HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS
BILL #: CS/CS/HB 7049 PCB JDC 22-02 Legal Notices
SPONSOR(S): State Affairs Committee, Judiciary Committee, Grall and Fine
TIED BILLS: IDEN./SIM. BILLS:
REFERENCE ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF
Orig. Comm.: Judiciary Committee 14 Y, 5 N, As CS Mawn Kramer
1) State Affairs Committee 13 Y, 7 N, As CS Leshko Williamson
SUMMARY ANALYSIS
The Florida Constitution requires all meetings of a county, municipality, school board, or special district at
which official acts are to be taken or at which public business is to be discussed or transacted be open to the
public and notice be given of such meetings. While this requirement is self-executing, the Legislature may
enact general laws enforcing this constitutional provision and may provide exemptions by a two-thirds vote. All
exemptions require a specific statement of public necessity justifying the exemption. Further, certain statutory
provisions require that public notices and advertisements be given for certain other local government and
judicial actions. Collectively, these notices and advertisements are referred to as “legal notices.”
Before January 1, 2022, legal notices had to be published in a newspaper that met specified requirements,
including that such newspaper be for sale to the public, unless no newspaper is published in the county; in
which case copies of the notice had to be posted in the county and published in a newspaper in the nearest
available county. The newspaper also had to place a copy of the notice on the Florida Press Association’s
(“FPA”) free repository website and, if the newspaper maintained a website, legal notices had to appear on
such website in a searchable format on the same day they appeared in the print edition at no additional
charge.
In 2021, the legislature passed CS/HB 35, which modified the requirements for newspaper publication to
expand the number of newspapers that could qualify for legal notice publication, including free newspapers,
and to authorize a governmental entity to publish legal notices on a newspaper’s website and the FPA’s
repository website in lieu of publishing in the newspaper’s print edition under specified conditions. CS/HB 35
(2021) also required the FPA to seek to ensure that minority populations in the state have equitable access to
legal notices posted on the FPA’s repository website and to publish a report containing s pecified information.
This bill:
 Gives a governmental agency the option to publish legal notices on a publicly accessible website of a
county instead of in a print newspaper under specified conditions.
 Reverts the criteria a newspaper must satisfy to publish legal notices back to the criteria in place before
the passage of CS/HB 35 (2021), with the exception of the requirement that a newspaper must be for
sale.
 Requires a governmental agency located in a county with a population of fewer than 160,000 to first
hold a public hearing and determine that its residents have sufficient access to the Internet before
publishing legally required advertisements and public notices on a publicly accessible website.
 Eliminates the FPA’s obligations relating to equitable legal notice access by minority populations.
 Makes technical and conforming changes.
The bill does not appear to have a fiscal impact on state government but may have an indeterminate fiscal
impact on local governments.
The bill provides an effective date of January 1, 2023.
This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives .
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DATE: 2/21/2022
FULL ANALYSIS
I. SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES:
Background
The Florida Constitution requires all meetings of a county, municipality, school board, or special district
at which official acts are to be taken or at which public business is to be discussed or transacted be
open to the public and notice be given of such meetings.1 While this constitutional requirement is self-
executing, the Legislature may enact general laws enforcing the provision and may provide exemptions
by a two-thirds vote.2 All exemptions require a specific statement of public necessity justifying the
exemption.3 Further, certain statutory provisions require that public notices and advertisements must be
given for certain other local government and judicial actions.4 Collectively, these notices and
advertisements are referred to as “legal notices.”
Legal Notice Publication Requirements Before January 1, 2022
Before January 1, 2022, Florida law required a legal notice to be published in a newspaper that:
 Was published at least once a week;
 Had at least 25 percent of its words in English;
 Was considered a periodical by a post office in its county of publication;
 Was available to the public generally for the publication of legal and other notices;
 Was for sale to the general public; and
 Contained information of interest or value to the general public in the affected area. 5
If no newspaper was published in the county, at least three copies of the legal notice had to be posted
in the county, with one posted on the front door of the county courthouse and two at other locations in
the county. In addition, the notice had to be published in a newspaper in the nearest county in which a
newspaper was published.6
A legal notice published in a newspaper had to appear on the newspaper’s website the same day it
appeared in the print edition at no additional charge, on a separate web page with a specific title.7 The
website had to have a search function, and the newspaper publisher could not charge a fee or require
registration to view or search legal notices.8 The newspaper also had to place a copy of the notice on
the Florida Press Association’s (“FPA”) free repository website, where it had to be maintained in a
searchable archive for 18 months after the first day of posting.9 The public also had to be permitted to
sign up to receive e-mailed notifications of notice publication.10
Legal notice publication was not considered effective unless:
 The notice was published for the period prescribed for such a notice;
 The newspaper had existed for at least one year at the time of notice publication; and
 A post office in the county of notice publication entered the newspaper as a periodical.11
1
Art. I, s. 24(b), Fla. Const.
