ACADEMY FOR POSITIVE LEARNING, INC. v. SCHOOL BOARD OF PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA ( 2020 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    ACADEMY FOR POSITIVE LEARNING, INC., a Florida not-for-profit
    corporation, PALM BEACH MARITIME MUSEUM, INC., a Florida not-
    for-profit corporation, d/b/a PALM BEACH MARITIME ACADEMY,
    MARLENY OLIVO, an individual, and PEDRO OLIVO, an individual,
    Appellants,
    v.
    SCHOOL BOARD OF PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA and G-STAR
    SCHOOL OF THE ARTS, INC., a Florida not-for-profit corporation,
    Appellees.
    No. 4D19-2816
    [April 22, 2020]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach County; Glenn D. Kelley, Judge; L.T. Case No. 50-2019-CA-000405-
    XXXX-MB.
    Shawn A. Arnold and Braxton A. Padgett of The Arnold Law Firm, LLC,
    Jacksonville, for appellants.
    Jon L. Mills of Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, Miami, Stuart H. Singer and
    Sabria A. McElroy of Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for
    appellee, School Board of Palm Beach County, Florida.
    GROSS, J.
    Is a charter school entitled to a share of ad valorem taxes collected
    pursuant to a 2018 referendum approved by the voters of Palm Beach
    County? We hold that the charter school is not so entitled and affirm the
    final judgment entered by the circuit court.
    Background
    Appellants Academy for Positive Learning and Palm Beach Maritime
    Academy (the “Charter Schools”) are charter schools located in Palm Beach
    County. Appellants Marleny and Pedro Olivo are parents of a public
    charter school student who attends Academy for Positive Learning.
    The 2018 Referendum
    During the November 2018 election, the School Board of Palm Beach
    County, Florida placed a referendum on the ballot asking county voters to
    approve an ad valorem levy for the operational needs of non-charter
    District schools to fund school safety equipment, fund program teachers,
    and improve teacher pay. This is how the referendum appeared on the
    ballot:
    REFERENDUM TO APPROVE AD VALOREM LEVY FOR
    SCHOOL SAFETY, TEACHERS AND OPERATIONAL
    NEEDS
    Shall the School Board of Palm Beach County have authority
    to levy 1.00 mills of ad valorem millage dedicated for
    operational needs of non-charter District schools to fund
    school safety equipment, hire additional school police and
    mental health professionals, fund arts, music, physical
    education, career and choice program teachers, and improve
    teacher pay beginning July 1, 2019 and automatically ending
    June 30, 2023, with oversight by the independent committee
    of citizens and experts?
    ______Yes
    ______No
    The referendum expressly excluded public charter schools from receiving
    any revenues generated from the ad valorem tax. County voters approved
    the referendum, which went into effect on July 1, 2019.
    The 2018 Referendum was authorized by section 1011.71(9), Florida
    Statutes (2018), which states:
    In addition to the maximum millage levied under this section
    and the General Appropriations Act, a school district may levy,
    by local referendum or in a general election, additional
    millage for school operational purposes up to an amount
    that, when combined with nonvoted millage levied under this
    section, does not exceed the 10-mill limit established in s.
    9(b), Art. VII of the State Constitution. Any such levy shall be
    for a maximum of 4 years and shall be counted as part of the
    10-mill limit established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State
    Constitution. Millage elections conducted under the authority
    granted pursuant to this section are subject to s. 1011.73.
    -2-
    Funds generated by such additional millage do not
    become a part of the calculation of the Florida Education
    Finance Program total potential funds in 2001-2002 or
    any subsequent year and must not be incorporated in the
    calculation of any hold-harmless or other component of
    the Florida Education Finance Program formula in any
    year. If an increase in required local effort, when added to
    existing millage levied under the 10-mill limit, would result in
    a combined millage in excess of the 10-mill limit, any millage
    levied pursuant to this subsection shall be considered to be
    required local effort to the extent that the district millage
    would otherwise exceed the 10-mill limit.
    § 1011.71(9), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added).
    No language in section 1011.71(9), as it existed in 2018, requires that
    funds generated by the referendum be distributed to charter schools. The
    only requirement for the use of “additional millage” collected as a result of
    the referendum is that it be used “for school operational purposes,” which
    vests much discretion in a School Board to allocate the funds.
    The 2018 Referendum at issue stated that the millage levy would be
    “dedicated for operational needs of non-charter District schools to fund
    school safety equipment, hire additional school police and mental health
    professionals, fund arts, music, physical education, career and choice
    program teachers, and improve teacher pay.” This language falls under
    the statutory requirement to use these funds “for school operational
    purposes.”
    Id. In this
    litigation, appellants have creatively attempted to rewrite both
    the 2018 Referendum and section 1011.71(9). For the reasons set forth
    below, we reject those attempts and, instead, abide by the plain language
    of the referendum and statute.
    The Underlying Litigation
    On January 10, 2019, appellants filed a complaint for declaratory and
    injunctive relief, requesting that the trial court (1) enter a declaratory
    judgment requiring the School Board to share the 2018 Referendum
    revenues with the Charter Schools on a pro rata basis; and (2) enjoin the
    School Board from denying the Charter Schools their proportionate share
    of the 2018 Referendum revenues. Appellants asserted that the 2018
    Referendum violated Florida law by excluding charter schools because
    -3-
    Florida’s statutory scheme mandates equal treatment of charter and non-
    charter schools.
    Appellants and the School Board filed cross-motions for summary
    judgment. The parties agreed that there were no disputed factual issues
    and that the case involved a matter of statutory construction and
    constitutional interpretation. Following a hearing, the circuit court issued
    a thoughtful and detailed order granting the School Board’s motion for
    summary judgment and denying appellants’ motion. The court agreed
    with the School Board that the 2018 Referendum did not violate Florida
    law based on the plain language of the statutory scheme. The court later
    entered a final judgment in favor of the School Board, prompting this
    appeal.
