Lawsuit seeks to block Fort Walton Beach Charter Amendments, claims ballot language misleads voters
Lawsuit seeks to block Fort Walton Beach Charter Amendments, claims ballot language misleads voters Collin Bestor January 16, 2026 1:00 pm Fort Walton Beach FORT WALTON BEACH— A local political committee has filed a lawsuit seeking to block five proposed amendments to the city charter from appearing on the Mar. 10, 2026, referendum ballot, escalating a months-long debate over a sweeping package of changes that city leaders say would modernize local government. Opponents argue that it is being misleadingly presented to voters. FWB Watch Group and Travis Smith, a former city councilman, have sued the City of Fort Walton Beach, City Clerk Kim Barnes and Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections Paul Lux on Jan. 14 in Okaloosa County Circuit Court. The verified complaint asks a judge to declare the ballot titles and summaries for the measures unlawful under Florida election law and to prevent them from being placed before voters “in their current form.” The lawsuit targets Ordinances 2196 through 2200 — five of six charter-related ordinances adopted on second reading by the Fort Walton Beach City Council on Dec. 16 after months of workshops and recommendations from the city’s Charter Review Committee. Taken together, the complete package of six ordinances would ask voters to weigh in on changes involving election timing, governance rules, administrative operations, compensation for elected officials, and limits on annual budget increases. At previous meetings, City Attorney Jeff Burns has said voter approval is required before any changes to the city charter...
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