Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/15/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Ms. Cynthia Prettyman Palm Beach County School District General Counsel 3318 Forest Hill Boulevard West Palm Beach, Florida 33406-5813
Dear Ms. Prettyman:
On behalf of the Palm Beach County School Board, you ask substantially the following questions:
1. Are the written comments and performance memoranda of the individual school board members evaluating an appointed superintendent and the summation evaluation prepared by the board confidential pursuant to section 231.291, Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement)?
2. Do meetings of individual school board members with the superintendent to review the school board member's written comments and performance memorandum violate section
In sum:
1. The written comments and performance memoranda prepared by individual school board members regarding an appointed superintendent and the summation evaluation prepared by the board are not exempt from disclosure pursuant to section 231.291, Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement).
2. Meetings of individual school board members with the superintendent to discuss the individual board members' evaluations do not violate section
You state that the school board evaluates the superintendent's job performance annually. Each board member is responsible for completing a form rating the superintendent on key job requirements. The completed form will also include written comments. The completed form is sent to the superintendent and a meeting is scheduled between the superintendent and the individual school board member, during which the performance evaluations and written comments are discussed. The evaluations are compiled into an official "summative evaluation" that is then discussed and approved at a public meeting of the school board.
Question One
Chapter
"all documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photographs, films, sound recordings, data processing software, or other material, regardless of the physical form, characteristics, or means of transmission, made or received pursuant to law or ordinance or in connection with the transaction of official business by any agency."
The Supreme Court of Florida in Shevin v. Byron, Harless,Schaffer, Reid and Associates, Inc.,1 has construed the above statutory definition to include "any material prepared in connection with official agency business which is intended to perpetuate, communicate, or formalize knowledge of some type."
The written comments and performance memoranda of the school board members that are discussed with the superintendent and the school board's "summative evaluation" are prepared in connection with the official business of the school board and appear to be intended to perpetuate, communicate or formalize knowledge.2 Thus, such materials constitute public records and are, in the absence of a statute making such records confidential or exempt, subject to disclosure.
Section 231.291, Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement), provides for the maintenance of public school system employee personnel files.
Subsection (3)(a)2. of the statute provides:
"An employee evaluation prepared pursuant to s. 231.17(3), s. 231.29, or 231.36 or rules adopted by the State Board of Education or local school board under the authority of those sections shall be confidential and exempt from the provisions of s.
Your inquiry concerns an appointed superintendent.3 The Supreme Court has recognized a distinction between an elected superintendent and an appointed superintendent, stating
"Fla. Const., Art.
Thus, where a school district has decided on an appointed superintendent, the district school board has the "sole authority and responsibility to remove its employed superintendent who is subject to the direction, hiring and firing by the employing authority. . . ."5
While an appointed superintendent may be considered an employee of the school board for some purposes,6 he is not evaluated pursuant to sections 231.17(3), 231.29 or 231.36, Florida Statutes, or the rules adopted pursuant to those statutes. Section 231.17(3), Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement), relates to a district's professional orientation program for "beginning teachers, teachers employed in the state for the first time, and teachers whose professional certificates are inactive." Section 231.29, Florida Statutes, provides for the superintendent to establish procedures for assessing the performance of instructional, administrative, and supervisory personnel while section 231.36, Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement), provides for contracts with instructional staff, supervisors, and principals.7
Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the exemption afforded by section 231.291, Florida Statutes (1996 Supplement), for employee evaluations is not applicable to written comments of the individual school board members evaluating an appointed superintendent and the "summative evaluation" prepared by the school board.
Question Two
The Government in the Sunshine Law, section
In analyzing the applicability of the Sunshine Law, The Supreme Court of Florida has stated that the statute must be construed "so as to frustrate all evasive devices."9 Accordingly, this office has stated that the physical presence of two or more members of a board or commission may not be necessary for the Sunshine Law to apply.10
For example, this office has stated that the use of a memorandum by a board or commission to avoid a public meeting may constitute a violation of the Sunshine Law even though two members are not physically present. If a memorandum reflecting the views of a board member on an issue pending before the board is circulated to other board members with each indicating approval or disapproval and completion of the signatures gives the memorandum the effect of becoming the official action of the board, there is a violation of the Sunshine Law.11
However, use of an informational report by one member to inform other board members of a subject that would be discussed at a public meeting does not violate section
This office concluded in Attorney General Opinion 93-90 that where a board is responsible for assessing the performance of its chief executive officer (CEO), it may not use a proceeding in which individual board members evaluate the CEO and such individual written comments, which are sent to the board chairman for compilation, constitute the board's evaluation. In the instant inquiry, however, the individual board members' evaluations are not circulated for comment among the other school board members nor do they constitute the school board's evaluation. Rather the individual evaluations are compiled into a "summative evaluation" that is then considered by the school board as a body and voted upon at a public meeting.
Accordingly, I am of the opinion that an individual school board member may meet with the superintendent to discuss the individual board member's written comments and performance evaluation memoranda of the superintendent, which are public records, without violating section
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw