Constitution of Florida
Article III, Section 8. Executive Approval and Veto
(a)
Every bill passed by the legislature shall be presented to the governor
for approval and shall become a law if the governor approves and signs
it, or fails to veto it within seven consecutive days after
presentation. If during that period or on the seventh day the
legislature adjourns sine die or takes a recess of more than thirty
days, the governor shall have fifteen consecutive days from the date of
presentation to act on the bill. In all cases except general
appropriations bills, the veto shall extend to the entire bill. The
governor may veto any specific appropriations in a general appropriation
bill without also vetoing the appropriation to which it relates.
(b)
When a bill or any specific appropriation of a general appropriation
bill has been vetoed, the governor shall transmit signed objections
thereto to the house in which the bill originated if in session. If that
house is not in session, the governor shall file them with the
custodian of state records, who shall lay them before that house at its
next regular or special session, whichever occurs first, and they shall
be entered on its journal. If the originating house votes to re-enact a
vetoed measure, whether in a regular or special session, and the other
house does not consider or fails to re-enact the vetoed measure, no
further consideration by either house at any subsequent session may be
taken. If a vetoed measure is presented at a special session and the
originating house does not consider it, the measure will be available
for consideration at any intervening special session and until the end
of the next regular session.
(c) If each house shall, by a
two-thirds vote, re-enact the bill or reinstate the vetoed specific
appropriation of a general appropriation bill, the vote of each member
voting shall be entered on the respective journals, and the bill shall
become law or the specific appropriation reinstated, the veto
notwithstanding.
The city is bringing the heights issue back to the commission on July 2. There are still some in the community hoping that the heights referendum will be overturned because of HB 537. As the above comes from the constitution of the State of Florida, the Charter Amendment is our local Constitution. It was just changed by a vote of the people. We have that right under both our Charter and the State Constitution.
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