November 5, 2024

Statement on Amendment 4 and Amendment 5

Florida Policy Institute released the statement below on Amendment 4 (Amendment to Limit Government Interference with Abortion) and Amendment 5 (Annual Adjustments to the Value of Certain Homestead Exemptions).

On Amendment 4 failing:


Fifty-seven percent of voters in Florida — nearly 6 million votes — supported Amendment 4, a clear majority in favor of preserving women’s rights over their own health care decisions without government interference.

Florida will continue to experience the economic fallout of restricting women’s access to abortion care. In addition to endangering women’s health and well-being, the restrictions on abortion care will create even greater barriers for women to achieve fiscal stability in a state that has one of the highest uninsured rates and supplemental poverty rates in the nation. These outcomes are the result of a record of anti-family policy decisions in Florida – a state where paid family leave is not available to 76 percent of workers; a state whose administration has refused to participate in a federal program that would have provided food assistance to 2 million Florida kids from low-income families during the summer; a state that is suing the federal government to be able to push children off health care quicker, and KidCare expansion is being delayed as a result; a state that has yet to expand Medicaid to all adults with low income or even adequately implement postpartum Medicaid extension; a state where over 500,000 children were disenrolled from Medicaid from 2023 to 2024; and a state where families with very low income who receive cash assistance are penalized for having additional children.

"Proponents of abortion bans and restrictions tout them as pro-family measures; Florida's record of policy choices when it comes to the health and well-being of parents and children, however, has been anything but.

On Amendment 5 passing:

Under Amendment 5, Florida counties will collectively have $406 million less in property tax revenue over the next five years alone, according to a recent analysis by state economists. Cities and towns will either have to cut public services funding — dollars that go to things like water, sewer, and emergency services, to name just a few — or raise taxes in order to balance local budgets. While local governments grapple with this reduction in revenue, Floridians will see only modest relief under Amendment 5, as FPI estimates that the 4.3 million households eligible for this inflation-adjusted homestead exemption will see an average of just $20 in savings over the next five years. Plus, since this is not targeted property tax relief, the wealthiest families in the state are among those who will benefit, while small business owners and renters are left out.

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