention the spending of billions in federal funds that are not included in these totals. The budget includes substantial increases in education, environmental, and health care spending, and state employees are getting a 5.4 percent pay raise. And of course, legislators got an unprecedented amount of their local projects to take back home. The is also significant tax relief of $658 million, with most of it going to individual taxpayers, with relatively little targeted at businesses. And there is still nearly $10 billion in GR reserves leftover (including two new reserve funds).

Documents to download

Previous Article Monitoring and Oversight of General Obligation Bonds to Improve Broward County Schools:
Next Article TOO EXPENSIVE TO RENT: FLORIDA’S RENTAL MARKET & EVICTION MORATORIUM
Print
8101
0Upvote 0Downvote
«June 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293031
1
Florida TaxWatch Provides Analysis of the Governor’s Property Tax Amendment and Legislation, Recommends Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission Lead Debate

Florida TaxWatch Provides Analysis of the Governor’s Property Tax Amendment and Legislation, Recommends Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission Lead Debate

The Florida Legislature is meeting in special session to consider Governor DeSantis’ proposed constitutional amendment and linked legislation to provide significant property tax relief to Florida homeowners. The proposal has many provisions, but the main ones would increase the homestead exemption to $150,000, beginning January 1, 2027, and then increase it to $250,000, beginning January 1, 2028. This exemption will apply to all property taxes. In addition, the cap on the annual increase in the assessment of non-homestead properties would be reduced from 10% to 5%, but this change would not apply to school property tax levies. Any property taxes remaining after the changes would be restricted to being used solely for core services such as public safety, education, infrastructure, debt, and retirement benefits.

Read more
234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive