CDDWatch turns dense government meeting minutes into plain-English summaries so you can actually understand what your Community Development District is doing with your money.
A Community Development District is a local government entity created under Florida law (Chapter 190) to manage and finance infrastructure in planned communities. If you live in a newer subdivision in Florida, you almost certainly pay CDD assessments on your tax bill — often $1,000 to $4,000+ per year.
CDDs are governed by a Board of Supervisors (usually 5 seats) who hold public meetings, approve contracts, set budgets, and spend your assessment dollars on landscaping, pool maintenance, pond management, roads, and more. Under Florida's Sunshine Law, every meeting is public record.
The problem? Meeting minutes are buried in PDFs on obscure websites. Nobody reads them. CDDWatch changes that by collecting these public records, generating AI-powered plain-English summaries, and making everything searchable.
We're starting with Pasco County, Florida and expanding. Each district below has full meeting archives with AI summaries.
The latest meetings across all tracked districts.