HB 1377

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to ethics for public officers and
3employees; amending s. 104.31, F.S.; prohibiting employees
4of the state and its political subdivisions from
5participating in a political campaign;  amending s.
6112.313, F.S.; prohibiting certain disclosures by a former
7public officer, agency employee, or local government
8attorney; redefining the term "employee" to include
9certain other-personal-services employees for certain
10postemployment activities; providing an exemption from
11provisions prohibiting conflicts in employment to a person
12who, after serving on an advisory board, files a statement
13with the Commission on Ethics relating to a bid or
14submission; amending s. 112.3144, F.S.; specifying how
15assets valued in excess of $1,000 are to be reported by a
16reporting individual; amending s. 112.3145, F.S.;
17requiring that a delinquency notice be sent to certain
18officeholders by certified mail, return receipt requested;
19revising certain filing deadlines; amending s. 112.3147,
20F.S.; deleting certain provisions relating to reporting
21the value of assets; amending s. 112.3148, F.S.; providing
22requirements for persons who have left office or
23employment as to filing a report relating to gifts;
24amending s. 112.3149, F.S.; requiring that a report of
25honoraria by a person who left office or employment be
26filed by a specified date; amending s. 112.317, F.S.;
27authorizing the commission to recommend a restitution
28penalty be paid to the agency or the General Revenue Fund;
29authorizing the Attorney General to recover costs for
30filing suit to collect penalties and fines; deleting
31provisions imposing a penalty for the disclosure of
32information concerning a complaint or an investigation;
33amending 112.3185, F.S.; providing additional standards
34for state agency employees relating to procurement of
35goods and services by a state agency; authorizing an
36employee whose position was eliminated to engage in
37certain contractual activities; prohibiting former
38employees from certain specified activities; amending s.
39112.321, F.S.; prohibiting an individual who qualifies as
40a lobbyist from serving on the commission; prohibiting a
41member of the commission from lobbying any state or local
42governmental entity; providing exceptions for individuals
43who are members of the commission on the effective date of
44the act until the expiration of their current terms;
45amending s. 112.3215, F.S.; requiring the commission to
46adopt a rule detailing the grounds for waiving a fine and
47the procedures when a lobbyist fails to timely file his or
48her report; requiring automatic suspension of a lobbyist's
49registration if the fine is not timely paid; requiring the
50commission to provide written notice to any lobbyist whose
51registration is automatically suspended; amending s.
52112.322, F.S.; authorizing travel and per diem expenses
53for certain witnesses; amending s. 914.21, F.S.;
54redefining the terms "official investigation" and
55"official proceeding," for purposes of provisions relating
56to tampering with witnesses, to include an investigation
57by the Commission on Ethics; providing an effective date.
58
59Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
60
61     Section 1.  Present subsections (2) and (3) of section
62104.31, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (3)
63and (4), respectively, and a new subsection (2) is added to that
64section, to read:
65     104.31  Political activities of state, county, and
66municipal officers and employees.--
67     (2)  An employee of the state or any political subdivision
68may not participate in any political campaign for an elective
69office while on duty.
70     Section 2.  Subsection (8), paragraph (a) of subsection
71(9), paragraph (b) of subsection (12), and subsection (14) of
72section 112.313, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
73     112.313  Standards of conduct for public officers,
74employees of agencies, and local government attorneys.--
75     (8)  DISCLOSURE OR USE OF CERTAIN INFORMATION.--No current
76or former public officer, employee of an agency, or local
77government attorney shall disclose or use information not
78available to members of the general public and gained by reason
79of his or her official position, except for information relating
80exclusively to governmental practices, for his or her personal
81gain or benefit or for the personal gain or benefit of any other
82person or business entity.
83     (9)  POSTEMPLOYMENT RESTRICTIONS; STANDARDS OF CONDUCT FOR
84LEGISLATORS AND LEGISLATIVE EMPLOYEES.--
85     (a)1.  It is the intent of the Legislature to implement by
86statute the provisions of s. 8(e), Art. II of the State
87Constitution relating to legislators, statewide elected
88officers, appointed state officers, and designated public
89employees.
