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Florida Budget Nears Finish Line as Tallahassee Special Session Eyes Early Close

Senate President expects vote right after Memorial Day; Treasure Coast lawmakers watching for local funding outcomes

Aerial daytime view of Miami, Florida capturing city skyline and distant ocean.
David Daza
· · ·

Florida's budget special session appears headed for an earlier-than-expected close, with Senate President Ben Albritton saying he expects a final vote right after Memorial Day — potentially wrapping the session before its scheduled May 29 end date.

For Treasure Coast residents, the accelerated timeline carries real stakes. The June 30 constitutional deadline for a signed budget governs every dollar flowing to Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties — from road maintenance and water quality programs to school funding and public safety budgets. Two consecutive sessions ran well past their scheduled end dates; a third delay would have threatened local appropriations that local governments build their fiscal years around.

Weekend work by budget chiefs produced enough agreement to keep the calendar intact, Albritton said. The session was called after the regular 60-day session failed to produce a completed budget, a standoff driven largely by friction between the House and Senate that has characterized Tallahassee's recent power dynamics.

State Sen. Ed Hooper, a Palm Harbor Republican who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee and steered the budget through both the extended 2025 session and the current special session, announced this week he will retire from the Senate in November — four years before his term was set to expire. Hooper's committee managed hurricane recovery expenditures, the drawdown of federal pandemic relief dollars, and the persistent House-Senate disputes over spending priorities.

The DeSantis administration's "Alligator Alcatraz" immigration detention facility in the Everglades is shutting down, with the roughly 1,400 remaining detainees expected to be transferred out by June, according to public records. Total operating costs have reached nearly $1 billion, and the state's $608 million federal reimbursement request remains unresolved with no clear payment timeline. Friends of the Everglades, which is suing over the facility's environmental impact, says it has additional claims ready and is returning to federal district court.

The environmental litigation carries downstream significance for the Treasure Coast, where water managers and advocacy groups have long tracked Everglades-adjacent policy for its effects on Lake Okeechobee discharges into the St. Lucie River.

A final budget vote is expected in the days following Memorial Day, with the June 30 hard deadline still governing if negotiations slip.

This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.

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