Wednesday, November 7, 2007
When is a "Notice of Claim" not a Part of a "Claims File"?
In AGO 2007-47, the Attorney General considered a seemingly simple question: Is the notice of claim required under Fla. Sta. §768.28 as a condition precedent to a tort suit against an agency exempt from disclosure under Fla. Stat. §768.16, which exempts "claims files" from the Public Records Law?
Anybody who sues or defends agencies in Florida is familiar with the notice of claim required under the waiver of sovereign immunity statute. Presumably, such a notice of claim upon receipt by an agency prompts the creation of a file related to the claim . . . commonly referred to as a "claims file." The first logical piece of paper that goes into the claims file is, of course, the notice of claim.
For some reason, the Attorney General struggled with the notion that "claims file" must necessarily include the things in the claims file . . . like the notice of claim. You really have to read this one for yourself.
Property Owners Association Exercising Delegated Authority
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Elected Officials Exchanging Documents . . .
Thursday, August 2, 2007
1st Carnival of Open Records is Up and Running
Saturday, July 14, 2007
Litigation Exemptions in the Legislative Claims Bill Process
Workers Compensation Cases - Statutory Exemptions
State of Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation v. Mitchell S. Ritchie, P.A., 951 So.2d 111 (Fla. 1 DCA 2007).
Hospital Strategic Plans
Attorney-Client "Shade" Meetings
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
Manatee County Goes Live With E-Access to Court Records
Classic Commercial Use of the Public Records Law
The article presents a fairly balanced discussion of the issue and there are points to be made on both sides of the question. Irrespective of how one may feel about this, it's further evidence that information has become a mere commodity -- and that many of the more "noble" arguments advanced on behalf of open government laws may have little to do with much of the very commercial nature of the modern information age.
Monday, July 2, 2007
Local Health Councils Subject to Sunshine Law?
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Journalist Suggests Public Records May Be "Too Public"; In Other News, Pigs Fly
Wow . . . did a journalist just suggest that public records can actually be "too public"?`
Public Tongue Lashing for Jax City Council
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Governor Appoints Commission of Foxes to Guard Hen House
Here's Executive Order 07-107 creating the Commission. Here's the Commission's membership and meeting schedule.
And some selected -- and predictable -- media reaction can be found here, here and here.
I'll of course be following the activities of the Commission and posting as developments warrant.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Chapter 2007-39, Laws of Florida, Amending Chapter 119
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Kudos to the Legislature - Your Open Records Laws at Work
So here's kudos to the Florida Legislature (don't get the opportunity to say that much) for having lots of important documents pertaining to the ongoing tax reform debate and special session available for easy access on its website. Access the tax reform documents here.
Friday, May 25, 2007
Many Thanks . . .
Back in Blog and Hoping to Catch Up . . .
Stay tuned . . .
Sunday, April 29, 2007
HB 541 Now Clarified - Records Custodians Must Now Both "Acknowledge" and "Respond" to Requests
The clarification is a positive development, as the earlier version of the bill had seemingly changed the well-established requirement to respond to requests within a reasonable time in a manner that seemed to defy explanation. But I'm not too sure the requirement to "acknowledge" requests promptly is anything but a "feel good" provision. My prediction (and my advice to my public clients) is that records custodians will now issue form letters in response to records requests that say something like this: "Thank you for your public records request which was received by this office on [date]. We will respond to your request within a reasonable time." And that accomplishes what, exactly?
The new requirement also raises another issue. Records proponents will claim that even asking for a requestor's personal information -- like a name and contact information -- is a violation. It isn't (although making such information a condition of producing records might be). But the new legislation seemingly would require a records custodian to ask for such information . . . how else can he or she "acknowledge" the request? So maybe asking for that basic information from a requestor isn't such a big deal, after all.
13th Circuit State Attorney Gets Tagged for Fees in Public Records Dispute
Saturday, April 21, 2007
Sarasota City Manager Search on Shaky Ground?
Here's the text of the end of the article:
Sarasota's search for a new manager is being conducted by Winter Haven-based The Mercer Group, Inc.The firm received about 50 applicants for the city manager position.Sarasota spokeswoman Jan Thornburg said the city could not immediately supply the names of the candidates because the applications were sent to the consultants in Winter Haven.The Mercer Group is still sorting the Sarasota city manager applications out from other applications, Thornburg said. She did not know when they will be available for public review.The Mercer Group is scheduled to screen applications next week before presenting semi-finalists to commissioners.
Hmmm . . . they can't produce the applications because they're still "sorting" them. But they have apparently "sorted" them enough to know how many there are? Sound like an unlawful refusal to produce records?
