Florida Senate - 2026                              CS for SB 526
       
       
        
       By the Committee on Governmental Oversight and Accountability;
       and Senator Grall
       
       
       
       
       585-02410-26                                           2026526c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to construction regulations; creating
    3         s. 255.0994, F.S.; defining terms; prohibiting a
    4         governmental entity that contracts for a public works
    5         project from taking certain actions; providing
    6         construction; providing severability; providing
    7         applicability; amending s. 553.71, F.S.; defining the
    8         term “commercial construction project”; creating s.
    9         553.789, F.S.; requiring the Florida Building
   10         Commission to adopt by rule uniform commercial
   11         building permit acceptance standards for a specified
   12         purpose by a specified date; specifying the
   13         information to be included in the acceptance
   14         standards; requiring the commission to adopt rules to
   15         create additional trade-specific acceptance standards
   16         for certain trades; requiring a local enforcement
   17         agency to accept a completed application if it
   18         provides the information set forth in such acceptance
   19         standards adopted by the Florida Building Commission;
   20         authorizing the local enforcement agency to require
   21         additional documentation or plans; amending s. 553.79,
   22         F.S.; requiring that permit fees that are imposed by a
   23         local enforcement agency be limited to the actual and
   24         reasonable costs incurred in reviewing, processing,
   25         and administering the permit; prohibiting such fees
   26         from being based on industry standards, market rates,
   27         or comparable retail pricing; requiring that such fees
   28         be proportional to the work performed in reviewing,
   29         processing, and administering such permits;
   30         prohibiting a political subdivision from imposing
   31         certain requirements for glazing on certain proposed
   32         construction or restoration projects; defining the
   33         terms “primary facade” and “glazing”; conforming a
   34         cross-reference; amending s. 553.791, F.S.; requiring
   35         a local jurisdiction to include a certain reduction in
   36         the permit fee on its schedule of fees posted on its
   37         website; prohibiting the local jurisdiction from
   38         charging fees for plans review services under certain
   39         circumstances; requiring the local jurisdiction to
   40         specify the services covered by the administrative
   41         fees on its website; requiring the local enforcement
   42         agency to reduce the permit fee by specified
   43         percentages for an owner or a contractor that retains
   44         a private provider for specified purposes; providing
   45         that a local enforcement agency forfeits its ability
   46         to collect any fees for a commercial construction
   47         project if it does not reduce its fees by such
   48         specified percentages; requiring that a certain
   49         surcharge be calculated based on the reduced permit
   50         fee; providing construction; creating s. 553.8411,
   51         F.S.; requiring nonresidential structures built in a
   52         flood zone after a specified date to have the lowest
   53         floor elevated above the required design flood
   54         elevation; authorizing the building of such a
   55         structure below the required design flood elevation if
   56         all structural areas below the required design flood
   57         elevation are substantially impermeable to water and
   58         capable of resisting certain effects of the regulatory
   59         floodplain; amending s. 553.842, F.S.; revising the
   60         products requiring statewide approval to include
   61         mitigation products; creating s. 553.8992, F.S.;
   62         requiring the Florida Building Commission to
   63         incorporate into the Florida Building Code certain
   64         standards for all new construction commercial or
   65         residential pools by a specified date; amending ss.
   66         497.271 and 553.902, F.S.; conforming cross
   67         references; providing an effective date.
   68          
   69  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   70  
   71         Section 1. Section 255.0994, Florida Statutes, is created
   72  to read:
   73         255.0994Public works projects; unenforceability of certain
   74  contract provisions regarding delays.
   75         (1)As used in this section, the term:
   76         (a)“Concurrent delays” means two or more unrelated delays
   77  in the contractor’s performance of a contract for a public works
   78  project which happen at the same time or overlap in time, each
   79  of which on its own would have delayed the contractor’s
   80  performance.
   81         (b)“Governmental entity” has the same meaning as in s.
   82  255.0993(1).
   83         (c)“Public works project” has the same meaning as in s.
   84  255.0992(1).
   85         (2)Except as otherwise required by federal or state law, a
   86  governmental entity that contracts for a public works project
   87  may not take any of the following actions:
   88         (a)Enforce any contract provisions that would eliminate or
   89  limit the contractor’s right to receive compensation for damages
   90  and increased costs, equitable adjustments, or time extensions
   91  due to a delay in performance of the contract, either on its own
   92  behalf or on behalf of a subcontractor or supplier, to the
   93  extent the delay was caused in whole or in part by the acts or
   94  omissions of the governmental entity or of any agent, employee,
   95  or person acting on its behalf.
