CEO 02-15 --
July 30, 2002
PUBLIC
OFFICERS; FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE; VOTING CONFLICTS LAW
FLORIDA SPACE
INDUSTRY COMMITTEE
To: Gregory A.
Popp, Counsel to Florida Space Industry Committee (Merritt
Island)
SUMMARY:
The officers
and directors of the Florida Space Industry Committee (FSIC) are "public
officers" subject to the standards of conduct contained in Section 112.313,
Florida Statutes. Because they are
not listed in the statute and because FSIC is an "advisory body," the
officers/directors are neither "local officers" nor "state officers" subject to
filing financial disclosure under Section 112.3145, Florida Statutes. However, they are "local public
officers" for purposes of the voting conflicts law contained in Section
112.3143, Florida Statutes. The
mere members of FSIC are neither public officers, local officers, state
officers, nor local public officers.
CEO's 76-25, 76-61, 77-7, 88-3, 88-25, and 01-11 are
referenced.
QUESTION
1:
Are the
officers and directors of the Florida Space Industry Committee "public officers"
subject to the standards of conduct contained within Section 112.313, Florida
Statutes?
This question
is answered in the affirmative.
By your
letter of inquiry, additional correspondence between you and our staff, and
information provided by you to our staff via telephone, we are advised that you
are counsel to the Florida Space Industry Committee (FSIC) and that you are
making inquiry in behalf of the several officers, directors, and many members of
FSIC, at the direction of its president.
Further, you advise that FSIC exists under Section 331.367, Florida
Statutes, and has as its mission to serve as the voice of the space industry in
advising the Spaceport Florida Authority (SFA) and the Office of Tourism, Trade,
and Economic Development of the Office of the Governor (OTTED) on matters
related to development, financing, and utilization of the Cape Canaveral
Spaceport and other space-related infrastructure and activity within the
State.[1] In addition, you advise that "FSIC has
not seen any 'appointments' as contemplated under Section 331.367, but exists
through an ad hoc association of volunteers"; that these persons have been
meeting to conduct the mission of FSIC, have elected a leadership, and have
established rules for operation of FSIC; that the meetings have been noticed and
are open to any person who desires to attend; that a record of meetings is kept
and reduced to minutes, which you understand to be available for public
inspection or copying; that it appears that FSIC is complying with and is
subject to the open meetings law contained in Chapter 286, Florida Statutes;
that any space enterprise person may belong to and participate in FSIC as a
member; but that FSIC is not a private (neither for-profit nor not-for-profit)
corporation.
Section
112.313(1), Florida Statutes, defines "public officer" to
mean
any person
elected or appointed to hold office in any agency, including any person serving
on an advisory body.
Initially, we
find that FSIC is an "agency" because it is not a private entity and, more
importantly, because it is statutorily rooted within the Spaceport Management
Council (SMC), which is itself created within the Spaceport Florida Authority
[(SFA) ". . . a public corporation, body politic, and subdivision of the state .
. . ."].[2] Also, we find that the officers and
directors of FSIC are public officers of FSIC notwithstanding that they are
chosen pursuant to FSIC's bylaws and not via gubernatorial appointment or
another more traditional method of appointment.[3] See CEO 76-61, in which we found that
the members of the Coastal Zone Citizens Advisory Committee (CZCAC) to the
Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council (SWFRPC), who are appointed by the
SWFRPC by agreement with the Division of State Planning, are public officers
subject to the standards of conduct of the Code of Ethics; CEO 88-25, in which we found that
associate medical examiners (appointed by and serving at the pleasure of the
district medical examiner) are public officers; and CEO 01-11 (community planning
panel members selected by neighborhood organizations are "appointed"). However, we do not find that persons
holding mere membership in FSIC (or persons representing businesses holding
membership in FSIC) are "public officers," inasmuch as the scenario before us
does not indicate that they are appointed or elected (by any method), much less
that they hold any public office.[4]
Accordingly,
we find that the directors and officers of FSIC (but not the mere members) are
"public officers" for purposes of the standards of conduct contained in Section
112.313.
