|
At ‘Affordability Now Tour’ stop, Paul Renner
elicits complaints about HOAs |
Article
Courtesy of States Newsroom
By
Mitch Perry
Published
April 17, 2026
OLDSMAR — Florida GOP gubernatorial candidate Paul
Renner took his “Affordability Now” tour to Tampa Bay Thursday, where
the conversation focused on property insurance rates, property taxes,
and growing discontent with condominium and homeowners’ associations (HOAs).
|
Florida voters have
made clear over the past year that affordability is their
top concern. In a University of North Florida survey last
month, 50% of respondents said it is their top concern, with
the next highest issue being political polarization at 12%.
Struggling in the polls, the former speaker of the Florida
House held an exchange about the cost of living in Florida
with about a dozen employees at Friends Plumbing, a small
business in northeastern Pinellas County. The biggest
complaints were high fees, restrictive rules, and
authoritarian structures within HOAs and condo associations.
“I understand wanting to keep the neighborhood neat, nice,
and clean,” said an unidentified Friends Plumbing staffer.
“I do want that as a person who bought a home and I want my
neighbor’s home to look good just like mine, but where do we
draw the line about what they can tell you to do and not to
do and how much they charge you?”
Monty Kosloski, owner of Friends Plumbing, said he
considered purchasing a beachfront property in Pinellas
County, but that the HOA fees were “out of control.”
“A thousand dollars, $1,200 for an HOA for an eight-story
building? That’s a lot of revenue that they’re bringing in.
Where the hell is all of that going? The whole thing is
concrete. There’s no grass to cut,” he said. “The HOAs in
this area are a real problem.” |
|
Paul Renner speaking with Friends Plumbing owner
Monty Kosloski (right) in Oldsmar on April 9, 2026.
|
An unidentified woman complained “the lobbyists are
lining the pockets of our politicians and nothing’s getting done to
actually get relief for the homeowners and to create more affordability
when it comes to these HOAs and condo associations.”
Lawmakers in Tallahassee did attempt to do something about those
problems during the regular legislative session.
A proposal designed to reform HOAs (HB 657) passed nearly
unanimously in the Florida House last month, 108-2. However, its Senate
companion (SB 1498) advanced only in one of its three assigned committees,
effectively killing the bill by the time the session ended on March 13.
Among its provisions was creating a process for homeowners to dissolve an
association and allow state circuit courts to set up “community association
court programs” to settle disputes.
Renner said it’s a complaint he’s heard countless times since he began his
campaign for governor last fall.
He also heard concerns on Thursday about Florida’s property insurance
market. Republicans in the Capitol have maintained that the crisis has
abated in the past year, touting reforms they contend have eased the way for
17 new insurance companies to enter the state. They also say dozens of
homeowners and auto insurers have filed for rate decreases.
Renner himself has touted some of those statistics, but he acknowleged more
needs to be done.
“I think that our reforms are absolutely working, but it was going up so
fast and now it’s leveling off and some people are seeing reductions,” he
told the Phoenix following the meeting. “We have competition, we’re moving
in the right direction, we’ve gotta protect the reforms we’ve got, but
there’s more that we can do regulatory and more home hardening with the My
Florida Safe Home [program] and things of that nature.”
Renner said he’s working on a major property tax reform package that he’ll
unveil in the next few weeks. In November, he called for the Legislature to
reduce ad valorem taxes levied by local governments to the previous year’s
levels, as well as a reduction based on how each county’s spending had
increased since 2020.
That proposal came as Gov. Ron DeSantis had been campaigning for months on
allowing voters to decide whether to reduce or even eliminate non-school
property taxes on homesteaded properties this November. Despite the buildup,
however, the Florida Senate, seemingly taking their cues from DeSantis,
declined to offer any type of property tax plan during the regular session,
ignoring a Houses joint resolution to end all such taxes.
DeSantis didn’t like that plan and intends to call a special session on the
topic.
“There is no proposal on the ballot right now for 2026, so what I’m
proposing would be as governor going forward if they don’t get anything done
this year — and it’s not looking good right now,” he said at one point
during the nearly 45-minute discussion.
Renner blasted state government leaders during the last week of the regular
session last month, saying the cost of living was “crushing” Florida
families yet “Tallahassee has just ignored” the problem. He doubled down on
that criticism Thursday.
“I say this as a Republican. They’ve totally failed and missed the No. 1
issue that people are facing, which is the cost of living,” he said. “And
your job when you’re in the majority is to solve people’s problems. And so,
we’ll do that, and I’ve gotten after these issues and I’m going to get after
them and do more when I’m governor.”
Renner later held a second stop in Tampa. He is scheduled to make four more
appearances on his tour next week.
Renner, Lt. Gov. Jay Collins, and investment firm CEO James Fishback are
trailing significantly behind U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds of Naples in the Aug.
18 Republican primary for governor. An Emerson College survey of 465 likely
Florida Republican voters published last week showed Donalds with 46%
support, with the other three nominees in the low single-digits.
|