   96         (b)Enforce any contract provisions that would eliminate or
   97  limit the contractor’s right to receive time extensions due to
   98  concurrent delays, either on its own behalf or on behalf of a
   99  subcontractor or supplier, if at least one of those delays was
  100  caused in whole or in part by the acts or omissions of the
  101  governmental entity or of any agent, employee, or person acting
  102  on its behalf.
  103         (3)This section may not be construed to render
  104  unenforceable a provision of a contract for a public works
  105  project which:
  106         (a)Requires the party claiming a delay to give notice of
  107  the acts or omissions giving rise to the delay;
  108         (b) Allows a governmental entity to recover liquidated
  109  damages for a delay if it was caused by the acts or omissions of
  110  the contractor or its subcontractors, agents, or employees; or
  111         (c)Provides for arbitration or any other procedure
  112  designed to settle contract disputes.
  113         (4)If a contract for a public works project contains a
  114  provision that is unenforceable under this section, the
  115  provision must be severed from the contract, and the remaining
  116  provisions must remain in full force and effect.
  117         (5)This section applies to any contract for a public works
  118  project entered into on or after July 1, 2026.
  119         Section 2. Present subsections (1) through (12) of section
  120  553.71, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (2)
  121  through (13), respectively, and a new subsection (1) is added to
  122  that section, to read:
  123         553.71 Definitions.—As used in this part, the term:
  124         (1)“Commercial construction project” means the
  125  construction, alteration, or repair of a building or structure
  126  that is primarily intended for business, industrial,
  127  institutional, or mercantile use and is not classified as
  128  residential under the Florida Building Code.
  129         Section 3. Section 553.789, Florida Statutes, is created to
  130  read:
  131         553.789Uniform commercial building permit application.
  132         (1) By December 31, 2026, the commission shall adopt rules
  133  pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 which establish uniform
  134  commercial building permit acceptance standards that identify
  135  the information required for acceptance of a commercial building
  136  permit application. The standards must be used statewide by all
  137  enforcement agencies. The standards must include, at a minimum,
  138  all of the following information:
  139         (a)The name and contact information of the property owner.
  140         (b)The name, license number, and contact information of
  141  the contractor, if known at the time of the application.
  142         (c)The address and parcel identification number of the
  143  construction project.
  144         (d)The project type and occupancy classification under the
  145  Florida Building Code.
  146         (e)A description of the construction project, including
  147  whether the project is new construction or an alteration, an
  148  addition, or a repair.
  149         (f)The total square footage and the declared value of the
  150  construction project.
  151         (g)The architect or engineer of record, if applicable.
  152         (h)The identification of any private provider services if
  153  used pursuant to s. 553.791.
  154         (2)The commission shall adopt rules pursuant to ss.
  155  120.536(1) and 120.54 which create additional trade-specific
  156  acceptance standards for trades that are often present on a
  157  commercial construction project, including, but not limited to,
  158  electric, HVAC, plumbing, and water and sewer.
  159         (3)An enforcement agency must accept a completed
  160  application if it provides the information set forth in the
  161  uniform commercial building permit acceptance standards and any
  162  other trade-specific acceptance standards that may be adopted by
  163  the commission. However, an enforcement agency may require
  164  submission of additional documentation or plans reasonably
  165  necessary for the applicant to demonstrate compliance with the
  166  Florida Building Code or applicable local ordinances and land
  167  development code.
  168         Section 4. Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) and paragraph
  169  (a) of subsection (24) of section 553.79, Florida Statutes, are
  170  amended, and paragraph (g) is added to subsection (1) of that
  171  section, to read:
  172         553.79 Permits; applications; issuance; inspections.—
  173         (1)
  174         (g)Permit fees imposed by a local enforcement agency must
  175  be limited to the actual and reasonable costs incurred in
  176  reviewing, processing, and administering the permit and may not
  177  be based on industry standards, market rates, or comparable
  178  retail pricing. Such fees must be proportional to the work
  179  performed in reviewing, processing, and administering the
  180  permit.
