Finance News
Is a Florida condo crisis brewing? Real estate developers claim rising costs are necessary

Gutman Development Marketing’s Phil Gutman, The Continuum Company’s Ian Bruce Eichner and BH Group CEO Isaac Toledano explain to Fox News Digital why they support Florida’s ‘Condo 3.0’ bill.
High-rise condominium owners along the sunny and serene Florida coastlines are facing a costly reality, but prominent developers in the state argue surges in HOA fees and maintenance reserves are necessary to prevent a future tragedy.
“A lot of people have seen their maintenances double. They’ve seen some of the assessments become extremely unaffordable. It’s definitely impacted many residents here in Florida,” Gutman Development Marketing President Phil Gutman told Fox News Digital.
“There is a conflict, and the conflict is a bit complicated, and it’s a bit complex because you have three competing issues. One, you have the issue of safety. Two, you have older buildings,” Ian Bruce Eichner, The Continuum Company founder, also told Digital. “The last issue that comes from [the Condo 3.0 law] is a requirement that unless the condominium’s declaration, what the original offering said 50 years ago provides otherwise, you need 90% of the residents to agree to terminate the condominium.”
“We have the state, cities, city officials, code enforcement, city managers more involved in buildings. I think it’s important to prevent the next disaster, God forbid, the next catastrophe. Let’s not forget that there [are] thousands of old buildings, and thank God we didn’t see any other catastrophe except the Surfside building,” BH Group CEO and founder Isaac Toledano added.
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“I think the fact that you have more inspections, more regulations, I think it’s good for everybody and for everybody’s safety.”

Three prominent Florida real estate developers voice support for the state’s Condo 3.0 bill, even though it’s resulted in higher HOA and maintenance fees for unit owners. (Getty Images)
The higher condo fees are a result of the state’s “Condo 3.0” bill, passed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in early 2024, less than three years after the Champlain Towers collapse in Surfside. The new bill dictates a new set of reforms, including how a building is maintained to how condo associations are governed. The oldest buildings and their residents are likely to see the most costly impending assessments.
“Any rational person has to be supportive of the legislation because it goes to the issue of safety. So while it may have a financial burden, we have an obligation – the state, the city, everybody has an obligation to keep people safe,” Eichner said. “So there’s no question that the law is something that, unfortunately, was a consequence of an event, but certainly it’s something everyone supports.”
According to recent data from Redfin, multiple Florida cities on the east and west coasts have year-over-year double-digit increases on condo fees. Tampa saw the sharpest rise at 16.7%; Fort Lauderdale had a 16.2% increase; the average median condo cost in Miami is $835 per month; and Key West has the highest median HOA fee at $1,063.
FOX Business’ Ashley Webster reports from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where condominium and HOA fees are rising and thus turning new residents away.
In some high-demand markets like Miami, unit owners at the 16-year-old 1060 Brickell Avenue building are required to split $21 million in special assessments after the board of directors reportedly identified areas of damage.
Many condo buildings that are 40 to 60 years old are more likely to be demolished and rebuilt as newer, luxury real estate projects, according to the developers.
“I think we’re going to see more and more of this transaction of prime real estate, older product getting replaced with the new product,” Toledano noted.
“The shift that we see in the market is the appetite of older product, older units, many other owners willing to work with the developers, and they understand that if you live in a three-story building that was built in the 1960s, this building will probably have some serious assessments, a lot of improvements, and sometimes it doesn’t make any sense to go and replace the roof, the electrical, the mechanical, something that will cost millions of dollars,” the BH Group lead also said. “[You’re] better off [to] sell the unit.”
Florida’s dubbed “Condo 3.0” bill requires yearly maintenance and reserve evaluations for buildings that are three stories or higher. | iStock
“Some of these buildings that are 50, 60 years old that really can’t be fixed anymore. Those buildings do need to come down,” Gutman explained. “If somebody has an apartment there that was worth $300,000 in the open market, and we come in at $750 [to] $800,000, I believe those people are in a much better position than they were, to be quite honest with you. But people will have to find possibly another area to live in, something that’s more affordable, something that’s newer, something that’s safer.”
While state lawmakers argue the Condo 3.0 law will improve the longevity and quality of high-rise buildings, there are fears that luxury mixed-use developers strip residents of deciding powers, add costly fees and price them out of their long-term homes – especially for retired or fixed-income owners.
Gov. DeSantis’ office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Eichner posed an example: “You have a building that is 62 years old, has $12 million in deferred maintenance, has a population of 20 or 25% of the building that’s retired, and that 20 or 25% either doesn’t want to move, doesn’t have the resources to move, need help to move.”
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“So what you have is building after building facing assessments that they really can’t afford. They do not have the will, i.e. the 90% that can require a termination, and so they sit now in this ‘Never-Never Land’ in which they attempt to have some partial assessment, deferred assessment. Where is this going to go? I don’t know,” Eichner continued. “But for sure, there are hundreds of buildings that are in this situation as we wind our way out of year one of the post-assessment requirement. I suspect that this is going to be a real issue in 2025, 2026.”
In February, new leaders in the Florida legislature said their next sessions will include potential changes to condo laws, but will not involve talks around direct financial assistance for condo owners.
The three developers insist they’re here to help those concerned residents.
“I think that after all, developer or not, we’re all human being[s]. And if the stronger person can help the weaker person, or the smarter person can help the person with less knowledge or less experience, I think this is something that it’s good to see, and we should all help each other if we can,” Toledano said.
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“We don’t go in to try to take over buildings and don’t prefer a hostile environment. When we approach a building, we approach it and we move forward because everybody in the building wants to sell. And they don’t want the assessments, they don’t want the hiked-up maintenance fees,” Gutman chimed in. “That’s just our approach. We’re not fighters, we’re trying to help.”
“Part of the offer that we made was, to the extent that you are interested, we will help move you. To the extent that you’re not sure where you want to go, we will recommend some brokers to work with you,” Eichner said. “So it’s an attempt to have a more holistic, full-service approach rather than simply say: We’re offering you ‘x’ million dollars for your apartment, and that’s that, thank you, goodbye.”
Finance News
Bertucci’s files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, closes restaurants

