The Florida Senate
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.)
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Fiscal Policy
BILL: SB 674
INTRODUCER: Senator Boyd
SUBJECT: United States-produced Iron and Steel in Public Works Projects
DATE: January 29, 2024 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Harmsen McVaney GO Favorable
2. Harmsen Yeatman FP Favorable
I. Summary:
SB 674 requires a governmental entity that contracts for a public works project or for the
purchase of materials for a public works project to require that any iron or steel product that will
be permanently incorporated into the project be produced in the United States.
The bill waives this contract requirement if the governmental entity determines that any of the
following apply:
 The iron or steel products required are not produced in the United States in sufficient
quantities, are not reasonably available, or are of an unsatisfactory quality;
 The use will increase the total cost of the project by more than 20 percent; or
 Compliance is inconsistent with the public interest.
A governmental entity may allow a minimal use of foreign iron or steel materials in the project,
if they are ancillary to the primary product and the cost of the materials does not exceed 0.10
percent of the total contract cost, or $2,500, whichever is greater.
These provisions do not apply to contracts procured by the Florida Department of Transportation
that are subject to the federal Buy America requirements.
The bill requires the Department of Management Services to develop guidelines and procedures
by rule to implement the bill.
The bill has an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on state and local expenditures.
The bill takes effect July 1, 2024.
BILL: SB 674 Page 2
II. Present Situation:
United States Steel
China is the largest global producer of steel, and makes approximately 55 percent of the world’s
crude steel output.1 The U.S. ranks fourth, behind China, India, and Japan, and produces 4.5
percent of the world’s crude steel output.2
Steel produced in the U.S. is relatively more expensive compared to its global competitors3 for
several reasons; the primary cause is that restrictions on steel imports into the U.S. create a more
narrow market. However, the U.S. has trade agreements that allow a specified amount of duty-
free steel to enter the U.S. from the EU, Japan, and the United Kingdom.4 Additionally, the U.S.-
Mexico-Canada Agreement allows steel mill products to move throughout the three countries
duty-free.5 In 2022, the U.S. imported approximately 30 million net tons of finished steel
products.6 In 2021, Canada accounted for 47 percent, and Mexico for 46 percent, of total
imports. China accounts for approximately 2 percent of imports.7
Additionally, the U.S. market has transitioned to harder-to-make steel products, which ultimately
incentivizes exporting those higher quality (and higher priced) items, and importing less
sophisticated products, such as ingots and rebar.8 In 2022, the U.S. exported 8 million net tons of
steel product.9
The price of steel has been relatively volatile in recent years, due largely to supply chain issues.
The chart below represents the price for specific steel commodities over the last 6 years.10
1
These figures represent monthly steel outputs for September 2023. U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Steel Executive Summary: July- September 2023, 5, https://www.trade.gov/data-visualization/us-steel-
executive-
summary#:~:text=From%20August%202023%20to%20September,to%202.0%20million%20metric%20tons.&text=In%20Se
ptember%202023%2C%20capacity%20utilization,from%2076.6%25%20in%20August%202023. (last visited Jan. 8, 2024).
2
Id.
3
In September 2023, U.S. price per metric ton of hot rolled band (a global benchmark for the price of steel) was $753,
compared to Europe’s $665, and China’s $453. Id. at 4.
4
CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE, Christopher Watson, Domestic Steel Manufacturing: Overview and Prospects, 6
(May 17, 2022) https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R47107 (last visited Jan. 8, 2024).
5
THE HILL, Sylvan Lane, Canada, Mexico lift tariffs on US goods after Trump Scraps Steel, Aluminum Levies (May 20,
2019), https://thehill.com/policy/finance/444581-canada-mexico-lift-tariffs-on-us-goods-after-trump-scraps-steel-aluminum/
(last visited Mar. 14, 2023). See also, CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE, Christopher Watson, Import Monitoring
Systems: Steel and Aluminum (Mar. 29, 2023), https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF12363 (last visited Jan. 8,
2024).
6
AMERICAN IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE, Finished Steel Imports up 11% in 2022 (Jan. 26, 2023), https://www.steel.org/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/IMP2212.pdf (last visited Jan. 8, 2024).
7
Watson, supra note 4 at 4.
8
Watson, supra note 4 at 7.
9
OECD, Steel Market Developments: Q4 2022, 21 https://www.oecd.org/industry/ind/steel-market-developments-Q4-
2022.pdf (last visited Mar. 14, 2023)
10
John Anton, S&P GLOBAL MARKET INTELLIGENCE, Steel Price Forecast and Steel Market Outlook: Prices Soften on
Weaker Steel Demand Outlook (https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/mi/solutions/steel-forecast.html (last visited
Jan. 8, 2024).