  181         (5)(a) During new construction or during repair or
  182  restoration projects in which the structural system or
  183  structural loading of a building is being modified, the
  184  enforcing agency shall require a special inspector to perform
  185  structural inspections on a threshold building pursuant to a
  186  structural inspection plan prepared by the engineer or architect
  187  of record. The structural inspection plan must be submitted to
  188  and approved by the enforcing agency before the issuance of a
  189  building permit for the construction of a threshold building.
  190  The purpose of the structural inspection plan is to provide
  191  specific inspection procedures and schedules so that the
  192  building can be adequately inspected for compliance with the
  193  permitted documents. The special inspector may not serve as a
  194  surrogate in carrying out the responsibilities of the building
  195  official, the architect, or the engineer of record. The
  196  contractor’s contractual or statutory obligations are not
  197  relieved by any action of the special inspector. The special
  198  inspector shall determine that a professional engineer who
  199  specializes in shoring design has inspected the shoring and
  200  reshoring for conformance with the shoring and reshoring plans
  201  submitted to the enforcing agency. A fee simple title owner of a
  202  building, which does not meet the minimum size, height,
  203  occupancy, occupancy classification, or number-of-stories
  204  criteria which would result in classification as a threshold
  205  building as defined in s. 553.71 under s. 553.71(12), may
  206  designate such building as a threshold building, subject to more
  207  than the minimum number of inspections required by the Florida
  208  Building Code.
  209         (24)(a) A political subdivision of this state may not adopt
  210  or enforce any ordinance or impose any building permit or other
  211  development order requirement that:
  212         1. Contains any building, construction, or aesthetic
  213  requirement or condition that conflicts with or impairs
  214  corporate trademarks, service marks, trade dress, logos, color
  215  patterns, design scheme insignia, image standards, or other
  216  features of corporate branding identity on real property or
  217  improvements thereon used in activities conducted under chapter
  218  526 or in carrying out business activities defined as a
  219  franchise by Federal Trade Commission regulations in 16 C.F.R.
  220  ss. 436.1, et. seq.; or
  221         2. Imposes any requirement on the design, construction, or
  222  location of signage advertising the retail price of gasoline in
  223  accordance with the requirements of ss. 526.111 and 526.121
  224  which prevents the signage from being clearly visible and
  225  legible to drivers of approaching motor vehicles from a vantage
  226  point on any lane of traffic in either direction on a roadway
  227  abutting the gas station premises and meets height, width, and
  228  spacing standards for Series C, D, or E signs, as applicable,
  229  published in the latest edition of Standard Alphabets for
  230  Highway Signs published by the United States Department of
  231  Commerce, Bureau of Public Roads, Office of Highway Safety; or
  232         3. Imposes a glazing requirement that results in the
  233  glazing of more than 15 percent of the surface area of the
  234  primary facade for the first 10 feet above the ground floor for
  235  a proposed new commercial or mixed-use construction or
  236  restoration project. Such glazing requirements may not be
  237  imposed or enforced on any facade other than the primary facade,
  238  and such glazing requirements may not be imposed or enforced on
  239  any portion of the primary facade higher than the first 10 feet
  240  above the ground floor. For purposes of this subparagraph, the
  241  term:
  242         a. “Glazing” means the installation of transparent or
  243  translucent materials, including glass or similar substances, in
  244  windows, doors, or storefronts. The term includes any actual or
  245  faux windows to be installed to a building facade.
  246         b. “Primary facade” means the single building side housing
  247  the primary entrance to the building.
  248         Section 5. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
  249  553.791, Florida Statutes, is amended, and paragraph (d) is
  250  added to that subsection, to read:
  251         553.791 Alternative plans review and inspection.—
  252         (2)
  253         (b) If an owner or contractor retains a private provider
  254  for purposes of plans review or building inspection services,
  255  the local jurisdiction must reduce the permit fee by the amount
  256  of cost savings realized by the local enforcement agency for not
  257  having to perform such services. Such reduction may be
  258  calculated on a flat fee or percentage basis, or any other
  259  reasonable means by which a local enforcement agency assesses
  260  the cost for its plans review or inspection services. The local
  261  jurisdiction shall include the applicable reduction in the
  262  permit fee on its schedule of fees which is posted on its
  263  website. The local jurisdiction may not charge fees for building
  264  inspections or plans review services if the fee owner or
  265  contractor hires a private provider to perform such services;
  266  however, the local jurisdiction may charge a reasonable
  267  administrative fee, which shall be based on the cost that is
  268  actually incurred, including the labor cost of the personnel
  269  providing the service, by the local jurisdiction or attributable
  270  to the local jurisdiction for the clerical and supervisory
  271  assistance required, or both. The local jurisdiction shall
  272  specify the services covered by the administrative fees on its
  273  website.
