1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to ethics for public officers and |
3 | employees; amending s. 104.31, F.S.; prohibiting employees |
4 | of the state and its political subdivisions from |
5 | participating in a political campaign; amending s. |
6 | 112.313, F.S.; prohibiting certain disclosures by a former |
7 | public officer, agency employee, or local government |
8 | attorney; redefining the term "employee" to include |
9 | certain other-personal-services employees for certain |
10 | postemployment activities; providing an exemption from |
11 | provisions prohibiting conflicts in employment to a person |
12 | who, after serving on an advisory board, files a statement |
13 | with the Commission on Ethics relating to a bid or |
14 | submission; amending s. 112.3144, F.S.; specifying how |
15 | assets valued in excess of $1,000 are to be reported by a |
16 | reporting individual; amending s. 112.3145, F.S.; |
17 | requiring that a delinquency notice be sent to certain |
18 | officeholders by certified mail, return receipt requested; |
19 | revising certain filing deadlines; amending s. 112.3147, |
20 | F.S.; deleting certain provisions relating to reporting |
21 | the value of assets; amending s. 112.3148, F.S.; providing |
22 | requirements for persons who have left office or |
23 | employment as to filing a report relating to gifts; |
24 | amending s. 112.3149, F.S.; requiring that a report of |
25 | honoraria by a person who left office or employment be |
26 | filed by a specified date; amending s. 112.317, F.S.; |
27 | authorizing the commission to recommend a restitution |
28 | penalty be paid to the agency or the General Revenue Fund; |
29 | authorizing the Attorney General to recover costs for |
30 | filing suit to collect penalties and fines; deleting |
31 | provisions imposing a penalty for the disclosure of |
32 | information concerning a complaint or an investigation; |
33 | amending 112.3185, F.S.; providing additional standards |
34 | for state agency employees relating to procurement of |
35 | goods and services by a state agency; authorizing an |
36 | employee whose position was eliminated to engage in |
37 | certain contractual activities; prohibiting former |
38 | employees from certain specified activities; amending s. |
39 | 112.321, F.S.; prohibiting an individual who qualifies as |
40 | a lobbyist from serving on the commission; prohibiting a |
41 | member of the commission from lobbying any state or local |
42 | governmental entity; providing exceptions for individuals |
43 | who are members of the commission on the effective date of |
44 | the act until the expiration of their current terms; |
45 | amending s. 112.3215, F.S.; requiring the commission to |
46 | adopt a rule detailing the grounds for waiving a fine and |
47 | the procedures when a lobbyist fails to timely file his or |
48 | her report; requiring automatic suspension of a lobbyist's |
49 | registration if the fine is not timely paid; requiring the |
50 | commission to provide written notice to any lobbyist whose |
51 | registration is automatically suspended; amending s. |
52 | 112.322, F.S.; authorizing travel and per diem expenses |
53 | for certain witnesses; amending s. 914.21, F.S.; |
54 | redefining the terms "official investigation" and |
55 | "official proceeding," for purposes of provisions relating |
56 | to tampering with witnesses, to include an investigation |
57 | by the Commission on Ethics; providing an effective date. |
58 |
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59 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
60 |
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61 | Section 1. Present subsections (2) and (3) of section |
62 | 104.31, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (3) |
63 | and (4), respectively, and a new subsection (2) is added to that |
64 | section, to read: |
65 | 104.31 Political activities of state, county, and |
66 | municipal officers and employees.-- |
67 | (2) An employee of the state or any political subdivision |
68 | may not participate in any political campaign for an elective |
69 | office while on duty. |
70 | Section 2. Subsection (8), paragraph (a) of subsection |
71 | (9), paragraph (b) of subsection (12), and subsection (14) of |
72 | section 112.313, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
73 | 112.313 Standards of conduct for public officers, |
74 | employees of agencies, and local government attorneys.-- |
75 | (8) DISCLOSURE OR USE OF CERTAIN INFORMATION.--No current |
76 | or former public officer, employee of an agency, or local |
77 | government attorney shall disclose or use information not |
78 | available to members of the general public and gained by reason |
79 | of his or her official position, except for information relating |
80 | exclusively to governmental practices, for his or her personal |
81 | gain or benefit or for the personal gain or benefit of any other |
82 | person or business entity. |
83 | (9) POSTEMPLOYMENT RESTRICTIONS; STANDARDS OF CONDUCT FOR |
84 | LEGISLATORS AND LEGISLATIVE EMPLOYEES.-- |
85 | (a)1. It is the intent of the Legislature to implement by |
86 | statute the provisions of s. 8(e), Art. II of the State |
87 | Constitution relating to legislators, statewide elected |
88 | officers, appointed state officers, and designated public |
89 | employees. |
90 | 2. As used in this paragraph: |
91 | a. "Employee" means: |
92 | (I) Any person employed in the executive or legislative |
93 | branch of government holding a position in the Senior Management |
94 | Service as defined in s. 110.402 or any person holding a |
