I think weather only factors in on the ventilation.
My opinion is when you are running cooling and dehumidification you want to be positive pressure and you do not really worry about infiltration.
What is inside the building is important. I am a Canadian in the Caribbean, take Miami's worst case humidity design scenario and this is our typical condition.
I only really need reheat when I have a dense occupancy and more so a dense and active occupancy.
Assembly halls, theatres, night clubs, churches, and my biggest challenge of them all, the Pentacostal Church.
Dense occupancy means more latent gain, more fresh air per person, and active occupancy means enormous latent gain from people.
You draw a line with the space load SHR through your room condition and it does not matter where you are located geographically.
An office load is pretty sensible and if you are going for 55 degree supply air, you may find that an extra two degrees cooling or so ie 53 off the coil to compensate for motor reheat to have 55 leaving the unit and you have already cut the saturation curve.
To technically get the 53F off of a coil, you would have to dehumidify some more. Programs like Elite will override you and tell you to base the CFM off of 57F air out of the unit to the space.
I did a telephone switch and the space load was all sensible. With the high air flow and blow through I think I was around 60 tons for the switch room. Draw through I would have been up around 69 tons and more air moving.
When I cannot extend an SHR line through my desired room condition and cut the saturation curve, I know right away it is time for reheat/dehumidifiers
Take the "V" out of HVAC and you are left with a HAC(k) job.