Judges: BILL McCOLLUM, Attorney General
Filed Date: 5/21/2008
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Wahlen:
On behalf of the School Board of Leon County, you ask the following question:
Must the school board disclose information exempt from public inspection and copying under section
119.071 (4)(d)1., Florida Statutes, to the certified bargaining representative of persons in a defined "bargaining unit" under section447.203 (8), Florida Statutes?
You indicate that the school board has configured its electronic information system to flag the names, home addresses, telephone numbers, photographs and places of employment of the spouses of active or former law enforcement personnel. Some of these employees are members of a bargaining unit within the meaning of section
Section
"The home addresses, telephone numbers, social security numbers, and photographs of active or former law enforcement personnel . . . the home addresses, telephone numbers, social security numbers, photographs, and places of employment of the spouses and children of such personnel; and the names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the children of such personnel are exempt from s.
119.07 (1). . . ."
This office has recognized that section
In Attorney General's Opinion 2007-21, this office discussed the limitations placed upon the chief of police regarding the release of photographs of the police department's law enforcement officers and employees. The opinion noted that there was little discussion in the statute's legislative history revealing the purpose of the exemption, other than the necessity of removing the information from public access. Subsequent amendments to the statute, however, make it clear that the purpose of the exemption is to protect the safety of the enumerated individuals and their families. The legislative history accompanying the adoption of the exemption in 1979, however, indicates a clear distinction between the terms "exempt" and "confidential."2 In addition, the staff analysis of the enabling legislation states that "[i]f the information was confidential it could not be revealed under any circumstances." The distinction between the two terms was clearly recognized: "[T]hus exempt information could be revealed at the discretion of the agency."3
In Attorney General's Opinion 90-50, this office addressed the issue of when information exempted pursuant to section
The FEA has presented several opinions from the Florida Public Employees Relations Commission (PERC) as well as the National Labor Relations Board in support of its position that the exemption in section
In City of Miami Beach v. Public Employees RelationsCommission,5 the Third District Court of Appeal reviewed a PERC decision exempting a labor union from the per page cost prescribed in the Public Records Act. The labor union had requested copies of documents for bargaining purposes with the city and alleged an unfair labor practice when the city charged fifteen cents per page for the documents. In reaffirming an earlier opinion in Hollywood Fire Fighters,Local 3175 v. City of Hollywood,6 PERC had concluded that the union's right to receive copies of documents necessary to carry out its duties as the employees' representative was best protected by only requiring the union to pay the actual cost (which was found to be materially less than fifteen cents per page), subject to an hourly labor cost when the copying requires more than one hour of work, rather than the prescribed fee of fifteen cents per page. The district court, finding that the Legislature through the Public Records Act had created a pervasive regulatory scheme for access to public records, concluded that the Act controlled over any rulings by PERC. The court rejected PERC's longstanding position that a bargainer's right to be supplied with relevant information was separate and distinct from that of access to public documents under Chapter
Moreover, I would note that Rule
The holding in City of Miami Beach v. Public Employees RelationsCommission, as well as the recognition of the protected nature of the home address of law enforcement personnel in Rule
Accordingly, it is my opinion that the home addresses and other protected personal information of the spouses of law enforcement personnel who are employed by the school board are exempt from disclosure under section
Statutes, and the school board is not required to report such information to the bargaining representative.
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum Attorney General
BM/tls
"Bargaining unit means either that unit determined by the commission, that unit determined through local regulations promulgated pursuant to s.
447.603 , or that unit determined by the public employer and the public employee organization and approved by the commission to be appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining. However, no bargaining unit shall be defined as appropriate which includes employees of two employers that are not departments or divisions of the state, a county, a municipality, or other political entity."