CS for CS for SB 1296                            First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       20261296e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to the Public Employees Relations
    3         Commission; amending s. 110.227, F.S.; conforming
    4         final order requirements to ch. 120, F.S.; deleting a
    5         provision requiring exceptions to a recommended order
    6         to be filed within a specified timeframe; amending s.
    7         112.0455, F.S.; revising the timeframe in which an
    8         appeal hearing must be conducted; conforming final
    9         order requirements to ch. 120, F.S.; amending s.
   10         120.80, F.S.; providing applicability; amending s.
   11         295.14, F.S.; conforming final order requirements to
   12         ch. 120, F.S.; reordering and amending s. 447.203,
   13         F.S.; revising and defining terms; amending s.
   14         447.205, F.S.; revising the seal of the Public
   15         Employees Relations Commission; amending s. 447.207,
   16         F.S.; authorizing subpoenas to be served by certified
   17         mail, return receipt requested, or by personal
   18         service; revising requirements for proof of service;
   19         deleting the requirement that the commission adopt
   20         rules for the qualifications of persons who may serve
   21         as mediators; authorizing the commission, under
   22         certain circumstances, to waive the application of
   23         part II of ch. 447, F.S., rather than only specified
   24         provisions; amending s. 447.301, F.S.; revising
   25         requirements for an employee organization membership
   26         authorization form; requiring an employee
   27         organization, within a specified timeframe, to revoke
   28         the membership of and cease the collection of
   29         membership dues from a public employee; providing that
   30         a membership authorization form is valid if it meets
   31         certain requirements; revising applicability; amending
   32         s. 447.303, F.S.; conforming provisions to changes
   33         made by the act; amending s. 447.305, F.S.; revising
   34         application requirements for employee organization
   35         registration and renewal of registration; requiring an
   36         employee organization to provide an application for
   37         renewal of registration to certain persons within a
   38         specified timeframe; requiring a bargaining agent to
   39         provide a remedy for incomplete application
   40         information to the commission within a specified
   41         timeframe; requiring the commission to dismiss an
   42         application for renewal of registration under certain
   43         circumstances; requiring the commission to notify the
   44         bargaining agent when such application information is
   45         complete; requiring the bargaining agent to petition
   46         for recertification within a specified timeframe
   47         thereafter; requiring the commission or one of its
   48         designated agents to conduct an investigation if a
   49         challenge to an application for renewal of
   50         registration is filed; authorizing a designated agent
   51         of the commission to conduct an investigation to
   52         confirm validity of submitted information; exempting
   53         certain employee organizations from a specified
   54         requirement; requiring a registration fee for
   55         applications for registration and renewal of
   56         registration; requiring that certain employee
   57         organization accounts be open for inspection by any
   58         member of the organization or by the commission at a
   59         reasonable time and place; providing for the
   60         revocation of an employee organization’s certification
   61         under certain circumstances; providing that decisions
   62         issued by the commission in accordance with certain
   63         provisions are final agency actions; amending s.
   64         447.307, F.S.; revising requirements for the
   65         certification and recertification of an employee
   66         organization; requiring the commission to conduct
   67         elections by specified methods; specifying the
   68         criteria by which the commission determines the method
   69         and timing of elections; requiring the commission to
   70         conduct election by mail if requested by one of the
   71         parties; providing the timeframe for when an election
   72         by mail must be conducted; requiring the commission to
   73         provide notice of such election to certain parties
   74         within a specified timeframe; requiring an election
   75         conducted by mail ballot to include return envelopes
   76         with prepaid postage affixed, subject to
   77         appropriation; creating s. 447.3076, F.S.; providing
   78         that a petition to clarify the composition of a
   79         bargaining unit may be filed with the commission under
   80         certain circumstances; requiring that a copy of the
   81         petition be served on certain persons; requiring the
   82         public employer to provide a copy of the petition to
   83         certain affected employees within a specified
   84         timeframe; requiring that a petition be dismissed
   85         under certain circumstances; amending s. 447.308,
   86         F.S.; revising requirements for the decertification of
   87         an employee organization; requiring an election
   88         conducted by mail ballot to include return envelopes
   89         with prepaid postage affixed, subject to
   90         appropriation; amending s. 447.309, F.S.; requiring
   91         that certain agreements be returned to the bargaining
   92         agent, rather than the employee organization; amending
   93         s. 447.401, F.S.; conforming provisions to changes
   94         made by the act; amending s. 447.403, F.S.; specifying
   95         requirements for when an impasse occurs; requiring a
   96         hearing within a specified timeframe; authorizing the
   97         recommended decision of a special magistrate from an
   98         impasse hearing to be transmitted by any method of
   99         service agreed to by the parties which establishes
  100         proof of delivery; amending s. 447.405, F.S.;
  101         conforming provisions to changes made by the act;
  102         amending s. 447.4095, F.S.; providing that
  103         implementation of appropriations from the Legislature
  104         which are specifically directed to be disbursed as
  105         salaries for employees of local governments are
  106         considered a financial urgency; requiring the chief
  107         executive officer or his or her representative to meet
  108         with the bargaining agent or its representative within
  109         a specified timeframe if the use of such funds
  110         requires modification of an agreement; providing
  111         meeting and dispute requirements; prohibiting the
  112         filing of unfair labor charges during specified time
  113         periods; providing applicability; amending s. 447.501,
  114         F.S.; requiring a public employer to provide to all
  115         registered employee organizations or petitioning
  116         employees equal access to the employer’s facilities
  117         and communication systems for a specified time period;
  118         amending s. 447.503, F.S.; authorizing certain public
  119         employers, public employees, and employee
  120         organizations, or combinations thereof, to file
  121         certain charges with the commission; amending s.
  122         447.507, F.S.; increasing fines for certain
  123         violations; amending s. 447.509, F.S.; prohibiting
  124         public employers, their agents or representatives, and
  125         any persons acting on their behalf from taking certain
  126         actions; authorizing certain actions by public
  127         employees under certain circumstances; providing
  128         applicability; amending ss. 110.114, 110.205,
  129         112.3187, 121.031, 447.02, 447.609, and 1011.60, F.S.;
  130         conforming cross-references and provisions to changes
  131         made by the act; providing an effective date.
  132          
  133  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  134  
  135         Section 1. Paragraph (d) of subsection (6) of section
  136  110.227, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  137         110.227 Suspensions, dismissals, reductions in pay,
  138  demotions, layoffs, transfers, and grievances.—
  139         (6) The following procedures shall apply to appeals filed
  140  pursuant to subsection (5) with the Public Employees Relations
  141  Commission, hereinafter referred to as the commission:
  142         (d) A recommended order must shall be issued by the hearing
  143  officer within 30 days after following the hearing. Exceptions
  144  to the recommended order shall be filed within 15 days after the
  145  recommended order is issued. The final order must be issued
  146  shall be filed by the commission in accordance with ss. 120.569
  147  and 120.57 no later than 45 calendar days after the hearing or
  148  after the filing of exceptions or oral arguments if granted.
  149         Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (14) of section
  150  112.0455, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  151         112.0455 Drug-Free Workplace Act.—
  152         (14) DISCIPLINE REMEDIES.—
  153         (a) An executive branch employee who is disciplined or who
  154  is a job applicant for another position and is not hired
  155  pursuant to this section, may file an appeal with the Public
  156  Employees Relations Commission. Any appeal must be filed within
  157  30 calendar days after of receipt by the employee or job
  158  applicant of notice of discipline or refusal to hire. The notice
  159  shall inform the employee or job applicant of the right to file
  160  an appeal, or if available, the right to file a collective
  161  bargaining grievance pursuant to s. 447.401. Such appeals shall
  162  be resolved pursuant to the procedures established in ss.
  163  447.207(1)-(4), 447.208(2), and 447.503(4) and (5). A hearing on
  164  the appeal must shall be conducted within 60 30 days after of
  165  the filing of the appeal, unless an extension is requested by
  166  the employee or job applicant and granted by the commission or
  167  an arbitrator. The final order must be issued by the commission
  168  in accordance with ss. 120.569 and 120.57.
  169         Section 3. Paragraph (c) is added to subsection (12) of
  170  section 120.80, Florida Statutes, to read:
  171         120.80 Exceptions and special requirements; agencies.—
  172         (12) PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION.—
  173         (c)Section 120.60 does not apply to registration of
  174  employee organizations under s. 447.305.
  175         Section 4. Subsection (1) of section 295.14, Florida
  176  Statutes, is amended to read:
  177         295.14 Penalties.—
  178         (1) When the Public Employees Relations Commission, after a
  179  hearing on notice conducted according to rules adopted by the
  180  commission, determines that a violation of s. 295.07, s. 295.08,
  181  s. 295.085, or s. 295.09(1)(a) or (b) has occurred and sustains
  182  the veteran seeking redress, the commission shall order the
  183  offending agency, employee, or officer of the state to comply
  184  with the provisions of s. 295.07, s. 295.08, s. 295.085, or s.
  185  295.09(1)(a) or (b); and, in the event of a violation of s.
  186  295.07, s. 295.08, s. 295.085, or s. 295.09(1)(a) or (b), the
  187  commission may issue an order to compensate the veteran for the
  188  loss of any wages and reasonable attorney attorney’s fees for
  189  actual hours worked, and costs of all work, including
  190  litigation, incurred as a result of such violation, which order
  191  shall be conclusive on the agency, employee, or officer
  192  concerned. The attorney attorney’s fees and costs may not exceed
  193  $10,000. The final order must be issued by action of the
  194  commission in accordance with ss. 120.569 and 120.57 shall be in
  195  writing and shall be served on the parties concerned by
  196  certified mail with return receipt requested.
  197         Section 5. Section 447.203, Florida Statutes, is reordered
  198  and amended to read:
  199         447.203 Definitions.—As used in this part:
  200         (6)(1) “Commission” means the Public Employees Relations
  201  Commission created by s. 447.205.
  202         (17)(2) “Public employer” or “employer” means the state or
  203  any county, municipality, or special district or any subdivision
  204  or agency thereof which the commission determines has sufficient
  205  legal distinctiveness properly to carry out the functions of a
  206  public employer. With respect to all public employees determined
  207  by the commission as properly belonging to a statewide
  208  bargaining unit composed of State Career Service System
  209  employees or Selected Professional Service employees, the
  210  Governor is deemed to be the public employer; and the Board of
  211  Governors of the State University System, or the board’s
  212  designee, is deemed to be the public employer with respect to
  213  all public employees of each constituent state university. The
  214  board of trustees of a community college is deemed to be the
  215  public employer with respect to all employees of the community
  216  college. The district school board is deemed to be the public
  217  employer with respect to all employees of the school district.
  218  The Board of Trustees of the Florida School for the Deaf and the
  219  Blind is deemed to be the public employer with respect to the
  220  academic and academic administrative personnel of the Florida
  221  School for the Deaf and the Blind. The Governor is deemed to be
  222  the public employer with respect to all employees in the
  223  Correctional Education Program of the Department of Corrections
  224  established pursuant to s. 944.801.
  225         (16)(3) “Public employee” means any person employed by a
  226  public employer except:
  227         (a) Those persons appointed by the Governor or elected by
  228  the people, agency heads, and members of boards and commissions.
  229         (b) Those persons holding positions by appointment or
  230  employment in the organized militia.
  231         (c) Those individuals acting as negotiating representatives
  232  for employer authorities.
  233         (d) Those persons who are designated by the commission as
  234  managerial or confidential employees pursuant to criteria
  235  contained herein.
  236         (e) Those persons holding positions of employment with the
  237  Florida Legislature.
  238         (f) Those persons who have been convicted of a crime and
  239  are inmates confined to institutions within the state.
  240         (g) Those persons appointed to inspection positions in
  241  federal/state fruit and vegetable inspection service whose
  242  conditions of appointment are affected by the following:
  243         1. Federal license requirement.
  244         2. Federal autonomy regarding investigation and
  245  disciplining of appointees.
  246         3. Frequent transfers due to harvesting conditions.
  247         (h) Those persons employed by the Public Employees
  248  Relations Commission.
  249         (i) Those persons enrolled as undergraduate students in a
  250  state university who perform part-time work for the state
  251  university.
  252         (12)(4) “Managerial employees” means are those employees
  253  who:
  254         (a) Perform jobs that are not of a routine, clerical, or
  255  ministerial nature and require the exercise of independent
  256  judgment in the performance of such jobs and to whom one or more
  257  of the following applies:
  258         1. They formulate or assist in formulating policies which
  259  are applicable to bargaining unit employees.
  260         2. They may reasonably be required on behalf of the
  261  employer to assist in the preparation for the conduct of
  262  collective bargaining negotiations.
  263         3. They have a role in the administration of agreements
  264  resulting from collective bargaining negotiations.
  265         4. They have a significant role in personnel
  266  administration.
  267         5. They have a significant role in employee relations.
  268         6. They are included in the definition of administrative
  269  personnel contained in s. 1012.01(3).
  270         7. They have a significant role in the preparation or
  271  administration of budgets for any public agency or institution
  272  or subdivision thereof.
  273         (b) Serve as police chiefs, fire chiefs, or directors of
  274  public safety of any police, fire, or public safety department.
  275  Other police officers, as defined in s. 943.10(1), and
  276  firefighters, as defined in s. 633.102, may be determined by the
  277  commission to be managerial employees of such departments. In
  278  making such determinations, the commission shall consider, in
  279  addition to the criteria established in paragraph (a), the
  280  paramilitary organizational structure of the department
  281  involved.
  282  
  283  However, in determining whether an individual is a managerial
  284  employee pursuant to paragraph (a) or paragraph (b), above, the
  285  commission may consider historic relationships of the employee
  286  to the public employer and to coemployees.
  287         (7)(5) “Confidential employees” means are persons who act
  288  in a confidential capacity to assist or aid managerial employees
  289  as defined in subsection (12) (4).
  290         (21)(6) “Strike” means the concerted failure of employees
  291  to report for duty; the concerted absence of employees from
  292  their positions; the concerted stoppage of work by employees;
  293  the concerted submission of resignations by employees; the
  294  concerted abstinence in whole or in part by any group of
  295  employees from the full and faithful performance of the duties
  296  of employment with a public employer for the purpose of
  297  inducing, influencing, condoning, or coercing a change in the
  298  terms and conditions of employment or the rights, privileges, or
  299  obligations of public employment, or participating in a
  300  deliberate and concerted course of conduct which adversely
  301  affects the services of the public employer; the concerted
  302  failure of employees to report for work after the expiration of
  303  a collective bargaining agreement; and picketing in furtherance
  304  of a work stoppage. The term includes “strike” shall also mean
  305  any overt preparation, including, but not limited to, the
  306  establishment of strike funds with regard to the above-listed
  307  activities listed in this subsection.
  308         (22)(7) “Strike funds” means are any appropriations by an
  309  employee organization which are established to directly or
  310  indirectly aid any employee or employee organization to
  311  participate in a strike in the state.
  312         (2)(8) “Bargaining unit” means either that unit determined
  313  by the commission, that unit determined through local
  314  regulations adopted promulgated pursuant to s. 447.603, or that
  315  unit determined by the public employer and the public employee
  316  organization and approved by the commission to be appropriate
  317  for the purposes of collective bargaining. However, no
  318  bargaining unit shall be defined as appropriate which includes
  319  employees of two employers that are not departments or divisions
  320  of the state, a county, a municipality, or other political
  321  entity.
  322         (3)(9) “Chief executive officer” for the state means shall
  323  mean the Governor and for other public employers means shall
  324  mean the person, whether elected or appointed, who is
  325  responsible to the legislative body of the public employer for
  326  the administration of the governmental affairs of the public
  327  employer.
  328         (11)(10) “Legislative body” means the State Legislature,
  329  the board of county commissioners, the district school board,
  330  the governing body of a municipality, or the governing body of
  331  an instrumentality or unit of government having authority to
  332  appropriate funds and establish policy governing the terms and
  333  conditions of employment and which, as the case may be, is the
  334  appropriate legislative body for the bargaining unit. For
  335  purposes of s. 447.403, the Board of Governors of the State
  336  University System, or the board’s designee, shall be deemed to
  337  be the legislative body with respect to all employees of each
  338  constituent state university. For purposes of s. 447.403, the
  339  board of trustees of a community college shall be deemed to be
  340  the legislative body with respect to all employees of the
  341  community college.
  342         (8)(11) “Employee organization” or “organization” means any
  343  labor organization, union, association, fraternal order,
  344  occupational or professional society, or group, however
  345  organized or constituted, which represents, or seeks to
  346  represent, any public employee or group of public employees
  347  concerning any matters relating to their employment relationship
  348  with a public employer.
  349         (9)“Employee organization activities” means activities
  350  undertaken at the direction of, on behalf of, or to advance the
  351  purposes of an employee organization or any parent organization
  352  or affiliate of the employee organization by doing any of the
  353  following:
  354         (a)Supporting or opposing a candidate for federal, state,
  355  or local public office.
  356         (b)Influencing the passage or defeat of any federal or
  357  state legislation or regulation, local ordinance or resolution,
  358  or ballot measure.
  359         (c)Promoting or soliciting membership or participation in,
  360  or financial support of, an employee organization or any parent
  361  organization or affiliate of the employee organization.
  362         (d)Seeking certification as a bargaining agent.
  363         (e)Participating in the administration, business, or
  364  internal governance of an employee organization or any parent
  365  organization or affiliate of the employee organization.
  366         (f)Preparing, conducting, or attending employee
  367  organization events, conferences, conventions, meetings, or
  368  trainings, unless such training is directly related to the
  369  performance of a public employee’s job duties.
  370         (g)Distributing communications of an employee organization
  371  or any parent organization or affiliate of the employee
  372  organization.
  373         (h)Representing or speaking on behalf of an employee
  374  organization or any parent organization or affiliate of the
  375  employee organization in any setting, venue, or procedure in
  376  which the public employer is not a participant.
  377         (i)Preparing, filing, or pursuing unfair labor practice
  378  charges or grievances.
  379         (j)Representing public employees in investigatory
  380  interviews; disciplinary proceedings or appeals, including
  381  termination; or other administrative or legal proceedings.
  382         (k)Engaging in collective bargaining and any related
  383  mediation, factfinding, or arbitration.
  384         (l)Administering a collective bargaining agreement.
  385         (m)Participating in labor-management committees.
  386         (1)(12) “Bargaining agent” means the employee organization
  387  that which has been certified by the commission as representing
  388  the employees in the bargaining unit, as provided in s. 447.307,
  389  or its representative.
  390         (13)“Membership dues” means any amount a member is
  391  required to pay in exchange for membership in an employee
  392  organization, including, but not limited to, employee
  393  organization dues; uniform assessments; or fees, including
  394  initiation fees.
  395         (15)(13) “Professional employee” means:
  396         (a) Any employee engaged in work in any two or more of the
  397  following categories:
  398         1. Work predominantly intellectual and varied in character
  399  as opposed to routine mental, manual, mechanical, or physical
  400  work.;
  401         2. Work involving the consistent exercise of discretion and
  402  judgment in its performance.;
  403         3. Work of such a character that the output produced or the
  404  result accomplished cannot be standardized in relation to a
  405  given period of time.; and
  406         4. Work requiring advanced knowledge in a field of science
  407  or learning customarily acquired by a prolonged course of
  408  specialized intellectual instruction and study in an institution
  409  of higher learning or a hospital, as distinguished from a
  410  general academic education, an apprenticeship, or training in
  411  the performance of routine mental or physical processes.
  412         (b) Any employee who:
  413         1. Has completed the course of specialized intellectual
  414  instruction and study described in subparagraph (a)4. 4. of
  415  paragraph (a); and
  416         2. Is performing related work under supervision of a
  417  professional person to qualify to become a professional employee
  418  as defined in paragraph (a).
  419         (5)(14) “Collective bargaining” means the performance of
  420  the mutual obligations of the public employer and the bargaining
  421  agent of the employee organization to meet at reasonable times,
  422  to negotiate in good faith, and to execute a written contract
  423  with respect to agreements reached concerning the terms and
  424  conditions of employment, except that neither party shall be
  425  compelled to agree to a proposal or be required to make a
  426  concession unless otherwise provided in this part.
  427         (14)(15) “Membership dues deduction” means the practice by
  428  of a public employer of deducting membership dues and uniform
  429  assessments from the salary or wages of a public employee and.
  430  Such term also means the practice of a public employer of
  431  transmitting the sums so deducted to an such employee
  432  organization on behalf of the public employee.
  433         (4)(16) “Civil service” means any career, civil, or merit
  434  system used by any public employer.
  435         (10)(17) “Good faith bargaining” means shall mean, but is
  436  not be limited to, the willingness of both parties to meet at
  437  reasonable times and places, as mutually agreed upon, in order
  438  to discuss issues that which are proper subjects of bargaining,
  439  with the intent of reaching a common accord. The term includes
  440  It shall include an obligation for both parties to participate
  441  actively in the negotiations with an open mind and a sincere
  442  desire, as well as making a sincere effort, to resolve
  443  differences and come to an agreement. In determining whether a
  444  party failed to bargain in good faith, the commission shall
  445  consider the total conduct of the parties during negotiations as
  446  well as the specific incidents of alleged bad faith. Incidents
  447  indicative of bad faith shall include, but not be limited to,
  448  the following occurrences:
  449         (a) Failure to meet at reasonable times and places with
  450  representatives of the other party for the purpose of
  451  negotiations.
  452         (b) Placing unreasonable restrictions on the other party as
  453  a prerequisite to meeting.
  454         (c) Failure to discuss proper subjects of bargaining
  455  bargainable issues.
  456         (d) Refusing, upon reasonable written request, to provide
  457  public information, excluding work products as defined in s.
  458  447.605.
  459         (e) Refusing to negotiate because of an unwanted person on
  460  the opposing negotiating team.
  461         (f) Negotiating directly with employees rather than with
  462  their certified bargaining agent.
  463         (g) Refusing to reduce a total agreement to writing.
  464         (18)“Public safety unit” means a bargaining unit in which
  465  the majority of the public employees are employed as a law
  466  enforcement officer, correctional officer, or correctional
  467  probation officer, as those terms are defined in s. 943.10(1),
  468  (2), or (3), respectively; a firefighter as defined in s.
  469  633.102(9); a 911 public safety telecommunicator as defined in
  470  s. 401.465(1); or an emergency medical technician or a
  471  paramedic, as those terms are defined in s. 401.23.
  472         (19)“Representational employee organization activities”
  473  means those activities specified in paragraphs (9)(i)-(m).
  474         (20)“Showing of interest” means written statements signed
  475  and dated by public employees in a proposed or existing
  476  bargaining unit indicating the desire of the public employees
  477  either to be represented by the employee organization for
  478  purposes of collective bargaining or to no longer be represented
  479  by the bargaining agent for purposes of collective bargaining.
  480         (23)(18) “Student representative” means the representative
  481  selected by each community college or university student
  482  government association. Each representative may be present at
  483  all negotiating sessions that take place between the appropriate
  484  public employer and a an exclusive bargaining agent. The
  485  representative must be enrolled as a student with at least 8
  486  credit hours in the respective community college or university
  487  during his or her term as student representative.
  488         Section 6. Subsection (8) of section 447.205, Florida
  489  Statutes, is amended to read:
  490         447.205 Public Employees Relations Commission.—
  491         (8) The commission shall have a seal for authentication of
  492  its orders and proceedings, upon which shall be inscribed the
  493  words “State of Florida-Public Employees Relations Commission”
  494  “State of Florida—Employees Relations Commission—and which shall
  495  be judicially noticed.
  496         Section 7. Subsections (4), (5), (6), and (12) of section
  497  447.207, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  498         447.207 Commission; powers and duties.—
  499         (4) Any subpoena, notice of hearing, or other process or
  500  notice of the commission issued under the provisions of this
  501  part must either shall be served personally or by certified
  502  mail, return receipt requested, or be served personally by any
  503  person specified by law to serve process or by any person who is
  504  not a party and who is 18 years of age or older. When certified
  505  mail is used, a returned post office receipt constitutes proof
  506  of service. When personal service is used, if the subpoena is
  507  not served by a person specified by law to serve process, an
  508  affidavit of the person making service constitutes proof of
  509  service. A return made and verified by the individual making
  510  such service and setting forth the manner of such service is
  511  proof of service, and a returned post office receipt, when
  512  certified mail is used, is proof of service. All process of any
  513  court to which application may be made under the provisions of
  514  this part shall be served in the county wherein the persons
  515  required to be served reside or may be found.