    Discussion 1
    Appellants argue that the Charter Schools are entitled to a
    proportionate share of the revenues generated by the 2018 Referendum
    because: (A) section 1002.33(17), Florida Statutes (2018), requires that
    public charter school students be funded the same as other public school
    students; (B) the millage levy authorized under section 1011.71(9) is part
    of the “current operating discretionary millage” that must be shared with
    the charter schools; and (C) the passage of House Bill 7123 supports the
    conclusion that the School Board is required to share the 2018
    Referendum revenues. 2 We consider each of these arguments in turn.
    The first sentence of the charter school funding provision in section
    1002.33(17) describes the calculation method for funding students,
    not the source or amount of such funding
    Appellants first argue that the Charter Schools are entitled to a
    proportionate share of the revenues generated from the 2018 Referendum
    because section 1002.33(17), Florida Statutes, requires that public charter
    school students be funded the same as other public school students.
    Section 1002.33(17) provides, in pertinent part:
    (17) Funding.--Students enrolled in a charter school,
    regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if they are
    1 “The standard of review for an order granting summary judgment is de novo.”
    State Farm Fla. Ins. Co. v. Lime Bay Condo., Inc., 
    187 So. 3d 932
    , 934 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 2016).
    2 Appellants also rely on a circuit court order from a different circuit that is not
    binding on this court.
    -4-
    in a basic program or a special program, the same as students
    enrolled in other public schools in the school district.
    § 1002.33(17), Fla. Stat. (2018).
    Appellants’ treatment of the statute omits crucial words; they appear
    to read the statute like this: “Students enrolled in a charter school,
    regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded . . . the same as students
    enrolled in other public schools in the school district,” while ignoring the
    language in the middle of the sentence. As the School Board asserts, when
    applying basic principles of statutory construction, the modifier in the first
    sentence, “the same as,” must be read to modify the entire nearest
    antecedent phrase, “shall be funded as if they are in a basic program or a
    special program.”     This rule of statutory construction “calls for a
    commonsense interpretation of the way in which words are put together
    to form phrases, clauses, or sentences.” Scherer v. Volusia Cty. Dep’t of
    Corr., 
    171 So. 3d 135
    , 138 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015). The phrase “as if they are
    in a basic program or a special program” describes a component of the
    formula for determining each charter school’s allocation of funds. See §
    1011.62(1), Fla. Stat. (2018).
    In addition to selectively reading the statute, appellants isolate it from
    its context—the statutory framework for funding schools. As pointed out
    by the School Board, the Florida Education Finance Program (“FEFP”)
    allocates funds to school districts based on student enrollment and uses
    a unit of measurement for each student called a full-time equivalent
    (“FTE”). § 1011.62(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2018). Surveys are taken each year to
    determine the number of students in one of several programs, which
    include “basic” educational programs and specified “special” programs.
    Id. Each program
    has an associated cost factor intended to reflect the relative
    cost of serving students in each program, which adds weight to the FTE.
    § 1011.62(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (2018). The weight increases the amount of
    funds a district is eligible to receive since the FTE is multiplied by the
    program cost factor to reach a weighted FTE. § 1011.62(1)(d), Fla. Stat.
    (2018).
    With this context in mind, we conclude that the first sentence of section
    1002.33(17) plainly requires charter school funding to take into account
    whether charter school students are enrolled in a “basic” or “special”
    education program, “the same as” is done with non-charter public school
    funding. Therefore, the trial court correctly reasoned that this section of
    the statute refers to the method of calculating funding, not the funding
    source or amount.
    -5-
    Appellants look to a 2004 Attorney General Opinion (“AGO”) to support
    their interpretation of the statute. That opinion addressed the question of
    “whether the language of section 1002.33, Florida Statutes, requires that
    charter schools be funded ‘the same as’ other schools in the public school
    system.” Op. Att’y Gen. Fla. 2004-67 (2005). The AGO answered the
    question in the affirmative, opining that “[t]he language of the statute
    appears to be plain and definite and the intention of the Legislature is
    conveyed clearly and must be followed.”
    Id. However, as
    the School Board argues, the AGO did not opine that
    charter schools are entitled to a share of funding from all of the same
    sources as district-operated schools and, instead, merely repeated the
    language of the charter school funding provision without analysis.
    For these reasons, we conclude that the language of the charter school
    funding provision in section 1002.33(17) simply makes the method of
    calculating funding for charter schools and non-charter schools the same;
    it does not mean that the funding amount or sources of funding are the
    same. The circuit court did not err in determining that the Charter Schools
    were not entitled to receive a portion of the proceeds from the 2018
    Referendum on this basis.
    The millage levy authorized under section 1011.71(9) is not part of
    the “current operating discretionary millage” that must be shared
    with the Charter Schools
    Section 1002.33(17)(b), Florida Statutes, sets forth the sources of
    funding for charter schools:
    (b) The basis for the agreement for funding students enrolled
    in a charter school shall be the sum of the school district’s
    operating funds from the Florida Education Finance
    program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General
    Appropriations Act, including gross state and local funds,
    discretionary lottery funds, and funds from the school
    district’s current operating discretionary millage levy;
    divided by total funded weighted full-time equivalent students
    in the school district; multiplied by the weighted full-time
    equivalent students for the charter school[.]
    § 1002.33(17)(b), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added). Appellants contend
    that the 2018 Referendum revenues are part of the “current operating
    discretionary millage levy,” and therefore must be shared with the charter
    schools.
    -6-
    This argument fails for two reasons: (1) the phrase “current operating
    discretionary millage levy” in section 1002.33(17)(b) refers solely to the
    nonvoted discretionary millage levy authorized by section 1011.71(1); and
    (2) the phrase “current operating discretionary millage levy” in section
    1002.33(17)(b) refers to a source of funds which are a component of the
    FEFP funds, and does not include the separate additional millage levy
    authorized under section 1011.71(9), which is expressly excluded from the
    FEFP funds. Each of these points is addressed in turn.
