Bill Text: FL S1342 | 2018 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Florida Statutes

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-03-02 - Laid on Table, refer to HB 7023 [S1342 Detail]

Download: Florida-2018-S1342-Comm_Sub.html
       Florida Senate - 2018                             CS for SB 1342
       
       
                                                                       
       By the Committee on Rules; and Senator Benacquisto
       
       
       
       
       
       595-03944-18                                          20181342c1
    1                   A reviser’s bill to be entitled                 
    2         An act relating to the Florida Statutes; amending ss.
    3         14.20195, 14.31, 27.341, 27.405, 27.511, 39.3035,
    4         106.34, 119.071, 119.092, 121.091, 197.3632, 197.502,
    5         199.303, 206.8745, 213.755, 215.442, 215.444,
    6         215.4725, 252.357, 252.358, 258.501, 261.04, 261.20,
    7         284.02, 286.29, 288.0001, 288.101, 288.1258, 315.03,
    8         320.833, 320.865, 331.3051, 332.007, 344.26, 364.386,
    9         366.92, 373.036, 373.042, 373.470, 373.709, 376.303,
   10         379.2495, 381.986, 381.987, 394.75, 400.6045, 403.061,
   11         403.064, 408.0611, 408.062, 408.811, 408.9091,
   12         409.1754, 409.906, 409.913, 420.609, 429.52, 429.75,
   13         455.219, 456.013, 456.017, 456.041, 462.18, 471.003,
   14         475.451, 475.611, 477.014, 487.2071, 489.529, 490.012,
   15         497.140, 497.282, 497.468, 497.552, 497.553, 497.608,
   16         499.012, 499.01211, 509.049, 520.68, 554.115, 559.11,
   17         626.9541, 627.066, 627.285, 627.748, 663.532,
   18         741.0306, 744.331, 796.04, 817.311, 817.625, 876.24,
   19         905.37, 943.0311, 944.48, 948.03, 1000.06, 1001.215,
   20         1002.61, 1003.4282, 1003.491, 1003.621, 1004.4473,
   21         1006.735, 1007.01, 1011.67, 1011.71, and 1013.64,
   22         F.S.; and reenacting ss. 1001.42 and 1008.34, F.S.;
   23         deleting provisions that have expired, have become
   24         obsolete, have had their effect, have served their
   25         purpose, or have been impliedly repealed or
   26         superseded; replacing incorrect cross-references and
   27         citations; correcting grammatical, typographical, and
   28         like errors; removing inconsistencies, redundancies,
   29         and unnecessary repetition in the statutes; and
   30         improving the clarity of the statutes and facilitating
   31         their correct interpretation; providing an effective
   32         date.
   33          
   34  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   35  
   36         Section 1. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section
   37  14.20195, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   38         14.20195 Suicide Prevention Coordinating Council; creation;
   39  membership; duties.—There is created within the Statewide Office
   40  for Suicide Prevention a Suicide Prevention Coordinating
   41  Council. The council shall develop strategies for preventing
   42  suicide.
   43         (1) SCOPE OF ACTIVITY.—The Suicide Prevention Coordinating
   44  Council is a coordinating council as defined in s. 20.03 and
   45  shall:
   46         (c) Make findings and recommendations regarding suicide
   47  prevention programs and activities. The council shall prepare an
   48  annual report and present it to the Governor, the President of
   49  the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by
   50  January 1, 2008, and each year thereafter. The annual report
   51  must describe the status of existing and planned initiatives
   52  identified in the statewide plan for suicide prevention and any
   53  recommendations arising therefrom.
   54         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
   55         Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section
   56  14.31, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
   57         14.31 Florida Faith-based and Community-based Advisory
   58  Council.—
   59         (4) MEETINGS; ORGANIZATION.—
   60         (a) The first meeting of the council shall be held no later
   61  than August 1, 2006. Thereafter, the council shall meet at least
   62  once per quarter per calendar year. Meetings may be held via
   63  teleconference or other electronic means.
   64         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
   65         Section 3. Subsection (3) of section 27.341, Florida
   66  Statutes, is amended to read:
   67         27.341 Electronic filing and receipt of court documents.—
   68         (3)The Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association shall
   69  file a report with the President of the Senate and the Speaker
   70  of the House of Representatives by March 1, 2012, describing the
   71  progress that each office of the state attorney has made to use
   72  the Florida Courts E-Portal or, if the case type is not approved
   73  for the Florida Courts E-Portal, separate clerks’ offices
   74  portals for purposes of electronic filing and documenting
   75  receipt of court documents. For any office of the state attorney
   76  that has not fully implemented an electronic filing and receipt
   77  system by March 1, 2012, the report must also include a
   78  description of the additional activities that are needed to
   79  complete the system for that office and the projected time
   80  necessary to complete the additional activities.
   81         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
   82         Section 4. Subsection (3) of section 27.405, Florida
   83  Statutes, is amended to read:
   84         27.405 Court-appointed counsel; Justice Administrative
   85  Commission tracking and reporting.—
   86         (3)From October 1, 2005, through September 30, 2007, the
   87  commission shall also track and issue a report on the race,
   88  gender, and national origin of private court-appointed counsel
   89  for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit.
   90         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
   91         Section 5. Subsection (1) of section 27.511, Florida
   92  Statutes, is amended to read:
   93         27.511 Offices of criminal conflict and civil regional
   94  counsel; legislative intent; qualifications; appointment;
   95  duties.—
   96         (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to provide adequate
   97  representation to persons entitled to court-appointed counsel
   98  under the Federal or State Constitution or as authorized by
   99  general law. It is the further intent of the Legislature to
  100  provide adequate representation in a fiscally sound manner,
  101  while safeguarding constitutional principles. Therefore, an
  102  office of criminal conflict and civil regional counsel is
  103  created within the geographic boundaries of each of the five
  104  district courts of appeal. The regional counsel shall be
  105  appointed as set forth in subsection (3) for each of the five
  106  regional offices. The offices shall commence fulfilling their
  107  constitutional and statutory purpose and duties on October 1,
  108  2007.
  109         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
  110         Section 6. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of section
  111  39.3035, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  112         39.3035 Child advocacy centers; standards; state funding.—
  113         (3) A child advocacy center within this state may not
  114  receive the funds generated pursuant to s. 938.10, state or
  115  federal funds administered by a state agency, or any other funds
  116  appropriated by the Legislature unless all of the standards of
  117  subsection (1) are met and the screening requirement of
  118  subsection (2) is met. The Florida Network of Children’s
  119  Advocacy Centers, Inc., shall be responsible for tracking and
  120  documenting compliance with subsections (1) and (2) for any of
  121  the funds it administers to member child advocacy centers.
  122         (c) At the end of each fiscal year, each children’s
  123  advocacy center receiving revenue as provided in this section
  124  must provide a report to the board of directors of the Florida
  125  Network of Children’s Advocacy Centers, Inc., which reflects
  126  center expenditures, all sources of revenue received, and
  127  outputs that have been standardized and agreed upon by network
  128  members and the board of directors, such as the number of
  129  clients served, client demographic information, and number and
  130  types of services provided. The Florida Network of Children’s
  131  Advocacy Centers, Inc., must compile reports from the centers
  132  and provide a report to the President of the Senate and the
  133  Speaker of the House of Representatives in August of each year
  134  beginning in 2005.
  135         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  136         Section 7. Subsection (3) of section 106.34, Florida
  137  Statutes, is amended to read:
  138         106.34 Expenditure limits.—
  139         (3) For purposes of this section, “Florida-registered
  140  voter” means a voter who is registered to vote in Florida as of
  141  June 30 of each odd-numbered year. The Division of Elections
  142  shall certify the total number of Florida-registered voters no
  143  later than July 31 of each odd-numbered year. Such total number
  144  shall be calculated by adding the number of registered voters in
  145  each county as of June 30 in the year of the certification date.
  146  For the 2006 general election, the Division of Elections shall
  147  certify the total number of Florida-registered voters by July
  148  31, 2005.
  149         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
  150         Section 8. Paragraph (d) of subsection (4) of section
  151  119.071, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  152         119.071 General exemptions from inspection or copying of
  153  public records.—
  154         (4) AGENCY PERSONNEL INFORMATION.—
  155         (d)1. For purposes of this paragraph, the term “telephone
  156  numbers” includes home telephone numbers, personal cellular
  157  telephone numbers, personal pager telephone numbers, and
  158  telephone numbers associated with personal communications
  159  devices.
  160         2.a. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  161  and photographs of active or former sworn or civilian law
  162  enforcement personnel, including correctional and correctional
  163  probation officers, personnel of the Department of Children and
  164  Families whose duties include the investigation of abuse,
  165  neglect, exploitation, fraud, theft, or other criminal
  166  activities, personnel of the Department of Health whose duties
  167  are to support the investigation of child abuse or neglect, and
  168  personnel of the Department of Revenue or local governments
  169  whose responsibilities include revenue collection and
  170  enforcement or child support enforcement; the names, home
  171  addresses, telephone numbers, photographs, dates of birth, and
  172  places of employment of the spouses and children of such
  173  personnel; and the names and locations of schools and day care
  174  facilities attended by the children of such personnel are exempt
  175  from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  176  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  177  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  178  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2022, unless reviewed and
  179  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  180         b. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  181  and photographs of current or former nonsworn investigative
  182  personnel of the Department of Financial Services whose duties
  183  include the investigation of fraud, theft, workers’ compensation
  184  coverage requirements and compliance, other related criminal
  185  activities, or state regulatory requirement violations; the
  186  names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and
  187  places of employment of the spouses and children of such
  188  personnel; and the names and locations of schools and day care
  189  facilities attended by the children of such personnel are exempt
  190  from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  191  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  192  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  193  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2021, unless reviewed and
  194  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  195         c. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  196  and photographs of current or former nonsworn investigative
  197  personnel of the Office of Financial Regulation’s Bureau of
  198  Financial Investigations whose duties include the investigation
  199  of fraud, theft, other related criminal activities, or state
  200  regulatory requirement violations; the names, home addresses,
  201  telephone numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of
  202  the spouses and children of such personnel; and the names and
  203  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  204  children of such personnel are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s.
  205  24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. This sub-subparagraph
  206  is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act in
  207  accordance with s. 119.15 and shall stand repealed on October 2,
  208  2022, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through reenactment
  209  by the Legislature.
  210         d. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  211  and photographs of current or former firefighters certified in
  212  compliance with s. 633.408; the names, home addresses, telephone
  213  numbers, photographs, dates of birth, and places of employment
  214  of the spouses and children of such firefighters; and the names
  215  and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  216  children of such firefighters are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and
  217  s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. This sub
  218  subparagraph is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act
  219  in accordance with s. 119.15, and shall stand repealed on
  220  October 2, 2022, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through
  221  reenactment by the Legislature.
  222         e. The home addresses, dates of birth, and telephone
  223  numbers of current or former justices of the Supreme Court,
  224  district court of appeal judges, circuit court judges, and
  225  county court judges; the names, home addresses, telephone
  226  numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of the spouses
  227  and children of current or former justices and judges; and the
  228  names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended
  229  by the children of current or former justices and judges are
  230  exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  231  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  232  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  233  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2022, unless reviewed and
  234  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  235         f. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  236  and photographs of current or former state attorneys, assistant
  237  state attorneys, statewide prosecutors, or assistant statewide
  238  prosecutors; the names, home addresses, telephone numbers,
  239  photographs, dates of birth, and places of employment of the
  240  spouses and children of current or former state attorneys,
  241  assistant state attorneys, statewide prosecutors, or assistant
  242  statewide prosecutors; and the names and locations of schools
  243  and day care facilities attended by the children of current or
  244  former state attorneys, assistant state attorneys, statewide
  245  prosecutors, or assistant statewide prosecutors are exempt from
  246  s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution.
  247         g. The home addresses, dates of birth, and telephone
  248  numbers of general magistrates, special magistrates, judges of
  249  compensation claims, administrative law judges of the Division
  250  of Administrative Hearings, and child support enforcement
  251  hearing officers; the names, home addresses, telephone numbers,
  252  dates of birth, and places of employment of the spouses and
  253  children of general magistrates, special magistrates, judges of
  254  compensation claims, administrative law judges of the Division
  255  of Administrative Hearings, and child support enforcement
  256  hearing officers; and the names and locations of schools and day
  257  care facilities attended by the children of general magistrates,
  258  special magistrates, judges of compensation claims,
  259  administrative law judges of the Division of Administrative
  260  Hearings, and child support enforcement hearing officers are
  261  exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  262  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  263  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  264  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2022, unless reviewed and
  265  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  266         h. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  267  and photographs of current or former human resource, labor
  268  relations, or employee relations directors, assistant directors,
  269  managers, or assistant managers of any local government agency
  270  or water management district whose duties include hiring and
  271  firing employees, labor contract negotiation, administration, or
  272  other personnel-related duties; the names, home addresses,
  273  telephone numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of
  274  the spouses and children of such personnel; and the names and
  275  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  276  children of such personnel are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s.
  277  24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution.
  278         i. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  279  and photographs of current or former code enforcement officers;
  280  the names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  281  and places of employment of the spouses and children of such
  282  personnel; and the names and locations of schools and day care
  283  facilities attended by the children of such personnel are exempt
  284  from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  285  Constitution.
  286         j. The home addresses, telephone numbers, places of
  287  employment, dates of birth, and photographs of current or former
  288  guardians ad litem, as defined in s. 39.820; the names, home
  289  addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and places of
  290  employment of the spouses and children of such persons; and the
  291  names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended
  292  by the children of such persons are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and
  293  s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. This sub
  294  subparagraph is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act
  295  in accordance with s. 119.15 and shall stand repealed on October
  296  2, 2022, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through
  297  reenactment by the Legislature.
  298         k. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  299  and photographs of current or former juvenile probation
  300  officers, juvenile probation supervisors, detention
  301  superintendents, assistant detention superintendents, juvenile
  302  justice detention officers I and II, juvenile justice detention
  303  officer supervisors, juvenile justice residential officers,
  304  juvenile justice residential officer supervisors I and II,
  305  juvenile justice counselors, juvenile justice counselor
  306  supervisors, human services counselor administrators, senior
  307  human services counselor administrators, rehabilitation
  308  therapists, and social services counselors of the Department of
  309  Juvenile Justice; the names, home addresses, telephone numbers,
  310  dates of birth, and places of employment of spouses and children
  311  of such personnel; and the names and locations of schools and
  312  day care facilities attended by the children of such personnel
  313  are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  314  Constitution.
  315         l. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  316  and photographs of current or former public defenders, assistant
  317  public defenders, criminal conflict and civil regional counsel,
  318  and assistant criminal conflict and civil regional counsel; the
  319  names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and
  320  places of employment of the spouses and children of such current
  321  or former public defenders, assistant public defenders, criminal
  322  conflict and civil regional counsel, and assistant criminal
  323  conflict and civil regional or counsel; and the names and
  324  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  325  children of such current or former public defenders, assistant
  326  public defenders, criminal conflict and civil regional counsel,
  327  and assistant criminal conflict and civil regional or counsel
  328  are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  329  Constitution.
  330         m. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  331  and photographs of current or former investigators or inspectors
  332  of the Department of Business and Professional Regulation; the
  333  names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and
  334  places of employment of the spouses and children of such current
  335  or former investigators and inspectors; and the names and
  336  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  337  children of such current or former investigators and inspectors
  338  are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  339  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  340  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  341  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2022, unless reviewed and
  342  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  343         n. The home addresses, telephone numbers, and dates of
  344  birth of county tax collectors; the names, home addresses,
  345  telephone numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of
  346  the spouses and children of such tax collectors; and the names
  347  and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  348  children of such tax collectors are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and
  349  s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. This sub
  350  subparagraph is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act
  351  in accordance with s. 119.15 and shall stand repealed on October
  352  2, 2022, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through
  353  reenactment by the Legislature.
  354         o. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  355  and photographs of current or former personnel of the Department
  356  of Health whose duties include, or result in, the determination
  357  or adjudication of eligibility for social security disability
  358  benefits, the investigation or prosecution of complaints filed
  359  against health care practitioners, or the inspection of health
  360  care practitioners or health care facilities licensed by the
  361  Department of Health; the names, home addresses, telephone
  362  numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of the spouses
  363  and children of such personnel; and the names and locations of
  364  schools and day care facilities attended by the children of such
  365  personnel are exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of
  366  the State Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the
  367  Open Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15
  368  and shall stand repealed on October 2, 2019, unless reviewed and
  369  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  370         p. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  371  and photographs of current or former impaired practitioner
  372  consultants who are retained by an agency or current or former
  373  employees of an impaired practitioner consultant whose duties
  374  result in a determination of a person’s skill and safety to
  375  practice a licensed profession; the names, home addresses,
  376  telephone numbers, dates of birth, and places of employment of
  377  the spouses and children of such consultants or their employees;
  378  and the names and locations of schools and day care facilities
  379  attended by the children of such consultants or employees are
  380  exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  381  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  382  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  383  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2020, unless reviewed and
  384  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  385         q. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  386  and photographs of current or former emergency medical
  387  technicians or paramedics certified under chapter 401; the
  388  names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and
  389  places of employment of the spouses and children of such
  390  emergency medical technicians or paramedics; and the names and
  391  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
  392  children of such emergency medical technicians or paramedics are
  393  exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  394  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  395  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  396  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2021, unless reviewed and
  397  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  398         r. The home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  399  and photographs of current or former personnel employed in an
  400  agency’s office of inspector general or internal audit
  401  department whose duties include auditing or investigating waste,
  402  fraud, abuse, theft, exploitation, or other activities that
  403  could lead to criminal prosecution or administrative discipline;
  404  the names, home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth,
  405  and places of employment of spouses and children of such
  406  personnel; and the names and locations of schools and day care
  407  facilities attended by the children of such personnel are exempt
  408  from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
  409  Constitution. This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open
  410  Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and
  411  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2021, unless reviewed and
  412  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  413         3. An agency that is the custodian of the information
  414  specified in subparagraph 2. and that is not the employer of the
  415  officer, employee, justice, judge, or other person specified in
  416  subparagraph 2. shall maintain the exempt status of that
  417  information only if the officer, employee, justice, judge, other
  418  person, or employing agency of the designated employee submits a
  419  written request for maintenance of the exemption to the
  420  custodial agency.
  421         4. The exemptions in this paragraph apply to information
  422  held by an agency before, on, or after the effective date of the
  423  exemption.
  424         Reviser’s note.—Amended to improve clarity.
  425         Section 9. Section 119.092, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  426  read:
  427         119.092 Registration by federal employer’s registration
  428  number.—Each state agency which registers or licenses
  429  corporations, partnerships, or other business entities shall
  430  include, by July 1, 1978, within its numbering system, the
  431  federal employer’s identification number of each corporation,
  432  partnership, or other business entity registered or licensed by
  433  it. Any state agency may maintain a dual numbering system in
  434  which the federal employer’s identification number or the state
  435  agency’s own number is the primary identification number;
  436  however, the records of such state agency shall be designed in
  437  such a way that the record of any business entity is subject to
  438  direct location by the federal employer’s identification number.
  439  The Department of State shall keep a registry of federal
  440  employer’s identification numbers of all business entities,
  441  registered with the Division of Corporations, which registry of
  442  numbers may be used by all state agencies.
  443         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  444         Section 10. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (9) of
  445  section 121.091, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  446         121.091 Benefits payable under the system.—Benefits may not
  447  be paid under this section unless the member has terminated
  448  employment as provided in s. 121.021(39)(a) or begun
  449  participation in the Deferred Retirement Option Program as
  450  provided in subsection (13), and a proper application has been
  451  filed in the manner prescribed by the department. The department
  452  may cancel an application for retirement benefits when the
  453  member or beneficiary fails to timely provide the information
  454  and documents required by this chapter and the department’s
  455  rules. The department shall adopt rules establishing procedures
  456  for application for retirement benefits and for the cancellation
  457  of such application when the required information or documents
  458  are not received.
  459         (9) EMPLOYMENT AFTER RETIREMENT; LIMITATION.—
  460         (b) Any person whose retirement is effective before July 1,
  461  2010, or whose participation in the Deferred Retirement Option
  462  Program terminates before July 1, 2010, except under the
  463  disability retirement provisions of subsection (4) or as
  464  provided in s. 121.053, may be reemployed by an employer that
  465  participates in a state-administered retirement system and
  466  receive retirement benefits and compensation from that employer,
  467  except that the person may not be reemployed by an employer
  468  participating in the Florida Retirement System before meeting
  469  the definition of termination in s. 121.021 and may not receive
  470  both a salary from the employer and retirement benefits for 12
  471  calendar months immediately subsequent to the date of
  472  retirement. However, a DROP participant shall continue
  473  employment and receive a salary during the period of
  474  participation in the Deferred Retirement Option Program, as
  475  provided in subsection (13).
  476         1. A retiree who violates such reemployment limitation
  477  before completion of the 12-month limitation period must give
  478  timely notice of this fact in writing to the employer and to the
  479  Division of Retirement or the state board and shall have his or
  480  her retirement benefits suspended for the months employed or the
  481  balance of the 12-month limitation period as required in sub
  482  subparagraphs b. and c. A retiree employed in violation of this
  483  paragraph and an employer who employs or appoints such person
  484  are jointly and severally liable for reimbursement to the
  485  retirement trust fund, including the Florida Retirement System
  486  Trust Fund and the Florida Retirement System Investment Plan
  487  Trust Fund Public Employee Optional Retirement Program Trust
  488  Fund, from which the benefits were paid. The employer must have
  489  a written statement from the retiree that he or she is not
  490  retired from a state-administered retirement system. Retirement
  491  benefits shall remain suspended until repayment has been made.
  492  Benefits suspended beyond the reemployment limitation shall
  493  apply toward repayment of benefits received in violation of the
  494  reemployment limitation.
  495         a. A district school board may reemploy a retiree as a
  496  substitute or hourly teacher, education paraprofessional,
  497  transportation assistant, bus driver, or food service worker on
  498  a noncontractual basis after he or she has been retired for 1
  499  calendar month. A district school board may reemploy a retiree
  500  as instructional personnel, as defined in s. 1012.01(2)(a), on
  501  an annual contractual basis after he or she has been retired for
  502  1 calendar month. Any member who is reemployed within 1 calendar
  503  month after retirement shall void his or her application for
  504  retirement benefits. District school boards reemploying such
  505  teachers, education paraprofessionals, transportation
  506  assistants, bus drivers, or food service workers are subject to
  507  the retirement contribution required by subparagraph 2.