  516         (5) The commission shall adopt rules as to the
  517  qualifications of persons who may serve as mediators and special
  518  magistrates and shall maintain a list lists of such qualified
  519  persons who are not employees of the commission. The commission
  520  may initiate dispute resolution procedures by special
  521  magistrates, pursuant to the provisions of this part.
  522         (6) Pursuant to its established procedures, the commission
  523  shall resolve questions and controversies concerning claims for
  524  recognition as the bargaining agent for a bargaining unit,
  525  determine or approve units appropriate for purposes of
  526  collective bargaining, expeditiously process charges of unfair
  527  labor practices and violations of s. 447.505 by public
  528  employees, and resolve such other questions and controversies as
  529  it may be authorized herein to undertake. The petitioner,
  530  charging party, respondent, and any intervenors shall be the
  531  adversary parties before the commission in any adjudicatory
  532  proceeding conducted pursuant to this part. Any commission
  533  statement of general applicability that implements, interprets,
  534  or prescribes law or policy, made in the course of adjudicating
  535  a case pursuant to s. 447.307 or s. 447.503 does shall not
  536  constitute a rule within the meaning of s. 120.52.
  537         (12) Upon a petition by a public employer after it has been
  538  notified by the Department of Labor that the public employer’s
  539  protective arrangement covering mass transit employees does not
  540  meet the requirements of 49 U.S.C. s. 5333(b) and would
  541  jeopardize the public employer’s continued eligibility to
  542  receive Federal Transit Administration funding, the commission
  543  may waive the application of this part, but only to the extent
  544  necessary for the public employer to comply with the
  545  requirements of 49 U.S.C. s. 5333(b), any of the following for
  546  an employee organization that has been certified as a bargaining
  547  agent to represent mass transit employees:
  548         (a)The prohibition on dues and assessment deductions
  549  provided in s. 447.303(1) as it applies to a mass transit
  550  employee who has provided a copy of his or her membership
  551  authorization form to the employer as part of the authorization
  552  of dues deduction under a waiver.
  553         (b)The requirement to petition the commission for
  554  recertification.
  555         (c)The revocation of certification provided in s.
  556  447.305(6) and (7).
  557         Section 8. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) and subsection
  558  (2) of section 447.301, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  559         447.301 Public employees’ rights; organization and
  560  representation.—
  561         (1)
  562         (b)1. A public employee who desires to be a member of an
  563  employee organization must sign and date a membership
  564  authorization form, as prescribed by the commission, and submit
  565  the executed form to the bargaining agent.
  566         2. The membership authorization form must identify the name
  567  of the bargaining agent; the name of the employee; the class
  568  code and class title of the employee; the name of the public
  569  employer and employing agency, if applicable; the amount of the
  570  membership initiation fee and of the monthly dues which the
  571  public employee member must pay; and the names name and amounts
  572  total amount of salary, allowances, and other direct or indirect
  573  disbursements, including reimbursements, paid to each of the
  574  five highest compensated officers and employees of the employee
  575  organization disclosed under s. 447.305(2)(d) for the officers
  576  and employees receiving the five highest total dollar amounts.
  577         3. The membership authorization form must contain the
  578  following statement in 14-point type:
  579  
  580         As a public employee in the State of Florida, is a
  581         right-to-work state. membership or nonmembership non
  582         membership in a labor union is not required as a
  583         condition of employment., and Union membership and
  584         payment of membership union dues and assessments are
  585         voluntary. A public employee’s Each person has the
  586         right to join and pay membership dues to a labor union
  587         or to refrain from joining and paying membership dues
  588         to a labor union is protected by both Florida’s right
  589         to-work law and the First Amendment of the United
  590         States Constitution. A public employer may not
  591         discriminate against a public No employee may be
  592         discriminated against in any manner for joining and
  593         financially supporting, a labor union or for refusing
  594         to join and or financially support, a labor union.
  595  
  596         4. A public employee may revoke membership in the employee
  597  organization at any time of the year. Within 30 days after Upon
  598  receipt of the public employee’s written revocation of
  599  membership, the employee organization must revoke the a public
  600  employee’s membership and cease collection of membership dues
  601  for such public employee. The employee organization may not
  602  limit a public an employee’s right to revoke membership to
  603  certain dates. If a public employee must complete a form to
  604  revoke membership in the employee organization, the form may not
  605  require a reason for the public employee’s decision to revoke
  606  his or her membership.
  607         5. An employee organization must retain for inspection by
  608  the commission such membership authorization forms and any
  609  revocations. A membership authorization form is valid if it
  610  meets the requirements in law at the time it was signed by the
  611  employee and if the employee’s membership has not been
  612  subsequently revoked.
  613         6. This paragraph does not apply to public employees in
  614  public safety units members of a bargaining unit the majority of
  615  whose employees eligible for representation are employed as law
  616  enforcement officers, correctional officers, or correctional
  617  probation officers as those terms are defined in s. 943.10(1),
  618  (2), or (3), respectively; firefighters as defined in s.
  619  633.102; 911 public safety telecommunicators as defined in s.
  620  401.465(1)(a); or emergency medical technicians or paramedics as
  621  defined in s. 401.23.
  622         7. The commission may adopt rules to implement this
  623  paragraph.
  624         (2) Public employees shall have the right to be represented
  625  by any employee organization of their own choosing and to
  626  negotiate collectively, through a certified bargaining agent,
  627  with their public employer in the determination of the terms and
  628  conditions of their employment. Public employees shall have the
  629  right to be represented in the determination of grievances on
  630  all terms and conditions of their employment. Public employees
  631  shall have the right to refrain from exercising the right to be
  632  represented.
  633         Section 9. Section 447.303, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  634  read:
  635         447.303 Membership dues; deduction and collection.—
  636         (1) Except as authorized in subsection (2) or subject to a
  637  waiver of the prohibition on membership dues deduction granted
  638  pursuant to s. 447.207(12), a public employer may not engage in
  639  membership dues deduction on behalf of s. 447.207(12)(a), an
  640  employee organization that has been certified as a bargaining
  641  agent may not have its dues and uniform assessments deducted and
  642  collected by the employer from the salaries of those employees
  643  in the unit. A public employee may pay membership dues and
  644  uniform assessments directly to the employee organization, any
  645  parent organization of the employee organization, or any
  646  affiliate of either the employee organization or the parent
  647  organization that has been certified as the bargaining agent.
  648         (2)(a) Upon the written authorization of a public employee
  649  in a public safety unit, the public employer must engage in
  650  membership dues deduction for such public employee. A public
  651  employee may revoke his or her authorization for membership dues
  652  deduction upon providing 30 days’ written notice to the public
  653  employer and bargaining agent An employee organization that has
  654  been certified as a bargaining agent to represent a bargaining
  655  unit the majority of whose employees eligible for representation
  656  are employed as law enforcement officers, correctional officers,
  657  or correctional probation officers as those terms are defined in
  658  s. 943.10(1), (2), or (3), respectively; firefighters as defined
  659  in s. 633.102; 911 public safety telecommunicators as defined in
  660  s. 401.465(1)(a); or emergency medical technicians or paramedics
  661  as defined in s. 401.23 has the right to have its dues and
  662  uniform assessments for that bargaining unit deducted and
  663  collected by the employer from the salaries of those employees
  664  who authorize the deduction and collection of said dues and
  665  uniform assessments. However, such authorization is revocable at
  666  the employee’s request upon 30 days’ written notice to the
  667  employer and employee organization. Said deductions shall
  668  commence upon the bargaining agent’s written request to the
  669  employer.
  670         (b) Reasonable costs to the public employer of engaging in
  671  membership dues said deductions is a proper subject of
  672  collective bargaining.
  673         (c) The requirement to engage in membership dues deductions
  674  Such right to deduction, unless revoked under s. 447.507, is in
  675  force as for so long as the employee organization remains the
  676  certified bargaining agent remains certified to represent for
  677  the public employees in the bargaining unit.
  678         (3) The public employer is expressly prohibited from any
  679  involvement in the collection of fines, penalties, or special
  680  assessments.
  681         Section 10. Section 447.305, Florida Statutes, is amended
  682  to read:
  683         447.305 Registration of employee organizations
  684  organization.—
  685         (1) Every employee organization seeking to become a
  686  certified bargaining agent for public employees shall register
  687  with the commission before pursuant to the procedures set forth
  688  in s. 120.60 prior to requesting recognition by a public
  689  employer for purposes of collective bargaining and prior to
  690  submitting a certification, recertification, or unit
  691  clarification petition to the commission requesting
  692  certification as an exclusive bargaining agent. Further, If an
  693  such employee organization is not registered, it may not
  694  participate in a certification, recertification, or unit
  695  clarification representation hearing;, participate in a
  696  certification or recertification representation election;, or be
  697  certified as a an exclusive bargaining agent. The application
  698  for registration required by this section must shall be under
  699  oath and in such form as the commission may prescribe, and must
  700  shall include all of the following:
  701         (a) The name and address of the organization and of any
  702  parent organization or affiliate of the employee organization
  703  with which it is affiliated.
  704         (b) The names and addresses of the principal officers and
  705  all representatives of the organization.
  706         (c) The amount of the initiation fee and the amount and
  707  collection frequency of the membership dues and uniform
  708  assessments that a member of the organization must pay.
  709         (d) The current annual financial statement of the
  710  organization, prepared by an independent certified public
  711  accountant licensed under chapter 473.
  712         (e) The name of its business agent, if any; if different
  713  from the business agent, the name of its local agent for service
  714  of process; and the addresses where such person or persons can
  715  be reached.
  716         (f) A pledge, in a form prescribed by the commission, that
  717  the employee organization will conform to the laws of this the
  718  state and that it will accept members without regard to age,
  719  race, sex, religion, or national origin.
  720         (g) A copy of the current constitution and bylaws of the
  721  employee organization.
  722         (h) A copy of the current constitution and bylaws of the
  723  state and national groups with which the employee organization
  724  is affiliated or associated. In lieu of this provision, and upon
  725  adoption of a rule by the commission, a state or national
  726  affiliate or parent organization of any registering employee
  727  labor organization may annually submit a copy of its current
  728  constitution and bylaws.
  729         (2) A registration granted to an employee organization
  730  pursuant to this section runs for 1 year after from the date of
  731  issuance. A registration must be renewed annually by filing an
  732  application for renewal under oath with the commission, which
  733  application must reflect any changes in the information provided
  734  to the commission in conjunction with the employee
  735  organization’s preceding application for registration or
  736  previous renewal, whichever is applicable. Each application for
  737  renewal of registration must include a current annual financial
  738  statement, prepared by an independent certified public
  739  accountant licensed under chapter 473 and signed by the employee
  740  organization’s president and treasurer or corresponding
  741  principal officers, containing the following information in such
  742  detail as may be necessary to accurately to disclose its
  743  financial condition and operations for its preceding fiscal year
  744  and in all of the following such categories as prescribed by the
  745  commission may prescribe:
  746         (a) Assets and liabilities at the beginning and end of the
  747  fiscal year.;
  748         (b) Receipts of any kind and the sources thereof.;
  749         (c) Disbursements by category.;
  750         (d) Salary, wages, fringe benefits, allowances, and other
  751  direct or indirect disbursements, including reimbursed expenses,
  752  paid or accruing to each of its officers officer and also to
  753  each of its employees employee who, during such fiscal year,
  754  received more than $10,000 in the aggregate from such employee
  755  organization and any parent organization of the other employee
  756  organization or any affiliate of either the employee
  757  organization or the parent organization. This paragraph requires
  758  reporting of any reimbursements paid by the employee
  759  organization to a public employer for moneys paid by the public
  760  employer to the employee organization’s officers or employees.