    1. The phrase “Current Operating Discretionary Millage Levy”
    in section 1002.33(17)(b) refers to the nonvoted discretionary
    millage levy contemplated under section 1011.71(1)
    The Legislature’s use of the phrase “current operating discretionary
    millage” in section 1002.33(17)(b) refers to the single nonvoted
    discretionary millage levy contemplated under section 1011.71(1), which
    states:
    1011.71 District School Tax
    (1) If the district school tax is not provided in the General
    Appropriations Act or the substantive bill implementing the
    General Appropriations Act, each district school board
    desiring to participate in the state allocation of funds for
    current operation as prescribed by s. 1011.62(18) shall levy
    on the taxable value for school purposes of the district,
    exclusive of millage voted under s. 9(b) or s. 12, Art. VII of the
    State Constitution, a millage rate not to exceed the amount
    certified by the commissioner as the minimum millage rate
    necessary to provide the district required local effort for the
    current year, pursuant to s. 1011.62(4)(a) 1. In addition to
    the required local effort millage levy, each district school
    board may levy a nonvoted current operating
    discretionary millage.       The Legislature shall prescribe
    annually in the appropriations act the maximum amount of
    millage a district may levy.
    § 1011.71(1), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added).
    -7-
    This nonvoted discretionary millage levy is separate from the voted-
    upon millage levy authorized under section 1011.71(9), 3 pursuant to
    which the 2018 Referendum at issue was passed.
    Again, as it existed in 2018, section 1011.71(9) provided:
    (9) In addition to the maximum millage levied under this
    section and the General Appropriations Act, a school district
    may levy, by local referendum or in a general election,
    additional millage for school operational purposes up to
    an amount that, when combined with nonvoted millage
    levied under this section, does not exceed the 10-mill
    limit established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State
    Constitution. Any such levy shall be for a maximum of 4
    years and shall be counted as part of the 10-mill limit
    established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State Constitution.
    Millage elections conducted under the authority granted
    pursuant to this section are subject to s. 1011.73. Funds
    generated by such additional millage do not become a part
    of the calculation of the Florida Education Finance
    Program total potential funds in 2001-2002 or any
    subsequent year and must not be incorporated in the
    calculation of any hold-harmless or other component of
    the Florida Education Finance Program formula in any
    year. If an increase in required local effort, when added to
    existing millage levied under the 10-mill limit, would result in
    a combined millage in excess of the 10-mill limit, any millage
    levied pursuant to this subsection shall be considered to be
    required local effort to the extent that the district millage
    would otherwise exceed the 10-mill limit.
    § 1011.71(9), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added). Unlike the nonvoted-
    upon discretionary millage in subsection (1), the voted-upon millage in
    subsection (9) is not referred to as a “current operating discretionary
    millage,” but is instead referred to as an “additional millage for school
    operational purposes.”
    Id. Further, as
    the trial court noted below, a
    millage levy under subsection (9) is not discretionary, as it requires voter
    approval, and therefore the use of the phrase “current operating
    discretionary millage” in section 1002.33(17)(b) cannot be reasonably
    3 Section 200.001(3), Florida Statutes, which sets forth different categories of
    school millage rates, recognizes “nonvoted discretionary school operating millage”
    and “voted district school operating millage” as separate and distinct categories.
    § 200.001(3)(b),(c), Fla. Stat. (2018).
    -8-
    interpreted to refer to the additional voted-upon millage in section
    1011.71(9).
    This conclusion is supported by the fact that the language of section
    1002.33(17)(b) predates the additional voted-upon millage in section
    1011.71(9). 4 Therefore, at the time the funding provision of the charter
    school statute was adopted, its reference to the “current operating
    discretionary millage” could not have contemplated the voted-upon millage
    because that subsection did not exist at that time; that reference must
    have been solely to the nonvoted millage, now codified at section
    1011.71(1). As the circuit court observed, had the Legislature intended to
    include the additional voted-upon millage as part of charter school
    funding, it could have amended the charter school statute, but there was
    no amendment when the voted-upon millage provision was enacted.
    Appellants contend that the “express language of section 1011.71(9)
    specifically contemplates that the voted millage is combined with the
    nonvoted millage” and together make up a school district’s total “current
    operating discretionary millage.” In support of their position, appellants
    cite language in subsection (9) stating that “a school district may levy . . .
    additional millage for school operational purposes up to an amount that,
    when combined with nonvoted millage levied under this section, does
    not exceed the 10-mill limit . . . .” § 1011.71(9), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis
    added).
    However, the use of the word “combined” does not indicate that both
    the nonvoted millage and voted-upon millage together comprise the
    “current operating discretionary millage,” as appellants suggest. Instead,
    the context of the sentence makes clear that the use of the word
    “combined” refers to the combination of the various millages for the
    purpose of assessing whether the combined rate complies with the overall
    constitutional limit on total assessed millage.
    2. The phrase “Current Operating Discretionary Millage Levy”
    in section 1002.33(17)(b) refers to a subset of the FEFP funds,
    not a separate source of funds
    The text of section 1002.33(17)(b) makes clear that the phrase “current
    operating discretionary millage levy” refers to a source of funds which are
    4 The charter school statute was enacted in 1996 (previously section 228.056,
    Florida Statutes) and is now codified at section 1002.33, Florida Statutes. The
    additional voted-upon millage was enacted in 2001 (previously section 236.25(6),
    Florida Statutes) and is now codified at section 1011.71(9), Florida Statutes.
    -9-
    a component of the district’s FEFP funds and does not include the separate
    “additional” millage levy authorized under section 1011.71(9), which is
    expressly excluded from the FEFP funds. Section 1002.33(17)(b) provides
    that funding for students enrolled in charter schools is limited to the sum
    of the school district’s operating funds from the FEFP and the General
    Appropriations Act, and then provides examples of the subset of funds
    included within the FEFP and the General Appropriations Act:
    (b) The basis for the agreement for funding students enrolled
    in a charter school shall be the sum of the school district’s
    operating funds from the Florida Education Finance
    program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General
    Appropriations Act, including gross state and local funds,
    discretionary lottery funds, and funds from the school
    district’s current operating discretionary millage levy;
    divided by total funded weighted full-time equivalent students
    in the school district; multiplied by the weighted full-time
    equivalent students for the charter school. . . .
