Senate Bill sb0014D
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    Florida Senate - 2007        (Corrected Copy)          SB 14-D
    By Senator Webster
    9-559A-08
  1                      A bill to be entitled
  2         An act relating to ad valorem taxation;
  3         amending s. 194.301, F.S.; specifying
  4         circumstances under which the presumption
  5         concerning the correctness of an ad valorem tax
  6         assessment is lost; providing for the rate of
  7         percentage change of a category of property
  8         comprised of comparable property; requiring the
  9         property appraiser to make the percentage
10         change for each category available on a website
11         or upon request; specifying the categories of
12         property; providing for the amendments to s.
13         194.301, F.S., to apply to assessments made on
14         or after a specified date; amending s. 193.017,
15         F.S.; deleting provisions providing for the
16         assessment of property receiving the low-income
17         housing tax credit; providing for the
18         assessment of structural improvements on land
19         owned by a community land trust and used to
20         provide affordable housing; defining the term
21         "community land trust"; providing for the
22         conveyance of structural improvements, subject
23         to certain conditions; specifying the criteria
24         to be used in arriving at just valuation of a
25         structural improvement; amending s. 196.1978,
26         F.S., relating to the affordable housing
27         property exemption; conforming provisions to
28         changes made by the act; authorizing the
29         Department of Revenue to adopt emergency rules;
30         providing for application and renewal thereof;
31         amending s. 196.002, F.S.; revising certain
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 1         reporting requirements for the property
 2         appraiser in order to conform to changes made
 3         by the act; amending s. 193.114, F.S.;
 4         providing additional requirements for
 5         assessment rolls; amending s. 193.155, F.S.;
 6         providing for the assessment of homestead
 7         property following a change in ownership based
 8         on the just value of the immediate prior
 9         homestead; providing for determining the just
10         value of the new homestead; providing for
11         assessing a homestead established by two or
12         more persons who held prior homestead property;
13         providing requirements for applying for such an
14         assessment; requiring that the Department of
15         Revenue provide by rule for documenting
16         entitlement to the assessment; amending s.
17         196.031, F.S.; increasing the amount of the
18         exemption provided for homestead property;
19         providing for an additional exemption for
20         levies other than school district levies;
21         deleting obsolete provisions; deleting a
22         requirement that property appraisers compile
23         information concerning the loss of certain tax
24         revenues and submit a copy to the Department of
25         Revenue; creating s. 196.078, F.S.; providing
26         for an additional homestead exemption for
27         first-time Florida homebuyers; providing a
28         definition; providing for the amount of the
29         additional exemption; requiring that a person
30         claiming such exemption submit a sworn
31         statement attesting that he or she has never
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 1         owned property that received a homestead
 2         exemption in this state; providing requirements
 3         for forms; providing penalties; creating s.
 4         196.098, F.S.; providing an additional tax
 5         exemption for low-income seniors; providing for
 6         eligibility and a limitation on income;
 7         providing for an annual adjustment in the
 8         income limitations; requiring the department to
 9         provide for verifying age and income by rule;
10         amending s. 196.161, F.S.; providing that
11         claims for homestead exemptions by persons not
12         entitled to such exemptions subjects the
13         property to tax liens; amending s. 197.252,
14         F.S., relating to the homestead tax deferral;
15         conforming provisions to changes made by the
16         act; creating s. 196.183, F.S.; exempting each
17         tangible personal property tax return from a
18         specified amount of assessed value; limiting a
19         single business operation within a county to
20         one exemption; providing a procedure for
21         waiving the requirement to file an annual
22         tangible personal property tax return if the
23         taxpayer is entitled to the exemption;
24         providing penalties for failure to file a
25         return as required or to claim more exemptions
26         than allowed; providing that the exemption does
27         not apply to certain mobile homes; creating s.
28         193.803, F.S.; providing for the assessment of
29         rental property used for workforce housing or
30         affordable housing; authorizing a property
31         owner to appeal a denial of eligibility to the
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 1         value adjustment board; requiring that a
 2         property owner file an application for such
 3         classification with the property appraiser or
 4         file a petition with the value adjustment
 5         board; providing a fee for filing a petition;
 6         providing for reapplication to be made on a
 7         short form provided by the Department of
 8         Revenue; defining the term "extenuating
 9         circumstances" for purposes of granting a
10         classification for January 1, 2008; specifying
11         the types of property that are eligible to be
12         classified as workforce rental housing or
13         affordable rental housing; providing for the
14         assessment of property receiving the low-income
15         housing tax credit; requiring that property be
16         removed from such classification if its use or
17         program eligibility changes; providing the
18         methodologies for assessing workforce rental
19         housing and affordable rental housing;
20         requiring that the property owner annually
21         provide a rent roll and income and expense
22         statement to the property appraiser for the
23         preceding year; authorizing the property
24         appraiser to base the assessment on the best
25         available information if the property owner
26         fails to provide the rent roll and statement;
27         providing for a tax lien to be filed against
28         property that is misclassified as workforce
29         rental housing or affordable rental housing
30         within a specified period; amending ss.
31         192.0105, 193.052, 194.011, 195.073, and
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 1         195.096, F.S., relating to taxpayer rights, the
 2         preparation and serving of returns, assessments
 3         involving agricultural lands, assessment
 4         notices and objections, the classification of
 5         property, and the review of assessment rolls;
 6         conforming provisions to changes made by the
 7         act; creating s. 200.186, F.S.; specifying a
 8         formula for counties, municipalities, municipal
 9         service taxing units, dependent districts, and
10         independent districts to determine a maximum
11         millage rate for the 2008-2009 fiscal year;
12         providing that a taxing authority in violation
13         of such provision forfeits its local government
14         half-cent sales tax revenues; providing certain
15         exceptions to the limitations on millage rates;
16         providing an exception for calculating the
17         rolled-back rate for certain counties;
18         providing that certain units of government are
19         recognized as municipalities; requiring the
20         Department of Revenue to report to the
21         Legislature the results of implementing ch.
22         2007-321, Laws of Florida, relating to ad
23         valorem taxation; requiring that the department
24         report those governments that are not in
25         compliance with requirements limiting certain
26         millage rates; providing legislative intent
27         with respect to the information reported to the
28         department; requiring the department to report
29         certain recommendations of the Revenue
30         Estimating Conference and identify needed
31         additional resources; providing that certain
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 1         provisions of the act apply retroactively;
 2         providing effective dates, one of which is
 3         contingent.
 4  
 5  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
 6  
 7         Section 1.  Section 194.301, Florida Statutes, is
 8  amended to read:
 9         194.301  Presumption of correctness.--
10         (1)  In any administrative or judicial action in which
11  a taxpayer challenges an ad valorem tax assessment of value,
12  the property appraiser's assessment shall be presumed correct.
13  This presumption of correctness is lost if the taxpayer shows
14  by a preponderance of the evidence that either the property
15  appraiser has failed to consider properly the criteria in s.
16  193.011 or if the property appraiser's assessment is
17  arbitrarily based on appraisal practices that which are
18  different from the appraisal practices generally applied by
19  the property appraiser to comparable property within the same
20  class and within the same county. In addition, except for
21  homestead property, the presumption of correctness is lost if
22  the percentage change, exclusive of new construction, in just
23  value of the challenged parcel is greater than the percentage
24  change for the category of property in which the challenged
25  parcel is included. If the presumption of correctness is lost,
26  the taxpayer has shall have the burden of proving by a
27  preponderance of the evidence that the appraiser's assessment
28  is in excess of just value. If the presumption of correctness
29  is retained, the taxpayer has shall have the burden of proving
30  by clear and convincing evidence that the appraiser's
31  assessment is in excess of just value. In no case shall the
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 1  taxpayer have the burden of proving that the property
 2  appraiser's assessment is not supported by any reasonable
 3  hypothesis of a legal assessment. If the property appraiser's
 4  assessment is determined to be erroneous, the Value Adjustment
 5  Board or the court can establish the assessment if there
 6  exists competent, substantial evidence in the record, which
 7  cumulatively meets the requirements of s. 193.011. If the
 8  record lacks competent, substantial evidence meeting the just
 9  value criteria of s. 193.011, the matter shall be remanded to
10  the property appraiser with appropriate directions from the
11  Value Adjustment Board or the court. This section does not
12  authorize any value adjustment board or court to establish the
13  value of property except in accordance with the State
14  Constitution.
15         (2)  The percentage change for a category of property
16  shall be based on the percentage change in just value from the
17  prior year to the current year of all parcels within that
18  category in both years, exclusive of new construction,
19  calculated for each tax roll by the property appraiser as of
20  the date on which the current year's proposed tax notices were
21  mailed. The property appraiser shall make available on the
22  appraiser's website or upon request the percentage change for
23  each category as soon as practicable, but no later than 10
24  days after such mailing.
