Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Synopsis of Florida's Open Government Laws


Synopsis of Florida's Open Government Laws

This paper is to familiarize you with the provisions of Florida's two open government laws: the Public Records Law and the Sunshine Law (Open Meetings Law).

I. Public Records Law

Virtually any document created, received or maintained by the University or by its representatives acting in their official capacities is considered a public record. Thus, most correspondence and other documents you author or receive are subject to inspection by the public.
There are several major exceptions which allow documents to be withheld from public inspection. First, documents which are the personal notes of the maker which are neither distributed to other nor filed as a permanent record are not public records. Personal notes also include notes you make of meetings you attend and which are kept solely for the purpose of refreshing your own recollection.
The second category of documents not subject to the Public Records Law include drafts which you prepare, and your administrative assistant revises, but are not circulated to others for comment. Some Florida courts have found that once circulated, the drafts become public records because they are communicate knowledge to others. For the most part, however, drafts are not public records.
The final category of documents not subject to disclosure includes documents which are confidential by law and specifically exempt from disclosure. The major exemptions for the University are student records, academic evaluation materials (such as those used for promotion and tenure, TIP), investigation records during an active investigation of employee misconduct, research information (such as proprietary information or potentially patentable information), and records of direct support organizations other than audit reports and management letters or supplemental data. In regard to this last category of documents, please note that the Chancellor has mandated that many business records of direct support organizations be made open to the public; direct support organizations must adopt disclosure policies specifying the extent of public access to documents.
The public can inspect and copy any public record which is not exempt from disclosure. The public has the right to conduct a "fishing expedition" and need not state any particularized need for the record. Public records requests need not be in writing although it is helpful from both the requestor and University's perspective to ask that they be.
The record must be provided within a reasonable period of time; the University may charge for the cost of duplication (e.g., $.15 per copy) plus, in cases of extensive public records request, the cost for the actual labor charges attendant to gathering the document. Public records request needs to be given a priority status by law and also from a media relations perspective. Given our active media in Florida, the gathering and production of public records is no small task at the University. In addition, public records may not be disposed of except by scheduling through the University's archives process. Electronic mail generally is considered a public record although "transitory messages" as defined by the State Division of Library and Information Services need not be retained as must other public records.

II. Sunshine Law

The Open Meetings Law is commonly referred to as the "Sunshine Law". This law mandates that any meeting of two or more members of any board or commission of a state agency be open to the public. In a university setting, "board or commission" would encompass committees with advisory or decisional functions. The Florida Supreme Court has ruled that a state university is an agency for purposes of this law when the court decided that a search committee recommending candidates for the dean of a college of law was a board or commission subject to the Sunshine Law. Any meeting of a board or commission during which decision or policy making is performed (or it is foreseeable that it will be performed) is open, including those decisions which are mere recommendations to the President or designee. In contrast, a purely fact-gathering function is not considered a decision or policy function.
The law does not apply to a meeting between a single member of a board or commission and a non-member, except when such a meeting is used as a substitute for the full meetings of the board. Any time you meet with two or more members of a board at which time you discuss business within the jurisdiction of that board, the Sunshine Law will apply.
In contrast, frequent and unpublicized meetings between you and your various advisors or staff to assist you in executing your duties are not meetings within the Sunshine Law. Courts have recognized that "[i]t would be unrealistic, indeed intolerable, to require of such professionals that every meeting, every contact, and every discussion with anyone from whom they would seek counsel or consultation to assist in acquiring the necessary information, data, or intelligence needed to advise or guide . . . be a public meeting within the disciplines of the Sunshine Law." A good rule of thumb is that most informal meetings we attend in the normal course of our daily work activities are not open to the public, whereas meetings of a committee or other formalized group performing functions delegated to it directly or indirectly by the President may well be open. When representatives of the media occasionally ask to attend meetings which are not open to the public, the person calling the meeting can decide whether to permit media attendance nevertheless as a matter of policy
As is the case the Public Records Law, there are a number of exemptions to the Sunshine Law, such as discussions about state land acquisitions and labor negotiations.
When a meeting is a public meeting, the law requires that notice of the meetings be posted and minutes be kept. Any member of the public who attends a public meeting has neither the right to participate in nor disrupt the meeting.

