Florida Senate - 2020 CS for CS for SB 1270 By the Committees on Community Affairs; and Governmental Oversight and Accountability; and Senator Lee 578-03804-20 20201270c2 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to the fiduciary duty of care for 3 appointed public officials and executive officers; 4 providing a directive to the Division of Law Revision 5 to create part IX of ch. 112, F.S.; creating s. 6 112.89, F.S.; providing legislative findings and 7 purpose; defining terms; establishing standards for 8 the fiduciary duty of care for appointed public 9 officials and executive officers of specified 10 governmental entities; requiring training on board 11 governance beginning on a specified date; requiring 12 the Department of Business and Professional Regulation 13 to contract for or approve such training programs or 14 publish a list of approved training providers; 15 specifying requirements for such training; authorizing 16 training to be provided by in-house counsel for 17 certain governmental entities; requiring appointed 18 public officials and executive officers to certify 19 their completion of the annual training; requiring the 20 department to adopt rules; providing exceptions to the 21 training requirement; specifying requirements for the 22 appointment of executive officers and general counsels 23 of governmental entities; specifying standards for 24 legal counsel; providing an effective date. 25 26 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 27 28 Section 1. The Division of Law Revision is directed to 29 create part IX of chapter 112, Florida Statutes, consisting of 30 s. 112.89, Florida Statutes, to be entitled “Fiduciary Duty of 31 Care for Appointed Public Officials and Executive Officers.” 32 Section 2. Section 112.89, Florida Statutes, is created to 33 read: 34 112.89 Fiduciary duty of care.— 35 (1) LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.—The Legislature finds 36 that appointed public officials and executive officers acting on 37 behalf of governmental entities owe a fiduciary duty to the 38 entities they serve. The Legislature finds that codifying a 39 fiduciary duty of care will require that appointed public 40 officials and executive officers stay adequately informed of 41 affairs, perform due diligence, perform reasonable oversight, 42 and practice fiscal responsibility regarding decisions involving 43 corporate and proprietary commitments on behalf of the entity 44 they serve. 45 (2) DEFINITIONS.— 46 (a) “Appointed public official” means either a “local 47 officer” as defined in s. 112.3145(1)(a)2. or a “state officer” 48 as defined in s. 112.3145(1)(c)2. and 3. 49 (b) “Department” means the Department of Business and 50 Professional Regulation. 51 (c) “Executive officer” means the chief executive officer 52 of a governmental entity to which an appointed public official 53 is appointed. 54 (d) “Governmental entity” means the entity, or a board, a 55 council, a commission, an authority, or other body thereof, to 56 which an appointed public official or an executive officer is 57 appointed or hired. 58 (3) FIDUCIARY DUTY OF CARE.—Each appointed public official 59 and executive officer owes a fiduciary duty of care to the 60 applicable entity in accordance with law he or she serves and 61 has a duty to: 62 (a) Act in accordance with the laws, ordinances, rules, 63 policies, and terms governing his or her office or employment. 64 (b) Act with the care, competence, and diligence normally 65 exercised by a reasonably prudent person in similar corporate 66 and proprietary circumstances. 67 (c) Act only within the scope of his or her authority. 68 (d) Refrain from conduct that is likely to damage the 69 financial or economic interests of the governmental entity. 70 (e) Use reasonable efforts to maintain documentation in 71 accordance with applicable laws. 72 (f) Maintain reasonable oversight of any delegated 73 authority and discharge his or her duties with the care that a 74 reasonably prudent person in a like business position would 75 believe appropriate under the circumstances, and must: 76 1. Become reasonably informed in connection with any 77 decisionmaking function; 78 2. Become reasonably informed when devoting attention to 79 any oversight function; 80 3. Keep reasonably informed concerning the affairs of the 81 governmental entity; and 82 4. Keep reasonably informed concerning the performance of a 83 governmental entity’s executive officers or other officers, 84 agents, or employees. 85 (4) TRAINING REQUIREMENT.— 86 (a) Beginning January 1, 2021, each appointed public 87 official and executive officer shall complete a minimum of 5 88 hours of board governance training for each term served. 89 1. An appointed public official or executive officer 90 holding office or employed by an entity on January 1, 2021, 91 shall complete the 5 hours of board governance training before 92 the expiration of his or her term of service. If an appointed 93 public official or executive officer is employed under a 94 contract that does not specify a termination date for 95 employment, the public official or executive officer shall 96 complete the 5 hours of training by January 1, 2022, and once 97 every 4 years thereafter for the duration of their employment. 98 2. An appointed public official or executive officer who is 99 appointed, reappointed, or hired after January 1, 2021, shall 100 complete the 5 hours of board governance training within 180 101 days after the date of his or her appointment, reappointment, or 102 hire. 103 (b) By January 1, 2021, the department shall: 104 1. Contract for or approve a board governance training 105 program that includes an affordable web-based electronic media 106 option; or 107 2. Publish a list of approved board governance training 108 providers on its website. A provider may include a Florida 109 College System institution, a state university, a nationally 110 recognized entity specializing in board governance education, or 111 any other entity deemed qualified by the department as capable 112 of providing the minimum training requirements specified in this 113 subsection. 114 (c) The board governance training programs must provide, at 115 a minimum, educational materials and instruction on the 116 following: 117 1. Generally accepted corporate board governance principles 118 and best practices; corporate board fiduciary duty of care legal 119 analyses; corporate board oversight and evaluation procedures; 120 governmental entity responsibilities; executive officer 121 responsibilities; executive officer performance evaluations; 122 selecting, monitoring, and evaluating an executive management 123 team; reviewing and approving proposed investments, 124 expenditures, and budget plans; financial accounting and capital 125 allocation principles and practices; and new governmental entity 126 member orientation. 127 2. The fiduciary duty of care and obligations imposed upon 128 appointed public officials and executive officers pursuant to 129 this section. 130 (d) A governmental entity complies with the training 131 requirement under this subsection by providing a department 132 approved program or contracting with a provider listed by the 133 department under subparagraph (b)2. However, for governmental 134 entities with annual revenues of less than $300,000, board 135 governance training may be provided by in-house counsel of the 136 governmental entity or the unit of government that created the 137 governmental entity, if applicable, so long as the training 138 complies with the minimum course content established by 139 department rule. 140 (e) Within 30 days after completion of the board governance 141 training, each appointed public official and executive officer 142 shall certify, in writing or electronic form and under oath, to 143 the department that he or she: 144 1. Has completed the training required by this subsection; 145 2. Has read the laws and relevant policies applicable to 146 his or her position; 147 3. Will work to uphold such laws and policies to the best 148 of his or her ability; and 149 4. Will faithfully discharge his or her fiduciary 150 responsibility, as imposed by this section. 151 (f) The department shall adopt rules to implement this 152 subsection. 153 (g) This subsection does not apply to appointed public 154 officials and executive officers who: 155 1. Serve governmental entities whose annual revenues are 156 less than $100,000; 157 2. Hold elected office in another capacity; or 158 3. Complete board governance training involving fiduciary 159 duties or responsibilities which is required under any other 160 state law. 161 (5) APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND GENERAL 162 COUNSELS.—The appointment of any executive officer or general 163 counsel is subject to approval by a majority vote of the 164 governmental entity. 165 (6) STANDARDS FOR LEGAL COUNSEL.—All legal counsel employed 166 by a governmental entity must represent the legal interests and 167 positions of the governmental entity and not the interest of any 168 individual or employee of the governmental entity, unless such 169 representation is directed by the governmental entity. 170 Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2020.