To: (Name withheld at the person's request.)
SUMMARY:
The public duties and responsibilities of the complaint investigators for the Office of Professional Practices Services (PPS) also would create a continuing or frequently recurring conflict with their private interests in contracting with school districts to be consultant/trainers, or would create an impediment to the proper performance of their public duties.
QUESTION:
You advise that you have received requests from a least two school districts to conduct training for administrative personnel on how to investigate complaints of both certificated and non-certificated employee misconduct, in order that the districts can fulfill their responsibilities as employers "more competently" when employee disciplinary situations occur and to enable the school boards to avoid liability for not adequately or appropriately responding to allegations of employee misconduct.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
A typical training session would be from one to two days, you advise.
You advise that all private work, including any travel prior to the training engagement, return travel, and time required to prepare for the training, would be performed by you while on annual leave from your public employment and independent of and not in conjunction with your public responsibilities. You also advise that you would use only your own private resources and equipment in carrying out the training.
You advise that the Education Practices Commission is established administratively within the Department of Education pursuant to Section 231.261, Florida Statutes, as the regulatory agency for the education profession. However, it is not subject to the control of the Department, you advise. It consists of 13 members, including five teachers, five administrators, and three lay citizens (two of whom must be school board members) appointed by the State Board of Education from nominations by the Commissioner of Education and subject to Senate confirmation. Its purpose, among other things, is to interpret and apply the standards of professional practice established by the State Board of Education and, upon review of a recommendation of the Division of Administrative Hearings and other relevant material, to render final orders imposing disciplinary sanctions, as authorized by Section 231.28, Florida Statutes, against certificate holders subject to its jurisdiction. Upon an appeal of a denial of issuance of a certificate by the Commissioner of Education, the EPC also is authorized to order issuance of a certificate. A copy of the "unit functional responsibilities," which you attached to your letter of inquiry, also indicates that the "unit"
As Executive Director of the EPC, you advise, you serve solely as the administrator of the EPC and have no role in recommending action to the EPC regarding discipline of educators' certificates. You advise that the appointed members of the EPC are the only individuals who, sitting as hearing panels, have legal authority to impose sanctions against certificates.
--
--
--
--
--
You advise that the staff of the Office of Professional Practices Services (PPS), who report directly to the Commissioner of Education, are responsible for investigating complaints alleging that a certificated individual has engaged in conduct that may be in violation of Section 231.28(1), Florida Statutes. See Section 231.262, Florida Statutes. All district superintendents are required by Section 231.28(5)(b), Florida Statutes, to report the name of any person they believe has committed or is found to have committed any act which would be a ground for revocation or suspension of an educator's certificate.
You advise that all complaints or reports initially are referred to the Director of PPS for a determination of legal sufficiency. You advise that a complaint which is determined to be legally sufficient is assigned to one of the investigative staff for investigation. Investigation typically includes interviewing people who have first-hand knowledge which either supports or refutes the allegations, and researching court documents, personnel files, and other sources of information. Once an investigation is completed and an investigative report prepared, the entire professional staff of PPS reviews the report, you advise. You further advise that the investigator's conclusions may be questioned, criticized, or revised by the rest of the PPS staff before it is reviewed by a contract attorney who would represent the Department in subsequent prosecution before the EPC. You advise that the PPS recommendation is submitted to the Commissioner of Education as a "total group recommendation" for purposes of a probable cause determination. You advise that if the Commissioner determines that there is no probable cause, the investigative file is considered closed.
--
--
--
--
Finally, you advise that of the approximately 350 reports of alleged misconduct by certificated educators filed with the Commissioner of Education for investigation each year, approximately 200 result in formal complaints being filed with the EPC. Of these, approximately six to ten involve complaints against school administrators.
CONFLICTING EMPLOYMENT OR CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP.--No public officer or employee of an agency shall have or hold any employment or contractual relationship with any business entity or any agency which is subject to the regulation of, or is doing business with, an agency of which he is an officer or employee . . . ; nor shall an officer or employee of an agency have or hold any employment or contractual relationship that will create a continuing or frequently recurring conflict between his private interests and the performance of his public duties or that would impede the full and faithful discharge of his public duties.
Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, prohibits you from having or holding any employment or contractual relationship with any business entity or agency which is doing business with or is regulated by your public agency.