25         (3)  For purposes of this section, categories of
26  property include:
27         (a)  Nonhomestead single-family residences.
28         (b)  Nonhomestead condominiums and cooperatives.
29         (c)  Nonhomestead mobile homes.
30         (d)  Multifamily and retirement homes.
31  
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 1         (e)  Agricultural, high-water recharge, historic
 2  property used for commercial or certain nonprofit purposes,
 3  and other use-valued property.
 4         (f)  Vacant residential lots.
 5         (g)  Nonagricultural acreage and other undeveloped
 6  parcels.
 7         (h)  Improved commercial and industrial property.
 8         (i)  Unimproved commercial and industrial property.
 9         (j)  Taxable institutional or governmental, utility,
10  locally assessed railroad, oil, gas, and mineral land,
11  subsurface rights, and other real property.
12         Section 2.  The amendments made by this act to s.
13  194.301, Florida Statutes, apply only to assessments made on
14  or after January 1, 2008.
15         Section 3.  Section 193.017, Florida Statutes, is
16  amended to read:
17         (Substantial rewording of section. See
18         s. 193.017, F.S., for present text.)
19         193.017  Assessment of structural improvements on land
20  owned by a community land trust and used to provide affordable
21  housing.--
22         (1)  As used in this section, the term "community land
23  trust" means a nonprofit entity that is qualified as
24  charitable under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and
25  has as one of its purposes the acquisition of land to be held
26  in perpetuity for the primary purpose of providing affordable
27  homeownership.
28         (2)  A community land trust may convey structural
29  improvements located on specific parcels of such land which
30  are identified by a legal description contained in and subject
31  to a ground lease having a term of at least 99 years to
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 1  natural persons or families who meet the extremely-low,
 2  very-low, low, and moderate income limits, as specified in s.
 3  420.0004, or the income limits for workforce housing, as
 4  defined in s. 420.5095(3). A community land trust shall retain
 5  a preemptive option to purchase any structural improvements on
 6  the land at a price determined by a formula specified in the
 7  ground lease which is designed to ensure that the structural
 8  improvements remain affordable.
 9         (3)  In arriving at just valuation under s. 193.011, a
10  structural improvement that provides affordable housing on
11  land owned by a community land trust and subject to a 99-year
12  or longer ground lease shall be assessed using the following
13  criteria:
14         (a)  The amount a willing purchaser would pay a willing
15  seller, which may not exceed the amount determined by the
16  formula in the ground lease.
17         (b)  If the ground lease and all amendments and
18  supplements thereto, or a memorandum documenting how such
19  lease and amendments or supplements restrict the price at
20  which the improvements may be sold, is recorded in the
21  official public records of the county in which the leased land
22  is located, the recorded lease and any amendments and
23  supplements, or the recorded memorandum, shall be deemed a
24  land use regulation during the term of the lease as amended or
25  supplemented.
26         Section 4.  Section 196.1978, Florida Statutes, is
27  amended to read:
28         196.1978  Affordable housing property
29  exemption.--Property used to provide affordable housing
30  serving eligible persons as defined by s. 159.603(7) and
31  natural persons or families meeting the extremely-low,
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 1  very-low, low, or moderate persons meeting income limits
 2  specified in s. 420.0004 s. 420.0004(8), (10), (11), and (15),
 3  which property is owned entirely by a nonprofit entity that
 4  which is a corporation not for profit which is qualified as
 5  charitable under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and
 6  which complies with Rev. Proc. 96-32, 1996-1 C.B. 717 or a
 7  limited partnership, the sole general partner of which is a
 8  corporation not for profit which is qualified as charitable
 9  under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and which
10  complies with Rev. Proc. 96-32, 1996-1 C.B. 717, shall be
11  considered property owned by an exempt entity and used for a
12  charitable purpose, and those portions of the affordable
13  housing property which provide housing to natural persons or
14  families that meet the extremely-low, very-low, low, or
15  moderate income limits specified individuals with incomes as
16  defined in s. 420.0004 s. 420.0004(10) and (15) shall be
17  exempt from ad valorem taxation to the extent authorized in s.
18  196.196. All property identified in this section shall comply
19  with the criteria for determination of exempt status to be
20  applied by property appraisers on an annual basis as defined
21  in s. 196.195. The Legislature intends that any property owned
22  by a limited liability company or a limited partnership that
23  which is disregarded as an entity for federal income tax
24  purposes pursuant to Treasury Regulation 301.7701-3(b)(1)(ii)
25  shall be treated as owned by its sole member or sole general
26  partner. The exemption provided in this section also extends
27  to land that is owned by an exempt entity and that is subject
28  to a 99-year or longer ground lease for the purpose of
29  providing affordable homeownership.
30         Section 5.  (1)  The executive director of the
31  Department of Revenue is authorized, and all conditions are
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 1  deemed met, to adopt emergency rules under ss. 120.536(1) and
 2  120.54(4), Florida Statutes, for the purpose of implementing
 3  sections 3 and 4 of this act.
 4         (2)  In anticipation of implementing those portions of
 5  this act which have not taken effect, the executive director
 6  of the Department of Revenue is authorized, and all conditions
 7  are deemed met, to adopt emergency rules under ss. 120.536(1)
 8  and 120.54(4), Florida Statutes, for the purpose of making
 9  necessary changes and preparations so that forms, methods, and
10  data records, electronic or otherwise, are ready and in place
11  if those portions of this act which have not taken effect
12  become law.
13         (3)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, such
14  emergency rules shall remain in effect for 18 months after the
15  date of adoption and may be renewed during the pendency of
16  procedures to adopt rules addressing the subject of the
17  emergency rules.
18         Section 6.  Section 196.002, Florida Statutes, is
19  amended to read:
20         196.002  Legislative intent.--For the purposes of
21  assessment roll recordkeeping and reporting,:
22         (1)  The increase in the homestead exemption provided
23  in s. 196.031(3)(d) shall be reported separately for those
24  persons entitled to exemption under paragraph (a) or paragraph
25  (b) of s. 196.031(3) and for those persons entitled to
26  exemption under s. 196.031(1) but not under said paragraphs;
27  and
28         (2)  the exemptions authorized by each provision of
29  this chapter shall be reported separately for each category of
30  exemption in each such provision, both as to total value
31  exempted and as to the number of exemptions granted.
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 1         Section 7.  Subsection (2) of section 193.114, Florida
 2  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3         193.114  Preparation of assessment rolls.--
 4         (2)  The department shall promulgate regulations and
 5  forms for the preparation of the real property assessment roll
 6  to reflect:
 7         (a)  A brief description of the property for purposes
 8  of location and, effective January 1, 1996, a market area code
 9  established according to department guidelines.  However, if a
10  property appraiser uses a neighborhood code, beginning in
11  1994, the property appraiser shall provide the neighborhood
12  code to the department.
13         (b)  The just value (using the factors set out in s.
14  193.011) of all property. The assessed value for school
15  district levies and for nonschool district levies shall be
16  separately listed.
17         (c)  When property is wholly or partially exempt, a
18  categorization of such exemption. There shall be a separate
19  listing on the roll for exemptions pertaining to assessed
20  value for school district levies and for nonschool district
21  levies.
22         (d)  When property is classified so that it is assessed
23  other than under s. 193.011, the value according to its
24  classified use and its value as assessed under s. 193.011.
