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Mayor pushes 90-day plan to speed permits after surge of post-storm applications

St. Pete Beach City Commission · December 17, 2025

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Summary

After processing more than 6,000 post-storm permits in 2025, St. Pete Beach’s mayor proposed a 90-day action plan and longer-term improvements including same-day low-risk permits, single-file ownership, a website cleanup and evaluation of a new permit portal; staff agreed to provide a timeline and monthly updates.

Mayor Petrillo told the commission Dec. 16 that the city must improve permit turnaround, customer communication and interdepartmental coordination after a surge of more than 6,000 permits following last year’s storm.

His proposed near-term steps included exit interviews with volunteer permit aides to capture lessons learned, improvements to tone and responsiveness in applicant communications, a pilot program for same-day or 24–48-hour permits for routine low-risk work (roofs, HVAC, windows), a single staff point of contact per permit file to avoid “moving goalposts,” consolidated interdepartmental reviews (so applicants receive one coordinated response rather than staggered comments), expanded in-person or evening appointment availability and a published timeline for response targets.

Mayor Petrillo also urged a medium-term work stream to evaluate the city’s permit portal and determine whether to update the existing system or issue an RFP for a replacement; he suggested exploring AI-assisted permit-review tools that can flag code issues to speed staff review. City manager and staff told the commission they’d scope costs and feasibility and produce a path forward, aiming to return with a scope of work for a portal replacement and a prioritized list of changes by mid-2026.

Commissioners supported many proposals and urged a quick pilot for high-impact items: clearer customer communication, single-file ownership and faster reviews. Staff said the same-day-permit idea requires legal and operational review (different permit categories will have different legal/inspection constraints) but that website cleanup, volunteer exit interviews, improved customer outreach and a staffing/liaison pilot were immediately feasible. Staff committed to monthly progress updates to the commission.

Quotes and context:

"We processed 6,000-plus permits — roughly ten times a normal year — and we owe our residents a better customer experience," Mayor Petrillo said, describing the plan’s goals of faster, consistent and empathetic service.

City staff acknowledged the improvements will require both process changes and potential short-term investments and said they had already begun meetings with contractors handling complex elevating and shoring projects to clear bottlenecks.

Next steps: staff will return with a 30/60/90-day implementation plan and a scope of work for a permitting-portal evaluation and potential RFP, and will report monthly on progress.