  761  affiliated with it or with which it is affiliated or which is
  762  affiliated with the same national or international employee
  763  organization;
  764         (e) Direct and indirect loans made to any of its officers
  765  officer, employees employee, or members member which aggregated
  766  more than $250 during the fiscal year, together with a statement
  767  of the purpose, security, if any, and arrangements for
  768  repayment.; and
  769         (f) Direct and indirect loans to any business enterprise,
  770  together with a statement of the purpose, security, if any, and
  771  arrangements for repayment.
  772         (g)The amount of membership dues retained by or
  773  distributed to the employee organization, any parent
  774  organization of the employee organization, and any affiliate of
  775  either the employee organization or the parent organization.
  776         (3) As part of its application for renewal of registration,
  777  a In addition to subsection (2), an employee organization that
  778  has been certified as the bargaining agent for public employees
  779  must include all of for each such certified bargaining unit the
  780  following information and documentation as of the 30th day
  781  immediately preceding the date upon which its current
  782  registration is scheduled to end for any renewal of registration
  783  on or after October 1, 2023:
  784         (a)For each bargaining unit for which the bargaining agent
  785  is certified, the certification number assigned to the
  786  bargaining unit by the commission.
  787         (b)(a)For each certification, the number of public
  788  employees in the bargaining unit who are eligible for
  789  representation by the employee organization.
  790         (c)For each certification, the number of public employees
  791  in the bargaining unit who paid full membership dues sufficient
  792  to maintain membership in good standing in the bargaining agent.
  793         (d)(b)For each certification, the number of public
  794  employees in the bargaining unit who have submitted signed
  795  membership authorization forms without a subsequent revocation
  796  of such membership.
  797         (c)The number of employees in the bargaining unit who paid
  798  dues to the employee organization.
  799         (d)The number of employees in the bargaining unit who did
  800  not pay dues to the employee organization.
  801         (e) An agreed-upon procedures report performed
  802  Documentation provided by an independent certified public
  803  accountant retained by the employee organization which verifies
  804  to assist in determining the accuracy of the information
  805  provided in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) (a)-(d). The agreed
  806  upon procedures must be conducted in accordance with attestation
  807  standards established by the American Institute of Certified
  808  Public Accountants.
  809         (4) Within 30 days after filing an application for renewal
  810  of registration with the commission, the employee organization
  811  must provide a copy of its application for renewal of
  812  registration relating to a public employer’s employees to the
  813  public employer and public employees of each bargaining unit for
  814  which the employee organization is the bargaining agent on the
  815  same day the application is submitted to the commission.
  816         (5) An application for renewal of registration is
  817  incomplete and is not eligible for consideration by The
  818  commission must notify the bargaining agent if it does not
  819  include all of the information and documentation required in
  820  subsection (3) is incomplete. The bargaining agent must provide
  821  the missing information to the commission within 30 days after
  822  such notification. If the bargaining agent fails to provide the
  823  missing information within 30 days after notification, the
  824  commission must dismiss the application The commission shall
  825  notify the employee organization if the application is
  826  incomplete. An incomplete application must be dismissed if the
  827  required information and documentation are not provided within
  828  10 days after the employee organization receives such notice.
  829         (6) The commission must notify the bargaining agent when
  830  the information required in subsection (3) is complete. Within
  831  30 days after such notification, the bargaining agent must
  832  petition for recertification pursuant to s. 447.307 for each of
  833  its bargaining units Notwithstanding the provisions of this
  834  chapter relating to collective bargaining, an employee
  835  organization certified as a bargaining agent to represent a
  836  bargaining unit for which less than 60 percent of the public
  837  unit employees in the bargaining unit have submitted membership
  838  authorization forms without subsequent revocation and paid
  839  membership dues to the organization, as reported under
  840  subsection (3) during its last registration period must petition
  841  the commission pursuant to s. 447.307(2) and (3) for
  842  recertification as the exclusive representative of all employees
  843  in the bargaining unit within 30 days after the date on which
  844  the employee organization applies for renewal of registration
  845  pursuant to subsection (2). The certification of an employee
  846  organization that does not comply with this section is revoked.
  847         (7) If the public employer or a public employee of a
  848  bargaining unit represented by a bargaining agent believes that
  849  the bargaining agent’s employee may challenge an employee
  850  organization’s application for renewal of registration is
  851  materially inaccurate, if the public employer or public
  852  bargaining unit employee may challenge believes that the
  853  application as materially is inaccurate during the pendency of
  854  the application or, if the registration renewal has been
  855  granted, before the date upon which the bargaining agent’s
  856  current registration is scheduled to end. If a challenge is
  857  filed, the commission or one of its designated agents must
  858  conduct an investigation pursuant to subsection (8) shall review
  859  the application to determine its accuracy and compliance with
  860  this section. If the commission finds that the application is
  861  inaccurate or does not comply with this section, the commission
  862  shall revoke the registration and certification of the employee
  863  organization.
  864         (8) The commission or one of its designated agents may
  865  conduct an investigation to confirm the validity of any
  866  information submitted pursuant to this section. The commission
  867  may revoke or deny an employee organization’s registration or
  868  certification if it finds that the employee organization:
  869         (a) Failed to cooperate with the investigation conducted
  870  pursuant to this subsection, including refusal to permit the
  871  commission or one of its designated agents to inspect membership
  872  authorization forms or revocations pursuant to s.
  873  447.301(1)(b)5.; or
  874         (b) Intentionally misrepresented the information it
  875  submitted pursuant to this section.
  876  
  877  A decision issued by the commission pursuant to this subsection
  878  is a final agency action that is reviewable pursuant to s.
  879  447.504.
  880         (9) An employee organization is exempt from the
  881  requirements of subsections (3)-(8) and (12) for each public
  882  safety unit it represents only with respect to the circumstances
  883  of each bargaining unit the majority of whose employees eligible
  884  for representation are employed as law enforcement officers,
  885  correctional officers, or correctional probation officers as
  886  those terms are defined in s. 943.10(1), (2), or (3),
  887  respectively; firefighters as defined in s. 633.102; 911 public
  888  safety telecommunicators as defined in s. 401.465(1)(a); or
  889  emergency medical technicians or paramedics as defined in s.
  890  401.23.
  891         (10) A registration fee must shall accompany each
  892  application for registration or renewal of registration filed
  893  with the commission. The registration fee may amount charged for
  894  an application for registration or renewal of registration shall
  895  not exceed $15. All such money collected by the commission shall
  896  be deposited in the General Revenue Fund.
  897         (11) Every employee organization shall keep accurate
  898  accounts of its income and expenses, which accounts must shall
  899  be open for inspection at a all reasonable time and place times
  900  by any member of the organization or by the commission. In
  901  addition, each employee organization that has been certified as
  902  a bargaining agent must provide to its members an annual
  903  financial report prepared by an independent certified public
  904  accountant licensed under chapter 473 that includes a detailed
  905  breakdown of revenues and expenditures in such categories as the
  906  commission may prescribe, and an accounting of membership dues
  907  and assessments. The employee organization must notify its
  908  members annually of all costs of membership.
  909         (12)The certification of an employee organization that
  910  does not comply with this section is revoked. An employee
  911  organization that has its certification revoked under this
  912  subsection may not file a petition for certification under s.
  913  447.307 which covers any of the public employees in the
  914  bargaining unit described in the revoked certification for at
  915  least 12 months after the date the certification was revoked.
  916         (13)A decision issued by the commission under this section
  917  is a final agency action that is reviewable pursuant to s.
  918  447.504.
  919         Section 11. Section 447.307, Florida Statutes, is amended
  920  to read:
  921         447.307 Certification and recertification of employee
  922  organizations organization.—
  923         (1)(a) An Any employee organization seeking certification
  924  or recertification as a bargaining agent must file a petition
  925  with the commission accompanied by a showing of interest from at
  926  least 30 percent of the public employees in the proposed or
  927  existing bargaining unit. The showing of interest statements
  928  must be signed and dated by the public employees not more than
  929  12 months before the filing of which is designated or selected
  930  by a majority of public employees in an appropriate unit as
  931  their representative for purposes of collective bargaining shall
  932  request recognition by the public employer. The public employer
  933  shall, if satisfied as to the majority status of the employee
  934  organization and the appropriateness of the proposed unit,
  935  recognize the employee organization as the collective bargaining
  936  representative of employees in the designated unit. Upon
  937  recognition by a public employer, the employee organization
  938  shall immediately petition the commission for certification. The
  939  commission shall review only the appropriateness of the unit
  940  proposed by the employee organization. If the unit is
  941  appropriate according to the criteria used in this part, the
  942  commission shall immediately certify the employee organization
  943  as the exclusive representative of all employees in the unit. If
  944  the unit is inappropriate according to the criteria used in this
  945  part, the commission may dismiss the petition.
  946         (b)Whenever a public employer recognizes an employee
  947  organization on the basis of majority status and on the basis of
  948  appropriateness in accordance with subparagraph (4)(f)5., the
  949  commission shall, in the absence of inclusion of a prohibited
  950  category of employees or violation of s. 447.501, certify the
  951  proposed unit.
  952         (b)(2)A If the public employer refuses to recognize the
  953  employee organization, the employee organization may file a
  954  petition with the commission for certification as the bargaining
  955  agent for a proposed bargaining unit. The petition shall be
  956  accompanied by dated statements signed by at least 30 percent of
  957  the employees in the proposed unit, indicating that such
  958  employees desire to be represented for purposes of collective
  959  bargaining by the petitioning employee organization. Once a
  960  petition for certification has been filed by an employee
  961  organization, any registered employee organization desiring
  962  placement on the ballot in any certification or recertification
  963  election to be conducted pursuant to this section may be
  964  permitted by the commission to intervene in the proceeding upon
  965  a motion accompanied by a showing of interest from dated
  966  statements signed by at least 10 percent of the public employees
  967  in the proposed or existing bargaining unit, indicating that
  968  such employees desire to be represented for the purposes of
  969  collective bargaining by the moving employee organization. The
  970  showing of interest petitions and dated statements must be
  971  signed and dated by the public employees not more than 12 months
  972  before the filing of the petition.
  973         (c)The showing of interest is are confidential and exempt
  974  from the provisions of s. 119.07(1), except that any public
  975  employee, public employer, or employee organization having
  976  sufficient reason to believe that the showing of interest was
  977  any of the employee signatures were obtained by collusion,
  978  coercion, intimidation, or misrepresentation or is are otherwise
  979  invalid shall be given a reasonable opportunity to verify and
  980  challenge the showing of interest signatures appearing on the
  981  petition.
  982         (d)Notwithstanding paragraph (b), if any employees in the
  983  proposed unit are included in a bargaining unit for which there
  984  is a bargaining agent currently certified by the commission,
  985  such bargaining agent will be automatically added as a party to
  986  the case and may appear on the ballot without being required to
  987  file a motion to intervene or a showing of interest.
  988         (2)(a)A certification petition may not be filed regarding
  989  any proposed or existing bargaining unit within 12 months after
  990  the date the commission issues an order that verifies the
  991  results of a certification, recertification, or decertification
  992  election covering any of the public employees in the proposed or
  993  existing bargaining unit.
  994         (b)If a valid collective bargaining agreement covering any
  995  of the public employees in a proposed or existing bargaining
  996  unit is in effect, a certification petition may only be filed
  997  with the commission at least 90 but not more than 150 days
  998  immediately preceding the expiration date of the collective
  999  bargaining agreement, or at any time subsequent to such
 1000  agreement’s expiration date but before the effective date of a
 1001  new collective bargaining agreement. The effective date of a
 1002  collective bargaining agreement is the date of ratification of
 1003  such agreement by both parties if such agreement becomes
 1004  effective immediately or retroactively, or the collective
 1005  bargaining agreement’s actual effective date if such agreement
 1006  becomes effective after its ratification date.
 1007         (3)(a) The commission or one of its designated agents shall
 1008  investigate a certification or recertification the petition to
 1009  determine its sufficiency; if it has reasonable cause to believe
 1010  that the petition is sufficient, the commission shall provide
 1011  for an appropriate hearing upon due notice. Such a hearing may
 1012  be conducted by an agent of the commission. If the commission
 1013  finds that the petition is to be insufficient, the commission
 1014  must it may dismiss the petition. If the commission finds upon
 1015  the record of the hearing that the petition is sufficient, the
 1016  commission must it shall immediately:
 1017         (a)1. Define the proposed or existing bargaining unit and
 1018  determine which public employees are shall be qualified and
 1019  entitled to vote at any election held by the commission. Upon
 1020  providing due notice, the commission may provide for a hearing.
