HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS
BILL #: CS/CS/HB 817 Authorized Agents of Tax Collectors
SPONSOR(S): Appropriations Committee, Insurance & Banking Subcommittee, Duggan
TIED BILLS: IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 840
REFERENCE ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF
1) Insurance & Banking Subcommittee 15 Y, 3 N, As CS Herrera Lloyd
2) Appropriations Committee 21 Y, 8 N, As CS Hicks Pridgeon
3) Infrastructure Strategies Committee
SUMMARY ANALYSIS
County tax collectors are the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles’ (DHSMV’s) authorized agents
for titling and registering motor vehicles, motor homes, and vessels. When processing these transactions, tax
collectors charge and collect fees specified in state law, which are remitted to the state. However, chapters
319, 320, and 328, F.S., also require tax collectors to collect and retain certain statutorily prescribed service
fees and charges.
Each tax collector is authorized to enter into contracts with private third-party license plate agents (LPAs) for
the titling and registration of motor vehicles, mobile homes, and vessels. LPAs are granted online computer
access to DHSMV systems and are supplied with title paper, registration decals, and license plates by the tax
collector.
The bill authorizes a licensed general lines insurance agency holding an insurer appointment to write motor
vehicle insurance in Florida to petition a tax collector for appointment, and requires the tax collector to make
such appointment, as an authorized agent of the tax collector for the purpose of issuing titles, registration
certificates, registration license plates, validation stickers, and mobile home stickers.
Also, the bill permits these insurance agencies to offer applicants the option to register emergency contact
information and the choice to be contacted with information about state and federal benefits available as a
result of military service, subject to the requirements of law and in accordance with the rules of DHSMV.
Further, the bill mandates that a general lines insurance agency appointed by a tax collector:
 Must file a performance bond of $2 million with DHSMV.
 Must provide DHSMV with audited financial statements, prepared by a certified public accountant
licensed in Florida, for each of the two previous years, demonstrating that the agency has produced
policy premiums in excess of $500 million in each of the two previous years.
 Is not obligated to provide services to the general public and may choose to offer services only to its
customers in the normal course of business.
 Must offer such services at no more than five locations in each county where the agency has a
branch office.
 Must be authorized by the tax collector to access DHSMV’s electronic filing system.
 Is subject to all provisions of the law, as if the insurance agency were a private tag agency, except
where the context indicates otherwise.
The bill appropriates $939,800 in nonrecurring funds from the Highway Safety Operating Trust Fund to
DHSMV to provide equipment and installation to a general lines insurance agency appointed by a tax collector
as an authorized agent. The bill may have an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on local government
revenues and an indeterminate positive fiscal impact on the private sector. See Fiscal Analysis Section.
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2024.
This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives .
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DATE: 2/21/2024
FULL ANALYSIS
I. SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES:
Current Situation
County tax collectors are the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles’ (DHSMV’s)
authorized agents for titling and registering motor vehicles, motor homes, and vessels.1 When
processing these transactions, tax collectors charge and collect fees specified in state law, 2 which are
remitted to the state. However, chapters 319, 320, and 328, F.S., also require tax collectors to collect
and retain certain statutorily prescribed service fees and charges.3
Currently, 65 counties have elected tax collectors who are constitutional officers, while Broward and
Miami-Dade Counties have appointed tax collectors under each county’s charter government.
However, pursuant to section 1(d), Article VIII of the State Constitution, these counties will have elected
tax collectors effective January 7, 2025.4
Each tax collector is authorized to enter into contracts with private third-party license plate agents
(LPAs) for the titling and registration of motor vehicles, mobile homes, and vessels. LPAs are granted
online computer access to DHSMV’s systems and are supplied with title paper, registration decals, and
license plates by the tax collector.
Seventeen counties have, or until recently had, contracts with privately owned LPAs to operate 57
offices 5, primarily in Miami Dade and Broward County, to perform title and registration services for
motor vehicles, mobile homes, and vessels. In counties with elected tax collectors, LPAs only charge
the fees for those services as expressly authorized in statute. In these counties, the LPAs may retain all
or a portion of the statutorily authorized service fee that tax collectors are allowed to collect for motor
vehicle, mobile home, and vessel title and registration services, as provided in the contracts between
the LPA and the tax collector.6 The LPAs in Broward and Miami-Dade Counties charge fees 7 for motor
vehicle, mobile home, and vessel title and registration fees in addition to the statutory fees authorized
in chapters 319, 320, and 328, F.S. The additional fees levied in Broward and Miami-Dade Counties
are levied pursuant to county ordinance and are retained by the LPAs. 8
DHSMV has transitioned its driver license services from DHSMV-owned facilities to elected county tax
collectors. Florida law required DHSMV to completely transition all driver license issuance services to
tax collectors who are constitutional officers under section 1(d), Article VIII of the State Constitution.