  508         b. A Florida College System institution board of trustees
  509  may reemploy a retiree as an adjunct instructor or as a
  510  participant in a phased retirement program within the Florida
  511  College System, after he or she has been retired for 1 calendar
  512  month. A member who is reemployed within 1 calendar month after
  513  retirement shall void his or her application for retirement
  514  benefits. Boards of trustees reemploying such instructors are
  515  subject to the retirement contribution required in subparagraph
  516  2. A retiree may be reemployed as an adjunct instructor for no
  517  more than 780 hours during the first 12 months of retirement. A
  518  retiree reemployed for more than 780 hours during the first 12
  519  months of retirement must give timely notice in writing to the
  520  employer and to the Division of Retirement or the state board of
  521  the date he or she will exceed the limitation. The division
  522  shall suspend his or her retirement benefits for the remainder
  523  of the 12 months of retirement. Any retiree employed in
  524  violation of this sub-subparagraph and any employer who employs
  525  or appoints such person without notifying the division to
  526  suspend retirement benefits are jointly and severally liable for
  527  any benefits paid during the reemployment limitation period. The
  528  employer must have a written statement from the retiree that he
  529  or she is not retired from a state-administered retirement
  530  system. Any retirement benefits received by the retiree while
  531  reemployed in excess of 780 hours during the first 12 months of
  532  retirement must be repaid to the Florida Retirement System Trust
  533  Fund, and retirement benefits shall remain suspended until
  534  repayment is made. Benefits suspended beyond the end of the
  535  retiree’s first 12 months of retirement shall apply toward
  536  repayment of benefits received in violation of the 780-hour
  537  reemployment limitation.
  538         c. The State University System may reemploy a retiree as an
  539  adjunct faculty member or as a participant in a phased
  540  retirement program within the State University System after the
  541  retiree has been retired for 1 calendar month. A member who is
  542  reemployed within 1 calendar month after retirement shall void
  543  his or her application for retirement benefits. The State
  544  University System is subject to the retired contribution
  545  required in subparagraph 2., as appropriate. A retiree may be
  546  reemployed as an adjunct faculty member or a participant in a
  547  phased retirement program for no more than 780 hours during the
  548  first 12 months of his or her retirement. A retiree reemployed
  549  for more than 780 hours during the first 12 months of retirement
  550  must give timely notice in writing to the employer and to the
  551  Division of Retirement or the state board of the date he or she
  552  will exceed the limitation. The division shall suspend his or
  553  her retirement benefits for the remainder of the 12 months. Any
  554  retiree employed in violation of this sub-subparagraph and any
  555  employer who employs or appoints such person without notifying
  556  the division to suspend retirement benefits are jointly and
  557  severally liable for any benefits paid during the reemployment
  558  limitation period. The employer must have a written statement
  559  from the retiree that he or she is not retired from a state
  560  administered retirement system. Any retirement benefits received
  561  by the retiree while reemployed in excess of 780 hours during
  562  the first 12 months of retirement must be repaid to the Florida
  563  Retirement System Trust Fund, and retirement benefits shall
  564  remain suspended until repayment is made. Benefits suspended
  565  beyond the end of the retiree’s first 12 months of retirement
  566  shall apply toward repayment of benefits received in violation
  567  of the 780-hour reemployment limitation.
  568         d. The Board of Trustees of the Florida School for the Deaf
  569  and the Blind may reemploy a retiree as a substitute teacher,
  570  substitute residential instructor, or substitute nurse on a
  571  noncontractual basis after he or she has been retired for 1
  572  calendar month. Any member who is reemployed within 1 calendar
  573  month after retirement shall void his or her application for
  574  retirement benefits. The Board of Trustees of the Florida School
  575  for the Deaf and the Blind reemploying such teachers,
  576  residential instructors, or nurses is subject to the retirement
  577  contribution required by subparagraph 2.
  578         e. A developmental research school may reemploy a retiree
  579  as a substitute or hourly teacher or an education
  580  paraprofessional as defined in s. 1012.01(2) on a noncontractual
  581  basis after he or she has been retired for 1 calendar month. A
  582  developmental research school may reemploy a retiree as
  583  instructional personnel, as defined in s. 1012.01(2)(a), on an
  584  annual contractual basis after he or she has been retired for 1
  585  calendar month after retirement. Any member who is reemployed
  586  within 1 calendar month voids his or her application for
  587  retirement benefits. A developmental research school that
  588  reemploys retired teachers and education paraprofessionals is
  589  subject to the retirement contribution required by subparagraph
  590  2.
  591         f. A charter school may reemploy a retiree as a substitute
  592  or hourly teacher on a noncontractual basis after he or she has
  593  been retired for 1 calendar month. A charter school may reemploy
  594  a retired member as instructional personnel, as defined in s.
  595  1012.01(2)(a), on an annual contractual basis after he or she
  596  has been retired for 1 calendar month after retirement. Any
  597  member who is reemployed within 1 calendar month voids his or
  598  her application for retirement benefits. A charter school that
  599  reemploys such teachers is subject to the retirement
  600  contribution required by subparagraph 2.
  601         2. The employment of a retiree or DROP participant of a
  602  state-administered retirement system does not affect the average
  603  final compensation or years of creditable service of the retiree
  604  or DROP participant. Before July 1, 1991, upon employment of any
  605  person, other than an elected officer as provided in s. 121.053,
  606  who is retired under a state-administered retirement program,
  607  the employer shall pay retirement contributions in an amount
  608  equal to the unfunded actuarial liability portion of the
  609  employer contribution which would be required for regular
  610  members of the Florida Retirement System. Effective July 1,
  611  1991, contributions shall be made as provided in s. 121.122 for
  612  retirees who have renewed membership or, as provided in
  613  subsection (13), for DROP participants.
  614         3. Any person who is holding an elective public office
  615  which is covered by the Florida Retirement System and who is
  616  concurrently employed in nonelected covered employment may elect
  617  to retire while continuing employment in the elective public
  618  office if he or she terminates his or her nonelected covered
  619  employment. Such person shall receive his or her retirement
  620  benefits in addition to the compensation of the elective office
  621  without regard to the time limitations otherwise provided in
  622  this subsection. A person who seeks to exercise the provisions
  623  of this subparagraph as they existed before May 3, 1984, may not
  624  be deemed to be retired under those provisions, unless such
  625  person is eligible to retire under this subparagraph, as amended
  626  by chapter 84-11, Laws of Florida.
  627         (c) Any person whose retirement is effective on or after
  628  July 1, 2010, or whose participation in the Deferred Retirement
  629  Option Program terminates on or after July 1, 2010, who is
  630  retired under this chapter, except under the disability
  631  retirement provisions of subsection (4) or as provided in s.
  632  121.053, may be reemployed by an employer that participates in a
  633  state-administered retirement system and receive retirement
  634  benefits and compensation from that employer. However, a person
  635  may not be reemployed by an employer participating in the
  636  Florida Retirement System before meeting the definition of
  637  termination in s. 121.021 and may not receive both a salary from
  638  the employer and retirement benefits for 6 calendar months after
  639  meeting the definition of termination. However, a DROP
  640  participant shall continue employment and receive a salary
  641  during the period of participation in the Deferred Retirement
  642  Option Program, as provided in subsection (13).
  643         1. The reemployed retiree may not renew membership in the
  644  Florida Retirement System, except as provided in s. 121.122.
  645         2. The employer shall pay retirement contributions in an
  646  amount equal to the unfunded actuarial liability portion of the
  647  employer contribution that would be required for active members
  648  of the Florida Retirement System in addition to the
  649  contributions required by s. 121.76.
  650         3. A retiree initially reemployed in violation of this
  651  paragraph and an employer that employs or appoints such person
  652  are jointly and severally liable for reimbursement of any
  653  retirement benefits paid to the retirement trust fund from which
  654  the benefits were paid, including the Florida Retirement System
  655  Trust Fund and the Florida Retirement System Investment Plan
  656  Trust Fund Public Employee Optional Retirement Program Trust
  657  Fund, as appropriate. The employer must have a written statement
  658  from the employee that he or she is not retired from a state
  659  administered retirement system. Retirement benefits shall remain
  660  suspended until repayment is made. Benefits suspended beyond the
  661  end of the retiree’s 6-month reemployment limitation period
  662  shall apply toward the repayment of benefits received in
  663  violation of this paragraph.
  664         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the renaming of the trust
  665         fund by s. 27, ch. 2011-68, Laws of Florida.
  666         Section 11. Paragraph (b) of subsection (5) of section
  667  197.3632, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  668         197.3632 Uniform method for the levy, collection, and
  669  enforcement of non-ad valorem assessments.—
  670         (5)
  671         (b) Beginning in 2009, By December 15 of each year, the tax
  672  collector shall provide to the department a copy of each local
  673  governing board’s non-ad valorem assessment roll containing the
  674  data elements and in the format prescribed by the executive
  675  director. In addition, beginning in 2008, a report shall be
  676  provided to the department by December 15 of each year for each
  677  non-ad valorem assessment roll, including, but not limited to,
  678  the following information:
  679         1. The name and type of local governing board levying the
  680  non-ad valorem assessment;
  681         2. Whether or not the local government levies a property
  682  tax;
  683         3. The basis for the levy;
  684         4. The rate of assessment;
  685         5. The total amount of non-ad valorem assessment levied;
  686  and
  687         6. The number of parcels affected.
  688         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  689         Section 12. Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section
  690  197.502, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  691         197.502 Application for obtaining tax deed by holder of tax
  692  sale certificate; fees.—
  693         (5)(a) The tax collector may contract with a title company
  694  or an abstract company to provide the minimum information
  695  required in subsection (4), consistent with rules adopted by the
  696  department. If additional information is required, the tax
  697  collector must make a written request to the title or abstract
  698  company stating the additional requirements. The tax collector
  699  may select any title or abstract company, regardless of its
  700  location, as long as the fee is reasonable, the minimum
  701  information is submitted, and the title or abstract company is
  702  authorized to do business in this state. The tax collector may
  703  advertise and accept bids for the title or abstract company if
  704  he or she considers it appropriate to do so.
  705         1. The property information report must include the
  706  letterhead of the person, firm, or company that makes the
  707  search, and the signature of the individual who makes the search
  708  or of an officer of the firm. The tax collector is not liable
  709  for payment to the firm unless these requirements are met. The
  710  report may be submitted to the tax collector in an electronic
  711  format.
  712         2. The tax collector may not accept or pay for any title
  713  search or abstract if financial responsibility is not assumed
  714  for the search. However, reasonable restrictions as to the
  715  liability or responsibility of the title or abstract company are
  716  acceptable. Notwithstanding s. 627.7843(3), the tax collector
  717  may contract for higher maximum liability limits.
  718         3. In order to establish uniform prices for property
  719  information reports within the county, the tax collector must
  720  ensure that the contract for property information reports
  721  include all requests for title searches or abstracts for a given
  722  period of time.
  723         Reviser’s note.—Amended to correct an apparent error. The word
  724         “reports” was stricken in error by s. 3, ch. 2017-132, Laws
  725         of Florida; the intent is for the word to remain.
  726         Section 13. Subsection (3) of section 199.303, Florida
  727  Statutes, is amended to read:
  728         199.303 Declaration of legislative intent.—
  729         (3)It is hereby declared to be the specific intent of the
  730  Legislature that all annual intangible personal property taxes
  731  imposed as provided by law for calendar years 2006 and prior
  732  shall remain in full force and effect during the period
  733  specified by s. 95.091 for the year in which the tax was due. It
  734  is further the intent of the Legislature that the department
  735  continue to assess and collect all taxes due to the state under
  736  such provisions for all periods available for assessment, as
  737  provided for the year in which tax was due by s. 95.091.
  738         Reviser’s note.—Amended to improve clarity.
  739         Section 14. Paragraph (b) of subsection (8) of section
  740  206.8745, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  741         206.8745 Credits and refund claims.—
  742         (8) Undyed, tax-paid diesel fuel purchased in this state
  743  and consumed by the engine of a qualified motor coach during
  744  idle time for the purpose of running climate control systems and
  745  maintaining electrical systems for the motor coach is subject to
  746  a refund. As used in this subsection, the term “qualified motor
  747  coach” means a privately owned vehicle that is designed to carry
  748  nine or more passengers, that has a gross vehicle weight of at
  749  least 33,000 pounds, that is used exclusively in the commercial
  750  application of transporting passengers for compensation, and
  751  that has the capacity to measure diesel fuel consumed in Florida
  752  during idling, separate from diesel fuel consumed to propel the
  753  vehicle in this state, by way of an on-board computer.
  754         (b) The annual refund claim must be submitted before April
  755  1 of the year following the year in which the tax was paid and
  756  after December 31, 2000.
  757  
  758  The Department of Revenue may adopt rules to administer this
  759  subsection.
  760         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  761         Section 15. Subsection (5) of section 213.755, Florida
  762  Statutes, is amended to read:
  763         213.755 Filing of returns and payment of taxes by
  764  electronic means.—
  765         (5) Beginning January 1, 2003, Consolidated filers shall
  766  file returns and remit taxes by electronic means.
  767         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  768         Section 16. Subsection (1) of section 215.442, Florida
  769  Statutes, is amended to read:
  770         215.442 Executive director; reporting requirements; public
  771  meeting.—
  772         (1) Beginning October 2007 and quarterly thereafter, The
  773  executive director shall present to the Board of Trustees of the
  774  State Board of Administration a quarterly report to include the
  775  following:
  776         (a) The name of each equity in which the State Board of
  777  Administration has invested for the quarter.
  778         (b) The industry category of each equity.
  779         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  780         Section 17. Subsection (1) of section 215.444, Florida
  781  Statutes, is amended to read:
  782         215.444 Investment Advisory Council.—
  783         (1) There is created a nine-member six-member Investment
  784  Advisory Council to review the investments made by the staff of
  785  the Board of Administration and to make recommendations to the
  786  board regarding investment policy, strategy, and procedures.
  787  Beginning February 1, 2011, the membership of the council shall
  788  be expanded to nine members. The council shall meet with staff
  789  of the board at least once each quarter and shall provide a
  790  quarterly report directly to the Board of Trustees of the State
  791  Board of Administration at a meeting of the board.
  792         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  793         Section 18. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) and paragraph
  794  (a) of subsection (3) of section 215.4725, Florida Statutes, are
  795  amended to read:
  796         215.4725 Prohibited investments by the State Board of
  797  Administration; companies that boycott Israel.—
  798         (2) IDENTIFICATION OF COMPANIES.—
  799         (a) By August 1, 2016, The public fund shall make its best
  800  efforts to identify all scrutinized companies in which the
  801  public fund has direct or indirect holdings or could possibly
  802  have such holdings in the future. Such efforts include:
  803         1. To the extent that the public fund finds it appropriate,
  804  reviewing and relying on publicly available information
  805  regarding companies that boycott Israel, including information
  806  provided by nonprofit organizations, research firms,
  807  international organizations, and government entities;
  808         2. Contacting asset managers contracted by the public fund
  809  for information regarding companies that boycott Israel; or
  810         3. Contacting other institutional investors that prohibit
  811  such investments or that have engaged with companies that
  812  boycott Israel.
  813         (3) REQUIRED ACTIONS.—The public fund shall adhere to the
  814  following procedures for assembling companies on the Scrutinized
  815  Companies that Boycott Israel List.
  816         (a) Engagement.—
  817         1. The public fund shall immediately determine the
  818  companies on the Scrutinized Companies that Boycott Israel List
  819  in which the public fund owns direct or indirect holdings.
  820         2. For each company newly identified under this paragraph
  821  after August 1, 2016, the public fund shall send a written
  822  notice informing the company of its scrutinized company status
  823  and that it may become subject to investment prohibition by the
  824  public fund. The notice must inform the company of the
  825  opportunity to clarify its activities regarding the boycott of
  826  Israel and encourage the company to cease the boycott of Israel
  827  within 90 days in order to avoid qualifying for investment
  828  prohibition.
  829         3. If, within 90 days after the public fund’s first
  830  engagement with a company pursuant to this paragraph, the
  831  company ceases a boycott of Israel, the company shall be removed
  832  from the Scrutinized Companies that Boycott Israel List, and the
  833  provisions of this section shall cease to apply to that company
  834  unless that company resumes a boycott of Israel.
  835         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  836         Section 19. Section 252.357, Florida Statutes, is amended
  837  to read:
  838         252.357 Monitoring of nursing homes and assisted living
  839  facilities during disaster.—The Florida Comprehensive Emergency
  840  Management Plan shall permit the Agency for Health Care
  841  Administration, working from the agency’s offices or in the
  842  Emergency Operations Center, ESF-8, to make initial contact with
  843  each nursing home and assisted living facility in the disaster
  844  area. The agency, by July 15, 2006, and annually thereafter,
  845  shall publish on the Internet an emergency telephone number that
  846  may be used by nursing homes and assisted living facilities to
  847  contact the agency on a schedule established by the agency to
  848  report requests for assistance. The agency may also provide the
  849  telephone number to each facility when it makes the initial
  850  facility call.
  851         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  852         Section 20. Section 252.358, Florida Statutes, is amended
  853  to read:
  854         252.358 Emergency-preparedness prescription medication
  855  refills.—All health insurers, managed care organizations, and
  856  other entities that are licensed by the Office of Insurance
  857  Regulation and provide prescription medication coverage as part
  858  of a policy or contract shall waive time restrictions on
  859  prescription medication refills, which include suspension of
  860  electronic “refill too soon” edits to pharmacies, to enable
  861  insureds or subscribers to refill prescriptions in advance, if
  862  there are authorized refills remaining, and shall authorize
  863  payment to pharmacies for at least a 30-day supply of any
  864  prescription medication, regardless of the date upon which the
  865  prescription had most recently been filled by a pharmacist, when
  866  the following conditions occur:
  867         (1) The person seeking the prescription medication refill
  868  resides in a county that:
  869         (a) Is under a hurricane warning issued by the National
  870  Weather Service;
  871         (b) Is declared to be under a state of emergency in an
  872  executive order issued by the Governor; or
  873         (c) Has activated its emergency operations center and its
  874  emergency management plan.
  875         (2) The prescription medication refill is requested within
  876  30 days after the origination date of the conditions stated in
  877  this section or until such conditions are terminated by the
  878  issuing authority or no longer exist. The time period for the
  879  waiver of prescription medication refills may be extended in 15-
  880  or 30-day increments by emergency orders issued by the Office of
  881  Insurance Regulation.
  882  
  883  This section does not excuse or exempt an insured or subscriber
  884  from compliance with all other terms of the policy or contract
  885  providing prescription medication coverage. This section takes
  886  effect July 1, 2006.
  887         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
  888         Section 21. Paragraph (c) of subsection (7) of section
  889  258.501, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  890         258.501 Myakka River; wild and scenic segment.—
  891         (7) MANAGEMENT COORDINATING COUNCIL.—
  892         (c)The Myakka River Management Coordinating Council shall
  893  prepare a report concerning the potential expansion of the
  894  Florida Wild and Scenic River designation to include the entire
  895  Myakka River. At a minimum, the report shall include a
  896  description of the extent of the Myakka River area that may be
  897  covered under the expanded designation and any recommendations
  898  or concerns of affected parties or other interests. During the
  899  development of the report, at least one public hearing shall be
  900  held in each of the affected areas of Manatee, Sarasota, and
  901  Charlotte Counties. The report shall be submitted to the
  902  Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
  903  House of Representatives no later than January 1, 2008.
  904         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
  905         Section 22. Subsection (1) of section 261.04, Florida
  906  Statutes, is amended to read:
  907         261.04 Off-Highway Vehicle Recreation Advisory Committee;
  908  members; appointment.—
  909         (1) Effective July 1, 2003, The Off-Highway Vehicle
  910  Recreation Advisory Committee is created within the Florida
  911  Forest Service and consists of nine members, all of whom are
  912  appointed by the Commissioner of Agriculture. The appointees
  913  shall include one representative of the Department of
  914  Agriculture and Consumer Services, one representative of the
  915  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, one
  916  representative of the Department of Environmental Protection’s
  917  Office of Greenways and Trails, one representative of the Fish
  918  and Wildlife Conservation Commission, one citizen with
  919  scientific expertise in disciplines relating to ecology,
  920  wildlife biology, or other environmental sciences, one
  921  representative of a licensed off-highway vehicle dealer, and
  922  three representatives of off-highway vehicle recreation groups.
  923  In making these appointments, the commissioner shall consider
  924  the places of residence of the members to ensure statewide
  925  representation.
  926         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  927         Section 23. Subsection (3) and paragraph (c) of subsection
  928  (4) of section 261.20, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  929         261.20 Operations of off-highway vehicles on public lands;
  930  restrictions; safety courses; required equipment; prohibited
  931  acts; penalties.—
  932         (3) Effective July 1, 2008, While operating an off-highway
  933  vehicle, a person who has not attained 16 years of age must have
  934  in his or her possession a certificate evidencing the
  935  satisfactory completion of an approved off-highway vehicle
  936  safety course in this state or another jurisdiction. A
  937  nonresident who has not attained 16 years of age and who is in
  938  this state temporarily for a period not to exceed 30 days is
  939  exempt from this subsection. Nothing contained in this chapter
  940  shall prohibit an agency from requiring additional safety
  941  education courses for all operators.
  942         (4)
  943         (c) On and after July 1, 2008, Off-highway vehicles, when
  944  operating pursuant to this chapter, shall be equipped with a
  945  silencer or other device which limits sound emissions. Exhaust
  946  noise must not exceed 96 decibels in the A-weighting scale for
  947  vehicles manufactured after January 1, 1986, or 99 decibels in
  948  the A-weighting scale for vehicles manufactured before January
  949  1, 1986, when measured from a distance of 20 inches using test
  950  procedures established by the Society of Automotive Engineers
  951  under Standard J-1287. Off-highway vehicle manufacturers or
  952  their agents prior to the sale to the general public in this
  953  state of any new off-highway vehicle model manufactured after
  954  January 1, 2008, shall provide to the department revolutions
  955  per-minute data needed to conduct the J-1287 test, where
  956  applicable.
  957         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  958         Section 24. Subsection (1) of section 284.02, Florida
  959  Statutes, is amended to read:
  960         284.02 Payment of premiums by each agency; handling of
  961  funds; payment of losses and expenses.—
  962         (1) Premiums as calculated on all coverages shall be billed
  963  and charged to each state agency according to coverages obtained
  964  from the fund for their benefit, and such obligation shall be
  965  paid promptly by each agency from its operating budget upon
  966  presentation of a bill therefor. However, no state agency shall
  967  be liable for the cost of insurance protection under this
  968  section prior to July 1, 1971, if any obligation therefor would
  969  be incurred against unappropriated funds. After July 1, 1971,
  970  Billings and the obligation to pay shall be based on coverage
  971  provided during each fiscal year and annually thereafter.
  972         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
  973         Section 25. Subsection (2) of section 286.29, Florida
  974  Statutes, is amended to read:
  975         286.29 Climate-friendly public business.—The Legislature
  976  recognizes the importance of leadership by state government in
  977  the area of energy efficiency and in reducing the greenhouse gas
  978  emissions of state government operations. The following shall
  979  pertain to all state agencies when conducting public business:
  980         (2) Effective July 1, 2008, State agencies shall contract
  981  for meeting and conference space only with hotels or conference
  982  facilities that have received the “Green Lodging” designation
  983  from the Department of Environmental Protection for best
  984  practices in water, energy, and waste efficiency standards,
  985  unless the responsible state agency head makes a determination
  986  that no other viable alternative exists. The Department of
  987  Environmental Protection is authorized to adopt rules to
  988  implement the “Green Lodging” program.