 1021         (b) Conduct elections by mail, on site, or by any combined
 1022  method ordered or approved by the commission.
 1023         1. In determining the method of election and timing, the
 1024  commission shall consider all of the following factors:
 1025         a. The number of eligible voters in the bargaining unit.
 1026         b. The number of work locations and availability of polling
 1027  locations.
 1028         c. The size of the public employer’s operations.
 1029         d. The cost to the commission and parties to conduct the
 1030  election.
 1031         e. The commission’s workload and election schedule.
 1032         f. The work schedules and shifts of the eligible voters.
 1033         g. Whether the parties agree on a time to hold the election
 1034  and the method of election to be used.
 1035         h. Any other factors that might impact the integrity of the
 1036  election.
 1037         2. Notwithstanding subparagraph 1., if one of the parties
 1038  to the election requests an election by mail, the commission
 1039  must conduct the election by mail. An election by mail must be
 1040  conducted no earlier than 4 weeks after the postmark date on the
 1041  ballot mailed by the commission. Notice of an election by mail
 1042  must be provided by the commission to the bargaining agent, the
 1043  public employer, and the public employees in the bargaining unit
 1044  at least 4 weeks before the date of the election.
 1045         (c)2. Identify the public employer or employers for
 1046  purposes of collective bargaining with the bargaining agent.
 1047         (d)3. Order an election by secret ballot, the cost of said
 1048  election and any required runoff election to be borne equally by
 1049  the parties, except as the commission may provide by rule. An
 1050  election conducted by mail ballot must include, subject to
 1051  appropriation, return envelopes with prepaid postage affixed.
 1052  The commission’s order assessing costs of an election may be
 1053  enforced pursuant to the provisions of this part.
 1054         (4)(a)Except as provided in paragraph (b), elections are
 1055  determined as follows for all certification or recertification
 1056  petitions filed on or after July 1, 2026:
 1057         1.(b)If at least 50 percent of the public employees in the
 1058  bargaining unit as of the date set by the commission participate
 1059  in the election, and at least 50 percent of the public employees
 1060  voting in the election select an employee organization When an
 1061  employee organization is selected by a majority of the employees
 1062  voting in an election, the commission must shall certify or
 1063  recertify the employee organization as the exclusive collective
 1064  bargaining agent for the public representative of all employees
 1065  in the unit.
 1066         2.A runoff election must be held according to rules
 1067  adopted by the commission if, in the election conducted under
 1068  subparagraph 1., there was more than one employee organization
 1069  on the ballot, at least 50 percent of the employees in the
 1070  bargaining unit participated in the election, and none of the
 1071  choices on the ballot received a vote of 50 percent of the
 1072  public employees who voted in the election.
 1073         (b)Certification elections involving public safety units
 1074  are determined as follows:
 1075         1.If an employee organization is selected by a majority
 1076  vote of the public employees voting in the election, the
 1077  commission must certify the employee organization as the
 1078  bargaining agent for the public employees in the bargaining
 1079  unit.
 1080         2.A runoff election must be held according to rules
 1081  adopted by the commission if, in the election conducted under
 1082  subparagraph 1., there was more than one employee organization
 1083  on the ballot and none of the choices on the ballot received a
 1084  majority vote of the public employees voting in the election.
 1085         (c) Certification, recertification, or revocation under
 1086  this section is effective upon the issuance of a the final order
 1087  by the commission or, if the final order is appealed, at the
 1088  time the appeal is exhausted or any stay is vacated by the
 1089  commission or a the court.
 1090         (c)In any election in which none of the choices on the
 1091  ballot receives the vote of a majority of the employees voting,
 1092  a runoff election shall be held according to rules promulgated
 1093  by the commission.
 1094         (d)No petition may be filed seeking an election in any
 1095  proposed or existing appropriate bargaining unit to determine
 1096  the exclusive bargaining agent within 12 months after the date
 1097  of a commission order verifying a representation election or, if
 1098  an employee organization prevails, within 12 months after the
 1099  date of an effective certification covering any of the employees
 1100  in the proposed or existing bargaining unit. Furthermore, if a
 1101  valid collective bargaining agreement covering any of the
 1102  employees in a proposed unit is in effect, a petition for
 1103  certification may be filed with the commission only during the
 1104  period extending from 150 days to 90 days immediately preceding
 1105  the expiration date of that agreement, or at any time subsequent
 1106  to its expiration date but prior to the effective date of any
 1107  new agreement. The effective date of a collective bargaining
 1108  agreement means the date of ratification by both parties, if the
 1109  agreement becomes effective immediately or retroactively; or its
 1110  actual effective date, if the agreement becomes effective after
 1111  its ratification date.
 1112         (5)(4) In defining a proposed bargaining unit, the
 1113  commission shall take into consideration:
 1114         (a) The principles of efficient administration of
 1115  government.
 1116         (b) The number of employee organizations with which the
 1117  employer might have to negotiate.
 1118         (c) The compatibility of the unit with the joint
 1119  responsibilities of the public employer and public employees to
 1120  represent the public.
 1121         (d) The power of the officials of government at the level
 1122  of the unit to agree, or make effective recommendations to
 1123  another administrative authority or to a legislative body, with
 1124  respect to matters of employment upon which the employee desires
 1125  to negotiate.
 1126         (e) The organizational structure of the public employer.
 1127         (f) Community of interest among the employees to be
 1128  included in the unit, considering:
 1129         1. The manner in which wages and other terms of employment
 1130  are determined.
 1131         2. The method by which jobs and salary classifications are
 1132  determined.
 1133         3. The interdependence of jobs and interchange of
 1134  employees.
 1135         4. The desires of the employees.
 1136         5. The history of employee relations within the
 1137  organization of the public employer concerning organization and
 1138  negotiation and the interest of the employees and the employer
 1139  in the continuation of a traditional, workable, and accepted
 1140  negotiation relationship.
 1141         (g) The statutory authority of the public employer to
 1142  administer a classification and pay plan.
 1143         (h) Such other factors and policies as the commission may
 1144  deem appropriate.
 1145  
 1146  However, a bargaining no unit may not shall be established or
 1147  approved for purposes of collective bargaining which includes
 1148  both professional and nonprofessional employees unless a
 1149  majority of each group votes for inclusion in such bargaining
 1150  unit.
 1151         Section 12. Section 447.3076, Florida Statutes, is created
 1152  to read:
 1153         447.3076Clarification of bargaining units.—
 1154         (1)A petition to clarify the composition of a bargaining
 1155  unit may be filed with the commission when significant changes
 1156  in statutory law or case law require clarification of the
 1157  bargaining unit or when a classification was:
 1158         (a)Created or substantially changed after the unit was
 1159  initially defined by the commission;
 1160         (b)Retitled with no substantial change in job duties; or
 1161         (c)Included or excluded through inadvertence or
 1162  misunderstanding by the commission.
 1163         (2)A bargaining unit clarification petition may be filed
 1164  by the bargaining agent for the bargaining unit or by the public
 1165  employer of the public employees in the unit.
 1166         (3)A copy of the petition must be served on the public
 1167  employer and any bargaining agent that is certified to represent
 1168  any employee or classification which may be substantially
 1169  affected by the proposed bargaining unit clarification.
 1170         (4)If any substantially affected employees are not
 1171  represented by a bargaining agent, the public employer must
 1172  provide a copy of the petition to those employees within 10 days
 1173  after the filing of the petition.
 1174         (5)When the clarification of a bargaining unit would
 1175  result in an increase in the size of the bargaining unit by more
 1176  than 25 percent, the unit clarification petition raises a
 1177  question concerning representation and must be dismissed.
 1178         Section 13. Section 447.308, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1179  to read:
 1180         447.308 Decertification Revocation of certification of
 1181  employee organizations organization.—
 1182         (1) A public Any employee or group of public employees
 1183  which no longer desires to be represented by a the certified
 1184  bargaining agent may file with the commission a petition to
 1185  decertify the bargaining agent revoke certification. The
 1186  petition must shall be accompanied by a showing of interest from
 1187  dated statements signed by at least 30 percent of the public
 1188  employees in the bargaining unit, indicating that such employees
 1189  no longer desire to be represented for purposes of collective
 1190  bargaining by the certified bargaining agent. The time of filing
 1191  said petition shall be governed by the provisions of s.
 1192  447.307(3)(d) relating to petitions for certification. The
 1193  showing of interest statements must be signed and dated by the
 1194  public employees not more than 12 months before the filing of
 1195  the petition. Any employee, employer, or employee organization
 1196  having sufficient reason to believe that the showing of interest
 1197  was any of the employee signatures were obtained by collusion,
 1198  coercion, intimidation, or misrepresentation or is are otherwise
 1199  invalid shall be given a reasonable opportunity to verify and
 1200  challenge the showing of interest signatures appearing on the
 1201  petition.
 1202         (2)(a)A decertification petition may not be filed
 1203  regarding the bargaining unit within 12 months after the date
 1204  the commission issues an order that verifies the results of a
 1205  certification, recertification, or decertification election
 1206  covering any of the public employees in the unit.
 1207         (b)If a valid collective bargaining agreement covering any
 1208  of the public employees in the bargaining unit is in effect, a
 1209  decertification petition may only be filed with the commission
 1210  at least 90 but not more than 150 days immediately preceding the
 1211  expiration date of the collective bargaining agreement, or at
 1212  any time after such agreement’s expiration date but before the
 1213  effective date of a new collective bargaining agreement. The
 1214  effective date of a collective bargaining agreement is the date
 1215  of ratification of such agreement by both parties if such
 1216  agreement becomes effective immediately or retroactively, or the
 1217  collective bargaining agreement’s actual effective date if such
 1218  agreement becomes effective after its ratification date.
 1219         (3) The commission or one of its designated agents shall
 1220  investigate the decertification petition to determine its
 1221  sufficiency. If the commission finds that the petition is to be
 1222  insufficient, the commission must it may dismiss the petition.
 1223  If the commission finds that the petition is sufficient, the
 1224  commission must it shall immediately:
 1225         (a) Identify the bargaining unit and determine which public
 1226  employees shall be qualified and entitled to vote in the
 1227  election held by the commission.
 1228         (b) Identify the public employer or employers of the
 1229  bargaining unit.
 1230         (c) Order an election by secret ballot, the cost of said
 1231  election to be borne equally by the parties, except as the
 1232  commission may provide by rule. An election conducted by mail
 1233  ballot must include, subject to appropriation, return envelopes
 1234  with prepaid postage affixed. The commission’s order assessing
 1235  costs of an election may be enforced pursuant to the provisions
 1236  of this part.
 1237         (4)(a)Except as provided in paragraph (b), elections are
 1238  determined as follows for all decertification petitions filed on
 1239  or after July 1, 2026:
 1240         1.If at least 50 percent of the public employees in the
 1241  bargaining unit as of the date set by the commission participate
 1242  in the election, and at least 50 percent of the public employees
 1243  voting in the election vote to decertify an employee
 1244  organization, the commission must revoke the bargaining agent’s
 1245  certification for that bargaining unit.
 1246         2.If decertification is not selected by at least 50
 1247  percent of the public employees voting in the election, and at
 1248  least 50 percent of the employees who are in the bargaining unit
 1249  as of the date set by the commission participate in the
 1250  election, the bargaining agent must retain its certification for
 1251  that bargaining unit.
 1252         (b)Decertification elections involving public safety units
 1253  are determined as follows:
 1254         1.(2) If decertification is selected by a majority vote of
 1255  the public employees voting in the such election vote against
 1256  the continuation of representation by the certified bargaining
 1257  agent, the commission must revoke the certification of the
 1258  employee organization as the exclusive bargaining agent’s
 1259  certification for that agent for the employees in the bargaining
 1260  unit shall be revoked.
 1261         2.(3) If decertification is not selected by a majority vote
 1262  of the public employees voting in the such election do not vote
 1263  against the continuation of representation by the certified
 1264  bargaining agent, the bargaining agent must retain its
 1265  certification for that bargaining of the employee organization
 1266  as the exclusive bargaining agent for the employees in the unit
 1267  shall be retained by the organization.
