Your feedback ensures we stay focused on the facts that matter to you most—take our survey.

Florida Offender Reintegration Program Initiative (2026)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Florida Offender Reintegration Program Initiative
Flag of Florida.png
Election date
November 3, 2026
Topic
Prisons
Status
Cleared for signature gathering
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

The Florida Offender Reintegration Program Initiative (Initiative #22-18) may appear on the ballot in Florida as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 3, 2026.

The ballot initiative would extend the authority of the Florida Commission on Offender Review to create an offender reintegration program and grant supervised release to qualifying offenders who meet certain requirements.[1]

Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title is as follows:[1]

Offender Reintegration Program[2]

Ballot summary

The proposed ballot summary is as follows:[1]

Extends the Florida Commission on Offender Review's authority to develop a standardized offender reintegration program, to place on supervised release (reintegration status) all qualifying offenders, including juvenile offenders, who have both served minimum sentence requirement and demonstrated an ability to live lawful, productive lives in society, and to terminate reintegration status of offenders who meet all financial obligations unless waived by Commission. Capital sexual offenders and death sentenced offenders are ineligible.[2]

Full text

The full text can be accessed here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Florida

The state process

In Florida, the number of signatures required for an initiated constitutional amendment is equal to 8% of the votes cast in the preceding presidential election. Florida also has a signature distribution requirement, which requires that signatures equaling at least 8% of the district-wide vote in the last presidential election be collected from at least half (14) of the state's 28 congressional districts. Signatures remain valid until February 1 of an even-numbered year.[3] Signatures must be verified by February 1 of the general election year the initiative aims to appear on the ballot.

Proposed measures are reviewed by the state attorney general and state supreme court after proponents collect 25% of the required signatures across the state in each of one-half of the state's congressional districts (222,898 signatures for 2024 ballot measures). After these preliminary signatures have been collected, the secretary of state must submit the proposal to the Florida Attorney General and the Financial Impact Estimating Conference (FIEC). The attorney general is required to petition the Florida Supreme Court for an advisory opinion on the measure's compliance with the single-subject rule, the appropriateness of the title and summary, and whether or not the measure "is facially invalid under the United States Constitution."[4]

The requirements to get an initiative certified for the 2026 ballot:

In Florida, proponents of an initiative file signatures with local elections supervisors, who are responsible for verifying signatures. Supervisors are permitted to use random sampling if the process can estimate the number of valid signatures with 99.5% accuracy. Enough signatures are considered valid if the random sample estimates that at least 115% of the required number of signatures are valid.

Details about the initiative

The organization Floridians for Redeemable People filed the ballot initiative, which was approved for signature gathering on December 6, 2022.[1]

See also

  • Ballot measure lawsuits
  • Ballot measure readability
  • Ballot measure polls

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Florida Division of Elections, "Initiative #22-18," accessed December 7, 2022
  2. 2.0 2.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Before the passage of Florida Senate Bill 1794 of 2020, signatures remained valid for a period of two years
  4. Florida State Senate, "Florida Senate Bill 1794," accessed April 13, 2020