    § 1002.33(17)(b), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphasis added).
    Although section 1011.71(9) expressly states that revenues generated
    pursuant to the voted-upon millage are excluded from the FEFP funds,
    appellants contend that this clear legislative mandate has no bearing on
    whether such revenues must be shared with public charter schools. They
    contend that section 1002.33(17)(b) guarantees charter schools sources of
    funding that exist outside of the FEFP, such as the “current operating
    discretionary millage levy.”
    However, the language of section 1002.33(17)(b) indicates that the
    “current operating discretionary millage levy” is not a separate source of
    funding apart from the FEFP. Rather, as the School Board notes, the
    phrase is one item in a list following the word “including,” which indicates
    that “gross state and local funds, discretionary lottery funds, and funds
    from the school district’s current operating discretionary millage levy” are
    all examples of operating funds from the FEFP and the General
    Appropriations Act.
    Appellants contend that the sources of funding listed after the word
    “including” in section 1002.33(17)(b) are not illustrative of sources of FEFP
    funding; they say the use of the word “including” exists only to clarify that
    public charter schools are entitled to both state and local FEFP funds. To
    support their position, appellants cite to a portion of a manual from the
    - 10 -
    Florida Department of Education regarding Funding for Florida School
    Districts, which states:
    Categorical program funds, which include Florida School
    Recognition, District Discretionary Lottery and Class Size
    Reduction funds, and any special allocations are added to the
    Net State FEFP Allocation to obtain the Total State Funding.
    Based on this language, appellants claim that discretionary lottery funds
    do not become part of the FEFP because they are “added on top of the
    state’s net FEFP allocation to arrive at a district’s total state funding.”
    As the School Board points out, appellants conflate the State’s “net”
    FEFP allocation with the total amount of school district operating funds
    from the FEFP. The state’s contribution to FEFP funding is not limited
    solely to the “Net State FEFP Allocation,” as evidenced by the FEFP statute,
    which confirms that categorical funds (which include discretionary lottery
    funds) are part of the overall state FEFP funds distributed to the school
    districts. See § 1011.62(6)(a), Fla. Stat. (2018). The very manual upon
    which appellants rely even noted that discretionary lottery funds “are
    added to the FEFP allocation that is distributed to the districts” and are
    therefore a part of the FEFP funding.
    Regarding the “current operating discretionary millage levy” referred to
    in section 1002.33(17)(b), appellants assert that this is a source of funding
    existing outside of the FEFP. However, subsection (5) of the FEFP statute
    refers to the nonvoted-upon discretionary millage levy and contemplates
    its inclusion in the total amount of locally contributed funds:
    (5) Discretionary millage compression supplement.--The
    Legislature shall prescribe in the General Appropriations Act,
    pursuant to s. 1011.71(1), the rate of nonvoted current
    operating discretionary millage that shall be used to calculate
    a discretionary millage compression supplement. If the
    prescribed millage generates an amount of funds per
    unweighted FTE for the district that is less than the state
    average, the district shall receive an amount per FTE that,
    when added to the funds per FTE generated by the designated
    levy, shall equal the state average.
    § 1011.62(5), Fla. Stat. (2018). Appellants acknowledge that “[t]he
    compression is a part of the FEFP,” but argue that “the Nonvoted Millage
    itself is not.” We agree with the School Board that it would be odd for the
    State to provide, as part of the FEFP, a supplement based on a district’s
    - 11 -
    current operating discretionary millage levy if that millage were not also a
    component of the district’s FEFP funds. A logical reading of section
    1002.33(17)(b) compels the conclusion that each of the items listed after
    the word “including” are all components of the FEFP.
    Because a voted millage levied under section 1011.71(9) is excluded
    from the FEFP calculation and charter school funding is based on the
    FEFP, the millage levied pursuant to the 2018 Referendum in this case
    was not part of the “current operating discretionary millage” that must be
    shared with the charter schools. The trial court properly concluded that
    the Charter Schools were not entitled to a share of the revenues generated
    from the referendum on this basis.
    The legislative history of section 1011.71(9) does not support
    appellants’ assertion that the School Board is required to share the
    2018 Referendum revenues
    After appellants filed the underlying lawsuit, section 1011.71(9) was
    amended to require that tax revenues generated by a voter-approved
    referendum be distributed to charter schools:
    (9) In addition to the maximum millage levied under this
    section and the General Appropriations Act, a school district
    may levy, by local referendum or in a general election,
    additional millage for school operational purposes up to an
    amount that, when combined with nonvoted millage levied
    under this section, does not exceed the 10-mill limit
    established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State Constitution. Any
    such levy shall be for a maximum of 4 years and shall be
    counted as part of the 10-mill limit established in s. 9(b), Art.
    VII of the State Constitution. For the purpose of distributing
    taxes collected pursuant to this subsection, the term
    “school operational purposes” includes charter schools
    sponsored by a school district. Millage elections conducted
    under the authority granted pursuant to this section are
    subject to s. 1011.73. Funds generated by such additional
    millage do not become a part of the calculation of the Florida
    Education Finance Program total potential funds in 2001-
    2002 or any subsequent year and must not be incorporated
    in the calculation of any hold-harmless or other component of
    the Florida Education Finance Program formula in any year.
    If an increase in required local effort, when added to existing
    millage levied under the 10-mill limit, would result in a
    combined millage in excess of the 10-mill limit, any millage
    - 12 -
    levied pursuant to this subsection shall be considered to be
    required local effort to the extent that the district millage
    would otherwise exceed the 10-mill limit. Funds levied under
    this subsection shall be shared with charter schools based
    on each charter school’s proportionate share of the
    district’s total unweighted full-time equivalent student
    enrollment and used in a manner consistent with the
    purposes of the levy. The referendum must contain an
    explanation of the distribution methodology consistent with
    the requirements of this subsection.
    § 1011.71(9), Fla. Stat. (2019) (emphasis added).
