Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S7012 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 12/08/2023

                    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 Committee on Ethics and Elections  
 
BILL: SPB 7012 
INTRODUCER:  For consideration by the Ethics and Elections Committee 
SUBJECT:  OGSR/Secure Login Credentials Held by the Commission on Ethics 
DATE: December 8, 2023 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Cleary Roberts        Pre-meeting 
 
I. Summary: 
SPB 7012 saves from repeal current public records exemptions for all secure login credentials 
held by the Commission on Ethics for the purpose of allowing access to the electronic financial 
disclosure filing system, as well as information entered into the system for purposes of making 
the disclosure.   
 
Pursuant to the Open Government Sunset Review Act, these exemptions will repeal on October 
2, 2024, unless reenacted by the Legislature. This bill saves the exemptions from repeal by 
deleting the scheduled repeal date. 
 
This bill takes effect October 1, 2024. 
II. Present Situation: 
Public Records Law 
The State Constitution provides that the public has the right to inspect or copy records made or 
received in connection with official governmental business.
1
 This applies to the official business 
of any public body, officer, or employee of the state, including all three branches of state 
government, local governmental entities, and any person acting on behalf of the government.
2
 
 
                                                
1
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(a) 
2
 Id. See also, Sarasota Citizens for Responsible Gov’t v. City of Sarasota, 48 So. 3d 755, 762-763 (Fla. 2010). 
REVISED:   BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 2 
 
Chapter 119, F.S., known as the Public Records Act, constitutes the main body of public records 
laws.
3
 The Public Records Act states that: 
 
[i]t is the policy of this state that all state, county, and municipal records 
are open for personal inspection and copying by any person. Providing 
access to public records is a duty of each agency.
4
  
 
The Public Records Act does not apply to legislative or judicial records.
5
 Legislative records are 
public pursuant to s. 11.0431, F.S. Public records exemptions for the Legislature are codified 
primarily in s. 11.0431(2)-(3), F.S., and adopted in the rules of each house of the legislature.  
 
Section 119.011(12), F.S., defines “public records” to include: 
 
[a]ll documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photographs, films, 
sound recordings, data processing software, or other material, regardless 
of the physical form, characteristics, or means of transmission, made or 
received pursuant to law or ordinance or in connections with the 
transaction of official business by any agency.    
 
The Florida Supreme Court has interpreted this definition to encompass all materials made or 
received by an agency in connection with official business which are used to “perpetuate, 
communicate, or formalize knowledge of some type.”
6
 
 
The Florida Statutes specify conditions under which public access to governmental records must 
be provided. The Public Records Act guarantees every person’s right to inspect and copy any 
state or local government public records at any reasonable time, under reasonable conditions, and 
under supervision by the custodian of the public record.
7
 A violation of the Public Records Act 
may result in civil or criminal liability.
8
 
Only the Legislature may create an exemption to public records requirements.
9
 An exemption 
must be created by general law and must specifically state the public necessity justifying the 
exemption.
10
 Further, the exemption must be no broader than necessary to accomplish the stated 
purpose of the law. A bill enacting an exemption may not contain other substantive provisions
11
 
and must pass by a two-thirds vote of the members present and voting in each house of the 
Legislature.
12
 
 
When creating a public records exemption, the Legislature may provide that a record is “exempt” 
or “confidential and exempt.” There is a difference between records the Legislature has 
                                                
3
 Public records laws are found throughout the Florida Statutes.  
4
 Section 119.01(1), F.S.  
5
 Locke v. Hawkes, 595 So. 2d 32, 34 (Fla. 1992); see also Times Pub. Co. v. Ake, 660 So. 2d 255 (Fla. 1995).  
6
 Shevin v. Byron, Harless, Schaffer, Reid and Assoc. Inc., 379 So. 2d 633, 640 (Fla. 1980).  
7
 Section 119.07(1)(a), F.S.  
8
 Section 119.10, F.S. Public records laws are found throughout the Florida Statutes, as are the penalties for violating those 
laws.  
9
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(c).  
10
 Id.  
11
 The bill may, however, contain multiple exemptions that relate to one subject.  
12
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(c).   BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 3 
 
determined to be exempt from the Public Records Act and those which the Legislature has 
determined to be exempt from the Public Records Act and confidential.
13
 Records designated as 
“confidential and exempt” are not subject to inspection by the public and may only be released 
under the circumstances defined by statute.
14
 Records designated as “exempt” may be released at 
the discretion of the records custodian under certain circumstances.
15
 
 
Open Government Sunset Review Act 
The provisions of s. 119.15, F.S., known as the Open Government Sunset Review Act (the 
OGSR Act), prescribe a legislative review process for newly created or substantially amended 
public records or open meetings exemptions,
16
 with specified exceptions.
17
 The OGSR Act 
requires the repeal of such exemptions on October 2
nd
 of the fifth year after creation or 
substantial amendment; in order to save an exemption from repeal the Legislature must reenact 
the exemption or repeal the sunset date.
18
 In practice, many exemptions are continued by 
repealing the sunset date, rather than reenacting the exemption.  
 
The OGSR Act provides that a public records or open meetings exemption may be created or 
maintained only if it serves an identifiable public purpose and is no broader than is necessary.
19
 
An exemption serves an identifiable purpose if the Legislature finds that the purpose of the 
exemption outweighs open government policy and cannot be accomplished without the 
exemption and it meets one of the following purposes: 
 It allows the state or its political subdivision to effectively and efficiently administer a 
program, and administration would be significantly impaired without the exemption;
20
 
 It protects sensitive, personal information, the release of which would be defamatory or 
would jeopardize an individual’s safety. If this public purpose is cited as the basis of an 
exemption, however, only personal identifying information is exempt;
21
 or 
 It protects trade or business secrets.
22
 
 
The OGSR Act also requires specified questions to be considered during the review process.
23
 In 
examining an exemption, the OGSR Act directs the Legislature to question the purpose and 
necessity of reenacting the exemption.  
                                                
13
 WFTV, Inc. v. The Sch. Bd. of Seminole County, 874 So. 2d 48, 53 (Fla. 5
th
 DCA 2004).  
14
 Id.  
15
 Williams v. City of Minneola, 575 So. 2d 683 (Fla. 5
th
 DCA 1991).  
16
 Section 119.15, F.S. Section 119.15(4)(b), F.S., provides that an exemption is considered to be substantially amended if it 
is expanded to include more records or information or to include meetings.  
17
 Section 119.15(2)(a) and (b), F.S., provides that exemptions required by federal law or applicable solely to the Legislature 
or the State Court System are not subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act.  
18
 Section 119.15(3), F.S.  
19
 Section 119.15(6)(b), F.S.  
20
 Section 119.15(6)(b)1., F.S.  
21
 Section 119.15(6)(b)2., F.S.  
22
 Section 119.15(6)(b)3.,F.S.  
23
 Section 119.15(6)(a), F.S. The specified questions are: 
 What specific records or meetings are affected by the exemption? 
 Whom does the exemption uniquely affect, as opposed to the general public? 
 What is the identifiable public purpose or goal of the exemption?  
 Can the information contained in the records or discussed in the meeting be readily obtained by alternative means? 
If so, how?  BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 4 
 
 
If, in reenacting an exemption or repealing the sunset date, the exemption is expanded, then a 
public necessity statement and a two-thirds vote for passage are again required.
24
 If the 
exemption is reenacted or saved from repeal without substantive changes or if the exemption is 
narrowed, then a public necessity statement and a two-thirds vote for passage are not required. If 
the Legislature allows an exemption to expire, the previously exempt records will remain exempt 
unless otherwise provided by law.
25
 
 
The Code of Ethics for Public Officers and Employees 
The Code of Ethics for Public Officers and Employees (Code of Ethics)
26
 establishes ethical 
standards for public officials and is intended to “ensure that public officials conduct themselves 
independently and impartially, not using their office for private gain other than compensation 
provided by law.”
27
 The Code of Ethics pertains to various ethical issues, such as ethics 
trainings, voting conflicts, full and public disclosure of financial interests, standards of conduct, 
and the Commission on Ethics (commission).
28
  
 
Commission on Ethics 
The State Constitution requires the creation of an independent commission to conduct 
investigations and make public reports on all complaints concerning breach of public trust by 
public officers or employees not within jurisdiction of the judicial qualifications commission.
29
 
The commission was created by the Legislature in 1974 “to serve as guardian of the standards of 
conduct” for state and local public officials and employees.
30
 In addition to its constitutional 
duties, the commission, in part:  
 Renders advisory opinions to public officials.
31
 
 Makes recommendations to disciplinary officials when appropriate for violations of ethics 
and disclosure laws.
32
 
 Administers the executive branch lobbying registration and reporting law.
33
 
 Maintains financial disclosure fillings of constitutional officers and state officers and 
employees.
34
 
                                                
 Is the record or meeting protected by another exemption? 
 Are there multiple exemptions for the same type of record or meeting that it would be appropriate to merge? 
24
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(c).  
25
 Section 119.15(7), F.S.  
26
 See Pt. III, Ch. 112, F.S.; see also Art. II, s. 8(h)(1), FLA. CONST.  
27
 Florida Commission on Ethics, Guide to the Sunshine Amendment and Code of Ethics for Public Officers and Employees, 
available at http://www.ethics.state.fl.us/Documents/Publications/GuideBookletInternet.pdf (last visited November 15, 
2023).  
28
 See Pt. III, Ch. 112, F.S.  
29
 Article III, s. 8(g), FLA. CONST.  
30
 Florida Commission on Ethics, Guide to the Sunshine Amendment and Code of Ethics for Public Officers and Employees, 
available at http://www.ethics.state.fl.us/Documents/Publications/GuideBookletInternet.pdf (last visited November 15, 
2023); see also s. 112.320, F.S.  
31
 Section 112.322(3)(a), F.S.  
32
 Section 112.322(2)(b), F.S. 
33
 Sections 112.3215 and 112.32155, F.S.  
34
 Section 112.3144, F.S.   BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 5 
 
 Administers automatic fines for public offices and employees who fail to timely file required 
annual financial disclosure.
35
 
 
Disclosure of Financial Interests  
The State Constitution requires elected constitutional officers, candidates for such offices, and 
statewide elected officers to file “full and public disclosure of their financial interests.”
36
 Other 
public officers, candidates, and public employees may be required to file a full and public 
disclosure of their financial interests as determined by law.
37
  
 
The term “full and public disclosure of financial interests” means the reporting individual must 
disclose his or her net worth and the value of each asset and liability in excess of $1,000.
38
 The 
disclosure must be accompanied by either a copy of the filer’s most recent federal income tax 
return or a sworn statement that identifies each separate source and amount of income that 
exceeds $1,000.
39
 The commission has created by rule CE Form 6 (Form 6) to be used to make 
the required full and public financial disclosure.
40
 
 
Currently, individuals holding the following positions must file Form 6:
41
 
 Governor. 
 Lieutenant Governor. 
 Cabinet members. 
 Legislators. 
 State attorneys. 
 Public defenders. 
 Clerks of circuit court. 
 Sheriffs. 
 Tax collectors. 
 Property appraisers. 
 Supervisors of elections. 
 County commissioners. 
 Mayors and elected members of a municipal governing body.  
 Each Member on the Commission of Ethics.  
 Elected Superintendents of schools. 
 District school board members.  
 Jacksonville City Council members, including the mayor.  
 Judges of compensation claims.  
                                                
35
 Section 112.31455, F.S.; see also Florida Commission on Ethics, Guide to the Sunshine Amendment and Code of Ethics for 
Public Officers and Employees, available at http://www.ethics.state.fl.us/Documents/Publications/GuideBookletInternet.pdf 
(last visited November 15, 2023).  
36
 Article II, s. 8(a), FLA. CONST. 
37
 See s. 112.3144(1), F.S.  
38
 Article II, s. 8(j)(1), FLA. CONST.  
39
 Id.; see also s. 112.3144, F.S.  
40
 Section 112.3144(8), F.S.; see also r. 34-7.010, F.A.C.  
41
 Rule 34-8.003, F.A.C.; see also Commission on Ethics, Filing Information, available at  
https://www.ethics.state.fl.us/Documents/Forms/Form1.html#form_6 (last visited November 15, 2023).  BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 6 
 
 Duval County Superintendent of Schools.  
 Florida Housing Finance Corporation board members.  
 Each member of a large-hub commercial service airport. 
 Each member of an expressway authority, a transportation authority (except the Jacksonville 
Transportation Authority), a bridge authority, or a toll authority created pursuant to chapter 
348 or Chapter 343, F.S., or any other general law.  
 
Reporting individuals must file Form 6 annually with the commission by 11:59 p.m. on July 1.
42
 
Additionally, candidates for a constitutional office must make a full and public disclosure of  
their financial interests at the time of qualifying.  
 
Current law requires a less detailed disclosure of financial interests using the commission’s CE 
Form 1 (Form 1) for certain local officers, including certain officers holding elected positions in 
political subdivisions of the state, as well as specified appointive officers.
43
 Other persons filing 
Form 1 include specified state officers and employees as well as persons seeking to qualify as 
candidates for state or local office.
44
 
 
Form 1 requires those individual to disclose their primary sources of income, other than their 
public position, secondary sources of income, real property, intangible personal property, 
liabilities, and interests in specific businesses.
45
 
 
Although no specified dollar values of incomes, property or liabilities are required to be reported, 
the filer must report which assets or liabilities exceed certain dollar thresholds.
46
 Form 1 filers 
must disclose all sources of income in excess of $2,500, excluding public salary, all sources of 
income from a business entity that the filers had a material interest in where their gross income 
was in excess of $5,000 and in excess of 10 percent of the business’ gross income. Form 1 filers 
must also disclose any property, except for their residence or vacation home, in which the person 
owns more than five percent of the value of the property, as well as any intangible property in 
excess of $10,000 and any liability in excess of $10,000.
47
 Form 1 must be filed annually with 
the commission by 11:59 p.m. on July 1.
48
  
 
Electronic Financial Disclosure 
In 2015, the commission began the process of implementing an electronic filing system for 
financial disclosures.
49
 That system was procured and testing began in 2022.
50
 Form 6 filers 
began filing electronically as of January 1, 2023.
51
 Form 1 filers will beginning filing using the 
electronic filing system as of January 1, 2024.
52
 
                                                
42
 Section 112.3144(8)(d), F.S.  
43
 Section 112.3145, F.S.  
44
 Id.  
45
 Id.  
46
 Section 112.3145(3), F.S.  
47
 Section 112.3145(3)(b), F.S.  
48
 Section 112.3145(2)(b), F.S.  
49
 Section 112.31445, F.S.  
50
 Section 112.31446(2), F.S.  
51
 Section 112.3144(8)(b)2., F.S.  
52
 Section 112.3145(2)(e), F.S.   BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 7 
 
 
Public Record Exemption under Review 
In 2019, the Legislature created two public records exemptions to facilitate the use of the 
electronic financial disclosure system.
53
 The first exemption protects all secure login credentials 
held by the commission for the purpose of allowing access to the electronic financial disclosure 
filing system. The second exemption protects information entered into the system prior to 
submission for the purpose of making the disclosure.
54
 Once information entered into the system 
is submitted to the commission or filed with a qualifying officer, the information loses its exempt 
status and becomes public.
55
 
 
The 2019 public necessity statement
56
 provides that: 
 
The Legislature finds that the public’s need for access to information 
included in the full and public disclosures of financial interests or 
statements of financial interests filed by reporting individuals be balanced 
with the filer’s interest in safeguarding personally sensitive information. 
The Legislature further finds that the unemotional publication of such 
information may subject the filer to identity theft, financial harm, or other 
adverse impacts.
57
  
 
Pursuant to the OGSR Act, the exemptions will repeal on October 2, 2024, unless reenacted by 
the Legislature.  
 
During the 2023 interim, House and Senate staff met with commission staff regarding the public 
record exemptions under review. Commission staff emphasized the importance of the 
exemptions as it protects secure login credentials to the electronic filing system itself as well as 
personally sensitive information that may subject the filer to identity theft, financial harm, or 
other adverse impacts if not protected. Therefore, commission staff recommended the 
exemptions be reenacted as is.  
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
The bill removes the scheduled repeal date of the public record exemptions, thereby maintaining 
the public record exemptions for all secure login credentials used to access the electronic 
financial disclosure filing system, as well as information entered into the system for the purpose 
of making disclosure prior to submission.  
 
The bill takes effect October 1, 2024. 
                                                
53
 Section 112.31446(6), F.S.  
54
 Section 112.31446(6)(a), F.S.  
55
 Section 112.31446(6)(b), F.S.  
56
 Article I, s. 24(c), FLA. CONST., requires each public record exemption to “state with specificity the necessity justifying 
the exemption.” 
57
 Chapter 2019-40, L.O.F.  BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 8 
 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
Vote Requirement 
Article I, s. 24(c) of the State Constitution requires a two-thirds vote of the members 
present and voting for final passage of a bill creating or expanding an exemption to the 
public records requirements. This bill does not create or expand an exemption, so it does 
not require a two-thirds vote for enactment. 
 
Public Necessity Statement 
Article I, s. 24(c) of the State Constitution requires a bill creating or expanding an 
exemption to the public records requirements to state with specificity the public necessity 
justifying the exemption. This bill does not create or expand an exemption, so it does not 
require a public necessity statement. 
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: 
None.  BILL: SPB 7012   	Page 9 
 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
 This bill substantially amends section 112.31446, Florida Statutes.  
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.