25         (e)  The owner or fiduciary responsible for payment of
26  taxes on the property, his or her address, and an indication
27  of any fiduciary capacity (such as executor, administrator,
28  trustee, etc.) as appropriate.
29         (f)  The millage levied on the property, including
30  separately, school district millage and nonschool district
31  millage.
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 1         (g)  A separate listing for taxable value for school
 2  district levies and for nonschool district levies. The tax
 3  shall be, determined by multiplying the millages by the
 4  taxable values for school district levies and nonschool
 5  district levies value.
 6         Section 8.  Section 193.155, Florida Statutes, is
 7  amended to read:
 8         193.155  Homestead assessments.--Homestead property
 9  shall be assessed at just value as of January 1, 1994.
10  Property receiving the homestead exemption after January 1,
11  1994, shall be assessed at just value as of January 1 of the
12  year in which the property receives the exemption unless the
13  provisions of subsection (8) apply.
14         (1)  Beginning in 1995, or the year following the year
15  the property receives homestead exemption, whichever is later,
16  the property shall be reassessed annually on January 1. Any
17  change resulting from such reassessment shall not exceed the
18  lower of the following:
19         (a)  Three percent of the assessed value of the
20  property for the prior year; or
21         (b)  The percentage change in the Consumer Price Index
22  for All Urban Consumers, U.S. City Average, all items
23  1967=100, or successor reports for the preceding calendar year
24  as initially reported by the United States Department of
25  Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
26         (2)  If the assessed value of the property as
27  calculated under subsection (1) exceeds the just value, the
28  assessed value of the property shall be lowered to the just
29  value of the property.
30         (3)  Except as provided in this subsection or
31  subsection (8), property assessed under this section shall be
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 1  assessed at just value as of January 1 of the year following a
 2  change of ownership. Thereafter, the annual changes in the
 3  assessed value of the property are subject to the limitations
 4  in subsections (1) and (2). For the purpose of this section, a
 5  change in ownership means any sale, foreclosure, or transfer
 6  of legal title or beneficial title in equity to any person,
 7  except as provided in this subsection. There is no change of
 8  ownership if:
 9         (a)  Subsequent to the change or transfer, the same
10  person is entitled to the homestead exemption as was
11  previously entitled and:
12         1.  The transfer of title is to correct an error;
13         2.  The transfer is between legal and equitable title;
14  or
15         3.  The change or transfer is by means of an instrument
16  in which the owner is listed as both grantor and grantee of
17  the real property and one or more other individuals are
18  additionally named as grantee. However, if any individual who
19  is additionally named as a grantee applies for a homestead
20  exemption on the property, the application shall be considered
21  a change of ownership;
22         (b)  The transfer is between husband and wife,
23  including a transfer to a surviving spouse or a transfer due
24  to a dissolution of marriage;
25         (c)  The transfer occurs by operation of law under s.
26  732.4015; or
27         (d)  Upon the death of the owner, the transfer is
28  between the owner and another who is a permanent resident and
29  is legally or naturally dependent upon the owner.
30         (4)(a)  Except as provided in paragraph (b), changes,
31  additions, or improvements to homestead property shall be
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 1  assessed at just value as of the first January 1 after the
 2  changes, additions, or improvements are substantially
 3  completed.
 4         (b)  Changes, additions, or improvements that replace
 5  all or a portion of homestead property damaged or destroyed by
 6  misfortune or calamity shall not increase the homestead
 7  property's assessed value when the square footage of the
 8  homestead property as changed or improved does not exceed 110
 9  percent of the square footage of the homestead property before
10  the damage or destruction. Additionally, the homestead
11  property's assessed value shall not increase if the total
12  square footage of the homestead property as changed or
13  improved does not exceed 1,500 square feet. Changes,
14  additions, or improvements that do not cause the total to
15  exceed 110 percent of the total square footage of the
16  homestead property before the damage or destruction or that do
17  not cause the total to exceed 1,500 total square feet shall be
18  reassessed as provided under subsection (1). The homestead
19  property's assessed value shall be increased by the just value
20  of that portion of the changed or improved homestead property
21  which is in excess of 110 percent of the square footage of the
22  homestead property before the damage or destruction or of that
23  portion exceeding 1,500 square feet. Homestead property
24  damaged or destroyed by misfortune or calamity which, after
25  being changed or improved, has a square footage of less than
26  100 percent of the homestead property's total square footage
27  before the damage or destruction shall be assessed pursuant to
28  subsection (5). This paragraph applies to changes, additions,
29  or improvements commenced within 3 years after the January 1
30  following the damage or destruction of the homestead.
31  
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 1         (c)  Changes, additions, or improvements that replace
 2  all or a portion of real property that was damaged or
 3  destroyed by misfortune or calamity shall be assessed upon
 4  substantial completion as if such damage or destruction had
 5  not occurred and in accordance with paragraph (b) if the owner
 6  of such property:
 7         1.  Was permanently residing on such property when the
 8  damage or destruction occurred;
 9         2.  Was not entitled to receive homestead exemption on
10  such property as of January 1 of that year; and
11         3.  Applies for and receives homestead exemption on
12  such property the following year.
13         (d)  Changes, additions, or improvements include
14  improvements made to common areas or other improvements made
15  to property other than to the homestead property by the owner
16  or by an owner association, which improvements directly
17  benefit the homestead property. Such changes, additions, or
18  improvements shall be assessed at just value, and the just
19  value shall be apportioned among the parcels benefiting from
20  the improvement.
21         (5)  When property is destroyed or removed and not
22  replaced, the assessed value of the parcel shall be reduced by
23  the assessed value attributable to the destroyed or removed
24  property.
25         (6)  Only property that receives a homestead exemption
26  is subject to this section. No portion of property that is
27  assessed solely on the basis of character or use pursuant to
28  s. 193.461 or s. 193.501, or assessed pursuant to s. 193.505,
29  is subject to this section. When property is assessed under s.
30  193.461, s. 193.501, or s. 193.505 and contains a residence
31  under the same ownership, the portion of the property
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 1  consisting of the residence and curtilage must be assessed
 2  separately, pursuant to s. 193.011, for the assessment to be
 3  subject to the limitation in this section.
 4         (7)  If a person received a homestead exemption limited
 5  to that person's proportionate interest in real property, the
 6  provisions of this section apply only to that interest.
 7         (8)  Property assessed under this section shall be
 8  assessed at less than just value following a change in
 9  ownership, for all levies other than school district levies,
10  when the person who establishes a new homestead has received a
11  homestead exemption as of January 1 of either of the two
12  immediately preceding years. A person who establishes a new
13  homestead as of January 1, 2008, is entitled to have the new
14  homestead assessed at less than just value only if that person
15  received a homestead exemption on January 1, 2007. The
16  assessed value of the newly established homestead shall be
17  determined as provided in this subsection.
18         (a)  If the just value of the new homestead as of
19  January 1 is greater than or equal to the just value of the
20  immediate prior homestead of the person establishing the new
21  homestead as of January 1 of the year in which the immediate
22  prior homestead was abandoned, the assessed value of the new
23  homestead shall be the just value of the new homestead minus
24  an amount equal to the lesser of $1 million or the difference
25  between the just value and the assessed value of the immediate
26  prior homestead as of January 1 of the year in which the prior
27  homestead was abandoned. Thereafter, the homestead shall be
28  assessed as provided in this section.
29         (b)  If the just value of the new homestead as of
30  January 1 is less than the just value of the immediate prior
31  homestead as of January 1 of the year in which the immediate
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 1  prior homestead was abandoned, the assessed value of the new
 2  homestead shall be equal to the just value of the new
 3  homestead divided by the just value of the immediate prior
 4  homestead and multiplied by the assessed value of the
 5  immediate prior homestead. However, if the difference between
 6  the just value of the new homestead and the assessed value of
 7  the new homestead calculated pursuant to this paragraph is
 8  greater than $1 million, the assessed value of the new
 9  homestead shall be increased so that the difference between
10  the just value and the assessed value equals $1 million.
11  Thereafter, the homestead shall be assessed as provided in
12  this section.