  989         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
  990         Section 26. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
  991  288.0001, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  992         288.0001 Economic Development Programs Evaluation.—The
  993  Office of Economic and Demographic Research and the Office of
  994  Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability (OPPAGA)
  995  shall develop and present to the Governor, the President of the
  996  Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
  997  chairs of the legislative appropriations committees the Economic
  998  Development Programs Evaluation.
  999         (2) The Office of Economic and Demographic Research and
 1000  OPPAGA shall provide a detailed analysis of economic development
 1001  programs as provided in the following schedule:
 1002         (c) By January 1, 2016, and every 3 years thereafter, an
 1003  analysis of the following:
 1004         1. The qualified defense contractor and space flight
 1005  business tax refund program established under s. 288.1045.
 1006         2. The tax exemption for semiconductor, defense, or space
 1007  technology sales established under s. 212.08(5)(j).
 1008         3. The Military Base Protection Program established under
 1009  s. 288.980.
 1010         4.The Manufacturing and Spaceport Investment Incentive
 1011  Program formerly established under s. 288.1083.
 1012         4.5. The Quick Response Training Program established under
 1013  s. 288.047.
 1014         5.6. The Incumbent Worker Training Program established
 1015  under s. 445.003.
 1016         6.7. International trade and business development programs
 1017  established or funded under s. 288.826.
 1018         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the repeal of referenced
 1019         s. 288.1083 by s. 6, ch. 2014-18, Laws of Florida, to
 1020         confirm repeal of s. 288.1083 pursuant to its own terms
 1021         effective July 1, 2013.
 1022         Section 27. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of section
 1023  288.101, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1024         288.101 Florida Job Growth Grant Fund.—
 1025         (3) For purposes of this section:
 1026         (c) “Targeted industry” means any industry identified in
 1027  the most recent list provided to the Governor, the President of
 1028  the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives in
 1029  accordance with s. 288.106(2)(q) 288.106(q).
 1030         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 1031         a reference to s. 288.106(2)(q) for a reference to s.
 1032         288.106(q) to provide the complete citation.
 1033         Section 28. Subsection (5) of section 288.1258, Florida
 1034  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1035         288.1258 Entertainment industry qualified production
 1036  companies; application procedure; categories; duties of the
 1037  Department of Revenue; records and reports.—
 1038         (5) RELATIONSHIP OF TAX EXEMPTIONS AND INCENTIVES TO
 1039  INDUSTRY GROWTH; REPORT TO THE LEGISLATURE.—The Office of Film
 1040  and Entertainment shall keep annual records from the information
 1041  provided on taxpayer applications for tax exemption certificates
 1042  beginning January 1, 2001. These records also must reflect a
 1043  ratio of the annual amount of sales and use tax exemptions under
 1044  this section, plus the incentives awarded pursuant to s.
 1045  288.1254 to the estimated amount of funds expended by certified
 1046  productions. In addition, the office shall maintain data showing
 1047  annual growth in Florida-based entertainment industry companies
 1048  and entertainment industry employment and wages. The employment
 1049  information must include an estimate of the full-time equivalent
 1050  positions created by each production that received tax credits
 1051  pursuant to s. 288.1254. The Office of Film and Entertainment
 1052  shall include this information in the annual report for the
 1053  entertainment industry financial incentive program required
 1054  under s. 288.1254(10).
 1055         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1056         Section 29. Paragraph (b) of subsection (12) of section
 1057  315.03, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1058         315.03 Grant of powers.—Each unit is hereby authorized and
 1059  empowered:
 1060         (12)
 1061         (b) The Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic
 1062  Development Council shall prepare an annual report detailing the
 1063  amounts loaned, the projects financed by the loans, any interest
 1064  earned, and loans outstanding. The report shall be submitted to
 1065  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
 1066  the House of Representatives by January 1 of each year,
 1067  beginning in 2004.
 1068         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1069         Section 30. Subsection (3) of section 320.833, Florida
 1070  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1071         320.833 Retention, destruction, and reproduction of
 1072  records; electronic retention.—Records and documents of the
 1073  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, created in
 1074  compliance with, and in the implementation of, chapter 319 and
 1075  this chapter, shall be retained by the department as specified
 1076  in record retention schedules established under the general
 1077  provisions of chapter 119. Further, the department is hereby
 1078  authorized:
 1079         (3) Beginning December 1, 2001, the department may To
 1080  maintain all records required or obtained in compliance with,
 1081  and in the implementation of, chapter 319 and this chapter
 1082  exclusively by electronic means.
 1083         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1084         Section 31. Section 320.865, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1085  to read:
 1086         320.865 Maintenance of records by the department.—Beginning
 1087  December 1, 2001, The department shall maintain electronic
 1088  records of all complaints filed against licensees licensed under
 1089  the provisions of ss. 320.27, 320.61, 320.77, 320.771, and
 1090  320.8225, any other provision of this chapter to the contrary
 1091  notwithstanding. The records shall contain all enforcement
 1092  actions taken against licensees and against unlicensed persons
 1093  acting in a capacity which would require them to be licensed
 1094  under those sections. The electronic file of each licensee and
 1095  unlicensed person shall contain a record of any complaints filed
 1096  against him or her and a record of any enforcement actions taken
 1097  against him or her. The complainant and the referring agency, if
 1098  there is one, shall be advised of the disposition by the
 1099  department of the complaint within 10 days of such action.
 1100         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1101         Section 32. Subsection (1) of section 331.3051, Florida
 1102  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1103         331.3051 Duties of Space Florida.—Space Florida shall:
 1104         (1) Create a business plan to foster the growth and
 1105  development of the aerospace industry. The business plan must
 1106  address business development, finance, spaceport operations,
 1107  research and development, workforce development, and education.
 1108  The business plan must be completed by March 1, 2007, and be
 1109  revised when determined as necessary by the board.
 1110         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1111         Section 33. Subsection (8) of section 332.007, Florida
 1112  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1113         332.007 Administration and financing of aviation and
 1114  airport programs and projects; state plan.—
 1115         (8)Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, any
 1116  airport with direct intercontinental passenger service that is
 1117  located in a county with a population under 400,000 as of July
 1118  1, 2002, and that has a loan from the Department of
 1119  Transportation due in August of 2002 shall have such loan
 1120  extended until September 18, 2008.
 1121         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
 1122         Section 34. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
 1123  344.26, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1124         344.26 State Board of Administration; duties concerning
 1125  debt service.—
 1126         (1)
 1127         (d) It shall be the duty of all officials of any such
 1128  public body, county, district, municipality or other public
 1129  authority to turn over to said State Board of Administration
 1130  within 30 days after May 27, 1943, or within 30 days after the
 1131  execution hereafter of any such lease or purchase agreement by
 1132  Department of Transportation all moneys or other assets
 1133  applicable to, or available for, the payment of said bonds or
 1134  debentures, together with all records, books, documents or other
 1135  papers pertaining to said bonds or debentures.
 1136         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1137         Section 35. Subsection (1) of section 364.386, Florida
 1138  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1139         364.386 Reports to the Legislature.—
 1140         (1)(a) The commission shall submit to the President of the
 1141  Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
 1142  majority and minority leaders of the Senate and the House of
 1143  Representatives, on August 1, 2008, and on an annual basis
 1144  thereafter, a report on the status of competition in the
 1145  telecommunications industry and a detailed exposition of the
 1146  following:
 1147         1. The ability of competitive providers to make
 1148  functionally equivalent local exchange services available to
 1149  both residential and business customers at competitive rates,
 1150  terms, and conditions.
 1151         2. The ability of consumers to obtain functionally
 1152  equivalent services at comparable rates, terms, and conditions.
 1153         3. The overall impact of competition on the maintenance of
 1154  reasonably affordable and reliable high-quality
 1155  telecommunications services.
 1156         4. A listing and short description of any carrier disputes
 1157  filed under s. 364.16.
 1158         (b) The commission shall make an annual request to
 1159  providers of local exchange telecommunications services on or
 1160  before March 1, 2008, and on or before March 1 of each year
 1161  thereafter, for the data it requires to complete the report. A
 1162  provider of local exchange telecommunications services shall
 1163  file its response with the commission on or before April 15,
 1164  2008, and on or before April 15 of each year thereafter.
 1165         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1166         Section 36. Subsection (3) of section 366.92, Florida
 1167  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1168         366.92 Florida renewable energy policy.—
 1169         (3) Each municipal electric utility and rural electric
 1170  cooperative shall develop standards for the promotion,
 1171  encouragement, and expansion of the use of renewable energy
 1172  resources and energy conservation and efficiency measures. On or
 1173  before April 1, 2009, and annually thereafter, each municipal
 1174  electric utility and electric cooperative shall submit to the
 1175  commission a report that identifies such standards.
 1176         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1177         Section 37. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section
 1178  373.036, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1179         373.036 Florida water plan; district water management
 1180  plans.—
 1181         (7) CONSOLIDATED WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT ANNUAL REPORT.—
 1182         (a) By March 1, 2006, and annually thereafter, each water
 1183  management district shall prepare and submit to the department,
 1184  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
 1185  the House of Representatives a consolidated water management
 1186  district annual report on the management of water resources. In
 1187  addition, copies must be provided by the water management
 1188  districts to the chairs of all legislative committees having
 1189  substantive or fiscal jurisdiction over the districts and the
 1190  governing board of each county in the district having
 1191  jurisdiction or deriving any funds for operations of the
 1192  district. Copies of the consolidated annual report must be made
 1193  available to the public, either in printed or electronic format.
 1194         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1195         Section 38. Subsection (3) of section 373.042, Florida
 1196  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1197         373.042 Minimum flows and minimum water levels.—
 1198         (3) By November 15, 1997, and annually thereafter, each
 1199  water management district shall submit to the department for
 1200  review and approval a priority list and schedule for the
 1201  establishment of minimum flows and minimum water levels for
 1202  surface watercourses, aquifers, and surface waters within the
 1203  district. The priority list and schedule shall identify those
 1204  listed water bodies for which the district will voluntarily
 1205  undertake independent scientific peer review; any reservations
 1206  proposed by the district to be established pursuant to s.
 1207  373.223(4); and those listed water bodies that have the
 1208  potential to be affected by withdrawals in an adjacent district
 1209  for which the department’s adoption of a reservation pursuant to
 1210  s. 373.223(4) or a minimum flow or minimum water level pursuant
 1211  to subsection (1) may be appropriate. By March 1, 2006, and
 1212  annually thereafter, each water management district shall
 1213  include its approved priority list and schedule in the
 1214  consolidated annual report required by s. 373.036(7). The
 1215  priority list shall be based upon the importance of the waters
 1216  to the state or region and the existence of or potential for
 1217  significant harm to the water resources or ecology of the state
 1218  or region, and shall include those waters which are experiencing
 1219  or may reasonably be expected to experience adverse impacts.
 1220  Each water management district’s priority list and schedule
 1221  shall include all first magnitude springs, and all second
 1222  magnitude springs within state or federally owned lands
 1223  purchased for conservation purposes. The specific schedule for
 1224  establishment of spring minimum flows and minimum water levels
 1225  shall be commensurate with the existing or potential threat to
 1226  spring flow from consumptive uses. Springs within the Suwannee
 1227  River Water Management District, or second magnitude springs in
 1228  other areas of the state, need not be included on the priority
 1229  list if the water management district submits a report to the
 1230  Department of Environmental Protection demonstrating that
 1231  adverse impacts are not now occurring nor are reasonably
 1232  expected to occur from consumptive uses during the next 20
 1233  years. The priority list and schedule is not subject to any
 1234  proceeding pursuant to chapter 120. Except as provided in
 1235  subsection (4), the development of a priority list and
 1236  compliance with the schedule for the establishment of minimum
 1237  flows and minimum water levels pursuant to this subsection
 1238  satisfies the requirements of subsection (1).
 1239         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1240         Section 39. Subsection (7) of section 373.470, Florida
 1241  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1242         373.470 Everglades restoration.—
 1243         (7) ANNUAL REPORT.—To provide enhanced oversight of and
 1244  accountability for the financial commitments established under
 1245  this section and the progress made in the implementation of the
 1246  comprehensive plan, the following information must be prepared
 1247  annually as part of the consolidated annual report required by
 1248  s. 373.036(7):
 1249         (a) The district, in cooperation with the department, shall
 1250  provide the following information as it relates to
 1251  implementation of the comprehensive plan:
 1252         1. An identification of funds, by source and amount,
 1253  received by the state and by each local sponsor during the
 1254  fiscal year.
 1255         2. An itemization of expenditures, by source and amount,
 1256  made by the state and by each local sponsor during the fiscal
 1257  year.
 1258         3. A description of the purpose for which the funds were
 1259  expended.
 1260         4. The unencumbered balance of funds remaining in trust
 1261  funds or other accounts designated for implementation of the
 1262  comprehensive plan.
 1263         5. A schedule of anticipated expenditures for the next
 1264  fiscal year.
 1265         (b) The department shall prepare a detailed report on all
 1266  funds expended by the state and credited toward the state’s
 1267  share of funding for implementation of the comprehensive plan.
 1268  The report shall include:
 1269         1. A description of all expenditures, by source and amount,
 1270  from the former Conservation and Recreation Lands Trust Fund,
 1271  the Land Acquisition Trust Fund, the former Preservation 2000
 1272  Trust Fund, the Florida Forever Trust Fund, the Save Our
 1273  Everglades Trust Fund, and other named funds or accounts for the
 1274  acquisition or construction of project components or other
 1275  features or facilities that benefit the comprehensive plan.
 1276         2. A description of the purposes for which the funds were
 1277  expended.
 1278         3. The unencumbered fiscal-year-end balance that remains in
 1279  each trust fund or account identified in subparagraph 1.
 1280         (c) The district, in cooperation with the department, shall
 1281  provide a detailed report on progress made in the implementation
 1282  of the comprehensive plan, including the status of all project
 1283  components initiated after the effective date of this act or the
 1284  date of the last report prepared under this subsection,
 1285  whichever is later.
 1286  
 1287  The information required in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) shall
 1288  be provided as part of the consolidated annual report required
 1289  by s. 373.036(7). The initial report is due by November 30,
 1290  2000, and Each annual report thereafter is due by March 1.
 1291         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1292         Section 40. Subsection (9) of section 373.709, Florida
 1293  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1294         373.709 Regional water supply planning.—
 1295         (9)For any regional water supply plan that is scheduled to
 1296  be updated before December 31, 2005, the deadline for such
 1297  update shall be extended by 1 year.
 1298         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1299         Section 41. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
 1300  376.303, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1301         376.303 Powers and duties of the Department of
 1302  Environmental Protection.—
 1303         (1) The department has the power and the duty to:
 1304         (d) Establish a registration program for drycleaning
 1305  facilities and wholesale supply facilities.
 1306         1. Owners or operators of drycleaning facilities and
 1307  wholesale supply facilities and real property owners shall
 1308  jointly register each facility owned and in operation with the
 1309  department by June 30, 1995, pay initial registration fees by
 1310  December 31, 1995, and pay annual renewal registration fees by
 1311  December 31, 1996, and each year thereafter, in accordance with
 1312  this subsection. If the registration form cannot be jointly
 1313  submitted, then the applicant shall provide notice of the
 1314  registration to other interested parties. The department shall
 1315  establish reasonable requirements for the registration of such
 1316  facilities. The department shall use reasonable efforts to
 1317  identify and notify drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply
 1318  facilities of the registration requirements by certified mail,
 1319  return receipt requested. The department shall provide to the
 1320  Department of Revenue a copy of each applicant’s registration
 1321  materials, within 30 working days of the receipt of the
 1322  materials. This copy may be in such electronic format as the two
 1323  agencies mutually designate.
 1324         2.a. The department shall issue an invoice for annual
 1325  registration fees to each registered drycleaning facility or
 1326  wholesale supply facility by December 31 of each year. Owners of
 1327  drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply facilities shall
 1328  submit to the department an initial fee of $100 and an annual
 1329  renewal registration fee of $100 for each drycleaning facility
 1330  or wholesale supply facility owned and in operation. The fee
 1331  shall be paid within 30 days after receipt of billing by the
 1332  department. Facilities that fail to pay their renewal fee within
 1333  30 days after receipt of billing are subject to a late fee of
 1334  $75.
 1335         b. Revenues derived from registration, renewal, and late
 1336  fees shall be deposited into the Water Quality Assurance Trust
 1337  Fund to be used as provided in s. 376.3078.
 1338         3. Effective March 1, 2009, A registered drycleaning
 1339  facility shall display in the vicinity of its drycleaning
 1340  machines the original or a copy of a valid and current
 1341  certificate evidencing registration with the department pursuant
 1342  to this paragraph. After that date, A person may not sell or
 1343  transfer any drycleaning solvents to an owner or operator of a
 1344  drycleaning facility unless the owner or operator of the
 1345  drycleaning facility displays the certificate issued by the
 1346  department. Violators of this subparagraph are subject to the
 1347  remedies available to the department pursuant to s. 376.302.
 1348         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1349         Section 42. Subsection (5) of section 379.2495, Florida
 1350  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1351         379.2495 Florida Ships-2-Reefs Program; matching grant
 1352  requirements.—
 1353         (5) No later than January 1 of each year, 2009, and each
 1354  January 1 thereafter, the commission shall submit a report to
 1355  the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of
 1356  the House of Representatives detailing the expenditure of the
 1357  funds appropriated to it for the purposes of carrying out the
 1358  provisions of this section.
 1359         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1360         Section 43. Paragraph (d) of subsection (14) of section
 1361  381.986, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1362         381.986 Medical use of marijuana.—
 1363         (14) EXCEPTIONS TO OTHER LAWS.—
 1364         (d) A licensed medical marijuana treatment center and its
 1365  owners, managers, and employees are not subject to licensure or
 1366  regulation under chapter 465 or chapter 499 for manufacturing,
 1367  possessing, selling, delivering, distributing, dispensing, or
 1368  lawfully disposing of marijuana or a marijuana delivery device,
 1369  as provided in this section, in s. 381.988, and by department
 1370  rule.
 1371         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial insertion of
 1372         the word “in.”
 1373         Section 44. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 1374  381.987, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1375         381.987 Public records exemption for personal identifying
 1376  information relating to medical marijuana held by the
 1377  department.—
 1378         (1) The following information is confidential and exempt
 1379  from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
 1380  Constitution:
 1381         (b) All personal identifying information collected for the
 1382  purpose of issuing a patient’s or caregiver’s medical marijuana
 1383  use registry identification card described in s. 381.986
 1384  381.896.
 1385         Reviser’s note.—Amended to correct an erroneous cross-reference.
 1386         Section 381.986(7), as amended by s. 3, ch. 2017-232, Laws
 1387         of Florida, authorizes and describes medical marijuana use
 1388         registry identification cards.
 1389         Section 45. Subsection (2) of section 394.75, Florida
 1390  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1391         394.75 State and district substance abuse and mental health
 1392  plans.—
 1393         (2) The state master plan shall also include:
 1394         (a) A proposal for the development of a data system that
 1395  will evaluate the effectiveness of programs and services
 1396  provided to clients of the substance abuse and mental health
 1397  service system.
 1398         (b) A proposal to resolve the funding discrepancies between
 1399  districts.
 1400         (c) A methodology for the allocation of resources available
 1401  from federal, state, and local sources and a description of the
 1402  current level of funding available from each source.
 1403         (d) A description of the statewide priorities for clients
 1404  and services, and each district’s priorities for clients and
 1405  services.
 1406         (e) Recommendations for methods of enhancing local
 1407  participation in the planning, organization, and financing of
 1408  substance abuse and mental health services.
 1409         (f) A description of the current methods of contracting for
 1410  services, an assessment of the efficiency of these methods in
 1411  providing accountability for contracted funds, and
 1412  recommendations for improvements to the system of contracting.
 1413         (g) Recommendations for improving access to services by
 1414  clients and their families.
 1415         (h) Guidelines and formats for the development of district
 1416  plans.
 1417         (i) Recommendations for future directions for the substance
 1418  abuse and mental health service delivery system.
 1419  
 1420  A schedule, format, and procedure for development and review of
 1421  the state master plan shall be adopted by the department by June
 1422  of each year. The plan and annual updates must be submitted to
 1423  the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 1424  Representatives by January 1 of each year, beginning January 1,
 1425  2001.
 1426         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1427         Section 46. Paragraph (i) of subsection (1) of section
 1428  400.6045, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1429         400.6045 Patients with Alzheimer’s disease or other related
 1430  disorders; staff training requirements; certain disclosures.—
 1431         (1) A hospice licensed under this part must provide the
 1432  following staff training:
 1433         (i)An employee who is hired on or after July 1, 2003, must
 1434  complete the required training by July 1, 2004, or by the
 1435  deadline specified in this section, whichever is later.
 1436         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1437         Section 47. Subsection (23) of section 403.061, Florida
 1438  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1439         403.061 Department; powers and duties.—The department shall
 1440  have the power and the duty to control and prohibit pollution of
 1441  air and water in accordance with the law and rules adopted and
 1442  promulgated by it and, for this purpose, to:
 1443         (23) Adopt rules and regulations to ensure that no
 1444  detergents are sold in Florida after December 31, 1972, which
 1445  are reasonably found to have a harmful or deleterious effect on
 1446  human health or on the environment. Any regulations adopted
 1447  pursuant to this subsection shall apply statewide. Subsequent to
 1448  the promulgation of such rules and regulations, no county,
 1449  municipality, or other local political subdivision shall adopt
 1450  or enforce any local ordinance, special law, or local regulation
 1451  governing detergents which is less stringent than state law or
 1452  regulation. Regulations, ordinances, or special acts adopted by
 1453  a county or municipality governing detergents shall be subject
 1454  to approval by the department, except that regulations,
 1455  ordinances, or special acts adopted by any county or
 1456  municipality with a local pollution control program approved
 1457  pursuant to s. 403.182 shall be approved as an element of the
 1458  local pollution control program.
 1459  
 1460  The department shall implement such programs in conjunction with
 1461  its other powers and duties and shall place special emphasis on
 1462  reducing and eliminating contamination that presents a threat to
 1463  humans, animals or plants, or to the environment.
 1464         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1465         Section 48. Subsection (16) of section 403.064, Florida
 1466  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1467         403.064 Reuse of reclaimed water.—
 1468         (16) Utilities implementing reuse projects are encouraged,
 1469  except in the case of use by electric utilities as defined in s.
