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 Appropriations Committee on Transportation, Tourism, and Economic
                                                       Development
BILL:               SB 1046
INTRODUCER:         Senators Rouson and Davis
SUBJECT:            Victims of Reform School Abuse
DATE:               April 18, 2023                  REVISED:
             ANALYST                      STAFF DIRECTOR                 REFERENCE                                 ACTION
1. Limones-Borja                        McVaney                              GO               Favorable
2. Wells                                Jerrett                              ATD              Favorable
3.                                                                            FP
  I.       Summary:
           SB 1046 creates the “Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Abuse Victim
           Certification Act,” to provide a process for former students of these schools who were abused to
           be certified as victims. The bill defines the term “victim of Florida reform school abuse.”
           The bill requires a person seeking to be certified as a victim of Florida reform school abuse to
           submit an application to the Department of State (DOS) by September 1, 2023. The DOS must
           notify the applicant of its determination within 5 business days after processing and reviewing
           the application. If the DOS determines that an application meets the requirements of the act, the
           DOS must certify the applicant as a victim of Florida reform school abuse. The DOS must also
           submit a list of all certified victims to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House
           of Representatives by December 31, 2023.
           The bill also provides that a victim of Florida reform school abuse or an intervenor connected
           therewith may file a claim under ch. 960, F.S., which governs victim assistance, including victim
           compensation. The bill defines “crime,” for purposes of filing a claim and requires that a claim
           must be brought within one year of the effective date of the bill.
           This bill may have an indeterminate fiscal impact on the DOS. Additionally, this bill may have
           an indeterminate fiscal impact on the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) for claims filed
           under ch. 960, F.S.
           This act is effective upon becoming law.
BILL:     SB 1046                                                                                                   Page 2
    II.    Present Situation:
           Victims of Florida Reform School Abuse
           This bill defines a “victim of Florida reform school abuse” to mean a living person who was
           confined at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee School at any time between
           1940 and 1975 and who was subjected to mental, physical, or sexual abuse perpetrated by school
           personnel during the period of confinement.
           The Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys
           From 1900 to 2011, the state operated the Florida State Reform School in Marianna. In 1967, the
           name was changed to the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys (Dozier School).1 Children were
           committed to the Dozier school for criminal offenses such as theft and murder, but later on the
           law was amended to allow for children with minor offenses such as truancy to be committed too.
           Additionally, many children who had not been charged with a crime were committed to the
           school as wards of the state and orphans.2
           Beginning as early as 1901, there were reports of children being chained to walls in irons, brutal
           whippings, and peonage.3 In the first 13 years of operation, six state-led investigations took
           place. Those investigations found that children as young as five years old were being hired out
           for labor, unjustly beaten, and were without education or proper food and clothing.4 In 2005,
           former students of the Dozier School began to publish accounts of the abuse they experienced at
           the school.5 These stories prompted Governor Charlie Crist to direct the Florida Department of
           Law Enforcement (FDLE) to investigate the Dozier School and the deaths that were alleged and
           occurred at the school. In 2008, Governor Charlie Crist directed the FDLE to investigate 32
           unmarked graves located on the property surrounding the school in response to complaints
           lodged by former students at the Dozier School.6 The former students of Dozier alleged that
           students who died as a result of abuse were buried at the school cemetery.7
           The Okeechobee School
           Due to overcrowding at the Dozier School, the state opened a new reform school in Okeechobee.
           The first 50 boys were transferred to the Okeechobee campus from the Marianna campus along
           with 20 staff members.8 Interviews with former students in the school found that the former
           superintendent and deputy superintendent of the Florida School for Boys in Okeechobee
1
  David Built, Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys, Abandoned Florida, Sep. 29, 2015, available at
https://www.abandonedfl.com/arthur-g-dozier-school-for-boys/ (last visited Apr. 4, 2023).
2
  Erin H. Kimmerle, Ph.D. et al., Report on the Investigation into the Deaths and Burials at the Former Arthur G. Dozier
School for Boys in Marianna, Florida, The University of South Florida, pg. 22, January 18, 2016, available at
http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/wusf/files/201601/usf-final-dozier-summary-2016.pdf (last visited Apr. 4, 2023).
3
  See supra note 2, at 12.
4
  See supra note 2, at 27.
5
  Office of Executive Investigations, Florida Department of Law Enforcement, FDLE Investigative Report (May 14, 2009),
available at http://thewhitehouseboys.com/fdlereport.html (last visited Apr. 4, 2023)
6
  Id.
7
  Id.
8
  Richard Marion, OYDC closure brings an end to troubled history, South Central Florida Life (Jul. 15, 2020), available at
https://www.southcentralfloridalife.com/stories/oydc-closure-brings-an-end-to-troubled-history,9159 (last visited Apr. 4,
2023).
BILL:   SB 1046                                                                                                  Page 3
         (Okeechobee School), would administer corporal punishment.9 Several students at the
         Okeechobee School died in the 1960s, some of those under questionable circumstances. Two of
         them being a 13-year-old boy found floating face down in the school's sewage tank, and a teen
         shot dead during an alleged escape attempt.10
         The Florida Crimes Compensation Act
         The Florida Crimes Compensation Act11 authorizes the Florida Attorney General’s Division of
         Victim Services to administer a compensation program to ensure financial assistance for victims
         of crime. Injured victims of crime may file for compensation for financial assistance such as
         treatment costs, economic loss, disability, or loss of support.12
         Section 960.065, F.S., provides that the following persons are eligible for compensation under
         ch. 960, F.S.:
          A victim.
          An intervenor, defined as any person who goes to the aid of another and suffers bodily injury
             or death as a result of acting, not recklessly, to prevent the commission of a crime, to
             apprehehnd a person suspected of having committed a crime, or to the aid of a crime
             victim.13
          A surviving spouse, parent or guardian, sibling, or child of a deceased victim or intervenor.
          Any other person who is dependent for his or her principal support upon a deceased victim or
             intervenor.14
         The Department of Legal Affairs cannot award compensation pursuant ch. 960, F.S., unless it
         finds that a crime was committed and that it resulted in personal injury, psychiatric or
         psychological injury, or death to the victim or intervenor. Any award granted, must be granted on
         an “actual need” basis and may be based on myriad other factors—including, but not limited to,
         the claimant’s risk of serious financial hardship as a result of the injury, and other claimants’
         rights to compensation based on the same claim.15 An award is provided only after all benefits
         provided by primary insurance carriers, including, but not limited to, health and accident
         insurers, workers’ compensation, and automobile accident coverage.16 Payments under ch. 960,
         F.S., are considered payments “of last resort,” that follow all other payments.17
9
  Id.
10
   WPBF News, Investigation uncovers deaths of boys at Okeechobee Florida School for Boys (April 10, 2015), available at
https://www.wpbf.com/article/investigation-uncovers-deaths-of-boys-at-okeechobee-florida-school-for-boys/1325188# (Last
visited Mar. 30, 2023).
11
   Sections 960.01-960.28, F.S.
12
   Attorney General, Victim Compensation Brochure, available at:
http://myfloridalegal.com/webfiles.nsf/WF/MRAY8CVP5T/$file/BVCVictimCompensationBrochure.pdf (last visited Mar.
30, 2023).
13
   Section 963.03(9), F.S.
14
   Section 960.065(1), F.S.
15
   Section 960.13, F.S.
16
   Section 960.13(2), F.S.
17
   Section 960.13(3), F.S.
BILL:    SB 1046                                                                                          Page 4
           Claims will generally be denied if filed for, or on behalf of, a person who:
            Committed or aided in the commission of the crime upon which the claim for compensation
              was based;
            Was engaged in an unlawful activity at the time of the crime upon which the claim for
              compensation is based, unless the victim was engaged in prostitution as a result of being a
              victim of human trafficking;
            Was in custody or confined, regardless of conviction, in a county or municipal detention
              facility, a state or federal correctional facility, or a juvenile detention or commitment facility
              at the time of the crime upon which the compensation is based;
            Has been adjudicated as a habitual felony offender, habitual violent offender, or violent
              career criminal; or
            Has been adjudicated guilty of a forcible felony offense.18
           Claims filed by or on behalf of a person who was in custody or confined, who are adjudicated as
           a habitual felony offender or found guilty of a forcible felony may be eligible upon a finding by
           the Crime Victim’s Service Office of mitigating or special circumstances that would render a
           disqualification unjust.19
III.       Effect of Proposed Changes:
           The bill provides that this Act may be cited as the “Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and
           Okeechobee School Abuse Victim Certification Act.” The bill provides numerous whereas
           clauses detailing the schools’ histories of abuse, the investigations that followed, and the
           Legislature’s formal apology in 2017.
           Section 1 defines the term “victim of Florida reform school abuse” to mean a living person who
           was confined at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee School at any time
           between 1940 and 1975 and who was subjected to mental, physical, or sexual abuse perpetrated
           by school personnel during the period of confinement.
