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Politicians respond to Suncoast Searchlight’s special development district investigation

Written by on Saturday, May 17, 2025

Official advice: ‘Buyer beware’. CDDs have a purpose, but they’re easy for developers to exploit.

By Josh Salman/Suncoast Searchlight

Original Air Date: May 16, 2025

Host: As more new special development districts break ground across the Suncoast, area officials warn they could mean higher tax bills and traffic congestion for those buying into these communities. Josh Salman brings us a follow-up to the Suncoast Searchlight investigation.

Blue and yellow graphic of a searchlight shining from above on the west coast of the state of Florida with the text "Suncoast Searchlight."

Josh Salman: State lawmakers, county commissioners, and national reform leaders, reacting to a recent Suncoast Searchlight investigation into the potential dangers of these independent government districts, called the reporting revealing.

Most cited “buyer beware” and said they themselves would never choose to live in these districts, pointing to the investigation’s findings of escalating fees and a lack of say over who serves on these governing boards. Officials echoed the sentiment that many homeowners in these communities don’t understand what they’re getting into and are then left with few options to fight back when decisions turn contentious.

But they stopped short of promising any major overhauls to slow the pace of new development districts coming to the region.

Here is Sarasota County Commissioner Tom Knight:

Tom Knight

“I didn’t realize the size and scope of how much community development districts have become prevalent in Florida, especially on the West Coast, right here in my own county. Is there a concern for me? Sure. If we have communities that may not be able to sustain themselves and may be sitting empty, that’s always a concern.”

A recent Suncoast Searchlight investigation found that, despite a series of defaults during the Great Recession, more of these development districts are popping up across the Suncoast than ever before. 

The developers behind these new governments often float multimillion-dollar public bonds to finance infrastructure. Then, they dictate terms on how future residents will pay it back—all while saving costs to the developer’s bottom-line.

During the past five years alone, local districts bonded out $2.9 billion in public bond money to fund neighborhood improvements from Parrish south to North Port. But unlike a traditional local municipality, residents of these districts go years with no say over who represents them.

More than 90% of the districts established within the past decade remain under the control of a real estate developer rather than those who live there, according to the investigation.

“I think when they were created the intent was pure, but everything gets exploited. Now, they’re like a runaway option for developers.”

Following publication, Suncoast Searchlight’s Power and Profit investigation circulated through neighborhood Facebook groups in areas like Parrish, where homeowners were surprised to learn of the proliferation, cited frustrations with their own development districts and asked how they can fight back.

Patrick Johansen, founder of the volunteer-based HOA Reform Leaders National Group, said the story further underscores the need for more controls to rein in the bond spending and decision-making powers of special development districts in Florida. 

He added that residents should be “extremely” concerned about the rise of these districts.

“This is a very easy system to abuse. These districts can very quickly become little dictatorships. The developers never let go.”

These special districts, including the more commonly known community development districts, operate like homeowners associations on steroids. Each must be established through a local city or county ordinance or a specific state law designating their authority.

Johansen’s group has put together proposed legislation that would restore certain powers to homeowners in these communities, but state lawmakers remain resistant to pursue any changes. 

Johansen said that’s because the powerful lobbyists who represent real estate developers, third-party district property managers and CDD attorneys continue to push back. The only option now for homeowner recourse, he said, is costly legal battles.

Florida Sen. Joe Gruters, the Republican from Sarasota, conceded that he would never want to live in one of these districts himself. But he also does not believe the state legislature or local government bodies have approved too many new districts in recent years. He pointed to the apparent demand from buyers willing to pay extra for nicer neighborhoods.

More than one-third of the active development districts across the Suncoast were formed within the past five years, state records show.

Senator Joe Gruters.

Senator Joe Gruters. Photo via flsenate.gov

“Special districts have their purpose. The question is, do buyers want to live there or not? You have to be careful and go in with your eyes wide open.”

Gruters said the rising fees and bond spending at these special districts cut against the low taxes he strives for at the state level, and he insisted that once these boards transition away from developers, homeowners who want to keep community spending down should elect fiscal conservatives.

CDDs and other developer districts in Florida date back to the early 1980s, when counties were more financially-constrained and couldn’t afford the infrastructure themselves.

Tal Siddique.

Tal Siddique

Manatee County Commissioner Tal Siddique said these districts can still be “an effective tool” for isolating infrastructure spending to just the neighborhoods benefiting, so a homeowner in Bradenton, for instance, is not subsidizing a road behind a gated subdivision in Palmetto.

But he agrees the districts have allowed new residential development to proliferate, especially in areas like Parrish where infrastructure has historically lagged behind. And he worries about the strain on countywide roads and stormwater systems.

“It essentially deflects the cost of infrastructure. Previous County Commissions did not want to fund a lot of this infrastructure out there…they just deflected to CDDs. But it’s not paying for the collector roads or other county roads it affects. It’s only paying for roads nobody outside these gated communities will use.”

Reporting for Suncoast Searchlight, Josh Salman. To read the full article, go to suncoastsearchlight.org/development-districts-officials-buyer-beware-overhaul.

 

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