  274         (d)If an owner or a contractor retains a private provider
  275  for purposes of plans review or building inspection services for
  276  a commercial construction project, the local enforcement agency
  277  must reduce the permit fee by at least 25 percent of the portion
  278  of the permit fee attributable to plans review or building
  279  inspection services, as applicable. If an owner or a contractor
  280  retains a private provider for all required plans review and
  281  building inspection services, the local enforcement agency must
  282  reduce the total permit fee by at least 50 percent of the amount
  283  otherwise charged for such services. If a local enforcement
  284  agency does not reduce its fees by at least the percentages
  285  provided in this paragraph, the local enforcement agency
  286  forfeits the ability to collect any fees for the commercial
  287  construction project. The surcharge required by s. 553.721 must
  288  be calculated based on the reduced permit fee. This paragraph
  289  does not prohibit a local enforcement agency from reducing its
  290  fees in excess of the percentages provided in this paragraph.
  291         Section 6. Section 553.8411, Florida Statutes, is created
  292  to read:
  293         553.8411 Nonresidential buildings; floodproofing.—A
  294  nonresidential structure constructed after July 1, 2026, which
  295  is located in a flood zone as designated by the Federal
  296  Emergency Management Agency must elevate its lowest floor above
  297  the required design flood elevation. As an alternative to this
  298  requirement, a nonresidential structure may be designed and
  299  constructed below the required design flood elevation if all
  300  structural areas below the required design flood elevation are
  301  substantially impermeable to water and capable of resisting the
  302  effects of the regulatory floodplain, including, but not limited
  303  to, flow velocities, duration, rate of rise, hydrostatic and
  304  hydrodynamic forces, buoyancy, and debris impact.
  305         Section 7. Subsection (5) of section 553.842, Florida
  306  Statutes, is amended to read:
  307         553.842 Product evaluation and approval.—
  308         (5) Statewide approval of products, methods, or systems of
  309  construction may be achieved by one of the following methods.
  310  One of these methods must be used by the commission to approve
  311  the following categories of products: panel walls, exterior
  312  doors, roofing, skylights, windows, shutters, impact protective
  313  systems, mitigation products, and structural components as
  314  established by the commission by rule. A product may not be
  315  advertised, sold, offered, provided, distributed, or marketed as
  316  hurricane, windstorm, or impact protection from wind-borne
  317  debris from a hurricane or windstorm unless it is approved
  318  pursuant to this section or s. 553.8425. Any person who
  319  advertises, sells, offers, provides, distributes, or markets a
  320  product as hurricane, windstorm, or impact protection from wind
  321  borne debris without such approval is subject to the Florida
  322  Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act under part II of
  323  chapter 501 brought by the enforcing authority as defined in s.
  324  501.203.
  325         (a) Products for which the code establishes standardized
  326  testing or comparative or rational analysis methods shall be
  327  approved by submittal and validation of one of the following
  328  reports or listings indicating that the product or method or
  329  system of construction was in compliance with the Florida
  330  Building Code and that the product or method or system of
  331  construction is, for the purpose intended, at least equivalent
  332  to that required by the Florida Building Code:
  333         1. A certification mark or listing of an approved
  334  certification agency, which may be used only for products for
  335  which the code designates standardized testing;
  336         2. A test report from an approved testing laboratory;
  337         3. A product evaluation report based upon testing or
  338  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, from
  339  an approved product evaluation entity; or
  340         4. A product evaluation report based upon testing or
  341  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof,
  342  developed and signed and sealed by a professional engineer or
  343  architect, licensed in this state.
  344  
  345  A product evaluation report or a certification mark or listing
  346  of an approved certification agency which demonstrates that the
  347  product or method or system of construction complies with the
  348  Florida Building Code for the purpose intended is equivalent to
  349  a test report and test procedure referenced in the Florida
  350  Building Code. An application for state approval of a product
  351  under subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 3. must be approved by the
  352  department after the commission staff or a designee verifies
  353  that the application and related documentation are complete.