And the private consultant will be "screening" the applications before presenting "semi-finalists" to the City? ill that screening process take place at a properly noticed public meeting? If not and if the consultant will be winnowing the field, ranking the applicants or eliminating applicants from further consideration based on anything but purely objective criteria, then a potential Sunshine violation is looming.
Let's follow this one and see how it plays out.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Records Custodians Take Note . . .
In a prior post I expressed my concerns over provisions in the bill that seem clearly intended to subject records custodians to an obligation to do more that what is merely reasonable in responding to public records requests. The new duty to respond "promptly" remains undefined in the bill, but the Staff Analysis report makes clear that whatever "promptly" means, it means something faster than "within a reasonable time."
In recent days, I've heard open government advocates advance different positions on the bill and its requirements. Some have argued that the bill doesn't change the current obligation to produce records within a reasonable time, but merely adds a new requirement to "respond" to records requests sooner. Of course, the bill doesn't say that at all . . . nothing in the bill defines what it means to "respond" to a records request and the bill certainly doesn't expressly indicate that it is intended to create a new two-step procedure to deal with public records requests. Besides, if that's all this bill intends to accomplish, it will accomplish nothing: agancies will just send all requestors a form letter that says "Thank you for your public records requests. We will produce any non-exempt records within a reasonable time." What does that accomplish?
Others have suggested that "promptly" doesn't mean anything different than "within a reasonable time," despite the conclusion to the contrary in the House's own analysis. That's just plain disingenuous.
The bill appears headed on its way to passage and there's little doubt that the Governor will sign it. So we'll apparently be litigating some new issues about the duty of public records custodians in the near future.
I remain concerned about the practicalities of the bill. But I am far more concerned about the larger philosophical question raised by holding often lower level government employees to a higher standard of conduct that simple reasonableness. Think about this . . . a police officer can shoot you dead if he reasonably believes that you intend to shoot him. A city or county can take your private property away from you through eminent domain if it can show a reasonable necessity for the project and the property. A government agency can abridge your First Amendment right to speak freely on government-owned property through he adoption of reasonable time, place and manner restrictions. Anybody see a pattern here?
So, if we only require the government to act reasonably when its actions impair our most fundamental rights -- life, liberty and property -- why in the world should we hold a records custodian to any higher standard? Please . . . somebody explain this to me . . . . my head is about to explode.
And records custodians . . . the Legislature is doing this to you. Speak now, or forever hold your peace.
Never Expected to Use the Word "Transgendered" in a Post . . .
Sordid details of the story notwithstanding, it does illustrate a couple of good points. First, personal records are not public records, even if they are made or received on a city-owned computer. Conversely, records that are made or received in connection with official agency business are public records, irrespective of who owns the computer on which they are stored. It's pretty much that simple.
Sunday, April 8, 2007
Legislative Update . . . Records Custodians Can No Longer Comply By Acting Reasonably? Say What?
It would also prohibit any person who is not a designated custodian of public records from denying the existence of a public records or misleading anyone as to the existence of such a record. Is this really a big problem? Are public employees running around willy nilly denying that records exist? And, more to the point, isn't that already a violation of the public records law . . . assuming that after such a denial comes a refusal to produce the supposedly non-existent record? And why are these burdens being placed on persons other than the designated custodian of records? If a public employee not charged with the duties of the custodian "misleads" somebody as to the existence of a public record -- and notice the complete lack of any intent requirement in the statute -- has some new form of violation, or perhaps even a criminal infraction, been committed? And what exactly is required to "mislead" somebody as to the existence of a record? Here comes a runaway litigation train . . .
As bad as all that is, it's nothing compared to the supremely bad, ridiculously stupid, moronically misguided idea embodied in this seemingly innocuous sentence: "A custodian of public records and his or her designee must respond to requests to inspect or copy records promptly and in good faith." That seems harmless, until you read the House Staff Analysis report here. As the Staff Analysis makes clear, "promptly" as used in this bill means something faster than "a reasonable time," which is what the law currently requires and expects of agencies responding to records requests. Let that sink in . . . it will now no longer be sufficient for agencies to respond to records requests within a reasonable time. In fact, responding within a reasonable time is now patently insufficient and in fact would constitute a violation of the Public Records Law.
A retired partner of mine who spent a career dealing with local government issues used to have a sign on his wall that said "No man's life, liberty or property are safe while the legislature is in session." Seems fitting here . . . only our Florida legislature could actually criminalize acting reasonably.
Current Status: Voted favorably out of the Committee on State Affairs; now pending in the Government Efficiency and Accountability Council.