13         (c)  If two or more persons who have each received a
14  homestead exemption as of January 1 of either of the two
15  immediately preceding years and would otherwise be eligible to
16  have a new homestead property assessed under this subsection
17  establish a single new homestead, the reduction in just value
18  shall be limited to the reduction that could have resulted
19  from any one of the eligible prior homesteads.
20         (d)  If two or more persons abandon their jointly owned
21  homestead property and one or more such persons establish a
22  new homestead that would otherwise be eligible for assessment
23  under this subsection, each person is entitled to a reduction
24  in just value for the new homestead in proportion to his or
25  her ownership interest in the prior homestead. There shall be
26  no reduction in assessed value of any new homestead unless the
27  prior homestead is reassessed under subsection (3) or this
28  subsection as of January 1 after the abandonment occurs.
29         (e)  In order to have his or her homestead property
30  assessed under this subsection, a person must provide to the
31  property appraiser a copy of his or her notice of proposed
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 1  property taxes for an eligible prior homestead at the same
 2  time he or she applies for the homestead exemption, and must
 3  sign a sworn statement, on a form prescribed by the
 4  department, attesting to his or her entitlement to the
 5  assessment.
 6  
 7  The department shall require by rule that the required
 8  documentation be submitted with the homestead exemption
 9  application under the timeframes and processes set forth in
10  chapter 196 to the extent practicable, and that the filing of
11  the statement be supported by copies of such notices.
12         (9)(8)  Erroneous assessments of homestead property
13  assessed under this section may be corrected in the following
14  manner:
15         (a)  If errors are made in arriving at any assessment
16  under this section due to a material mistake of fact
17  concerning an essential characteristic of the property, the
18  just value and assessed value must be recalculated for every
19  such year, including the year in which the mistake occurred.
20         (b)  If changes, additions, or improvements are not
21  assessed at just value as of the first January 1 after they
22  were substantially completed, the property appraiser shall
23  determine the just value for such changes, additions, or
24  improvements for the year they were substantially completed.
25  Assessments for subsequent years shall be corrected, applying
26  this section if applicable.
27         (c)  If back taxes are due pursuant to s. 193.092, the
28  corrections made pursuant to this subsection shall be used to
29  calculate such back taxes.
30         (10)(9)  If the property appraiser determines that for
31  any year or years within the prior 10 years a person who was
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 1  not entitled to the homestead property assessment limitation
 2  granted under this section was granted the homestead property
 3  assessment limitation, the property appraiser making such
 4  determination shall record in the public records of the county
 5  a notice of tax lien against any property owned by that person
 6  in the county, and such property must be identified in the
 7  notice of tax lien. Such property that is situated in this
 8  state is subject to the unpaid taxes, plus a penalty of 50
 9  percent of the unpaid taxes for each year and 15 percent
10  interest per annum. However, when a person entitled to
11  exemption pursuant to s. 196.031 inadvertently receives the
12  limitation pursuant to this section following a change of
13  ownership, the assessment of such property must be corrected
14  as provided in paragraph (9)(a) (8)(a), and the person need
15  not pay the unpaid taxes, penalties, or interest.
16         Section 9.  Section 196.031, Florida Statutes, is
17  amended to read:
18         196.031  Exemption of homesteads.--
19         (1)(a)  Every person who, on January 1, has the legal
20  title or beneficial title in equity to real property in this
21  state and who resides thereon and in good faith makes the same
22  his or her permanent residence, or the permanent residence of
23  another or others legally or naturally dependent upon such
24  person, is entitled to an exemption from all taxation, except
25  for assessments for special benefits, up to the assessed
26  valuation of $25,000 $5,000 on the residence and contiguous
27  real property, as defined in s. 6, Art. VII of the State
28  Constitution. Such title may be held by the entireties,
29  jointly, or in common with others, and the exemption may be
30  apportioned among such of the owners as shall reside thereon,
31  as their respective interests shall appear. If only one of the
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 1  owners of an estate held by the entireties or held jointly
 2  with the right of survivorship resides on the property, that
 3  owner is allowed an exemption of up to the assessed valuation
 4  of $25,000 $5,000 on the residence and contiguous real
 5  property. However, no such exemption of more than $25,000
 6  $5,000 is allowed to any one person or on any one dwelling
 7  house, except that an exemption up to the assessed valuation
 8  of $25,000 $5,000 may be allowed on each apartment or mobile
 9  home occupied by a tenant-stockholder or member of a
10  cooperative corporation and on each condominium parcel
11  occupied by its owner. Except for owners of an estate held by
12  the entireties or held jointly with the right of survivorship,
13  the amount of the exemption may not exceed the proportionate
14  assessed valuation of all owners who reside on the property.
15  Before such exemption may be granted, the deed or instrument
16  shall be recorded in the official records of the county in
17  which the property is located. The property appraiser may
18  request the applicant to provide additional ownership
19  documents to establish title.
20         (b)  Every person who qualifies to receive the
21  exemption provided in paragraph (a) is entitled to an
22  additional exemption of up to $25,000 on the assessed
23  valuation greater than $50,000 and up to $75,000 of assessed
24  value for all levies other than school district levies.
25         (2)  As used in subsection (1), the term "cooperative
26  corporation" means a corporation, whether for profit or not
27  for profit, organized for the purpose of owning, maintaining,
28  and operating an apartment building or apartment buildings or
29  a mobile home park to be occupied by its stockholders or
30  members; and the term "tenant-stockholder or member" means an
31  individual who is entitled, solely by reason of his or her
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 1  ownership of stock or membership in a cooperative corporation,
 2  as evidenced in the official records of the office of the
 3  clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the
 4  apartment building is located, to occupy for dwelling purposes
 5  an apartment in a building owned by such corporation or to
 6  occupy for dwelling purposes a mobile home which is on or a
 7  part of a cooperative unit. A corporation leasing land for a
 8  term of 98 years or more for the purpose of maintaining and
 9  operating a cooperative thereon shall be deemed the owner for
10  purposes of this exemption.
11         (3)(a)  The exemption provided in this section does For
12  every person who is entitled to the exemption provided in
13  subsection (1), who is a permanent resident of this state, and
14  who is 65 years of age or older, the exemption is increased to
15  $10,000 of assessed valuation for taxes levied by governing
16  bodies of counties, municipalities, and special districts.
17         (b)  For every person who is entitled to the exemption
18  provided in subsection (1), who has been a permanent resident
19  of this state for the 5 consecutive years prior to claiming
20  the exemption under this subsection, and who qualifies for the
21  exemption granted pursuant to s. 196.202 as a totally and
22  permanently disabled person, the exemption is increased to
23  $9,500 of assessed valuation for taxes levied by governing
24  bodies of counties, municipalities, and special districts.
25         (c)  No homestead shall be exempted under both
26  paragraphs (a) and (b). In no event shall the combined
27  exemptions of s. 196.202 and paragraph (a) or paragraph (b)
28  exceed $10,000.
29         (d)  For every person who is entitled to the exemption
30  provided in subsection (1) and who is a permanent resident of
31  this state, the exemption is increased to a total of $25,000
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 1  of assessed valuation for taxes levied by governing bodies of
 2  school districts.
 3         (e)  For every person who is entitled to the exemption
 4  provided in subsection (1) and who is a resident of this
 5  state, the exemption is increased to a total of $25,000 of
 6  assessed valuation for levies of taxing authorities other than
 7  school districts. However, the increase provided in this
 8  paragraph shall not apply with respect to the assessment roll
 9  of a county unless and until the roll of that county has been
10  approved by the executive director pursuant to s. 193.1142.
11         (4)  The property appraisers of the various counties
12  shall each year compile a list of taxable property and its
13  value removed from the assessment rolls of each school
14  district as a result of the excess of exempt value above that
15  amount allowed for nonschool levies as provided in subsections
16  (1) and (3), as well as a statement of the loss of tax revenue
17  to each school district from levies other than the minimum
18  financial effort required pursuant to s. 1011.60(6), and shall
19  deliver a copy thereof to the Department of Revenue upon
20  certification of the assessment roll to the tax collector.
21         (4)(5)  The exemption provided in this section applies
22  only to those parcels classified and assessed as
23  owner-occupied residential property or only to the portion of
24  property so classified and assessed.
25         (5)(6)  A person who is receiving or claiming the
26  benefit of an ad valorem tax exemption or a tax credit in
27  another state where permanent residency is required as a basis
28  for the granting of that ad valorem tax exemption or tax
29  credit is not entitled to the homestead exemption provided by
30  this section. This subsection does not apply to a person who
31  has the legal or equitable title to real estate in Florida and
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 1  maintains thereon the permanent residence of another legally
 2  or naturally dependent upon the owner.
 3         (6)(7)  When homestead property is damaged or destroyed
 4  by misfortune or calamity and the property is uninhabitable on
 5  January 1 after the damage or destruction occurs, the
 6  homestead exemption may be granted if the property is
 7  otherwise qualified and if the property owner notifies the
 8  property appraiser that he or she intends to repair or rebuild
 9  the property and live in the property as his or her primary
10  residence after the property is repaired or rebuilt and does
11  not claim a homestead exemption on any other property or
12  otherwise violate this section. Failure by the property owner
13  to commence the repair or rebuilding of the homestead property
14  within 3 years after January 1 following the property's damage
15  or destruction constitutes abandonment of the property as a
16  homestead.
17         Section 10.  Section 196.078, Florida Statutes, is
18  created to read:
19         196.078  Additional homestead exemption for first-time
20  Florida homebuyers.--
21         (1)  As used in this section, the term "first-time
22  Florida homebuyer" means a person who establishes the right to
23  receive the homestead exemption provided in s. 196.031 within
24  1 year after purchasing the homestead property and who had not
25  previously owned property receiving the homestead exemption
26  provided in s. 196.031.
27         (2)  Every first-time Florida homebuyer is entitled to
28  an additional homestead exemption in an amount equal to 25
29  percent of the homestead property's just value on January 1 of
30  the year in which the homestead is established, not to exceed
31  25 percent of the median just value of homesteads in the
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 1  county in which the homestead is located in the year prior to
 2  establishing the new homestead. This exemption is not
 3  available if any owner of the property has previously owned
 4  property that received the homestead exemption provided in s.
 5  196.031. The additional homestead exemption shall be reduced
 6  each year by the difference between the homestead's just value
 7  and assessed value as determined under s. 193.155 until the
 8  value of the exemption is reduced to zero. The exemption
 9  provided under this subsection applies to all levies other
10  than school district levies.
11         (3)  The property appraiser shall require a first-time
12  Florida homebuyer claiming an exemption under this section to
13  submit, not later than March 1 on a form prescribed by the
14  Department of Revenue, a sworn statement attesting that the
15  taxpayer, and each other person who holds legal or equitable
16  title to the property, has never owned property that received
17  the homestead exemption provided by s. 196.031. In order for
18  the exemption to be retained upon the addition of another
19  person to the title to the property, the person added must
20  also submit, not later than the subsequent March 1 on a form
21  prescribed by the department, a sworn statement attesting that
22  he or she has never held title to Florida homestead property.
23         (4)  The provisions of ss. 196.131 and 196.161 apply to
24  the exemption provided in this section.
25         Section 11.  Section 196.098, Florida Statutes, is
26  created to read:
27         196.098  Exemption for low-income seniors.--
28         (1)  Any real estate used and owned as a homestead by
29  an eligible low-income senior is exempt from taxation on the
30  first $100,000 of assessed value as provided in this section.
31  
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 1         (2)  As used in this section, the term "low-income
 2  senior" means a permanent resident of this state who has
 3  attained 65 years of age and whose household income does not
 4  exceed $23,604. Submission of an affidavit that the person
 5  claiming the exemption under subsection (1) is a permanent
 6  resident of this state is prima facie proof of such residence.
 7  For purposes of this section, household income means that the
 8  gross income of all persons residing in or upon the homestead
 9  for the prior year may not exceed $23,604. For purposes of
10  this section, the term "gross income" includes United States
11  Department of Veterans Affairs benefits and any social
12  security benefits paid to the person.
13         (3)  The maximum income limitation provided in this
14  subsection shall be adjusted annually on January 1, beginning
15  January 1, 2008, by the percentage change in the average
16  cost-of-living index in the period January 1 through December
17  31 of the immediate prior year compared with the same period
18  for the year prior to that. The index is the average of the
19  monthly consumer price index figures for the stated 12-month
20  period, relative to the United States as a whole, issued by
21  the United States Department of Labor.
22         (4)  The department shall require by rule that the
23  taxpayer annually submit to the property appraiser a sworn
24  return of age and gross income pursuant to subsection (2). The
25  department shall require that the filing of such return be
26  accompanied by proof of age, copies of federal income tax
27  returns for the prior year, wage and earning statements (W-2
28  forms), and other documents it deems necessary for each member
29  of the household. The taxpayer's return shall attest to the
30  accuracy of such copies. The department shall prescribe and
31  furnish a form to be used for this purpose which shall include
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 1  spaces for a separate listing of United States Department of
 2  Veterans Affairs benefits and social security benefits.
 3         Section 12.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 4  196.161, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 5         196.161  Homestead exemptions; lien imposed on property
 6  of person claiming exemption although not a permanent
 7  resident.--
 8         (1)(a)  When the estate of any person is being probated
 9  or administered in another state under an allegation that such
10  person was a resident of that state and the estate of such
11  person contains real property situate in this state upon which
12  homestead exemption has been allowed pursuant to this chapter
13  s. 196.031 for any year or years within 10 years immediately
14  prior to the death of the deceased, then within 3 years after
15  the death of such person the property appraiser of the county
16  where the real property is located shall, upon knowledge of
17  such fact, record a notice of tax lien against the property
18  among the public records of that county, and the property
19  shall be subject to the payment of all taxes exempt
20  thereunder, a penalty of 50 percent of the unpaid taxes for
21  each year, plus 15 percent interest per year, unless the
22  circuit court having jurisdiction over the ancillary
23  administration in this state determines that the decedent was
24  a permanent resident of this state during the year or years an
25  exemption was allowed, whereupon the lien shall not be filed
26  or, if filed, shall be canceled of record by the property
27  appraiser of the county where the real estate is located.
28         Section 13.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
29  197.252, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
30         197.252  Homestead tax deferral.--
31         (2)
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 1         (b)  If the applicant is 65 years of age or older
 2  entitled to claim the increased exemption by reason of age and
 3  residency as provided in s. 196.031(3)(a), approval of the
 4  application shall defer that portion of the ad valorem taxes
 5  plus non-ad valorem assessments which exceeds 3 percent of the
 6  applicant's household income for the prior calendar year. If
 7  any applicant's household income for the prior calendar year
 8  is less than $10,000, or is less than the amount of the
 9  household income designated for the additional homestead
10  exemption pursuant to s. 196.075, and the applicant is 65
11  years of age or older, approval of the application shall defer
12  the ad valorem taxes plus non-ad valorem assessments in their
13  entirety.
14         Section 14.  Section 196.183, Florida Statutes, is
15  created to read:
16         196.183  Exemption for tangible personal property.--
17         (1)  Each tangible personal property tax return is
18  eligible for an exemption from ad valorem taxation of up to
19  $25,000 of assessed value. A single return must be filed for
20  each site in the county where the owner of tangible personal
21  property transacts business. Owners of freestanding property
22  placed at multiple sites, other than sites where the owner
23  transacts business, must file a single return, including all
24  such property located in the county. Freestanding property
25  placed at multiple sites includes vending and amusement
26  machines, LP/propane tanks, utility and cable company
27  property, billboards, leased equipment, and similar property
28  that is not customarily located in the offices, stores, or
29  plants of the owner, but is placed throughout the county.
30  Railroads, private carriers, and other companies assessed
31  pursuant to s. 193.085 shall be allowed one $25,000 exemption
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 1  for each county to which the value of their property is
 2  allocated.