95 | position in the Selected Exempt Service as defined in s. 110.602 |
96 | or any person having authority over policy or procurement |
97 | employed by the Department of the Lottery. |
98 | (II) The Auditor General, the director of the Office of |
99 | Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, the |
100 | Sergeant at Arms and Secretary of the Senate, and the Sergeant |
101 | at Arms and Clerk of the House of Representatives. |
102 | (III) The executive director of the Legislative Committee |
103 | on Intergovernmental Relations and the executive director and |
104 | deputy executive director of the Commission on Ethics. |
105 | (IV) An executive director, staff director, or deputy |
106 | staff director of each joint committee, standing committee, or |
107 | select committee of the Legislature; an executive director, |
108 | staff director, executive assistant, analyst, or attorney of the |
109 | Office of the President of the Senate, the Office of the Speaker |
110 | of the House of Representatives, the Senate Majority Party |
111 | Office, Senate Minority Party Office, House Majority Party |
112 | Office, or House Minority Party Office; or any person, hired on |
113 | a contractual basis, having the power normally conferred upon |
114 | such persons, by whatever title. |
115 | (V) The Chancellor and Vice Chancellors of the State |
116 | University System; the general counsel to the Board of Regents; |
117 | and the president, vice presidents, and deans of each state |
118 | university. |
119 | (VI) Any person, including an other-personal-services |
120 | employee, having the power normally conferred upon the positions |
121 | referenced in this sub-subparagraph. |
122 | b. "Appointed state officer" means any member of an |
123 | appointive board, commission, committee, council, or authority |
124 | of the executive or legislative branch of state government whose |
125 | powers, jurisdiction, and authority are not solely advisory and |
126 | include the final determination or adjudication of any personal |
127 | or property rights, duties, or obligations, other than those |
128 | relative to its internal operations. |
129 | c. "State agency" means an entity of the legislative, |
130 | executive, or judicial branch of state government over which the |
131 | Legislature exercises plenary budgetary and statutory control. |
132 | 3. No member of the Legislature, appointed state officer, |
133 | or statewide elected officer shall personally represent another |
134 | person or entity for compensation before the government body or |
135 | agency of which the individual was an officer or member for a |
136 | period of 2 years following vacation of office. No member of the |
137 | Legislature shall personally represent another person or entity |
138 | for compensation during his or her term of office before any |
139 | state agency other than judicial tribunals or in settlement |
140 | negotiations after the filing of a lawsuit. |
141 | 4. No agency employee shall personally represent another |
142 | person or entity for compensation before the agency with which |
143 | he or she was employed for a period of 2 years following |
144 | vacation of position, unless employed by another agency of state |
145 | government. |
146 | 5. Any person violating this paragraph shall be subject to |
147 | the penalties provided in s. 112.317 and a civil penalty of an |
148 | amount equal to the compensation which the person receives for |
149 | the prohibited conduct. |
150 | 6. This paragraph is not applicable to: |
151 | a. A person employed by the Legislature or other agency |
152 | prior to July 1, 1989; |
153 | b. A person who was employed by the Legislature or other |
154 | agency on July 1, 1989, whether or not the person was a defined |
155 | employee on July 1, 1989; |
156 | c. A person who was a defined employee of the State |
157 | University System or the Public Service Commission who held such |
158 | employment on December 31, 1994; |
159 | d. A person who has reached normal retirement age as |
160 | defined in s. 121.021(29), and who has retired under the |
161 | provisions of chapter 121 by July 1, 1991; or |
162 | e. Any appointed state officer whose term of office began |
163 | before January 1, 1995, unless reappointed to that office on or |
164 | after January 1, 1995; or. |
165 | f. An agency employee whose position was transferred from |
166 | the Career Service System to the Selected Exempt Service System |
167 | under chapter 2001-43, Laws of Florida. |
168 | (12) EXEMPTION.--The requirements of subsections (3) and |
169 | (7) as they pertain to persons serving on advisory boards may be |
170 | waived in a particular instance by the body which appointed the |
171 | person to the advisory board, upon a full disclosure of the |
172 | transaction or relationship to the appointing body prior to the |
173 | waiver and an affirmative vote in favor of waiver by two-thirds |
174 | vote of that body. In instances in which appointment to the |
175 | advisory board is made by an individual, waiver may be effected, |
176 | after public hearing, by a determination by the appointing |
177 | person and full disclosure of the transaction or relationship by |
178 | the appointee to the appointing person. In addition, no person |
179 | shall be held in violation of subsection (3) or subsection (7) |
180 | if: |
181 | (b) The business is awarded under a system of sealed, |
182 | competitive bidding to the lowest or best bidder and: |
183 | 1. The official or the official's spouse or child has in |
184 | no way participated in the determination of the bid |