 1470  366.02(2), to meter use of reclaimed water by all end users and
 1471  to charge for the use of reclaimed water based on the actual
 1472  volume used when such metering and charges can be shown to
 1473  encourage water conservation. Metering and the use of volume
 1474  based rates are effective water management tools for the
 1475  following reuse activities: residential irrigation, agricultural
 1476  irrigation, industrial uses, landscape irrigation, irrigation of
 1477  other public access areas, commercial and institutional uses
 1478  such as toilet flushing, and transfers to other reclaimed water
 1479  utilities. Beginning with the submittal due on January 1, 2005,
 1480  Each domestic wastewater utility that provides reclaimed water
 1481  for the reuse activities listed in this section shall include a
 1482  summary of its metering and rate structure as part of its annual
 1483  reuse report to the department.
 1484         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1485         Section 49. Subsection (3) of section 408.0611, Florida
 1486  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1487         408.0611 Electronic prescribing clearinghouse.—
 1488         (3) The agency shall work in collaboration with private
 1489  sector electronic prescribing initiatives and relevant
 1490  stakeholders to create a clearinghouse of information on
 1491  electronic prescribing for health care practitioners, health
 1492  care facilities, and pharmacies. These stakeholders shall
 1493  include organizations that represent health care practitioners,
 1494  organizations that represent health care facilities,
 1495  organizations that represent pharmacies, organizations that
 1496  operate electronic prescribing networks, organizations that
 1497  create electronic prescribing products, and regional health
 1498  information organizations. Specifically, the agency shall, by
 1499  October 1, 2007:
 1500         (a) Provide on its website:
 1501         1. Information regarding the process of electronic
 1502  prescribing and the availability of electronic prescribing
 1503  products, including no-cost or low-cost products;
 1504         2. Information regarding the advantages of electronic
 1505  prescribing, including using medication history data to prevent
 1506  drug interactions, prevent allergic reactions, and deter doctor
 1507  and pharmacy shopping for controlled substances;
 1508         3. Links to federal and private sector websites that
 1509  provide guidance on selecting an appropriate electronic
 1510  prescribing product; and
 1511         4. Links to state, federal, and private sector incentive
 1512  programs for the implementation of electronic prescribing.
 1513         (b) Convene quarterly meetings of the stakeholders to
 1514  assess and accelerate the implementation of electronic
 1515  prescribing.
 1516         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1517         Section 50. Paragraphs (i) and (j) of subsection (1) of
 1518  section 408.062, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1519         408.062 Research, analyses, studies, and reports.—
 1520         (1) The agency shall conduct research, analyses, and
 1521  studies relating to health care costs and access to and quality
 1522  of health care services as access and quality are affected by
 1523  changes in health care costs. Such research, analyses, and
 1524  studies shall include, but not be limited to:
 1525         (i) The use of emergency department services by patient
 1526  acuity level and the implication of increasing hospital cost by
 1527  providing nonurgent care in emergency departments. The agency
 1528  shall submit an annual report based on this monitoring and
 1529  assessment to the Governor, the Speaker of the House of
 1530  Representatives, the President of the Senate, and the
 1531  substantive legislative committees, due with the first report
 1532  due January 1, 2006.
 1533         (j) The making available on its Internet website beginning
 1534  no later than October 1, 2004, and in a hard-copy format upon
 1535  request, of patient charge, volumes, length of stay, and
 1536  performance indicators collected from health care facilities
 1537  pursuant to s. 408.061(1)(a) for specific medical conditions,
 1538  surgeries, and procedures provided in inpatient and outpatient
 1539  facilities as determined by the agency. In making the
 1540  determination of specific medical conditions, surgeries, and
 1541  procedures to include, the agency shall consider such factors as
 1542  volume, severity of the illness, urgency of admission,
 1543  individual and societal costs, and whether the condition is
 1544  acute or chronic. Performance outcome indicators shall be risk
 1545  adjusted or severity adjusted, as applicable, using nationally
 1546  recognized risk adjustment methodologies or software consistent
 1547  with the standards of the Agency for Healthcare Research and
 1548  Quality and as selected by the agency. The website shall also
 1549  provide an interactive search that allows consumers to view and
 1550  compare the information for specific facilities, a map that
 1551  allows consumers to select a county or region, definitions of
 1552  all of the data, descriptions of each procedure, and an
 1553  explanation about why the data may differ from facility to
 1554  facility. Such public data shall be updated quarterly. The
 1555  agency shall submit an annual status report on the collection of
 1556  data and publication of health care quality measures to the
 1557  Governor, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the
 1558  President of the Senate, and the substantive legislative
 1559  committees, with the first status report due January 1, 2005.
 1560         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1561         Section 51. Paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section
 1562  408.811, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1563         408.811 Right of inspection; copies; inspection reports;
 1564  plan for correction of deficiencies.—
 1565         (6)(a) Each licensee shall maintain as public information,
 1566  available upon request, records of all inspection reports
 1567  pertaining to that provider that have been filed by the agency
 1568  unless those reports are exempt from or contain information that
 1569  is exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State
 1570  Constitution or is otherwise made confidential by law. Effective
 1571  October 1, 2006, Copies of such reports shall be retained in the
 1572  records of the provider for at least 3 years following the date
 1573  the reports are filed and issued, regardless of a change of
 1574  ownership.
 1575         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1576         Section 52. Paragraph (d) of subsection (10) of section
 1577  408.9091, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1578         408.9091 Cover Florida Health Care Access Program.—
 1579         (10) PROGRAM EVALUATION.—The agency and the office shall:
 1580         (d) Jointly submit by March 1, 2009, and annually
 1581  thereafter, a report to the Governor, the President of the
 1582  Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives which
 1583  provides the information specified in paragraphs (a)-(c) and
 1584  recommendations relating to the successful implementation and
 1585  administration of the program.
 1586         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1587         Section 53. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
 1588  409.1754, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1589         409.1754 Commercial sexual exploitation of children;
 1590  screening and assessment; training; multidisciplinary staffings;
 1591  service plans.—
 1592         (2) MULTIDISCIPLINARY STAFFINGS AND SERVICE PLANS.—
 1593         (a) The department, or a sheriff’s office acting under s.
 1594  39.3065, shall conduct a multidisciplinary staffing for each
 1595  child who that is a suspected or verified victim of commercial
 1596  sexual exploitation. The department or sheriff’s office shall
 1597  coordinate the staffing and invite individuals involved in the
 1598  child’s care, including, but not limited to, the child, if
 1599  appropriate; the child’s family or legal guardian; the child’s
 1600  guardian ad litem; Department of Juvenile Justice staff; school
 1601  district staff; local health and human services providers;
 1602  victim advocates; and any other persons who may be able to
 1603  assist the child.
 1604         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 1605         the word “who” for the word “that.”
 1606         Section 54. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) and subsection
 1607  (26) of section 409.906, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1608         409.906 Optional Medicaid services.—Subject to specific
 1609  appropriations, the agency may make payments for services which
 1610  are optional to the state under Title XIX of the Social Security
 1611  Act and are furnished by Medicaid providers to recipients who
 1612  are determined to be eligible on the dates on which the services
 1613  were provided. Any optional service that is provided shall be
 1614  provided only when medically necessary and in accordance with
 1615  state and federal law. Optional services rendered by providers
 1616  in mobile units to Medicaid recipients may be restricted or
 1617  prohibited by the agency. Nothing in this section shall be
 1618  construed to prevent or limit the agency from adjusting fees,
 1619  reimbursement rates, lengths of stay, number of visits, or
 1620  number of services, or making any other adjustments necessary to
 1621  comply with the availability of moneys and any limitations or
 1622  directions provided for in the General Appropriations Act or
 1623  chapter 216. If necessary to safeguard the state’s systems of
 1624  providing services to elderly and disabled persons and subject
 1625  to the notice and review provisions of s. 216.177, the Governor
 1626  may direct the Agency for Health Care Administration to amend
 1627  the Medicaid state plan to delete the optional Medicaid service
 1628  known as “Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally
 1629  Disabled.” Optional services may include:
 1630         (1) ADULT DENTAL SERVICES.—
 1631         (b) Beginning July 1, 2006, The agency may pay for full or
 1632  partial dentures, the procedures required to seat full or
 1633  partial dentures, and the repair and reline of full or partial
 1634  dentures, provided by or under the direction of a licensed
 1635  dentist, for a recipient who is 21 years of age or older.
 1636         (26) HOME AND COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES FOR AUTISM SPECTRUM
 1637  DISORDER AND OTHER DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES.—The agency is
 1638  authorized to seek federal approval through a Medicaid waiver or
 1639  a state plan amendment for the provision of occupational
 1640  therapy, speech therapy, physical therapy, behavior analysis,
 1641  and behavior assistant services to individuals who are 5 years
 1642  of age and under and have a diagnosed developmental disability
 1643  as defined in s. 393.063, autism spectrum disorder as defined in
 1644  s. 627.6686, or Down syndrome, a genetic disorder caused by the
 1645  presence of extra chromosomal material on chromosome 21. Causes
 1646  of the syndrome may include Trisomy 21, Mosaicism, Robertsonian
 1647  Translocation, and other duplications of a portion of chromosome
 1648  21. Coverage for such services shall be limited to $36,000
 1649  annually and may not exceed $108,000 in total lifetime benefits.
 1650  The agency shall submit an annual report beginning on January 1,
 1651  2009, to the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House
 1652  of Representatives, and the relevant committees of the Senate
 1653  and the House of Representatives regarding progress on obtaining
 1654  federal approval and recommendations for the implementation of
 1655  these home and community-based services. The agency may not
 1656  implement this subsection without prior legislative approval.
 1657         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 1658         Section 55. Section 409.913, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1659  to read:
 1660         409.913 Oversight of the integrity of the Medicaid
 1661  program.—The agency shall operate a program to oversee the
 1662  activities of Florida Medicaid recipients, and providers and
 1663  their representatives, to ensure that fraudulent and abusive
 1664  behavior and neglect of recipients occur to the minimum extent
 1665  possible, and to recover overpayments and impose sanctions as
 1666  appropriate. Beginning January 1, 2003, and Each January 1 year
 1667  thereafter, the agency and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of
 1668  the Department of Legal Affairs shall submit a joint report to
 1669  the Legislature documenting the effectiveness of the state’s
 1670  efforts to control Medicaid fraud and abuse and to recover
 1671  Medicaid overpayments during the previous fiscal year. The
 1672  report must describe the number of cases opened and investigated
 1673  each year; the sources of the cases opened; the disposition of
 1674  the cases closed each year; the amount of overpayments alleged
 1675  in preliminary and final audit letters; the number and amount of
 1676  fines or penalties imposed; any reductions in overpayment
 1677  amounts negotiated in settlement agreements or by other means;
 1678  the amount of final agency determinations of overpayments; the
 1679  amount deducted from federal claiming as a result of
 1680  overpayments; the amount of overpayments recovered each year;
 1681  the amount of cost of investigation recovered each year; the
 1682  average length of time to collect from the time the case was
 1683  opened until the overpayment is paid in full; the amount
 1684  determined as uncollectible and the portion of the uncollectible
 1685  amount subsequently reclaimed from the Federal Government; the
 1686  number of providers, by type, that are terminated from
 1687  participation in the Medicaid program as a result of fraud and
 1688  abuse; and all costs associated with discovering and prosecuting
 1689  cases of Medicaid overpayments and making recoveries in such
 1690  cases. The report must also document actions taken to prevent
 1691  overpayments and the number of providers prevented from
 1692  enrolling in or reenrolling in the Medicaid program as a result
 1693  of documented Medicaid fraud and abuse and must include policy
 1694  recommendations necessary to prevent or recover overpayments and
 1695  changes necessary to prevent and detect Medicaid fraud. All
 1696  policy recommendations in the report must include a detailed
 1697  fiscal analysis, including, but not limited to, implementation
 1698  costs, estimated savings to the Medicaid program, and the return
 1699  on investment. The agency must submit the policy recommendations
 1700  and fiscal analyses in the report to the appropriate estimating
 1701  conference, pursuant to s. 216.137, by February 15 of each year.
 1702  The agency and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Department
 1703  of Legal Affairs each must include detailed unit-specific
 1704  performance standards, benchmarks, and metrics in the report,
 1705  including projected cost savings to the state Medicaid program
 1706  during the following fiscal year.
 1707         (1) For the purposes of this section, the term:
 1708         (a) “Abuse” means:
 1709         1. Provider practices that are inconsistent with generally
 1710  accepted business or medical practices and that result in an
 1711  unnecessary cost to the Medicaid program or in reimbursement for
 1712  goods or services that are not medically necessary or that fail
 1713  to meet professionally recognized standards for health care.
 1714         2. Recipient practices that result in unnecessary cost to
 1715  the Medicaid program.
 1716         (b) “Complaint” means an allegation that fraud, abuse, or
 1717  an overpayment has occurred.
 1718         (c) “Fraud” means an intentional deception or
 1719  misrepresentation made by a person with the knowledge that the
 1720  deception results in unauthorized benefit to herself or himself
 1721  or another person. The term includes any act that constitutes
 1722  fraud under applicable federal or state law.
 1723         (d) “Medical necessity” or “medically necessary” means any
 1724  goods or services necessary to palliate the effects of a
 1725  terminal condition, or to prevent, diagnose, correct, cure,
 1726  alleviate, or preclude deterioration of a condition that
 1727  threatens life, causes pain or suffering, or results in illness
 1728  or infirmity, which goods or services are provided in accordance
 1729  with generally accepted standards of medical practice. For
 1730  purposes of determining Medicaid reimbursement, the agency is
 1731  the final arbiter of medical necessity. Determinations of
 1732  medical necessity must be made by a licensed physician employed
 1733  by or under contract with the agency and must be based upon
 1734  information available at the time the goods or services are
 1735  provided.
 1736         (e) “Overpayment” includes any amount that is not
 1737  authorized to be paid by the Medicaid program whether paid as a
 1738  result of inaccurate or improper cost reporting, improper
 1739  claiming, unacceptable practices, fraud, abuse, or mistake.
 1740         (f) “Person” means any natural person, corporation,
 1741  partnership, association, clinic, group, or other entity,
 1742  whether or not such person is enrolled in the Medicaid program
 1743  or is a provider of health care.
 1744         (2) The agency shall conduct, or cause to be conducted by
 1745  contract or otherwise, reviews, investigations, analyses,
 1746  audits, or any combination thereof, to determine possible fraud,
 1747  abuse, overpayment, or recipient neglect in the Medicaid program
 1748  and shall report the findings of any overpayments in audit
 1749  reports as appropriate. At least 5 percent of all audits shall
 1750  be conducted on a random basis. As part of its ongoing fraud
 1751  detection activities, the agency shall identify and monitor, by
 1752  contract or otherwise, patterns of overutilization of Medicaid
 1753  services based on state averages. The agency shall track
 1754  Medicaid provider prescription and billing patterns and evaluate
 1755  them against Medicaid medical necessity criteria and coverage
 1756  and limitation guidelines adopted by rule. Medical necessity
 1757  determination requires that service be consistent with symptoms
 1758  or confirmed diagnosis of illness or injury under treatment and
 1759  not in excess of the patient’s needs. The agency shall conduct
 1760  reviews of provider exceptions to peer group norms and shall,
 1761  using statistical methodologies, provider profiling, and
 1762  analysis of billing patterns, detect and investigate abnormal or
 1763  unusual increases in billing or payment of claims for Medicaid
 1764  services and medically unnecessary provision of services.
 1765         (3) The agency may conduct, or may contract for, prepayment
 1766  review of provider claims to ensure cost-effective purchasing;
 1767  to ensure that billing by a provider to the agency is in
 1768  accordance with applicable provisions of all Medicaid rules,
 1769  regulations, handbooks, and policies and in accordance with
 1770  federal, state, and local law; and to ensure that appropriate
 1771  care is rendered to Medicaid recipients. Such prepayment reviews
 1772  may be conducted as determined appropriate by the agency,
 1773  without any suspicion or allegation of fraud, abuse, or neglect,
 1774  and may last for up to 1 year. Unless the agency has reliable
 1775  evidence of fraud, misrepresentation, abuse, or neglect, claims
 1776  shall be adjudicated for denial or payment within 90 days after
 1777  receipt of complete documentation by the agency for review. If
 1778  there is reliable evidence of fraud, misrepresentation, abuse,
 1779  or neglect, claims shall be adjudicated for denial of payment
 1780  within 180 days after receipt of complete documentation by the
 1781  agency for review.
 1782         (4) Any suspected criminal violation identified by the
 1783  agency must be referred to the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of
 1784  the Office of the Attorney General for investigation. The agency
 1785  and the Attorney General shall enter into a memorandum of
 1786  understanding, which must include, but need not be limited to, a
 1787  protocol for regularly sharing information and coordinating
 1788  casework. The protocol must establish a procedure for the
 1789  referral by the agency of cases involving suspected Medicaid
 1790  fraud to the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit for investigation, and
 1791  the return to the agency of those cases where investigation
 1792  determines that administrative action by the agency is
 1793  appropriate. Offices of the Medicaid program integrity program
 1794  and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Department of Legal
 1795  Affairs, shall, to the extent possible, be collocated. The
 1796  agency and the Department of Legal Affairs shall periodically
 1797  conduct joint training and other joint activities designed to
 1798  increase communication and coordination in recovering
 1799  overpayments.
 1800         (5) A Medicaid provider is subject to having goods and
 1801  services that are paid for by the Medicaid program reviewed by
 1802  an appropriate peer-review organization designated by the
 1803  agency. The written findings of the applicable peer-review
 1804  organization are admissible in any court or administrative
 1805  proceeding as evidence of medical necessity or the lack thereof.
 1806         (6) Any notice required to be given to a provider under
 1807  this section is presumed to be sufficient notice if sent to the
 1808  address last shown on the provider enrollment file. It is the
 1809  responsibility of the provider to furnish and keep the agency
 1810  informed of the provider’s current address. United States Postal
 1811  Service proof of mailing or certified or registered mailing of
 1812  such notice to the provider at the address shown on the provider
 1813  enrollment file constitutes sufficient proof of notice. Any
 1814  notice required to be given to the agency by this section must
 1815  be sent to the agency at an address designated by rule.
 1816         (7) When presenting a claim for payment under the Medicaid
 1817  program, a provider has an affirmative duty to supervise the
 1818  provision of, and be responsible for, goods and services claimed
 1819  to have been provided, to supervise and be responsible for
 1820  preparation and submission of the claim, and to present a claim
 1821  that is true and accurate and that is for goods and services
 1822  that:
 1823         (a) Have actually been furnished to the recipient by the
 1824  provider prior to submitting the claim.
 1825         (b) Are Medicaid-covered goods or services that are
 1826  medically necessary.
 1827         (c) Are of a quality comparable to those furnished to the
 1828  general public by the provider’s peers.
 1829         (d) Have not been billed in whole or in part to a recipient
 1830  or a recipient’s responsible party, except for such copayments,
 1831  coinsurance, or deductibles as are authorized by the agency.
 1832         (e) Are provided in accord with applicable provisions of
 1833  all Medicaid rules, regulations, handbooks, and policies and in
 1834  accordance with federal, state, and local law.
 1835         (f) Are documented by records made at the time the goods or
 1836  services were provided, demonstrating the medical necessity for
 1837  the goods or services rendered. Medicaid goods or services are
 1838  excessive or not medically necessary unless both the medical
 1839  basis and the specific need for them are fully and properly
 1840  documented in the recipient’s medical record.
 1841  
 1842  The agency shall deny payment or require repayment for goods or
 1843  services that are not presented as required in this subsection.
 1844         (8) The agency shall not reimburse any person or entity for
 1845  any prescription for medications, medical supplies, or medical
 1846  services if the prescription was written by a physician or other
 1847  prescribing practitioner who is not enrolled in the Medicaid
 1848  program. This section does not apply:
 1849         (a) In instances involving bona fide emergency medical
 1850  conditions as determined by the agency;
 1851         (b) To a provider of medical services to a patient in a
 1852  hospital emergency department, hospital inpatient or outpatient
 1853  setting, or nursing home;
 1854         (c) To bona fide pro bono services by preapproved non
 1855  Medicaid providers as determined by the agency;
 1856         (d) To prescribing physicians who are board-certified
 1857  specialists treating Medicaid recipients referred for treatment
 1858  by a treating physician who is enrolled in the Medicaid program;
 1859         (e) To prescriptions written for dually eligible Medicare
 1860  beneficiaries by an authorized Medicare provider who is not
 1861  enrolled in the Medicaid program;
 1862         (f) To other physicians who are not enrolled in the
 1863  Medicaid program but who provide a medically necessary service
 1864  or prescription not otherwise reasonably available from a
 1865  Medicaid-enrolled physician; or
 1866         (9) A Medicaid provider shall retain medical, professional,
 1867  financial, and business records pertaining to services and goods
 1868  furnished to a Medicaid recipient and billed to Medicaid for a
 1869  period of 5 years after the date of furnishing such services or
 1870  goods. The agency may investigate, review, or analyze such
 1871  records, which must be made available during normal business
 1872  hours. However, 24-hour notice must be provided if patient
 1873  treatment would be disrupted. The provider must keep the agency
 1874  informed of the location of the provider’s Medicaid-related
 1875  records. The authority of the agency to obtain Medicaid-related
 1876  records from a provider is neither curtailed nor limited during
 1877  a period of litigation between the agency and the provider.
 1878         (10) Payments for the services of billing agents or persons
 1879  participating in the preparation of a Medicaid claim shall not
 1880  be based on amounts for which they bill nor based on the amount
 1881  a provider receives from the Medicaid program.
 1882         (11) The agency shall deny payment or require repayment for
 1883  inappropriate, medically unnecessary, or excessive goods or
 1884  services from the person furnishing them, the person under whose
 1885  supervision they were furnished, or the person causing them to
 1886  be furnished.
 1887         (12) The complaint and all information obtained pursuant to
 1888  an investigation of a Medicaid provider, or the authorized
 1889  representative or agent of a provider, relating to an allegation
 1890  of fraud, abuse, or neglect are confidential and exempt from the
 1891  provisions of s. 119.07(1):
 1892         (a) Until the agency takes final agency action with respect
 1893  to the provider and requires repayment of any overpayment, or
 1894  imposes an administrative sanction;
 1895         (b) Until the Attorney General refers the case for criminal
 1896  prosecution;
 1897         (c) Until 10 days after the complaint is determined without
 1898  merit; or
 1899         (d) At all times if the complaint or information is
 1900  otherwise protected by law.
 1901         (13) The agency shall terminate participation of a Medicaid
 1902  provider in the Medicaid program and may seek civil remedies or
 1903  impose other administrative sanctions against a Medicaid
 1904  provider, if the provider or any principal, officer, director,
 1905  agent, managing employee, or affiliated person of the provider,
 1906  or any partner or shareholder having an ownership interest in
 1907  the provider equal to 5 percent or greater, has been convicted
 1908  of a criminal offense under federal law or the law of any state
 1909  relating to the practice of the provider’s profession, or a
 1910  criminal offense listed under s. 408.809(4), s. 409.907(10), or
 1911  s. 435.04(2). If the agency determines that the provider did not
 1912  participate or acquiesce in the offense, termination will not be
 1913  imposed. If the agency effects a termination under this
 1914  subsection, the agency shall take final agency action.
