Florida Senate - 2015                                     SB 180
       
       
        
       By Senator Evers
       
       
       
       
       
       2-00311-15                                             2015180__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to school safety; providing
    3         legislative intent; amending s. 790.115, F.S.;
    4         permitting a school superintendent, with approval of
    5         the school board, to authorize a school safety
    6         designee to carry a concealed weapon or firearm on
    7         school property; providing requirements for school
    8         safety designees; providing exceptions to the
    9         prohibition on possession of firearms or other
   10         specified devices on school property; providing for
   11         fingerprint processing and retention; requiring that
   12         fees shall be borne by the school safety designee or
   13         school; requiring the Criminal Justice Standards and
   14         Training Commission to develop a school safety
   15         program; amending s. 1006.07, F.S.; requiring school
   16         boards to formulate policies and procedures for
   17         managing active-shooter and hostage situations;
   18         requiring that active-shooter procedures for each
   19         school be developed in consultation with local law
   20         enforcement agencies; requiring that district school
   21         boards and private schools allow campus tours by local
   22         law enforcement agencies for specified purposes;
   23         requiring that all recommendations be documented;
   24         amending s. 1006.12, F.S.; permitting district school
   25         boards to commission one or more school safety
   26         officers on each school campus; amending ss. 435.04,
   27         790.251, 921.0022, and 1012.315, F.S.; conforming
   28         cross-references; providing an appropriation;
   29         providing an effective date.
   30          
   31  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   32  
   33         Section 1. It is the intent of the Legislature to prevent
   34  violent crimes from occurring on school grounds. The Legislature
   35  acknowledges that the safekeeping of our students, teachers, and
   36  campuses is imperative. In addition, the Legislature’s intent is
   37  not to mandate that a school have one or more school safety
   38  designees as described in the amendments made by this act to s.
   39  790.115, Florida Statutes; rather, the intent of the amendments
   40  is to allow a district school board to develop policies
   41  consistent with chapter 790, Florida Statutes.
   42         Section 2. Section 790.115, Florida Statutes, is amended to
   43  read:
   44         790.115 Possessing or discharging weapons or firearms at a
   45  school-sponsored event or on school property prohibited;
   46  penalties; exceptions.—
   47         (1) As used in this section, the term “school” means a
   48  preschool, elementary school, middle school, junior high school,
   49  secondary school, adult education facility, career center, or
   50  postsecondary school, whether public or nonpublic, or any
   51  combination of such schools, facilities, or centers.
   52         (2)(1) A person who exhibits any sword, sword cane,
   53  firearm, electric weapon or device, destructive device, or other
   54  weapon as defined in s. 790.001(13), including a razor blade,
   55  box cutter, or common pocketknife, except as authorized in
   56  support of school-sanctioned activities, in the presence of one
   57  or more persons in a rude, careless, angry, or threatening
   58  manner and not in lawful self-defense, at a school-sponsored
   59  event or on the grounds or facilities of any school, school bus,
   60  or school bus stop, or within 1,000 feet of the real property
   61  that comprises a public or private elementary school, middle
   62  school, or secondary school, during school hours or during the
   63  time of a sanctioned school activity, commits a felony of the
   64  third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
   65  or s. 775.084. This subsection does not apply to the exhibition
   66  of a firearm or weapon on private real property within 1,000
   67  feet of a school by the owner of such property or by a person
   68  whose presence on such property has been authorized, licensed,
   69  or invited by the owner.
   70         (3)(a) A school superintendent, with approval of the school
   71  board, may authorize a school safety designee to carry a
   72  concealed weapon or firearm on school property. For purposes of
   73  this subsection, a school safety designee is an individual who
   74  is a school district employee or volunteer who is licensed to
   75  carry a concealed weapon or firearm pursuant to s. 790.06 and
   76  who is:
   77         1. A military veteran who was honorably discharged and who
   78  has not been found to have committed a firearms-related
   79  disciplinary infraction during his or her service;
   80         2. An active duty member of the military, the National
   81  Guard, or military reserves who has not been found to have
   82  committed a firearms-related disciplinary infraction during his
   83  or her service; or
   84         3. An active law enforcement officer in good standing or a
   85  law enforcement officer who retired or terminated employment in
   86  good standing and did not retire or terminate employment during
   87  the course of an internal affairs investigation.
