Lee County voters could decide next year whether to elect County Commissioners to single-member districts after the House approved a local bill (HB 4001) on a 94-11 vote.
Rep. Mike Giallombardo, a Cape Coral Republican, has fought for years to push the issue to the ballot. His local bill won approval from the Lee County legislative delegation through a 6-1 vote.
The bill calls for a measure to appear on Lee County ballots in the 2026 General Election. If a majority supports the referendum, single-member districts will go into effect beginning in 2028.
That would be a change from the current system where all five Lee County Commissioners must live in their respective districts but are elected through countywide elections. The county of nearly 835,000 residents is the largest in Florida that currently elects all County Commissioners through at-large votes.
The proposed change has not been without dissenters. A majority of sitting Lee County Commissioners opposes the measure, as do a number of business and political groups in Lee County.
Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka, a Fort Myers Republican who is married to Lee County Commissioner David Mulicka, spoke out against the legislation.
“It’s a local bill without local support,” she said on the floor.
“Our local community doesn’t want this. They don’t want to lose their ability to vote for all five County Commissioners. They don’t want to lose their ability to hold all five County Commissioners accountable at the ballot box. And you may hear that this bill is about giving people a choice to vote on this issue. But members, Lee County has already voted on this issue more than once, and they’ve adopted a government governing document that gives them the ability to petition for a change.”
But Lee County Property Appraiser Matt Caldwell, a former Representative, has supported the measure, and said voters should be allowed the right to decide on the issue at the ballot box.
“We just went through two other referendums, one for making the School Board single-member in ‘14, one to bring back the Superintendent in ’22,” Caldwell said. “If the voters were smart enough to choose how to structure their School Board, why aren’t they smart enough to choose how to structure their County Commission?”
Now, the matter heads to the Senate. There, three Senators hail from the Lee County delegation, including Senate President Ben Albritton. But Albritton did not attend the delegation meeting where the local bill was first approved.
Sen. Jonathan Martin, a Fort Myers Republican and the only Senator living in Lee County, supported the bill at the delegation level, and said he supports the language passed by the House.
Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, a Naples Republican, also attended and supported the bill, but said at the time she would follow the bill through the legislative process. She voiced concerns about prior versions of the bill creating additional Commission seats or establishing population triggers that would result in new districts being drawn.
But the version passed in the House leaves the Commission at five seats and does not set any type of population threshold to add members to the board.
Post Views: 0