90     2.  As used in this paragraph:
91     a.  "Employee" means:
92     (I)  Any person employed in the executive or legislative
93branch of government holding a position in the Senior Management
94Service as defined in s. 110.402 or any person holding a
95position in the Selected Exempt Service as defined in s. 110.602
96or any person having authority over policy or procurement
97employed by the Department of the Lottery.
98     (II)  The Auditor General, the director of the Office of
99Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, the
100Sergeant at Arms and Secretary of the Senate, and the Sergeant
101at Arms and Clerk of the House of Representatives.
102     (III)  The executive director of the Legislative Committee
103on Intergovernmental Relations and the executive director and
104deputy executive director of the Commission on Ethics.
105     (IV)  An executive director, staff director, or deputy
106staff director of each joint committee, standing committee, or
107select committee of the Legislature; an executive director,
108staff director, executive assistant, analyst, or attorney of the
109Office of the President of the Senate, the Office of the Speaker
110of the House of Representatives, the Senate Majority Party
111Office, Senate Minority Party Office, House Majority Party
112Office, or House Minority Party Office; or any person, hired on
113a contractual basis, having the power normally conferred upon
114such persons, by whatever title.
115     (V)  The Chancellor and Vice Chancellors of the State
116University System; the general counsel to the Board of Regents;
117and the president, vice presidents, and deans of each state
118university.
119     (VI)  Any person, including an other-personal-services
120employee, having the power normally conferred upon the positions
121referenced in this sub-subparagraph.
122     b.  "Appointed state officer" means any member of an
123appointive board, commission, committee, council, or authority
124of the executive or legislative branch of state government whose
125powers, jurisdiction, and authority are not solely advisory and
126include the final determination or adjudication of any personal
127or property rights, duties, or obligations, other than those
128relative to its internal operations.
129     c.  "State agency" means an entity of the legislative,
130executive, or judicial branch of state government over which the
131Legislature exercises plenary budgetary and statutory control.
132     3.  No member of the Legislature, appointed state officer,
133or statewide elected officer shall personally represent another
134person or entity for compensation before the government body or
135agency of which the individual was an officer or member for a
136period of 2 years following vacation of office. No member of the
137Legislature shall personally represent another person or entity
138for compensation during his or her term of office before any
139state agency other than judicial tribunals or in settlement
140negotiations after the filing of a lawsuit.
141     4.  No agency employee shall personally represent another
142person or entity for compensation before the agency with which
143he or she was employed for a period of 2 years following
144vacation of position, unless employed by another agency of state
145government.
146     5.  Any person violating this paragraph shall be subject to
147the penalties provided in s. 112.317 and a civil penalty of an
148amount equal to the compensation which the person receives for
149the prohibited conduct.
150     6.  This paragraph is not applicable to:
151     a.  A person employed by the Legislature or other agency
152prior to July 1, 1989;
153     b.  A person who was employed by the Legislature or other
154agency on July 1, 1989, whether or not the person was a defined
155employee on July 1, 1989;
156     c.  A person who was a defined employee of the State
157University System or the Public Service Commission who held such
158employment on December 31, 1994;
159     d.  A person who has reached normal retirement age as
160defined in s. 121.021(29), and who has retired under the
161provisions of chapter 121 by July 1, 1991; or
162     e.  Any appointed state officer whose term of office began
163before January 1, 1995, unless reappointed to that office on or
164after January 1, 1995; or.
