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 Fiscal Policy
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24
INTRODUCER: Fiscal Policy Committee; Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee; and
Senator Rouson and others
SUBJECT: Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Victim Compensation Program
DATE: February 28, 2024 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Limones-Borja McVaney GO Fav/CS
2. Henderson Harkness ACJ Favorable
3. Limones-Borja Yeatman FP Fav/CS
Please see Section IX. for Additional Information:
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE - Substantial Changes
I. Summary:
CS/CS/SB 24 creates the “Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Victim
Compensation Program,” to compensate living persons who were confined to those schools.
The bill requires the Department of Legal Affairs (DLA) to accept, review, and approve or deny
applications for the payment of compensation claims under the bill. Applications for
compensation under this section must be submitted by December 31, 2024. An application must
be made by a living person who was confined to the Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee
School. The bill sets forth the requirements for the application. Once a person is compensated
under this bill, they are ineligible for any further compensation related to the person’s
confinement at the Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee School.
The bill authorizes the Commissioner of Education to award a standard high school diploma to a
person compensated under this program, if they have not completed high school graduation
requirements.
The bill appropriates $20 million in nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the
Department of Legal Affairs for the Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Victim
Compensation Program.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 2
This bill may have an indeterminate workload impact on the DLA associated with processing
applications for compensation under this bill.
This act takes effect July 1, 2024.
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 the law was
later amended to allow for children with minor offenses such as truancy to be committed.
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
1
David Built, Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys (Sep. 29, 2015), available at https://www.abandonedfl.com/arthur-g-dozier-
school-for-boys/ (last visited Feb. 1, 2024).
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 Feb. 1, 2024).
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 Feb. 1, 2024).
6
Id.
7
Id.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 3
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
(Okeechobee School), would administer corporal punishment himself.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
apprehend a person suspected of having committed a crime, or to aid 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 to 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
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 Feb. 1,
2024).
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 Feb. 1, 2024).
11
Sections 960.01-960.28, F.S.
12
Attorney General, Victim Compensation Brochure, available at:
https://www.myfloridalegal.com/files/pdf/page/8DE75D8DEA1F3B2285256CFD00744575/BVCVictimCompensationBroch
ure.pdf (last visited Feb. 1, 2024).
13
Section 963.03(9), F.S.
14
Section 960.065(1), F.S.
15
Section 960.13, F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 4
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
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:
Section 1 creates the Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Victim Compensation
Program (Program) within the Department of Legal Affairs (DLA). The purpose of the Program
is to compensate living persons who were confined to the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys or
the Okeechobee School at any time between 1940 and 1975 and were subjected to mental,
physical, or sexual abuse perpetrated by school personnel during the period of confinement.
Section 1 requires the DLA to accept, review, and approve or deny applications for the payment
of compensation claims under this section. An application for compensation must be signed by
the applicant under oath and be submitted by December 31, 2024. An application must be made
by a living person who was confined at the schools between 1940 and 1975, thus preventing a
personal representative or estate from receiving compensation. The application must include:
The applicant’s name, date of birth, mailing address, telephone number, and, if available,
electronic mail address;
The name of the school in which the applicant was confined and the approximate dates of the
applicant’s confinement;
Reasonable proof submitted as attachments establishing that the applicant was both:
o Confined to the Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee School between 1940 and
1975, which proof may include school records submitted with a notarized certificate of
authenticity signed by the records custodian or certified court records;
16
Section 960.13(2), F.S.
17
Section 960.13(3), F.S.
18
Section 960.065(2), F.S.
19
Section 960.065(3), F.S.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 5
o A victim of mental, physical, or sexual abuse perpetrated by school personnel during the
applicant’s confinement, which proof may include a notarized statement signed by the
applicant attesting to the abuse the applicant suffered;
A signed statement from the applicant acknowledging that, by accepting compensation under
this section, the applicant waives any right to further compensation related to the applicant’s
confinement at the Dozier School for Boys or the Okeechobee School or any abuse suffered
during such confinement.
An application for compensation under this section must be signed by the applicant under oath.
A false statement in such application, including in any attachment or exhibit submitted is subject
to the penalty of perjury under s. 837.012, F.S. Section 837. 12, F.S., provides that whoever
makes a false statement, which he or she does not believe to be true, under oath, not in an official
proceeding, in regard to any material matter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree.
The bill requires the DLA to maintain a page on its official website titled “The Dozier School for
Boys and Okeechobee School Victim Compensation Program.” The website must maintain any
relevant forms for the Program available for download. Once the DLA has completed review of
an application the DLA must:
Approve a one-time payment, subject to appropriation, to those whose applications meet the
criteria specified in this section;
Deny the payment of compensation under this section to an applicant whose application does
not meet the criteria specified in this section.
The bill specifies that each approved applicant shall receive an equal share of the funds
appropriated for this purpose.
The DLA is required to provide written notice of such approval or denial by certified mail with
return receipt requested to the mailing address provided by the applicant on the application form.
An applicant whose application is rejected for providing insufficient information may submit a
new application by December 31, 2024.
Section 1 prevents a person who receives compensation under this section to receive further
compensation related to the person’s confinement at the Dozier School for Boys or the
Okeechobee School or any abuse suffered during such confinement.
The bill provides the DLA with rule making authority to administer this Program.
Section 2 authorizes the Commissioner of Education to award a standard high school diploma to
a person compensated under this program, if they have not completed high school graduation
requirements.
Section 3 appropriates $20 million in nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the
Department of Legal Affairs for the Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee School Victim
Compensation Program.
Section 4 provides that the act takes effect July 1, 2024.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 6
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.
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. The bill directs the DLA to administer compensation to applicants if they meet the
criteria if funds are appropriated for that purpose.
C. Government Sector Impact:
There will be an indeterminate negative workload impact to the DLA. The bill provides
that the DLA is responsible for processing applications for persons seeking to be certified
as a victim of Florida reform school abuse. As such, there may be a negative workload
impact on the DLA due to the processing of applications.
The bill appropriates $20 million in nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue Fund
to the Department of Legal Affairs for the Dozier School for Boys and Okeechobee
School Victim Compensation Program.
BILL: CS/CS/SB 24 Page 7
VI. Technical Deficiencies:
None.
VII. Related Issues:
None.
VIII. Statutes Affected:
This bill creates section 16.63 of the Florida Statutes.
IX. Additional Information:
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Substantial Changes:
(S