    Appellants contend that the amendment served to clarify, rather than
    change, the law, thereby evidencing the Legislature’s intent that the voted
    millage funds be shared with public charter schools all along.
    We reject that contention because the legislative history does not
    support it.
    First, as the School Board notes, while the original version of the House
    Bill proposing the amendment to section 1011.71(9) included a section
    describing the proposed amendment as “amending and clarifying the use
    of certain voted discretionary operating millages,” the final version of the
    bill did not include the term “clarifying.” Fla. HB 7123, § 17 (2019).
    Appellants also rely upon a “Final Bill Analysis” published by the House of
    Representative’s Ways & Means Committee, but that source is not
    persuasive because what ultimately prevails is the actual language of a
    statute, not the wording that did not survive the legislative process. See
    GTC, Inc. v. Edgar, 
    967 So. 2d 781
    , 789 n.4 (Fla. 2007) (noting that the
    Florida Supreme Court is “not unified in its view of the use of legislative
    staff analyses to determine legislative intent”); Am. Home Assur. Co. v.
    Plaza Materials Corp., 
    908 So. 2d 360
    , 376 (Fla. 2005) (Cantero, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part) (proposing that “legislative staff
    analyses add nothing to an investigation of legislative intent”).
    Second, the Legislature ultimately did not adopt language which would
    have made the amendment retroactive. An earlier version of the bill
    proposing the amendment stated: “The provisions of this act relating to
    ss. 1011.71 and 1002.33, Florida Statutes, amending and clarifying the
    use of certain voted discretionary operating millages levied by school
    districts, apply to revenues collected on or after July 1, 2019.”
    (Emphasis added). However, Chapter 2019-42, Laws of Florida, Section
    17, deleted the word “clarifying” and creates a prospective application only;
    - 13 -
    it states, “The provisions of this act relating to s. 1011.71, Florida Statutes,
    amending the use of certain voted discretionary operating millages levied
    by school districts, apply to such levies authorized by a vote of the
    electors on or after July 1, 2019.” Ch. 2019-42 § 17, Laws of Fla.
    (emphasis added). It is clear from the context of the sentence that all
    provisions relating to section 1011.71, not just the portion pertaining to
    the limited use of the funds, apply prospectively.
    We reject appellants’ argument that section 1011.71 should be viewed
    as a clarification amidst a “growing controversy about whether voted
    operating discretionary millage revenues must be shared with the public
    charter schools.” The Florida Supreme Court has adopted a policy of
    declining to rewrite legislation by viewing amendments as being
    “clarifications” of statutes enacted many years earlier. See, e.g., State
    Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. Laforet, 
    658 So. 2d 55
    , 62 (Fla. 1995) (“[A]
    clarifying amendment to a statute that is enacted soon after controversies
    as to the interpretation of a statute arise may be considered as a legislative
    interpretation of the original law and not as a substantive change. It would
    be absurd, however, to consider legislation enacted more than ten years
    after the original act as a clarification of original intent.”); Parole Comm’n
    v. Cooper, 
    701 So. 2d 543
    , 544–45 (Fla. 1997) (“[I]t is inappropriate to use
    an amendment enacted ten years after the original enactment to clarify
    original legislative intent.”).
    Here, the pertinent provision regarding the voted-upon millage
    remained unchanged from the time of its enactment in 2001 until July 1,
    2019. Applying Laforet and Cooper, we conclude that it is inappropriate
    to consider an amendment passed 18 years after the original enactment
    as a clarification of the original enactment.
    Finally, we have considered appellants’ constitutional argument and
    conclude that Article IX, Section 1(a) of the Florida Constitution does not
    alter the statutory interpretation contained in this opinion.
    Affirmed.
    MAY, J., concurs.
    GERBER, J., dissents with opinion.
    GERBER, J., dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent. By excluding charter schools from that portion
    of the current discretionary operating millage levy permitted by section
    1011.71(9), as approved by voters in the 2018 Referendum, the school
    - 14 -
    district is violating section 1002.33(17)’s requirement that “[s]tudents
    enrolled in a charter school, regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded
    as if they are in a basic program or a special program, the same as
    students enrolled in other public schools in the school district.” (emphasis
    added). See Bank of N.Y. Mellon v. Glanville, 
    252 So. 3d 1120
    , 1127 (Fla.
    2018) (“As with any matter involving an issue of statutory interpretation,
    courts must first look to the actual language of the statute and examine
    the statute’s plain meaning.”) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    I would reverse the circuit court’s final judgment, and remand for the
    circuit court to enter a new final judgment finding the 2018 Referendum
    was illegal and therefore void.
    A. Interpreting sections 1002.33(17) and 1011.71(9) in harmony
    according to plain meaning favors the charter schools’ position.
    The method by which students enrolled in charter schools are funded,
    and the sources from which such funding is derived, are provided in
    Section 1002.33(17), Florida Statutes (2018), entitled “Charter schools.”
    That section provides, in pertinent part:
    (17) Funding. -- Students enrolled in a charter school,
    regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if they
    are in a basic program or a special program, the same as
    students enrolled in other public schools in the school
    district. . . .
    ...
    (b) The basis for the agreement for funding students
    enrolled in a charter school shall be the sum of the school
    district’s operating funds from the Florida Education Finance
    Program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General
    Appropriations Act, including gross state and local funds,
    discretionary lottery funds, and funds from the school
    district’s current operating discretionary millage levy;
    divided by total funded weighted full-time equivalent students
    in the school district; multiplied by the weighted full-time
    equivalent students for the charter school. . . .
    § 1002.33(17)(b), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphases added).
    - 15 -
    Section 1011.71, Florida Statutes (2018), entitled “District school tax,”
    describes the sources by which “funds from the school district’s operating
    discretionary millage levy” may be generated. That section provides, in
    pertinent part:
    (1) . . . [E]ach district school board desiring to participate in
    the state allocation of funds for current operation as
    prescribed by s. 1011.62(18) shall levy . . . a millage rate not
    to exceed the amount certified by the commissioner as the
    minimum millage rate necessary to provide the district
    required local effort for the current year, pursuant to s.