165     f.  An agency employee whose position was transferred from
166the Career Service System to the Selected Exempt Service System
167under 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
170waived in a particular instance by the body which appointed the
171person to the advisory board, upon a full disclosure of the
172transaction or relationship to the appointing body prior to the
173waiver and an affirmative vote in favor of waiver by two-thirds
174vote of that body.  In instances in which appointment to the
175advisory board is made by an individual, waiver may be effected,
176after public hearing, by a determination by the appointing
177person and full disclosure of the transaction or relationship by
178the appointee to the appointing person.  In addition, no person
179shall be held in violation of subsection (3) or subsection (7)
180if:
181     (b)  The business is awarded under a system of sealed,
182competitive bidding to the lowest or best bidder and:
183     1.  The official or the official's spouse or child has in
184no way participated in the determination of the bid
185specifications or the determination of the lowest or best
186bidder;
187     2.  The official or the official's spouse or child has in
188no way used or attempted to use the official's influence to
189persuade the agency or any personnel thereof to enter such a
190contract other than by the mere submission of the bid; and
191     3.  The official, prior to or at the time of the submission
192of the bid, has filed a statement with the Commission on Ethics
193Department of State, if the official is a state officer or
194employee, or with the supervisor of elections of the county in
195which the agency has its principal office, if the official is an
196officer or employee of a political subdivision, disclosing the
197official's interest, or the interest of the official's spouse or
198child, and the nature of the intended business.
199     (14)  LOBBYING BY FORMER LOCAL OFFICERS; PROHIBITION.--A
200person who has been elected to any county, municipal, special
201district, or school district office may not personally represent
202another person or entity for compensation before the government
203governing body or agency of which the person was an officer for
204a period of 2 years after vacating that office.
205     Section 3.  Present subsections (4), (5), and (6) of
206section 112.3144, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as
207subsections (5), (6), and (7), respectively, and a new
208subsection (4) is added to that section, to read:
209     112.3144  Full and public disclosure of financial
210interests.--
211     (4)(a)  With respect to reporting assets valued in excess
212of $1,000 on forms prescribed under this section which the
213reporting individual holds jointly with another person, the
214amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's
215legal percentage of ownership in the property. However, assets
216that are held jointly, with right of survivorship, must be
217reported at 100 percent of the value of the asset. For purposes
218of this subsection, a reporting individual is deemed to own a
219percentage of a partnership which is equal to the reporting
220individual's interest in the capital or equity of the
221partnership.
222     (b)1.  With respect to reporting liabilities valued in
223excess of $1,000 on forms prescribed under this section for
224which the reporting individual is jointly and severally liable,
225the amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's
226percentage of liability rather than the total amount of the
227liability. However, liability for a debt that is secured by
228property owned by the reporting individual but that is held
229jointly, with right of survivorship, must be reported at 100
230percent of the total amount owed.
231     2.  A separate section of the form shall be created to
232provide for the reporting of the amounts of joint and several
233liability of the reporting individual not otherwise reported in
234subparagraph 1.
235     Section 4.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of section
236112.3145, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
237     112.3145  Disclosure of financial interests and clients
238represented before agencies.--
239     (6)  Forms for compliance with the disclosure requirements
240of this section and a current list of persons subject to
241disclosure shall be created by the commission and provided to
242each supervisor of elections. The commission and each supervisor
243of elections shall give notice of disclosure deadlines and
244delinquencies and distribute forms in the following manner:
245     (c)  Not later than 30 days after July 1 of each year, the
246commission and each supervisor of elections shall determine
247which persons required to file a statement of financial
248interests in their respective offices have failed to do so and
249shall send delinquency notices by certified mail, return receipt
250requested, to these such persons.  Each notice shall state that
251a grace period is in effect until September 1 of the current
252year; that no investigative or disciplinary action based upon
253the delinquency will be taken by the agency head or commission
254if the statement is filed by September 1 of the current year;
255that, if the statement is not filed by September 1 of the
256current year, a fine of $25 for each day late will be imposed,
257up to a maximum penalty of $1,500; for notices sent by a
258supervisor of elections, that he or she is required by law to
259notify the commission of the delinquency; and that, if upon the
260filing of a sworn complaint the commission finds that the person
261has failed to timely file the statement within 60 days after
262September 1 of the current year, such person will also be
263subject to the penalties provided in s. 112.317.