This transition was completed on June 30, 2015. The transition of services to appointed charter county
tax collectors may occur on a limited basis as directed by DHSMV.9
Driver License Issuance Systems
DHSMV’s Florida Driver License Information System (FDLIS) is the legacy driver license issuance
system that will be completely replaced by 2025 with the newly launched Online Registration and
1 Ch. 320 and 328, F.S. County tax collectors are expressly made agents of the state with respect to motor vehicle registration in s.
320.03(1), F.S., and with respect to vessel registration in s. 328.73(1), F.S.
2 See s. 319.32, F.S., for motor vehicle title fees, s. 320.03, for motor vehicle registration fees, s. 320.04, F.S., as to motor vehicle
service charges, and s. 328.72, F.S., as to vessel registration fees.
3 Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency Analysis of 2021 SB 342, p 2. (January 14, 2021).
4 Id. Art. VIII, s. 1(d), Fla. Const.
5 Email from Jennifer Langston, Chief of Staff, Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Re: [EXT] RE: HB 817 (Ja n 11. 2024).
6 Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency Analysis of 2021 SB 342, p 2. (January 14, 2021).
7 Formerly the LPAs in Volusia County charged fees. An elected county tax collector took office on January 5, 2021, and the LPA
offices closed by February 4, 2021. Id.
8 Id.
9 Section 322.02(1), F.S.
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Identity Operating Network (ORION) database application.10 ORION will be used to conduct all driver
license and identification card issuances. ORION provides real-time access to extensive information on
every driver, including driving history, vehicle insurance information, and personal identity information
and documents.
FDLIS/ORION is installed in 195 tax collector offices in 63 counties in Florida and in the 15 driver
license offices DHSMV operates in Broward and Miami-Dade Counties. Only DHSMV and elected tax
collectors have access to FDLIS/ORION. Access to these systems is governed by individual
memoranda of understanding (MOUs) between DHSMV and each tax collector. County tax collectors
are allowed to charge a $6.25 service fee for providing driver license services. 11
Division of Insurance Agent and Agency Services
The Department of Financial Services (DFS) Division of Insurance Agent and Agency Services is
responsible for the licensing and regulation of insurance agents, adjusters, insurance agencies, as well
as related personnel and business entities.12
No person may be, act as, or advertise, or hold himself/herself out to be an insurance agent, insurance
adjuster, or customer representative unless he or she is currently licensed by DFS and appointed by an
appropriate appointing entity or person.13 There are several types of insurance representatives. These
include:
 General lines agents,
 Life insurance agents,
 Health insurance agents,
 Title insurance agents,
 Personal lines agents, and
 Unaffiliated insurance agents.14
General Lines Agent
A general lines agent15 is one who sells the following lines of insurance: property; 16 casualty,17 including
commercial liability insurance underwritten by a risk retention group, a commercial self-insurance
fund,18 or a workers’ compensation self-insurance fund;19 surety;20 health;21 and, marine.22 The general
lines agent may only transact health insurance for an insurer that the general lines agent also
represents for property and casualty insurance. If the general lines agent wishes to represent health
insurers that are not also property and casualty insurers, they must be licensed as a health insurance
agent.23 Motor vehicle insurance is a type of casualty insurance. 24
Effect of the Bill
Tax Collector Appointment of Insurance Agency
10 Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency Analysis of 2024 HB 817, p 7. (December 22, 2023). S. 322.135(1)(c),
F.S.
11
Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency Analysis of 2021 House Bill 613, p. 5 -6. (Mar. 5, 2021).
12 Ch. 626, parts I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VIII, IX, and XIII, F.S.
13 S. 626.112, F.S.
14 S. 626.015, F.S.
15 S. 626.015(5), F.S.
16
S. 624.604, F.S.
17 S. 624.605, F.S.
18 As defined in s. 624.462, F.S.
19 Pursuant to s. 624.4621, F.S.
20
S. 626.606, F.S.
21 Ss. 624.603 and 627.6482, F.S.
22 S. 624.607, F.S.
23 S. 626.829, F.S.
24 S. 624.605, F.S.
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The bill authorizes a licensed general lines insurance agency holding an insurer appointment to write
motor vehicle insurance in Florida to petition a tax collector for appointment, and requires the tax
collector to make such appointment, as an authorized agent of the tax collector for the purpose of
issuing:
 Titles;
 Registration certificates;
 Registration license plates;
 Validation stickers; and
 Mobile home stickers.