QUESTION
2:
Are the
officers and directors of FSIC either "local officers" or "state officers"
required to file statements of financial interests under Section 112.3145,
Florida Statutes?
This question
is answered in the negative.
In addition
to your representations referenced under Question 1, you advise that there is no
line item funding for FSIC; that FSIC is
funded by SFA on a discretionary basis [that is by providing support to
FSIC through a SFA contractor (that no moneys go directly to FSIC)]; that FSIC
advisory recommendations go to OTTED only, with courtesy copies provided to SFA;
and that OTTED is under no obligation to accept FSIC recommendations, OTTED
exercising total discretion in its responses to FSIC
recommendations.
Currently,
Section 112.3145(1)(a), Florida Statutes, enumerates a long list of positions
(all located within political subdivisions of the State), the holders of which
are "local officers."[5] Assuming arguendo that the FSIC
director/officer positions are within a political subdivision by virtue of
FSIC's status relative to SFA (a credible assumption in view of the language of
Section 331.302, Florida Statutes), we nevertheless find that the FSIC
director/officer positions do not coincide with any of the positions enumerated
under current law and thus that the directors/officers are not "local
officers."[6]
Regarding the
issue of whether the directors/officers are "state officers," Section
112.3145(1)(c)2, Florida Statutes, is relevant and includes within the
applicable definition
[a]n
appointed member of each board, commission, authority, or council having
statewide jurisdiction, excluding a member of an advisory
body.
Section
112.312(1), Florida Statutes, defines "advisory body" to
mean
any board,
commission, committee, council, or authority, however selected, whose total
budget, appropriations, or authorized expenditures constitute less than 1
percent of the budget of each agency it serves or $100,000, whichever is less,
and whose powers, jurisdiction, and authority are solely advisory and do not
include the final determination or adjudication of any personal or property
rights, duties, or obligations, other than those relating to its internal
operations.
Assuming that
FSIC has "statewide jurisdiction," a somewhat difficult assumption given the
limited territory (confined to five counties) designated for SFA (the agency
served by FSIC) under Section 331.304 and given the "body politic and
subdivision of the state" language applied to SFA via Section 331.302(2), we
nevertheless find that its directors/officers are not "state officers" because
we find that FSIC is an "advisory body."
Under the situation described, FSIC meets both the budgetary amount test
(in that it has no budget) and the advisory nature test (in that OTTED has
complete discretion regarding its treatment of FSIC recommendations). See CEO 76-25 and CEO 77-7.
Accordingly,
we find that the directors/officers of FSIC are not required to file financial
disclosure (CE Form 1) because they are neither "local officers" nor "state
officers."[7]
QUESTION
3:
Are the
directors/officers of FSIC "local public officers" for purposes of the voting
conflicts law contained in Sections 112.3143(3)&(4), Florida
Statutes?
This question
is answered in the affirmative.
We have
interpreted the voting conflicts law's references to "local public officers" and
"state public officers" in relation to our interpretation of "local officer" and
"state officer" under the financial disclosure law, with the understanding that
for voting conflicts law purposes a member of a board must be one or the other,
with the "default" result identifying one as a "local public officer." See CEO 88-3. Thus, because FSIC does not have
statewide jurisdiction, we find that its directors/officers[8]
are "local public officers" under the voting conflicts law, with the result that
they are subject to the disclosure, abstention, and filing requirements of
Sections 112.3413(3)(a)&(4), Florida Statutes.[9]
This question is answered accordingly.
ORDERED by the State of Florida Commission on
Ethics meeting in public session on July 25, 2002 and RENDERED this 30th
day of July, 2002.
__________________________
Patrick K.
Neal
Chair
[1]Section 331.304, Florida
Statutes, identifies "spaceport territory" as being located in Brevard, Gulf,
Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, and Walton Counties.
[2]Sections 331.302(2) and
331.367, Florida Statutes.