    1011.62(4)(a)1. In addition to the required local effort
    millage levy, each district school board may levy a
    nonvoted current operating discretionary millage. The
    Legislature shall prescribe annually in the appropriations act
    the maximum amount of millage a district may levy.
    ....
    (9) In addition to the maximum millage levied under this
    section and the General Appropriations Act, a school district
    may levy, by local referendum or in a general election,
    additional millage for school operational purposes up to
    an amount that, when combined with nonvoted millage
    levied under this section, does not exceed the 10-mill
    limit established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State Constitution.
    . . . Funds generated by such additional millage . . . must not
    be incorporated in the calculation of any hold-harmless or
    other component of the Florida Education Finance Program
    formula in any year. . . .
    § 1011.71(1), (9), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphases added).
    Both sections 1011.71(1) and (9) use the words “may levy” to describe
    how a school district may increase its operating millage above the required
    operating millage also described in section 1011.71(1). That is, a school
    board “may levy” an increased operating millage by its own vote under
    section 1011.71(1), or a school board “may levy” an increased operating
    millage by voting to place an increased operating millage on the ballot and
    obtaining voter approval under section 1011.71(9). The consistent use of
    the words “may levy” makes both increased operating millages
    discretionary. See Fla. Bar v. Trazenfeld, 
    833 So. 2d 734
    , 738 (Fla. 2002)
    (“The word ‘may’ when given its ordinary meaning denotes a permissive
    term rather than the mandatory connotation of the word ‘shall.’”).
    - 16 -
    Because the increased operating millages permitted by sections
    1011.71(1) and (9) are both discretionary, and because a school district’s
    “current operating discretionary millage levy” is to be included in the
    method of funding students enrolled in a charter school under section
    1002.33(17)(b), the school district’s exclusion of charter schools from the
    2018 Referendum violated section 1002.33(17)’s requirement that
    “[s]tudents enrolled in a charter school, regardless of the sponsorship,
    shall be funded as if they are in a basic program or a special program, the
    same as students enrolled in other public schools in the school district.”
    See Sch. Bd. of Palm Beach Cty. v. Survivors Charter Schs., Inc., 
    3 So. 3d 1220
    , 1234 (Fla. 2009) (“[W]e give full effect to all statutory provisions and
    construe related statutory provisions in harmony with one another.”)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    B. The school district’s arguments lack merit.
    1. The school district misinterprets sections 1002.33(17) and
    1011.71(9) as providing two distinct funding mechanisms. The
    sections are related and must be read in harmony.
    The school district argues sections 1002.33(17) and 1011.71(9) provide
    two distinct funding mechanisms and, therefore, section 1002.33(17) has
    no application to the instant case. According to the school district,
    “[g]eneral funding for charter schools under [section 1002.33(17)(b)]
    includes a mandatory requirement that [Florida Education Finance
    Program] funds be distributed to charter schools,” but section 1011.71(9)
    explicitly states “additional millage for school operational purposes”
    generated after a local referendum or general election “do not become part
    of the calculation of the Florida Education Finance Program.”
    The flaw in the school district’s reasoning is that charter schools’
    general funding under section 1002.33(17)(b) does not include only Florida
    Education Finance Program components. Rather, section 1002.33(17)(b)’s
    plain language provides charter schools’ funding is “the sum of” three
    sources: (1) “the school district’s operating funds from the Florida
    Education Finance Program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General
    Appropriations Act, including gross state and local funds,” (2)
    “discretionary lottery funds,” and (3) “funds from the school district’s
    current operating discretionary millage levy.” That sum is then “divided
    by total funded weighted full-time equivalent students in the school
    district; multiplied by the weighted full-time equivalent students for the
    charter school.”
    - 17 -
    The flaw in the school district’s reasoning arises from its misapplication
    of the word “including” within section 1002.33(17)(b). According to the
    school district, the word “including” modifies each funding component
    which follows – “gross state and local funds, discretionary lottery funds,
    and funds from the school district’s current operating discretionary
    millage levy” – thus making each component a part of the Florida
    Education Finance Program formula.
    However, if each funding component following the word “including”
    already was included in “the school district’s operating funds from the
    Florida Education Finance Program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the
    General Appropriations Act,” what else is the fund for students enrolled in
    a charter school to be “the sum of”? The question cannot be answered,
    because interpreting the word “including” as modifying each funding
    component stated within section 1002.33(17)(b) improperly renders the
    phrase “the sum of” as mere surplusage. See Sch. Bd. of Palm Beach 
    Cty., 3 So. 3d at 1233
    (“Basic to our examination of statutes, and an important
    aspect of our analysis here, is the elementary principle of statutory
    construction that significance and effect must be given to every word,
    phrase, sentence, and part of the statute if possible, and words in a statute
    should not be construed as mere surplusage.”) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    The only logical construction of section 1002.33(17)(b) is that the word
    “including” modifies only its nearest reasonable referent, that is, “gross
    state and local funds.” See Scherer v. Volusia Cty. Dep’t of Corrs., 
    171 So. 3d
    135, 138 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015) (“The [nearest-reasonable-referent] canon
    holds simply that, whether coming before or after what is modified,
    modifiers (adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases, restrictive clauses)
    should be read as modifying the nearest noun, verb, or other sentence
    element to which they can reasonably be said to pertain.”) (emphasis
    added).
    Thus, the proper construction of section 1002.33(17)(b) is that the basis
    for the agreement for funding students enrolled in a charter school shall
    be the sum of “the school district’s operating funds from the Florida
    Education Finance Program as provided in s. 1011.62 and the General
    Appropriations Act, including gross state and local funds,” “discretionary
    lottery funds,” and “funds from the school district’s current operating
    discretionary millage levy.”
    As I have explained in Section A above, “funds from the school district’s
    current operating discretionary millage levy” include increased operating
    millages permitted by both sections 1011.71(1) and (9).
    - 18 -
    2. The school district overlooks section 1002.33(17)’s plain
    meaning that charter school students shall be funded by the same
    method as other public school students.