185 | specifications or the determination of the lowest or best |
186 | bidder; |
187 | 2. The official or the official's spouse or child has in |
188 | no way used or attempted to use the official's influence to |
189 | persuade the agency or any personnel thereof to enter such a |
190 | contract other than by the mere submission of the bid; and |
191 | 3. The official, prior to or at the time of the submission |
192 | of the bid, has filed a statement with the Commission on Ethics |
193 | Department of State, if the official is a state officer or |
194 | employee, or with the supervisor of elections of the county in |
195 | which the agency has its principal office, if the official is an |
196 | officer or employee of a political subdivision, disclosing the |
197 | official's interest, or the interest of the official's spouse or |
198 | child, and the nature of the intended business. |
199 | (14) LOBBYING BY FORMER LOCAL OFFICERS; PROHIBITION.--A |
200 | person who has been elected to any county, municipal, special |
201 | district, or school district office may not personally represent |
202 | another person or entity for compensation before the government |
203 | governing body or agency of which the person was an officer for |
204 | a period of 2 years after vacating that office. |
205 | Section 3. Present subsections (4), (5), and (6) of |
206 | section 112.3144, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as |
207 | subsections (5), (6), and (7), respectively, and a new |
208 | subsection (4) is added to that section, to read: |
209 | 112.3144 Full and public disclosure of financial |
210 | interests.-- |
211 | (4)(a) With respect to reporting assets valued in excess |
212 | of $1,000 on forms prescribed under this section which the |
213 | reporting individual holds jointly with another person, the |
214 | amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's |
215 | legal percentage of ownership in the property. However, assets |
216 | that are held jointly, with right of survivorship, must be |
217 | reported at 100 percent of the value of the asset. For purposes |
218 | of this subsection, a reporting individual is deemed to own a |
219 | percentage of a partnership which is equal to the reporting |
220 | individual's interest in the capital or equity of the |
221 | partnership. |
222 | (b)1. With respect to reporting liabilities valued in |
223 | excess of $1,000 on forms prescribed under this section for |
224 | which the reporting individual is jointly and severally liable, |
225 | the amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's |
226 | percentage of liability rather than the total amount of the |
227 | liability. However, liability for a debt that is secured by |
228 | property owned by the reporting individual but that is held |
229 | jointly, with right of survivorship, must be reported at 100 |
230 | percent of the total amount owed. |
231 | 2. A separate section of the form shall be created to |
232 | provide for the reporting of the amounts of joint and several |
233 | liability of the reporting individual not otherwise reported in |
234 | subparagraph 1. |
235 | Section 4. Paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of section |
236 | 112.3145, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
237 | 112.3145 Disclosure of financial interests and clients |
238 | represented before agencies.-- |
239 | (6) Forms for compliance with the disclosure requirements |
240 | of this section and a current list of persons subject to |
241 | disclosure shall be created by the commission and provided to |
242 | each supervisor of elections. The commission and each supervisor |
243 | of elections shall give notice of disclosure deadlines and |
244 | delinquencies and distribute forms in the following manner: |
245 | (c) Not later than 30 days after July 1 of each year, the |
246 | commission and each supervisor of elections shall determine |
247 | which persons required to file a statement of financial |
248 | interests in their respective offices have failed to do so and |
249 | shall send delinquency notices by certified mail, return receipt |
250 | requested, to these such persons. Each notice shall state that |
251 | a grace period is in effect until September 1 of the current |
252 | year; that no investigative or disciplinary action based upon |
253 | the delinquency will be taken by the agency head or commission |
254 | if the statement is filed by September 1 of the current year; |
255 | that, if the statement is not filed by September 1 of the |
256 | current year, a fine of $25 for each day late will be imposed, |
257 | up to a maximum penalty of $1,500; for notices sent by a |
258 | supervisor of elections, that he or she is required by law to |
259 | notify the commission of the delinquency; and that, if upon the |
260 | filing of a sworn complaint the commission finds that the person |
261 | has failed to timely file the statement within 60 days after |
262 | September 1 of the current year, such person will also be |
263 | subject to the penalties provided in s. 112.317. |
264 | Section 5. Section 112.3147, Florida Statutes, is amended |
265 | to read: |
266 | 112.3147 Forms.-- |
267 | (1) All information required to be furnished by ss. |
268 | 112.313, 112.3143, 112.3144, 112.3145, 112.3148, and 112.3149 |
269 | and by s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution shall be on forms |
270 | prescribed by the Commission on Ethics. |
271 | (2)(a) With respect to reporting assets valued in excess |
272 | of $1,000 on forms prescribed pursuant to s. 112.3144 which the |
273 | reporting individual holds jointly with another person, the |