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Italian restaurant chain Bertucci’s is closing more locations after filing for bankruptcy again to mitigate losses.
The Massachusetts-based business, which has locations along the East Coast and is best known for its brick oven pizza and pasta, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Florida last week. It marked the chain’s third bankruptcy since 2018.
Bertucci’s also closed seven of its underperforming locations – five in Massachusetts, one in Rhode Island and one in Maryland. It now operates 15 restaurant locations in six states, according to court documents.
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Italian restaurant chain Bertucci’s has filed for bankruptcy for the third time since 2018. It has also closed seven restaurants to mitigate losses, according to an April 24 bankruptcy filing. (WFXT)
The company cited the “deterioration” of the U.S. economy and “lack of consumer demand for legacy casual-dining brands” as reasons why the restaurant chain has been operating at a loss, according to the filing.
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“With losses accumulating, inflationary pressures still high, and industry headwinds gusting, the proverbial final straw fell on [Bertucci’s] this year as the world saw food costs soar, consumer spending slow, and an uncertain global economy falling in (and out) of decline,” as stated in the bankruptcy documents.
Bertucci’s has assets and liabilities between $10 million and $50 million, according to the filing.
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The restaurant chain hopes bankruptcy will provide the business with a “breathing spell” so it can “determine the best path forward and formulate an overall reorganizational plan,” it said in the filing.
In April 2018, Bertucci’s filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and closed 15 restaurants. In December 2022, amid challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic like the closure of restaurants and inflation, it declared bankruptcy for a second time and streamlined operations down to 23 locations, according to the filing.

Bertucci’s previously filed for bankruptcy in 2018 and 2022. (WFXT)
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Bertucci’s did not respond to FOX Business’ request for comment.
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Finance News
Flags of Valor employs military veterans to create patriotic products

Brian Steorts, a combat veteran who founded Flags of Valor in 2015, said his flag-making business believes in the “American supply chain, the American worker and the American spirit.”
For Flags of Valor – a veteran-owned and operated business that has shipped more than 96,000 flags to doorsteps nationwide – the phrase “made in America” lies at the foundation of everything it stands for.
“For over 10 years, we’ve been saying the same thing – we build American products, on American wood, with American tools, made by American hands,” Flags of Valor founder and military veteran Brian Steorts told FOX Business. “And we do it while giving back to the causes that matter – supporting veterans, educating youth, and honoring service and sacrifice at every step.”
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Founded in Virginia in 2015, Flags of Valor is known for its handcrafted, wooden U.S. flags, as well as military and first responder flags. The business currently has 10 employees, the majority of whom are veterans and military spouses.

Flags of Valor currently has 10 employees, the majority of whom are veterans and military spouses. (Flags of Valor)
Each material used by the Flags of Valor team – from the woodworking tools to the tape for the shipping boxes – is sourced from American companies, according to Steorts.
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“We believe that’s the only way it should be done,” Steorts said.
Steorts, a combat veteran who was deployed nine times, served in the U.S. Army as a paratrooper and later as an Air Force special operations pilot.
In 2013, he got into woodworking after returning from one of his deployments injured and “mentally and physically” broken, he said. During that same time period, Steorts also lost four friends in combat and his sister to mental health struggles.

Founded in Winchester, Virginia, in 2015, Flags of Valor is known for its handcrafted, wooden U.S. flags, as well as military and first responder flags. (Flags of Valor)
“I wanted something patriotic on the wall of my house – something that meant something,” Steorts said. “I found therapy in [woodworking], and I found philanthropy in it by donating my first couple of flags to the widows of my buddies that passed, and I just knew I wanted to do more.”
While Flags of Valor’s best-selling products today are its wooden U.S. flags, the business also sells patriotic home and office decor, awards, memorial displays, corporate gifts, employee recognition pieces, Christmas ornaments, clothing and accessories, and more, Steorts said.
“One of the most important things we’re doing right now is building memorial flag cases – because our heroes deserve a final resting place for their flag that’s made by a veteran-owned American company, not mass-produced overseas,” he said.

Flags of Valor Founder Brian Steorts is pictured with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in 2017. (Flags of Valor)
In addition to employing veterans, Flags of Valor has also given back by donating $1.7 million to veteran-operated nonprofits.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the company also launched a Kids Flag Building Kit, a hands-on activity to help educate children about the history and values the American flag represents. Each year, during the weeks of Veterans Day and Memorial Day, thousands of students across the nation use the kits to create their own American flags.
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“We believe in educating our youth and passing freedom on to the next generation,” Steorts said. “It’s more than a project – it’s about patriotism, education and preserving what matters most.”
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