    The school district correctly argues that section 1002.33(17) describes
    the method of funding charter school students. However, the school
    district then argues the method of funding charter school students is not
    the same as the method for funding public school students, despite the
    plain meaning of section 1002.33(17)’s first sentence – “Students enrolled
    in a charter school, regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if
    they are in a basic program or a special program, the same as students
    enrolled in other public schools in the school district.” (emphasis added).
    The school district attempts to justify its disregard of the plain meaning
    of “the same as” by its own application the nearest-reasonable-referent
    canon. According to the school district:
    Applying this principle to the sentence at issue, it is clear that
    the modifier “the same as” must be read to modify the entire
    nearest antecedent phrase – “shall be funded as if they are in
    a basic program or a special program.” [The charter schools]
    simply ignore the words “as if they are in a basic program or
    a special program” between “funded” and “the same as.” . . .
    It defies logic to interpret “the same as” to modify only the first
    few words in the antecedent clause but not the nearer,
    remaining words. It would also render the words “shall be
    funded as if they are in a basic program or a special program”
    meaningless, contrary to basic principles of statutory
    construction. It is an “elementary principle of statutory
    construction that significance and effect must be given to
    every word, phrase, sentence, and part of the statute if
    possible, and words in a statute should not be construed as
    mere surplusage.” Mendenhall v. State, 
    48 So. 3d 740
    , 749
    (Fla. 2010).
    (emphasis added).
    The school district misapplies the nearest-reasonable-referent canon
    by considering only the “nearest antecedent phrase.” (emphasis added).
    As our sister court explained, the nearest-reasonable-referent canon may
    rely on a modifier which “com[es] before or after what is modified.” See
    Scherer, 
    171 So. 3d
    at 138 (“The [nearest-reasonable-referent] canon holds
    simply that, whether coming before or after what is modified, modifiers
    - 19 -
    (adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases, restrictive clauses) should be
    read as modifying the nearest noun, verb, or other sentence element to
    which they can reasonably be said to pertain.”) (emphasis added); see also
    Scalia and Garner, Reading the Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 152
    (1st ed. 2012) (the nearest-reasonable-reference canon “applies not just to
    words that precede the modifier, but also to words that follow it.”)
    (emphasis added).
    Applying     the   nearest-reasonable-referent      canon    to   section
    1002.33(17)’s first sentence, the modifier “the same as” may apply to the
    antecedent phrase “shall be funded as if they are in a basic program or a
    special program,” or may apply to the subsequent phrase “students
    enrolled in other public schools in the school district.” The question is, to
    paraphrase our sister court, to which nearest sentence element can the
    modifier “the same as” reasonably be said to pertain? In my opinion, the
    most reasonable interpretation is that “the same as” modifies the
    subsequent phrase “students enrolled in other public schools in the
    district,” because “the same as” draws a direct comparison to the earlier
    phrase “[s]tudents enrolled in a charter school.”
    In reaching my opinion, I have not ignored (as the school district has
    faulted the charter schools for ignoring) the antecedent phrase “as if they
    are in a basic program or a special program” within section 1002.33(17)’s
    first sentence. Having reviewed the charter schools’ briefs, I do not believe
    the charter schools have ignored that phrase either.
    In fact, the antecedent phrase “as if they are in a basic program or a
    special program” supports the charter schools’ argument that charter
    school students are to be funded the same as other public school students.
    That is because “basic program” and “special program” are statutorily-
    defined terms which plainly apply to both charter school students and
    public school students.
    Section 1011.61(6), Florida Statutes (2018), defines “Basic programs”
    as “includ[ing], but are not limited to, language arts, mathematics, art,
    music, physical education, science, and social studies.”
    Section 1003.01(10), Florida Statutes (2018), defines “Special program”
    as synonymous with “Alternative measures for students with special
    needs” and “mean[ing] measures designed to meet the special needs of a
    student that cannot be met by regular school curricula.”
    Section 1003.01(3)(a), Florida Statutes (2018), which defines
    “Exceptional student,” elucidates what types of “special programs” exist:
    - 20 -
    “‘Exceptional student’ means any student who has been determined
    eligible for a special program in accordance with rules of the State Board
    of Education. The term includes students who are gifted and students
    with disabilities who have an intellectual disability; autism spectrum
    disorder; a speech impairment; a language impairment; an orthopedic
    impairment; another health impairment; traumatic brain injury; a visual
    impairment; an emotional or behavioral disability; or a specific learning
    disability, including, but not limited to, dyslexia, dyscalculia, or
    developmental aphasia; students who are deaf or hard of hearing or dual
    sensory impaired; students who are hospitalized or homebound; children
    with developmental delays ages birth through 5 years, or children, ages
    birth through 2 years, with established conditions that are identified in
    State Board of Education rules pursuant to s. 1003.21(1)(e).” (emphasis
    added).
    Based on the foregoing, I agree with the charter schools’ argument that,
    under section 1002.33(17)’s plain meaning, “Students enrolled in a charter
    school, regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded as if they are in a
    basic program or a special program, the same as students enrolled in
    other public schools in the school district.” (emphasis added).
    3. Contrary to both sides’ arguments, the Legislature’s 2019
    amendment of section 1011.71(9) should not affect our
    interpretation of the 2018 version of section 1011.71(9).
    In 2019, the Legislature amended section 1011.71(9) to add the
    following language shown in bold:
    (9) In addition to the maximum millage levied under this
    section and the General Appropriations Act, a school district
    may levy, by local referendum or in a general election,
    additional millage for school operational purposes up to an
    amount that, when combined with nonvoted millage levied
    under this section, does not exceed the 10-mill limit
    established in s. 9(b), Art. VII of the State Constitution. Any
    such levy shall be for a maximum of 4 years and shall be
    counted as part of the 10-mill limit established in s. 9(b), Art.