274 | amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's |
275 | legal percentage of ownership in the property, except that |
276 | assets held jointly with the reporting individual's spouse shall |
277 | be reported at 100 percent of the value of the asset. For |
278 | purposes of this subsection, a reporting individual is deemed to |
279 | own an interest in a partnership which corresponds to the |
280 | reporting individual's interest in the capital or equity of the |
281 | partnership. |
282 | (b)1. With respect to reporting liabilities valued in |
283 | excess of $1,000 on forms prescribed pursuant to s. 112.3144 for |
284 | which the reporting individual is jointly and severally liable, |
285 | the amount reported shall be based upon the reporting |
286 | individual's percentage of liability rather than the total |
287 | amount of the liability, except, a joint and several liability |
288 | with the reporting individual's spouse for a debt which relates |
289 | to property owned by both as tenants by the entirety shall be |
290 | reported at 100 percent of the total amount owed. |
291 | 2. A separate section of the form shall be created to |
292 | provide for the reporting of the amounts of joint and several |
293 | liability of the reporting individual not otherwise reported in |
294 | paragraph (a). |
295 | Section 6. Paragraph (d) of subsection (6) and subsection |
296 | (8) of section 112.3148, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
297 | 112.3148 Reporting and prohibited receipt of gifts by |
298 | individuals filing full or limited public disclosure of |
299 | financial interests and by procurement employees.-- |
300 | (6) |
301 | (d) No later than July 1 of each year, each reporting |
302 | individual or procurement employee shall file a statement |
303 | listing each gift having a value in excess of $100 received by |
304 | the reporting individual or procurement employee, either |
305 | directly or indirectly, from a governmental entity or a direct- |
306 | support organization specifically authorized by law to support a |
307 | governmental entity. The statement shall list the name of the |
308 | person providing the gift, a description of the gift, the date |
309 | or dates on which the gift was given, and the value of the total |
310 | gifts given during the calendar year for which the report is |
311 | made. The reporting individual or procurement employee shall |
312 | attach to the such statement any report received by him or her |
313 | in accordance with paragraph (c), which report shall become a |
314 | public record when filed with the statement of the reporting |
315 | individual or procurement employee. The reporting individual or |
316 | procurement employee may explain any differences between the |
317 | report of the reporting individual or procurement employee and |
318 | the attached reports. The annual report filed by a reporting |
319 | individual shall be filed with the financial disclosure |
320 | statement required by either s. 8, Art. II of the State |
321 | Constitution or s. 112.3145, as applicable to the reporting |
322 | individual. The annual report filed by a procurement employee |
323 | shall be filed with the Commission on Ethics. The report filed |
324 | by a reporting individual or procurement employee who left |
325 | office or employment during the calendar year covered by the |
326 | report shall be filed by July 1 of the year after leaving office |
327 | or employment at the same location as his or her final financial |
328 | disclosure statement or, in the case of a former procurement |
329 | employee, with the Commission on Ethics. |
330 | (8)(a) Each reporting individual or procurement employee |
331 | shall file a statement with the Commission on Ethics not later |
332 | than on the last day of each calendar quarter, for the previous |
333 | calendar quarter, containing a list of gifts which he or she |
334 | believes to be in excess of $100 in value, if any, accepted by |
335 | him or her, for which compensation was not provided by the donee |
336 | to the donor within 90 days of receipt of the gift to reduce the |
337 | value to $100 or less, except the following: |
338 | 1. Gifts from relatives. |
339 | 2. Gifts prohibited by subsection (4) or s. 112.313(4). |
340 | 3. Gifts otherwise required to be disclosed by this |
341 | section. |
342 | (b) The statement shall include: |
343 | 1. A description of the gift, the monetary value of the |
344 | gift, the name and address of the person making the gift, and |
345 | the dates thereof. If any of these facts, other than the gift |
346 | description, are unknown or not applicable, the report shall so |
347 | state. |
348 | 2. A copy of any receipt for such gift provided to the |
349 | reporting individual or procurement employee by the donor. |
350 | (c) The statement may include an explanation of any |
351 | differences between the reporting individual's or procurement |
352 | employee's statement and the receipt provided by the donor. |
353 | (d) The reporting individual's or procurement employee's |
354 | statement shall be sworn to by such person as being a true, |
355 | accurate, and total listing of all such gifts. |
356 | (e) Statements must be filed not later than 5 p.m. of the |
357 | due date. However, any statement that is postmarked by the |
358 | United States Postal Service by midnight of the due date is |
359 | deemed to have been filed in a timely manner, and a certificate |
360 | of mailing obtained from and dated by the United States Postal |
361 | Service at the time of the mailing, or a receipt from an |