   88         (b) A school safety designee authorized to carry a
   89  concealed weapon or firearm on school property under this
   90  subsection may only carry such weapon or firearm in a concealed
   91  manner. The weapon or firearm must be carried on the school
   92  safety designee’s person at all times while the school safety
   93  designee is performing his or her official school duties or, if
   94  the school safety designee is a volunteer, while performing his
   95  or her official school duties under this program.
   96         (c) A school board that approves the use of a school safety
   97  designee shall develop policies consistent with this section to
   98  incorporate in its overall school safety plan. A school
   99  principal may recommend school safety designees to the school
  100  superintendent under this subsection. The school superintendent
  101  may designate individuals to serve as school safety designees
  102  who agree to accept the designation. If a superintendent
  103  designates one or more individuals pursuant to this section, the
  104  school district shall coordinate with each local law enforcement
  105  agency that may potentially respond to an emergency at a school
  106  in which a school safety designee is employed or volunteers to
  107  develop best practices and to allow the responding law
  108  enforcement agency to easily identify a school safety designee
  109  in a case of emergency. In the case of an emergency, a school
  110  safety designee shall be under the direction of the assigned
  111  school resource officer, if any. Upon the arrival of the local
  112  responding law enforcement agency, the school safety designee
  113  shall be under the direction of the responding law enforcement
  114  agency.
  115         (d) Each school safety designee must submit to the school
  116  superintendent proof of completion of a school safety program.
  117  The school safety program shall be created and defined by the
  118  Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission and may
  119  include, but is not limited to, active-shooter training, firearm
  120  proficiency, school resource officer training, crisis
  121  intervention training, weapons retention training, and
  122  continuing education and training. The school safety program
  123  shall be developed and created by January 1, 2016. The school
  124  safety program shall be administered by criminal justice
  125  training centers operated by the State of Florida. Each state
  126  operated criminal justice training center that administers the
  127  school safety program must certify and provide proof of
  128  completion of the program in a manner prescribed by the Criminal
  129  Justice Standards and Training Commission.
  130         (e) School property at which a school safety designee may
  131  carry a concealed weapon or firearm under this subsection may be
  132  indicated with signage that reads: “Authorized Armed Defense
  133  Present and Permitted.”
  134         (f) Subsection (4) does not apply to school safety
  135  designees who are working or volunteering at the school to which
  136  they are assigned as school safety designees. A school safety
  137  designee who stores or leaves a weapon or firearm within the
  138  reach or easy access of a minor who obtains the firearm commits
  139  a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s.
  140  775.082 or s. 775.083.
  141         (g)1. If the school safety designee has not previously
  142  undergone level 2 background screening pursuant to s. 435.04 by
  143  the school board, the school superintendent must require the
  144  school safety designee to undergo the level 2 background
  145  screening pursuant to s. 435.04 at least once every 5 years. The
  146  school superintendent may require additional screenings at any
  147  time.
  148         2. If the school safety designee is screened pursuant to
  149  subparagraph 1., the school safety designee’s fingerprints must
  150  be submitted by the school or an entity or vendor as authorized
  151  by s. 943.053(13). The fingerprints shall be forwarded to the
  152  Department of Law Enforcement for state processing, and the
  153  Department of Law Enforcement shall forward the fingerprints to
  154  the Federal Bureau of Investigation for national processing.
  155         3. All fingerprints submitted to the Department of Law
  156  Enforcement as required under this subsection shall be retained
  157  by the Department of Law Enforcement as provided under s.
  158  943.05(2)(g) and (h) and enrolled in the Federal Bureau of
  159  Investigation’s national retained print arrest notification
  160  program. Fingerprints shall be enrolled in the national retained
  161  print arrest notification program when the Department of Law
  162  Enforcement begins participation with the Federal Bureau of
  163  Investigation. Arrest fingerprints shall be searched against the
  164  retained prints by the Department of Law Enforcement and the
  165  Federal Bureau of Investigation, and any arrest record that is
  166  identified shall be reported to the school by the Department of
  167  Law Enforcement.
  168         4. The fees for state and national fingerprint processing,
  169  along with the fingerprint retention fees, shall be borne by the
  170  school safety designee or school. The state shall pay the cost
  171  for fingerprint processing as authorized in s. 943.053(3)(b) for
  172  records provided to persons or entities other than those
  173  specified as exceptions therein.
