Article
Courtesy of Florida Politics
By Andrew Powell
Published May 1, 2025
The Senate has unanimously passed a bill
aiming to improve the My Safe Florida Condominium Pilot
Program that enhances hurricane resilience.
St. Augustine Republican Sen. Tom Leek presented the bill
(SB 592) before substituting in the House companion (HB 393)
sponsored by Miami Republican Rep. Vicki Lopez. The House
approved its version last week.
Leek explained the bill aims to revise and enhance the My
Safe Florida Condominium Pilot Program to improve hurricane
resilience of eligible condominiums by providing financial
assistance for mitigation projects.
The bill states that condos need to be three stories or
higher to be eligible for the program. In order to apply for
a grant, at least 75% of all unit owners who live in the
building must approve the move. The bill also revises rules
for roof repair projects and revises reimbursement language,
while clarifying that detached units are excluded.
Boynton Beach Democratic Sen. Lori Berman asked if a condo
association could only use the pilot program if it will
result in an insurance premium credit.
Leek said in response that the original version only applied
to windows that were owned by the individual owner.
“We learned that some windows are owned by the condo
association, so that amendment was intended to expand that
to basically to cover the windows,” Leek said. “I don’t know
if a condo association can get a discount on the policy.”
Hollywood independent Sen. Jason Pizzo said he appreciates
the amendments but noted that some changes could be
expanded.
“I appreciate the changes because 100% approval from
ownership is tantamount to never getting approval on a condo
board,” Pizzo said. “This is not a luxury second or third
property, this is their home. I applaud your efforts on
this, but I think we should lower the threshold more going
forward and we have to fund it.”
In closing, Leek said programs such as this take time.
“This is an important program. It only came into existence
last year as it relates to condos. As with any new program,
they take time,” Leek said. “They take time to get
implemented, you have to apply, you have to qualify, then
you have to execute.”
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