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Article
Courtesy of Florida Politics
By Jesse Scheckner
Published February 22, 2026
Legislation to make sure state funds meant for
condo-hardening projects go to the unit owners who most need them is bound
for a Senate floor vote after advancing through its final Committee stop.
As it had at two prior panels, the bill (SB
1706) won unanimous support.
Its sponsor, Hollywood independent Democratic Sen. Jason Pizzo, described
the rollout of the My Safe Florida Condominium Pilot Program — an offshoot
of a larger home-hardening initiative — as faulty and ineffective.
It launched in 2024 with a $30 million appropriation as a way to provide
free hurricane mitigation inspections and matching grants to eligible condo
associations.
Fast forward about a year and a half, and about $10 million of those funds
have been used, 30% of which covered administrative costs, members of the
Senate Appropriations Committee said Wednesday before approving the bill.
“(With) what scarce resources we have allocated to that program, this bill
seeks to revise the eligibility to make sure that it’s going to those most
in need,” Pizzo said.
To that end, SB 1706 would expand eligibility statewide but narrow
participation to older condo buildings where at least 80% of units are owned
and occupied by households earning no more than 80% of the area median
income.
It would require the Department of Financial Services to verify household
income, permit periodic recertification and mandate income documentation
with grant applications.
The bill would also limit grants by requiring associations to complete 100%
of recommended upgrades that strengthen doors and windows to wind and debris
to qualify for mitigation credits or insurance discounts.
Pizzo amended the item Wednesday to allow grant funds to also cover water
intrusion mitigation devices for wind-driven rain. While most insurance
companies still exclude coverage for damage caused by rain-driven water
intrusion, he said, “that doesn’t mean it’s not good practice to include
mitigation devices and products that do.”
The bill’s House version (HB
1497) by Parkland Democratic Rep. Christine Hunschofsky has two more
Committee stops before reaching a floor vote.
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