The Honorable John Carassas Representative, District 54 Room 303, House Office Building 402 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1300
Dear Representative Carassas:
You ask this office substantially the following question:
Does Article
During the 2002 general election, Florida voters approved an amendment to Article
"(c) This section shall be self-executing. The legislature, however, may provide by general law passed by a two-thirds vote of each house for the exemption of records from the requirements of subsection (a) and the exemption of meetings from the requirements of subsection (b), provided that such law shall state with specificity the public necessity justifying the exemption and shall be no broader than necessary to accomplish the stated purpose of the law. The legislature shall enact laws governing the enforcement of this section, including the maintenance, control, destruction, disposal, and disposition of records made public by this section, except that each house of the legislature may adopt rules governing the enforcement of this section in relation to records of the legislative branch. Laws enacted pursuant to this subsection shall contain only exemptions from the requirements of subsections (a) or (b) and provisions governing the enforcement of this section, and shall relate to one subject."1 (emphasis supplied for added language)
The ballot summary provided by the sponsors of the legislative initiative stated that the chief purpose of the proposed constitutional amendment was to provide that "exemptions from public records or public meetings requirements must . . . be passed by a two-thirds vote of each house of the Legislature."2 No reference in either the ballot summary or the full text of the proposed amendment drew a distinction between the initial enactment of an exemption or subsequent consideration for re-adoption of an exemption.
The Open Government Sunset Review Act (Sunset Act), section
Moreover, in section
"[T]he public has a right to access to executive branch governmental meetings and records unless the criteria in this section for restricting such access to a public meeting or public record are met and the criteria are considered during legislative review in connection with the particular exemption to be significant enough to override the strong public policy of open government."
No distinction is made in the application of these criteria between creation or maintenance of exemptions. The statute recognizes the public's right to access without regard to whether an exemption is maintained or created, unless the criteria are met and "the criteria are considered during legislative review[.]"6 Had the Legislature intended to differentiate between the creation of exemptions and the re-enactment or maintenance of exemptions in requiring a two-thirds passage, it could have clearly done so. No expression of legislative intent in either section
In fact, an examination of the staff analysis for Senate Joint Resolution 1284 indicates that re-enactment of the public records exemptions would be covered by the then proposed constitutional amendment.7 The staff analysis states that all bills providing public records exemptions that passed during the 1999 through 2001 legislative sessions passed with votes in excess of a two-thirds majority. In listing those exemptions, the staff analysis refers to bills that "reenacted" exemptions pursuant to section
I am therefore of the opinion that this State's strong public policy of open government expressed in section
Sincerely,
Charlie Crist Attorney General
"(a) The exempted record or meeting is of a sensitive, personal nature concerning individuals; (b) The exemption is necessary for the effective and efficient administration of a governmental program; or (c) The exemption affects confidential information concerning an entity."