9 Actions Florida Should Take to Help Taxpayers Impacted by Hurricane Ian

1.     Postpone tax notices and waive penalties or interest for late tax filings in affected areas

2.     Extend the date for residents to take advantage of the tax discounts they would normally receive for paying property taxes and special assessments in November and postpone or defer the deadline for property tax installment payments

3.     Protect individual and business taxpayers from the risks for notices that they will likely not receive because their home or business addresses is not accessible anymore

4.     Issue no new audits in severely impacted areas, extend the statute of limitations and postpone existing audits that haven’t reached the assessment stage because these can’t be responded to while entire communities are still recovering

5.     Create procedures for fairly estimating taxes which can’t be calculated because records have been destroyed by the storm, moving away from the current method which significantly overestimates activity if no records are available

6.     Initiate procedures to offer payment plan assistance for late taxes, rather than resorting to the standard collection methods, like liens, levies, or bank freezes

7.     Retroactively apply the recently passed law that provides property tax refunds for residential property rendered uninhabitable as a result of a catastrophic event

8.     Provide tangible personal property relief and allow n on-residential properties rendered uninhabitable to receive property tax refunds

9.     Get Congress to pass a Disaster Tax Relief Act that includes provisions from past packages, including elements such as an Employee Retention Credit, an enhanced casualty loss deduction, and other relief provisions

Other Resources

Florida TaxWatch Statement on Hurricane Ian Recovery

Community Involvement

Government Efficiency Should Not Be Something We Do Every Four Years

Government Efficiency Is Not Something We Should Do Every Four Years — Report Cover

Government Efficiency Is Not Something We Should Do Every Four Years reviews Florida’s government-efficiency machinery—the constitutional Government Efficiency Task Force (GETF), the Local Government Efficiency Task Force (LGETF), and the Governor’s 2025 DOGE initiative—and argues for moving from episodic efforts to a standing, statute-driven process embedded in the annual budget. The GETF was placed in the state constitution in 2006 to convene every four years and deliver proposals to improve operations and reduce costs; its work window is limited to a single year per term, and delivery goes to the Legislative Budget Commission, the Governor, and the Chief Justice.

Across four GETF cycles, output and follow-through have varied. The 2011–12 term logged 98 proposals and helped spur streamlining of business permits and an enterprise IT overhaul, with documented savings such as reduced unemployment benefit weeks from permitting changes. The 2015–16 term produced 29 proposals with an estimated $2.14–$12.14 billion four-year savings range. The 2019–20 term drafted 42 proposals but, amid pandemic disruptions, the final report and savings estimates were not publicly tracked. The 2024–25 term issued only three proposals focused on agency long-range program plans. In total, 172 proposals have been identified across GETF terms with headline estimated savings of $15.14 billion, but recent cycles have shown diminished scope and public tracking.

At the local level, the LGETF (created in 2020) surfaced practical fixes—standardizing local election schedules, modernizing public-notice practices, consolidating duplicative reporting, aligning deadlines with municipal fiscal years, centralizing submissions, studying FRS migrations for local pensions, and capping business-occupancy license fees—illustrating how recurring, nuts-and-bolts changes can yield efficiency without fanfare.

In February 2025, Executive Order 25-44 established DOGE teams in the Governor’s office and within each state agency to hunt for waste, scrutinize questionable federal grants, and coordinate statewide reviews, paired with on-site local spending audits that began July 31, 2025. The order underscores daily discipline around efficiency but, like any order, it sunsets—on March 31, 2026—leaving continuity uncertain across administrations.

To make efficiency business-as-usual, Florida TaxWatch urges the Legislature to enact a Florida Government Efficiency Act by amending Chapter 216, Florida Statutes. The Act would require the Governor’s annual budget to include explicit efficiency and cost-saving items, informed by the Auditor General, OPPAGA, the GETF, agency inspectors general, state agencies, and credible outside institutions such as Florida TaxWatch, and would require the Legislature to consider these items during appropriations. Agencies charged with implementation would file quarterly updates documenting progress and verified savings to appropriations committees and the Legislative Budget Commission, creating ongoing accountability rather than four-year bursts.

Florida has proven ideas, demonstrated wins, and active tools; now it needs permanence. By embedding efficiency into the annual budget cycle—backed by transparent tracking and regular reporting—the state can convert sporadic initiatives into sustained savings and better service delivery for taxpayers.

Meet the Authors:

Bob Nave
Bob Nave
Senior Vice President of Research
LinkedIn
Meg Cannan
Meg Cannan
Senior Research Analyst
LinkedIn

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