Florida’s Republican lawmakers rolled out the red carpet for Donald Trump when they passed a law last year banning cities from enforcing local rules against presidential libraries, but there’s a catch that could give Miami officials far more power over Trump’s plans than Gov. Ron DeSantis intended.

The state law DeSantis signed last summer bars local governments from enforcing regulations hindering the construction or operation of a presidential library, as defined by the federal Presidential Libraries Act. But Trump’s plans for a skyscraper presidential museum and potential hotel in Miami don’t appear to meet that definition.

There is already a formal Trump presidential library administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) holding records from his first administration. It’s a document warehouse in College Park, Maryland.