As you are the Executive Director of the EPC, your agency for purposes of Section 112.313(7)(a) is the EPC. Likewise, the agency of the Program Specialists IV is the Office of PPS. See Section 112.312(2), Florida Statutes. It is clear that neither the EPC nor the PPS regulate or are doing business with the local school districts. Therefore, we find that the first part of Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, would not apply to prohibit you from entering into a contract with the school districts to provide consulting/training services.
As we noted above, one of the functions of the EPC is to interpret and apply the standards of professional practice established by the State Board of Education. These standards apply to both the teachers of the school districts that you would be contracting with as well as to the administrators, with whom you would contract on behalf on their school districts. These same districts also have a direct interest in the decisions of the EPC, which you implement. Their interests may range from supporting or opposing the taking of disciplinary action against a district teacher or administrator to supporting the revocation of the certification of instructional personnel based upon evaluations done by the district and reported to the Department of Education by the district superintendent. Additionally, as Executive Director, you are responsible for providing direction and training to EPC members; for maintaining liaison with agencies, such as school districts concerned with decisions of the EPC; for providing feedback to appropriate education oriented groups by facilitating workshops or services on school law and the role and function of the EPC; and by providing technical assistance to client groups in order that each individual whose case is filed with the EPC is given full due process of law.
In CEO 81-23, we found that Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, prohibits public employees, such as the Executive Director of the State Board of Dentistry, who participate in regulatory matters from transacting business with persons who have interests that fall within that regulatory authority, even though the business transacted may not be subject to the regulatory authority. There, we found that the Executive Director's ownership of a dental laboratory would place him in a position of having continuing business relationships with persons who are regulated by his public agency. We found that when the interests of those persons come before the board, he would be presented with a conflict of interest, a situation in which regard for his private interests in the profitability of the laboratory would tend to lead to disregard of his public duty to see that dentists are regulated in the best interests of the public. In addition, we found that the Executive Director's ownership of one or more dental laboratories may result in the appearance of an implicit use of his public position to solicit or to retain business from dentists. Similarly, we find here that although the EPC does not regulate school districts, the districts' interest in the decisions of the EPC, which you may participate in through your giving direction to the members of the EPC, and the interests of those administrators with whom you would contract on behalf of a school district and who are subject to the jurisdiction of the EPC create a continuing conflict of interest. As in CEO 81-23
In CEO 82-39, we found a prohibited conflict of interest would be created were an auditor employed by the Department of Education to teach a course for a school district whose programs were audited by her under the Florida Education Finance Program. Although we did not find that the school district was regulated by the Division of Administration, the auditor's agency, we found that the auditor performed an important function in the Department's determination of the amount of funding to be allocated to the District. As we believed that both the Department and the school districts were entitled to complete independence and impartiality during the Department's audits of the districts, we were concerned that this independence would be threatened by partiality towards the auditor's employer. Likewise, the EPC performs an important function with respect to the school districts and the certification and discipline of their teachers and administrators. We believe that the school districts, and their teachers and administrators, are entitled to complete independence and impartiality during the EPC's consideration of their cases, unaffected by a contract or other business relationship between the Executive Director of the EPC and the district.
We also find that your public duties and responsibilities as Program Specialists IV within the Office of PPS in the Department of Education would create a conflict with your private interests as consultant/trainers. We view your roles as investigators, supervisors of investigators, and reviewers of investigations as including the duty to conduct your investigations with impartiality, that is, to interview witnesses and evaluate the material that you gather impartially, without potential conflict with your private interests that might stem from a concern for satisfying or pleasing your private employers, the school districts. In light of your responsibility to question, criticize, and revise all investigative reports prepared by your office, we find that the fact that one of the requests for training came from a school district outside of your "territory" does not eliminate the possibility of conflict.
We note that under the second clause of Section 112.313(7)(a) it is not necessary that a public employee actually misuse his or her public position, and this opinion does not make such a finding of misuse or intent to misuse regarding your proposed conduct. The existence of temptation for a public officer or employee to forsake the objective performance of his or her public duty in favor of his or her own private interests is sufficient to create a prohibited conflict; the existence of such a temptation is to be discerned from an examination of the nature and extent of the public employee's duties together with a review of his or her private employment to determine whether the two are compatible, separate and distinct or whether they coincide to create a situation which tempts dishonor. See Zerwick v. State Commission on Ethics, 409 So. 2d 57 (Fla. 4th DCA 1982). Clearly, in a situation in which a public employee has no public duties or responsibilities in relation to his or her private employment, he or she could not be tempted to compromise the performance of his or her public duty. However, here, your situation is one in which you do have public duties to the school districts with which you wish to privately contract.