CEO 02-16 --
July 30, 2002
VOTING CONFLICT OF
INTEREST
CITY
COMMISSIONER ALSO AN EMERGENCY ROOM PHYSICIAN AT HOSPITAL LOCATED WITHIN
CITY
To: Name
withheld at person's request
SUMMARY:
No voting
conflict of interest under Section 112.3143(3), Florida Statutes, is created
where a city commissioner who is also an emergency medicine physician and who
contracts with a corporation which provides staffing to a local hospital's
emergency room votes on matters involving the hospital. The city commissioner is not an employee
of the hospital and the hospital is not a "principal" by whom he is
retained. Although the commissioner
may abstain from voting under Section 286.012, Florida Statutes, this statute is
permissive, not mandatory.
QUESTION:
Would a
voting conflict of interest be created were you, a city commissioner and
emergency medicine physician, to vote on matters involving a hospital where you
contract with a corporation providing staffing in the hospital's emergency room?
Under the
circumstances presented, your question is answered in the
negative.
From your
letter of inquiry and other materials submitted with your request, along with
information our staff obtained from the Internet, we are advised that you were
elected to the Cocoa Beach City Commission in November 2000. Shortly after your election, you sought
guidance from our staff about the voting conflicts law—Section 112.3143(3),
Florida Statutes—and its applicability to you as a board-certified emergency
medicine physician who, as an independent contractor, contracts with a
corporation providing emergency physician staffing services to hospitals in 28
states including the one located in your community.[1] You explain that you are not an employee
of the hospital, although you do have medical staff privileges there. Instead, the hospital is a client of the
corporation, and the corporation bills patients and pays its contracted
physicians for services they provide in the hospital's emergency
department.
Further, in
your situation, you are actually an employee of your professional association,
so the corporation pays your professional association which, in turn, pays you a
salary. You add that you also work
as an occupational and emergency physician for a contractor at Kennedy Space
Center and as a contractor to an emergency physician group providing services at
another hospital in Brevard County.
You ask
whether you can vote on matters involving the local hospital without violating
Section 112.3143(3), Florida Statutes.
Although you have not provided any details about specific votes, you
indicate that the hospital is a large landowner and employer within the City
and, it appears, is involved in environmental litigation with the City over a
dredge and fill permit it needs n order to expand.[2]
Section
112.3143(3) provides:
No county,
municipal, or other local public officer shall vote in an official capacity upon
any measure which would inure to his or her special private gain or loss; which
he or she knows would inure to the special private gain or loss of any principal
by whom he or she is retained or to the parent organization or subsidiary of a
corporate principal by which he or she is retained, other than an agency as
defined in s. 112.312(2); or which he or she knows would inure to the special
private gain or loss of a relative or business associate of the public officer.
Such public officer shall, prior to the vote being taken, publicly state to the
assembly the nature of the officer's interest in the matter from which he or she
is abstaining from voting and, within 15 days after the vote occurs, disclose
the nature of his or her interest as a public record in a memorandum filed with
the person responsible for recording the minutes of the meeting, who shall
incorporate the memorandum in the minutes. [Section 112.3143(3)(a), Florida
Statutes (2001).]
Section
112.3143(3) prohibits a local public officer from voting in certain situations,
including when the matter he is voting on inures to his special private gain or
loss or to the special private gain or loss of a principal by whom he is
retained.
Our analysis
focuses on whether the hospital is your "principal," as there is no indication
that you have voted on any matter which inured to your special private gain or
loss. In CEO 84-3, this Commission opined
that a county commissioner who was also a physician did not have a voting
conflict of interest when voting on hospital or health care-related matters,
even though he admitted patients at both local hospitals. We noted in that opinion that although
he had a professional interest in those matters, he did not have a contractual
relationship with the hospitals or any health care entity such that a voting
conflict of interest was created when he voted. Several other opinions have concluded
that being on the medical staff of a hospital does not constitute an employment
relationship with the hospital. See
CEO 75-96, CEO 84-101, and CEO 02-2.
In your situation, since you
(individually or through your professional association) do not contract with the
hospital, it is not your "principal."
Accordingly, there is no statutory basis to conclude that you have a
conflict of interest prohibited by Section 112.3143(3) when voting on matters
involving the hospital. Instead,
your principal is the corporation which contracts with your professional
association for your services in the hospital's emergency room, and there is no
indication that any matter voted upon by the City Commission involves or affects
the corporation's contract with the hospital. Thus, Section 112.3143(3), Florida
Statutes, is not violated by your votes on matters involving the
hospital.
In
numerous opinions, we have recognized that a public officer may choose to
abstain under Section 286.012, Florida Statutes, which allows abstention in
situations which "appear" to create conflicts of interest but are not actual
conflicts addressed or prohibited in the Code of Ethics. In CEO 83-49, we opined that a city
commissioner whose husband was on the medical staff of a hospital could choose
to abstain from matters involving the hospital, even though there was no actual
conflict of interest under the voting conflicts law. In CEO 83-42, we opined that a mayor
was not required to abstain from voting on the settlement of a lawsuit between
the city and his landlord, as the matter did not inure to his special private
gain and the landlord was not his "principal." Abstention under Section 286.012 is
always permissive, however, unlike Section 112.3143(3), which is mandatory.
We
recognize that there are some who believe that, notwithstanding the absence of a
conflict of interest under Section 112.3143(3), you should abstain from voting
on all matters involving the hospital.
Every public officer should weigh these types of concerns carefully. However, inasmuch as the voters elected
you to the City Commission knowing that you were an emergency medicine physician
associated with the local hospital[3],
it is conceivable that you were elected because of your unique perspective on
issues involving the hospital.
Nonetheless, that perspective does not create a voting conflict of
interest prohibited by Section 112.3143(3), Florida
Statutes.
Your
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