  174         5. A school superintendent shall notify the Department of
  175  Law Enforcement regarding any person whose fingerprints have
  176  been retained but who is no longer a school safety designee.
  177         (4)(2)(a) A person shall not possess any firearm, electric
  178  weapon or device, destructive device, or other weapon as defined
  179  in s. 790.001(13), including a razor blade or box cutter, except
  180  as authorized in support of school-sanctioned activities, at a
  181  school-sponsored event or on the property of any school, school
  182  bus, or school bus stop; however, a person may carry a firearm:
  183         1. In a case to a firearms program, class or function which
  184  has been approved in advance by the principal or chief
  185  administrative officer of the school as a program or class to
  186  which firearms could be carried;
  187         2. In a case to a career center having a firearms training
  188  range; or
  189         3. In a vehicle pursuant to s. 790.25(5); except that
  190  school districts may adopt written and published policies that
  191  waive the exception in this subparagraph for purposes of student
  192  and campus parking privileges.
  193  
  194  For the purposes of this section, “school” means any preschool,
  195  elementary school, middle school, junior high school, secondary
  196  school, career center, or postsecondary school, whether public
  197  or nonpublic.
  198         (b) A person who willfully and knowingly possesses any
  199  electric weapon or device, destructive device, or other weapon
  200  as defined in s. 790.001(13), including a razor blade or box
  201  cutter, except as authorized in support of school-sanctioned
  202  activities, in violation of this subsection commits a felony of
  203  the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s.
  204  775.083, or s. 775.084.
  205         (c)1. A person who willfully and knowingly possesses any
  206  firearm in violation of this subsection commits a felony of the
  207  third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
  208  or s. 775.084.
  209         2. A person who stores or leaves a loaded firearm within
  210  the reach or easy access of a minor who obtains the firearm and
  211  commits a violation of subparagraph 1. commits a misdemeanor of
  212  the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s.
  213  775.083; except that this does not apply if the firearm was
  214  stored or left in a securely locked box or container or in a
  215  location which a reasonable person would have believed to be
  216  secure, or was securely locked with a firearm-mounted push
  217  button combination lock or a trigger lock; if the minor obtains
  218  the firearm as a result of an unlawful entry by any person; or
  219  to members of the Armed Forces, National Guard, or State
  220  Militia, or to police or other law enforcement officers, with
  221  respect to firearm possession by a minor which occurs during or
  222  incidental to the performance of their official duties.
  223         (d) A person who discharges any weapon or firearm while in
  224  violation of paragraph (a), unless discharged for lawful defense
  225  of himself or herself or another or for a lawful purpose,
  226  commits a felony of the second degree, punishable as provided in
  227  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  228         (e) The penalties of this subsection shall not apply to
  229  persons licensed under s. 790.06. Persons licensed under s.
  230  790.06 shall be punished as provided in s. 790.06(12), except
  231  that a licenseholder who unlawfully discharges a weapon or
  232  firearm on school property as prohibited by this subsection
  233  commits a felony of the second degree, punishable as provided in
  234  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  235         (5)(3) This section does not apply to any law enforcement
  236  officer as defined in s. 943.10(1), (2), (3), (4), (6), (7),
  237  (8), (9), or (14).
  238         (6)(4) Notwithstanding s. 985.24, s. 985.245, or s.
  239  985.25(1), any minor under 18 years of age who is charged under
  240  this section with possessing or discharging a firearm on school
  241  property shall be detained in secure detention, unless the state
  242  attorney authorizes the release of the minor, and shall be given
  243  a probable cause hearing within 24 hours after being taken into
  244  custody. At the hearing, the court may order that the minor
  245  continue to be held in secure detention for a period of 21 days,
  246  during which time the minor shall receive medical, psychiatric,
  247  psychological, or substance abuse examinations pursuant to s.