Legislative Developments . . . Scope of "Shade" Meetings to be Expanded?
The bill would expressly define "pending litigation" to include "matters which are the subject of a notice given to a governmental entity pursuant to s. 768.28 and for which a lawsuit has not yet been filed, and matters about which the governmental entity is contemplating litigation." This definition would be a departure from current law, which interprets the phrase "pending litigation" to mean . . . well . . . pending litigation. As in, a pending case.
This change recognizes that an agency should be able to discuss threatened litigation with its attorneys in private, and a notice under s. 768.28 is the appropriate trigger for such a provision. When a potential plaintiff sends the required notice of intent to sue a government agency, there's no reason the agency shouldn't immediately be permitted to seek confidential legal advice of its own.
It also recognizes that an agency contemplating litigation should be able to seek private legal counsel in advance of filing suit. Again, it's hard to find anything wrong with that concept.
In fact, the proposed change seems to bring the attorney-client meetings exemption more closely into line with the attorney-client records exemption found in Ch.119, which incorporates the notion of "imminent" civil or administrative proceedings. Doing so addresses the unusual state of the current law, in which a record may be exempt under the attorney-client exemption in Ch. 119, but a meeting to discuss the same matter wouldn't be exempt under Ch. 286 because the case hasn't yet been filed.
Current Status: Referred to the Committee on State Affairs as of March 8, 2007.
Economic Development Agency Records
In an interesting twist, the Attorney General was asked specifically whether the written request for confidentiality itself was exempt under the statute and whether the statutory confidentiality precluded the agency from citing to the exemption when responding to a public records request. The opinion advises -- correctly, I think -- that the written request for confidentiality may be itself confidential and exempt, if it contains information that the statute is intended to protect, and that the express requirement in Chapter 119 that a records custodian cite to any applicable exemption being relied upon to withhold records from production means that citing to the exemption provision of the statute can't be a violation of the confidentiality requirement.
If My Math is Right . . .
According to the Trib, "The bureau contended it’s not a governmental entity and therefore not subject to the state open records law. The Tribune argued that the bid is a public record because the city delegated to the bureau the governmental function of preparing the bid. The bid spelled out how millions in public money would be spent to host the GOP convention."
Given what I know about the structure and operation of the Bureau, I'm not so sure I would have caved on the legal issue as quickly as what seems to have happened here. And $28,000 is a pretty hefty price to pay for what looks like it amounts to an "Oh never mind" legal strategy.
Monday, March 26, 2007
Legislative Update Coming Soon . . .
Sunday, March 4, 2007
Overlapping Board Membership and the Sunshine Law
After discussing the applicable provisions of the Florida Regional Planning Council Act, including the provisions that expressly require members of the local general purpose governments to serve on such councils, the Attorney General concluded that the two County Commissioners could take part in the regional planning council meetings without violating the Sunshine Law.
If you're interested in this issue, you'll also want to read AGO 98-14.
City Emails Are Public Records . . . Even With a bcc
In any event, here's a gratuitous plug for my law school classmate Andy Salzman, the City Attorney for the City of Indian Rocks Beach (and some others).
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
No Media Bias Here . . .
Here's the lead-in to the invitation, which has been running each day on the Op-Ed page: "Florida's commitment to open government is one of the state's greatest strengths, but every year the Legislature tries to weaken public access by passing exemptions to Florida's Sunshine Laws." So you see, no matter how important the public policy behind an exemption may be and no matter how significant the interest protected by an exemption is . . . to the media it's just another attempt by the Legislature "to weaken public access."
Yes, and I suppose that laws that make it illegal to sell firearms to convicted felons are intended "to weaken the Second Amendment rights" of such folks. Guess it's all just a matter of perspective. And it's fine for the media to have their own point of view on such matters . . . but let's not even pretend that the media is objective about these things.
And does anybody want to make a small wager as to how many "successes" get written about during Sunshine Week?
Sunday, February 18, 2007
A Little Legislative Sunblock?
As part of the amendments to the Electronic Mail Communications Act, Chapter 668 of the Florida Statutes, the Legislature in 2006 enacted the following requirement in Fla. Stat. sec. 668.6076:
Any agency, as defined in s. 119.011, or legislative entity that operates a website and uses electronic mail shall post the following statement in a conspicuous location on its website:
Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records. If you do not want your e-mail address released in response to a public records request, do not send electronic
mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
Now, getting lots of unwanted email is certainly inconvenient, wastes time and resources and carries at least some potential for damage to personal property through viruses and other sinister technological weapons, but most folks wouldn't put preventing "spam" in the same category as, say, protecting against unauthorized use of Social Security Numbers or the unwanted distribution or publication of a loved one's autopsy photographs (both of which the Legislature has addressed in recent measures).