362 | established courier company which bears a date on or before the |
363 | due date, constitutes proof of mailing in a timely manner. |
364 | (f)(e) If a reporting individual or procurement employee |
365 | has not received any gifts described in paragraph (a) during a |
366 | calendar quarter, he or she is not required to file a statement |
367 | under this subsection for that calendar quarter. |
368 | Section 7. Subsection (6) of section 112.3149, Florida |
369 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
370 | 112.3149 Solicitation and disclosure of honoraria.-- |
371 | (6) A reporting individual or procurement employee who |
372 | receives payment or provision of expenses related to any |
373 | honorarium event from a person who is prohibited by subsection |
374 | (4) from paying an honorarium to a reporting individual or |
375 | procurement employee shall publicly disclose on an annual |
376 | statement the name, address, and affiliation of the person |
377 | paying or providing the expenses; the amount of the honorarium |
378 | expenses; the date of the honorarium event; a description of the |
379 | expenses paid or provided on each day of the honorarium event; |
380 | and the total value of the expenses provided to the reporting |
381 | individual or procurement employee in connection with the |
382 | honorarium event. The annual statement of honorarium expenses |
383 | shall be filed by July 1 of each year for those such expenses |
384 | received during the previous calendar year. The reporting |
385 | individual or procurement employee shall attach to the annual |
386 | statement a copy of each statement received by him or her in |
387 | accordance with subsection (5) regarding honorarium expenses |
388 | paid or provided during the calendar year for which the annual |
389 | statement is filed. The Such attached statement shall become a |
390 | public record upon the filing of the annual report. The annual |
391 | statement of a reporting individual shall be filed with the |
392 | financial disclosure statement required by either s. 8, Art. II |
393 | of the State Constitution or s. 112.3145, as applicable to the |
394 | reporting individual. The annual statement of a procurement |
395 | employee shall be filed with the Commission on Ethics. The |
396 | statement filed by a reporting individual or procurement |
397 | employee who left office or employment during the calendar year |
398 | covered by the statement shall be filed by July 1 of the year |
399 | after leaving office or employment at the same location as his |
400 | or her final financial disclosure statement or, in the case of a |
401 | former procurement employee, with the Commission on Ethics. |
402 | Section 8. Subsections (1), (2), (6), (7), and (8) of |
403 | section 112.317, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
404 | 112.317 Penalties.-- |
405 | (1) Violation of any provision of this part, including, |
406 | but not limited to, any failure to file any disclosures required |
407 | by this part or violation of any standard of conduct imposed by |
408 | this part, or violation of any provision of s. 8, Art. II of the |
409 | State Constitution, in addition to any criminal penalty or other |
410 | civil penalty involved, shall, under pursuant to applicable |
411 | constitutional and statutory procedures, constitute grounds for, |
412 | and may be punished by, one or more of the following: |
413 | (a) In the case of a public officer: |
414 | 1. Impeachment. |
415 | 2. Removal from office. |
416 | 3. Suspension from office. |
417 | 4. Public censure and reprimand. |
418 | 5. Forfeiture of no more than one-third salary per month |
419 | for no more than 12 months. |
420 | 6. A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000. |
421 | 7. Restitution of any pecuniary benefits received because |
422 | of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that |
423 | the restitution penalty be paid to the agency of which the |
424 | public officer was a member or to the General Revenue Fund. |
425 | (b) In the case of an employee or a person designated as a |
426 | public officer by this part who otherwise would be deemed to be |
427 | an employee: |
428 | 1. Dismissal from employment. |
429 | 2. Suspension from employment for not more than 90 days |
430 | without pay. |
431 | 3. Demotion. |
432 | 4. Reduction in salary level. |
433 | 5. Forfeiture of no more than one-third salary per month |
434 | for no more than 12 months. |
435 | 6. A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000. |
436 | 7. Restitution of any pecuniary benefits received because |
437 | of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that |
438 | the restitution penalty be paid to the agency by which the |
439 | public employee was employed, or of which the officer was deemed |
440 | to be an employee, or to the General Revenue Fund. |
441 | 8. Public censure and reprimand. |
442 | (c) In the case of a candidate who violates the provisions |
443 | of this part or s. 8(a) and (i), Art. II of the State |
444 | Constitution: |
445 | 1. Disqualification from being on the ballot. |
446 | 2. Public censure. |
447 | 3. Reprimand. |
448 | 4. A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000. |
449 | (d) In the case of a former public officer or employee who |
450 | has violated a provision applicable to former officers or |
451 | employees or whose violation occurred before the prior to such |
452 | officer's or employee's leaving public office or employment: |
453 | 1. Public censure and reprimand. |
454 | 2. A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000. |
