They talked big about making Florida more affordable, but lawmakers disappointed | Opinion
The passage of a
The Herald Editorial Board met with dozens of candidates, Republican and Democratic, ahead of last year’s legislative elections. Back then, virtually all of them told us that the biggest concern they were hearing from voters was the exorbitant price of homeowners’ insurance and housing.
As the Editorial Board wrote on
They will have a lot of explaining to do.
To be fair, the Legislature did make disaster-relief sales-tax cuts year round and extended the back-to-school sales tax holiday for a full month, the Herald reported. These cuts will go into effect every year without the need for legislative approval. Lawmakers also eliminated the business-rent tax, which is supposed to help small businesses, and doubled the funding to address food insecurity.
These measures will provide some relief for Floridians, but, as the Herald reported, most tax breaks passed this year actually went toward businesses, many of which have an army of lobbyists in
House Speaker
Perez and his colleagues are naive if they think their constituents will be satisfied. Even longtime homeowners cannot keep up with the cost of everything, especially, property insurance.
A few years ago, the Legislature passed a reform package that made it harder to sue insurance companies, which said they were forced to pass their high legal costs onto consumers in the form of higher premiums. President
After years of instability, Florida’s insurance market has stabilized with premium increases slowing down, but the crisis for homeowners is far from over and many are paying more than they can afford. Last November, the Herald reported that Republican leaders were surprising their colleagues with “tough talk” on insurance companies and the affordability crisis.
“[Floridians] don’t want our state’s insurance laws to be written by insurance companies,” Perez told the House.
The political appetite for more accountability grew when, in March, the Herald/
In the end, no meaningful comprehensive reform on the insurance industry passed, even though
Lawmakers always have next year to tackle broader reforms. Caution, in some cases, is needed. Lawmakers, for example, did not try to eliminate property taxes as Gov.
The real issue making
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