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Senate clears a package of bills on public records, co-ops, consumer protections and others

January 29, 2026 | 2026 Legislature FL, Florida


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Senate clears a package of bills on public records, co-ops, consumer protections and others
After passage of the day's most contested measure, the Florida Senate approved a group of additional bills spanning public-nuisance enforcement, utilities, consumer protections, and public-records exemptions.

Key outcomes at a glance:

- Senate Bill 168 (Trudeau) — expands public-nuisance designation to include gambling establishments, authorizes fines up to $500 per day and foreclosure on unpaid fees; passed 35-0.

- Senate Bill 288 (Rodriguez) — clarifies statute to narrow ambiguity affecting rural electric cooperatives serving roughly 2.7 million Floridians; passed 35-0.

- Senate Bill 292 (Russon) — creates a public-records exemption for personal information of appellate court clerks and families, mirroring a prior exemption for circuit clerks; passed 34-1.

- Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 296 and related SB 298 — updates and extends Address Confidentiality protections and calls for a feasibility study to evaluate a secure web-based alert platform for domestic-violence victims; both passed with unanimous support (votes reported 35-0).

- Senate Bill 364 (Rodriguez) — modernizes pathways to CPA licensure and creates mobility for out-of-state CPAs; passed 35-0.

- Senate Bill 386 (Trumbull) — establishes consumer protections (similar to a "lemon law") for purchasers of major farm equipment; passed 35-0.

- Open Government Sunset Review Act package (multiple bills including SB 7000, SB 7002, SB 7004, SB 7012, SB 7014, SB 7016, SB 7006, SB 7008) — a series of measures saving or extending public-records exemptions for a variety of records and agencies; votes varied by bill but most passed with strong majorities as reported on the floor.

Procedural note: Rules were waived to certify all bills passed that day immediately to the House.

Vote totals and brief sponsor descriptions are drawn from floor statements and clerk announcements. Several bills were presented with little or no floor debate and were adopted on unanimous or near-unanimous tallies reported by the clerk.

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