Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S0460 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/12/2024

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Appropriations Committee on Education  
 
BILL: CS/CS/SB 460 
INTRODUCER:  Appropriations Committee on Education and Senators Simon and Perry 
SUBJECT:  Career and Technical Education 
DATE: February 12, 2024 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Brick Bouck ED Fav/CS 
2. Gray Elwell AED  Fav/CS 
3.     FP  
 
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information: 
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes 
 
I. Summary: 
CS/CS/SB 460 aims to enhance vocational and technical education. The bill authorizes minors 
aged 16 or 17 to work in construction if the minor: 
 Has earned his or her Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 10 
certification; 
 Is under the direct supervision of a person 21 years of age or older with at least two years of 
related experience and his or her OSHA 10 certification. 
 Is not working on any scaffolding, roof, superstructure, or ladder above six feet. 
 Is not in violation of any OSHA rule or federal law related to minors in the workplace. 
 
The bill provides a uniform standard for counties and municipalities to recognize a 
journeyworker.  
 
The bill authorizes district school boards to satisfy the career fair requirement through consulting 
with specified groups to determine free or cost-effective methods to provide other career and 
industry networking opportunities. 
 
The bill authorizes a student who earns credit for one year of related technical instruction for a 
registered apprenticeship or preapprenticeship program to use such credit to satisfy high school 
graduation credit requirements. 
 
REVISED:   BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 2 
 
The bill authorizes an exemption from the career education basic skills assessment to certain 
students with a private school diploma or home education affidavit. 
 
Lastly, the bill creates the Career and Technical Education (CTE) Task Force to study the status 
of CTE in each school district within the state and repeals the Florida Talent Development 
Council. 
 
This bill could have an impact to the Department of Commerce. See fiscal, section V. 
 
The bill takes effect July 1, 2024. 
II. Present Situation: 
Hazardous Occupations Prohibited 
The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 regulates the employment of children in particularly 
hazardous occupations.
1
 Prohibitions regarding the employment of minors age 16 or 17 in 
hazardous occupations in Florida are consistent with regulations adopted by the United States 
(US) Secretary of Labor.
2
 No minor under 18 years of age, whether such person’s disabilities of 
nonage have been removed, may be employed or permitted or suffered to work on any 
scaffolding, roof, superstructure, residential or nonresidential building construction, or ladder 
above 6 feet. This prohibition does not apply to a student learner who: 
 Is enrolled in a youth vocational training program under a recognized state or local 
educational authority. 
 Is employed under a written agreement that provides: 
o That the work of the student learner in the occupation declared particularly hazardous 
shall be incidental to the training. 
o That such work will be intermittent and for short periods of time and under the direct and 
close supervision of a qualified and experienced person. 
o That safety instructions shall be given by the school and correlated by the employer with 
on-the-job training. 
o That a schedule of organized and progressive work processes to be performed on the job 
shall have been prepared.
3
 
 
Every employer in the construction industry is required to secure the payment of workers’ 
compensation to his or her employees.
4
 Employers who fail to secure the payment of workers’ 
compensation for their employees are required to stop working and are liable for administrative 
and criminal penalties.
5
 Employers must provide this benefit to all employees, including minors, 
whether lawfully or unlawfully employed.
6
 
                                                
1
 29 U.S.C. s. 203(l). 
2
 Compare s. 450.061, F.S., with 29 CFR Part 570, Subpart E (Occupations Particularly Hazardous for the Employment of 
Minors Between 16 and 18 Years of Age or Detrimental to Their Health or Well–Being). However, the Secretary of Labor 
has not selected residential construction as a particularly hazardous activity. See 3 EMP. COORD. Compensation IV s. 24.20 
(Jan. 2024). 
3
 Sections 450.061(2) and 450.161, F.S. 
4
 Sections 440.10(1) and 440.38(1), F.S. 
5
 See ss. 440.105 and 440.107, F.S. 
6
 Section 440.02(18), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 3 
 