264     Section 5.  Section 112.3147, Florida Statutes, is amended
265to read:
266     112.3147  Forms.--
267     (1)  All information required to be furnished by ss.
268112.313, 112.3143, 112.3144, 112.3145, 112.3148, and 112.3149
269and by s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution shall be on forms
270prescribed by the Commission on Ethics.
271     (2)(a)  With respect to reporting assets valued in excess
272of $1,000 on forms prescribed pursuant to s. 112.3144 which the
273reporting individual holds jointly with another person, the
274amount reported shall be based on the reporting individual's
275legal percentage of ownership in the property, except that
276assets held jointly with the reporting individual's spouse shall
277be reported at 100 percent of the value of the asset. For
278purposes of this subsection, a reporting individual is deemed to
279own an interest in a partnership which corresponds to the
280reporting individual's interest in the capital or equity of the
281partnership.
282     (b)1.  With respect to reporting liabilities valued in
283excess of $1,000 on forms prescribed pursuant to s. 112.3144 for
284which the reporting individual is jointly and severally liable,
285the amount reported shall be based upon the reporting
286individual's percentage of liability rather than the total
287amount of the liability, except, a joint and several liability
288with the reporting individual's spouse for a debt which relates
289to property owned by both as tenants by the entirety shall be
290reported at 100 percent of the total amount owed.
291     2.  A separate section of the form shall be created to
292provide for the reporting of the amounts of joint and several
293liability of the reporting individual not otherwise reported in
294paragraph (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
298individuals filing full or limited public disclosure of
299financial interests and by procurement employees.--
300     (6)
301     (d)  No later than July 1 of each year, each reporting
302individual or procurement employee shall file a statement
303listing each gift having a value in excess of $100 received by
304the reporting individual or procurement employee, either
305directly or indirectly, from a governmental entity or a direct-
306support organization specifically authorized by law to support a
307governmental entity. The statement shall list the name of the
308person providing the gift, a description of the gift, the date
309or dates on which the gift was given, and the value of the total
310gifts given during the calendar year for which the report is
311made. The reporting individual or procurement employee shall
312attach to the such statement any report received by him or her
313in accordance with paragraph (c), which report shall become a
314public record when filed with the statement of the reporting
315individual or procurement employee. The reporting individual or
316procurement employee may explain any differences between the
317report of the reporting individual or procurement employee and
318the attached reports. The annual report filed by a reporting
319individual shall be filed with the financial disclosure
320statement required by either s. 8, Art. II of the State
321Constitution or s. 112.3145, as applicable to the reporting
322individual.  The annual report filed by a procurement employee
323shall be filed with the Commission on Ethics. The report filed
324by a reporting individual or procurement employee who left
325office or employment during the calendar year covered by the
326report shall be filed by July 1 of the year after leaving office
327or employment at the same location as his or her final financial
328disclosure statement or, in the case of a former procurement
329employee, with the Commission on Ethics.
330     (8)(a)  Each reporting individual or procurement employee
331shall file a statement with the Commission on Ethics not later
332than on the last day of each calendar quarter, for the previous
333calendar quarter, containing a list of gifts which he or she
334believes to be in excess of $100 in value, if any, accepted by
335him or her, for which compensation was not provided by the donee
336to the donor within 90 days of receipt of the gift to reduce the
337value 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
341section.
342     (b)  The statement shall include:
343     1.  A description of the gift, the monetary value of the
344gift, the name and address of the person making the gift, and
345the dates thereof.  If any of these facts, other than the gift
346description, are unknown or not applicable, the report shall so
347state.
348     2.  A copy of any receipt for such gift provided to the
349reporting individual or procurement employee by the donor.
350     (c)  The statement may include an explanation of any
351differences between the reporting individual's or procurement
352employee's statement and the receipt provided by the donor.