III. Sanctions or Penalties for Violation

Knowing violation of the Public Records or Sunshine Law can result in criminal misdemeanor charges and a fine. In addition, an aggrieved individual can bring a civil action to enforce the provisions of these laws, after which attorneys fees can be assessed against the agency. When a member of the public files a Public Records lawsuit, he or she is given almost immediate access to the courts to enforce the law.
A violation of the Sunshine Law can also result in invalidity of the action taken at that meeting.

IV. Attorney-Client Communications

Written communications between an agency attorney and client generally are not protected under the attorney-client privilege in Florida. An important exception is written communications prepared by or at the direction of the attorney which reflect mental impressions, conclusions or litigation theory or strategies of the University. These exempt communications must have been prepared exclusively for litigation or in anticipation of imminent litigation. The exemption only applies until the conclusion of the litigation. The fact that there is no general attorney-client written communication privilege in Florida means that the attorney must confer with an agency client and render advice orally in many instances to avoid sensitive written communications possibly being subject to public disclosure.
Likewise, there is no blanket attorney-client privilege for conversations between a public board or commission and its attorney. This has not been a problem at the University inasmuch as the attorney can confer with the president or a vice president as the case may be, thus never triggering the existence of a board or commission.
As one can surmise, the Public Records and Sunshine Laws in our State are two of the broadest in the nation. Because this summary is strictly an overview of the law, you will need to confer with legal and other advisors as particular questions arise concerning Florida's open government laws. In any event, it behooves the University to fully understand and respond appropriately to any requests for documents or access to meetings in order to avoid legal sanctions and, moreover, credibility loss in the eyes of our various constituents.
From http://www.generalcounsel.ufl.edu/legal/, accessed 8/30/2011 11:30 AM

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Petition posted: Save the UF Architecture & Fine Arts Library and Music Library

An online petition has been posted entitled "Save the UF Architecture and Fine Arts Library and Music Library". See the petition at http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/save-the-uf-architecture-fine-arts-library-and-music-library/.

Here is the petition text:

We are concerned with the decisions currently being made in regard to the future of the Architecture and Fine Arts Library and Music Library. The document circulated just before the Fall 2011 semester regarding the "opportunity for space planning," specifically targets these two libraries. While, as of yet, no decisions have been made to close or move either library, the intent is clearly to re-conceptualize the use of both spaces.
The University of Florida Architecture and Fine Arts Library and Music Library serve over 80,000 users and comprise 15,000 sq ft. of study space and in-house browsing. They both have served the university and community for decades. For 46 years the AFA Library has been one of the largest free-standing art designated facilities in the southeast and is eligible for National Register candidacy. Both libraries have diverse, well-rounded collections which should not be confined to off-site storage facilities or the already highly trafficked and often over-crowded Library West. These libraries are valued and must be preserved.
Please do not close our libraries!

Faculty of the School of Art and Art History meets with the Dean of Libraries tomorrow (August 31)

Faculty of the School of Art and Art History meets with the Dean of Libraries tomorrow (Wednesday, August 31).

Meeting will take place in the office of the College of Fine Arts, first floor of FAC.

Meeting begins at 12:40 PM.

If you are willing to attend this meeting and take notes or record audio or video, we'll have an anonymous email address posted soon where you can send your audio, video, or text.

Flip Video recorders are available for 3-day check out at the service desk of the Architecture and Fine Arts Library.

Dean's Letter

This letter purporting to be from the deans was found taped to railing on the FAC/FAB bridge; The letter lacks date and signatures.  See below for a scan and transcript.