 
Employers are also required to provide certain training for their employees. Employers are 
required to instruct each employee in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and the 
regulations applicable to their work environment to control or eliminate any hazards or other 
exposure to illness or injury. Employers are encouraged to use the safety and health training 
programs provided by the Secretary of Labor.
7
 
 
The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) within the US Department of 
Labor, provides an Outreach Training Program to promote workplace safety and health and to 
make workers more knowledgeable about workplace hazards and their rights. The OSHA 
Outreach Training Program provides training on the recognition, avoidance, abatement, and 
prevention of workplace hazards. Outreach classes also provide overview information regarding 
OSHA, including workers' rights, employer responsibilities, and how to file a complaint.
8
 
 
The 10-hour training program is primarily intended for entry level workers. The 30-hour training 
program is intended to provide workers with some safety responsibility a greater depth and 
variety of training. All outreach training is intended to cover an overview of the hazards a worker 
may encounter on a job site. Training emphasizes hazard identification, avoidance, control and 
prevention, not OSHA standards.
9
 
 
In the Fiscal Year 2023, 1,341,168 individuals were trained through the Outreach Training 
Program.
10
 The construction 10-hour certification comprised 42 percent of the trainings.
11
 
 
Apprentices and Journeyworkers 
Florida law defines an apprentice as a person at least 16 years of age who has entered into a 
written apprentice agreement with an employer, an association of employers, or a local joint 
apprenticeship committee, to learn a recognized skilled trade through actual work experience 
under the supervision of another worker who has completed an apprenticeship program or has 
worked in the field for a minimum number of years established by industry standard. Training 
for an apprentice should be combined with properly coordinated studies of related technical and 
supplementary subjects.
12
 
 
An apprenticeship program must be registered and approved by the Department of Education 
(DOE).
13
 A student who earns credit upon completion of a registered apprenticeship or 
preapprenticeship program may use such credit to satisfy high school graduation credit 
requirements for fine or performing arts, speech and debate, or career and technical education, or 
electives. The State Board of Education (SBE) is required to approve and identify in the Course 
                                                
7
 29 CFR s. 1926.21. 
8
 USDOL, OSHA, Outreach Training Program: Program Overview, https://www.osha.gov/training/outreach/overview (last 
visited Jan. 18, 2024). 
9
 Id. 
10
 USDOL, OSHA, Outreach Training Program Annual Number of Trainees, https://www.osha.gov/training/outreach/growth 
(last visited Jan. 18, 2024). 
11
 USDOL, OSHA, Number of Trainees by Class Type, https://www.osha.gov/training/outreach/growth#tab2 (last visited Jan. 
18, 2024). 
12
 Section 446.021(2), F.S. 
13
 Section 446.021(6), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 4 
 
Code Directory the apprenticeship and preapprenticeship programs from which earned credit 
may be used to satisfy high school graduation requirements.
14
 
 
The term of an apprenticeship may be completed through either a time-based approach, a 
competency-based approach, or a hybrid approach, as follows: 
 The time-based approach measures skill acquisition through the apprentice's completion of at 
least 2,000 hours of on-the-job training, exclusive of related technical instruction. 
 The competency-based approach measures the apprentice's successful demonstration of 
acquired skills and knowledge, demonstrated through on-the-job training and related 
technical instruction.  
 The hybrid approach measures the individual apprentice's skill acquisition through a 
combination of a range of specified number of hours of on-the-job training and the successful 
demonstration of competency.
15
 
 
Florida apprenticeship standards define a journeyworker as a person working in an 
apprenticeable occupation who has successfully completed a registered apprenticeship program 
or who has worked the number of years required by established industry practices for the 
particular trade or occupation.
16
 
 
Counties and municipalities are authorized to issue journeyman licenses in the plumbing, pipe 
fitting, mechanical, HVAC, electrical and alarm system trades. An individual who holds a valid, 
active journeyman license in the trade issued by any county or municipality may work as a 
journeyman in the trade in which he or she is licensed in any other county or municipality 
without taking an additional examination or paying an additional license fee, if he or she: 
 Has scored at least 70 percent, or after October 1, 1997, at least 75 percent, on a proctored 
journeyman Block and Associates examination or other proctored examination approved by 
the board for the trade in which he or she is licensed; 
 Has completed a registered apprenticeship program and demonstrates four years’ verifiable 
practical experience in the trade for which he or she is licensed, or demonstrates six years’ 
verifiable practical experience in the trade for which he or she is licensed; 
 Has satisfactorily completed specialized and advanced module coursework approved by the 
Florida Building Commission, as part of the building code compliance and mitigation 
training program,
17
 specific to the discipline or, pursuant to authorization by the certifying 
authority, provides proof of completion of such curriculum or coursework within 6 months 
after such certification; and 
 Has not had a license suspended or revoked within the last five years.
18
 
 
A local government may charge a registration fee for reciprocity, not to exceed $25.
19
 Subject to 
limited exceptions,
20
 state law related to electrical and alarm system contracting does not limit 
the power of a municipality or county to require that one electrical journeyman, who is a 
                                                
14
 Section 1003.4282(7), F.S. 
15
 Rule 6A-23.004(2), F.A.C. 
16
 Section 446.021(4), F.S. 
17
 Section 553.841, F.S. 
18
 Sections 489.1455 and 489.5335, F.S. 
19
 Id. 
20
 See s. 489.503, F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 5 
 
graduate of the Institute of Applied Technology in Construction Excellence or licensed locally, 
be present on an industrial or commercial new construction site with a facility of 50,000 gross 
square feet or more when electrical work in excess of 77 volts is being performed in order to 
supervise or perform such work.
21
 
 
Career Fairs 
Each district school board must require each high school within its jurisdiction to host an annual 
career fair during the school year and establish a process to provide students in grades 11 and 12 
the opportunity to meet or interview with potential employers during the career fair. The career 
fair must be held on the campus of the high school, except that a group of high schools in the 
district or a group of districts may hold a joint career fair at an alternative location. A joint career 
fair must be held at a location located within reasonable driving distance for students at all 
participating schools. The career fair must be held during the school day and may use Florida’s 
online career planning and work-based learning system as part of the career fair activities.
22
 
 
State Academic Standards 
The state academic standards establish the core content of the curricula to be taught in the state 
and specify the core content knowledge and skills that K-12 public school students are expected 
to acquire. Standards must be rigorous and relevant and provide for the logical, sequential 
progression of core curricular content that incrementally increases a student's core content 
knowledge and skills over time. Curricular content for all subjects must integrate critical-
thinking, problem-solving, and workforce-literacy skills; communication, reading, and writing 
skills; mathematics skills; collaboration skills; contextual and applied-learning skills; 
technology-literacy skills; information and media-literacy skills; and civic-engagement skills.
23
 
 
The standards must include distinct grade-level expectations for the core content knowledge and 
skills that a student is expected to have acquired by each individual grade level from 
kindergarten through grade 8. The standards for grades 9 through 12 may be organized by grade 
clusters of more than one grade level except as otherwise provided for visual and performing 
arts, physical education, health, and foreign language standards.
24
 
 
The Commissioner of Education (commissioner), as needed, is required to develop and submit 
proposed revisions to the standards for review and comment by Florida educators, school 
administrators, representatives of the Florida College System institutions and state universities 
who have expertise in the content knowledge and skills necessary to prepare a student for 
postsecondary education and careers, business and industry leaders, and the public. The 
commissioner, after considering reviews and comments, must submit the proposed revisions to 
the SBE for adoption.
25
 
 
                                                
21
 Section 489.537(3), F.S. 
22
 Section 1001.43(14), F.S. 
23
 Section 1003.41(1), F.S. 
24
 Id. 
25
 Section 1003.41(3), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 6 
 
CAPE Industry Certification Funding List 
The SBE is required to adopt, at least annually, based on recommendations by the commissioner, 
the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List that assigns additional full-time equivalent 
membership to certifications identified in the Master Credentials List that meet a statewide, 
regional, or local demand.
26
  
 
Certifications included on the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List:
27
 
 Require at least 150 hours of instruction and 
 Can be earned in middle and high school. 
 Usually require passage of a subject area examination and some combination of work 
experience, educational attainment, or on-the-job training. 
 
Requirements for Career Education Basic Skills 
Each career and technical education (CTE) career certificate program, 450 clock hours or longer, 
includes associated basic academic skills (reading, mathematics, and language) that are required 
for completion from each CTE program. For the purpose of CTE and basic skills requirements, 
completion is accomplished when a student has demonstrated mastery of the entire program’s 
standards and benchmarks and receives a Career Certificate of Completion.
28
  
 
Students who enroll in a program offered for career credit of 450 hours or more must complete 
an entry-level examination within the first six weeks after admission into the program.
29
 The 
State Board of Education (SBE) designates examinations to assess student mastery of basic 
skills, which include the following:  
 Tests of Adult Basic Education (TABE), Forms 11 and 12, 2017; 
 Demonstration of basic communication and computation skills; 
 Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System (CASAS), GOALS 900 Series, 2019;  
 2014 GED® Tests: Reasoning through Language Arts and Mathematical Reasoning where a 
minimum score as determined by the SBE has been attained on each test; and 
 A test adopted by the Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission, used for 
admission into law enforcement or corrections training programs.
30
 
 
Any student who lacks the required level of basic skills for the career program must be provided 
with a structured program of basic skills instruction to correct deficiencies. A student may not 
receive a career or technical certificate of completion without first demonstrating the basic skills 
required in the state curriculum frameworks for the career education program.
31
 
 
                                                
26
 Section 1008.44(1), F.S. 
27
 Rule 6A-6.0576(5)-(6), F.S. 
28
 Florida Department of Education, Career and Technical Education, 2019-2020 Technical Assistance Paper, CTE Basic 
Skills Assessment Requirements (Mar. 2020), available at https://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/5398/urlt/basic-skill-tap-
att1.pdf, at 2. (last visited Jan. 18, 2026). 
29
 Section 1004.91(2), F.S. 
30
 Rule 6A-10.040(1), F.A.C. 
31
 Section 1004.91(2), F.S. See also Rule 6A-10.040, F.A.C.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 7 
 
An adult with a disability
32
 may be exempted from the basic skills assessment requirement. In 
addition, the following students are exempt from taking the initial basic skills assessment: 
 A student who possesses a college degree at the associate in applied science level or higher. 
 A student who demonstrates readiness for public postsecondary education in communication 
and computation specified in SBE rule.
33
 
 A student who passes a specified state, national or industry certification or licensure 
examination that is aligned to the career education program. 
 An adult student who is enrolled in an apprenticeship program that is registered with the 
Department of Education.
34
 
 
The Florida Talent Development Council 
The Florida Talent Development Council was created to develop a coordinated, data-driven, 
statewide approach to meeting Florida's needs for a 21st century workforce that employers and 
educators use as part of Florida's talent supply system. Among various assigned tasks, the 
council is required to: 
 Coordinate, facilitate, and communicate statewide efforts to meet supply and demand needs 
for the state's health care workforce.  
 Develop definitions for data elements and a uniform survey for use by the Department of 
Health, the Commission for Independent Education, the Independent Colleges and 
Universities of Florida, and postsecondary institutions participating in a state loan 
forgiveness program, grant, fund, or performance-based incentive program.
35
 
 
 
Executive Task Forces 
A “task force” is an advisory body created without specific statutory enactment for a time not to 
exceed one year or created by specific statutory enactment for a time not to exceed three years 
and appointed to study a specific problem and recommend a solution or policy alternative with 
respect to that problem. Its existence terminates upon the completion of its assignment.
36
 
 
The task force must keep the Legislature and the public informed of the numbers, purposes, 
memberships, activities, and expenses of advisory bodies, commissions, boards of trustees, and 
other collegial bodies established as adjuncts to executive agencies. A task force has the 
following characteristics: 
 It meets a statutorily defined purpose. 
 Its members, unless expressly provided otherwise in the State Constitution, are appointed for 
4-year staggered terms. 
                                                
32
 An adult with disability means an individual who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more 
major life activities, has a record of such impairment, or is regarded as having such an impairment, and who requires 
modifications to the educational program, adaptive equipment, or specialized instructional methods and services in order to 
participate in workforce development programs that lead to competitive employment. Section 1004.02(6), F.S. 
33
 Rule 6A-10.0315, F.A.C. 
34
 Section 1004.91(3), F.S. 
35
 Section 1004.015, F.S. 
36
 Section 20.03(5), F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 8 
 
 Its members, unless expressly provided otherwise by specific statutory enactment, serve 
without additional compensation or honorarium, and are authorized to receive only per diem 
and reimbursement for travel expenses. 
 The private citizen members must be appointed by the Governor, the head of the department, 
the executive director of the department, or a Cabinet officer. 
 Its meetings are public meetings, which must be open to the public at all times, and no 
resolution, rule, or formal action may be considered binding except as taken or made in 
public.
37
 
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
This bill aims to enhance vocational and technical education. 
 
Hazardous Occupations Prohibited 
The bill amends s. 450.061, F.S., to authorize a minor aged 16 or 17 to be employed on any 
residential building construction if he or she: 
 Has earned his or her OSHA 10 certification 
 Is under the direct supervision of a person at least 21 years of age who has earned his or her 
OSHA 10 certification and has at least two years of work experience related to the work he 
or she is supervising. 
 Is not working on any scaffolding, roof, superstructure, or ladder above six feet. 
 Is not working in violation of the Fair Labor Standards of 1938, any OSHA rule, or federal 
law related to minors in the workplace. 
 
Apprentices and Journeyworkers 
The bill amends s. 446.021, F.S., to modify the definition of journeyworker to clarify that, in 
addition to existing requirements, one must complete a state-approved apprenticeship and pass a 
state-approved test, when required, to meet the definition of journeyworker.  
 
The bill modifies ss. 489.1455 and 489.5335, F.S., to require a local government to recognize a 
person as a journeyman plumbing, pipe fitting, mechanical, HVAC, electrical, or alarm trades if 
the person has: 
 Scored at least 70 percent, or after October 1, 1997, at least 75 percent, on a proctored 
journeyman Block and Associates examination or other proctored examination approved by 
the board for the trade in which he or she is licensed; 
 Completed a registered and state-approved apprenticeship program or has at least 12,000 
hours of on-the-job training in his or her specific trade; and 
 Satisfactorily completed specialized and advanced module coursework approved by the 
Florida Building Commission, as part of the building code training program established in s. 
553.841, F.S., specific to the discipline or, pursuant to authorization by the certifying 
authority, provides proof of completion of such coursework within 6 months after such 
certification. 
 
                                                
37
 Section 20.052, F.S.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 9 
 
The bill accordingly removes the authority of a county or municipality to issue a journeyman 
license. 
 
Career Fairs 
The bill amends s. 1001.43, F.S., to add an alternative to the required annual career fair hosted at 
each school district high school. The bill authorizes district school boards, as an alternative to the 
required career fair, to consult with local workforce development boards, advisory committees, 
and business groups to determine free or cost-effective methods to provide other career and 
industry networking opportunities, during the school day, for secondary students and exposure 
for elementary and secondary students to a representative variety of industries, businesses, and 
careers.  
 
State Academic Standards 
The bill modifies s. 1003.41, F.S., to add to the persons who the Commissioner of Education 
(commissioner) must include for review and comment on proposed revisions to the state 
standards to include a representative from the Department of Commerce and specifies that 
business and industry leaders are limited to those for in-demand careers. 
 
Career and Technical Education Courses 
The bill modifies s. 1003.4282, F.S., to change how apprentice and preapprenticeship programs 
may satisfy the high school graduation credit requirements for fine or performing arts, speech 
and debate, or career and technical education, or electives. The bill authorizes earned credit for 
completion of one year of related technical instruction in a registered apprenticeship or 
preapprenticeship program, rather than completion of the entire program, to satisfy the high 
school graduation credit requirements for fine or performing arts, speech and debate, or career 
and technical education, or electives. 
 
Requirements for Career Education Basic Skills 
The bill modifies s. 1004.91, F.S., to authorize an exemption from postsecondary career 
education program basic skills requirements for a student who possesses a high school diploma 
from a private school, or, for a student in a home education program, a signed affidavit submitted 
by the student’s parent attesting that the student has completed a home education program. 
 
The Career and Technical Education Task Force 
The bill creates the Career and Technical Education Task Force, adjunct to the Department of 
Commerce, to study the status of CTE in each school district within the state. The bill requires 
the Secretary of Commerce to provide administrative and staff support relating to the functions 
of the task force. 
 
The Governor, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the 
Commissioner of Education, and the Secretary of the Department of Commerce are each 
required to appoint two members to the task force by September 1, 2024. The bill requires the 
commissioner to appoint a chair of the task force. The bill requires the task force to:  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 10 
 
 Compile a list of CTE courses offered within each school district. Such data must be broken 
down by industry, grade level, location, the number of students enrolled in such courses, the 
number of students who complete such courses, and the total number of students per district 
enrolled in such courses. 
 Compile a list of career and technical education courses offered through the Department of 
Corrections and Juvenile Justice. Such data must be broken down by location, population, 
industry course offering, the number of students enrolled in each course, and the number of 
students who complete such courses. 
 Review existing postsecondary credits available for K-12 career and technical education 
course offerings and how this information is advertised to students and parents. 
 Compare existing career and technical education course offerings with data from the 
Department of Commerce and industry leaders on in-demand careers and the state’s 
economic needs. 
 Identify the total funding provided for the CTE courses offered by school districts and 
analyze whether such funding is uniform across the state or if such funding varies by course 
or industry. 
 Compare funding and reimbursement rates and timelines for CTE courses to funding and 
reimbursement rates and timelines for traditional K-12 education courses. 
 Identify any additional funding available for additional CTE courses, including federal 
funding, industry funding, or additional state funding. 
 Identify how CTE courses are advertised to parents and students. 
 Identify the needs of school districts to expand CTE, including what needs could be met by 
the Legislature. 
 Identify the number of students who earn an industry certification through CTE courses who 
also find employment in relevant industries. 
 Provide recommendations for increasing funding, eliminating barriers to expanding career 
and technical education offerings, and streamlining regulations. 
 Provide recommendations for improving the marketing of career and technical education 
offerings to students and parents. 
 Provide recommendations for changes and expansions to CTE course offerings beginning in 
the 2026-2027 school year. 
 
The bill requires the task force to submit a report of its findings to the Governor, the President of 
the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the Secretary of Commerce by 
September 1, 2025, and submit its recommendations by January 1, 2026. The task force expires 
upon submission of the recommendations. 
 
The bill takes effect July 1, 2024. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 11 
 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
None. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
The Department of Commerce may incur costs associated with creating the Career and 
Technical Education Task Force. Without a fiscal analysis the cost to the department is 
indeterminate, but likely insignificant. 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends the following sections of the Florida Statutes: 446.021, 450.061, 
489.117, 489.1455, 489.5335, 1001.43, 1003.41, 1003.4282, and 1004.91.  
 
This bill repeals section 1004.015 of the Florida Statutes. 
 
The bill creates an undesignated section of Florida Law.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 12 
 
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Substantial Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
CS/CS by Appropriations Committee on Education on February 8, 2024: 
The committee substitute: 
 Clarifies that the employment of minors in residential construction may not violate 
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. 
 Clarifies that, in addition to existing requirements, an individual must complete a 
state-approved apprenticeship and pass a state-approved test, when required, to meet 
the definition of journeyworker. 
 Restores the authority of local governments to recognize journeyworkers while 
retaining the provision of the bill removing the authority to grant local journeyworker 
licenses. The amendment requires a local government to recognize a person as a 
journeyman if the person: 
 Passed a test approved for the trade; 
 Completed an apprenticeship or has 12,000 hours of experience in the trade; and  
 Completed coursework as approved by the Florida Building Commission. 
 Makes optional for institutions the exemption from basic skills requirements for home 
education and private school completers, similar to existing exemption for public 
school graduates. 
 Shifts the CTE task force to be housed within the Department of Commerce instead 
of the Department of Education. 
 Repeals the Florida Talent Development Council. 
 
CS in Education Pre-K – 12 on January 17, 2024: 
The committee substitute narrows the exception provided in the bill to the prohibition on 
minors aged 16 to 17 working on scaffolding, roof, superstructure, or residential or 
nonresidential building construction, to apply the exception only to residential building 
construction. The committee substitute maintains the requirement that the exception only 
apply to minors with an Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 10 
certification, who are supervised as provided in the bill. 
 
The committee substitute removes the requirement of the bill that: 
 High school career fairs include specific additional criteria, and instead authorizes 
district school boards, as an alternative to the required career fair, to consult with 
local workforce development boards, advisory committees, and business groups to 
determine free or cost-effective methods to provide other career and industry 
networking opportunities, during the school day, for secondary students and exposure 
for elementary and secondary students to a representative variety of industries, 
businesses, and careers. 
 The specific curricular content established in the state academic standards for 
mathematics ensure the integration of real-life opportunities to use such curricular 
content.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 13 
 
 All courses directly related to CAPE Digital Tool or Industry Certifications be 
weighted the same as a grade in an honors course for purposes of calculating grade-
point-average (GPA). 
 Conditions high school credit for apprenticeship or preapprenticeship programs on the 
completion of OSHA 10 certification and maintains the provision of the bill 
authorizing students to use one year of related technical instruction (CTE) to satisfy 
high school credit requirements. 
 Require the Department of Education (DOE) and the Board of Governors (BOG) to 
establish and publish lists related to articulation certain CTE credits. 
 Increases the career-themed courses that district high school and middle schools must 
offer. 
 Modifies the CAPE Act 3-year strategic plan, curriculum review committee, and the 
Commissioner of Education’s annual review of CTE offerings. 
 
The committee substitute adds to the bill: 
 December 1, 2024, as a deadline for the Department of Education (DOE) to convene 
the workgroup to identify the three math pathways for students enrolled in secondary 
grades. 
 An exemption from postsecondary career education program basic skills requirements 
for a student who possesses a high school diploma from a private school, or, for a 
student in a home education program, a signed affidavit submitted by the student’s 
parent attesting that the student has completed a home education program. 
 
The committee substitute removes from the bill the provision providing flexibility from 
certification requirements for district school boards in hiring non-degree CTE teachers. 
 
The committee substitute adds to the CTE Task Force created in the bill the responsibility 
to: 
 Compile a list of career and technical education courses offered through the 
Department of Corrections and Juvenile Justice. Such data must be broken down by 
location, population, industry course offering, the number of students enrolled in each 
course, and the number of students who complete such courses 
 Review existing postsecondary credits available for K-12 career and technical 
education course offerings and how this information is advertised to students and 
parents. 
 Compare existing career and technical education course offerings with data from the 
Department of Commerce and industry leaders on in-demand careers and the state’s 
economic needs. 
 Provide recommendations for increasing funding, eliminating barriers to expanding 
career and technical education offerings, and streamlining regulations. 
 Provide recommendations for improving the marketing of career and technical 
education offerings to students and parents. 
 
The committee substitute modifies the date for the task force to report on its findings to 
require the task force to submit its report by September 1, 2025, and its recommendations 
by January 1, 2026.  BILL: CS/CS/SB 460   	Page 14 
 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.