 1915         (14) If the provider has been suspended or terminated from
 1916  participation in the Medicaid program or the Medicare program by
 1917  the Federal Government or any state, the agency must immediately
 1918  suspend or terminate, as appropriate, the provider’s
 1919  participation in this state’s Medicaid program for a period no
 1920  less than that imposed by the Federal Government or any other
 1921  state, and may not enroll such provider in this state’s Medicaid
 1922  program while such foreign suspension or termination remains in
 1923  effect. The agency shall also immediately suspend or terminate,
 1924  as appropriate, a provider’s participation in this state’s
 1925  Medicaid program if the provider participated or acquiesced in
 1926  any action for which any principal, officer, director, agent,
 1927  managing employee, or affiliated person of the provider, or any
 1928  partner or shareholder having an ownership interest in the
 1929  provider equal to 5 percent or greater, was suspended or
 1930  terminated from participating in the Medicaid program or the
 1931  Medicare program by the Federal Government or any state. This
 1932  sanction is in addition to all other remedies provided by law.
 1933         (15) The agency shall seek a remedy provided by law,
 1934  including, but not limited to, any remedy provided in
 1935  subsections (13) and (16) and s. 812.035, if:
 1936         (a) The provider’s license has not been renewed, or has
 1937  been revoked, suspended, or terminated, for cause, by the
 1938  licensing agency of any state;
 1939         (b) The provider has failed to make available or has
 1940  refused access to Medicaid-related records to an auditor,
 1941  investigator, or other authorized employee or agent of the
 1942  agency, the Attorney General, a state attorney, or the Federal
 1943  Government;
 1944         (c) The provider has not furnished or has failed to make
 1945  available such Medicaid-related records as the agency has found
 1946  necessary to determine whether Medicaid payments are or were due
 1947  and the amounts thereof;
 1948         (d) The provider has failed to maintain medical records
 1949  made at the time of service, or prior to service if prior
 1950  authorization is required, demonstrating the necessity and
 1951  appropriateness of the goods or services rendered;
 1952         (e) The provider is not in compliance with provisions of
 1953  Medicaid provider publications that have been adopted by
 1954  reference as rules in the Florida Administrative Code; with
 1955  provisions of state or federal laws, rules, or regulations; with
 1956  provisions of the provider agreement between the agency and the
 1957  provider; or with certifications found on claim forms or on
 1958  transmittal forms for electronically submitted claims that are
 1959  submitted by the provider or authorized representative, as such
 1960  provisions apply to the Medicaid program;
 1961         (f) The provider or person who ordered, authorized, or
 1962  prescribed the care, services, or supplies has furnished, or
 1963  ordered or authorized the furnishing of, goods or services to a
 1964  recipient which are inappropriate, unnecessary, excessive, or
 1965  harmful to the recipient or are of inferior quality;
 1966         (g) The provider has demonstrated a pattern of failure to
 1967  provide goods or services that are medically necessary;
 1968         (h) The provider or an authorized representative of the
 1969  provider, or a person who ordered, authorized, or prescribed the
 1970  goods or services, has submitted or caused to be submitted false
 1971  or a pattern of erroneous Medicaid claims;
 1972         (i) The provider or an authorized representative of the
 1973  provider, or a person who has ordered, authorized, or prescribed
 1974  the goods or services, has submitted or caused to be submitted a
 1975  Medicaid provider enrollment application, a request for prior
 1976  authorization for Medicaid services, a drug exception request,
 1977  or a Medicaid cost report that contains materially false or
 1978  incorrect information;
 1979         (j) The provider or an authorized representative of the
 1980  provider has collected from or billed a recipient or a
 1981  recipient’s responsible party improperly for amounts that should
 1982  not have been so collected or billed by reason of the provider’s
 1983  billing the Medicaid program for the same service;
 1984         (k) The provider or an authorized representative of the
 1985  provider has included in a cost report costs that are not
 1986  allowable under a Florida Title XIX reimbursement plan after the
 1987  provider or authorized representative had been advised in an
 1988  audit exit conference or audit report that the costs were not
 1989  allowable;
 1990         (l) The provider is charged by information or indictment
 1991  with fraudulent billing practices or an offense referenced in
 1992  subsection (13). The sanction applied for this reason is limited
 1993  to suspension of the provider’s participation in the Medicaid
 1994  program for the duration of the indictment unless the provider
 1995  is found guilty pursuant to the information or indictment;
 1996         (m) The provider or a person who ordered, authorized, or
 1997  prescribed the goods or services is found liable for negligent
 1998  practice resulting in death or injury to the provider’s patient;
 1999         (n) The provider fails to demonstrate that it had available
 2000  during a specific audit or review period sufficient quantities
 2001  of goods, or sufficient time in the case of services, to support
 2002  the provider’s billings to the Medicaid program;
 2003         (o) The provider has failed to comply with the notice and
 2004  reporting requirements of s. 409.907;
 2005         (p) The agency has received reliable information of patient
 2006  abuse or neglect or of any act prohibited by s. 409.920; or
 2007         (q) The provider has failed to comply with an agreed-upon
 2008  repayment schedule.
 2009  
 2010  A provider is subject to sanctions for violations of this
 2011  subsection as the result of actions or inactions of the
 2012  provider, or actions or inactions of any principal, officer,
 2013  director, agent, managing employee, or affiliated person of the
 2014  provider, or any partner or shareholder having an ownership
 2015  interest in the provider equal to 5 percent or greater, in which
 2016  the provider participated or acquiesced.
 2017         (16) The agency shall impose any of the following sanctions
 2018  or disincentives on a provider or a person for any of the acts
 2019  described in subsection (15):
 2020         (a) Suspension for a specific period of time of not more
 2021  than 1 year. Suspension precludes participation in the Medicaid
 2022  program, which includes any action that results in a claim for
 2023  payment to the Medicaid program for furnishing, supervising a
 2024  person who is furnishing, or causing a person to furnish goods
 2025  or services.
 2026         (b) Termination for a specific period of time ranging from
 2027  more than 1 year to 20 years. Termination precludes
 2028  participation in the Medicaid program, which includes any action
 2029  that results in a claim for payment to the Medicaid program for
 2030  furnishing, supervising a person who is furnishing, or causing a
 2031  person to furnish goods or services.
 2032         (c) Imposition of a fine of up to $5,000 for each
 2033  violation. Each day that an ongoing violation continues, such as
 2034  refusing to furnish Medicaid-related records or refusing access
 2035  to records, is considered a separate violation. Each instance of
 2036  improper billing of a Medicaid recipient; each instance of
 2037  including an unallowable cost on a hospital or nursing home
 2038  Medicaid cost report after the provider or authorized
 2039  representative has been advised in an audit exit conference or
 2040  previous audit report of the cost unallowability; each instance
 2041  of furnishing a Medicaid recipient goods or professional
 2042  services that are inappropriate or of inferior quality as
 2043  determined by competent peer judgment; each instance of
 2044  knowingly submitting a materially false or erroneous Medicaid
 2045  provider enrollment application, request for prior authorization
 2046  for Medicaid services, drug exception request, or cost report;
 2047  each instance of inappropriate prescribing of drugs for a
 2048  Medicaid recipient as determined by competent peer judgment; and
 2049  each false or erroneous Medicaid claim leading to an overpayment
 2050  to a provider is considered a separate violation.
 2051         (d) Immediate suspension, if the agency has received
 2052  information of patient abuse or neglect or of any act prohibited
 2053  by s. 409.920. Upon suspension, the agency must issue an
 2054  immediate final order under s. 120.569(2)(n).
 2055         (e) A fine, not to exceed $10,000, for a violation of
 2056  paragraph (15)(i).
 2057         (f) Imposition of liens against provider assets, including,
 2058  but not limited to, financial assets and real property, not to
 2059  exceed the amount of fines or recoveries sought, upon entry of
 2060  an order determining that such moneys are due or recoverable.
 2061         (g) Prepayment reviews of claims for a specified period of
 2062  time.
 2063         (h) Comprehensive followup reviews of providers every 6
 2064  months to ensure that they are billing Medicaid correctly.
 2065         (i) Corrective-action plans that remain in effect for up to
 2066  3 years and that are monitored by the agency every 6 months
 2067  while in effect.
 2068         (j) Other remedies as permitted by law to effect the
 2069  recovery of a fine or overpayment.
 2070  
 2071  If a provider voluntarily relinquishes its Medicaid provider
 2072  number or an associated license, or allows the associated
 2073  licensure to expire after receiving written notice that the
 2074  agency is conducting, or has conducted, an audit, survey,
 2075  inspection, or investigation and that a sanction of suspension
 2076  or termination will or would be imposed for noncompliance
 2077  discovered as a result of the audit, survey, inspection, or
 2078  investigation, the agency shall impose the sanction of
 2079  termination for cause against the provider. The agency’s
 2080  termination with cause is subject to hearing rights as may be
 2081  provided under chapter 120. The Secretary of Health Care
 2082  Administration may make a determination that imposition of a
 2083  sanction or disincentive is not in the best interest of the
 2084  Medicaid program, in which case a sanction or disincentive may
 2085  not be imposed.
 2086         (17) In determining the appropriate administrative sanction
 2087  to be applied, or the duration of any suspension or termination,
 2088  the agency shall consider:
 2089         (a) The seriousness and extent of the violation or
 2090  violations.
 2091         (b) Any prior history of violations by the provider
 2092  relating to the delivery of health care programs which resulted
 2093  in either a criminal conviction or in administrative sanction or
 2094  penalty.
 2095         (c) Evidence of continued violation within the provider’s
 2096  management control of Medicaid statutes, rules, regulations, or
 2097  policies after written notification to the provider of improper
 2098  practice or instance of violation.
 2099         (d) The effect, if any, on the quality of medical care
 2100  provided to Medicaid recipients as a result of the acts of the
 2101  provider.
 2102         (e) Any action by a licensing agency respecting the
 2103  provider in any state in which the provider operates or has
 2104  operated.
 2105         (f) The apparent impact on access by recipients to Medicaid
 2106  services if the provider is suspended or terminated, in the best
 2107  judgment of the agency.
 2108  
 2109  The agency shall document the basis for all sanctioning actions
 2110  and recommendations.
 2111         (18) The agency may take action to sanction, suspend, or
 2112  terminate a particular provider working for a group provider,
 2113  and may suspend or terminate Medicaid participation at a
 2114  specific location, rather than or in addition to taking action
 2115  against an entire group.
 2116         (19) The agency shall establish a process for conducting
 2117  followup reviews of a sampling of providers who have a history
 2118  of overpayment under the Medicaid program. This process must
 2119  consider the magnitude of previous fraud or abuse and the
 2120  potential effect of continued fraud or abuse on Medicaid costs.
 2121         (20) In making a determination of overpayment to a
 2122  provider, the agency must use accepted and valid auditing,
 2123  accounting, analytical, statistical, or peer-review methods, or
 2124  combinations thereof. Appropriate statistical methods may
 2125  include, but are not limited to, sampling and extension to the
 2126  population, parametric and nonparametric statistics, tests of
 2127  hypotheses, and other generally accepted statistical methods.
 2128  Appropriate analytical methods may include, but are not limited
 2129  to, reviews to determine variances between the quantities of
 2130  products that a provider had on hand and available to be
 2131  purveyed to Medicaid recipients during the review period and the
 2132  quantities of the same products paid for by the Medicaid program
 2133  for the same period, taking into appropriate consideration sales
 2134  of the same products to non-Medicaid customers during the same
 2135  period. In meeting its burden of proof in any administrative or
 2136  court proceeding, the agency may introduce the results of such
 2137  statistical methods as evidence of overpayment.
 2138         (21) When making a determination that an overpayment has
 2139  occurred, the agency shall prepare and issue an audit report to
 2140  the provider showing the calculation of overpayments. The
 2141  agency’s determination must be based solely upon information
 2142  available to it before issuance of the audit report and, in the
 2143  case of documentation obtained to substantiate claims for
 2144  Medicaid reimbursement, based solely upon contemporaneous
 2145  records. The agency may consider addenda or modifications to a
 2146  note that was made contemporaneously with the patient care
 2147  episode if the addenda or modifications are germane to the note.
 2148         (22) The audit report, supported by agency work papers,
 2149  showing an overpayment to a provider constitutes evidence of the
 2150  overpayment. A provider may not present or elicit testimony on
 2151  direct examination or cross-examination in any court or
 2152  administrative proceeding, regarding the purchase or acquisition
 2153  by any means of drugs, goods, or supplies; sales or divestment
 2154  by any means of drugs, goods, or supplies; or inventory of
 2155  drugs, goods, or supplies, unless such acquisition, sales,
 2156  divestment, or inventory is documented by written invoices,
 2157  written inventory records, or other competent written
 2158  documentary evidence maintained in the normal course of the
 2159  provider’s business. A provider may not present records to
 2160  contest an overpayment or sanction unless such records are
 2161  contemporaneous and, if requested during the audit process, were
 2162  furnished to the agency or its agent upon request. This
 2163  limitation does not apply to Medicaid cost report audits. This
 2164  limitation does not preclude consideration by the agency of
 2165  addenda or modifications to a note if the addenda or
 2166  modifications are made before notification of the audit, the
 2167  addenda or modifications are germane to the note, and the note
 2168  was made contemporaneously with a patient care episode.
 2169  Notwithstanding the applicable rules of discovery, all
 2170  documentation to be offered as evidence at an administrative
 2171  hearing on a Medicaid overpayment or an administrative sanction
 2172  must be exchanged by all parties at least 14 days before the
 2173  administrative hearing or be excluded from consideration.
 2174         (23)(a) In an audit or investigation of a violation
 2175  committed by a provider which is conducted pursuant to this
 2176  section, the agency is entitled to recover all investigative,
 2177  legal, and expert witness costs if the agency’s findings were
 2178  not contested by the provider or, if contested, the agency
 2179  ultimately prevailed.
 2180         (b) The agency has the burden of documenting the costs,
 2181  which include salaries and employee benefits and out-of-pocket
 2182  expenses. The amount of costs that may be recovered must be
 2183  reasonable in relation to the seriousness of the violation and
 2184  must be set taking into consideration the financial resources,
 2185  earning ability, and needs of the provider, who has the burden
 2186  of demonstrating such factors.
 2187         (c) The provider may pay the costs over a period to be
 2188  determined by the agency if the agency determines that an
 2189  extreme hardship would result to the provider from immediate
 2190  full payment. Any default in payment of costs may be collected
 2191  by any means authorized by law.
 2192         (24) If the agency imposes an administrative sanction
 2193  pursuant to subsection (13), subsection (14), or subsection
 2194  (15), except paragraphs (15)(e) and (o), upon any provider or
 2195  any principal, officer, director, agent, managing employee, or
 2196  affiliated person of the provider who is regulated by another
 2197  state entity, the agency shall notify that other entity of the
 2198  imposition of the sanction within 5 business days. Such
 2199  notification must include the provider’s or person’s name and
 2200  license number and the specific reasons for sanction.
 2201         (25)(a) The agency shall withhold Medicaid payments, in
 2202  whole or in part, to a provider upon receipt of reliable
 2203  evidence that the circumstances giving rise to the need for a
 2204  withholding of payments involve fraud, willful
 2205  misrepresentation, or abuse under the Medicaid program, or a
 2206  crime committed while rendering goods or services to Medicaid
 2207  recipients. If it is determined that fraud, willful
 2208  misrepresentation, abuse, or a crime did not occur, the payments
 2209  withheld must be paid to the provider within 14 days after such
 2210  determination. Amounts not paid within 14 days accrue interest
 2211  at the rate of 10 percent per year, beginning after the 14th
 2212  day.
 2213         (b) The agency shall deny payment, or require repayment, if
 2214  the goods or services were furnished, supervised, or caused to
 2215  be furnished by a person who has been suspended or terminated
 2216  from the Medicaid program or Medicare program by the Federal
 2217  Government or any state.
 2218         (c) Overpayments owed to the agency bear interest at the
 2219  rate of 10 percent per year from the date of final determination
 2220  of the overpayment by the agency, and payment arrangements must
 2221  be made within 30 days after the date of the final order, which
 2222  is not subject to further appeal.
 2223         (d) The agency, upon entry of a final agency order, a
 2224  judgment or order of a court of competent jurisdiction, or a
 2225  stipulation or settlement, may collect the moneys owed by all
 2226  means allowable by law, including, but not limited to, notifying
 2227  any fiscal intermediary of Medicare benefits that the state has
 2228  a superior right of payment. Upon receipt of such written
 2229  notification, the Medicare fiscal intermediary shall remit to
 2230  the state the sum claimed.
 2231         (e) The agency may institute amnesty programs to allow
 2232  Medicaid providers the opportunity to voluntarily repay
 2233  overpayments. The agency may adopt rules to administer such
 2234  programs.
 2235         (26) The agency may impose administrative sanctions against
 2236  a Medicaid recipient, or the agency may seek any other remedy
 2237  provided by law, including, but not limited to, the remedies
 2238  provided in s. 812.035, if the agency finds that a recipient has
 2239  engaged in solicitation in violation of s. 409.920 or that the
 2240  recipient has otherwise abused the Medicaid program.
 2241         (27) When the Agency for Health Care Administration has
 2242  made a probable cause determination and alleged that an
 2243  overpayment to a Medicaid provider has occurred, the agency,
 2244  after notice to the provider, shall:
 2245         (a) Withhold, and continue to withhold during the pendency
 2246  of an administrative hearing pursuant to chapter 120, any
 2247  medical assistance reimbursement payments until such time as the
 2248  overpayment is recovered, unless within 30 days after receiving
 2249  notice thereof the provider:
 2250         1. Makes repayment in full; or
 2251         2. Establishes a repayment plan that is satisfactory to the
 2252  Agency for Health Care Administration.
 2253         (b) Withhold, and continue to withhold during the pendency
 2254  of an administrative hearing pursuant to chapter 120, medical
 2255  assistance reimbursement payments if the terms of a repayment
 2256  plan are not adhered to by the provider.
 2257         (28) Venue for all Medicaid program integrity cases lies in
 2258  Leon County, at the discretion of the agency.
 2259         (29) Notwithstanding other provisions of law, the agency
 2260  and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Department of Legal
 2261  Affairs may review a provider’s Medicaid-related and non
 2262  Medicaid-related records in order to determine the total output
 2263  of a provider’s practice to reconcile quantities of goods or
 2264  services billed to Medicaid with quantities of goods or services
 2265  used in the provider’s total practice.
 2266         (30) The agency shall terminate a provider’s participation
 2267  in the Medicaid program if the provider fails to reimburse an
 2268  overpayment or pay an agency-imposed fine that has been
 2269  determined by final order, not subject to further appeal, within
 2270  30 days after the date of the final order, unless the provider
 2271  and the agency have entered into a repayment agreement.
 2272         (31) If a provider requests an administrative hearing
 2273  pursuant to chapter 120, such hearing must be conducted within
 2274  90 days following assignment of an administrative law judge,
 2275  absent exceptionally good cause shown as determined by the
 2276  administrative law judge or hearing officer. Upon issuance of a
 2277  final order, the outstanding balance of the amount determined to
 2278  constitute the overpayment and fines is due. If a provider fails
 2279  to make payments in full, fails to enter into a satisfactory
 2280  repayment plan, or fails to comply with the terms of a repayment
 2281  plan or settlement agreement, the agency shall withhold
 2282  reimbursement payments for Medicaid services until the amount
 2283  due is paid in full.
 2284         (32) Duly authorized agents and employees of the agency
 2285  shall have the power to inspect, during normal business hours,
 2286  the records of any pharmacy, wholesale establishment, or
 2287  manufacturer, or any other place in which drugs and medical
 2288  supplies are manufactured, packed, packaged, made, stored, sold,
 2289  or kept for sale, for the purpose of verifying the amount of
 2290  drugs and medical supplies ordered, delivered, or purchased by a
 2291  provider. The agency shall provide at least 2 business days’
 2292  prior notice of any such inspection. The notice must identify
 2293  the provider whose records will be inspected, and the inspection
 2294  shall include only records specifically related to that
 2295  provider.
 2296         (33) In accordance with federal law, Medicaid recipients
 2297  convicted of a crime pursuant to 42 U.S.C. s. 1320a-7b may be
 2298  limited, restricted, or suspended from Medicaid eligibility for
 2299  a period not to exceed 1 year, as determined by the agency head
 2300  or designee.
 2301         (34) To deter fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program, the
 2302  agency may limit the number of Schedule II and Schedule III
 2303  refill prescription claims submitted from a pharmacy provider.
 2304  The agency shall limit the allowable amount of reimbursement of
 2305  prescription refill claims for Schedule II and Schedule III
 2306  pharmaceuticals if the agency or the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit
 2307  determines that the specific prescription refill was not
 2308  requested by the Medicaid recipient or authorized representative
 2309  for whom the refill claim is submitted or was not prescribed by
 2310  the recipient’s medical provider or physician. Any such refill
 2311  request must be consistent with the original prescription.
 2312         (35) The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government
 2313  Accountability shall provide a report to the President of the
 2314  Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives on a
 2315  biennial basis, beginning January 31, 2006, on the agency’s
 2316  efforts to prevent, detect, and deter, as well as recover funds
 2317  lost to, fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program.
 2318         (36) The agency may provide to a sample of Medicaid
 2319  recipients or their representatives through the distribution of
 2320  explanations of benefits information about services reimbursed
 2321  by the Medicaid program for goods and services to such
 2322  recipients, including information on how to report inappropriate
 2323  or incorrect billing to the agency or other law enforcement
 2324  entities for review or investigation, information on how to
 2325  report criminal Medicaid fraud to the Medicaid Fraud Control
 2326  Unit’s toll-free hotline number, and information about the
 2327  rewards available under s. 409.9203. The explanation of benefits
 2328  may not be mailed for Medicaid independent laboratory services
 2329  as described in s. 409.905(7) or for Medicaid certified match
 2330  services as described in ss. 409.9071 and 1011.70.
 2331         (37) The agency shall post on its website a current list of
 2332  each Medicaid provider, including any principal, officer,
 2333  director, agent, managing employee, or affiliated person of the
 2334  provider, or any partner or shareholder having an ownership
 2335  interest in the provider equal to 5 percent or greater, who has
 2336  been terminated for cause from the Medicaid program or
 2337  sanctioned under this section. The list must be searchable by a
 2338  variety of search parameters and provide for the creation of
 2339  formatted lists that may be printed or imported into other
 2340  applications, including spreadsheets. The agency shall update
 2341  the list at least monthly.
