The Florida Senate
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.)
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources
BILL: SB 690
INTRODUCER: Senator Rodriguez
SUBJECT: Resilience-related Advisory Committees
DATE: January 28, 2022 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Hunter Ryon CA Favorable
2. Collazo Rogers EN Favorable
3. RC
I. Summary:
SB 690 permits certain resilience-related advisory committees to conduct public meetings and
workshops by means of communications media technology pursuant to the rules of the
Administrative Procedures Act. The bill provides that an advisory committee member who
participates in a meeting or workshop by means of communications media technology is deemed
to be present at such meeting or workshop.
The bill also provides notice requirements and audible communication requirements for such
meetings. Additionally, it clarifies that other public meetings laws must be liberally construed for
such meetings.
II. Present Situation:
Open Meetings Law
The Florida Constitution provides that the public has a right to access governmental meetings.1
Each collegial body must provide notice of its meetings to the public and permit the public to
attend any meeting at which official acts are taken or at which public business is transacted or
discussed.2 This applies to the meetings of any collegial body of the executive branch of state
government, counties, municipalities, school districts, or special districts.3
1
FLA CONST., art. I, s. 24(b).
2
Id.
3
FLA CONST., art. I, s. 24(b). Meetings of the Legislature are governed by Article III, section 4(e) of the Florida Constitution,
which states: “The rules of procedure of each house shall further provide that all prearranged gatherings, between more than
two members of the legislature, or between the governor, the president of the senate, or the speaker of the house of
representatives, the purpose of which is to agree upon formal legislative action that will be taken at a subsequent time, or at
which formal legislative action is taken, regarding pending legislation or amendments, shall be reasonably open to the
public.”
BILL: SB 690 Page 2
Public policy regarding access to government meetings also is addressed in the Florida Statutes.
Section 286.011, F.S., which is also known as the “Government in the Sunshine Law,”4 or the
“Sunshine Law,”5 requires all meetings of any board or commission of any state or local agency
or authority at which official acts are to be taken be open to the public.6 The board or
commission must provide the public reasonable notice of such meetings.7 Public meetings may
not be held at any location that discriminates on the basis of sex, age, race, creed, color, origin or
economic status or which operates in a manner that unreasonably restricts the public’s access to
the facility.8 Minutes of a public meeting must be promptly recorded and open to public
inspection.9 Failure to abide by public meetings requirements will invalidate any resolution, rule
or formal action adopted at a meeting.10 A public officer or member of a governmental entity
who violates the Sunshine Law is subject to civil and criminal penalties.11
Administrative Procedure Act
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA)12 outlines a comprehensive administrative process by
which agencies exercise the authority granted by the Legislature while offering citizen
involvement. The process subjects state agencies to a uniform procedure in enacting rules and
issuing orders and allows citizens to challenge an agency’s decision.13
The term “agency” is defined in s. 120.52(1), F.S., as:
 The Governor, each state officer and state department, and each departmental unit described
in s. 20.04, F.S.;14
 The Board of Governors of the State University System;
 The Commission on Ethics;
 The Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission;
 A regional water supply authority;
 A regional planning agency;
 A multicounty special district, but only if a majority of its governing board is comprised of
non-elected persons;
 Educational units;
 Each entity described in chs. 163 (Intergovernmental Programs), 373 (Water Resources), 380
(Land and Water Management), and 582 (Soil and Water Conservation), F.S., and s. 186.504
(regional planning councils), F.S.;
 Each officer and governmental entity in the state having statewide jurisdiction or jurisdiction
in more than one county; and
4
Times Pub. Co. v. Williams, 222 So. 2d 470, 472 (Fla. 2d DCA 1969).
5
Board of Public Instruction of Broward County v. Doran, 224 So. 2d 693, 695 (Fla. 1969).
6
Section 286.011(1)-(2), F.S.
7
Id.
8
Section 286.011(6), F.S.
9
Section 286.011(2), F.S.
10
Section 286.011(1), F.S.
11
Section 286.011(3), F.S. Penalties include a fine of up to $500 or a second degree misdemeanor.
12
See ch. 120, F.S.
13
Joint Administrative Procedures Committee, A Primer on Florida’s Administrative Procedure Act, available at
http://www.japc.state.fl.us/Documents/Publications/PocketGuideFloridaAPA.pdf (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
14
Section 20.04, F.S., specifies the structure of the executive branch of state government.
BILL: SB 690 Page 3
 Each officer and governmental entity in the state having jurisdiction in one county or less
than one county, to the extent they are expressly made subject to the act by general or special
law or existing judicial decisions.15
Use of Electronic Media and Public Meetings
Section 120.54(5)(b)2, F.S., requires the Administration Commission16 to create uniform rules of
procedure for state agencies to use when conducting public meetings, hearings or workshops,
including procedures for conducting meetings in person and by means of communications media
technology.17 Unless otherwise authorized by the Legislature, these procedures for
communications media technology apply only to state agencies and not to local boards or
commissions.
The Office of Attorney General has opined that only state agencies can conduct meetings and
vote via communications media technology, thus rejecting a school board’s request to conduct
board meetings via electronic means.18 The Attorney General reasoned that s. 120.54(5)(b)2,
F.S., limits its terms only to uniform rules that apply to state agencies.19 The Attorney General
reasoned that a similar rationale is not applicable to local boards and commissions even though it
may be convenient and save money since the representation on these boards and commissions
are local thus, “such factors would not by themselves appear to justify or allow the use of
electronic media technology in order to assemble the members for a meeting.”20
Local entities authorized under current law to conduct meetings and vote by means of
communications media technology include regional planning councils (RPCs)21 and certain
entities created by an interlocal agreement.22
15
The definition of agency does not include a municipality or legal entity created solely by a municipality and expressly
excludes certain legal entities or organizations found in chs. 343, 348, and 361, F.S., and ss. 339.175 and 163.01(7), F.S.
16
Section 14.202, F.S. The Administration Commission is composed of the Governor and the Cabinet (The Attorney
General, the Chief Financial Officer, and the Commissioner of Agriculture compose the Cabinet. Section 20.03(1), F.S.).
17
Section 120.54(5)(b)2, F.S. The term “communications media technology” means the electronic transmission of printed
matter, audio, full-motion video, freeze-frame video, compressed video, and digital video by any method available.
18
Op. Att’y Gen. Fla. 98-28 (1998).
19
Id. The Attorney General explained that “allowing state agencies and their boards and commissions to conduct meetings
via communications media technology under specific guidelines recognizes the practicality of members from throughout the
state participating in meetings of the board or commission.”
20
Id. However, if a quorum of a local board is physically present at the public meeting, a board may allow a member who is
unavailable to physically attend the meeting due to extraordinary circumstances such as illness, to participate and vote at the
meeting via communications media technology.
21
Section 120.525(4), F.S. Chapter 186, F.S., finds that RPCs are comprehensive planning districts of the state, designated as
the primary organization to address problems and plan solutions that are of greater-than-local concern or scope and
recognized as Florida’s multipurpose regional entities in a position to plan for and coordinate intergovernmental solutions to
growth-related problems. By statute, the state is divided into 10 RPC regions. Each county must be a member of their
respective RPC and municipalities may be members at their option.
22
Section 163.01(18), F.S. (Allowing public agencies located in at least five counties, of which at least three are not
contiguous, to conduct public meetings and workshops by means of communications media technology).
BILL: SB 690 Page 4
Resilience-related Advisory Committees
In 2021, the Legislature authorized the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), subject
to specific legislative appropriation, to provide funding to regional resilience entities that are
established by general purpose local governments and whose responsibilities include planning
for the resilience needs of communities and coordinating intergovernmental solutions to mitigate
adverse impacts of flooding and sea level rise.23 The DEP is authorized to provide funding to
regional resilience entities for the following purposes:
 Providing technical assistance to counties and municipalities.
 Coordinating multijurisdictional vulnerability assessments.
 Developing project proposals to be submitted for inclusion in the statewide resilience plan.24
Local governments who apply for inclusion as a regional resilience entity must have a
memorandum of understanding between the members of the entity, or an equivalent, to be
eligible to apply.25 According to DEP, seven regional resilience entities have applied for funding
from the DEP.
Florida’s local governments are at the forefront of preparing for and addressing flooding and sea
level rise.26 Generally, every community will need to go through a process of planning and
implementing adaptation strategies and projects.27 Florida’s coastal local governments must have
a coastal management element in their comprehensive plans which advances objectives to protect
public safety and coastal resources.28
Many local governments in the state have worked together to form regional resilience entities
that vary in size and distance between member governments. Examples of regional resilience
entities29 that exist across the state include the Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change
23
Section 380.093(6), F.S.
24
Section 380.093(6), F.S.