According to this letter:


  • The College of Fine Arts, Design Construction and Planning and University Libraries have "received an invitation to consider a new opportunity for space planning", which we may assume means the proposal to close the Music and AFA libraries.
  • CFA, DCP, and Library faculty "will receive more information... from their directors and deans when school begins", but there is no exact date given.
  • Neither the Provost, nor the Colleges, nor the Libraries have made a decision to move the AFA or Music libraries as of the date of the writing of this letter.
  • An unspecified number of unnamed faculty from the Colleges and Libraries as well as "selected students" will review this "opportunity" and "develop ideas", but there is no indication about how and when this group of reviewers will be formed.
  • The directors and deans will review the ideas generated by the faculty, and then forward them to the Provost for approval. The letter does not indicate the extent to which directors and deans may censor the faculty-generated ideas; final approval apparently rests with the Provost rather than faculty.




Here is a transcript of the letter:

Dear Faculty and Staff,

The College of Fine Arts and the College of Design, Construction, and Planning and the Universities [sic] Libraries received an invitation to consider a new opportunity for space planning this week. Faculty in both colleges and libraries will receive more information about this opportunity from their directors and deans when school begins. At this point in time, no decision has been made by the Provost or the Colleges or Libraries to move the CFA/DCP or Music Libraries. Faculty under the direction of their directors will be asked to analyze ideas and form recommendations during this year.

Discussion and planning are hallmarks of our CFA and DCP and the Provost has provided those colleges an opportunity to be considered for the scant UF resource of space among all the competing UF needs. This opportunity will be reviewed by faculty members in the colleges and libraries and selected students with the goal of developing ideas that will afford students a superior learning environment. These faculty generated ideas will be reviewed by the directors and deans to forward to the Provost for approval. We all appreciate the value expressed for the libraries and the ideas that have already been generated. An additional benefit of this opportunity to discuss space utilization will be the dialogue from working together that will strengthen relationships and communication within the schools and across the colleges and library.

Best regards,

Lucinda Lavelli
Dean, CFA
llavelli@arts.ufl.edu

Chris Silver
Dean, DCP
silver2@ufl.edu

Judy Russell
Dean, University Libraries
jcrussell@ufl.edu

Richard Heipp
Acting Director, SAAH
heipp@ufl.edu

John Duff
Director, SOM
jduff@arts.ufl.edu


What if they close your library???

Banner posted by concerned students on the bridge to the Architecture and Fine Arts library at the University of Florida

UF Architecture and Fine Arts and Music libraries to close (email from the Dean of University Libraries)


From: Russell,Judith
Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2011 12:23 PM
To: All UF Libraries Staff
Cc: LIB-COMM-LLB; ULC
Subject: Changes in the AFA and Music Libraries

As some of you know, the College of Fine Arts (CFA) recently completed it accreditation process and was given provisional accreditation for two departments, based on inadequate space.

The Provost accompanied the Dean of the CFA on an inspection tour yesterday and, as a result, has recommended that we move the AFA and Music collections to Library West and storage and return the space those libraries currently occupy to the college. This will also require moving some of the materials in Library West to storage to make space for the AFA and Music collections.

This is not a reflection on the value of the libraries to the faculty and students of the college, but rather a result of the college’s needs for additional space to meet accreditation requirements.

There are no additional details to report at this time because this is a very new initiative, but many of you will be involved in discussions over the next few weeks as various options are considered and an integration plan is developed.
Regardless of the final decisions, we will all continue to work together to provide the best possible service for the CFA students and faculty, who will also have some adjustments to make as these changes take place.

Diane Bruxvoort will be coordinating the planning effort. She and I will keep you informed as additional information becomes available.

Judy

Judith C. Russell
Dean of University Libraries
George A. Smathers Libraries
University of Florida
535 Library West
PO Box 117000
Gainesville FL 32611-7000
Phone: 352-273-2505
Mobile: 202-262-6501
Fax: 352-392-7251
E-Mail: jcrussell@ufl.edu

Library Watch: Purpose and principles

In the spirit of openness of information, the Library Watch blog serves as a clearinghouse for documentation pertaining to the pending closure of the AFA and Music libraries at the University of Florida.


The editors of this blog do not take an official position on whether or not the libraries should be closed, nor do the editors advocate any particular action regarding this issue; it is simply an information source, and nothing more.


Any opinions expressed are exclusively those of the contributors and commentators. Contributor anonymity will be protected as much as possible under current law.