So, if open government is such a good thing . . . why do we have to warn people about it?
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Email Confusion in Tallahassee
Thursday, February 1, 2007
Boys Will Be Boys . . .
The motion to expunge or seal portions of the presentment remains pending in Flagler County Circuit Court. Here's today's report from the Daytona Beach News-Journal, whose reporter consulted with your humble blogmeister for some insight into the confidentiality of grand jury presentments.
Saturday, January 27, 2007
This Seems Obvious . . .
Hillier, a former City Councilman, filed a petition for writ of mandamus and a complaint for injunctive relief alleging that the City had denied him access to public records. The court noted that Hillier submitted "quite a number" of public records requests and that the City had furnished access to "voluminous documents." Nonetheless, Hillier maintained that not all of the requested records had been made available to him.
The court required Hillier to make a list of the specific records which he claimed he had been denied, which he did. More thoughts on the list a bit further on. Hillier's list had twelve items.
However, Hillier was apparently not able to testify that any of these twelve records actually existed or was in the City's possession. The City's witnesses testified that some of the records did not exist. Moreover, the City's witnesses testified that they had never denied Hillier access to the public records he requested, "if they could understand what he wanted." The court did not elaborate further on this subtle point, but it suggests some confusion or lack of clarity as to the nature of the records that were being requested.
In any event, the court held that faced with conflicting testimony about the existence of the records and whether Hillier was or wasn't ever denied access, the trial court's credibility determination would not be disturbed on appeal.
Now, about that list. Sunshine proponents will usually claim that asking a requestor to submit a public records request in writing is a violation of the Public Records Law. That, of course, is nonsense -- merely asking is not a violation, although insisting on a written request as a condition of granting access likely would be. And most of the time the reason the government agency is asking for a written request is for the same reasons the court required Hillier to make one in this case -- to be sure all parties understand precisely what records are being sought. That seems so patently reasonable that I still struggle to understand why some folks find such a request offensive.
Public Records Seminar in Tampa April 11, 2007
Hope to see many of you there. Bring some tough questions.
Friday, January 19, 2007
House Creates New "Office of Follow Our Own Rules"
Thursday, January 18, 2007
A Day at the Fair?
There are at least fifty such fair associations chartered under Chapter 616, the most prominent being the Florida State Fair and our local favorite, the Florida Strawberry Festival. Many of the fair associations control large tracts of real estate (ever increasingly valuable real estate) and generate seven-figure revenues over the course of a year. Their stated statutory purpose, according to subsection (10) of the above-referenced statute, is "the benefit and development of the educational, agricultural, horticultural, livestock, charitable, historical, civic, cultural, scientific, and other resources of the state, any county or counties of the state, or any municipality or other community of any county of the state."
In connection with a series of claims that never quite developed, I had occasion to investigate the nature of these fair associations and any potential exposure under the public records and sunshine laws. The starting point for any analysis of the public records issue would be the venerable Schwab or "totality of factors" test, the elements of which are well known to folks in this area of practice.
Needless to say, I was fascinated by sec. 616.07(1), which provides that: "No member, officer, director, or trustee of a fair association shall be personally liable for any of the debts of the association; and no money or property of a fair association shall be distributed as profits or dividends among its members, officers, directors, or trustees, but all money and property of the association shall, except for the payments of its just debts and liabilities, be and remain perpetually public property, administered by the association as trustee, to be used exclusively for the legitimate purpose of the association, and shall be, so long as so used, exempt from all forms of taxation, including special assessments."
The provisions for no private gain, no personal liability and tax exempt status are pretty standard fare, but to my knowledge the express declaration highlighted above is unique in Florida law. Read the operative portion again: "all money and property of the association shall . . . be and remain perpetually public property, administered by the association as trustee." Now that would make for an interesting Schwab analysis.
More thoughts on fair associations later.
Monday, January 15, 2007
Clambake Anybody?
Let's hope things get better.
Saturday, January 6, 2007
"Crikey . . . now that's an exemption!"
As reported by the St. Petersburg Times here, government officials in Queensland Australia have returned the original video of Steve Irwin's fatal stingray encounter to his widow and have destroyed all other copies.
There you go. Records exempt. Permanently.
Thursday, January 4, 2007
New Office of Open Government Created by Governor Crist
I'll refrain from any commentary for the moment and let the media continue to gloat. For some reason, though, the words "irrational exuberance" come to mind.
More thoughts later . . .