353     (d)  The reporting individual's or procurement employee's
354statement shall be sworn to by such person as being a true,
355accurate, and total listing of all such gifts.
356     (e)  Statements must be filed not later than 5 p.m. of the
357due date. However, any statement that is postmarked by the
358United States Postal Service by midnight of the due date is
359deemed to have been filed in a timely manner, and a certificate
360of mailing obtained from and dated by the United States Postal
361Service at the time of the mailing, or a receipt from an
362established courier company which bears a date on or before the
363due date, constitutes proof of mailing in a timely manner.
364     (f)(e)  If a reporting individual or procurement employee
365has not received any gifts described in paragraph (a) during a
366calendar quarter, he or she is not required to file a statement
367under this subsection for that calendar quarter.
368     Section 7.  Subsection (6) of section 112.3149, Florida
369Statutes, is amended to read:
370     112.3149  Solicitation and disclosure of honoraria.--
371     (6)  A reporting individual or procurement employee who
372receives payment or provision of expenses related to any
373honorarium event from a person who is prohibited by subsection
374(4) from paying an honorarium to a reporting individual or
375procurement employee shall publicly disclose on an annual
376statement the name, address, and affiliation of the person
377paying or providing the expenses; the amount of the honorarium
378expenses; the date of the honorarium event; a description of the
379expenses paid or provided on each day of the honorarium event;
380and the total value of the expenses provided to the reporting
381individual or procurement employee in connection with the
382honorarium event.  The annual statement of honorarium expenses
383shall be filed by July 1 of each year for those such expenses
384received during the previous calendar year. The reporting
385individual or procurement employee shall attach to the annual
386statement a copy of each statement received by him or her in
387accordance with subsection (5) regarding honorarium expenses
388paid or provided during the calendar year for which the annual
389statement is filed. The Such attached statement shall become a
390public record upon the filing of the annual report. The annual
391statement of a reporting individual shall be filed with the
392financial disclosure statement required by either s. 8, Art. II
393of the State Constitution or s. 112.3145, as applicable to the
394reporting individual. The annual statement of a procurement
395employee shall be filed with the Commission on Ethics. The
396statement filed by a reporting individual or procurement
397employee who left office or employment during the calendar year
398covered by the statement shall be filed by July 1 of the year
399after leaving office or employment at the same location as his
400or her final financial disclosure statement or, in the case of a
401former procurement employee, with the Commission on Ethics.
402     Section 8.  Subsections (1), (2), (6), (7), and (8) of
403section 112.317, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
404     112.317  Penalties.--
405     (1)  Violation of any provision of this part, including,
406but not limited to, any failure to file any disclosures required
407by this part or violation of any standard of conduct imposed by
408this part, or violation of any provision of s. 8, Art. II of the
409State Constitution, in addition to any criminal penalty or other
410civil penalty involved, shall, under pursuant to applicable
411constitutional and statutory procedures, constitute grounds for,
412and 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
419for no more than 12 months.
420     6.  A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000.
421     7.  Restitution of any pecuniary benefits received because
422of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that
423the restitution penalty be paid to the agency of which the
424public officer was a member or to the General Revenue Fund.
425     (b)  In the case of an employee or a person designated as a
426public officer by this part who otherwise would be deemed to be
427an employee:
428     1.  Dismissal from employment.
429     2.  Suspension from employment for not more than 90 days
430without pay.
431     3.  Demotion.
432     4.  Reduction in salary level.
433     5.  Forfeiture of no more than one-third salary per month
434for no more than 12 months.
435     6.  A civil penalty not to exceed $10,000.
436     7.  Restitution of any pecuniary benefits received because
437of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that
438the restitution penalty be paid to the agency by which the
439public employee was employed, or of which the officer was deemed
440to 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
443of this part or s. 8(a) and (i), Art. II of the State
444Constitution:
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
450has violated a provision applicable to former officers or
451employees or whose violation occurred before the prior to such
452officer'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
456of the violation committed. The commission may recommend that
457the restitution penalty be paid to the agency of the public
458officer or employee or to the General Revenue Fund.
