Bill Text: FL S1112 | 2013 | Regular Session | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Background Screening

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Failed) 2013-05-03 - Died in Transportation [S1112 Detail]

Download: Florida-2013-S1112-Introduced.html
       Florida Senate - 2013                                    SB 1112
       
       
       
       By Senator Garcia
       
       
       
       
       38-00779-13                                           20131112__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to background screening; amending s.
    3         322.142, F.S.; authorizing the Department of Highway
    4         Safety and Motor Vehicles to share photographs or
    5         digital images of driver licenses with the Agency for
    6         Health Care Administration; amending s. 408.809, F.S.;
    7         adding additional disqualifying theft offenses for
    8         persons who must undergo background screening for
    9         health care licensing; amending s. 435.04, F.S.;
   10         revising the requirement that vendors who submit
   11         fingerprints on behalf of employers must provide the
   12         necessary information required by law, or the agency,
   13         in order to process the submission; adding an
   14         additional disqualifying offense; amending s. 435.07,
   15         F.S.; requiring that individuals seeking an exemption
   16         from disqualification must have completed all
   17         nonmonetary conditions imposed by the court, rather
   18         than sanctions, for a disqualifying felony or
   19         misdemeanor; authorizing the head of the appropriate
   20         agency to grant an exemption to an employee otherwise
   21         disqualified from employment for payment in full of a
   22         court-ordered fee, fine, fund, lien, civil judgment,
   23         application, trust, restitution, or costs of
   24         prosecution as part of the judgment and sentence for a
   25         disqualifying felony or misdemeanor; amending s.
   26         435.12, F.S.; requiring that a photograph be submitted
   27         of the potential employee taken at the time the
   28         fingerprints are processed; requiring an employer to
   29         register and initiate criminal background checks
   30         through the Care Provider Background Screening
   31         Clearinghouse before submission of the electronic
   32         fingerprints; providing requirements for the
   33         registration; providing an effective date.
   34  
   35  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   36  
   37         Section 1. Subsection (4) of section 322.142, Florida
   38  Statutes, is amended to read:
   39         322.142 Color photographic or digital imaged licenses.—
   40         (4) The department may maintain a film negative or print
   41  file. The department shall maintain a record of the digital
   42  image and signature of the licensees, together with other data
   43  required by the department for identification and retrieval.
   44  Reproductions from the file or digital record are exempt from
   45  the provisions of s. 119.07(1) and may shall be made and issued
   46  only for departmental administrative purposes; for the issuance
   47  of duplicate licenses; in response to law enforcement agency
   48  requests; to the Department of Business and Professional
   49  Regulation pursuant to an interagency agreement for the purpose
   50  of accessing digital images for reproduction of licenses issued
   51  by the Department of Business and Professional Regulation; to
   52  the Department of State pursuant to an interagency agreement to
   53  facilitate determinations of eligibility of voter registration
   54  applicants and registered voters in accordance with ss. 98.045
   55  and 98.075; to the Department of Revenue pursuant to an
   56  interagency agreement for use in establishing paternity and
   57  establishing, modifying, or enforcing support obligations in
   58  Title IV-D cases; to the Department of Children and Family
   59  Services pursuant to an interagency agreement to conduct
   60  protective investigations under part III of chapter 39 and
   61  chapter 415; to the Department of Children and Family Services
   62  pursuant to an interagency agreement specifying the number of
   63  employees in each of that department’s regions to be granted
   64  access to the records for use as verification of identity to
   65  expedite the determination of eligibility for public assistance
   66  and for use in public assistance fraud investigations; to the
   67  Agency for Health Care Administration pursuant to an interagency
   68  agreement for the purpose of verifying photographs in the Care
   69  Provider Background Screening Clearinghouse authorized in s.
   70  435.12; to the Department of Financial Services pursuant to an
