Committee adopts amendment and advances CDD recall bill after sponsor cites alleged $2 million misuse
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Summary
SB 1180, establishing a recall framework for elected community development district (CDD) board members and adding provisions on synthetic turf and mixed-use definitions in a strike-all amendment, was amended and reported favorably; sponsor cited a JLAC audit alleging $2,000,000 in gross negligence/fraud in Concord Estates.
Senator Arrington explained SB 11 80, presented as a response to resident concerns in Concord Estates, a CDD in his district. He told the committee that a JLAC audit alleged gross negligence and fraud in the amount of $2,000,000, and said SB 11 80 creates a recall framework similar to municipal recall statutes and strengthens transparency and homeowner protections.
The committee considered and adopted a strike-all amendment that (1) added two provisions relating to CDDs, (2) allowed CDDs to enforce deed restrictions related to synthetic turf despite a 2025 statute, (3) expanded the definition of compact urban mixed-use district to include qualified opportunity zones meeting thresholds (250,000 square feet commercial and 500 affordable residential rental units), and (4) streamlined recall procedures including petition verification and filing with the county or city clerk rather than the Department of Commerce.
Why it matters: Sponsor said the changes are intended to protect homeowners, increase transparency and let supervisors administer recall elections without Department of Commerce involvement. Art Woodruff waived in support; no public opposition appeared in the record for the amended bill. The amendment was adopted and the bill as amended was reported favorably.
Outcome: Committee adopted amendment 353762 and reported CS for SB 1180 favorably. Sponsor and committee staff indicated readiness to continue stakeholder coordination on implementation details such as petition verification across counties.