 1268         (c)Revocation under this section is effective upon the
 1269  issuance of a final order by the commission or, if the final
 1270  order is appealed, at the time the appeal is exhausted or any
 1271  stay is vacated by the commission or a court.
 1272         Section 14. Section 447.309, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1273  to read:
 1274         447.309 Collective bargaining; approval or rejection.—
 1275         (1) After an employee organization has been certified as
 1276  the bargaining agent of a bargaining unit pursuant to the
 1277  provisions of this part, the bargaining agent for the
 1278  organization and the chief executive officer of the appropriate
 1279  public employer or employers, jointly, shall bargain
 1280  collectively in the determination of the wages, hours, and terms
 1281  and conditions of employment of the public employees within the
 1282  bargaining unit. The chief executive officer or his or her
 1283  representative and the bargaining agent or its representative
 1284  shall meet at reasonable times and bargain in good faith. In
 1285  conducting negotiations with the bargaining agent, the chief
 1286  executive officer or his or her representative shall consult
 1287  with, and attempt to represent the views of, the legislative
 1288  body of the public employer. Any collective bargaining agreement
 1289  reached by the negotiators must shall be reduced to writing, and
 1290  such agreement must shall be signed by the chief executive
 1291  officer and the bargaining agent. Any agreement signed by the
 1292  chief executive officer and the bargaining agent is shall not be
 1293  binding on the public employer until such agreement has been
 1294  ratified by the public employer and the by public employees in
 1295  who are members of the bargaining unit, subject to the
 1296  provisions of subsections (2) and (3). However, with respect to
 1297  statewide bargaining units, any agreement signed by the Governor
 1298  and the bargaining agent for such a bargaining unit is shall not
 1299  be binding until approved by the public employees in who are
 1300  members of the bargaining unit, subject to the provisions of
 1301  subsections (2) and (3).
 1302         (2)(a) Upon execution of the collective bargaining
 1303  agreement, the chief executive shall, in his or her annual
 1304  budget request or by other appropriate means, request the
 1305  legislative body to appropriate such amounts as shall be
 1306  sufficient to fund the provisions of the collective bargaining
 1307  agreement.
 1308         (b) If the state is a party to a collective bargaining
 1309  agreement in which less than the requested amount is
 1310  appropriated by the Legislature, the collective bargaining
 1311  agreement shall be administered on the basis of the amounts
 1312  appropriated by the Legislature. The failure of the Legislature
 1313  to appropriate funds sufficient to fund the collective
 1314  bargaining agreement does shall not constitute, or be evidence
 1315  of, any unfair labor practice. All collective bargaining
 1316  agreements entered into by the state are subject to the
 1317  appropriations powers of the Legislature, and the provisions of
 1318  this section may shall not conflict with the exclusive authority
 1319  of the Legislature to appropriate funds.
 1320         (3) If any provision of a collective bargaining agreement
 1321  is in conflict with any law, ordinance, rule, or regulation over
 1322  which the chief executive officer has no amendatory power, the
 1323  chief executive officer shall submit to the appropriate
 1324  governmental body having amendatory power a proposed amendment
 1325  to such law, ordinance, rule, or regulation. Unless and until
 1326  such amendment is enacted or adopted and becomes effective, the
 1327  conflicting provision of the collective bargaining agreement may
 1328  shall not become effective.
 1329         (4) If the agreement is not ratified by the public employer
 1330  or is not approved by a majority vote of the public employees
 1331  voting in the unit, in accordance with procedures adopted by the
 1332  commission, the agreement must shall be returned to the chief
 1333  executive officer and the bargaining agent employee organization
 1334  for further negotiations.
 1335         (5) A Any collective bargaining agreement may shall not
 1336  provide for a term of existence of more than 3 years and must
 1337  shall contain all of the terms and conditions of employment of
 1338  the employees in the bargaining unit during such term except
 1339  those terms and conditions provided for in applicable merit and
 1340  civil service rules and regulations.
 1341         Section 15. Section 447.401, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1342  to read:
 1343         447.401 Grievance procedures.—Each public employer and
 1344  bargaining agent shall negotiate a grievance procedure to be
 1345  used for the settlement of disputes between a public employer
 1346  and a public employee, or a group of public employees, involving
 1347  the interpretation or application of a collective bargaining
 1348  agreement. The Such grievance procedure must shall have as its
 1349  terminal step a final and binding disposition by an impartial
 1350  neutral arbitrator, mutually selected by the parties; however,
 1351  when the issue under appeal is an allegation of abuse,
 1352  abandonment, or neglect of a child by a public an employee under
 1353  s. 39.201 or an allegation of abuse, neglect, or exploitation of
 1354  a vulnerable adult by a public employee under s. 415.1034, the
 1355  grievance may not be decided until such allegation the abuse,
 1356  abandonment, or neglect of a child has been judicially
 1357  determined. However, an arbitrator arbiter or other neutral
 1358  party may shall not have the power to add to, subtract from,
 1359  modify, or alter the terms of a collective bargaining agreement.
 1360  If an employee organization is certified as the bargaining agent
 1361  of a bargaining unit, the grievance procedure then in existence
 1362  may be the subject of collective bargaining, and any agreement
 1363  that which is reached shall supersede the previously existing
 1364  procedure. All public employees shall have the right to a fair
 1365  and equitable grievance procedure administered without regard to
 1366  membership or nonmembership in any employee organization, except
 1367  that bargaining agents may certified employee organizations
 1368  shall not be required to process grievances for public employees
 1369  who are not members of the employee organization. A public
 1370  career service employee may use shall have the option of
 1371  utilizing the civil service appeal procedure, an unfair labor
 1372  practice procedure, or a grievance procedure established under
 1373  this section, but may not avail such employee is precluded from
 1374  availing himself or herself of to more than one of these
 1375  procedures.
 1376         Section 16. Subsections (1) through (4) of section 447.403,
 1377  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1378         447.403 Resolution of impasses.—
 1379         (1) If, after a reasonable period of negotiation concerning
 1380  the terms and conditions of employment to be incorporated in a
 1381  collective bargaining agreement, a dispute exists between a
 1382  public employer and a bargaining agent, either party may declare
 1383  an impasse by providing written notification shall be deemed to
 1384  have occurred when one of the parties so declares in writing to
 1385  the other party and to the commission. When an impasse occurs,
 1386  the public employer or the bargaining agent, or both parties
 1387  acting jointly, may use appoint, or secure the services
 1388  appointment of, a mediator to assist in the resolution of the
 1389  impasse. If the Governor is the public employer or for an
 1390  impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095, a no mediator may not
 1391  shall be appointed.
 1392         (2)(a) If a no mediator is not used under subsection (1)
 1393  appointed, or upon the request of either party, the commission
 1394  must shall appoint, and submit all unresolved issues to, a
 1395  special magistrate acceptable to both parties. If the parties
 1396  are unable to agree on the appointment of a special magistrate,
 1397  the commission must shall appoint, in its discretion, a
 1398  qualified special magistrate. However, if the parties agree in
 1399  writing to waive the appointment of a special magistrate, the
 1400  parties may proceed directly to resolution of the impasse by the
 1401  legislative body pursuant to paragraph (4)(d). Nothing in this
 1402  section precludes the parties from using the services of a
 1403  mediator at any time during the conduct of collective
 1404  bargaining.
 1405         (b) If the Governor is the public employer, a no special
 1406  magistrate may not shall be appointed. The parties must may
 1407  proceed directly to the Legislature for resolution of the
 1408  impasse pursuant to paragraph (4)(d).
 1409         (c)For an impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), the
 1410  parties must agree on a special magistrate and submit the
 1411  agreed-upon name to the commission within 5 calendar days after
 1412  the declaration of impasse. Within 2 business days after the
 1413  submission of the special magistrate’s name, the commission must
 1414  appoint the agreed-upon special magistrate. If the parties do
 1415  not submit the name of an agreed-upon special magistrate to the
 1416  commission within 5 calendar days after the declaration of
 1417  impasse, the commission must appoint a special magistrate of its
 1418  choosing within 5 calendar days after the parties’ deadline to
 1419  submit the name of the agreed-upon special magistrate. Within 5
 1420  calendar days after the special magistrate is appointed, each
 1421  party must submit a list of issues at impasse to the special
 1422  magistrate and serve a copy of the list on the other party at
 1423  the same time.
 1424         (3) The special magistrate shall hold a hearing hearings in
 1425  order to define the area or areas of dispute, to determine facts
 1426  relating to the dispute, and to render a decision on any and all
 1427  unresolved contract issues. The hearing must hearings shall be
 1428  held at a time, date, and place times, dates, and places to be
 1429  established by the special magistrate in accordance with rules
 1430  adopted promulgated by the commission. For an impasse declared
 1431  pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), a hearing must be held within 20
 1432  calendar days after the parties submit the list of issues at
 1433  impasse to the special magistrate. The special magistrate may
 1434  shall be empowered to administer oaths and issue subpoenas on
 1435  behalf of the parties to the dispute or on his or her own
 1436  behalf. Within 15 calendar days after the close of the final
 1437  hearing, or 7 calendar days after the close of the hearing for
 1438  an impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), the special
 1439  magistrate shall submit transmit his or her recommended decision
 1440  to the commission and to the representatives of both parties by
 1441  any method of service agreed to by the parties which establishes
 1442  proof of delivery registered mail, return receipt requested.
 1443  Such recommended decision must shall be discussed by the
 1444  parties, and each recommendation of the special magistrate is
 1445  shall be deemed approved by both parties unless specifically
 1446  rejected by either party by written notice filed with the
 1447  commission within 20 calendar days, or 10 calendar days for an
 1448  impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), after the date the
 1449  party received the special magistrate’s recommended decision.
 1450  The written notice must shall include a statement of the cause
 1451  for each rejection and shall be served upon the other party at
 1452  the same time as it is filed with the commission.
 1453         (4) If either the public employer or the bargaining agent
 1454  employee organization does not accept, in whole or in part, the
 1455  recommended decision of the special magistrate, all of the
 1456  following procedures apply:
 1457         (a) The chief executive officer of the governmental entity
 1458  involved must shall, within 10 calendar days after rejection of
 1459  a recommendation of the special magistrate, submit to the
 1460  legislative body of the governmental entity involved a copy of
 1461  the findings of fact and recommended decision of the special
 1462  magistrate, together with the chief executive officer’s
 1463  recommendations for settling the disputed impasse issues. The
 1464  chief executive officer must shall also submit transmit his or
 1465  her recommendations to the bargaining agent at the same time as
 1466  the recommendations are submitted to the legislative body.
 1467  employee organization;
 1468         (b) Within 10 calendar days after rejection of a
 1469  recommendation of the special magistrate, the bargaining agent
 1470  must employee organization shall submit its recommendations for
 1471  settling the disputed impasse issues to such legislative body
 1472  and to the chief executive officer.;
 1473         (c) The legislative body or its a duly authorized committee
 1474  must thereof shall forthwith conduct a public hearing at which
 1475  the parties must shall be required to explain their positions
 1476  with respect to the rejected recommendations of the special
 1477  magistrate. For an impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2),
 1478  the legislative body must conduct the public hearing within 20
 1479  calendar days after the parties submit their recommendations to
 1480  the legislative body.;
 1481         (d) Thereafter, the legislative body must shall take such
 1482  action as it deems to be in the public interest, including the
 1483  interest of the public employees involved, to resolve all
 1484  disputed impasse issues. For an impasse declared pursuant to s.
 1485  447.4095(2), the legislative body must take action within 10
 1486  calendar days after the close of the public hearing.; and
 1487         (e)1. Following the resolution of the disputed impasse
 1488  issues by the legislative body, the parties must shall reduce to
 1489  writing an agreement which includes those issues agreed to by
 1490  the parties and those disputed impasse issues resolved by the
 1491  legislative body’s action taken pursuant to paragraph (d). For
 1492  an impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), the parties must
 1493  reduce the agreement to writing within 10 calendar days after
 1494  the resolution of the disputed impasse issues by the legislative
 1495  body.