459     (2)  In any case in which the commission finds a violation
460of this part or of s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution and
461the proper disciplinary official or body under s. 112.324
462imposes recommends a civil penalty or restitution penalty, the
463Attorney General shall bring a civil action to recover such
464penalty.  No defense may be raised in the civil action to
465enforce the civil penalty or order of restitution that could
466have been raised by judicial review of the administrative
467findings and recommendations of the commission by certiorari to
468the district court of appeal. The Attorney General shall collect
469any costs, attorney's fees, expert witness fees, or other costs
470of collection incurred in bringing the action.
471     (6)  Any person who willfully discloses, or permits to be
472disclosed, his or her intention to file a complaint, the
473existence or contents of a complaint which has been filed with
474the commission, or any document, action, or proceeding in
475connection with a confidential preliminary investigation of the
476commission, before such complaint, document, action, or
477proceeding becomes a public record as provided herein commits a
478misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s.
479775.082 or s. 775.083.
480     (6)(7)  In any case in which the commission finds probable
481cause to believe that a complainant has committed perjury in
482regard to any document filed with, or any testimony given
483before, the commission, it shall refer such evidence to the
484appropriate law enforcement agency for prosecution and taxation
485of costs.
486     (7)(8)  In any case in which the commission determines that
487a person has filed a complaint against a public officer or
488employee with a malicious intent to injure the reputation of
489such officer or employee by filing the complaint with knowledge
490that the complaint contains one or more false allegations or
491with reckless disregard for whether the complaint contains false
492allegations of fact material to a violation of this part, the
493complainant shall be liable for costs plus reasonable attorney's
494fees incurred in the defense of the person complained against,
495including the costs and reasonable attorney's fees incurred in
496proving entitlement to and the amount of costs and fees. If the
497complainant fails to pay such costs and fees voluntarily within
49830 days following such finding by the commission, the commission
499shall forward such information to the Department of Legal
500Affairs, which shall bring a civil action in a court of
501competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of such costs and
502fees awarded by the commission.
503     Section 9.  Section 112.3185, Florida Statutes, is amended
504to read:
505     112.3185  Additional standards for state agency employees
506Contractual services.--
507     (1)  For the purposes of this section:
508     (a)  "Contractual services" shall be defined as set forth
509in chapter 287.
510     (b)  "Agency" means any state officer, department, board,
511commission, or council of the executive or judicial branch of
512state government and includes the Public Service Commission.
513     (2)  No agency employee who participates through decision,
514approval, disapproval, recommendation, preparation of any part
515of a purchase request, influencing the content of any
516specification or procurement standard, rendering of advice,
517investigation, or auditing or in any other advisory capacity in
518the procurement of contractual services shall become or be,
519while an agency employee, the employee of a person contracting
520with the agency by whom the employee is employed.
521     (3)  No agency employee shall, after retirement or
522termination, have or hold any employment or contractual
523relationship with any business entity other than an agency in
524connection with any contract in which the agency employee
525participated personally and substantially through decision,
526approval, disapproval, recommendation, rendering of advice, or
527investigation while an officer or employee. When the agency
528employee's position is eliminated and his or her duties are
529performed by the business entity, this subsection does not
530prohibit him or her from employment or contractual relationship
531with the business entity if the employee's participation in the
532contract was limited to recommendation, rendering of advice, or
533investigation and if the agency head determines that the best
534interests of the state will be served thereby and provides prior
535written approval for the particular employee.
536     (4)  No agency employee shall, within 2 years after
537retirement or termination, have or hold any employment or
538contractual relationship with any business entity other than an
539agency in connection with any contract for contractual services
540which was within his or her responsibility while an employee. If
541the agency employee's position is eliminated and his or her
542duties are performed by the business entity, the provisions of
543this subsection may be waived by the agency head through prior
544written approval for a particular employee if the agency head
545determines that the best interests of the state will be served
546thereby.