  248  985.18, and a written report shall be completed.
  249         Section 3. Subsections (4) and (6) of section 1006.07,
  250  Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (7) is added to
  251  that section, to read:
  252         1006.07 District school board duties relating to student
  253  discipline and school safety.—The district school board shall
  254  provide for the proper accounting for all students, for the
  255  attendance and control of students at school, and for proper
  256  attention to health, safety, and other matters relating to the
  257  welfare of students, including:
  258         (4) EMERGENCY DRILLS; EMERGENCY PROCEDURES.—
  259         (a) Formulate and prescribe policies and procedures for
  260  emergency drills and for actual emergencies, including, but not
  261  limited to, fires, natural disasters, active shooters, hostage
  262  situations, and bomb threats, for all the public schools of the
  263  district which comprise grades K-12. District school board
  264  policies shall include commonly used alarm system responses for
  265  specific types of emergencies and verification by each school
  266  that drills have been provided as required by law and fire
  267  protection codes. The emergency response agency that is
  268  responsible for notifying the school district for each type of
  269  emergency must be listed in the district’s emergency response
  270  policy.
  271         (b) Establish model emergency management and emergency
  272  preparedness procedures, including emergency notification
  273  procedures pursuant to paragraph (a), for the following life
  274  threatening emergencies:
  275         1. Weapon-use, and hostage, and active-shooter situations.
  276  The active-shooter situation procedures for each school shall be
  277  developed in consultation with a local law enforcement agency.
  278         2. Hazardous materials or toxic chemical spills.
  279         3. Weather emergencies, including hurricanes, tornadoes,
  280  and severe storms.
  281         4. Exposure as a result of a manmade emergency.
  282         (6) SAFETY AND SECURITY BEST PRACTICES.—Use the Safety and
  283  Security Best Practices developed by the Office of Program
  284  Policy Analysis and Government Accountability to conduct a self
  285  assessment of the school districts’ current safety and security
  286  practices. Based on these self-assessment findings, the district
  287  school superintendent shall provide recommendations to the
  288  district school board and local law enforcement agencies that
  289  are first responders to the district campuses which identify
  290  strategies and activities that the district school board should
  291  implement in order to improve school safety and security.
  292  Annually each district school board must receive the self
  293  assessment results at a publicly noticed district school board
  294  meeting to provide the public an opportunity to hear the
  295  district school board members discuss and take action on the
  296  report findings. Each district school superintendent shall
  297  report the self-assessment results and school board action to
  298  the commissioner within 30 days after the district school board
  299  meeting.
  300         (7) SAFETY IN CONSTRUCTION AND PLANNING.—A district school
  301  board or private school principal or governing board must allow
  302  local law enforcement agencies that are first responders to the
  303  schools to tour the school campuses at least once every 3 years.
  304  Any changes related to school safety and emergency issues
  305  recommended by a law enforcement agency based on a campus tour
  306  must be documented by the district school board or the private
  307  school principal or governing board.
  308         Section 4. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
  309  1006.12, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  310         1006.12 School resource officers and school safety
  311  officers.—
  312         (2)
  313         (b) A district school board may commission one or more
  314  school safety officers for the protection and safety of school
  315  personnel, property, and students on each school campus within
  316  the school district. The district school superintendent may
  317  recommend and the district school board may appoint the one or
  318  more school safety officers.
  319         Section 5. Paragraphs (q) and (r) of subsection (2) of
  320  section 435.04, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  321         435.04 Level 2 screening standards.—
  322         (2) The security background investigations under this
  323  section must ensure that no persons subject to the provisions of
  324  this section have been arrested for and are awaiting final
  325  disposition of, have been found guilty of, regardless of
  326  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to,
  327  or have been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been
  328  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any of the
  329  following provisions of state law or similar law of another
  330  jurisdiction:
  331         (q) Section 790.115(2) 790.115(1), relating to exhibiting
  332  firearms or weapons within 1,000 feet of a school.
  333         (r) Section 790.115(4)(b) 790.115(2)(b), relating to
  334  possessing an electric weapon or device, destructive device, or
  335  other weapon on school property.
