-
Responding to residents' concerns about rising costs, the Florida Legislature approved changes to condominium-safety laws passed after the deadly 2021 Surfside collapse.
-
Legislation passed after a deadly building collapse in 2021 aimed to improve condo safety in Florida. But the changes have left owners grappling with higher fees.
-
Eight condo bills have been filed this session.
-
Condo associations must comply with legislation passed after the 2021 deadly building collapse in Surfside. Compliance costs are being passed on to owners.
-
Gov. Ron DeSantis called for a special session to get lawmakers to fix the 'condo crisis'.
-
Sen. Jennifer Bradley has signaled a willingness to make more changes to safety laws that require inspections of older condo buildings and adequate reserves for repairs.
-
DeSantis says lawmakers are partially to blame for the rising cost of insurance and HOA fees.
-
Condo reform laws were passed after the deadly collapse of the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside, Florida in 2021.
-
Sunrise Mayor Mike Ryan is calling on state lawmakers to fix condominium association reforms before they take effect.
-
Gov. Ron DeSantis says lawmakers should act before next year's legislative session to address problems facing condo associations and owners, including soaring costs.