Also, the bill permits these insurance agencies to offer applicants the option to register emergency
contact information and the choice to be contacted with information about state and federal benefits
available as a result of military service, subject to the requirements of law and in accordance with the
rules of DHSMV.
Insurance Agency Requirements
The bill mandates that a general lines insurance agency appointed by a tax collector:
 Must file a performance bond of $2 million with DHSMV.
 Must provide DHSMV with audited financial statements, prepared by a certified public
accountant licensed in Florida, for each of the two previous years, demonstrating that the
agency has produced policy premiums in excess of $500 million in each of the two previous
years.
 Is not obligated to provide services to the general public and may choose to offer services only
to its customers in the normal course of business.
 Must offer such services at no more than five locations in each county where the agency has a
branch office.
 Must be authorized by the tax collector to access DHSMV’s electronic filing system.
 Is subject to all provisions of the law, as if the insurance agency were a private tag agency,
except where the context indicates otherwise.
Nonrecurring Appropriation for the 2024-2025 Fiscal Year
The bill provides a nonrecurring appropriation in the sum of $939,800 from the Highway Safety
Operating Trust Fund to the DHSMV to provide equipment and installation to a licensed general lines
insurance agency holding an insurer appointment to write motor vehicle insurance in Florida and has
been appointed by a tax collector as an authorized agency for issuing titles, registration certificates,
registration license plates, validation stickers, and mobile home stickers for Fiscal Year 2024-2025.
B. SECTION DIRECTORY:
Section 1. Amends section 320.03, F.S., relating to registration; duties of tax collectors; international
registration plan.
Section 2. Provides an appropriation for the 2024-2025 fiscal year.
Section 3. Provides an effective date of July 1, 2024.
II. FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT:
1. Revenues:
None.
2. Expenditures:
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According to DHSMV, there will be a significant cost associated with providing equipment such as
computers, printers, servers, ports, cabling, and software, as well as registration inventory, which
includes license plates and decals, to insurance agencies. 25 Additionally, DHSMV would require
additional staff to ensure that the bill is implemented properly. 26 For instance, DHSMV will likely
need to hire more employees in the Tax Collection Liaison Unit to oversee the proper collection of
motor vehicle registration fees by insurance agencies. 27
DHSMV projects a startup cost of $12,965,840, followed by recurring costs of $4,603,955 for each
of the following four fiscal years. In the fifth fiscal year, when outdated equipment must be
refreshed, DHSMV estimates a cost of $9,377,997.28
In addition, the department estimates programming cost of $900,000 to implement changes to its
computer systems and expects additional recurring cost to purchase software licenses for each
insurance agency that elects to offer services.29
It should be noted that DHSMV projections are based on equipping multiple workstations in five
separate insurance agency locations in all 67 counties. However, the actual number of insurance
agencies that avail themselves of this new authority cannot be quantified at this time. Using the
cost assumptions provided by DHSMV, the cost to open one insurance agency location would be
$37,592. If only one insurance agency location were to be opened in each of the 67 counties, the
startup cost is projected to be $2,518,664 in comparison to the department’s projections.
Because the actual number of insurance agencies that could avail themselves of this new authority
is indeterminate, including the wide deviation in variables such as the number of workstations,
locations, and counties, the bill provides a nonrecurring appropriation in the sum of $939,800 from
the Highway Safety Operating Trust Fund to the department to provide equipment and installation
for the 2024-2025 fiscal year. This funding level will provide for 25 locations; however, the
department may submit a future budget request when actual data is available to adequately
evaluate the budgetary needs for implementation.
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:
1. Revenues:
County tax collectors are allowed to charge a service fee for services rendered. The MOU between
a tax collector and an insurance agency that elects to offer these new services would determine
how the service fees are shared between the two entities. Therefore, the impact on revenues is
indeterminate.
2. Expenditures:
None.
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR:
Eligible general lines agencies that are appointed for this purpose may experience increased revenues.
D. FISCAL COMMENTS:
None.
III. COMMENTS
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES:
25
Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency Analysis of 2024 HB 817, p 3. (December 22, 2023).
26 Id. at 4.
27 Id.
28 Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Agency A