  336         Section 6. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section
  337  790.251, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  338         790.251 Protection of the right to keep and bear arms in
  339  motor vehicles for self-defense and other lawful purposes;
  340  prohibited acts; duty of public and private employers; immunity
  341  from liability; enforcement.—
  342         (7) EXCEPTIONS.—The prohibitions in subsection (4) do not
  343  apply to:
  344         (a) Any school property as defined in s. 790.115(1) and
  345  regulated under that section s. 790.115.
  346         Section 7. Paragraphs (d) and (f) of subsection (3) of
  347  section 921.0022, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  348         921.0022 Criminal Punishment Code; offense severity ranking
  349  chart.—
  350         (3) OFFENSE SEVERITY RANKING CHART
  351         (d) LEVEL 4
  352  
  353  
  354  FloridaStatute    FelonyDegree           Description            
  355  316.1935(3)(a)       2nd   Driving at high speed or with wanton disregard for safety while fleeing or attempting to elude law enforcement officer who is in a patrol vehicle with siren and lights activated.
  356  499.0051(1)          3rd   Failure to maintain or deliver pedigree papers.
  357  499.0051(2)          3rd   Failure to authenticate pedigree papers.
  358  499.0051(6)          2nd   Knowing sale or delivery, or possession with intent to sell, contraband prescription drugs.
  359  517.07(1)            3rd   Failure to register securities.   
  360  517.12(1)            3rd   Failure of dealer, associated person, or issuer of securities to register.
  361  784.07(2)(b)         3rd   Battery of law enforcement officer, firefighter, etc.
  362  784.074(1)(c)        3rd   Battery of sexually violent predators facility staff.
  363  784.075              3rd   Battery on detention or commitment facility staff.
  364  784.078              3rd   Battery of facility employee by throwing, tossing, or expelling certain fluids or materials.
  365  784.08(2)(c)         3rd   Battery on a person 65 years of age or older.
  366  784.081(3)           3rd   Battery on specified official or employee.
  367  784.082(3)           3rd   Battery by detained person on visitor or other detainee.
  368  784.083(3)           3rd   Battery on code inspector.        
  369  784.085              3rd   Battery of child by throwing, tossing, projecting, or expelling certain fluids or materials.
  370  787.03(1)            3rd   Interference with custody; wrongly takes minor from appointed guardian.
  371  787.04(2)            3rd   Take, entice, or remove child beyond state limits with criminal intent pending custody proceedings.
  372  787.04(3)            3rd   Carrying child beyond state lines with criminal intent to avoid producing child at custody hearing or delivering to designated person.
  373  787.07               3rd   Human smuggling.                  
  374  790.115(2) 790.115(1)   3rd   Exhibiting firearm or weapon within 1,000 feet of a school.
  375  790.115(4)(b) 790.115(2)(b)   3rd   Possessing electric weapon or device, destructive device, or other weapon on school property.
  376  790.115(4)(c) 790.115(2)(c)   3rd   Possessing firearm on school property.
  377  800.04(7)(c)         3rd   Lewd or lascivious exhibition; offender less than 18 years.
  378  810.02(4)(a)         3rd   Burglary, or attempted burglary, of an unoccupied structure; unarmed; no assault or battery.
  379  810.02(4)(b)         3rd   Burglary, or attempted burglary, of an unoccupied conveyance; unarmed; no assault or battery.
  380  810.06               3rd   Burglary; possession of tools.    
  381  810.08(2)(c)         3rd   Trespass on property, armed with firearm or dangerous weapon.
  382  812.014(2)(c)3.      3rd   Grand theft, 3rd degree $10,000 or more but less than $20,000.
  383  812.014 (2)(c)4.-10.   3rd   Grand theft, 3rd degree, a will, firearm, motor vehicle, livestock, etc.
  384  812.0195(2)          3rd   Dealing in stolen property by use of the Internet; property stolen $300 or more.
  385  817.563(1)           3rd   Sell or deliver substance other than controlled substance agreed upon, excluding s. 893.03(5) drugs.
  386  817.568(2)(a)        3rd   Fraudulent use of personal identification information.
  387  817.625(2)(a)        3rd   Fraudulent use of scanning device or reencoder.
  388  828.125(1)           2nd   Kill, maim, or cause great bodily harm or permanent breeding disability to any registered horse or cattle.
  389  837.02(1)            3rd   Perjury in official proceedings.  
  390  837.021(1)           3rd   Make contradictory statements in official proceedings.
  391  838.022              3rd   Official misconduct.              
  392  839.13(2)(a)         3rd   Falsifying records of an individual in the care and custody of a state agency.
  393  839.13(2)(c)         3rd   Falsifying records of the Department of Children and Families.
  394  843.021              3rd   Possession of a concealed handcuff key by a person in custody.
  395  843.025              3rd   Deprive law enforcement, correctional, or correctional probation officer of means of protection or communication.
  396  843.15(1)(a)         3rd   Failure to appear while on bail for felony (bond estreature or bond jumping).
  397  847.0135(5)(c)       3rd   Lewd or lascivious exhibition using computer; offender less than 18 years.
  398  874.05(1)(a)         3rd   Encouraging or recruiting another to join a criminal gang.
  399  893.13(2)(a)1.       2nd   Purchase of cocaine (or other s. 893.03(1)(a), (b), or (d), (2)(a), (2)(b), or (2)(c)4. drugs).
  400  914.14(2)            3rd   Witnesses accepting bribes.       
  401  914.22(1)            3rd   Force, threaten, etc., witness, victim, or informant.
  402  914.23(2)            3rd   Retaliation against a witness, victim, or informant, no bodily injury.
  403  918.12               3rd   Tampering with jurors.            
  404  934.215              3rd   Use of two-way communications device to facilitate commission of a crime.
  405         (f) LEVEL 6
  406  
  407  
  408  FloridaStatute    FelonyDegree           Description            
  409  316.027(2)(b)        2nd   Leaving the scene of a crash involving serious bodily injury.
  410  316.193(2)(b)        3rd   Felony DUI, 4th or subsequent conviction.
  411  499.0051(3)          2nd   Knowing forgery of pedigree papers.
  412  499.0051(4)          2nd   Knowing purchase or receipt of prescription drug from unauthorized person.
  413  499.0051(5)          2nd   Knowing sale or transfer of prescription drug to unauthorized person.
  414  775.0875(1)          3rd   Taking firearm from law enforcement officer.
  415  784.021(1)(a)        3rd   Aggravated assault; deadly weapon without intent to kill.
  416  784.021(1)(b)        3rd   Aggravated assault; intent to commit felony.
  417  784.041              3rd   Felony battery; domestic battery by strangulation.
  418  784.048(3)           3rd   Aggravated stalking; credible threat.
  419  784.048(5)           3rd   Aggravated stalking of person under 16.
  420  784.07(2)(c)         2nd   Aggravated assault on law enforcement officer.
  421  784.074(1)(b)        2nd   Aggravated assault on sexually violent predators facility staff.
  422  784.08(2)(b)         2nd   Aggravated assault on a person 65 years of age or older.
  423  784.081(2)           2nd   Aggravated assault on specified official or employee.
  424  784.082(2)           2nd   Aggravated assault by detained person on visitor or other detainee.
  425  784.083(2)           2nd   Aggravated assault on code inspector.
  426  787.02(2)            3rd   False imprisonment; restraining with purpose other than those in s. 787.01.
  427  790.115(4)(d) 790.115(2)(d)   2nd   Discharging firearm or weapon on school property.
  428  790.161(2)           2nd   Make, possess, or throw destructive device with intent to do bodily harm or damage property.
  429  790.164(1)           2nd   False report of deadly explosive, weapon of mass destruction, or act of arson or violence to state property.
  430  790.19               2nd   Shooting or throwing deadly missiles into dwellings, vessels, or vehicles.
  431  794.011(8)(a)        3rd   Solicitation of minor to participate in sexual activity by custodial adult.
  432  794.05(1)            2nd   Unlawful sexual activity with specified minor.
  433  800.04(5)(d)         3rd   Lewd or lascivious molestation; victim 12 years of age or older but less than 16 years of age; offender less than 18 years.
