P-21-01Equality, Inclusion & Protecting Civil Rights · claim-level record
Enforce the city nondiscrimination ordinance
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to enforce the city nondiscrimination ordinance during the next administration.
- Authority
- direct
- Confidence
- limited
- Material cost
- No
- Last reviewed
- 2026-07-15
The claim
fully enforcing the city’s non-discrimination ordinance
What voters are likely to hear
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to enforce the city nondiscrimination ordinance during the next administration.
What the mayor actually controls
- Authority level
- direct
- City Hall controls
- City HR, ordinances, partnerships, ADA compliance, participatory-budgeting design
- City Hall does not control
- City Council appropriations, independent partners, and state or federal law remain outside unilateral mayoral control.
What implementation requires
- A written implementation scope and public deadline
- Mayoral direction and departmental workplan
- Legal review, public process, and adoption by the required decision-maker
What it would cost
Cost-estimation limitation
No separate program or capital appropriation is modeled for this legal, policy, governance, or advocacy commitment. Staff time is not cost-free, and the campaign does not provide a staffing allocation that supports a defensible estimate.
- Campaign-identified funding
- None identified for this claim
- Funding still unidentified
- No separate gap recorded
What already exists
What Eskamani has previously done
Mobility-device right-to-repair proposal advanced but died
The proposal received favorable committee action and reached the House second-reading calendar; it did not change Florida law.
People's Platform campaign-promise inventory
The campaign published a 28-section platform that this project has separated into 294 independently testable promise records.
The strongest evidence
Evidence supporting the finding
The campaign’s primary platform page publishes this commitment in the cited section.
Evidence that qualifies the finding
The cited governing or program record qualifies unilateral mayoral authority, existing-program overlap, or the delivery path.
The unresolved problem
The campaign does not identify the legal instrument, decision-maker sequence, deadline, or measurable completion standard for this individual commitment.
The accountability question
For "Enforce the city nondiscrimination ordinance," what is the eligibility or scope, deadline, annual city cost, outside-approval sequence, and public completion measure?