 3         (2)  The requirement that an annual tangible personal
 4  property tax return pursuant to s. 193.052 be filed for
 5  taxpayers owning taxable property the value of which, as
 6  listed on the return, does not exceed the exemption provided
 7  in this section is waived. In order to qualify for this
 8  waiver, a taxpayer must file an initial return on which the
 9  exemption is taken. If, in subsequent years, the taxpayer owns
10  taxable property the value of which, as listed on the return,
11  exceeds the exemption, the taxpayer is obligated to file a
12  return. The taxpayer may again qualify for the waiver only
13  after filing a return on which the value as listed on the
14  return does not exceed the exemption. A return filed or
15  required to be filed shall be considered an application filed
16  or required to be filed for the exemption under this section.
17         (3)  The exemption provided in this section does not
18  apply in any year a taxpayer fails to file a return that is
19  not waived pursuant to subsection (2). Any taxpayer who
20  received a waiver pursuant to subsection (2) and who owns
21  taxable property the value of which, as listed on the return,
22  exceeds the exemption in a subsequent year and who fails to
23  file a return with the property appraiser is subject to the
24  penalty contained in s. 193.072(1)(a) calculated without the
25  benefit of the exemption pursuant to this section. Any
26  taxpayer claiming more exemptions than allowed pursuant to
27  subsection (1) is subject to the taxes exempted as a result of
28  wrongfully claiming the additional exemptions plus 15 percent
29  interest per annum and a penalty of 50 percent of the taxes
30  exempted.
31  
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 1         (4)  The exemption provided in this section does not
 2  apply to a mobile home that is presumed to be tangible
 3  personal property pursuant to s. 193.075(2).
 4         Section 15.  Section 193.803, Florida Statutes, is
 5  created to read:
 6         193.803  Assessment of eligible rental property used
 7  for workforce and affordable housing; classification.--
 8         (1)  Upon the property owner's application on a form
 9  prescribed by the Department of Revenue, the property
10  appraiser shall annually classify for assessment purposes,
11  with respect to all levies other than school district levies,
12  all eligible property used for workforce rental housing or
13  affordable rental housing. Eligibility shall be as provided in
14  this section.
15         (2)  A property owner whose eligible property is denied
16  classification as workforce rental housing or affordable
17  rental housing by the property appraiser may appeal to the
18  value adjustment board. The property appraiser shall notify
19  the property owner in writing of the denial of the workforce
20  rental housing or affordable rental housing classification on
21  or before July 1 of the year for which the application was
22  filed. The written notification must advise the property owner
23  of his or her right to appeal the denial of classification to
24  the value adjustment board and must contain the deadline for
25  filing an appeal. The property appraiser shall have available
26  at his or her office a list, by parcel and property owner, of
27  all applications for classification received, and the list
28  must identify whether or not the classification requested was
29  granted.
30         (3)(a)  Eligible property may not be classified as
31  workforce rental housing or affordable rental housing unless
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 1  an application is filed on or before March 1 of each year.
 2  Before approving a classification, the property appraiser may
 3  require the property owner to furnish such information as may
 4  reasonably be required to establish that the property was
 5  actually used as required by this section. Failure by a
 6  property owner to apply for classification of eligible
 7  property as workforce rental housing or affordable rental
 8  housing by March 1 constitutes a 1-year waiver of the
 9  privilege granted under this section for workforce rental
10  housing assessment or affordable rental housing assessment.
11  However, a property owner who is qualified to receive a
12  workforce rental housing classification or an affordable
13  rental housing classification but who fails to file an
14  application by March 1, may file an application for the
15  classification, and may file, under s. 194.011(3), a petition
16  with the value adjustment board requesting that the
17  classification be granted. The petition may be filed at any
18  time during the taxable year on or before the 25th day
19  following the mailing of the assessment notice by the property
20  appraiser as required under s. 194.011(1). Notwithstanding the
21  provisions of s. 194.013, the applicant must pay a
22  nonrefundable fee of $15 upon filing the petition. Upon review
23  of the petition, if the person is qualified to receive the
24  classification and demonstrates particular extenuating
25  circumstances judged by the property appraiser or the value
26  adjustment board to warrant granting the classification, the
27  property appraiser or the value adjustment board may grant the
28  classification. An owner of property classified as workforce
29  rental housing or affordable rental housing in the previous
30  tax year whose ownership or use has not changed may reapply on
31  a short form prescribed by the department. A county may, at
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 1  the request of the property appraiser and by a majority vote
 2  of its governing body, waive the requirement that an annual
 3  application or statement be made for the renewal of the
 4  classification of property within the county as workforce
 5  rental housing or affordable rental housing after an initial
 6  classification is granted by the property appraiser. Such
 7  waiver may be revoked by a majority vote of the governing body
 8  of the county. Notwithstanding such waiver, an application
 9  must be refiled when any property granted the classification
10  is sold or otherwise disposed of, when the ownership changes
11  in any manner, when the applicant ceases to use the property
12  as workforce rental housing or affordable rental housing, or
13  when the status of the owner changes so as to change the
14  classified status of the property.
15         (b)  For purposes of granting a workforce rental
16  housing or affordable rental housing classification for
17  January 1, 2008, only, the term "extenuating circumstances" as
18  used in paragraph (a) includes the failure of the property
19  owner to return the application for classification by March 1,
20  2008.
21         (4)  The following types of property are eligible to be
22  classified by a property appraiser as workforce rental housing
23  or affordable rental housing property, and shall be assessed
24  based upon their character and use and as further described in
25  this section:
26         (a)  Property that is funded and rent restricted by the
27  United States Department of Housing and Urban Development
28  under s. 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937 and that
29  provides affordable housing for eligible persons as defined by
30  s. 159.603 or the elderly, extremely-low-income persons, or
31  very-low-income persons as specified in s. 420.0004.
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 1         (b)  Rental property for multifamily housing,
 2  commercial fishing workers and farmworkers, families, persons
 3  who are homeless, or the elderly which is funded and rent
 4  restricted by the Florida Housing Finance Corporation under s.
 5  420.5087, s. 420.5089, s. 420.509, or s. 420.5095, the State
 6  Housing Initiatives Partnership Program under s. 420.9072, s.
 7  420.9075, or s. 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26
 8  U.S.C. s. 42; the HOME Investment Partnership Program under
 9  the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, 42
10  U.S.C. ss. 12741 et seq.; or the Federal Home Loan Bank's
11  Affordable Housing Program established pursuant to the
12  Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of
13  1989, Pub. L. No. 101-73.
14         (c)  Multifamily residential rental property of 10 or
15  more units which is certified by the local public housing
16  agency as having 100 percent of its units used to provide
17  affordable housing for extremely-low-income persons,
18  very-low-income persons, low-income persons, or
19  moderate-income persons as specified in s. 420.0004 and which
20  is subject to a land use agreement or other agreement that is
21  recorded in the official records of the county in which the
22  property is located and which recorded agreement restricts the
23  use of the property to affordable housing for a period of at
24  least 20 years.
25         (5)  The property appraiser shall remove from the
26  classification of workforce rental housing or affordable
27  rental housing any properties for which the classified use has
28  been abandoned or discontinued, the property has been diverted
29  to another use, or the participation in and eligibility for
30  the programs specified in this section has been terminated.
31  
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 1  Such removed property shall be assessed at just value under s.
 2  193.011.
 3         (6)  In years in which the proper application for
 4  classification as workforce rental housing or affordable
 5  rental housing has been made and granted, the assessment of
 6  such property shall be based upon its use as workforce rental
 7  housing or affordable rental housing and by applying the
 8  following methodologies, subject to the provisions of
 9  subsection (7):
10         (a)  Property used for workforce rental housing or
11  affordable rental housing as described in subsection (4) shall
12  be assessed under the income approach using the actual net
13  operating income.
14         (b)  Property used for workforce rental housing and
15  affordable rental housing which has received low-income
16  housing tax credits from the Florida Housing Finance
17  Corporation under s. 420.5099 shall be assessed under the
18  income approach using the actual net operating income and the
19  following applies:
20         1.  The tax credits granted and the financing generated
21  by the tax credits may not be considered as income.
22         2.  The actual rental income from rent-restricted units
23  in such property shall be used by the property appraiser.
24         3.  Any costs paid with the tax credits and costs paid
25  with the proceeds from additional financing under chapter 420
26  may not be included as income.