455 | 3. Restitution of any pecuniary benefits received because |
456 | of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that |
457 | the restitution penalty be paid to the agency of the public |
458 | officer or employee or to the General Revenue Fund. |
459 | (2) In any case in which the commission finds a violation |
460 | of this part or of s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution and |
461 | the proper disciplinary official or body under s. 112.324 |
462 | imposes recommends a civil penalty or restitution penalty, the |
463 | Attorney General shall bring a civil action to recover such |
464 | penalty. No defense may be raised in the civil action to |
465 | enforce the civil penalty or order of restitution that could |
466 | have been raised by judicial review of the administrative |
467 | findings and recommendations of the commission by certiorari to |
468 | the district court of appeal. The Attorney General shall collect |
469 | any costs, attorney's fees, expert witness fees, or other costs |
470 | of collection incurred in bringing the action. |
471 | (6) Any person who willfully discloses, or permits to be |
472 | disclosed, his or her intention to file a complaint, the |
473 | existence or contents of a complaint which has been filed with |
474 | the commission, or any document, action, or proceeding in |
475 | connection with a confidential preliminary investigation of the |
476 | commission, before such complaint, document, action, or |
477 | proceeding becomes a public record as provided herein commits a |
478 | misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. |
479 | 775.082 or s. 775.083. |
480 | (6)(7) In any case in which the commission finds probable |
481 | cause to believe that a complainant has committed perjury in |
482 | regard to any document filed with, or any testimony given |
483 | before, the commission, it shall refer such evidence to the |
484 | appropriate law enforcement agency for prosecution and taxation |
485 | of costs. |
486 | (7)(8) In any case in which the commission determines that |
487 | a person has filed a complaint against a public officer or |
488 | employee with a malicious intent to injure the reputation of |
489 | such officer or employee by filing the complaint with knowledge |
490 | that the complaint contains one or more false allegations or |
491 | with reckless disregard for whether the complaint contains false |
492 | allegations of fact material to a violation of this part, the |
493 | complainant shall be liable for costs plus reasonable attorney's |
494 | fees incurred in the defense of the person complained against, |
495 | including the costs and reasonable attorney's fees incurred in |
496 | proving entitlement to and the amount of costs and fees. If the |
497 | complainant fails to pay such costs and fees voluntarily within |
498 | 30 days following such finding by the commission, the commission |
499 | shall forward such information to the Department of Legal |
500 | Affairs, which shall bring a civil action in a court of |
501 | competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of such costs and |
502 | fees awarded by the commission. |
503 | Section 9. Section 112.3185, Florida Statutes, is amended |
504 | to read: |
505 | 112.3185 Additional standards for state agency employees |
506 | Contractual services.-- |
507 | (1) For the purposes of this section: |
508 | (a) "Contractual services" shall be defined as set forth |
509 | in chapter 287. |
510 | (b) "Agency" means any state officer, department, board, |
511 | commission, or council of the executive or judicial branch of |
512 | state government and includes the Public Service Commission. |
513 | (2) No agency employee who participates through decision, |
514 | approval, disapproval, recommendation, preparation of any part |
515 | of a purchase request, influencing the content of any |
516 | specification or procurement standard, rendering of advice, |
517 | investigation, or auditing or in any other advisory capacity in |
518 | the procurement of contractual services shall become or be, |
519 | while an agency employee, the employee of a person contracting |
520 | with the agency by whom the employee is employed. |
521 | (3) No agency employee shall, after retirement or |
522 | termination, have or hold any employment or contractual |
523 | relationship with any business entity other than an agency in |
524 | connection with any contract in which the agency employee |
525 | participated personally and substantially through decision, |
526 | approval, disapproval, recommendation, rendering of advice, or |
527 | investigation while an officer or employee. When the agency |
528 | employee's position is eliminated and his or her duties are |
529 | performed by the business entity, this subsection does not |
530 | prohibit him or her from employment or contractual relationship |
531 | with the business entity if the employee's participation in the |
532 | contract was limited to recommendation, rendering of advice, or |
533 | investigation and if the agency head determines that the best |
534 | interests of the state will be served thereby and provides prior |
535 | written approval for the particular employee. |
536 | (4) No agency employee shall, within 2 years after |
537 | retirement or termination, have or hold any employment or |
538 | contractual relationship with any business entity other than an |
539 | agency in connection with any contract for contractual services |
540 | which was within his or her responsibility while an employee. If |
541 | the agency employee's position is eliminated and his or her |