   71  interagency agreement to facilitate the location of owners of
   72  unclaimed property, the validation of unclaimed property claims,
   73  and the identification of fraudulent or false claims; or to
   74  district medical examiners pursuant to an interagency agreement
   75  for the purpose of identifying a deceased individual,
   76  determining cause of death, and notifying next of kin of any
   77  investigations, including autopsies and other laboratory
   78  examinations, authorized in s. 406.011.
   79         Section 2. Subsection (4) of section 408.809, Florida
   80  Statutes, is amended to read:
   81         408.809 Background screening; prohibited offenses.—
   82         (4) In addition to the offenses listed in s. 435.04, all
   83  persons required to undergo background screening pursuant to
   84  this part or authorizing statutes must not have an arrest
   85  awaiting final disposition for, must not have been found guilty
   86  of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo
   87  contendere or guilty to, and must not have been adjudicated
   88  delinquent and the record not have been sealed or expunged for
   89  any of the following offenses or any similar offense of another
   90  jurisdiction:
   91         (a) Any authorizing statutes, if the offense was a felony.
   92         (b) This chapter, if the offense was a felony.
   93         (c) Section 409.920, relating to Medicaid provider fraud.
   94         (d) Section 409.9201, relating to Medicaid fraud.
   95         (e) Section 741.28, relating to domestic violence.
   96         (f) Section 817.034, relating to fraudulent acts through
   97  mail, wire, radio, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or
   98  photooptical systems.
   99         (g) Section 817.234, relating to false and fraudulent
  100  insurance claims.
  101         (h) Section 817.481, relating to the use of false,
  102  counterfeit, or expired credit cards, if the offense was a
  103  felony.
  104         (i) Section 817.50, relating to fraudulently obtaining
  105  goods or service from a health care provider.
  106         (j)(h) Section 817.505, relating to patient brokering.
  107         (k)(i) Section 817.568, relating to criminal use of
  108  personal identification information.
  109         (l)(j) Section 817.60, relating to obtaining a credit card
  110  through fraudulent means.
  111         (m)(k) Section 817.61, relating to fraudulent use of credit
  112  cards, if the offense was a felony.
  113         (n)(l) Section 831.01, relating to forgery.
  114         (o)(m) Section 831.02, relating to uttering forged
  115  instruments.
  116         (p)(n) Section 831.07, relating to forging bank bills,
  117  checks, drafts, or promissory notes.
  118         (q)(o) Section 831.09, relating to uttering forged bank
  119  bills, checks, drafts, or promissory notes.
  120         (r)(p) Section 831.30, relating to fraud in obtaining
  121  medicinal drugs.
  122         (s)(q) Section 831.31, relating to the sale, manufacture,
  123  delivery, or possession with the intent to sell, manufacture, or
  124  deliver any counterfeit controlled substance, if the offense was
  125  a felony.
  126         (t) Section 895.03, relating to racketeering and illegal
  127  debts.
  128         (u) Section 896.101, relating to the Florida Money
  129  Laundering Act.
  130         Section 3. Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of section
  131  435.04, Florida Statutes, is amended, present paragraphs (d)
  132  through (yy) of subsection (2) of that section are redesignated
  133  as (e) through (zz), respectively, and a new paragraph (d) is
  134  added to that subsection, to read:
  135         435.04 Level 2 screening standards.—
  136         (1)
  137         (e) Vendors who submit fingerprints on behalf of employers
  138  must:
  139         1. Meet the requirements of s. 943.053; and
  140         2. Have the ability to communicate electronically with the
  141  state agency accepting screening results from the Department of
  142  Law Enforcement and provide the necessary information required
  143  by law, or the agency, in order to process the submission a
  144  photograph of the applicant taken at the time the fingerprints
  145  are submitted.
  146         (2) The security background investigations under this
  147  section must ensure that no persons subject to the provisions of
  148  this section have been arrested for and are awaiting final
  149  disposition of, have been found guilty of, regardless of
  150  adjudication, or entered a plea of nolo contendere or guilty to,
  151  or have been adjudicated delinquent and the record has not been
  152  sealed or expunged for, any offense prohibited under any of the
  153  following provisions of state law or similar law of another
  154  jurisdiction:
  155         (d) Section 777.04, relating to attempts, solicitation, and
  156  conspiracy.