 2342         (38) In order to improve the detection of health care
 2343  fraud, use technology to prevent and detect fraud, and maximize
 2344  the electronic exchange of health care fraud information, the
 2345  agency shall:
 2346         (a) Compile, maintain, and publish on its website a
 2347  detailed list of all state and federal databases that contain
 2348  health care fraud information and update the list at least
 2349  biannually;
 2350         (b) Develop a strategic plan to connect all databases that
 2351  contain health care fraud information to facilitate the
 2352  electronic exchange of health information between the agency,
 2353  the Department of Health, the Department of Law Enforcement, and
 2354  the Attorney General’s Office. The plan must include recommended
 2355  standard data formats, fraud identification strategies, and
 2356  specifications for the technical interface between state and
 2357  federal health care fraud databases;
 2358         (c) Monitor innovations in health information technology,
 2359  specifically as it pertains to Medicaid fraud prevention and
 2360  detection; and
 2361         (d) Periodically publish policy briefs that highlight
 2362  available new technology to prevent or detect health care fraud
 2363  and projects implemented by other states, the private sector, or
 2364  the Federal Government which use technology to prevent or detect
 2365  health care fraud.
 2366         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2367         Section 56. Subsection (7) of section 420.609, Florida
 2368  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2369         420.609 Affordable Housing Study Commission.—Because the
 2370  Legislature firmly supports affordable housing in Florida for
 2371  all economic classes:
 2372         (7) By July 15 of each year beginning in 2001, the
 2373  commission shall prepare and submit to the Governor, the
 2374  President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
 2375  Representatives a report detailing its findings and making
 2376  specific program, legislative, and funding recommendations and
 2377  any other recommendations it deems appropriate.
 2378         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2379         Section 57. Subsection (4) of section 429.52, Florida
 2380  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2381         429.52 Staff training and educational programs; core
 2382  educational requirement.—
 2383         (4) Effective January 1, 2004, A new facility administrator
 2384  must complete the required training and education, including the
 2385  competency test, within a reasonable time after being employed
 2386  as an administrator, as determined by the department. Failure to
 2387  do so is a violation of this part and subjects the violator to
 2388  an administrative fine as prescribed in s. 429.19.
 2389  Administrators licensed in accordance with part II of chapter
 2390  468 are exempt from this requirement. Other licensed
 2391  professionals may be exempted, as determined by the department
 2392  by rule.
 2393         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2394         Section 58. Subsection (3) of section 429.75, Florida
 2395  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2396         429.75 Training and education programs.—
 2397         (3) Effective January 1, 2004, Providers must complete the
 2398  training and education program within a reasonable time
 2399  determined by the department. Failure to complete the training
 2400  and education program within the time set by the department is a
 2401  violation of this part and subjects the provider to revocation
 2402  of the license.
 2403         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2404         Section 59. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section
 2405  455.219, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2406         455.219 Fees; receipts; disposition; periodic management
 2407  reports.—
 2408         (7)(a) The department, or a board thereunder, shall waive
 2409  the initial licensing fee for a member of the Armed Services of
 2410  the United States who that has served on active duty, the spouse
 2411  of a member of the Armed Services of the United States who was
 2412  married to the member during a period of active duty, the
 2413  surviving spouse of a member of the Armed Services of the United
 2414  States who at the time of death was serving on active duty, or a
 2415  low-income individual upon application by the individual in a
 2416  format prescribed by the department. The application format must
 2417  include the applicant’s signature, under penalty of perjury, and
 2418  supporting documentation as required by the department. For
 2419  purposes of this subsection, the term “low-income individual”
 2420  means a person whose household income, before taxes, is at or
 2421  below 130 percent of the federal poverty guidelines prescribed
 2422  for the family’s household size by the United States Department
 2423  of Health and Human Services, proof of which may be shown
 2424  through enrollment in a state or federal public assistance
 2425  program that requires participants to be at or below 130 percent
 2426  of the federal poverty guidelines to qualify.
 2427         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 2428         the word “who” for the word “that.”
 2429         Section 60. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 2430  456.013, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2431         456.013 Department; general licensing provisions.—
 2432         (1)(a) Any person desiring to be licensed in a profession
 2433  within the jurisdiction of the department shall apply to the
 2434  department in writing to take the licensure examination. The
 2435  application shall be made on a form prepared and furnished by
 2436  the department. The application form must be available on the
 2437  World Wide Web and the department may accept electronically
 2438  submitted applications beginning July 1, 2001. The application
 2439  shall require the social security number of the applicant,
 2440  except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c). The form shall be
 2441  supplemented as needed to reflect any material change in any
 2442  circumstance or condition stated in the application which takes
 2443  place between the initial filing of the application and the
 2444  final grant or denial of the license and which might affect the
 2445  decision of the department. If an application is submitted
 2446  electronically, the department may require supplemental
 2447  materials, including an original signature of the applicant and
 2448  verification of credentials, to be submitted in a nonelectronic
 2449  format. An incomplete application shall expire 1 year after
 2450  initial filing. In order to further the economic development
 2451  goals of the state, and notwithstanding any law to the contrary,
 2452  the department may enter into an agreement with the county tax
 2453  collector for the purpose of appointing the county tax collector
 2454  as the department’s agent to accept applications for licenses
 2455  and applications for renewals of licenses. The agreement must
 2456  specify the time within which the tax collector must forward any
 2457  applications and accompanying application fees to the
 2458  department.
 2459         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2460         Section 61. Subsection (6) of section 456.017, Florida
 2461  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2462         456.017 Examinations.—
 2463         (6) In addition to meeting any other requirements for
 2464  licensure by examination or by endorsement, and notwithstanding
 2465  the provisions in paragraph (1)(c), an applicant may be required
 2466  by a board, or the department when there is no board, to certify
 2467  competency in state laws and rules relating to the applicable
 2468  practice act. Beginning October 1, 2001, All laws and rules
 2469  examinations shall be administered electronically unless the
 2470  laws and rules examination is administered concurrently with
 2471  another written examination for that profession or unless the
 2472  electronic administration would be substantially more expensive.
 2473         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2474         Section 62. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) of
 2475  section 456.041, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2476         456.041 Practitioner profile; creation.—
 2477         (1)(a) The Department of Health shall compile the
 2478  information submitted pursuant to s. 456.039 into a practitioner
 2479  profile of the applicant submitting the information, except that
 2480  the Department of Health shall develop a format to compile
 2481  uniformly any information submitted under s. 456.039(4)(b).
 2482  Beginning July 1, 2001, The Department of Health may compile the
 2483  information submitted pursuant to s. 456.0391 into a
 2484  practitioner profile of the applicant submitting the
 2485  information. The protocol submitted pursuant to s. 464.012(3)
 2486  must be included in the practitioner profile of the advanced
 2487  registered nurse practitioner.
 2488         (b) Beginning July 1, 2005, The department shall verify the
 2489  information submitted by the applicant under s. 456.039
 2490  concerning disciplinary history and medical malpractice claims
 2491  at the time of initial licensure and license renewal using the
 2492  National Practitioner Data Bank. The physician profiles shall
 2493  reflect the disciplinary action and medical malpractice claims
 2494  as reported by the National Practitioner Data Bank, and shall
 2495  include information relating to liability and disciplinary
 2496  actions obtained as a result of a search of the National
 2497  Practitioner Data Bank.
 2498         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2499         Section 63. Subsection (1) of section 462.18, Florida
 2500  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2501         462.18 Educational requirements.—
 2502         (1) At the time each licensee shall renew her or his
 2503  license as otherwise provided in this chapter, each licensee,
 2504  beginning with the license renewal due May 1, 1944, in addition
 2505  to the payment of the regular renewal fee, shall furnish to the
 2506  department satisfactory evidence that, in the year preceding
 2507  each such application for renewal, the licensee has attended the
 2508  2-day educational program as promulgated and conducted by the
 2509  Florida Naturopathic Physicians Association, Inc., or, as a
 2510  substitute therefor, the equivalent of that program as approved
 2511  by the department. The department shall send a written notice to
 2512  this effect to every person holding a valid license to practice
 2513  naturopathy within this state at least 30 days prior to May 1 in
 2514  each even-numbered biennial year, directed to the last known
 2515  address of such licensee, and shall enclose with the notice
 2516  proper blank forms for application for annual license renewal.
 2517  All of the details and requirements of the aforesaid educational
 2518  program shall be adopted and prescribed by the department. In
 2519  the event of national emergencies, or for sufficient reason, the
 2520  department shall have the power to excuse the naturopathic
 2521  physicians as a group or as individuals from taking this
 2522  postgraduate course.
 2523         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2524         Section 64. Paragraph (h) of subsection (2) of section
 2525  471.003, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2526         471.003 Qualifications for practice; exemptions.—
 2527         (2) The following persons are not required to be licensed
 2528  under the provisions of this chapter as a licensed engineer:
 2529         (h) Any electrical, plumbing, air-conditioning, or
 2530  mechanical contractor whose practice includes the design and
 2531  fabrication of electrical, plumbing, air-conditioning, or
 2532  mechanical systems, respectively, which she or he installs by
 2533  virtue of a license issued under chapter 489, under former part
 2534  I of chapter 553, Florida Statutes 2001, or under any special
 2535  act or ordinance when working on any construction project which:
 2536         1. Requires an electrical or plumbing or air-conditioning
 2537  and refrigeration system with a value of $125,000 or less; and
 2538         2.a. Requires an aggregate service capacity of 600 amperes
 2539  (240 volts) or less on a residential electrical system or 800
 2540  amperes (240 volts) or less on a commercial or industrial
 2541  electrical system;
 2542         b. Requires a plumbing system with fewer than 250 fixture
 2543  units; or
 2544         c. Requires a heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning
 2545  system not to exceed a 15-ton-per-system capacity, or if the
 2546  project is designed to accommodate 100 or fewer persons.
 2547         Reviser’s note.—Amended to reflect the repeal of former part I
 2548         of chapter 553, Florida Statutes 2001, relating to
 2549         plumbing, by s. 68, ch. 98-287, Laws of Florida, as amended
 2550         by s. 108, ch. 2000-141, s. 39, ch. 2001-186, and s. 8, ch.
 2551         2001-372, Laws of Florida.
 2552         Section 65. Subsection (8) of section 475.451, Florida
 2553  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2554         475.451 Schools teaching real estate practice.—
 2555         (8) Beginning October 1, 2006, Each person, school, or
 2556  institution permitted under this section is required to keep
 2557  registration records, course rosters, attendance records, a file
 2558  copy of each examination and progress test, and all student
 2559  answer sheets for a period of at least 3 years subsequent to the
 2560  beginning of each course and make them available to the
 2561  department for inspection and copying upon request.
 2562         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2563         Section 66. Paragraph (j) of subsection (1) of section
 2564  475.611, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2565         475.611 Definitions.—
 2566         (1) As used in this part, the term:
 2567         (j) “Board” means the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board
 2568  established under s. 475.613 this section.
 2569         Reviser’s note.—Amended to facilitate correct interpretation.
 2570         The Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board is established
 2571         under s. 475.613.
 2572         Section 67. Section 477.014, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2573  to read:
 2574         477.014 Qualifications for practice.—On and after January
 2575  1, 1979, No person other than a duly licensed cosmetologist
 2576  shall practice cosmetology or use the name or title of
 2577  cosmetologist.
 2578         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2579         Section 68. Subsection (4) of section 487.2071, Florida
 2580  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2581         487.2071 Penalties against violators; worker relief;
 2582  monitoring complaints of retaliation.—
 2583         (4)The department shall monitor all complaints of
 2584  retaliation that it receives and report its findings to the
 2585  President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 2586  Representatives on or before October 1, 2008. The report shall
 2587  include the number of such complaints received, the
 2588  circumstances surrounding the complaints, and the actions taken
 2589  concerning the complaints.
 2590         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2591         Section 69. Section 489.529, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2592  to read:
 2593         489.529 Alarm verification calls required.—All residential
 2594  or commercial intrusion/burglary alarms that have central
 2595  monitoring must have a central monitoring verification call made
 2596  to a telephone number associated with the premises generating
 2597  the alarm signal, before alarm monitor personnel contact
 2598  contacting a law enforcement agency for alarm dispatch. The
 2599  central monitoring station must employ call-verification methods
 2600  for the premises generating the alarm signal if the first call
 2601  is not answered. However, verification calling is not required
 2602  if:
 2603         (1) The intrusion/burglary alarm has a properly operating
 2604  visual or auditory sensor that enables the monitoring personnel
 2605  to verify the alarm signal; or
 2606         (2) The intrusion/burglary alarm is installed on a premises
 2607  that is used for the storage of firearms or ammunition by a
 2608  person who holds a valid federal firearms license as a
 2609  manufacturer, importer, or dealer of firearms or ammunition,
 2610  provided the customer notifies the alarm monitoring company that
 2611  he or she holds such license and would like to bypass the two
 2612  call verification protocol. Upon initiation of a new alarm
 2613  monitoring service contract, the alarm monitoring company shall
 2614  make reasonable efforts to inform a customer who holds a valid
 2615  federal firearms license as a manufacturer, importer, or dealer
 2616  of firearms or ammunition of his or her right to opt out of the
 2617  two-call verification protocol.
 2618         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 2619         the word “contact” for the word “contacting.”
 2620         Section 70. Subsection (8) of section 490.012, Florida
 2621  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2622         490.012 Violations; penalties; injunction.—
 2623         (8) Effective October 1, 2000, A person may not practice
 2624  juvenile sexual offender therapy in this state, as the practice
 2625  is defined in s. 490.0145, for compensation, unless the person
 2626  holds an active license issued under this chapter and meets the
 2627  requirements to practice juvenile sexual offender therapy. An
 2628  unlicensed person may be employed by a program operated by or
 2629  under contract with the Department of Juvenile Justice or the
 2630  Department of Children and Families if the program employs a
 2631  professional who is licensed under chapter 458, chapter 459, s.
 2632  490.0145, or s. 491.0144 who manages or supervises the treatment
 2633  services.
 2634         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2635         Section 71. Subsection (5) of section 497.140, Florida
 2636  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2637         497.140 Fees.—
 2638         (5) The department shall charge a fee not to exceed $25 for
 2639  the certification of a public record. The fee shall be
 2640  determined by rule of the department. The department shall
 2641  assess a fee for duplication of a public record as provided in
 2642  s. 119.07(4) 119.07(1)(a) and (e).
 2643         Reviser’s note.—Amended to correct a cross-reference. Provisions
 2644         relating to fees were moved from s. 119.07(1) to s.
 2645         119.07(4) by s. 7, ch. 2004-335, Laws of Florida.
 2646         Section 72. Subsection (9) of section 497.282, Florida
 2647  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2648         497.282 Disclosure of information to public.—A licensee
 2649  offering to provide burial rights, merchandise, or services to
 2650  the public shall:
 2651         (9) Effective October 1, 2006, Display in its offices for
 2652  free distribution to all potential customers, and provide to all
 2653  customers at the time of sale, a brochure explaining how and by
 2654  whom cemeteries and preneed sales are regulated; summarizing
 2655  consumer rights under the law; and providing the name, address,
 2656  and phone number of the department’s consumer affairs division.
 2657  The format and content of the brochure shall be as prescribed by
 2658  rule. The licensing authority may cause the publication of such
 2659  brochures and by rule establish requirements that cemetery and
 2660  preneed licensees purchase and make available such brochures as
 2661  so published, in the licensee’s offices, to all potential
 2662  customers.
 2663         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2664         Section 73. Subsection (8) of section 497.468, Florida
 2665  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2666         497.468 Disclosure of information to the public.—A preneed
 2667  licensee offering to provide burial rights, merchandise, or
 2668  services to the public shall:
 2669         (8) Effective October 1, 2006, Display in its offices for
 2670  free distribution to all potential customers, and provide to all
 2671  customers at the time of sale, a brochure explaining how and by
 2672  whom preneed sales are regulated, summarizing consumer rights
 2673  under the law, and providing the name, address, and phone number
 2674  of the department’s consumer affairs division. The format and
 2675  content of the brochure shall be as prescribed by rule. The
 2676  licensing authority may cause the publication of such brochures
 2677  and by rule require that preneed licensees purchase and make
 2678  available such brochures as so published, in the licensee’s
 2679  offices, to all potential customers.
 2680         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2681         Section 74. Section 497.552, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2682  to read:
 2683         497.552 Required facilities.—Effective January 1, 2006, A
 2684  monument establishment shall at all times have and maintain a
 2685  full-service place of business at a specific street address or
 2686  location in Florida complying with the following requirements:
 2687         (1) It shall include an office for the conduct of its
 2688  business including the reception of customers.
 2689         (2) It shall include a display area in which is displayed a
 2690  selection of monuments, markers, and related products for
 2691  inspection by customers prior to sale.
 2692         (3) Its office and display area shall normally be open to
 2693  the public weekdays during normal business hours.
 2694         (4) It shall have facilities on site for inscribing
 2695  monuments and equipment to deliver and install markers and
 2696  monuments.
 2697         (5) It shall comply with any local government zoning
 2698  regulations and may not be located on tax-exempt property.
 2699         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2700         Section 75. Subsections (2), (3), (4), and (5) of section
 2701  497.553, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2702         497.553 Regulation of monument establishments.—
 2703         (2) Commencing January 1, 2006, All retail sales by
 2704  monument establishments shall be on a sales agreement form filed
 2705  by the monument establishment with and approved by the licensing
 2706  authority. Sales agreement forms must provide a complete
 2707  description of any monument, marker, or related product to be
 2708  delivered, and shall prominently and clearly specify the agreed
 2709  date for delivery and installation. Procedures for submission
 2710  and approval of such forms shall be established by rule.
 2711         (3) Commencing January 1, 2006, All monument establishments
 2712  shall have written procedures for the receipt, investigation,
 2713  and disposition of customer complaints, and shall ensure that
 2714  their staff who receive or process such complaints are familiar
 2715  with and follow such procedures.
 2716         (4) Commencing January 1, 2006, All monument establishments
 2717  shall maintain for inspection by the department records of
 2718  written complaints received by the monument establishment. Such
 2719  complaint records shall include a chronological log of written
 2720  complaints received, in which the name and address of each
 2721  complainant and date of complaint is entered consecutively
 2722  within 10 business days of receipt of each complaint. The
 2723  licensing authority may by rule establish requirements regarding
 2724  the format of complaint logs, including whether they may be
 2725  maintained electronically or shall be maintained by pen and ink
 2726  on paper; the licensing authority may by order direct a licensee
 2727  to maintain complaint logs by pen and ink in writing. The
 2728  original or complete copy of each written complaint received by
 2729  a monument establishment, and all subsequent correspondence
 2730  related to such complaint, shall be maintained by the monument
 2731  establishment, for inspection by the department, for the longer
 2732  of 24 months or 12 months after the most recent department
 2733  inspection during which the complaint was in the monument
 2734  establishment’s complaint records and available for the
 2735  department’s review.
 2736         (5) Commencing January 1, 2006, The failure of a monument
 2737  establishment to deliver and install a purchased monument or
 2738  marker by the date agreed in the sales agreement shall entitle
 2739  the customer to a full refund of all amounts paid by the
 2740  customer for the monument and its delivery and installation,
 2741  unless the monument establishment has obtained a written
 2742  agreement from the customer extending the delivery date. Such
 2743  refund shall be made within 30 days after receipt by the
 2744  monument establishment of the customer’s written request for a
 2745  refund. This subsection does not preclude the purchase and
 2746  installation of a new monument from any other registered
 2747  monument establishment or licensee.
 2748         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2749         Section 76. Subsection (2) of section 497.608, Florida
 2750  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2751         497.608 Liability for unintentional commingling of the
 2752  residue of the cremation process.—
 2753         (2) The operator of a cinerator facility shall establish
 2754  written procedures for the removal of cremated remains, to the
 2755  extent possible, resulting from the cremation of a human body
 2756  and the postcremation processing, shipping, packing, or
 2757  identifying of those remains. The operator of a cinerator
 2758  facility shall file its written procedures, and any revisions to
 2759  those written procedures, with the licensing authority for its
 2760  approval, and effective January 1, 2006, the cremation facility
 2761  shall not be operated unless it has and follows such written
 2762  procedures approved by the licensing authority; provided, the
 2763  licensing authority may adopt by rule standard uniform
 2764  procedures for the removal of such cremated remains, which may
 2765  be adopted by any cinerator facility in lieu of promulgating,
 2766  filing, and obtaining approval of procedures. A cinerator
 2767  facility choosing to utilize standard uniform procedures
 2768  specified by rule shall file notice of its choice with the
 2769  licensing authority pursuant to procedures and forms specified
 2770  by rule.
 2771         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2772         Section 77. Paragraph (d) of subsection (9) of section
 2773  499.012, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2774         499.012 Permit application requirements.—
 2775         (9)
 2776         (d) For purposes of applying for renewal of a permit under
 2777  subsection (8) or certification under subsection (15) (16), a
 2778  person may submit the following in lieu of satisfying the
 2779  requirements of paragraphs (a), (b), and (c):
 2780         1. A photograph of the individual taken within 180 days;
 2781  and
 2782         2. A copy of the personal information statement form most
 2783  recently submitted to the department and a certification under
 2784  oath, on a form specified by the department, that the individual
 2785  has reviewed the previously submitted personal information
 2786  statement form and that the information contained therein
 2787  remains unchanged.
 2788         Reviser’s note.—Amended to reflect the renumbering of former
 2789         subsection (16) as subsection (15) by s. 7, ch. 2016-212,
 2790         Laws of Florida.
 2791         Section 78. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (2) of
 2792  section 499.01211, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2793         499.01211 Drug Wholesale Distributor Advisory Council.—
 2794         (2) The Secretary of Business and Professional Regulation
 2795  or his or her designee and the Secretary of Health Care
 2796  Administration or her or his designee shall be members of the
 2797  council. The Secretary of Business and Professional Regulation
 2798  shall appoint 10 additional members to the council who shall be
 2799  appointed to a term of 4 years each, as follows:
 2800         (a) Three persons, each of whom is employed by a different
 2801  prescription drug wholesale distributor permitted under this
 2802  part which operates nationally and is a primary wholesale
 2803  distributor as defined in s. 499.003.
 2804         (b) One person employed by a prescription drug wholesale
 2805  distributor permitted under this part which is a secondary
 2806  wholesale distributor, as defined in s. 499.003.
 2807         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the fact that s. 2, ch.
 2808         2016-212, Laws of Florida, deleted the definitions for
 2809         “primary wholesale distributor” and “secondary wholesale
 2810         distributor” in s. 499.003, but retained the definition for
 2811         “wholesale distributor.”
