Sunrise Mayor Mike
Ryan thinks Gov. Ron DeSantis and lawmakers should go back
to work soon to address reforms for condo associations.
Ryan calls the looming deadline for reforms "priority one."
He's explicit in what he worries the rules could lead to if
they aren't changed.
|
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, and Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuņez, second from left, listen during a roundtable discussion with condominium owners, at the Roberto Alonso Community Center, Monday, Sept. 9, 2024, in Miami Lakes |
DeSantis heard from association board
members and a South Florida condo owner Monday in Miami
Lakes during a roundtable discussion of the condo crisis. He
said lawmakers should take action before the next regular
legislative session which starts in March.
“We do need to do something this year,” DeSantis said. “I
don't think this is something that you can just put off
until next March or April.”
The governor stopped short of taking the official step of
calling lawmakers back to Tallahassee for a special session.
Outgoing Senate Pres. Kathleen Passidomo in August rejected
calls for a special session. "The legislative process best
serves Floridians when there is analysis, collaboration, and
input from all stakeholders," she wrote in a letter to
senators.
Ryan said he doesn't know what "Tallahassee is missing" but
expressed support to find solutions. "Doing nothing is
simply not an option," he said.
On the edge of the Everglades
Despite its name, Sunrise is miles from a place where it
would have obstructed views of the first rays of sunshine
over the Atlantic Ocean each morning. It has about 100,000
residents stretched along its diagonal borders with Weston,
Tamarac, Plantation and the Everglades. It is probably best
known as the home of the Amerant Bank Arena, where the
Florida Panthers won the NHL championship in June. Sawgrass
Mills shopping mall is a major economic draw.
It is a suburban community not known for condo high rises.
Yet, housing data reflects the growing concerns of trouble
brewing with older condos due to the reforms.
According to Realtor.com, the median price of a home sold in
Sunrise, which includes both single family homes and condos,
was $230,000 in July. That is down 30% from a year earlier.
"All of this is interlocking when we start losing condo
sales and our seniors can't save their homes or they're
being sold at a loss or they just stop paying their
maintenance fee. Then you start to have this cascade
downward where associations get in worse trouble," Ryan
said. "None of us are beyond the reach of what's coming."
The pace of condo sales has been slowing. More condos are up
for sale and they've been taking longer to find buyers. A
year ago a Broward County condo owner could expect to wait
about two months to sell their property. In July, that had
grown to almost three months, according to data from the
Miami Association of Realtors.
Prices are coming down, but slowly. The median price of a
condo in Broward hit $290,000 in February. By July, it had
fallen to $272,500.
Perhaps a better gauge of the price pressure sellers are
feeling is the gap between asking prices and selling prices.
That gap has widened. Sellers are taking about 94 cents of
every dollar in their original listing price. They were
getting almost 97 cents on the dollar last July. It signals
buyers are more willing to negotiate as more condos hit the
market. Listings have jumped more than 20% year-to-date
through July.
Reform the reforms
Ryan said lawmakers should consider giving condo
associations more time to come into compliance with the
reforms, especially the financial requirements. "They need
to maybe spread this out and ramp it up at a slower
trajectory," he said.
He also thinks lawmakers can rework the law to make it more
reflective of the complexities of the condo market,
specifically revisiting the three-story requirement.
"There needs to be a more precise way of handling this
rather than the large net that was cast from the seagrass to
the sawgrass capturing every one of these buildings," he
said.
“Let's just be nimble with this. Let's listen to people,”
DeSantis said on Monday. “Let's make sure they're able to
stay in their home.” The governor suggested low cost loans
could help condo owners facing hefty charges.
Sunrise has not offered financial assistance to condo
residents facing financial challenges from higher fees and
assessments. Ryan said the problem is too big for any one
city.
South Florida communities have enjoyed rising property
values for many years. Those higher values have helped fund
local governments without having to resort to property tax
increases.
The taxable value of all properties in Sunrise rose 8.1%
last year, according to data from the Broward County
Property Appraiser's Office. That was on top of an 8%
increase the year before. A drop in sales prices may
eventually threaten municipal budgets.
As Ryan waits to see if Florida lawmakers will return for a
special session or not, he warned against complacency in
local government. "I've already begun those discussions with
staff saying we really need to start tightening our belts
now because I am deeply concerned," he said. "I've talked to
my colleague mayors around the county. We're preparing for
what is, we feel, a potential Category 5 economic storm."