  434  800.04(6)(b)         2nd   Lewd or lascivious conduct; offender 18 years of age or older.
  435  806.031(2)           2nd   Arson resulting in great bodily harm to firefighter or any other person.
  436  810.02(3)(c)         2nd   Burglary of occupied structure; unarmed; no assault or battery.
  437  810.145(8)(b)        2nd   Video voyeurism; certain minor victims; 2nd or subsequent offense.
  438  812.014(2)(b)1.      2nd   Property stolen $20,000 or more, but less than $100,000, grand theft in 2nd degree.
  439  812.014(6)           2nd   Theft; property stolen $3,000 or more; coordination of others.
  440  812.015(9)(a)        2nd   Retail theft; property stolen $300 or more; second or subsequent conviction.
  441  812.015(9)(b)        2nd   Retail theft; property stolen $3,000 or more; coordination of others.
  442  812.13(2)(c)         2nd   Robbery, no firearm or other weapon (strong-arm robbery).
  443  817.4821(5)          2nd   Possess cloning paraphernalia with intent to create cloned cellular telephones.
  444  825.102(1)           3rd   Abuse of an elderly person or disabled adult.
  445  825.102(3)(c)        3rd   Neglect of an elderly person or disabled adult.
  446  825.1025(3)          3rd   Lewd or lascivious molestation of an elderly person or disabled adult.
  447  825.103(3)(c)        3rd   Exploiting an elderly person or disabled adult and property is valued at less than $10,000.
  448  827.03(2)(c)         3rd   Abuse of a child.                 
  449  827.03(2)(d)         3rd   Neglect of a child.               
  450  827.071(2) & (3)     2nd   Use or induce a child in a sexual performance, or promote or direct such performance.
  451  836.05               2nd   Threats; extortion.               
  452  836.10               2nd   Written threats to kill or do bodily injury.
  453  843.12               3rd   Aids or assists person to escape. 
  454  847.011              3rd   Distributing, offering to distribute, or possessing with intent to distribute obscene materials depicting minors.
  455  847.012              3rd   Knowingly using a minor in the production of materials harmful to minors.
  456  847.0135(2)          3rd   Facilitates sexual conduct of or with a minor or the visual depiction of such conduct.
  457  914.23               2nd   Retaliation against a witness, victim, or informant, with bodily injury.
  458  944.35(3)(a)2.       3rd   Committing malicious battery upon or inflicting cruel or inhuman treatment on an inmate or offender on community supervision, resulting in great bodily harm.
  459  944.40               2nd   Escapes.                          
  460  944.46               3rd   Harboring, concealing, aiding escaped prisoners.
  461  944.47(1)(a)5.       2nd   Introduction of contraband (firearm, weapon, or explosive) into correctional facility.
  462  951.22(1)            3rd   Intoxicating drug, firearm, or weapon introduced into county facility.
  463         Section 8. Paragraphs (n) and (o) of subsection (1) of
  464  section 1012.315, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  465         1012.315 Disqualification from employment.—A person is
  466  ineligible for educator certification, and instructional
  467  personnel and school administrators, as defined in s. 1012.01,
  468  are ineligible for employment in any position that requires
  469  direct contact with students in a district school system,
  470  charter school, or private school that accepts scholarship
  471  students under s. 1002.39 or s. 1002.395, if the person,
  472  instructional personnel, or school administrator has been
  473  convicted of:
  474         (1) Any felony offense prohibited under any of the
  475  following statutes:
  476         (n) Section 790.115(2) 790.115(1), relating to exhibiting
  477  firearms or weapons at a school-sponsored event, on school
  478  property, or within 1,000 feet of a school.
  479         (o) Section 790.115(4)(b) 790.115(2)(b), relating to
  480  possessing an electric weapon or device, destructive device, or
  481  other weapon at a school-sponsored event or on school property.
  482         Section 9. For the 2015-2016 fiscal year, the sum of
  483  $157,927 in nonrecurring funds is appropriated from the General
  484  Revenue Fund to the Department of Law Enforcement for the
  485  Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission to develop
  486  the training curriculum as required by this act.
  487         Section 10. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015.