 2812         Section 79. Paragraph (b) of subsection (6) of section
 2813  509.049, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2814         509.049 Food service employee training.—
 2815         (6)
 2816         (b) Effective January 1, 2005, Each third-party provider
 2817  shall provide the following information on each employee upon
 2818  certification and recertification: the name of the certified
 2819  food service employee, the employee’s date of birth, the
 2820  employing food service establishment, the name of the certified
 2821  food manager who conducted the training, the training date, and
 2822  the certification expiration date. This information shall be
 2823  reported electronically to the division, in a format prescribed
 2824  by the division, within 30 days of certification or
 2825  recertification. The division shall compile the information into
 2826  an electronic database that is not directly or indirectly owned,
 2827  maintained, or installed by any nongovernmental provider of food
 2828  service training. A public food service establishment that
 2829  trains its employees using its own in-house, proprietary food
 2830  safety training program approved by the division, and which uses
 2831  its own employees to provide this training, shall be exempt from
 2832  the electronic reporting requirements of this paragraph, and
 2833  from the card or certificate requirement of paragraph (a).
 2834         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2835         Section 80. Subsection (6) of section 520.68, Florida
 2836  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2837         520.68 Persons not required to be licensed.—No home
 2838  improvement finance seller’s or seller’s license shall be
 2839  required under this act of any person when acting in any
 2840  capacity or type of transaction set forth in this section:
 2841         (6) Retail establishments, including employees thereof,
 2842  which are licensed under part III II of this chapter and which
 2843  engage in home improvements as an incidental part of their
 2844  business. However, such retail establishments and their
 2845  employees shall be governed by all other provisions contained in
 2846  this act.
 2847         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the redesignation of part
 2848         II of chapter 520 as part III by s. 5, ch. 2017-118, Laws
 2849         of Florida.
 2850         Section 81. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
 2851  554.115, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2852         554.115 Disciplinary proceedings.—
 2853         (2) The department may deny, refuse to renew, suspend, or
 2854  revoke a certificate of competency upon proof that:
 2855         (c) The boiler inspector:
 2856         1. Gave false or forged information to the department, to
 2857  an authorized inspection agency, or to another boiler inspector
 2858  for the purpose of obtaining a certificate of operation; or
 2859         2. Inspected any boiler regulated under this chapter
 2860  without having obtained a valid certificate of competency.
 2861         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial insertion of
 2862         the word “to” to provide clarity.
 2863         Section 82. Section 559.11, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 2864  read:
 2865         559.11 Budget planning prohibited.—No person, firm,
 2866  corporation, or association, shall after June 17, 1959, engage
 2867  in the business of budget planning as defined in s. 559.10;
 2868  provided, the provisions of this part shall not be construed to
 2869  affect any contract for services to facilitate accelerated
 2870  payment of a mortgage loan.
 2871         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language and improve
 2872         clarity.
 2873         Section 83. Paragraph (dd) of subsection (1) of section
 2874  626.9541, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2875         626.9541 Unfair methods of competition and unfair or
 2876  deceptive acts or practices defined.—
 2877         (1) UNFAIR METHODS OF COMPETITION AND UNFAIR OR DECEPTIVE
 2878  ACTS.—The following are defined as unfair methods of competition
 2879  and unfair or deceptive acts or practices:
 2880         (dd) Life insurance limitations based on past foreign
 2881  travel experiences or future foreign travel plans.—
 2882         1. An insurer may not refuse life insurance to; refuse to
 2883  continue the life insurance of; or limit the amount, extent, or
 2884  kind of life insurance coverage available to an individual based
 2885  solely on the individual’s past lawful foreign travel
 2886  experiences.
 2887         2. An insurer may not refuse life insurance to; refuse to
 2888  continue the life insurance of; or limit the amount, extent, or
 2889  kind of life insurance coverage available to an individual based
 2890  solely on the individual’s future lawful travel plans unless the
 2891  insurer can demonstrate and the Office of Insurance Regulation
 2892  determines that:
 2893         a. Individuals who travel are a separate actuarially
 2894  supportable class whose risk of loss is different from those
 2895  individuals who do not travel; and
 2896         b. Such risk classification is based upon sound actuarial
 2897  principles and actual or reasonably anticipated experience that
 2898  correlates to the risk of travel to a specific destination.
 2899         3. The commission may adopt rules pursuant to ss.
 2900  120.536(1) and 120.54 necessary to implement this paragraph and
 2901  may provide for limited exceptions that are based upon national
 2902  or international emergency conditions that affect the public
 2903  health, safety, and welfare and that are consistent with public
 2904  policy.
 2905         4. Each market conduct examination of a life insurer
 2906  conducted pursuant to s. 624.3161 shall include a review of
 2907  every application under which such insurer refused to issue life
 2908  insurance; refused to continue life insurance; or limited the
 2909  amount, extent, or kind of life insurance issued, based upon
 2910  future lawful travel plans.
 2911         5. The administrative fines provided in s. 624.4211(2) and
 2912  (3) shall be trebled for violations of this paragraph.
 2913         6. The Office of Insurance Regulation shall report to the
 2914  President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
 2915  Representatives by March 1, 2007, and on the same date annually
 2916  thereafter, on the implementation of this paragraph. The report
 2917  shall include, but not be limited to, the number of applications
 2918  under which life insurance was denied, continuance was refused,
 2919  or coverage was limited based on future travel plans; the number
 2920  of insurers taking such action; and the reason for taking each
 2921  such action.
 2922         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2923         Section 84. Subsection (4) of section 627.066, Florida
 2924  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2925         627.066 Excessive profits for motor vehicle insurance
 2926  prohibited.—
 2927         (4) Each insurer group shall also file a schedule of
 2928  Florida private passenger automobile loss and loss adjustment
 2929  experience for each of the 3 most recent accident years. The
 2930  incurred losses and loss adjustment expenses shall be valued as
 2931  of March 31 of the year following the close of the accident
 2932  year, developed to an ultimate basis, and at two 12-month
 2933  intervals thereafter, each developed to an ultimate basis, so
 2934  that a total of three evaluations will be provided for each
 2935  accident year. The first year to be so reported shall be
 2936  accident year 1976, so that the reporting of 3 accident years
 2937  will not take place until accident years 1977 and 1978 have
 2938  become available.
 2939         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
 2940         Section 85. Section 627.285, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2941  to read:
 2942         627.285 Independent actuarial peer review of workers’
 2943  compensation rating organization.—The Financial Services
 2944  Commission shall at least once every other year contract for an
 2945  independent actuarial peer review and analysis of the ratemaking
 2946  processes of any licensed rating organization that makes rate
 2947  filings for workers’ compensation insurance, and the rating
 2948  organization shall fully cooperate in the peer review. The
 2949  contract shall require submission of a final report to the
 2950  commission, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
 2951  House of Representatives by February 1. The first report shall
 2952  be submitted by February 1, 2004. The costs of the independent
 2953  actuarial peer review shall be paid from the Workers’
 2954  Compensation Administration Trust Fund.
 2955         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 2956         Section 86. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 2957  627.748, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2958         627.748 Transportation network companies.—
 2959         (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 2960         (b) “Prearranged ride” means the provision of
 2961  transportation by a TNC driver to a rider, beginning when a TNC
 2962  driver accepts a ride requested by a rider through a digital
 2963  network controlled by a transportation network company,
 2964  continuing while the TNC driver transports the rider, and ending
 2965  when the last rider exits from and is no longer occupying the
 2966  TNC vehicle. The term does not include a taxicab, for-hire
 2967  vehicle, or street hail service and does not include ridesharing
 2968  as defined in s. 341.031, carpool as defined in s. 450.28, or
 2969  any other type of service in which the driver receives a fee
 2970  that does not exceed the driver’s cost to provide the ride.
 2971         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial insertion of
 2972         the word “in.”
 2973         Section 87. Paragraph (h) of subsection (1) of section
 2974  663.532, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2975         663.532 Qualification.—
 2976         (1) To qualify as a qualified limited service affiliate
 2977  under this part, a proposed qualified limited service affiliate
 2978  must file a written notice with the office, in the manner and on
 2979  a form prescribed by the commission. Such written notice must
 2980  include:
 2981         (h) Disclosure of any instance occurring within the prior
 2982  10 years when the proposed qualified limited service affiliate’s
 2983  director, executive officer, principal shareholder, manager,
 2984  managing member, or equivalent position was:
 2985         1. Arrested for, charged with, or convicted of, or who pled
 2986  guilty or nolo contendere to, regardless of adjudication, any
 2987  offense that is punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding
 2988  1 year, or to any offense that involves money laundering,
 2989  currency transaction reporting, tax evasion, facilitating or
 2990  furthering terrorism, fraud, theft, larceny, embezzlement,
 2991  fraudulent conversion, misappropriation of property, dishonesty,
 2992  breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, or moral turpitude,
 2993  or that is otherwise related to the operation of a financial
 2994  institution;
 2995         2. Fined or sanctioned as a result of a complaint to the
 2996  office or any other state or federal regulatory agency; or
 2997         3. Ordered to pay a fine or penalty in a proceeding
 2998  initiated by a federal, state, foreign, or local law enforcement
 2999  agency or an international agency related to money laundering,
 3000  currency transaction reporting, tax evasion, facilitating or
 3001  furthering terrorism, fraud, theft, larceny, embezzlement,
 3002  fraudulent conversion, misappropriation of property, dishonesty,
 3003  breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, or moral turpitude,
 3004  or that is otherwise related to the operation of a financial
 3005  institution.
 3006  
 3007  The proposed qualified limited service affiliate may provide
 3008  additional information in the form of exhibits when attempting
 3009  to satisfy any of the qualification requirements. All
 3010  information that the proposed qualified limited service
 3011  affiliate desires to present to support the written notice must
 3012  be submitted with the notice.
 3013         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial deletion of the
 3014         word “who.”
 3015         Section 88. Subsection (5) of section 741.0306, Florida
 3016  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3017         741.0306 Creation of a family law handbook.—
 3018         (5)The existing family law handbook shall be reviewed and
 3019  a report provided to the Legislature by October 1, 2008, or as
 3020  soon thereafter as practicable, with recommendations for
 3021  updating the handbook.
 3022         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
 3023         Section 89. Paragraph (d) of subsection (2) of section
 3024  744.331, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3025         744.331 Procedures to determine incapacity.—
 3026         (2) ATTORNEY FOR THE ALLEGED INCAPACITATED PERSON.—
 3027         (d) Effective January 1, 2007, An attorney seeking to be
 3028  appointed by a court for incapacity and guardianship proceedings
 3029  must have completed a minimum of 8 hours of education in
 3030  guardianship. A court may waive the initial training requirement
 3031  for an attorney who has served as a court-appointed attorney in
 3032  incapacity proceedings or as an attorney of record for guardians
 3033  for not less than 3 years. The education requirement of this
 3034  paragraph does not apply to the office of criminal conflict and
 3035  civil regional counsel until July 1, 2008.
 3036         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3037         Section 90. Subsection (1) of section 796.04, Florida
 3038  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3039         796.04 Forcing, compelling, or coercing another to become a
 3040  prostitute.—
 3041         (1) After May 1, 1943, It shall be unlawful for anyone to
 3042  force, compel, or coerce another to become a prostitute.
 3043         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3044         Section 91. Subsection (1) of section 817.311, Florida
 3045  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3046         817.311 Unlawful use of badges, etc.—
 3047         (1) From and after May 9, 1949, Any person who shall wear
 3048  or display a badge, button, insignia or other emblem, or shall
 3049  use the name of or claim to be a member of any benevolent,
 3050  fraternal, social, humane, or charitable organization, which
 3051  organization is entitled to the exclusive use of such name and
 3052  such badge, button, insignia or emblem either in the identical
 3053  form or in such near resemblance thereto as to be a colorable
 3054  imitation thereof, unless such person is entitled so to do under
 3055  the laws, rules and regulations of such organization, shall be
 3056  guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as
 3057  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
 3058         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3059         Section 92. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section
 3060  817.625, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3061         817.625 Use of scanning device, skimming device, or
 3062  reencoder to defraud; possession of skimming device; penalties.—
 3063         (2)
 3064         (c) It is a felony of the third degree, punishable as
 3065  provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084, for a person
 3066  to knowingly possess, sell, or deliver a skimming device. This
 3067  paragraph does not apply to the following individuals while
 3068  acting within the scope of their his or her official duties:
 3069         1. An employee, officer, or agent of:
 3070         a. A law enforcement agency or criminal prosecuting
 3071  authority for the state or the Federal Government;
 3072         b. The state courts system as defined in s. 25.382 or the
 3073  federal court system; or
 3074         c. An executive branch agency in this state.
 3075         2. A financial or retail security investigator employed by
 3076  a merchant.
 3077         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 3078         the word “their” for the words “his or her.”
 3079         Section 93. Section 876.24, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 3080  read:
 3081         876.24 Membership in subversive organization; penalty.—It
 3082  shall be unlawful for any person after the effective date of
 3083  this law to become or after July 1, 1953, to remain a member of
 3084  a subversive organization or a foreign subversive organization
 3085  knowing said organization to be a subversive organization or
 3086  foreign subversive organization. Any person convicted of
 3087  violating this section shall be guilty of a felony of the third
 3088  degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s.
 3089  775.084.
 3090         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3091         Section 94. Subsection (1) of section 905.37, Florida
 3092  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3093         905.37 List of prospective jurors; impanelment; composition
 3094  of jury; compensation.—
 3095         (1) On or before July 15, 1973, and Not later than the
 3096  first week in December of each year thereafter, the chief judge
 3097  of each judicial circuit shall cause to be compiled a list of
 3098  persons called and certified for jury duty in each of the
 3099  several counties in the circuit. From the lists of persons
 3100  certified for jury duty in each of the several counties in his
 3101  or her judicial circuit, the chief judge shall select by lot and
 3102  at random a list of eligible prospective grand jurors from each
 3103  county. The number of prospective statewide grand jurors to be
 3104  selected from each county shall be determined on the basis of 3
 3105  such jurors for each 3,000 residents, or fraction thereof, in
 3106  each county. When such lists are compiled, the chief judge of
 3107  each judicial circuit shall cause the lists to be submitted to
 3108  the state courts administrator on or before August 15, 1973, and
 3109  not later than February 15 of each year thereafter.
 3110         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3111         Section 95. Subsection (2) of section 943.0311, Florida
 3112  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3113         943.0311 Chief of Domestic Security; duties of the
 3114  department with respect to domestic security.—
 3115         (2) The chief shall conduct or cause to be conducted by the
 3116  personnel and with the resources of the state agency, state
 3117  university, or community college that owns or leases a building,
 3118  facility, or structure, security assessments of buildings,
 3119  facilities, and structures owned or leased by state agencies,
 3120  state universities, and community colleges using methods and
 3121  instruments made available by the department. Each entity making
 3122  such an assessment shall prioritize its security needs based on
 3123  the findings of its assessment. Each state agency, state
 3124  university, and community college shall cooperate with the
 3125  department and provide the assistance of employees within
 3126  existing resources to provide to the chief information in the
 3127  format requested by the chief. The chief must report to the
 3128  Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the
 3129  House of Representatives if any state agency, state university,
 3130  or community college substantially fails to cooperate with the
 3131  chief in making a security assessment of the buildings,
 3132  facilities, and structures of the state agency, state
 3133  university, or community college.
 3134         (a)The initial assessment of each building, facility, or
 3135  structure owned or leased by a state agency, state university,
 3136  or community college shall be completed by the state agency,
 3137  state university, or community college and shall be provided to
 3138  the chief no later than November 1, 2004.
 3139         (b) Assessments of any building, facility, or structure
 3140  owned or leased by a state agency, state university, or
 3141  community college not previously provided to the chief under
 3142  paragraph (a) must be completed by the state agency, state
 3143  university, or community college and provided to the chief
 3144  before occupying or substantially modifying such building,
 3145  facility, or structure. The chief may request additional
 3146  assessments to ensure that the security assessments of
 3147  buildings, facilities, and structures, owned or leased by state
 3148  agencies, state universities, and community colleges, remain
 3149  reasonably current and valid.
 3150         Reviser’s note.—Paragraph (a) is amended to delete an obsolete
 3151         provision. Paragraph (b) is amended to conform to the
 3152         deletion of paragraph (a).
 3153         Section 96. Section 944.48, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 3154  read:
 3155         944.48 Service of sentence.—Whenever any prisoner is
 3156  convicted under the provisions of ss. 944.44-944.47, 944.41
 3157  944.47 the punishment of imprisonment imposed shall be served
 3158  consecutively to any former sentence imposed upon any prisoner
 3159  convicted hereunder.
 3160         Reviser’s note.—Amended to correct a cross-reference and to
 3161         improve clarity. Section 944.41 was repealed by s. 177, ch.
 3162         71-355, Laws of Florida; s. 944.42 was repealed by s. 7,
 3163         ch. 96-293, Laws of Florida; and s. 944.43 was repealed by
 3164         s. 1, ch. 81-88, Laws of Florida. The first section in the
 3165         range is now s. 944.44.
 3166         Section 97. Paragraph (l) of subsection (1) of section
 3167  948.03, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3168         948.03 Terms and conditions of probation.—
 3169         (1) The court shall determine the terms and conditions of
 3170  probation. Conditions specified in this section do not require
 3171  oral pronouncement at the time of sentencing and may be
 3172  considered standard conditions of probation. These conditions
 3173  may include among them the following, that the probationer or
 3174  offender in community control shall:
 3175         (l)1. Submit to random testing as directed by the probation
 3176  officer or the professional staff of the treatment center where
 3177  he or she is receiving treatment to determine the presence or
 3178  use of alcohol or controlled substances.
 3179         2. If the offense was a controlled substance violation and
 3180  the period of probation immediately follows a period of
 3181  incarceration in the state correctional correction system, the
 3182  conditions must include a requirement that the offender submit
 3183  to random substance abuse testing intermittently throughout the
 3184  term of supervision, upon the direction of the probation
 3185  officer.
 3186         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 3187         the word “correctional” for the word “correction” to
 3188         conform to context.
 3189         Section 98. Subsection (2) of section 1000.06, Florida
 3190  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3191         1000.06 Display of flags.—
 3192         (2) Each public K-20 educational institution that is
 3193  provided or authorized by the Constitution and laws of Florida
 3194  shall display daily in each classroom the flag of the United
 3195  States. The flag must be made in the United States, must be at
 3196  least 2 feet by 3 feet, and must be properly displayed in
 3197  accordance with Title 4 U.S.C. Each educational institution
 3198  shall acquire the necessary number of flags to implement the
 3199  provisions of this subsection. The principal, director, or
 3200  president of each educational institution shall attempt to
 3201  acquire the flags through donations or fundraising for 1 year
 3202  prior to securing other funding sources or allocating funds for
 3203  the purchase of flags. The president of each state university or
 3204  Florida College System institution must present to the governing
 3205  board of the institution the results of donations and
 3206  fundraising activities relating to the acquisition of flags
 3207  prior to requesting the governing board to approve a funding
 3208  source for the purchase of flags. A flag must be displayed in
 3209  each classroom pursuant to this subsection no later than August
 3210  1, 2005.
 3211         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3212         Section 99. Subsection (3) of section 1001.215, Florida
 3213  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3214         1001.215 Just Read, Florida! Office.—There is created in
 3215  the Department of Education the Just Read, Florida! Office. The
 3216  office is fully accountable to the Commissioner of Education and
 3217  shall:
 3218         (3) Work with the Lastinger Center for Learning at the
 3219  University of Florida to develop training for K-12 teachers,
 3220  reading coaches, and school principals on effective content
 3221  area-specific reading strategies; the integration of content
 3222  rich curriculum from other core subject areas into reading
 3223  instruction; and evidence-based reading strategies identified in
 3224  subsection (8) (7) to improve student reading performance. For
 3225  secondary teachers, emphasis shall be on technical text. These
 3226  strategies must be developed for all content areas in the K-12
 3227  curriculum.
 3228         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 3229         a reference to subsection (8) for a reference to subsection
 3230         (7) to conform to context. Subsection (7) relates to
 3231         implementation of a comprehensive reading plan; subsection
 3232         (8) relates to identification of evidence-based reading
 3233         instructional and intervention programs.
 3234         Section 100. Subsection (18) of section 1001.42, Florida
 3235  Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 3236         1001.42 Powers and duties of district school board.—The
 3237  district school board, acting as a board, shall exercise all
 3238  powers and perform all duties listed below:
 3239         (18) IMPLEMENT SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY.
 3240  Maintain a system of school improvement and education
 3241  accountability as provided by statute and State Board of
 3242  Education rule. This system of school improvement and education
 3243  accountability shall be consistent with, and implemented
 3244  through, the district’s continuing system of planning and
 3245  budgeting required by this section and ss. 1008.385, 1010.01,
 3246  and 1011.01. This system of school improvement and education
 3247  accountability shall comply with the provisions of ss. 1008.33,
 3248  1008.34, 1008.345, and 1008.385 and include the following:
 3249         (a) School improvement plans.—The district school board
 3250  shall annually approve and require implementation of a new,
 3251  amended, or continuation school improvement plan for each school
 3252  in the district which has a school grade of “D” or “F”; has a
 3253  significant gap in achievement on statewide, standardized
 3254  assessments administered pursuant to s. 1008.22 by one or more
 3255  student subgroups, as defined in the federal Elementary and
 3256  Secondary Education Act (ESEA), 20 U.S.C. s.
 3257  6311(b)(2)(C)(v)(II); has not significantly increased the
 3258  percentage of students passing statewide, standardized
 3259  assessments; has not significantly increased the percentage of
 3260  students demonstrating Learning Gains, as defined in s. 1008.34
 3261  and as calculated under s. 1008.34(3)(b), who passed statewide,
 3262  standardized assessments; or has significantly lower graduation
 3263  rates for a subgroup when compared to the state’s graduation
 3264  rate. The improvement plan of a school that meets the
 3265  requirements of this paragraph shall include strategies for
 3266  improving these results. The state board shall adopt rules
 3267  establishing thresholds and for determining compliance with this
 3268  paragraph.
 3269         (b) Early warning system.—
 3270         1. A school that serves any students in kindergarten
 3271  through grade 8 shall implement an early warning system to
 3272  identify students in such grades who need additional support to
 3273  improve academic performance and stay engaged in school. The
 3274  early warning system must include the following early warning
 3275  indicators:
 3276         a. Attendance below 90 percent, regardless of whether
 3277  absence is excused or a result of out-of-school suspension.
 3278         b. One or more suspensions, whether in school or out of
 3279  school.
 3280         c. Course failure in English Language Arts or mathematics
 3281  during any grading period.
 3282         d. A Level 1 score on the statewide, standardized
 3283  assessments in English Language Arts or mathematics or, for
 3284  students in kindergarten through grade 3, a substantial reading
 3285  deficiency under s. 1008.25(5)(a).
 3286  
 3287  A school district may identify additional early warning
 3288  indicators for use in a school’s early warning system. The
 3289  system must include data on the number of students identified by
 3290  the system as exhibiting two or more early warning indicators,
 3291  the number of students by grade level who exhibit each early
 3292  warning indicator, and a description of all intervention
 3293  strategies employed by the school to improve the academic
 3294  performance of students identified by the early warning system.
