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Florida’s 'Rural Renaissance' bill passes out of Senate, heads to House floor

The Florida Historic Capital
Anna Jones
/
WFSU Public Media
The Florida Historic Capital

The Florida Senate passed the measure unanimously.

  • A bill to support rural communities through economic development has approval from the full Senate.
  • The measure, a priority of Senate President Ben Albritton, is on its way to the House.
  • Listen to what the bill offers smaller, rural areas in Florida.

BROADCAST TRANSCRIPT:
Senate President Ben Albritton says the measure will bring what he calls a “Rural Renaissance to Florida.”

“As I’ve traveled the state, what I’ve seen is just an eminence amount of opportunity in rural Florida," Albritton, a Wauchula Republican, said on Wednesday.

Senators passed the measure unanimously. The bill would mandate new state funding for rural communities.

Some examples include establishing programs for educational and healthcare support within rural communities, fixing roads used for transporting farm goods, and adding a recruitment program that offers different initiatives to recruit doctors and educators to rural counties.

The bill’s sponsor, Tallahassee Republican Senator Corey Simon, spoke about the measure after the Senate session, Wed., March 19, 2025. Sen. Simon is carrying SB 110, which is a high priority for Senate President Ben Albritton, a sixth-generation Floridian and fourth-generation citrus grower. (The Florida Channel)
The Florida Channel
The bill’s sponsor, Tallahassee Republican Senator Corey Simon, spoke about the measure after the Senate session, Wed., March 19, 2025. Sen. Simon is carrying SB 110, which is a high priority for Senate President Ben Albritton, a sixth-generation Floridian and fourth-generation citrus grower. (The Florida Channel)

The bill’s sponsor, Tallahassee Republican Senator Corey Simon, spoke about the measure after the Senate session.

“The impact that this will have is far reaching from everything from health care, from education, to transportation," he said.

"Especially dealing with in this part of the state, what we’ve dealt over the last year and a half, with the number of storms that have come through and really decimated these communities.”

Simon said some rural communities have fallen behind in recent years, specifically in economic and population growth.

The lawmaker believes the bill addresses that by creating the Office of Rural Prosperity at the State Department of Commerce. This will ensure small county outreach.

The measure also increases grant funding by $50 million for “fiscally constrained counties,” and provides $1 million block grants to counties with declining populations.

“I think there are things that we need in these communities in order to be successful going forward," Simon said. "I was always taught, if you’re not growing, you’re dying.”

The Republican lawmaker estimates his plan will cost about $200 million.

Adrian Andrews is a multimedia journalist with WFSU Public Media. He is a Gadsden County native and a first-generation college graduate from Florida A&M University. Adrian is also a military veteran, ending his career as a Florida Army National Guard Non-Comissioned Officer.

Adrian has experience in print writing, digital content creation, documentary, and film production. He has spent the last four years on the staff of several award-winning publications such as The Famuan, Gadsden County News Corp, and Cumulus Media before joining the WFSU news team.