  354  This verification must be completed within 10 business days
  355  after receipt of the application. Upon approval by the
  356  department, the product shall be immediately added to the list
  357  of state-approved products maintained under subsection (13).
  358  Approvals by the department shall be reviewed and ratified by
  359  the commission’s program oversight committee except for a
  360  showing of good cause that a review by the full commission is
  361  necessary. The commission shall adopt rules providing means to
  362  cure deficiencies identified within submittals for products
  363  approved under this paragraph.
  364         (b) Products, methods, or systems of construction for which
  365  there are no specific standardized testing or comparative or
  366  rational analysis methods established in the code may be
  367  approved by submittal and validation of one of the following:
  368         1. A product evaluation report based upon testing or
  369  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof, from
  370  an approved product evaluation entity indicating that the
  371  product or method or system of construction was in compliance
  372  with the intent of the Florida Building Code and that the
  373  product or method or system of construction is, for the purpose
  374  intended, at least equivalent to that required by the Florida
  375  Building Code; or
  376         2. A product evaluation report based upon testing or
  377  comparative or rational analysis, or a combination thereof,
  378  developed and signed and sealed by a professional engineer or
  379  architect, licensed in this state, who certifies that the
  380  product or method or system of construction is, for the purpose
  381  intended, at least equivalent to that required by the Florida
  382  Building Code.
  383         Section 8. Section 553.8992, Florida Statutes, is created
  384  to read:
  385         553.8992 Incorporation of standards into the Florida
  386  Building Code.—By December 31, 2026, the Florida Building
  387  Commission shall incorporate into the Florida Building Code
  388  pursuant to s. 553.73(1) standards for the adoption of sections
  389  680.26(B)(1) Conductive Pool Shells and 680.26(B)(2) Perimeter
  390  Surfaces of the 2026 Edition of the National Electrical Code for
  391  all new construction of commercial or residential pools.
  392         Section 9. Subsection (3) of section 497.271, Florida
  393  Statutes, is amended to read:
  394         497.271 Standards for construction and significant
  395  alteration or renovation of mausoleums and columbaria.—
  396         (3) The licensing authority shall transmit the rules as
  397  adopted under subsection (2), referred to as the “mausoleum
  398  standards,” to the Florida Building Commission, which shall
  399  initiate rulemaking under chapter 120 to consider such mausoleum
  400  standards. If such mausoleum standards are not deemed
  401  acceptable, they must be returned by the Florida Building
  402  Commission to the licensing authority with details of changes
  403  needed to make them acceptable. If such mausoleum standards are
  404  acceptable, the Florida Building Commission must adopt a rule
  405  designating the mausoleum standards as an approved revision to
  406  the State Minimum Building Codes under part IV of chapter 553.
  407  When designated by the Florida Building Commission, such
  408  mausoleum standards must shall become a required element of the
  409  State Minimum Building Codes under s. 553.73(2)(a) and must
  410  shall be transmitted to each local enforcement agency, as
  411  defined in s. 553.71 s. 553.71(5). Such local enforcement agency
  412  shall consider and inspect for compliance with such mausoleum
  413  standards as if they were part of the local building code, but
  414  shall have no continuing duty to inspect after final approval of
  415  the construction pursuant to the local building code. Any
  416  further amendments to the mausoleum standards must shall be
  417  accomplished by the same procedure. Such designated mausoleum
  418  standards, as from time to time amended, must shall be a part of
  419  the State Minimum Building Codes under s. 553.73 until the
  420  adoption and effective date of a new statewide uniform minimum
  421  building code, which may supersede the mausoleum standards as
  422  provided by the law enacting the new statewide uniform minimum
  423  building code.
  424         Section 10. Subsection (5) of section 553.902, Florida
  425  Statutes, is amended to read:
  426         553.902 Definitions.—As used in this part, the term:
  427         (5) “Local enforcement agency” means the agency of local
  428  government which has the authority to make inspections of
  429  buildings and to enforce the Florida Building Code. The term
  430  includes any agency within the definition of s. 553.71 s.
  431  553.71(5).
  432         Section 11. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.