2 Art. I, s. 24(c), Fla. Const.
3 Id.
4 See, e.g., s. 45.031, F.S. (requiring publication of notice of judicial sales) and s. 125.66, F.S. (requiring publication of the tax i mpact of
a value adjustment board’s decisions regarding petitions to adjust property taxes).
5 S. 50.011, F.S. (2020).
6 S. 50.021, F.S. (2020).
7 S. 50.0211(2), F.S. (2020).
8 Id.
9 S. 50.0211(3)(a)-(c), F.S. (2020).; The Florida Press Association’s repository is available at www.floridapublicnotices.com.
10 S. 50.0211(4), F.S. (2020).
11 Legal notices could also be published in a newspaper which was a direct successor of a newspaper so published. S. 50.031, F.S.
(2020).
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A uniform affidavit established proof of legal notice publication,12 which was required to:
 Be notarized on paper formatted in a specific manner or in an electronic format that complied
with the electronic notarization requirements of s. 117.021, F.S.;
 Contain specified information, including the newspaper’s name, publication frequency, and city
and county of publication; and
 Include a copy of the legal notice.13
Legal notice publication fees were set by statute and could not be rebated, commissioned, or
refunded.14 The legal notice publication fee was 70 cents per square inch of newspaper for the first
insertion and 40 cents per square inch of newspaper for each subsequent insertion.15 However, if the
regular established minimum commercial rate per square inch of newspaper was greater than the rate
stipulated in statute, the publisher could charge the minimum commercial rate for each insertion, except
that second and successive insertions of legal notices required to be published more than once and
paid for by a governmental agency could not cost more than 85 percent of the original rate.16 All legal
notice charges were based on 6-point type on 6-point body, unless otherwise specified by statute. 17
2021 Legislative Changes
In 2021, the Legislature passed CS/HB 35, which became effective January 1, 2022. 18 The bill modified
the criteria a newspaper must satisfy to publish legal notices, requiring that a newspaper publishing
legal notices in print must:
 Be printed and published periodically at least once a week.
 Contain at least 25 percent of its words in English.
 Satisfy one of the following criteria:
o Be sold, or otherwise be available to the public, at no less than 10 publicly accessible
outlets and have an audience consisting of at least 10 percent of the households in the
county or municipality, as determined by the most recent decennial census, where the
legal notice is being published or posted, by calculating the:
 Combination of the total number of print copies reflecting the day of highest print
circulation, of which at least 25 percent of such print copies must be delivered to
home and business addresses; and
 Total number of online unique monthly visitors to the newspaper’s website from
within the state.
o Hold a periodicals permit as of March 1, 2021, and accept legal notices for publication as
of that date; however, any such newspaper could only publish legal notices through
December 31, 2023, if the newspaper continued to meet the requirements in s. 21, ch.
99-2, Laws of Florida, and continued to hold a periodicals permit.
o For newspapers publishing legal notices in a fiscally constrained county, hold a
periodicals permit and meet all other requirements of the legal notices chapter.
 Be available to the public generally for legal notice publication with no more than 75 percent of
its content dedicated to advertising, as measured in half of the newspaper’s issues published
during any 12-month period, and customarily containing information of interest or value to the
general public in the affected area.