547     (5)  The sum of money paid to a former agency employee
548during the first year after the cessation of his or her
549responsibilities, by the agency with whom he or she was
550employed, for contractual services provided to the agency, shall
551not exceed the annual salary received on the date of cessation
552of his or her responsibilities. The provisions of This
553subsection may be waived by the agency head for a particular
554contract if the agency head determines that such waiver will
555result in significant time or cost savings for the state.
556     (6)  No agency employee shall, after retirement or
557termination, represent or advise another person or entity,
558except the state, in any matter in which the employee
559participated personally in his or her official capacity through
560decision, approval, disapproval, recommendation, rendering of
561advice, investigation, or otherwise while an employee. The term
562"matter" includes any judicial or other proceeding, application,
563request for a ruling, or other determination, contract, claim,
564controversy, investigation, charge, accusation, arrest, or other
565particular action involving a specific party or parties.
566     (7)(6)  No agency employee acting in an official capacity
567shall directly or indirectly procure contractual services for
568his or her own agency from any business entity of which a
569relative is an officer, partner, director, or proprietor or in
570which the such officer or employee or his or her spouse or
571child, or any combination of them, has a material interest.
572     (8)(7)  A violation of any provision of this section is
573punishable in accordance with s. 112.317.
574     (9)(8)  This section is not applicable to any employee of
575the Public Service Commission who was so employed on or before
576December 31, 1994.
577     Section 10.  Subsection (1) of section 112.321, Florida
578Statutes, is amended to read:
579     112.321  Membership, terms; travel expenses; staff.--
580     (1)  The commission shall be composed of nine members. Five
581of these members shall be appointed by the Governor, no more
582than three of whom shall be from the same political party,
583subject to confirmation by the Senate. One member appointed by
584the Governor shall be a former city or county official and may
585be a former member of a local planning or zoning board which has
586only advisory duties.  Two members shall be appointed by the
587Speaker of the House of Representatives, and two members shall
588be appointed by the President of the Senate. Neither the Speaker
589of the House of Representatives nor the President of the Senate
590shall appoint more than one member from the same political
591party. Of the nine members of the Commission, no more than five
592members shall be from the same political party at any one time.
593No member may hold any public employment. An individual who
594qualifies as a lobbyist pursuant to s. 11.045 or s. 112.3215 or
595pursuant to any local government charter or ordinance may not
596serve as a member of the commission, except that this
597prohibition does not apply to an individual who is a member of
598the commission on July 1, 2005, until the expiration of his or
599her current term. A member of the commission may not lobby any
600state or local governmental entity as provided in s. 11.045 or
601s. 112.3215 or as provided by any local government charter or
602ordinance, except that this prohibition does not apply to an
603individual who is a member of the commission on July 1, 2005,
604until the expiration of his or her current term. All members
605shall serve 2-year terms.  No member shall serve more than two
606full terms in succession. Any member of the commission may be
607removed for cause by majority vote of the Governor, the
608President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
609Representatives, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
610     Section 11.  Paragraph (f) of subsection (5) of section
611112.3215, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
612     112.3215  Lobbyists before the executive branch or the
613Constitution Revision Commission; registration and reporting;
614investigation by commission.--
615     (5)
616     (f)  The commission shall provide by rule the grounds for
617waiving a fine and the procedures a procedure by which a
618lobbyist who fails to timely file a report shall be notified and
619assessed fines and the procedure for appealing the fines. The
620rule shall provide for the following:
621     1.  Upon determining that the report is late, the person
622designated to review the timeliness of reports shall immediately
623notify the lobbyist as to the failure to timely file the report
624and that a fine is being assessed for each late day. The fine
625shall be $50 per day per report for each late day up to a
626maximum of $5,000 per late report.