[3]FSIC's bylaws
state:
Article V, Section
2. Power to Elect
Directors. The Florida Space
Industry Committee general membership, at their annual meeting, shall elect a
President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer and, as defined in Article
VII, standing Sub-Committee chairs.
The Directors shall consist of the President, Vice President, Secretary,
Treasurer and the standing Sub-Committee chairs. Each Director (except the Administrative
Chair) shall have one vote. These
Directors shall have the power to appoint such other positions as they may deem
necessary for the transaction of the business of the Florida Space Industry
Committee. They shall have the
power to fill any vacancy occurring for any reasons
whatsoever.
Article V, Section
3. Duties of the
Directors. The Directors of the
Florida Space Industry Committee shall transact all business of the Florida
Space Industry Committee. They
shall determine the policies and in general assume responsibility for the
guidance and the affairs of the Florida Space Industry
Committee.
[4]Regarding mere
membership, in addition to Article V, Section 2, quoted above, FSIC's bylaws
state:
Article III, Section
1. Eligibility. Entities eligible for membership in the
Committee shall consist of space-related Florida
businesses.
Article III, Section
2. Dues. Annual dues, if any, will be set at the
annual meeting and must be current in order to remain a member in good
standing.
Further, regarding
membership, you state:
Membership in FSIC is purely
voluntary. Generally, the
membership consists of natural persons representing companies[,] but a natural
person engaged in space enterprise could belong to the FSIC. No one else has asked for or sought
membership. The membership votes
for the officers and directors[,] who then speak for all members through the
decisions the [board of directors] makes for the
FSIC.
[5]112.3145 Disclosure of financial interests and
clients represented before agencies.C
(1) For purposes of this section, unless the context otherwise requires, the term:
(a) "Local officer" means:
1. Every person who is elected to office in any political subdivision of the
state, and every person who is appointed to fill a vacancy for an unexpired term
in such an elective office.
2. Any appointed member of any of the following boards, councils, commissions,
authorities, or other bodies of any county, municipality, school district,
independent special district, or other political subdivision of the state:
a. The governing body of the political subdivision, if appointed;
b. An expressway authority or transportation authority established by general law;
c. A community college or junior college district board of trustees;
d. A board having the power to enforce local code provisions;
e. A planning or zoning board, board of
adjustment, board of appeals, or other board having the power to recommend,
create, or modify land planning or zoning within the political subdivision,
except for citizen advisory committees, technical coordinating committees, and
such other groups who only have the power to make recommendations to planning or
zoning boards;
f. A pension board or retirement board
having the power to invest pension or retirement funds
or the power to make a binding determination of one's entitlement to or amount
of a pension or other retirement benefit; or
g. Any other appointed member of a local government board who is required to file a statement of
financial interests by the appointing authority or the enabling legislation,
ordinance, or resolution creating the board.
3. Any person holding one or more of the
following positions: mayor; county or city manager; chief administrative
employee of a county, municipality, or other political subdivision; county or
municipal attorney; chief county or municipal building code inspector; county or
municipal water resources coordinator; county or municipal pollution control
director; county or municipal environmental control director; county or
municipal administrator, with power to grant or deny a land development permit;
chief of police; fire chief; municipal clerk; district school superintendent;
community college president; district medical examiner; or purchasing agent
having the authority to make any purchase exceeding the threshold amount
provided for in s. 287.017 for CATEGORY ONE, on behalf of any political
subdivision of the state or any entity thereof.
[6]Prior to amendment of
Section 112.3145 in 2000, the definition of "local officer" included the
following language:
Any appointed member of
a board; commission; authority, including any expressway authority or
transportation authority established by general law; community college district
board of trustees; or council of any political subdivision of the state,
excluding any member of an advisory body.
[7]Also, we find that the
mere members of FSIC are neither "local officers" nor "state
officers."
[8]Further, we find that
the mere members are neither "local public officers" nor "state public
officers."
[9]In contrast, "state
public officers" are not prohibited from voting on any matter. See Section 112.3143(2), Florida
Statutes.