 1496         2. The agreement must shall be signed by the chief
 1497  executive officer and the bargaining agent and shall be
 1498  submitted to the public employer and to the public employees in
 1499  who are members of the bargaining unit for ratification. For an
 1500  impasse declared pursuant to s. 447.4095(2), the chief executive
 1501  officer and the bargaining agent must sign the agreement within
 1502  7 calendar days after the agreement is reduced to writing and
 1503  must submit the agreement to the public employer and the
 1504  bargaining unit for ratification within 10 calendar days after
 1505  the agreement is signed. For an impasse declared pursuant to s.
 1506  447.4095(2), the agreement must be signed, submitted, and
 1507  ratified separately from other bargainable issues.
 1508         3. If the such agreement is not ratified by all parties,
 1509  pursuant to the provisions of s. 447.309, the legislative body’s
 1510  action taken pursuant to the provisions of paragraph (d) shall
 1511  take effect as of the date of such legislative body’s action for
 1512  the remainder of the first fiscal year which was the subject of
 1513  negotiations; however, the legislative body’s action may shall
 1514  not take effect with respect to those disputed impasse issues
 1515  that which establish the language of contractual provisions that
 1516  which could have no effect in the absence of a ratified
 1517  agreement, including, but not limited to, preambles, recognition
 1518  clauses, and duration clauses.
 1519         Section 17. Section 447.405, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1520  to read:
 1521         447.405 Factors to be considered by the special
 1522  magistrate.—The special magistrate shall conduct the hearings
 1523  and render recommended decisions with the objective of achieving
 1524  a prompt, peaceful, and just settlement of disputes between the
 1525  bargaining agents public employee organizations and the public
 1526  employers. The factors, among others, to be given weight by the
 1527  special magistrate in arriving at a recommended decision must
 1528  shall include:
 1529         (1) Comparison of the annual income of employment of the
 1530  public employees in question with the annual income of
 1531  employment maintained for the same or similar work of employees
 1532  exhibiting like or similar skills under the same or similar
 1533  working conditions in the local operating area involved.
 1534         (2) Comparison of the annual income of employment of the
 1535  public employees in question with the annual income of
 1536  employment of public employees in similar public employee
 1537  governmental bodies of comparable size within this the state.
 1538         (3) The interest and welfare of the public.
 1539         (4) Comparison of peculiarities of employment in regard to
 1540  other trades or professions, specifically with respect to:
 1541         (a) Hazards of employment.
 1542         (b) Physical qualifications.
 1543         (c) Educational qualifications.
 1544         (d) Intellectual qualifications.
 1545         (e) Job training and skills.
 1546         (f) Retirement plans.
 1547         (g) Sick leave.
 1548         (h) Job security.
 1549         (5) Availability of funds.
 1550         Section 18. Section 447.4095, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1551  to read:
 1552         447.4095 Financial urgency.—
 1553         (1) In the event of a financial urgency requiring
 1554  modification of an agreement, the chief executive officer or his
 1555  or her representative and the bargaining agent or its
 1556  representative shall meet as soon as possible to negotiate the
 1557  impact of the financial urgency. If after a reasonable period of
 1558  negotiation, which may shall not exceed 14 calendar days, a
 1559  dispute exists between the public employer and the bargaining
 1560  agent, an impasse is shall be deemed to have occurred, and one
 1561  of the parties must shall so declare in writing to the other
 1562  party and to the commission. The parties must shall then proceed
 1563  to follow the requirements under pursuant to the provisions of
 1564  s. 447.403. An unfair labor practice charge may shall not be
 1565  filed during the 14 calendar days during which negotiations are
 1566  occurring under pursuant to this section.
 1567         (2)For the purposes of this section, the implementation of
 1568  appropriations to local governments by the Legislature which are
 1569  specifically directed in law to be disbursed as salaries to
 1570  employees of local governments is considered a financial
 1571  urgency. If the use of funding appropriated by the Legislature
 1572  to local governments is restricted to salaries and associated
 1573  costs of such salaries and the implementation of such
 1574  appropriations will require modification of an agreement, the
 1575  chief executive officer or his or her representative and the
 1576  bargaining agent or its representative must meet within 15
 1577  calendar days after the effective date of the appropriation to
 1578  negotiate the impact of the financial urgency. If, 30 calendar
 1579  days after the effective date of the appropriation, a dispute
 1580  exists between the public employer and the bargaining agent as
 1581  to the impact of the financial urgency, one of the parties must,
 1582  within 2 business days, declare an impasse in writing to the
 1583  other party and to the commission. The parties must then proceed
 1584  to follow the requirements under s. 447.403. An unfair labor
 1585  practice charge may not be filed during the 30-day period of
 1586  negotiations or while the parties are proceeding through the
 1587  resulting impasse process. This subsection does not apply to
 1588  public employees in public safety units.
 1589         Section 19. Paragraphs (c) and (f) of subsection (1) and
 1590  subsection (2) of section 447.501, Florida Statutes, are
 1591  amended, and paragraph (g) is added to subsection (1) of that
 1592  section, to read:
 1593         447.501 Unfair labor practices.—
 1594         (1) Public employers or their agents or representatives are
 1595  prohibited from:
 1596         (c) Refusing to bargain collectively, failing to bargain
 1597  collectively in good faith, or refusing to sign a final
 1598  agreement agreed upon with the certified bargaining agent for
 1599  the public employees in the bargaining unit.
 1600         (f) Refusing to discuss grievances in good faith pursuant
 1601  to the terms of the collective bargaining agreement with either
 1602  the certified bargaining agent for the public employee or the
 1603  employee involved.
 1604         (g)Failing to provide to any registered employee
 1605  organization or any petitioning public employee who is seeking
 1606  to support, oppose, or intervene in the certification,
 1607  recertification, or decertification of a bargaining agent equal
 1608  access to the public employer’s facilities and its internal
 1609  means of communication for those purposes. The public employer
 1610  must provide such equal access from the date of the filing of a
 1611  petition pursuant to s. 447.307 or s. 447.308 until the final
 1612  resolution of the petition.
 1613         (2) An A public employee organization or anyone acting on
 1614  in its behalf or its officers, representatives, agents, or
 1615  members are prohibited from:
 1616         (a) Interfering with, restraining, or coercing public
 1617  employees in the exercise of any rights guaranteed them under
 1618  this part or interfering with, restraining, or coercing
 1619  managerial employees by reason of their performance of job
 1620  duties or other activities undertaken in the interests of the
 1621  public employer.
 1622         (b) Causing or attempting to cause a public employer to
 1623  discriminate against a public an employee because of such the
 1624  employee’s membership or nonmembership in an employee
 1625  organization or attempting to cause the public employer to
 1626  violate any of the provisions of this part.
 1627         (c) Refusing to bargain collectively or failing to bargain
 1628  collectively in good faith with a public employer.
 1629         (d) Discriminating against a public an employee because he
 1630  or she has signed or filed an affidavit, a petition, or a
 1631  complaint or given any information or testimony in any
 1632  proceedings provided for in this part.
 1633         (e) Participating in a strike against the public employer
 1634  by instigating or supporting, in any positive manner, a strike.
 1635  A person who violates Any violation of this paragraph is shall
 1636  subject the violator to the penalties provided in this part.
 1637         (f) Instigating or advocating support, in any positive
 1638  manner, for an employee organization’s activities from high
 1639  school or grade school students or students in institutions of
 1640  higher learning.
 1641         Section 20. Subsection (1) of section 447.503, Florida
 1642  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1643         447.503 Charges of unfair labor practices.—It is the intent
 1644  of the Legislature that the commission act as expeditiously as
 1645  possible to settle disputes regarding alleged unfair labor
 1646  practices. To this end, violations of the provisions of s.
 1647  447.501 shall be remedied by the commission in accordance with
 1648  the following procedures and in accordance with chapter 120;
 1649  however, to the extent that chapter 120 is inconsistent with the
 1650  provisions of this section, the procedures contained in this
 1651  section shall govern:
 1652         (1) A proceeding to remedy a violation of the provisions of
 1653  s. 447.501 must shall be initiated by the filing of a charge
 1654  with the commission by a public an employer, a public employee,
 1655  or an employee organization, or any combination thereof, whose
 1656  substantial interests will be affected as referenced in chapter
 1657  120. Such a charge must shall contain a clear and concise
 1658  statement of facts constituting the alleged unfair labor
 1659  practice, including the names of all individuals involved in the
 1660  alleged unfair labor practice, and include specific reference to
 1661  the provisions of s. 447.501 alleged to have been violated, and
 1662  such other relevant information as the commission may by rule
 1663  require or allow. Service of the charge must shall be made upon
 1664  each named respondent at the time of filing with the commission.
 1665  The charge must be accompanied by sworn statements and
 1666  documentary evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie
 1667  violation of the applicable unfair labor practice provision.
 1668  Such supporting evidence is not to be attached to the charge and
 1669  is to be furnished only to the commission.
 1670         Section 21. Subsections (2) through (5) and paragraph (a)
 1671  of subsection (6) of section 447.507, Florida Statutes, are
 1672  amended to read:
 1673         447.507 Violation of strike prohibition; penalties.—
 1674         (2) If a public employee, a group of public employees, an
 1675  employee organization, or any officer, agent, or representative
 1676  of any employee organization engages in a strike in violation of
 1677  s. 447.505, either the commission or any public employer whose
 1678  public employees are involved or whose public employees may be
 1679  affected by the strike may file suit to enjoin the strike in the
 1680  circuit court having proper jurisdiction and proper venue of
 1681  such actions under the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure and
 1682  Florida Statutes. The circuit court shall conduct a hearing,
 1683  with notice to the commission and to all interested parties, at
 1684  the earliest practicable time. If the plaintiff makes a prima
 1685  facie showing that a violation of s. 447.505 is in progress or
 1686  that there is a clear, real, and present danger that such a
 1687  strike is about to commence, the circuit court must shall issue
 1688  a temporary injunction enjoining the strike. Upon final hearing,
 1689  the circuit court shall either make the injunction permanent or
 1690  dissolve it.
 1691         (3) If an injunction to enjoin a strike issued pursuant to
 1692  this section is not promptly complied with, on the application
 1693  of the plaintiff, the circuit court must shall immediately
 1694  initiate contempt proceedings against those who appear to be in
 1695  violation. An employee organization found to be in contempt of
 1696  court for violating an injunction against a strike shall be
 1697  fined an amount deemed appropriate by the court. In determining
 1698  the appropriate fine, the court shall objectively consider the
 1699  extent of lost services and the particular nature and position
 1700  of the public employee group in violation. A In no event shall
 1701  the fine may not exceed $30,000 $5,000. Each officer, agent, or
 1702  representative of an employee organization found to be in
 1703  contempt of court for violating an injunction against a strike
 1704  shall be fined at least $300, but not more than $600, not less
 1705  than $50 nor more than $100 for each calendar day that the
 1706  violation is in progress.
 1707         (4) An employee organization is shall be liable for any
 1708  damages that which might be suffered by a public employer as a
 1709  result of a violation of the provisions of s. 447.505 by the
 1710  employee organization or its representatives, officers, or
 1711  agents. The circuit court having jurisdiction over such actions
 1712  may is empowered to enforce judgments against employee
 1713  organizations in the amount deemed appropriate by the court in
 1714  accordance with this section. An action may not, as defined in
 1715  this part, by attachment or garnishment of union initiation fees
 1716  or dues which are to be deducted or checked off by public
 1717  employers. No action shall be maintained pursuant to this
 1718  subsection until all proceedings that which were pending before
 1719  the commission at the time of the strike or that which were
 1720  initiated within 30 days after of the strike have been finally
 1721  adjudicated or otherwise disposed of. In determining the amount
 1722  of damages, if any, to be awarded to the public employer, the
 1723  trier of fact shall take into consideration any action or
 1724  inaction by the public employer or its agents that provoked or
 1725  tended to provoke the strike by the public employees. The trier
 1726  of fact shall also take into consideration any damages that
 1727  might have been recovered by the public employer under
 1728  subparagraph (6)(a)4.