542 | duties are performed by the business entity, the provisions of |
543 | this subsection may be waived by the agency head through prior |
544 | written approval for a particular employee if the agency head |
545 | determines that the best interests of the state will be served |
546 | thereby. |
547 | (5) The sum of money paid to a former agency employee |
548 | during the first year after the cessation of his or her |
549 | responsibilities, by the agency with whom he or she was |
550 | employed, for contractual services provided to the agency, shall |
551 | not exceed the annual salary received on the date of cessation |
552 | of his or her responsibilities. The provisions of This |
553 | subsection may be waived by the agency head for a particular |
554 | contract if the agency head determines that such waiver will |
555 | result in significant time or cost savings for the state. |
556 | (6) No agency employee shall, after retirement or |
557 | termination, represent or advise another person or entity, |
558 | except the state, in any matter in which the employee |
559 | participated personally in his or her official capacity through |
560 | decision, approval, disapproval, recommendation, rendering of |
561 | advice, investigation, or otherwise while an employee. The term |
562 | "matter" includes any judicial or other proceeding, application, |
563 | request for a ruling, or other determination, contract, claim, |
564 | controversy, investigation, charge, accusation, arrest, or other |
565 | particular action involving a specific party or parties. |
566 | (7)(6) No agency employee acting in an official capacity |
567 | shall directly or indirectly procure contractual services for |
568 | his or her own agency from any business entity of which a |
569 | relative is an officer, partner, director, or proprietor or in |
570 | which the such officer or employee or his or her spouse or |
571 | child, or any combination of them, has a material interest. |
572 | (8)(7) A violation of any provision of this section is |
573 | punishable in accordance with s. 112.317. |
574 | (9)(8) This section is not applicable to any employee of |
575 | the Public Service Commission who was so employed on or before |
576 | December 31, 1994. |
577 | Section 10. Subsection (1) of section 112.321, Florida |
578 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
579 | 112.321 Membership, terms; travel expenses; staff.-- |
580 | (1) The commission shall be composed of nine members. Five |
581 | of these members shall be appointed by the Governor, no more |
582 | than three of whom shall be from the same political party, |
583 | subject to confirmation by the Senate. One member appointed by |
584 | the Governor shall be a former city or county official and may |
585 | be a former member of a local planning or zoning board which has |
586 | only advisory duties. Two members shall be appointed by the |
587 | Speaker of the House of Representatives, and two members shall |
588 | be appointed by the President of the Senate. Neither the Speaker |
589 | of the House of Representatives nor the President of the Senate |
590 | shall appoint more than one member from the same political |
591 | party. Of the nine members of the Commission, no more than five |
592 | members shall be from the same political party at any one time. |
593 | No member may hold any public employment. An individual who |
594 | qualifies as a lobbyist pursuant to s. 11.045 or s. 112.3215 or |
595 | pursuant to any local government charter or ordinance may not |
596 | serve as a member of the commission, except that this |
597 | prohibition does not apply to an individual who is a member of |
598 | the commission on July 1, 2005, until the expiration of his or |
599 | her current term. A member of the commission may not lobby any |
600 | state or local governmental entity as provided in s. 11.045 or |
601 | s. 112.3215 or as provided by any local government charter or |
602 | ordinance, except that this prohibition does not apply to an |
603 | individual who is a member of the commission on July 1, 2005, |
604 | until the expiration of his or her current term. All members |
605 | shall serve 2-year terms. No member shall serve more than two |
606 | full terms in succession. Any member of the commission may be |
607 | removed for cause by majority vote of the Governor, the |
608 | President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of |
609 | Representatives, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. |
610 | Section 11. Paragraph (f) of subsection (5) of section |
611 | 112.3215, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
612 | 112.3215 Lobbyists before the executive branch or the |
613 | Constitution Revision Commission; registration and reporting; |
614 | investigation by commission.-- |
615 | (5) |
616 | (f) The commission shall provide by rule the grounds for |
617 | waiving a fine and the procedures a procedure by which a |
618 | lobbyist who fails to timely file a report shall be notified and |
619 | assessed fines and the procedure for appealing the fines. The |
620 | rule shall provide for the following: |
621 | 1. Upon determining that the report is late, the person |
622 | designated to review the timeliness of reports shall immediately |
623 | notify the lobbyist as to the failure to timely file the report |
624 | and that a fine is being assessed for each late day. The fine |
625 | shall be $50 per day per report for each late day up to a |
626 | maximum of $5,000 per late report. |
627 | 2. Upon receipt of the report, the person designated to |
