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Senate President Albritton unveils Florida "Rural Renaissance” package

The "Rural Renaissance" package is Florida Senate President Ben Albritton's legislative priority.
Phil Sears/AP
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FR170567 AP
The "Rural Renaissance" package is the legislative priority of Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, pictured here on Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2023, at the Capitol in Tallahassee, Fla. (AP Photo/Phil Sears, File)

Florida Senate President Ben Albritton unveiled his much-anticipated priority package Wednesday ahead of next month’s legislative session.

The proposal, SB 110, calls for a “rural renaissance” in Florida by appropriating $197 million and redirecting $97 million in already allocated money to help the state’s more sparsely populated areas. It is focused on creating “opportunities for rural communities to expand education offerings, increase health care services, and modernize commerce” according to a release announcing the bill's filing.

While Florida has experienced economic and population booms in recent years, some rural areas have fallen behind. The poverty rate in rural Florida is 20.0%, compared with 13.0% in urban areas of the state, according to American Community Survey data. All eight Florida counties that shrunk in population over the last 10 years are rural.

Albritton, whose represents Wauchula and other rural areas, pledged since becoming Senate President last year to focus on helping Florida’s rural areas. He said this package is focused on improving infrastructure so those communities can thrive.

“Florida’s legacy rural communities offer a time-honored way of life worth preserving in modern Florida. Our rural communities are full of opportunity, but that doesn’t mean traditional development. We can create a rural renaissance by modernize some of our longstanding economic development programs with a focus on infrastructure, not incentives,” he said.

Tallahassee Republican Senator Corey Simon is sponsoring the package as it makes its way through the legislature. His district includes 12 rural counties in the Florida Panhandle and Big Bend region. He said the package will help hundreds of small communities across Florida.

“We are combining enhancements to the traditional infrastructure for schools and hospitals with innovations that expand and strengthen access. We know commerce and capital are attracted to strong transportation infrastructure and robust public services, which will provide the chance for rural communities to prosper and grow as they see fit,” he said.

$110 million of the proposal would go to improving rural roads. About $48 million would go to protecting and developing affordable housing. Over $80 million would go to improving access to medical resources.

The bill also creates the Office of Rural Prosperity within the state’s Department of Commerce. That office will help rural local governments with accessing state and federal resources.

It is typical for the heads of Florida’s two legislative chambers to champion an expensive and intricate legislative package every year. SB 110’s filing is the first step in a long process that will include passing committees, being approved by a majority vote in the House and Senate and surviving Gov. Ron DeSantis’ veto pen.

However, expect some version of this package to be passed. The legislature and governor’s mansion are controlled by Republicans. While those two entities have butted heads recently over immigration, they have begun working collaboratively for now.

The fate of the package will be determined during the 2025 legislative session that starts on March 4.

Tristan Wood is a senior producer and host with WFSU Public Media. A South Florida native and University of Florida graduate, he focuses on state government in the Sunshine State and local panhandle political happenings.