Florida Senate - 2017                                      SB 68
       
       
        
       By Senator Grimsley
       
       26-00138A-17                                            201768__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to the tourist development tax;
    3         amending s. 125.0104, F.S.; authorizing counties
    4         imposing the tourist development tax to use those tax
    5         revenues for auditoriums that are publicly owned but
    6         operated by specified organizations under certain
    7         circumstances; providing an effective date.
    8          
    9  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   10  
   11         Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section
   12  125.0104, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   13         125.0104 Tourist development tax; procedure for levying;
   14  authorized uses; referendum; enforcement.—
   15         (5) AUTHORIZED USES OF REVENUE.—
   16         (a) All tax revenues received pursuant to this section by a
   17  county imposing the tourist development tax shall be used by
   18  that county for the following purposes only:
   19         1. To acquire, construct, extend, enlarge, remodel, repair,
   20  improve, maintain, operate, or promote one or more:
   21         a. Auditoriums, Publicly owned and operated convention
   22  centers, sports stadiums, sports arenas, or coliseums that are
   23  publicly owned and operated, or auditoriums that are publicly
   24  owned but operated by 26 U.S.C. s. 501(c)(3) organizations and
   25  open to the public, within the boundaries of the county or
   26  subcounty special taxing district in which the tax is levied; or
   27         b. Aquariums or museums that are publicly owned and
   28  operated or owned and operated by not-for-profit organizations
   29  and open to the public, within the boundaries of the county or
   30  subcounty special taxing district in which the tax is levied;
   31         2. To promote zoological parks that are publicly owned and
   32  operated or owned and operated by not-for-profit organizations
   33  and open to the public;
   34         3. To promote and advertise tourism in this state and
   35  nationally and internationally; however, if tax revenues are
   36  expended for an activity, service, venue, or event, the
   37  activity, service, venue, or event must have as one of its main
   38  purposes the attraction of tourists as evidenced by the
   39  promotion of the activity, service, venue, or event to tourists;
   40         4. To fund convention bureaus, tourist bureaus, tourist
   41  information centers, and news bureaus as county agencies or by
   42  contract with the chambers of commerce or similar associations
   43  in the county, which may include any indirect administrative
   44  costs for services performed by the county on behalf of the
   45  promotion agency; or
   46         5. To finance beach park facilities or beach improvement,
   47  maintenance, renourishment, restoration, and erosion control,
   48  including shoreline protection, enhancement, cleanup, or
   49  restoration of inland lakes and rivers to which there is public
   50  access as those uses relate to the physical preservation of the
   51  beach, shoreline, or inland lake or river. However, any funds
   52  identified by a county as the local matching source for beach
   53  renourishment, restoration, or erosion control projects included
   54  in the long-range budget plan of the state’s Beach Management
   55  Plan, pursuant to s. 161.091, or funds contractually obligated
   56  by a county in the financial plan for a federally authorized
   57  shore protection project may not be used or loaned for any other
   58  purpose. In counties of fewer than 100,000 population, up to 10
   59  percent of the revenues from the tourist development tax may be
   60  used for beach park facilities.
   61  
   62  Subparagraphs 1. and 2. may be implemented through service
   63  contracts and leases with lessees that have sufficient expertise
   64  or financial capability to operate such facilities.
   65         Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2017.