 3295         2. A school-based team responsible for implementing the
 3296  requirements of this paragraph shall monitor the data from the
 3297  early warning system. The team may include a school
 3298  psychologist. When a student exhibits two or more early warning
 3299  indicators, the team, in consultation with the student’s parent,
 3300  shall determine appropriate intervention strategies for the
 3301  student unless the student is already being served by an
 3302  intervention program at the direction of a school-based,
 3303  multidisciplinary team. Data and information relating to a
 3304  student’s early warning indicators must be used to inform any
 3305  intervention strategies provided to the student.
 3306         (c) Public disclosure.—The district school board shall
 3307  provide information regarding the performance of students and
 3308  educational programs as required pursuant to ss. 1008.22 and
 3309  1008.385 and implement a system of school reports as required by
 3310  statute and State Board of Education rule which shall include
 3311  schools operating for the purpose of providing educational
 3312  services to students in Department of Juvenile Justice programs,
 3313  and for those schools, report on the elements specified in s.
 3314  1003.52(17). Annual public disclosure reports shall be in an
 3315  easy-to-read report card format and shall include the school’s
 3316  grade, high school graduation rate calculated without high
 3317  school equivalency examinations, disaggregated by student
 3318  ethnicity, and performance data as specified in state board
 3319  rule.
 3320         (d) School improvement funds.—The district school board
 3321  shall provide funds to schools for developing and implementing
 3322  school improvement plans. Such funds shall include those funds
 3323  appropriated for the purpose of school improvement pursuant to
 3324  s. 24.121(5)(c).
 3325         Reviser’s note.—Section 38, ch. 2017-116, Laws of Florida,
 3326         purported to amend subsection (18), but did not publish
 3327         paragraphs (c) and (d). Absent affirmative evidence of
 3328         legislative intent to repeal them, paragraphs (c) and (d)
 3329         are reenacted to confirm the omission was not intended.
 3330         Section 101. Subsection (7) of section 1002.61, Florida
 3331  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3332         1002.61 Summer prekindergarten program delivered by public
 3333  schools and private prekindergarten providers.—
 3334         (7) Notwithstanding ss. 1002.55(3)(f) and 1002.63(7), each
 3335  prekindergarten class in the summer prekindergarten program,
 3336  regardless of whether the class is a public school’s or private
 3337  prekindergarten provider’s class, must be composed of at least 4
 3338  students but may not exceed 12 students beginning with the 2009
 3339  summer session. In order to protect the health and safety of
 3340  students, each public school or private prekindergarten provider
 3341  must also provide appropriate adult supervision for students at
 3342  all times. This subsection does not supersede any requirement
 3343  imposed on a provider under ss. 402.301-402.319.
 3344         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete obsolete language.
 3345         Section 102. Subsection (10) of section 1003.4282, Florida
 3346  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3347         1003.4282 Requirements for a standard high school diploma.—
 3348         (10) STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES.—Beginning with students
 3349  entering grade 9 in the 2014-2015 school year, this subsection
 3350  applies to a student with a disability.
 3351         (a) A parent of the student with a disability shall, in
 3352  collaboration with the individual education plan (IEP) team
 3353  during the transition planning process pursuant to s. 1003.5716,
 3354  declare an intent for the student to graduate from high school
 3355  with either a standard high school diploma or a certificate of
 3356  completion. A student with a disability who does not satisfy the
 3357  standard high school diploma requirements pursuant to this
 3358  section shall be awarded a certificate of completion.
 3359         (b) The following options, in addition to the other options
 3360  specified in this section, may be used to satisfy the standard
 3361  high school diploma requirements, as specified in the student’s
 3362  individual education plan:
 3363         1. For a student with a disability for whom the IEP team
 3364  has determined that the Florida Alternate Assessment is the most
 3365  appropriate measure of the student’s skills:
 3366         a. A combination of course substitutions, assessments,
 3367  industry certifications, other acceleration options, or
 3368  occupational completion points appropriate to the student’s
 3369  unique skills and abilities that meet the criteria established
 3370  by State Board of Education rule.
 3371         b. A portfolio of quantifiable evidence that documents a
 3372  student’s mastery of academic standards through rigorous metrics
 3373  established by State Board of Education rule. A portfolio may
 3374  include, but is not limited to, documentation of work
 3375  experience, internships, community service, and postsecondary
 3376  credit.
 3377         2. For a student with a disability for whom the IEP team
 3378  has determined that mastery of academic and employment
 3379  competencies is the most appropriate way for a student to
 3380  demonstrate his or her skills:
 3381         a. Documented completion of the minimum high school
 3382  graduation requirements, including the number of course credits
 3383  prescribed by rules of the State Board of Education.
 3384         b. Documented achievement of all annual goals and short
 3385  term objectives for academic and employment competencies,
 3386  industry certifications, and occupational completion points
 3387  specified in the student’s transition plan. The documentation
 3388  must be verified by the IEP team.
 3389         c. Documented successful employment for the number of hours
 3390  per week specified in the student’s transition plan, for the
 3391  equivalent of 1 semester, and payment of a minimum wage in
 3392  compliance with the requirements of the federal Fair Labor
 3393  Standards Act.
 3394         d. Documented mastery of the academic and employment
 3395  competencies, industry certifications, and occupational
 3396  completion points specified in the student’s transition plan.
 3397  The documentation must be verified by the IEP team, the
 3398  employer, and the teacher. The transition plan must be developed
 3399  and signed by the student, parent, teacher, and employer before
 3400  placement in employment and must identify the following:
 3401         (I) The expected academic and employment competencies,
 3402  industry certifications, and occupational completion points;
 3403         (II) The criteria for determining and certifying mastery of
 3404  the competencies;
 3405         (III) The work schedule and the minimum number of hours to
 3406  be worked per week; and
 3407         (IV) A description of the supervision to be provided by the
 3408  school district.
 3409         3. Any change to the high school graduation option
 3410  specified in the student’s IEP must be approved by the parent
 3411  and is subject to verification for appropriateness by an
 3412  independent reviewer selected by the parent as provided in s.
 3413  1003.572.
 3414         (c) A student with a disability who meets the standard high
 3415  school diploma requirements in this section may defer the
 3416  receipt of a standard high school diploma if the student:
 3417         1. Has an individual education plan that prescribes special
 3418  education, transition planning, transition services, or related
 3419  services through age 21; and
 3420         2. Is enrolled in accelerated college credit instruction
 3421  pursuant to s. 1007.27, industry certification courses that lead
 3422  to college credit, a collegiate high school program, courses
 3423  necessary to satisfy the Scholar designation requirements, or a
 3424  structured work-study, internship, or preapprenticeship program.
 3425         (d) A student with a disability who receives a certificate
 3426  of completion and has an individual education plan that
 3427  prescribes special education, transition planning, transition
 3428  services, or related services through 21 years of age may
 3429  continue to receive the specified instruction and services.
 3430         (e) Any waiver of the statewide, standardized assessment
 3431  requirements by the individual education plan team, pursuant to
 3432  s. 1008.22(3)(c), must be approved by the parent and is subject
 3433  to verification for appropriateness by an independent reviewer
 3434  selected by the parent as provided for in s. 1003.572.
 3435  
 3436  The State Board of Education shall adopt rules under ss.
 3437  120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement this subsection paragraph,
 3438  including rules that establish the minimum requirements for
 3439  students described in this subsection paragraph to earn a
 3440  standard high school diploma. The State Board of Education shall
 3441  adopt emergency rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54.
 3442         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial substitution of
 3443         a reference to “subsection” for a reference to “paragraph”
 3444         to conform to context. The flush left language following
 3445         paragraph (e) is a part of subsection (10) and not any
 3446         single paragraph.
 3447         Section 103. Paragraphs (e) and (f) of subsection (3) of
 3448  section 1003.491, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3449         1003.491 Florida Career and Professional Education Act.—The
 3450  Florida Career and Professional Education Act is created to
 3451  provide a statewide planning partnership between the business
 3452  and education communities in order to attract, expand, and
 3453  retain targeted, high-value industry and to sustain a strong,
 3454  knowledge-based economy.
 3455         (3) The strategic 3-year plan developed jointly by the
 3456  local school district, local workforce development boards,
 3457  economic development agencies, and state-approved postsecondary
 3458  institutions shall be constructed and based on:
 3459         (e) Strategies to provide personalized student advisement,
 3460  including a parent-participation component, and coordination
 3461  with middle grades to promote and support career-themed courses
 3462  and education planning as required under s. 1003.4156;
 3463         (f) Alignment of requirements for middle school career
 3464  planning under s. 1003.4156(1)(e), middle and high school career
 3465  and professional academies or career-themed courses leading to
 3466  industry certification or postsecondary credit, and high school
 3467  graduation requirements;
 3468         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the deletion of s.
 3469         1003.4156(1)(e) by s. 2, ch. 2017-55, Laws of Florida, and
 3470         s. 60, ch. 2017-116, Laws of Florida. Section
 3471         1003.4156(1)(e) related to career and education planning to
 3472         be completed in 6th, 7th, or 8th grade.
 3473         Section 104. Paragraph (j) of subsection (2) of section
 3474  1003.621, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3475         1003.621 Academically high-performing school districts.—It
 3476  is the intent of the Legislature to recognize and reward school
 3477  districts that demonstrate the ability to consistently maintain
 3478  or improve their high-performing status. The purpose of this
 3479  section is to provide high-performing school districts with
 3480  flexibility in meeting the specific requirements in statute and
 3481  rules of the State Board of Education.
 3482         (2) COMPLIANCE WITH STATUTES AND RULES.—Each academically
 3483  high-performing school district shall comply with all of the
 3484  provisions in chapters 1000-1013, and rules of the State Board
 3485  of Education which implement these provisions, pertaining to the
 3486  following:
 3487         (j) Those statutes relating to instructional materials,
 3488  except that s. 1006.37, relating to the requisition of state
 3489  adopted materials from the depository under contract with the
 3490  publisher, and s. 1006.40(3)(b) 1006.40(3)(a), relating to the
 3491  use of 50 percent of the instructional materials allocation,
 3492  shall be eligible for exemption.
 3493         Reviser’s note.—Amended to correct a cross-reference. Section
 3494         1006.40(3)(b) relates to the use of 50 percent of the
 3495         annual allocation; s. 1006.40(3)(a) provides that the
 3496         annual allocation may be used only for the purchase of
 3497         instructional materials that align with state standards and
 3498         are included on the state-adopted list, except as expressly
 3499         provided.
 3500         Section 105. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) of section
 3501  1004.4473, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3502         1004.4473 Industrial hemp pilot projects.—
 3503         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 3504         (f) “Qualified project partner” means a public, nonprofit,
 3505  or private entity that:
 3506         1. Has a principal place of business is in this state.
 3507         2. Has access to a grow site and research facility located
 3508  in this state which is acceptable for the cultivation,
 3509  processing, and manufacturing of industrial hemp and hemp
 3510  products, as determined by the department.
 3511         3. Submits a comprehensive business or research plan
 3512  acceptable to the partnering university.
 3513         4. Provides proof of prior experience in or knowledge of,
 3514  or demonstrates an interest in and commitment to, the
 3515  cultivation, processing, manufacturing, or research of
 3516  industrial hemp, as determined by the department.
 3517         Reviser’s note.—Amended to confirm the editorial deletion of the
 3518         word “is” to improve clarity.
 3519         Section 106. Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section
 3520  1006.735, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3521         1006.735 Complete Florida Plus Program.—The Complete
 3522  Florida Plus Program is created at the University of West
 3523  Florida.
 3524         (4) STATEWIDE ONLINE STUDENT ADVISING SERVICES AND
 3525  SUPPORT.—The Complete Florida Plus Program shall make available
 3526  on a statewide basis online services and support, including:
 3527         (b) A K-20 statewide computer-assisted student advising
 3528  system which shall support career and education planning for the
 3529  K-12 system and the process of advising, registering, and
 3530  certifying postsecondary students for graduation and which shall
 3531  include a degree audit and an articulation component. Florida
 3532  College System institutions and state universities shall
 3533  interface institutional advising systems with the statewide
 3534  computer-assisted student advising system. At a minimum, the
 3535  statewide computer-assisted student advising system shall:
 3536         1. Allow a student to access the system at any time.
 3537         2. Support K-12 career and education planning required by
 3538  s. 1003.4156(1)(e).
 3539         3. Allow a student to search public postsecondary education
 3540  institutions and identify course options that will meet the
 3541  requirements of a selected path toward a degree.
 3542         4. Audit transcripts of students enrolled in a public
 3543  postsecondary education institution to assess current academic
 3544  standing, the requirements for a student to transfer to another
 3545  institution, and all requirements necessary for graduation.
 3546         5. Serve as the official statewide repository for the
 3547  common prerequisite manual, admissions information for
 3548  transferring programs, foreign language requirements, residency
 3549  requirements, and statewide articulation agreements.
 3550         6. Provide information relating to career descriptions and
 3551  corresponding educational requirements, admissions requirements,
 3552  and available sources of student financial assistance.
 3553         7. Provide the admissions application for transient
 3554  students pursuant to paragraph (a) which must include the
 3555  electronic transfer and receipt of information and records for:
 3556         a. Admissions and readmissions.
 3557         b. Financial aid.
 3558         c. Transfer of credit awarded by the institution offering
 3559  the course to the transient student’s degree-granting
 3560  institution.
 3561         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the deletion of s.
 3562         1003.4156(1)(e) by s. 2, ch. 2017-55, Laws of Florida, and
 3563         s. 60, ch. 2017-116, Laws of Florida. Section
 3564         1003.4156(1)(e) related to career and education planning to
 3565         be completed in 6th, 7th, or 8th grade.
 3566         Section 107. Paragraph (i) of subsection (3) of section
 3567  1007.01, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3568         1007.01 Articulation; legislative intent; purpose; role of
 3569  the State Board of Education and the Board of Governors;
 3570  Articulation Coordinating Committee.—
 3571         (3) The Commissioner of Education, in consultation with the
 3572  Chancellor of the State University System, shall establish the
 3573  Articulation Coordinating Committee, which shall make
 3574  recommendations related to statewide articulation policies and
 3575  issues regarding access, quality, and reporting of data
 3576  maintained by the K-20 data warehouse, established pursuant to
 3577  ss. 1001.10 and 1008.31, to the Higher Education Coordination
 3578  Council, the State Board of Education, and the Board of
 3579  Governors. The committee shall consist of two members each
 3580  representing the State University System, the Florida College
 3581  System, public career and technical education, K-12 education,
 3582  and nonpublic postsecondary education and one member
 3583  representing students. The chair shall be elected from the
 3584  membership. The Office of K-20 Articulation shall provide
 3585  administrative support for the committee. The committee shall:
 3586         (i)Make recommendations regarding the cost and
 3587  requirements to develop and implement an online system for
 3588  collecting and analyzing data regarding requests for transfer of
 3589  credit by postsecondary education students. The online system,
 3590  at a minimum, must collect information regarding the total
 3591  number of credit transfer requests denied and the reason for
 3592  each denial. Recommendations shall be reported to the President
 3593  of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives on
 3594  or before January 31, 2015.
 3595         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete an obsolete provision.
 3596         Section 108. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 3597  1008.34, Florida Statutes, is reenacted to read:
 3598         1008.34 School grading system; school report cards;
 3599  district grade.—
 3600         (1) DEFINITIONS.—For purposes of the statewide,
 3601  standardized assessment program and school grading system, the
 3602  following terms are defined:
 3603         (a) “Achievement level,” “student achievement,” or
 3604  “achievement” describes the level of content mastery a student
 3605  has acquired in a particular subject as measured by a statewide,
 3606  standardized assessment administered pursuant to s.
 3607  1008.22(3)(a) and (b). There are five achievement levels. Level
 3608  1 is the lowest achievement level, level 5 is the highest
 3609  achievement level, and level 3 indicates satisfactory
 3610  performance. A student passes an assessment if the student
 3611  achieves a level 3, level 4, or level 5. For purposes of the
 3612  Florida Alternate Assessment administered pursuant to s.
 3613  1008.22(3)(c), the state board shall provide, in rule, the
 3614  number of achievement levels and identify the achievement levels
 3615  that are considered passing.
 3616         Reviser’s note.—Reenacted to publish the correct text of
 3617         paragraph (1)(a) and to correct an input error made in the
 3618         compilation of the statutes.
 3619         Section 109. Subsection (2) of section 1011.67, Florida
 3620  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3621         1011.67 Funds for instructional materials.—
 3622         (2) Annually by July 1 and before the release of
 3623  instructional materials funds, each district school
 3624  superintendent shall certify to the Commissioner of Education
 3625  that the district school board has approved a comprehensive
 3626  staff development plan that supports fidelity of implementation
 3627  of instructional materials programs, including verification that
 3628  training was provided; that the materials are being implemented
 3629  as designed; and, beginning July 1, 2021, for core reading
 3630  materials and reading intervention materials used in
 3631  kindergarten through grade 5, that the materials meet the
 3632  requirements of s. 1001.215(8) 1001.215(7). This subsection does
 3633  not preclude school districts from purchasing or using other
 3634  materials to supplement reading instruction and provide
 3635  additional skills practice.
 3636         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the redesignation of s.
 3637         1001.215(7) as s. 1001.215(8) by s. 16, ch. 2017-116, Laws
 3638         of Florida.
 3639         Section 110. Subsection (1) of section 1011.71, Florida
 3640  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3641         1011.71 District school tax.—
 3642         (1) If the district school tax is not provided in the
 3643  General Appropriations Act or the substantive bill implementing
 3644  the General Appropriations Act, each district school board
 3645  desiring to participate in the state allocation of funds for
 3646  current operation as prescribed by s. 1011.62(16) 1011.62(15)
 3647  shall levy on the taxable value for school purposes of the
 3648  district, exclusive of millage voted under s. 9(b) or s. 12,
 3649  Art. VII of the State Constitution, a millage rate not to exceed
 3650  the amount certified by the commissioner as the minimum millage
 3651  rate necessary to provide the district required local effort for
 3652  the current year, pursuant to s. 1011.62(4)(a)1. In addition to
 3653  the required local effort millage levy, each district school
 3654  board may levy a nonvoted current operating discretionary
 3655  millage. The Legislature shall prescribe annually in the
 3656  appropriations act the maximum amount of millage a district may
 3657  levy.
 3658         Reviser’s note.—Amended to conform to the redesignation of s.
 3659         1011.62(15) as s. 1011.62(16) by s. 4, ch. 2017-116, Laws
 3660         of Florida.
 3661         Section 111. Paragraph (b) of subsection (6) of section
 3662  1013.64, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3663         1013.64 Funds for comprehensive educational plant needs;
 3664  construction cost maximums for school district capital
 3665  projects.—Allocations from the Public Education Capital Outlay
 3666  and Debt Service Trust Fund to the various boards for capital
 3667  outlay projects shall be determined as follows:
 3668         (6)
 3669         (b)1. A district school board may not use funds from the
 3670  following sources: Public Education Capital Outlay and Debt
 3671  Service Trust Fund; School District and Community College
 3672  District Capital Outlay and Debt Service Trust Fund; Classrooms
 3673  First Program funds provided in s. 1013.68; nonvoted 1.5-mill
 3674  levy of ad valorem property taxes provided in s. 1011.71(2);
 3675  Classrooms for Kids Program funds provided in s. 1013.735;
 3676  District Effort Recognition Program funds provided in s.
 3677  1013.736; or High Growth District Capital Outlay Assistance
 3678  Grant Program funds provided in s. 1013.738 for any new
 3679  construction of educational plant space with a total cost per
 3680  student station, including change orders, that equals more than:
 3681         a. $17,952 for an elementary school,
 3682         b. $19,386 for a middle school, or
 3683         c. $25,181 for a high school,
 3684  
 3685  (January 2006) as adjusted annually to reflect increases or
 3686  decreases in the Consumer Price Index.
 3687         2. School districts shall maintain accurate documentation
 3688  related to the costs of all new construction of educational
 3689  plant space reported to the Department of Education pursuant to
 3690  paragraph (d). The Auditor General shall review the
 3691  documentation maintained by the school districts and verify
 3692  compliance with the limits under this paragraph during its
 3693  scheduled operational audits of the school district. The
 3694  department shall make the final determination on district
 3695  compliance based on the recommendation of the Auditor General.
 3696         3.The Office of Economic and Demographic Research, in
 3697  consultation with the department, shall conduct a study of the
 3698  cost per student station amounts using the most recent available
 3699  information on construction costs. In this study, the costs per
 3700  student station should represent the costs of classroom
 3701  construction and administrative offices as well as the
 3702  supplemental costs of core facilities, including required media
 3703  centers, gymnasiums, music rooms, cafeterias and their
 3704  associated kitchens and food service areas, vocational areas,
 3705  and other defined specialty areas, including exceptional student
 3706  education areas. The study must take into account appropriate
 3707  cost-effectiveness factors in school construction and should
 3708  include input from industry experts. The Office of Economic and
 3709  Demographic Research must provide the results of the study and
 3710  recommendations on the cost per student station to the Governor,
 3711  the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
 3712  Representatives no later than January 31, 2017.
 3713         4.The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government
 3714  Accountability (OPPAGA) shall conduct a study of the State
 3715  Requirements for Education Facilities (SREF) to identify current
 3716  requirements that can be eliminated or modified in order to
 3717  decrease the cost of construction of educational facilities
 3718  while ensuring student safety. OPPAGA must provide the results
 3719  of the study, and an overall recommendation as to whether SREF
 3720  should be retained, to the Governor, the President of the
 3721  Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives no later
 3722  than January 31, 2017.
 3723         3.5. Effective July 1, 2017, in addition to the funding
 3724  sources listed in subparagraph 1., a district school board may
 3725  not use funds from any sources for new construction of
 3726  educational plant space with a total cost per student station,
 3727  including change orders, which equals more than the current
 3728  adjusted amounts provided in sub-subparagraphs 1.a.-c. which
 3729  shall subsequently be adjusted annually to reflect increases or
 3730  decreases in the Consumer Price Index. However, if a contract
 3731  has been executed for architectural and design services or for
 3732  construction management services before July 1, 2017, a district
 3733  school board may use funds from any source for the new
 3734  construction of educational plant space and such funds are
 3735  exempt from the total cost per student station requirements.
 3736         4.6. A district school board must not use funds from the
 3737  Public Education Capital Outlay and Debt Service Trust Fund or
 3738  the School District and Community College District Capital
 3739  Outlay and Debt Service Trust Fund for any new construction of
 3740  an ancillary plant that exceeds 70 percent of the average cost
 3741  per square foot of new construction for all schools.
 3742         Reviser’s note.—Amended to delete provisions that have served
 3743         their purposes.
 3744         Section 112. This act shall take effect on the 60th day
 3745  after adjournment sine die of the session of the Legislature in
 3746  which enacted.

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