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Senate committee advances bill allowing local governments to publish legal notices on their websites amid opposition from press and transparency groups

Florida Senate Community Affairs Committee · January 27, 2026

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Summary

The Community Affairs Committee reported CS for CS SB 380 favorably after adopting an amendment; the bill expands online publication options for legally required notices but drew opposition from the Florida Press Association and Common Cause, which warned it could fragment and reduce discoverability and archiving of public notices.

Senators on the Florida Senate Community Affairs Committee voted to report CS for CS SB 3 80 favorably after adopting an amendment clarifying which local offices qualify to post legal notices online.

The bill, sponsored by Senator Trumbull, would let courts clerks, tax collectors, water management districts and other local government offices publish required legal notices on their own publicly accessible websites or on a county-designated private site when that is less expensive than publishing in a local newspaper. Trumbull said the change aims to modernize notices and provide cost savings.

Why it matters: Witnesses representing news publishers and good-government groups told senators the change could make legally required notices harder for Floridians to find and harder to archive. Carolyn Nolte, president and CEO of the Florida Press Association, testified that the bill “fails to provide guidelines, proposed standards, or stipulations that set a minimum threshold for reaching Floridians” and warned it “will further fragment and dilute important governmental communications to Florida residents.”

Common Cause Florida’s executive director Amy Keith also opposed the bill, telling the committee that removing the requirement of centralized publication risks fragmentation and that “Floridians who have been able to look on their county website as a centralized place to find public notices … now won't even have that.”

Sponsor response: Senator Trumbull and amendment proponents said the amendment clarifies covered agencies and preserves options — counties could continue using newspapers, their county website, or the statewide floridapublicnotices.com portal. Trumbull described the measure as modernizing options while preserving existing publication methods.

Outcome and next steps: The committee adopted Senator Trumbull’s amendment and reported the bill favorably. Supporters said the change will save money and allow agencies to post where practical; opponents urged additional safeguards to ensure discoverability, centralized archiving, and an auditable record for evidentiary purposes.

What to watch: Any further amendments to specify minimum discoverability standards, archival/retention requirements, or a centralized aggregation mechanism could address opponents’ concerns before the bill moves to the floor.