           Section 1 requires a person seeking to be certified as a victim of Florida reform school abuse to
           submit an application to the Department of State (DOS) by September 1, 2023. The estate,
           personal representative, next of kin, or lineal descendants may submit an application on behalf of
           the victim. The application must include:
            An affidavit stating:
               o That the applicant was confined at the Dozier School or the Okeechobee School;
               o The beginning and ending days of the confinement; and
               o That the applicant was subjected to mental, physical, or sexual abuse perpetrated by
                   school personnel during the confinement.
            Documentation from the State Archives of Florida, the Dozier School, or the Okeechobee
               School, demonstrating that the applicant was confined at the school for any length of time
               between 1940 and 1975; and
            Proof of identification, including a current form of photo ID.
18
     Section 960.065(2), F.S.
19
     Section 960.065(3), F.S.
BILL:   SB 1046                                                                                                        Page 5
         The bill requires the DOS to examine an application within 30 days of receipt and to notify the
         applicant of any errors or omissions or request any additional information relevant to the review
         of the application. If the DOS notifies the applicant of any errors or omissions, or requests
         additional information, the applicant has 15 days after such notification to complete or modify
         the application.
         The bill prohibits the DOS from denying an application due to the applicant’s failure to correct
         an error or submit additional information requested by the DOS if the DOS failed to timely
         notify the applicant of the error.
         The bill requires the DOS to notify the applicant of its determination within 5 business days after
         completing its processing and review. If the DOS determines that the applicant meets the
         requirement, the DOS must certify the applicant as a victim of Florida reform school abuse.
         The bill requires the DOS to review and process all the applications submitted before
         September 1, 2023, by December 31, 2023. The bill also requires the DOS to submit a list of all
         certified victims to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
         Section 2 authorizes a victim of Florida reform school abuse or an intervenor20 to file a claim for
         compensation under ch. 960, F.S. The claim must be based on a felony or misdemeanor offense
         committed by an adult or juvenile which results in a mental or physical injury or death. The
         mental injury must be verified by a psychologist, a physician who has completed a residency in
         psychiatry, or by a physician who has obtained certification as an expert witness.
         The bill makes a victim of Florida reform school abuse eligible to receive an award despite the
         victim having been confined in a juvenile detention facility at the time of victimization.
         The bill requires a victim of Florida reform school abuse or an intervenor to file a claim under
         ch. 960, F.S., within 1 year after the effective date of the bill, notwithstanding timeframes
         otherwise provided in s. 960.07.
         Section 3 provides that the act takes effect upon becoming a law.
IV.      Constitutional Issues:
         A.       Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions:
                  Not applicable. The mandate restrictions do not apply because the bill does not require
                  counties and municipalities to spend funds, reduce counties’ or municipalities’ ability to
                  raise revenue, or reduce the percentage of state tax shared with counties and
                  municipalities.
20
  “Intervenor” means any person who goes to the aid of another and suffers bodily injury or death as a direct result of acting,
not recklessly, to prevent the commission of a crime, to lawfully apprehend a person reasonably suspected of having
committed a crime, or to aid the victim of a crime. Section 960.03(9), F.S.
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         B.       Public Records/Open Meetings Issues:
                  None.
         C.       Trust Funds Restrictions:
                  None.
         D.       State Tax or Fee Increases:
                  None.
         E.       Other Constitutional Issues:
                  None identified.
 V.      Fiscal Impact Statement:
         A.       Tax/Fee Issues:
                  None.
         B.       Private Sector Impact:
                  None.
         C.       Government Sector Impact:
                  There will be indeterminate negative fiscal impact to both the DOS and the OAG. The
                  bill provides that the DOS is responsible for processing applications for persons seeking
                  to be certified as a victim of Florida reform school abuse. While it is unknown how many
                  persons will seek this certification, the bill indicates that there are over 500 people who
                  have come forward as victims. As such, there may be a negative fiscal impact on the
                  DOS due to the processing of applications.
                  Additionally, this bill will have a negative fiscal impact on the OAG for the additional
                  claims filed under ch. 960, F.S. The benefits for claims are payable from the Crimes
                  Compensation Trust Fund. While it is unknown how many applicants will file a claim,
                  lines the bill indicates on line 78 that there are over 500 people who have come forward
                  as victims.
VI.      Technical Deficiencies:
         None.
VII.     Related Issues:
         None.
 BILL:   SB 1046                                                                                                                        Page 7
VIII.     Statutes Affected:
          This bill creates an unnumbered section of law.
 IX.      Additional Information:
          A.       Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes:
                   (Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the p