627     2.  Upon receipt of the report, the person designated to
628review the timeliness of reports shall determine the amount of
629the fine due based upon the earliest of the following:
630     a.  When a report is actually received by the lobbyist
631registration 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
635dated.
636     3.  Such fine shall be paid within 30 days after the notice
637of payment due is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration
638Office, unless appeal is made to the commission.  The moneys
639shall be deposited into the Executive Branch Lobby Registration
640Trust Fund.
641     4.  A fine shall not be assessed against a lobbyist the
642first time any reports for which the lobbyist is responsible are
643not timely filed. However, to receive the one-time fine waiver,
644all reports for which the lobbyist is responsible must be filed
645within 30 days after the notice that any reports have not been
646timely filed is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration Office.
647A fine shall be assessed for any subsequent late-filed reports.
648     5.  Any lobbyist may appeal or dispute a fine, based upon
649unusual circumstances surrounding the failure to file on the
650designated due date, and may request and shall be entitled to a
651hearing before the commission, which shall have the authority to
652waive the fine in whole or in part for good cause shown. Any
653such request shall be made within 30 days after the notice of
654payment due is transmitted by the Lobbyist Registration Office.  
655In such case, the lobbyist shall, within the 30-day period,
656notify the person designated to review the timeliness of reports
657in writing of his or her intention to bring the matter before
658the commission.
659     6.  The person designated to review the timeliness of
660reports shall notify the commission of the failure of a lobbyist
661to file a report after notice or of the failure of a lobbyist to
662pay the fine imposed. The registration of a lobbyist who fails
663to timely pay a fine is automatically suspended until the fine
664is paid, unless an appeal of the fine is pending before the
665commission. The commission shall provide a written suspension
666notice to each lobbyist whose registration has been
667automatically suspended.
668     7.  Notwithstanding any provision of chapter 120, any fine
669imposed under this subsection that is not waived by final order
670of the commission and that remains unpaid more than 60 days
671after the notice of payment due or more than 60 days after the
672commission renders a final order on the lobbyist's appeal shall
673be collected by the Department of Financial Services as a claim,
674debt, or other obligation owed to the state, and the department
675may assign the collection of such fine to a collection agent as
676provided in s. 17.20.
677     Section 12.  Subsection (4) of section 112.322, Florida
678Statutes, is amended to read:
679     112.322  Duties and powers of commission.--
680     (4)  The commission has the power to subpoena, audit, and
681investigate.  The commission may subpoena witnesses and compel
682their attendance and testimony, administer oaths and
683affirmations, take evidence, and require by subpoena the
684production of any books, papers, records, or other items
685relevant to the performance of the duties of the commission or
686to the exercise of its powers.  The commission may delegate to
687its investigators the authority to administer oaths and
688affirmations. The commission may delegate the authority to issue
689subpoenas to its chair, and may authorize its employees to serve
690any subpoena issued under this section.  In the case of a
691refusal to obey a subpoena issued to any person, the commission
692may make application to any circuit court of this state which
693shall have jurisdiction to order the witness to appear before
694the commission and to produce evidence, if so ordered, or to
695give testimony touching on the matter in question. Failure to
696obey the order may be punished by the court as contempt.
697Witnesses shall be paid mileage and witnesses fees as authorized
698for witnesses in civil cases, except that a witness who is
699required to travel outside the county of his or her residence to
700testify is entitled to per diem and travel expenses at the same
701rate provided for state employees under s. 112.061, to be paid
702after the witness appears.
703     Section 13.  Subsections (3) and (4) of section 914.21,
704Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
705     914.21  Definitions.--As used in ss. 914.22-914.24, the
706term:
707     (3)  "Official investigation" means any investigation
708instituted by a law enforcement agency or prosecuting officer of
709the state or a political subdivision of the state or the
710Commission 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
715authorized by law.
716     (d)  A proceeding before the Commission on Ethics.
717     Section 14.  This act shall take effect October 1, 2005.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.