628 | review the timeliness of reports shall determine the amount of |
629 | the fine due based upon the earliest of the following: |
630 | a. When a report is actually received by the lobbyist |
631 | registration and reporting office. |
632 | b. When the report is postmarked. |
633 | c. When the certificate of mailing is dated. |
634 | d. When the receipt from an established courier company is |
635 | dated. |
636 | 3. Such fine shall be paid within 30 days after the notice |
637 | of payment due is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration |
638 | Office, unless appeal is made to the commission. The moneys |
639 | shall be deposited into the Executive Branch Lobby Registration |
640 | Trust Fund. |
641 | 4. A fine shall not be assessed against a lobbyist the |
642 | first time any reports for which the lobbyist is responsible are |
643 | not timely filed. However, to receive the one-time fine waiver, |
644 | all reports for which the lobbyist is responsible must be filed |
645 | within 30 days after the notice that any reports have not been |
646 | timely filed is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration Office. |
647 | A fine shall be assessed for any subsequent late-filed reports. |
648 | 5. Any lobbyist may appeal or dispute a fine, based upon |
649 | unusual circumstances surrounding the failure to file on the |
650 | designated due date, and may request and shall be entitled to a |
651 | hearing before the commission, which shall have the authority to |
652 | waive the fine in whole or in part for good cause shown. Any |
653 | such request shall be made within 30 days after the notice of |
654 | payment due is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration Office. |
655 | In such case, the lobbyist shall, within the 30-day period, |
656 | notify the person designated to review the timeliness of reports |
657 | in writing of his or her intention to bring the matter before |
658 | the commission. |
659 | 6. The person designated to review the timeliness of |
660 | reports shall notify the commission of the failure of a lobbyist |
661 | to file a report after notice or of the failure of a lobbyist to |
662 | pay the fine imposed. The registration of a lobbyist who fails |
663 | to timely pay a fine is automatically suspended until the fine |
664 | is paid, unless an appeal of the fine is pending before the |
665 | commission. The commission shall provide a written suspension |
666 | notice to each lobbyist whose registration has been |
667 | automatically suspended. |
668 | 7. Notwithstanding any provision of chapter 120, any fine |
669 | imposed under this subsection that is not waived by final order |
670 | of the commission and that remains unpaid more than 60 days |
671 | after the notice of payment due or more than 60 days after the |
672 | commission renders a final order on the lobbyist's appeal shall |
673 | be collected by the Department of Financial Services as a claim, |
674 | debt, or other obligation owed to the state, and the department |
675 | may assign the collection of such fine to a collection agent as |
676 | provided in s. 17.20. |
677 | Section 12. Subsection (4) of section 112.322, Florida |
678 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
679 | 112.322 Duties and powers of commission.-- |
680 | (4) The commission has the power to subpoena, audit, and |
681 | investigate. The commission may subpoena witnesses and compel |
682 | their attendance and testimony, administer oaths and |
683 | affirmations, take evidence, and require by subpoena the |
684 | production of any books, papers, records, or other items |
685 | relevant to the performance of the duties of the commission or |
686 | to the exercise of its powers. The commission may delegate to |
687 | its investigators the authority to administer oaths and |
688 | affirmations. The commission may delegate the authority to issue |
689 | subpoenas to its chair, and may authorize its employees to serve |
690 | any subpoena issued under this section. In the case of a |
691 | refusal to obey a subpoena issued to any person, the commission |
692 | may make application to any circuit court of this state which |
693 | shall have jurisdiction to order the witness to appear before |
694 | the commission and to produce evidence, if so ordered, or to |
695 | give testimony touching on the matter in question. Failure to |
696 | obey the order may be punished by the court as contempt. |
697 | Witnesses shall be paid mileage and witnesses fees as authorized |
698 | for witnesses in civil cases, except that a witness who is |
699 | required to travel outside the county of his or her residence to |
700 | testify is entitled to per diem and travel expenses at the same |
701 | rate provided for state employees under s. 112.061, to be paid |
702 | after the witness appears. |
703 | Section 13. Subsections (3) and (4) of section 914.21, |
704 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
705 | 914.21 Definitions.--As used in ss. 914.22-914.24, the |
706 | term: |
707 | (3) "Official investigation" means any investigation |
708 | instituted by a law enforcement agency or prosecuting officer of |
709 | the state or a political subdivision of the state or the |
710 | Commission on Ethics. |
711 | (4) "Official proceeding" means: |
712 | (a) A proceeding before a judge or court or a grand jury; |
713 | (b) A proceeding before the Legislature; or |
714 | (c) A proceeding before a federal agency which is |
715 | authorized by law. |
716 | (d) A proceeding before the Commission on Ethics. |
717 | Section 14. This act shall take effect October 1, 2005. |