  157         Section 4. Subsection (1) of section 435.07, Florida
  158  Statutes, is amended to read:
  159         435.07 Exemptions from disqualification.—Unless otherwise
  160  provided by law, the provisions of this section apply to
  161  exemptions from disqualification for disqualifying offenses
  162  revealed pursuant to background screenings required under this
  163  chapter, regardless of whether those disqualifying offenses are
  164  listed in this chapter or other laws.
  165         (1) The head of the appropriate agency may grant to an any
  166  employee otherwise disqualified from employment an exemption
  167  from disqualification for:
  168         (a) Felonies for which at least 3 years have elapsed since
  169  the applicant for the exemption has completed or been lawfully
  170  released from confinement, supervision, or nonmonetary
  171  conditions imposed by the court sanction for the disqualifying
  172  felony;
  173         (b) Misdemeanors prohibited under any of the statutes cited
  174  in this chapter or under similar statutes of other jurisdictions
  175  for which the applicant for the exemption has completed or been
  176  lawfully released from confinement, supervision, or nonmonetary
  177  conditions imposed by the court for the disqualifying offense
  178  sanction;
  179         (c) Payment in full of a court-ordered fee, fine, fund,
  180  lien, civil judgment, application, trust, or restitution or the
  181  costs of prosecution as part of the judgment and sentence for a
  182  disqualifying felony or misdemeanor;
  183         (d)(c) Offenses that were felonies when committed but that
  184  are now misdemeanors and for which the applicant for the
  185  exemption has completed or been lawfully released from
  186  confinement, supervision, or sanction; or
  187         (e)(d) Findings of delinquency. For offenses that would be
  188  felonies if committed by an adult and the record has not been
  189  sealed or expunged, the exemption may not be granted until at
  190  least 3 years have elapsed since the applicant for the exemption
  191  has completed or been lawfully released from confinement,
  192  supervision, or sanction for the disqualifying offense.
  193  
  194  For the purposes of this subsection, the term “felonies” means
  195  both felonies prohibited under any of the statutes cited in this
  196  chapter or under similar statutes of other jurisdictions.
  197         Section 5. Subsection (2) of section 435.12, Florida
  198  Statutes, is amended to read:
  199         435.12 Care Provider Background Screening Clearinghouse.—
  200         (2)(a) To ensure that the information in the clearinghouse
  201  is current, the fingerprints of an employee required to be
  202  screened by a specified agency and included in the clearinghouse
  203  must be:
  204         1. Retained by the Department of Law Enforcement pursuant
  205  to s. 943.05(2)(g) and (h) and (3), and the Department of Law
  206  Enforcement must report the results of searching those
  207  fingerprints against state incoming arrest fingerprint
  208  submissions to the Agency for Health Care Administration for
  209  inclusion in the clearinghouse.
  210         2. Resubmitted for a Federal Bureau of Investigation
  211  national criminal history check every 5 years until such time as
  212  the fingerprints are retained by the Federal Bureau of
  213  Investigation.
  214         3. Subject to retention on a 5-year renewal basis with fees
  215  collected at the time of initial submission or resubmission of
  216  fingerprints.
  217         4. Submitted with a photograph of the potential employee
  218  taken at the time the fingerprints are submitted.
  219         (b) Until such time as the fingerprints are retained at the
  220  Federal Bureau of Investigation, an employee with a break in
  221  service of more than 90 days from a position that requires
  222  screening by a specified agency must submit to a national
  223  screening if the person returns to a position that requires
  224  screening by a specified agency.
  225         (c) An employer of persons subject to screening by a
  226  specified agency must register with the clearinghouse and
  227  maintain the employment status of all employees within the
  228  clearinghouse. Initial employment status and any subsequent
  229  changes in status must be reported within 10 business days.
  230         (d) An employer shall register and initiate all criminal
  231  history checks through the clearinghouse before referring an
  232  employee or potential employee for electronic fingerprint
  233  submission to the Department of Law Enforcement. The
  234  registration must include the employee’s first name, middle
  235  name, last name, social security number, date of birth, mailing
  236  address, sex, and race.
  237         Section 6. This act shall take effect July 1, 2013.

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