 Continually publish in a prominent manner within the first five pages of the print addition and at
the bottom portion of the homepage of the newspaper’s website:
o The name, street address, phone number, and website URL of the newspaper’s
approved print auditor;
o The newspaper’s most recent statement of ownership; and
12 S. 50.041(1), F.S. (2020).
13 Ss. 50.041(2) and 50.051, F.S. (2020).
14 S. 50.061(1), F.S. (2020).
15 S. 50.061(2), F.S. (2020).
16 S. 50.061(3), F.S. (2020).
17 S. 50.061(6), F.S. (2020).
18 Ch. 2021-17, Laws of Fla.
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o A statement of the auditor certifying the veracity of the newspaper’s print distribution and
the number of the newspaper website’s monthly unique visitors, or the newspaper’s
periodicals permit, if applicable.19
CS/HB 35 (2021) also authorized a governmental agency20 to publish legal notices on the website of
any newspaper in the county to which the legal notice pertained 21 and on the FPA’s repository website
in lieu of publishing the notice in the print edition of a newspaper if the governmental agency, after
holding a public hearing noticed in a print edition of a newspaper of general circulation in the affected
governmental agency’s jurisdiction,22 makes a determination by a majority of its governing board
members that:
 Internet publication of legal notices is in the public interest; and
 Residents within the governmental agency’s jurisdiction have sufficient internet access such
that internet-only legal notices publication would not unreasonably restrict public access. 23
All requirements regarding format and accessibility for legal notices published in a printed newspaper
also apply to legal notices published only online.24
Under the provisions of CS/HB 35 (2021):
 The legal notices section of a printed newspaper must include a disclaimer stating:
o Additional legal notices may be accessed on the newspaper’s website and the FPA’s
repository website.
o Legal notices published in print are also published on the FPA’s repository website.25
 A newspaper may charge for internet-only legal notice publication up to the amount authorized
for publication of legal notices in print, without rebate, commission, or refund. 26
 A governmental agency publishing legal notices only online has to:
o Give notice, at least once a week in a printed newspaper of general circulation within the
region in which the governmental agency is located, that:
 Legal notices pertaining to the agency do not all appear in a printed newspaper;
 Additional legal notices may be accessed on the newspaper’s website; and
 A full listing of legal notices may be accessed on the FPA’s repository website.
o Post a link on its website homepage to a webpage listing all the newspapers in which it
published legal notices.27
Further, CS/HB 35 (2021) required the FPA to seek to ensure that minority populations in the state
have equitable access to legal notices posted on the FPA’s repository website and publish a report:
 Listing all newspapers that have placed notices on the repository website in the preceding
calendar quarter.
 Identifying which criteria each newspaper satisfied to become qualified to publish legal notices.
 Including the number of unique visitors to the repository website during the quarter and the
number of legal notices that were published during that quarter by Internet-only publication or by
publication in a printed newspaper and on the repository website. 28
19 Ch. 2021-17, s. 1, Laws of Fla.
20
“Governmental agency” means a county, a municipality, a district school board, or any other unit of local government or polit ical
subdivision in this state. Ch. 2021-17, s. 3(1)(a), Laws of Fla.
21 A newspaper was deemed to be a newspaper in the county to which the legal notice pertains if it satisfied the criteria to publish legal
notices in print. Ch. 2021-17, s. 1(2), Laws of Fla.
22 A newspaper deemed to be a newspaper of general circulation within the jurisdiction of the affected governmental agency if it
satisfied the criteria to public legal notices in print.
23 Ch. 2021-17, s. 5(a), Laws of Fla.
24 The bill did not change format and accessibility requirements for legal notices published in a printed newspaper.
25 Ch. 2021-17, s. 5(b), Laws of Fla.
26 Ch. 2021-17, s. 5(c), Laws of Fla. The bill did not modify the charges authorized or the size and placement requirements for
publication in a printed newspaper.
27 Ch. 2021-17, s. 3(5)(d), Laws. of Fla.
28 Ch. 2021-17, s. 3(4)(d), Laws of Fla.
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Additionally, a newspaper or newspaper’s website must have been in existence for two years prior to
publication in order for publication to be completed in accordance with the statutes. 29
Effect of Proposed Changes
The bill gives a governmental agency the option to publish its legal notices on the publicly accessible
website30 of the county in which it lies instead of in a printed newspaper if doing so would cost less than
publishing legal notices in a newspaper. A governmental agency with at least 75 percent of its
population located in a county with a population of fewer than 160,000 must first hold a public hearing
and determine the residents of the governmental agency have sufficient access to the Internet before it
may publish legally required advertisements and public notices on a publicly accessible website. The
bill also requires a special district31 spanning the geographic boundaries of more than one county and
opting to publish legal notices on a publicly accessible website to publish its legal notices on the