25
See DEP, Office of Resilience & Coastal Protection, Resilient Florida, available at https://frcp.secure-platform.com/a (last
visited Jan. 25, 2022).
26
See DEP, Florida Adaptation Planning Guidebook, at I, available at https://floridadep.gov/sites/default/files/Adaptation
PlanningGuidebook.pdf (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
27
See DEP, Florida Resilient Coastlines Program - Grants, https://floridadep.gov/rcp/florida-resilient-coastlines-
program/content/florida-resilient-coastlines-program-funded (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
28
Sections 380.24, 163.3177(6)(g), and 163.3178(2), F.S. Section 380.24, F.S., provides the description of which local
governments are subject to these requirements: “[u]nits of local government abutting the Gulf of Mexico or the Atlantic
Ocean, or which include or are contiguous to waters of the state where marine species of vegetation listed by rule as ratified
in s. 373.4211 constitute the dominant plant community…”
29
DEP, Resilient Florida Grant Program Webinar Presentation, available at http://publicfiles.dep.state.fl.us/CAMA/FRCP/
Resilient%20Florida%207.14.21%20Resources/Resilient%20Florida%20Grant%20Program%20Webinar%20Presentation%2
0-%20July%2014,%202021.pdf (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
BILL: SB 690 Page 5
Compact,30 East Central Florida Regional Resilience Collaborative,31 and the Tampa Bay
Regional Resiliency Coalition.32
The majority of these type of entities follow the boundaries of Florida’s RPCs and are often
coordinated by the respective RPC. While membership is typically coordinated through county
boundaries, resilience entities often seek out member partners from municipalities within the
geographic region, as well as businesses, universities, and non-profit organizations.33 Members
of the entities often meet to enact compacts relating to the region’s approach to resilience.
Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact
The Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact is a longstanding partnership between
Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe, and Palm Beach Counties executed in January 2010. This
entity was formed to engage regional partners to work collaboratively to reduce regional
greenhouse gas emissions, implement adaptation strategies, and build climate resilience within
member communities and across the Southeast Florida region. Since its inception, the Compact
counties have collaborated on mitigation and adaptation strategies, worked to build bipartisan
support for climate action, and forged partnerships with stakeholders, including federal, state,
and municipal governments and agencies; economic development entities; community-based
organizations; and the academic community.34
III. Effect of Proposed Changes:
SB 690 amends s. 286.011, F.S., to authorize resilience-related advisory committees whose
membership is composed solely of representatives of four or more counties, when there is at least
200 miles of geographic distance between the county seats of the two most distant counties to
conduct public meetings and workshops by means of communications media technology
pursuant to the rules of the Administrative Procedures Act. Of the seven regional resilience
entities that have applied for funding from DEP, this bill appears to currently apply only to the
Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact.
The bill provides that an advisory committee member who participates in a meeting or workshop
by means of communications media technology is deemed to be present at such meeting. The bill
30
Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact, About the Compact, available at https://southeastflorida
climatecompact.org/ (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
31
In 2018, the East Central Florida Regional Planning Council adopted a resolution to convene stakeholders across the region
to develop a structure and framework for a regional resilience collaborative. Members include Lake, Orange, Osceola,
Volusia, and Brevard counties and 22 member cities. See East Central Florida Regional Planning Council, East Central
Florida Regional Resilience Collaborative, available at https://www.ecfrpc.org/resiliencecollaborative (last visited Jan. 25,
2022).
32
The Tampa Bay Regional Resiliency Coalition is comprised of members from Citrus, Hernando, Hillsborough, Manatee,
Pasco and Pinellas counties and the 21 municipalities that come together to discuss complex regional issues; develop
strategic regional responses for resolving them; and build consensus for setting and accomplishing regional goals. See Tampa
Bay Regional Planning Council, Tampa Bay Regional Resiliency Coalition, available at https://www.tbrpc.org/coalition/ (last
visited Jan. 25, 2022).
33
Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council, Participate in the Tampa Bay Regional Resiliency Coalition, available at
https://www.tbrpc.org/coalitionpartner/ (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
34
Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact, What is the Compact?, available at https://southeastflorida
climatecompact.org/about-us/what-is-the-compact/ (last visited Jan. 25, 2022).
BILL: SB 690 Page 6
requires that communications media technology must allow for all persons attending such public
meeting or workshop to audibly communicate, as would be allowed if they were physically
present.
The bill states that notice for such a meeting or workshop must