27         (7)  By April 1 of each year, the property owner must
28  provide the property appraiser with a return on a form and in
29  a manner prescribed by the Department of Revenue which
30  includes a rent roll and an income and expense statement for
31  the preceding year. After a review of the rent roll and the
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 1  income and expense statement, the property appraiser may
 2  request additional information from the property owner as may
 3  be reasonably required to consider the methodologies in
 4  subsection (6). Failure to timely provide the property
 5  appraiser with the requested information, including failure to
 6  meet any extension that may be granted for the submission of
 7  information, shall result in an estimated assessment based on
 8  the best available information instead of an assessment based
 9  on the methodologies provided in subsection (6). Such
10  assessment shall be deemed to be prima facie correct and may
11  be included on the tax roll, and taxes may be extended on the
12  tax roll in the same manner as for all other taxes.
13         (8)  It is the duty of the owner of any property used
14  for workforce rental housing or affordable rental housing that
15  has been granted the classification for assessment under this
16  section who is not required to file an annual application or
17  statement to notify the property appraiser promptly whenever
18  the use of the property, or the status or condition of the
19  owner, changes so as to change the classified status of the
20  property. If any property owner fails to so notify the
21  property appraiser and the property appraiser determines that
22  for any year within the prior 10 years the owner was not
23  entitled to receive such classification, the owner of the
24  property is subject to the taxes otherwise due and owing as a
25  result of such failure plus 15 percent interest per annum and
26  a penalty of 50 percent of the additional taxes owed. It is
27  the duty of the property appraiser making such determination
28  to record in the public records of the county in which the
29  rental property is located a notice of tax lien against any
30  property owned by that person or entity in the county, and
31  such property must be identified in the notice of tax lien.
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 1  Such property is subject to the payment of all taxes and
 2  penalties. Such lien, when filed, attaches to any property
 3  identified in the notice of tax lien owned by the person or
 4  entity that illegally or improperly received the
 5  classification. If such person or entity no longer owns
 6  property in that county but owns property in another county or
 7  counties in the state, the property appraiser shall record in
 8  such other county or counties a notice of tax lien identifying
 9  the property owned by such person or entity in such county or
10  counties which becomes a lien against the identified property.
11         Section 16.  Paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (2)
12  of section 192.0105, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
13         192.0105  Taxpayer rights.--There is created a Florida
14  Taxpayer's Bill of Rights for property taxes and assessments
15  to guarantee that the rights, privacy, and property of the
16  taxpayers of this state are adequately safeguarded and
17  protected during tax levy, assessment, collection, and
18  enforcement processes administered under the revenue laws of
19  this state. The Taxpayer's Bill of Rights compiles, in one
20  document, brief but comprehensive statements that summarize
21  the rights and obligations of the property appraisers, tax
22  collectors, clerks of the court, local governing boards, the
23  Department of Revenue, and taxpayers. Additional rights
24  afforded to payors of taxes and assessments imposed under the
25  revenue laws of this state are provided in s. 213.015. The
26  rights afforded taxpayers to assure that their privacy and
27  property are safeguarded and protected during tax levy,
28  assessment, and collection are available only insofar as they
29  are implemented in other parts of the Florida Statutes or
30  rules of the Department of Revenue. The rights so guaranteed
31  
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 1  to state taxpayers in the Florida Statutes and the
 2  departmental rules include:
 3         (2)  THE RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS.--
 4         (b)  The right to petition the value adjustment board
 5  over objections to assessments, denial of exemption, denial of
 6  agricultural classification, denial of historic
 7  classification, denial of high-water recharge classification,
 8  denial of workforce rental housing or affordable rental
 9  housing classification, disapproval of tax deferral, and any
10  penalties on deferred taxes imposed for incorrect information
11  willfully filed. Payment of estimated taxes does not preclude
12  the right of the taxpayer to challenge his or her assessment
13  (see ss. 194.011(3), 196.011(6) and (9)(a), 196.151,
14  196.193(1)(c) and (5), 193.461(2), 193.503(7), 193.625(2),
15  193.803(2), 197.253(2), 197.301(2), and 197.2301(11)).
16         (c)  The right to file a petition for exemption, or
17  agricultural classification, or workforce rental housing or
18  affordable rental housing classification with the value
19  adjustment board when an application deadline is missed, upon
20  demonstration of particular extenuating circumstances for
21  filing late (see ss. 193.461(3)(a), 193.803(3)(a), and
22  196.011(1), (7), (8), and (9)(c)).
23         Section 17.  Subsection (2) of section 193.052, Florida
24  Statutes, is amended to read:
25         193.052  Preparation and serving of returns.--
26         (2)  No return shall be required for real property the
27  ownership of which is reflected in instruments recorded in the
28  public records of the county in which the property is located,
29  unless otherwise required in this title.  In order for land to
30  be considered for agricultural classification under s.
31  193.461, or high-water recharge classification under s.
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 1  193.625, or workforce rental housing or affordable rental
 2  housing classification under s. 193.803, an application for
 3  classification must be filed on or before March 1 of each year
 4  with the property appraiser of the county in which the land is
 5  located, except as provided in s. 193.461(3)(a). The
 6  application must state that the lands on January 1 of that
 7  year were used primarily for bona fide commercial agricultural
 8  or high-water recharge purposes or for workforce rental
 9  housing or affordable rental housing classified under s.
10  193.803.
11         Section 18.  Paragraph (d) of subsection (3) of section
12  194.011, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
13         194.011  Assessment notice; objections to
14  assessments.--
15         (3)  A petition to the value adjustment board must be
16  in substantially the form prescribed by the department.
17  Notwithstanding s. 195.022, a county officer may not refuse to
18  accept a form provided by the department for this purpose if
19  the taxpayer chooses to use it. A petition to the value
20  adjustment board shall describe the property by parcel number
21  and shall be filed as follows:
22         (d)  The petition may be filed, as to valuation issues,
23  at any time during the taxable year on or before the 25th day
24  following the mailing of notice by the property appraiser as
25  provided in subsection (1).  With respect to an issue
26  involving the denial of an exemption, an agricultural or
27  high-water recharge classification application, an application
28  for classification as historic property used for commercial or
29  certain nonprofit purposes, an application for classification
30  as workforce rental housing or affordable rental housing, or a
31  deferral, the petition must be filed at any time during the
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 1  taxable year on or before the 30th day following the mailing
 2  of the notice by the property appraiser under s. 193.461, s.
 3  193.503, s. 193.625, s. 193.803, or s. 196.193 or notice by
 4  the tax collector under s. 197.253.
 5         Section 19.  Subsection (1) of section 195.073, Florida
 6  Statutes, is amended to read:
 7         195.073  Classification of property.--All items
 8  required by law to be on the assessment rolls must receive a
 9  classification based upon the use of the property.  The
10  department shall promulgate uniform definitions for all
11  classifications.  The department may designate other
12  subclassifications of property.  No assessment roll may be
13  approved by the department which does not show proper
14  classifications.
15         (1)  Real property must be classified according to the
16  assessment basis of the land into the following classes:
17         (a)  Residential, subclassified into categories, one
18  category for homestead property and one for nonhomestead
19  property:
20         1.  Single family.
21         2.  Mobile homes.
22         3.  Multifamily.
23         4.  Condominiums.
24         5.  Cooperatives.
25         6.  Retirement homes.
26         (b)  Commercial and industrial.
27         (c)  Agricultural.
28         (d)  Nonagricultural acreage.
29         (e)  High-water recharge.
30         (f)  Historic property used for commercial or certain
31  nonprofit purposes.
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 1         (g)  Exempt, wholly or partially.
 2         (h)  Centrally assessed.
 3         (i)  Leasehold interests.
 4         (j)  Time-share property.
 5         (k)  Workforce rental housing and affordable rental
 6  housing property.
 7         (l)(k)  Other.
 8         Section 20.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section
 9  195.096, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
10         195.096  Review of assessment rolls.--
11         (3)(a)  Upon completion of review pursuant to paragraph
12  (2)(f), the department shall publish the results of reviews
13  conducted under this section. The results must include all
14  statistical and analytical measures computed under this
15  section for the real property assessment roll as a whole, the
16  personal property assessment roll as a whole, and
17  independently for the following real property classes whenever
18  the classes constituted 5 percent or more of the total
19  assessed value of real property in a county on the previous
20  tax roll:
21         1.  Residential property that consists of one primary
22  living unit, including, but not limited to, single-family
23  residences, condominiums, cooperatives, and mobile homes.
24         2.  Residential property that consists of two or more
25  primary living units.
26         3.  Agricultural, high-water recharge, historic
27  property used for commercial or certain nonprofit purposes,
28  workforce rental housing and affordable rental housing
29  property, and other use-valued property.
30         4.  Vacant lots.
31  
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 1         5.  Nonagricultural acreage and other undeveloped
 2  parcels.
 3         6.  Improved commercial and industrial property.
 4         7.  Taxable institutional or governmental, utility,
 5  locally assessed railroad, oil, gas and mineral land,
 6  subsurface rights, and other real property.
 7  
 8  When one of the above classes constituted less than 5 percent
 9  of the total assessed value of all real property in a county
10  on the previous assessment roll, the department may combine it
11  with one or more other classes of real property for purposes
12  of assessment ratio studies or use the weighted average of the
13  other classes for purposes of calculating the level of
14  assessment for all real property in a county.  The department
15  shall also publish such results for any subclassifications of
16  the classes or assessment rolls it may have chosen to study.
17         Section 21.  Section 200.186, Florida Statutes, is
18  created to read:
19         200.186  Maximum millage rates for the 2008-2009 fiscal
20  year.--
21         (1)  In the 2008-2009 fiscal year, a county, municipal
22  service taxing units of that county, and special districts
23  dependent to that county; a municipality and special districts
24  dependent to that municipality; and an independent special
25  district may levy a maximum millage rate that is determined as
26  follows:
27         (a)  The maximum millage rate shall be the rolled-back
28  rate calculated pursuant to s. 200.065 and adjusted for growth
29  in per capita Florida personal income, except that:
30         1.  Ad valorem tax revenue levied in the 2007-2008
31  fiscal year, as used in the calculation of the rolled-back
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 1  rate, shall be reduced by any tax revenue resulting from a
 2  millage rate in excess of the maximum rate that could have
 3  been levied by a majority vote as provided in s. 200.185; and
 4         2.  The taxable value within the jurisdiction of each
 5  taxing authority, as used in the calculation of the
 6  rolled-back rate, shall be increased by the amount necessary
 7  to offset any reduction in taxable value occurring as a result
 8  of the amendments to the State Constitution contained in SJR
 9  __ or HJR __ revising the homestead tax exemption, providing
10  tax relief for low-income seniors, providing an exemption for
11  first-time homestead property owners, providing portability of
12  the Save-Our-Homes differential, and providing an exemption
13  from ad valorem taxation for tangible personal property. The
14  maximum millage rate applicable to a county authorized to levy
15  a county public hospital surtax under s. 212.055 shall exclude
16  the revenues required to be contributed to the county public
17  general hospital for the purposes of making the maximum
18  millage rate calculation, but shall be added back to the
19  maximum millage rate allowed after the roll back has been
20  applied.
21         (b)  If approved by a two-thirds vote of the governing
22  body, a rate may be levied in excess of the rate calculated
23  pursuant to paragraph (a) if the excess is not more than 67
24  percent of the difference between the rolled-back rate
25  calculated pursuant to s. 200.065, and the rate calculated in
26  paragraph (a).
27         (c)  A rate may be levied in excess of the millage rate
28  allowed in paragraph (b) if the rate is approved by a
29  unanimous vote of the governing body or by a three-fourths
30  vote if the governing body has nine or more members or if
31  approved by a referendum of the voters.
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 1         (2)  Any county or municipality that is in violation of
 2  this section shall forfeit the distribution of the local
 3  government half-cent sales tax revenues during the 12 months
 4  following a determination of noncompliance by the Department
 5  of Revenue, subject to the conditions provided in ss. 200.065
 6  and 218.63.
 7         (3)  The millage rate of a county or municipality,
 8  municipal service taxing unit of that county, and any special
 9  district dependent to that county or municipality may exceed
10  the maximum millage rate calculated pursuant to this section
11  if the total county ad valorem taxes levied or total municipal
12  ad valorem taxes levied, as defined in s. 200.001, do not
13  exceed the maximum total county ad valorem taxes levied or
14  maximum total municipal ad valorem taxes levied, as defined in
15  s. 200.001, respectively. Total ad valorem taxes levied may
16  exceed the maximum calculated pursuant to this section as a
17  result of an increase in taxable value above that certified in
18  s. 200.065(1) if such increase is less than the percentage
19  amounts contained in s. 200.065(6); however, if such increase
20  in taxable value exceeds the percentage amounts contained in
21  s. 200.065(6), millage rates subject to this section must be
22  reduced so that total taxes levied do not exceed the maximum.
23  Any unit of government operating under a home rule charter
24  adopted pursuant to ss. 10, 11, and 24, Art. VIII of the State
25  Constitution of 1885, as preserved by s. 6(e), Art. VIII of
26  the State Constitution of 1968, which is granted the authority
27  in the State Constitution to exercise all the powers conferred
28  now or hereafter by general law upon municipalities and which
29  exercises such powers in the unincorporated area shall be
30  recognized as a municipality under this section.
31  
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 1         (4)  If the amendments to the State Constitution
 2  contained in SJR __ or HJR __ revising the homestead tax
 3  exemption and providing an exemption from ad valorem taxation
 4  for tangible personal property, are approved by a vote of the
 5  electors, this section shall supersede the provisions of s.
 6  200.185(5).
 7         Section 22.  The Department of Revenue shall report by
 8  March 1, 2008, to the President of the Senate and the Speaker
 9  of the House of Representatives the results of the
10  implementation of chapter 2007-321, Laws of Florida. The
11  report must include the millage rates adopted by
12  municipalities, counties, and independent special districts
13  compared to prior year millage rates, rolled-back rates, and
14  majority-vote rates as established by s. 200.185, Florida
15  Statutes. The department shall report on those local
16  governments that were not in compliance with the requirements
17  of s. 200.185, Florida Statutes. The department shall provide
18  the emergency rules adopted pursuant to s. 9 of chapter
19  2007-321, Laws of Florida. The department shall report on
20  issues that arose in the implementation of chapter 2007-321,
21  Laws of Florida, which may need to be addressed. It is the
22  intent of the Legislature that the information reported to the
23  department should be sufficient to allow the performance of
24  the oversight functions outlined in chapters 195 and 200,
25  Florida Statutes, for the local government budget and millage
26  adoption process and the tax roll submittal and approval
27  process. The department shall identify any improvements in the
28  information required to be provided by local governments,
29  property appraisers, and tax collectors. The department shall
30  include in the report recommendations of the Revenue
31  Estimating Conference for information from local governments,
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 1  property appraisers, and tax collectors which would improve
 2  the ability to forecast revenues or estimate impacts of
 3  proposed changes to the property tax system. The department
 4  shall identify any additional resources necessary to
 5  efficiently and effectively administer the oversight functions
 6  outlined in chapters 195 and 200, Florida Statutes.
 7         Section 23.  Except as otherwise expressly provided in
 8  this act, this act shall take effect January 1, 2008, sections
 9  6 through 21 of this act shall take effect only upon the
10  effective date of amendments to the State Constitution
11  contained in Senate Joint Resolution __ or House Joint
12  Resolution __ revising the homestead tax exemption and
13  providing an exemption from ad valorem taxation for tangible
14  personal property and property used for workforce and
15  affordable rental housing, and sections 6 through 21 of this
16  act shall apply retroactively to the 2008 tax roll if the
17  amendments to the State Constitution contained in Senate Joint
18  Resolution __ or House Joint Resolution __ are approved in a
19  special election held on January 29, 2008, or shall apply to
20  the 2009 tax roll if the amendments to the State Constitution
21  contained in Senate Joint Resolution __ or House Joint
22  Resolution __ are approved in the general election held in
23  November of 2008.
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
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