Florida Legislative Highlights | Week of April 7-11, 2025

Florida

The Foundation for Florida's Future recaps top education highlights from the sixth week of the 2025 Florida legislative session.

House and Senate Advance Budgets to Conference

The House and Senate each advanced their budgets and conforming bills with successful votes in each chamber, setting the stage to begin the budget conferencing process. The two chambers remain more than $4 billion apart in spending and differ in their tax relief proposals, with the House proposing permanent $5 billion sales tax relief while the Senate has proposed a roughly $800 million sales tax relief package targeted at clothing and shoe purchases under $75.

Along with tax proposals, the two chambers also differ on their proposed approaches to funding school choice scholarships.

School Choice Proposals Move Forward

Several proposals that would positively affect charter schools and private school choice continued to advance through the committee process this week: 

Workforce Education Bills Move Forward

The legislature continues to tackle smarter workforce education policies by advancing several proposals this session. 

Changes to Educator Preparation Programs Advance

Two versions of proposals that would make significant changes to the state’s educator preparation programs took another step forward this week with Rep. Alex Rizo’s House Bill 875 advancing through the House Education and Employment Committee and Sen. Danny Burgess’ Senate Bill 1590 advancing through the Senate PreK-12 Appropriations Committee.

The Senate version of the bill has a shorter implementation timeline with broader requirements to be developed by a Department of Education working group, while the House version has a longer implementation timeline with more specific criteria that must be part of the new requirements for educator preparation programs.