The Florida House voted on Feb. 19 to recreate an Emergency Preparedness and Response Fund, tightening reporting and adding new limits on how fund money may be used, including prohibiting certain capital purchases and requiring quarterly reporting and an attestation of accuracy.
Representative Griffiths, the bill sponsor, said the legislation balances readiness and accountability and includes a sunset date (07/01/2030) to prevent permanent entrenchment. The amended measure allows legislative consultation and requires consultation beyond an initial 60‑day emergency window.
Debate focused heavily on how the fund was used in prior emergency responses — including spending on temporary facilities, transport and other capital activity. Multiple members, including Representatives Escamani and others, said the fund had been used to assemble large, expensive facilities and to award no‑bid contracts without adequate legislative oversight. Amendments proposing additional oversight or prohibiting use to "open or operate detention facilities" were offered and debated but did not carry.
Representative Griffiths defended the bill as providing necessary flexibility with constraints; the House adopted the bill on final passage, 84 yeas to 18 nays.
What to watch: The bill requires quarterly reports, asset inventories and sworn attestations; members and outside watchdogs will likely monitor implementation and any federal‑funding reimbursements closely.