    VII of the State Constitution. For the purpose of distributing
    taxes collected pursuant to this subsection, the term
    “school operational purposes” includes charter schools
    sponsored by a school district. Millage elections conducted
    under the authority granted pursuant to this section are
    subject to s. 1011.73. Funds generated by such additional
    millage do not become a part of the calculation of the Florida
    - 21 -
    Education Finance Program total potential funds in 2001-
    2002 or any subsequent year and must not be incorporated
    in the calculation of any hold-harmless or other component of
    the Florida Education Finance Program formula in any year.
    If an increase in required local effort, when added to existing
    millage levied under the 10-mill limit, would result in a
    combined millage in excess of the 10-mill limit, any millage
    levied pursuant to this subsection shall be considered to be
    required local effort to the extent that the district millage
    would otherwise exceed the 10-mill limit. Funds levied under
    this subsection shall be shared with charter schools based
    on each charter school’s proportionate share of the
    district’s total unweighted full-time equivalent student
    enrollment and used in a manner consistent with the
    purposes of the levy. The referendum must contain an
    explanation of the distribution methodology consistent with
    the requirements of this subsection.
    § 1011.71(9), Fla. Stat. (2019) (emphasis added).
    According to the charter schools, the 2019 Legislature’s addition of the
    bolded sentences was meant to clarify the Legislature’s intent for the 2018
    Referendum’s approved millage increase under section 1011.71(9) “to be
    shared with public charter schools all along.” In support, the charter
    schools cite several Florida Supreme Court cases, including Matthews v.
    State, 
    760 So. 2d 1148
    (Fla. 2000), to argue “a court may consider an
    amendment to a statute soon after controversies as to the interpretation of
    the original act arise as legislative interpretation of the original law. Such
    subsequent amendments to a statute, which serve to clarify rather than
    change existing law, are entitled to substantial weight in construing the
    earlier law.”
    Id. at 1150
    (citation omitted; emphasis added).
    Here, the charter schools argue, a growing controversy existed two years
    earlier about whether voted operating discretionary millage revenues must
    be shared with public charter schools. See Indian River Charter High Sch.,
    Inc. v. Sch. Bd. of Indian River Cty., Case No. 31- 2016-CA-000432 (Fla. 19th
    Cir. Ct. June 13, 2017) (circuit court held the Indian River County School
    Board was required to share voted millage levy revenues with charter
    schools).     Thus, the charter schools argue, the Legislature’s 2019
    amendment to section 1011.71(9) was meant to clarify “[i]t was the intent
    of the Legislature all along for Voted Millage funds to be shared with
    public     charter     schools,    even under the prior version of section
    1011.71(9).”
    - 22 -
    On the other hand, the school district argues the 2019 Legislature’s
    addition of the bolded sentences necessarily means those provisions did
    not exist within the 2018 version of section 1011.71(9). In support, the
    school district cites Arnold v. Shumpert, 
    217 So. 2d 116
    , 119 (Fla. 1968)
    (“[W]hen a statute is amended, it is presumed that the Legislature intended
    it to have a meaning different from that accorded to it before the
    amendment.”). The school district also counters the charter schools’
    reliance on cases like Matthews with other Florida Supreme Court cases
    holding it is inappropriate to use an amendment enacted several years
    after the original enactment to “ clarify” original legislative intent. See,
    e.g., State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. Laforet, 
    658 So. 2d 55
    , 62 (Fla. 1995)
    (“[A] clarifying amendment to a statute that is enacted soon after
    controversies as to the interpretation of a statute arise may be considered
    as a legislative interpretation of the original law and not as a substantive
    change. It would be absurd, however, to consider legislation enacted more
    than ten years after the original act as a clarification of original intent[.]”).
    In my opinion, rather than attempting to choose one viable statutory
    construction canon over another in determining the 2019 amendment’s
    effect on section 1011.71(9), we should simply interpret the 2018 version
    of section 1011.71(9) as written. If we had been called upon to interpret
    the 2018 version of section 1011.71(9) before the 2019 amendment, we
    would have done so, using other statutory construction canons available
    for our consideration.
    Also contrary to the parties’ positions, the 2019 amendment’s prior
    drafts or final bill analysis should not affect our interpretation of the 2018
    version of section 1011.71(9). According to the school district, the
    Legislature considered in an earlier bill draft, but ultimately did not
    adopt, language which would have made the 2019 amendment
    retroactive. Instead, the Legislature included express language providing
    that the 2019 amendment applies prospectively, which the school district
    says shows the Legislature did not intend the changes to “clarify” a
    requirement that already applied. On the other hand, the charter schools
    argue, the 2019 amendment’s final bill analysis states it was intended “to
    clarify that the term ‘school operational purposes’ includes charter schools
    sponsored by a school district.” (emphasis added).
    The school district’s reliance on earlier drafts, and the charter schools’
    reliance on a final bill analysis, are simply not persuasive as a matter of
    law. See Rollins v. Pizzarelli, 
    761 So. 294
    , 299 (Fla. 2000) (“[W]hen the
    statutory language is clear, legislative history cannot be used to alter the
    plain meaning of the statute.”); American Home Assur. Co. v. Plaza
    Materials Corp., 
    908 So. 2d 360
    , 376 (Fla. 2005) (Cantero, J., concurring
    - 23 -
    in part and dissenting in part) (proposing that “legislative staff analyses
    add nothing to an investigation of legislative intent”).
    Conclusion
    In sum, our review should be limited to the 2018 versions of sections
    1002.33(17) and 1011.71(9), and how those statutes may be read in
    harmony according to their plain meaning. In my opinion, by excluding
    charter schools from that portion of the current discretionary operating
    millage levy provided in section 1011.71(9), as approved by voters in the
    2018 Referendum, the school district is violating section 1002.33(17)’s
    requirement that “[s]tudents enrolled in a charter school, regardless of the
    sponsorship, shall be funded as if they are in a basic program or a special
    program, the same as students enrolled in other public schools in the
    school district.” (emphasis added).
    Based on the foregoing, I would reverse the circuit court’s final
    judgment, and remand for the circuit court to enter a new final judgment
    finding the 2018 Referendum was illegal and therefore void.
    *         *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    - 24 -