The Florida Senate on the floor passed a series of bills largely described on the record as reviser or adoption acts and one tax/retirement-related change, then took procedural steps to certify those bills to the House.
Senate Bill 100 was presented as the "adoption act" to prospectively adopt the 2026 Florida Statutes and to adopt as the official statute law materials passed by the 2025 regular session. The rules chair explained the measure, there were no amendments or debate, and the tally was announced as 36 yays and 0 nays.
Senate Bills 102 and 104 were described as reviser's bills: SB 102 deletes statutory provisions rendered without effect by previous repeals or expirations; SB 104 was described as the general reviser's bill to delete obsolete language, update cross-references, and correct typographical errors. Both passed on voice vote with the recorded tally 36-0.
Senate Bill 7010 (recorded in the transcript as "70 10") would permit state and local deferred-compensation plans to offer post-tax Roth contributions; Senator Mayfield explained that the change aligns state plans with federal tax law and grants authority to the Department of Financial Services and to local entities for their local plans. The bill passed with a recorded vote of 36 yays, 0 nays.
Senate Bill 1720, listed on the floor as a bill concerning public school personnel compensation, was withdrawn from further consideration by leave of the Senate at the request of the senator listed on the sheet. Following passage of the day's bills, the rules chair moved that the rules be waived so that all bills passed that day could be immediately certified to the House; the motion was adopted without objection.
The session included ceremonial recognitions — including a YMCA delegation and a "doctor of the day" — and concluded with an adjournment until 9 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 29, or upon the call of the president.
Recorded tallies announced on the floor for each vote were 36 yays, 0 nays; the transcript does not list individual names for each yes vote.