Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 9/1/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Daniel J. Bosanko St. Johns Assistant County Attorney Post Office Box 1533 St. Augustine, Florida 32085-1533
Dear Mr. Bosanko:
On behalf of the Board of County Commissioners of St. Johns County, you ask substantially the following questions:
1. Is an architectural review committee of a homeowners' association subject to the Government in the Sunshine Law and the Public Records Law where that committee, pursuant to county ordinance, must review and approve applications for county building permits?
2. If so, may the meetings of such architectural committee be noticed and open only to members of the homeowners' association?
In sum:
1. An architectural review committee of a home owners' association is subject to the Government in the Sunshine Law and the Public Records Law where that committee, pursuant to county ordinance, must review and approve applications for county building permits.
2. Meetings of such architectural committee to consider such applications must be noticed and open to the public at large and not merely to members of the homeowners' association.
Question One
The Florida Government in the Sunshine Law, section
"All meetings of any board or commission . . . of any agency or authority of any county, municipal corporation, or political subdivision . . . at which official acts are to be taken are declared to be public meetings open to the public at all times, and no resolution, rule, or formal action shall be considered binding except as taken or made at such meeting."
As a statute enacted in the public interest to protect the public from "closed door" politics, the Sunshine Law must be broadly construed to effect its remedial and protective purpose.1 The courts of this state have repeatedly stated that it is the entire decision-making process to which the Sunshine Law applies and not merely to a formal assemblage of a public body at which voting to ratify an official decision is carried out. Thus, the statute extends to discussions and deliberations as well as to formal action taken by a public body.2 As the court stated in TimesPublishing Company v. Williams,3
"[I]t is the entire decision-making process that the legislature intended to affect by the enactment of the statute before us. . . . Every step in the decision-making process, including the decision itself, is a necessary preliminary to formal action. It follows that each such step constitutes an "official act," an indispensable requisite to ``formal action,' within the meaning of the act."
The Supreme Court of Florida, in Town of Palm Beach v.Gradison,4 construed the scope of section
"It is axiomatic that public officials cannot do indirectly what they are prevented from doing directly. Those to whom public officials delegate de facto authority to act on their behalf in the formulation, preparation and promulgation of plans on whichforeseeable action will be taken by such public officials stand in the shoes of such public officials insofar as the application of the Government in the Sunshine Law is concerned."6
As the Supreme Court of Florida stated in Wood v. Marston,7 "[n]o official act which is in and of itself decision-making can be ``remote' from the decision-making process, regardless of how many decision-making steps go into the ultimate decision."
Although the Legislature has "no right to require meetings of civic organizations, unconnected with . . . government, to conform to the government in the sunshine law,"8 I am unable to state that these architectural review committees are unconnected with county government. While the activities of a homeowners' association architectural review committee would not normally be subject to the Sunshine Law, the county has by ordinance elevated the decisions of such committee to a prerequisite step in obtaining a building permit. The ordinance, in effect, gives these committees the authority to review and approve building permit applications before they will be considered by the county building department. If the committee does not approve the application, a county permit generally will not be issued.
Section 5.03.02G. of the county code states:
"Any PUD/PRD/PSD that requires homeowner's association or committee review and/or approval of an application for a building permit prior to issuance of a County building permit shall include or be presumed to include the following requirements, limitations and appeal provisions in regard to that process:
* * *
2. The homeowner's association shall comply with all valid and applicable State laws and County ordinances that pertain to hearings, public and private notices and public records."
In considering the applicability of the Sunshine Law to private entities that provide services to public agencies, this office, for example, has stated that where a county has accepted the technical services of a nongovernmental advisory committee appointed by a private nonprofit corporation in the recodification and amendment of the county zoning laws, the meetings of such a committee were subject to the Sunshine Law.9 While the Sunshine Law does not generally apply to private organizations, the committee appointed to study the zoning code was not, in this office's opinion, unconnected with government but rather had been impliedly delegated the authority to act on behalf of the county commission in the examination and revision of the zoning code.
Similarly, in Attorney General Opinion 85-55, this office concluded that the actions of the downtown redevelopment task force, in analyzing methods for improvement of the downtown business and residential areas and in placing recommendations before the city commission for its consideration, constituted a significant part of the decision-making process by the city commission toward the improvement of the downtown business district. Although the task force was not appointed by the city, it in effect stood in the place of the city commission when it analyzed information regarding the improvement of the downtown business district. Thus, this office concluded that the task force was subject to the Sunshine Law.
Florida's Public Records Law, Chapter
Recent decisions by the courts considering the applicability of the Public Records Law have focused on whether the private entity is merely providing services to the public agency or is standing in the shoes of the public agency. For example, the court inStanfield v. Salvation Army,12 in holding a private corporation subject to Chapter
Similarly, the Fifth District Court of Appeal in News-JournalCorporation v. Memorial Hospital-West Volusia, Inc.,14 noted a distinction between a private entity's provision of materials or services to a public body to help the public body perform its public function and a private entity's performance of the public function in place of the public body. As the Supreme Court noted in approving the Fifth District's opinion, when the actual public function is transferred, public access follows.15
In the instant inquiry, the authorized function of the county to review and approve county building permits has been transferred and delegated to the architectural review committees of the homeowners' associations by county ordinance.
Accordingly, in light of the above, I am of the view that an architectural review committee of a homeowners' association is subject to the Government in the Sunshine Law and the Public Records Law where that committee, pursuant to county ordinance, must review and approve applications for county building permits.
Question Two
In light of this office's conclusion that meetings of architectural committees that must by county ordinance review and approve requests for county building permits are subject to the Sunshine Law, you ask whether the notice for, and attendance at, such meetings may be limited to members of the homeowners' association.
The Sunshine Law requires that meetings of boards or commissions covered by the law be "open to the public" and that reasonable notice of such meetings be given.16 While generally the meetings of an architectural committee of a homeowners' association would not be required to be open to the public, in the instant inquiry these committees have been elevated by county ordinance to constitute an integral part of the decision-making process relating to the issuance of county building permits.
I find nothing in section
I am, therefore, of the opinion that meetings of an architectural review committee of a homeowners' association that must review and approve applications for county building permits must be noticed and open to the public at large and not merely to members of the homeowners' association.
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw
"Review is a second-hand retrospective reflection upon the decision-making process, not the first-hand observation to which the public is entitled. Where a body merely reviews decisions delegated to another entity, the potential for rubber-stamping always exists. To allow a review procedure to insulate the decision itself from public scrutiny invites circumvention of the Sunshine Law."
Times Publishing Company v. Williams , 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5837 ( 1969 )
Wood v. Marston , 442 So. 2d 934 ( 1983 )
Krause v. Reno , 366 So. 2d 1244 ( 1979 )
IDS Properties, Inc. v. Town of Palm Beach , 279 So. 2d 353 ( 1973 )
Canney v. Board of Pub. Instruction of Alachua Cty. , 278 So. 2d 260 ( 1973 )
Board of Public Instruction of Broward Cty. v. Doran , 1969 Fla. LEXIS 2268 ( 1969 )
Town of Palm Beach v. Gradison , 296 So. 2d 473 ( 1974 )
Shevin v. Byron, Harless, Schaffer, Reid & Associates, Inc. , 1980 Fla. LEXIS 4104 ( 1980 )
Prison Health Services, Inc. v. Lakeland Ledger Pub. Co. , 718 So. 2d 204 ( 1998 )
Port Everglades Authority v. ILA , 652 So. 2d 1169 ( 1995 )
News-Journal Corp. v. Memorial Hosp. , 1997 Fla. App. LEXIS 5397 ( 1997 )