BILL: SB 674 Page 3
Federal Provisions
A suite of federal laws and rules require federal agencies that procure specific goods, products,
and materials, and other entities that use federal financial assistance, to give preference to those
goods, products, and materials manufactured primarily in the United States.11
Buy American Act of 1933
The Buy American Act (BAA)12 of 1933 requires federal agencies to purchase domestic end
products and use domestic construction materials in any contract valued at more than $10,000.
For purposes of the BAA, iron or steel products are considered domestic if the cost of the
domestic components within the iron or steel product constitute at least 95 percent of the total
cost of the product.13
Under the BAA, a federal agency may purchase a foreign-made product if it determines that the
domestic product will cost unreasonably more.14 A price for an end product that is not a critical
item and that does not contain critical components is unreasonable under the BAA if the
domestic offer is not the lowest offer after applying the following domestic preference price
offsets:15
 20 percent added to the low offer for end products, if the lowest domestic offer is from a
large business;
 30 percent added to the low offer for end products, if the lowest domestic offer is from a
small business; or
 20 percent added to the low offer for construction materials.
11
General Services Administration, Made in America.gov, Frequently Asked Questions: Are Buy America and Buy American
the Same?, https://www.madeinamerica.gov/ (last visited Jan. 8, 2024).
12
BAA, 41 U.S.C. §§8301-8305.
13
41 U.S.C. §8302(c)(1) and 48 C.F.R. §25.003. This definition differs from that which applies to the subsequent Build
America, Buy America Act.
14
D. Carpenter and B. Murrill, Congressional Research Service, The Buy American Act and Other Federal Procurement
Domestic Content Restrictions (Nov. 8, 2022), available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46748 (last visited
Jan. 8, 2024).
15
48 C.F.R. §25.106
BILL: SB 674 Page 4
Other exceptions to the BAA apply when:16
 The procurement of domestic goods, or the use of domestic construction materials is
“impracticable” or “inconsistent with the public interest”;
 Domestic end products or construction materials are unavailable “insufficient and reasonably
available commercial quantities and of a satisfactory quality”;
 The contracting officer determines that the cost of domestic end products or construction
materials would be “unreasonable”; or
 The items are procured for use outside the United States.
Build America, Buy America Act
The Build America, Buy America Act17 (BABA), enacted as part of the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, amends the Build American Act and related Buy America
provisions. BABA requires that all infrastructure projects that use federal financial assistance
programs use iron and steel that is produced in the United States; this includes public works
projects taken on by state or local governments and even private entities that receive federal
funds for the project.18
BABA defines iron or steel products produced in the United States as those made, through all of
their manufacturing processes (from melting through application of coatings), in the United
States.19 If American made iron or steel will increase the total cost of the project by more than
25 percent, then an award may be given to a bid that uses foreign iron or steel.20 This price
preference does not apply in pre- and post-disaster or emergency response expenditures, or in
cases in which a treaty or WTO agreement allows the use of a foreign product.
Florida Construction Contracts
The Department of Management Services (DMS) manages projects throughout the state,
including new construction, renovations, and consulting services for various public works
projects. The Bureau of Building Construction (Bureau), within the DMS, oversees public
building construction statewide. The Bureau is also responsible for managing fixed capital outlay
funds appropriated by the Legislature and for overseeing the repair and renovation of DMS-
managed facilities.21
16
48 C.F.R. §25.202
17
Pub. L. 117-58, Title IX (Nov. 15, 2021), available at
https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/GC/documents/Build%20America,%20Buy%20America%20Act%20Provisions.pdf (last
visited Jan. 8, 2024).
18
See, Christopher Watson, Congressional Research Service, OMB Issues Final Guidance on “Buy America” Domestic
Preference Requirements (Aug. 24, 2023), available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IN/IN12230 (last visited
Jan. 8, 2024). See also, Office of Management and Budget, Memorandum regarding Implementation Guidance on
Application of Buy America Preference in Federal Financial Assistance Programs for Infrastructure, M-24-02, 4 (Oct. 25,
2023), available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/M-24-02-Buy-America-Implementation-
Guidance-Update.pdf (last visited Jan. 8, 2024).
19
Pub. L. 117-58, Title IX, s. 70912.
20
2 C.F.R. §184.7
21
DMS, Building Construction,
https://www.dms.myflorida.com/business_operations/real_estate_development_and_management/building_construction (last
visited Jan. 8, 2024).
BILL: SB 674 Page 5
Chapter 255, F.S., specifies the procedures required in the procurement of construction services
for public property and publicly owned buildings. Section 255.29, F.S., authorizes the DMS to
adopt rules for bidding on building construction contracts. These rules must establish the
procedures to:
 Determine the qualifications and responsibility of potential bidders prior to advertising for
and receiving bids for building construction contracts;
 Award each state agency construction project to the lowest qualified bidder;
 Negotiate for construction contracts and contract modifications when such negotiations are
determined to be in the best interest of the state; and
 Enter into performance-based contracts for the development of public facilities when those
contracts are determined to be in the best interest of the state.22
State contracts for construction projects that are projected to cost in excess of $200,000 must be
competitively bid.23 The solicitation of competitive bids or proposals for such state construction
projects must be publicly advertised in the Florida Administrative Register (FAR) for at least 21
days prior to the bid opening. If the project is expected to cost more than $500,000, the
advertisement must be published for 30 days in the FAR, and at least one time, at least 30 days
prior to bid opening, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the project is
located.24
A county, municipality, special district, or other political subdivision that seeks to construct or
improve a public building must competitively award each project estimated to cost more than
$300,000.25 Like state construction project procurements, these county and municipality
procurements are subject to publishing requirements.26
Chapter 337, F.S., governs contracts entered into by the Florida Department of Transportation
(FDOT). FDOT has authority to enter into contracts for the construction and maintenance of all
State Highway or State Park systems’ roads, rest areas, weigh stations, parking areas, supporting
facilities, and any associated building.27 The FDOT must certify as qualified any bidders for a
construction contract, road, bridge, or public construction project that exceeds $250,000 in
cost.28 The certification process ensures that the bidders have professional and financial
competence by evaluating them “with respect to the equipment, past record, experience, financial
resources, and organizational personnel of the applicant necessary to perform the specific class
of work for which the person seeks certification.29
22
See Rule 60D-5.001-60D-5.010, F.A.C.
23
Section 255.0525, F.S.
24
Section 255.0525(1), F.S.
25
Section 255.20, F.S.
26
See, s. 255.0525(2), F.S., which requires a project of $200,000 or more to be advertised in a newspaper of general
circulation in the county where the project is located at least 21 days prior to bid opening, and at least 5 days prior to any
prebid conference. If the project will cost more than $500,000, it must be advertised in a newspaper of general circulation in
the county where the project is located for at least 30 days prior to bid opening, and 5 days prior to any prebid conference.
27
Section 337.11, F.S.
28
Section 337.14(1), F.S.
29
Id.
BILL: SB 674 Page 6
III. Effect of Proposed Changes:
Section 1 creates s. 255.0993, F.S., to require a governmental entity that contracts for a public
works project or for the purchase of materials for a public works project to require, by terms
incorporated into the contract, that any iron or steel product that will be used permanently in the
project be produced in the United States.
Governmental entities are exempt from this requirement if the administering governmental entity
determines that:
 Iron or steel products that are produced in the United States are not produced in sufficient
quantities, reasonably available, or of satisfactory quality;
 The use of U.S. produced iron or steel will increase the total cost of the project by more than
20 percent; or
 It is inconsistent with public interest to comply with the requirement.
Therefore, a project manager that agrees to use domestically produced iron or steel in its public
works project may be awarded the contract even though its bid is up to 20 percent higher than the
next lowest bid which does not use domestic iron or steel.
It is not clear at what point the administering governmental entity must decide to waive the
requirement to use U.S. iron or steel product based on the above factors, although it would likely
vary depending on the type of procurement used.
Additionally, a project may use a minimal amount of foreign steel and iron materials if the
materials are incidental or ancillary to the primary product and are not separately identified in the
project’s specifications, or if the cost of those materials does not exceed .10 percent of the total
contract cost, or $2,500—whichever is greater.
Electrical components, equipment, systems, and appurtenances (including supports, covers,
shielding, and other appurtenances that are related to the electrical system and that are necessary
for operation or concealment) are not considered iron or steel products for purposes of this bill.
However, electrical transmission and distribution poles are considered iron and steel products.
Public works projects subject to this pricing preference include any activity that is paid for with
state-appropriated funds or state funds administered by a governmental entity, which consists of
construction, maintenance, repair, renovation, remodeling, or improvement of the following: