The debate over Amendment 4 seems to intensify daily. With an unprecedented coalition of business, environmental, labor and civic groups aligned against it, the proponents of Amendment 4 are turning to fanciful rhetoric and imaginative half-truths to distract voters from the facts.
Let's get this debate back on track by focusing on those facts - before voters make the final decision this November.
Amendment 4 is a proposed change to our state's constitution that would require taxpayers to fund elections for every revision to local government comprehensive plans. That means every revision. Not just major issues. Not just important projects. Not just big decisions. The Florida Supreme Court has already brought clarity to this point, having interpreted Amendment 4 broadly in a 2005 decision.
Citing statute, the court indicated that everything from "drainage" and "solid waste" to "traffic circulation" and "intergovernmental coordination" items would appear on the ballot.
What exactly would that mean for voters? Chaos at the polls. Under Amendment 4, Floridians would be expected to vote on hundreds - even thousands - of comprehensive-plan amendments each year. According to Florida's Department of Community Affairs Sunset Review, there were nearly 6,500 changes to local government comprehensive plans in fiscal year 2006-2007. And that figure appears to be on the low side because a 2003 Department of Community Affairs brief shows that there were 16,581 plan amendments in 1999.
Amendment 4 is so extreme that it does not even provide exceptions for schools, hospitals or police stations. The result: thousands of minor, technical plan amendments would litter ballots while vital community needs could be neglected for years - or ignored altogether.

