High Heat, Higher Responsibility: The Sunshine State Must Enact Policies to Protect Working Floridians

Note: This summary was updated as of date and time of publication to clarify that Florida has the highest numbers of heat-related illness in the U.S.

Executive Summary 

While sunshine and warm weather draw Florida visitors and residents alike, excessive heat is a looming threat to the nearly half a million Floridians who work outdoors. These Floridians work in myriad roles — as landscapers, amusement park attendants, construction workers, and agricultural workers, to name a few. Given a lack of state and federal mandates, plus a new law blocking cities and counties from implementing their own, the choice to protect working Floridians from heat-related illness is ultimately up to employers. Plus, unions face increasing challenges in negotiating better conditions for working Floridians. As such, Florida’s workers have little reprieve from the extreme heat. 

Florida Policy Institute (FPI) analyzed U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data and found:

  • An estimated 490,710 Floridians work in outdoor jobs.
  • Florida's top three outdoor industries are construction, amusement and recreation, and landscaping.
  • 5,750,273 Floridians (26.2 percent) are highly vulnerable to extreme heat. In 20 counties, more than a third of residents are.
  • Florida has the highest numbers of heat-related illness in the U.S., with the most recent data showing 31,011 emergency room visits and hospitalizations between 2018 and 2022. 

Therefore, statewide policy intervention is paramount. To protect working Floridians and keep businesses operating smoothly, Florida must spread awareness about heat-related illness, stop the preemption of local heat exposure ordinances, and pass a statewide law that covers all outdoor workers.

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