Florida Senator Darryl Rouson bid farewell Friday as he prepares to term out of office. The sendoff came during the final days of the legislative session, where family, friends and longtime supporters gathered in Tallahassee.
Rouson represents Florida’s 16th Senate District, which includes parts of Pinellas and Hillsborough counties, including St. Petersburg and portions of Tampa. The district was previously numbered District 19 before redistricting.
A longtime attorney and community advocate, Rouson first entered the Florida Legislature in 2008. He served four terms in the Florida House before winning election to the Florida Senate in 2016. Over nearly two decades in Tallahassee, he became one of the Tampa Bay region’s most recognizable lawmakers and a leading voice on health care access, addiction recovery and social services.
Before and during his legislative career, Rouson was active in civic leadership in St. Petersburg. He served as president of the St. Petersburg NAACP for five years, a role he won by a narrow 16 vote margin. He also worked as a prosecutor in Pinellas County and has long been involved in local civil rights and community advocacy.
In the Senate, Rouson currently serves as vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, one of the chamber’s most influential panels responsible for shaping the state budget. He also serves on several committees, including Agriculture, Appropriations on Health and Human Services, Children, Families and Elder Affairs, Ethics and Elections, Finance and Tax and Rules, along with the Joint Legislative Budget Commission.
Those assignments placed him squarely at the center of debates over health care funding, behavioral health services and broader state spending priorities.
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“There are moments in this chamber that are a reminder that our work is not merely the crafting of our policy but the expression of our shared humanity,” said Senate President Kathleen Passidomo during Rouson’s farewell Friday. “Today we bid farewell to a man who embodies that truth more fully than perhaps anyone who has served among us.”
Passidomo was referring in part to Rouson’s long-standing advocacy for addiction treatment and mental health services. That work traces back to his own recovery story.
Rouson has been candid about his struggles with addiction, recalling waking up in a hospital with what he once described as “the gift of desperation,” he said. “Desperate to change.”
That moment came nearly three decades ago after suffering from crack cocaine addiction and cycling in and out of rehabilitation centers for years.
His personal experience later shaped his legislative priorities. Throughout his time in the Legislature, Rouson pushed for expanded recovery programs, mental health funding and community-based treatment services.
Among the measures he has highlighted is Senate Bill 1620, legislation focused on strengthening support and treatment options for those facing mental health and substance abuse challenges.
Following the bill’s passage in 2025, the University of South Florida named its substance abuse research institute in Rouson’s honor.
Rouson has often pushed back against criticism of his past, framing it as the foundation of his public service.
“How dare a man stand up and tell another man he cannot become something because of what he used to be,” Rouson said during his closing remarks in the chamber.
Members of the Senate spoke favorably of him for nearly two hours.
“I’m going to miss the Senate,” Rouson said. “But I won’t be far away.”
Rouson has been rumored to be considering a run for Rep. Michele Rayner’s House seat when she terms out, though no official announcement or candidate filings have been made.
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