 1729         (5) If the commission, after a hearing on notice conducted
 1730  according to rules adopted promulgated by the commission,
 1731  determines that a public an employee has violated s. 447.505, it
 1732  may order the termination of such employee’s his or her
 1733  employment by the public employer. Notwithstanding any other
 1734  provision of law, a person knowingly violating s. 447.505 the
 1735  provision of said section may, subsequent to such violation, be
 1736  appointed, reappointed, employed, or reemployed as a public
 1737  employee, but only upon the following conditions:
 1738         (a) Such person shall be on probation for a period of 18
 1739  months after following his or her appointment, reappointment,
 1740  employment, or reemployment, during which period he or she shall
 1741  serve without permanent status and at the pleasure of the agency
 1742  head.
 1743         (b) His or her compensation may not in no event exceed the
 1744  compensation that received immediately before prior to the time
 1745  of the violation.
 1746         (c) The compensation of the person may not be increased
 1747  until at least after the expiration of 1 year after from such
 1748  appointment, reappointment, employment, or reemployment.
 1749         (6)(a) If the commission determines that an employee
 1750  organization has violated s. 447.505, it may:
 1751         1. Issue cease and desist orders as necessary to ensure
 1752  compliance with its order.
 1753         2. Suspend or revoke the certification of the employee
 1754  organization as the bargaining agent of such bargaining employee
 1755  unit.
 1756         3. Revoke any requirement of the public employer to engage
 1757  in membership the right of dues deduction for the and collection
 1758  previously granted to said employee organization pursuant to s.
 1759  447.303.
 1760         4. Fine the organization up to $40,000 $20,000 for each
 1761  calendar day of such violation or determine the approximate cost
 1762  to the public due to each calendar day of the strike and fine
 1763  the organization an amount equal to such cost, regardless of
 1764  whether the fine exceeds $40,000, notwithstanding the fact that
 1765  the fine may exceed $20,000 for each such calendar day. The
 1766  fines so collected shall immediately accrue to the public
 1767  employer and must shall be used by the public employer him or
 1768  her to replace those services denied the public as a result of
 1769  the strike. In determining the amount of damages, if any, to be
 1770  awarded to the public employer, the commission must consider
 1771  shall take into consideration any action or inaction by the
 1772  public employer or its agents that provoked, or tended to
 1773  provoke, the strike by the public employees.
 1774         Section 22. Section 447.509, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1775  to read:
 1776         447.509 Other unlawful acts; exceptions.—
 1777         (1) Employee organizations, their members, agents, or
 1778  representatives, or any persons acting on their behalf are
 1779  hereby prohibited from:
 1780         (a) Soliciting public employees during working hours of any
 1781  employee who is involved in the solicitation.
 1782         (b) Distributing literature during working hours in areas
 1783  where the actual work of public employees is performed, such as
 1784  offices, warehouses, schools, police stations, fire stations,
 1785  and any similar public installations. This section may shall not
 1786  be construed to prohibit the distribution of literature during
 1787  the employee’s lunch hour or in such areas not specifically
 1788  devoted to the performance of the employee’s official duties.
 1789         (c) Instigating or advocating support, in any positive
 1790  manner, for an employee organization’s activities from high
 1791  school or grade school students during classroom time.
 1792         (d) Offering anything of value to a public officer as
 1793  defined in s. 112.313(1) which the public officer is prohibited
 1794  from accepting under s. 112.313(2).
 1795         (e) Offering any compensation, payment, or thing of value
 1796  to a public officer as defined in s. 112.313(1) which the public
 1797  officer is prohibited from accepting under s. 112.313(4).
 1798         (2) An No employee organization may not shall directly or
 1799  indirectly pay any fines or penalties assessed against
 1800  individuals pursuant to the provisions of this part.
 1801         (3) Public employers, their agents or representatives, or
 1802  persons acting on their behalf may not provide any form of
 1803  compensation or paid leave to a public employee, directly or
 1804  indirectly, for the purpose of engaging in employee organization
 1805  activities.
 1806         (4)Notwithstanding subsection (3), a public employee may
 1807  do any of the following:
 1808         (a)Be granted time off without pay or benefits to engage
 1809  in employee organization activities, provided that the public
 1810  employer and the bargaining agent agree. An employee
 1811  organization may compensate a public employee for engaging in
 1812  employee organization activities.
 1813         (b)Use compensated personal leave, whether the leave is
 1814  the public employee’s or is voluntarily donated by other public
 1815  employees in the bargaining unit, to engage in employee
 1816  organization activities if:
 1817         1.The leave is accrued at the same rate by similarly
 1818  situated public employees in the bargaining unit without regard
 1819  to membership in or participation with an employee organization.
 1820         2.The public employee may freely choose the manner in
 1821  which to use the leave.
 1822         (c)Engage in representational employee organization
 1823  activities on behalf of the bargaining agent while in a duty
 1824  status without loss of pay or benefits, provided that the public
 1825  employer and the bargaining agent agree.
 1826         (5) Notwithstanding subsection (3), a public employer may
 1827  provide compensation and benefits to a public employee for the
 1828  purpose of engaging in employee organization activities if
 1829  agreed to in the collective bargaining agreement and if the
 1830  public employer is fully reimbursed by the employee organization
 1831  for such compensation and benefits.
 1832         (6)Subsections (3) and (4) do not apply to public
 1833  employees in public safety units.
 1834         (7) The circuit courts of this state shall have
 1835  jurisdiction to enforce the provisions of this section by
 1836  injunction and contempt proceedings, if necessary. A public
 1837  employee who is convicted of a violation of any provision of
 1838  this section may be discharged or otherwise disciplined by his
 1839  or her public employer, notwithstanding further provisions of
 1840  law, and notwithstanding the provisions of any collective
 1841  bargaining agreement.
 1842         Section 23. Subsection (3) of section 110.114, Florida
 1843  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1844         110.114 Employee wage deductions.—
 1845         (3) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (1) and
 1846  (2), the deduction of an employee’s membership dues deductions
 1847  as defined in s. 447.203 s. 447.203(15) for an employee
 1848  organization as defined in s. 447.203(11) shall be authorized or
 1849  permitted only for an organization that has been certified
 1850  pursuant to chapter 447 as the exclusive bargaining agent
 1851  pursuant to chapter 447 for a unit of public state employees in
 1852  which the employee is included. Such deductions are shall be
 1853  subject to the provisions of s. 447.303.
 1854         Section 24. Paragraph (w) of subsection (2) of section
 1855  110.205, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1856         110.205 Career service; exemptions.—
 1857         (2) EXEMPT POSITIONS.—The exempt positions that are not
 1858  covered by this part include the following:
 1859         (w) Managerial employees and, as defined in s. 447.203(4),
 1860  confidential employees, as those terms are defined in s. 447.203
 1861  s. 447.203(5), and supervisory employees who spend the majority
 1862  of their time communicating with, motivating, training, and
 1863  evaluating employees, and planning and directing employees’
 1864  work, and who have the authority to hire, transfer, suspend, lay
 1865  off, recall, promote, discharge, assign, reward, or discipline
 1866  subordinate employees or effectively recommend such action,
 1867  including all employees serving as supervisors, administrators,
 1868  and directors. Excluded are employees also designated as special
 1869  risk or special risk administrative support and attorneys who
 1870  serve as administrative law judges pursuant to s. 120.65 or for
 1871  hearings conducted pursuant to s. 120.57(1)(a). Additionally,
 1872  registered nurses licensed under chapter 464, dentists licensed
 1873  under chapter 466, psychologists licensed under chapter 490 or
 1874  chapter 491, nutritionists or dietitians licensed under part X
 1875  of chapter 468, pharmacists licensed under chapter 465,
 1876  psychological specialists licensed under chapter 491, physical
 1877  therapists licensed under chapter 486, and speech therapists
 1878  licensed under part I of chapter 468 are excluded, unless
 1879  otherwise collectively bargained.
 1880         Section 25. Subsection (6) of section 112.3187, Florida
 1881  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1882         112.3187 Adverse action against employee for disclosing
 1883  information of specified nature prohibited; employee remedy and
 1884  relief.—
 1885         (6) TO WHOM INFORMATION DISCLOSED.—The information
 1886  disclosed under this section must be disclosed to any agency or
 1887  federal government entity having the authority to investigate,
 1888  police, manage, or otherwise remedy the violation or act,
 1889  including, but not limited to, the Office of the Chief Inspector
 1890  General, an agency inspector general or the employee designated
 1891  as agency inspector general under s. 112.3189(1) or inspectors
 1892  general under s. 20.055, the Florida Commission on Human
 1893  Relations, and the whistle-blower’s hotline created under s.
 1894  112.3189. However, for disclosures concerning a local
 1895  governmental entity, including any regional, county, or
 1896  municipal entity, special district, community college district,
 1897  or school district or any political subdivision of any of the
 1898  foregoing, the information must be disclosed to a chief
 1899  executive officer as defined in s. 447.203 s. 447.203(9) or
 1900  other appropriate local official.
 1901         Section 26. Subsection (5) of section 121.031, Florida
 1902  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1903         121.031 Administration of system; appropriation; oaths;
 1904  actuarial studies; public records.—
 1905         (5) The names and addresses of retirees are confidential
 1906  and exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1) to the extent
 1907  that no state or local governmental agency may provide the names
 1908  or addresses of such persons in aggregate, compiled, or list
 1909  form to any person except to a public agency engaged in official
 1910  business. However, a state or local government agency may
 1911  provide the names and addresses of retirees from that agency to
 1912  a bargaining agent as defined in s. 447.203 s. 447.203(12) or to
 1913  a retiree organization for official business use. Lists of names
 1914  or addresses of retirees may be exchanged by public agencies,
 1915  but such lists may shall not be provided to, or open for
 1916  inspection by, the public. Any person may view or copy any
 1917  individual’s retirement records at the Department of Management
 1918  Services, one record at a time, or may obtain information by a
 1919  separate written request for a named individual for which
 1920  information is desired.
 1921         Section 27. Subsection (1) of section 447.02, Florida
 1922  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1923         447.02 Definitions.—The following terms, when used in this
 1924  chapter, shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this
 1925  section:
 1926         (1) The term “labor organization” means any organization of
 1927  employees or local or subdivision thereof, having within its
 1928  membership residents of the state, whether incorporated or not,
 1929  organized for the purpose of dealing with employers concerning
 1930  hours of employment, rate of pay, working conditions, or
 1931  grievances of any kind relating to employment and recognized as
 1932  a unit of bargaining by one or more employers doing business in
 1933  this state, except that an “employee organization,” as defined
 1934  in s. 447.203 s. 447.203(11), shall be included in this
 1935  definition at such time as it seeks to register pursuant to s.
 1936  447.305.
 1937         Section 28. Section 447.609, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1938  to read:
 1939         447.609 Representation in proceedings.—Any full-time
 1940  employee or officer of any public employer or employee
 1941  organization may represent his or her employer or any public
 1942  employee in member of a bargaining unit in any proceeding
 1943  authorized in this part, excluding the representation of any
 1944  person or public employer in a court of law by a person who is
 1945  not a licensed attorney.
 1946         Section 29. Subsection (2) of section 1011.60, Florida
 1947  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1948         1011.60 Minimum requirements of the Florida Education
 1949  Finance Program.—Each district which participates in the state
 1950  appropriations for the Florida Education Finance Program shall
 1951  provide evidence of its effort to maintain an adequate school
 1952  program throughout the district and shall meet at least the
 1953  following requirements:
 1954         (2) MINIMUM TERM.—Operate all schools for a term of 180
 1955  actual teaching days or the equivalent on an hourly basis as
 1956  specified by rules of the State Board of Education each school
 1957  year. The State Board of Education may prescribe procedures for
 1958  altering, and, upon written application, may alter, this
 1959  requirement during a national, state, or local emergency as it
 1960  may apply to an individual school or schools in any district or
 1961  districts if, in the opinion of the board, it is not feasible to
 1962  make up lost days or hours, and the apportionment may, at the
 1963  discretion of the Commissioner of Education and if the board
 1964  determines that the reduction of school days or hours is caused
 1965  by the existence of a bona fide emergency, be reduced for such
 1966  district or districts in proportion to the decrease in the
 1967  length of term in any such school or schools. A strike, as
 1968  defined in s. 447.203 s. 447.203(6), by employees of the school
 1969  district may not be considered an emergency.
 1970         Section 30. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.