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To amend sections 9.39, 121.22, 149.43, 305.03, | 1 |
319.04, 319.26, 321.37, 321.38, 321.46, 2921.44, | 2 |
and 3314.023; to enact sections 9.831, 117.411, | 3 |
507.12, 507.15, 733.78, 733.81, 3313.30, 3314.50, | 4 |
3326.211, 3328.16, and 3328.37; and to repeal | 5 |
section 319.25 of the Revised Code; to amend | 6 |
Section 267.50.70 of Am. Sub. H.B. 153 of the | 7 |
129th General Assembly; and to amend Section | 8 |
267.50.70 of Am. Sub. H.B. 153 of the 129th | 9 |
General Assembly for the purpose of changing its | 10 |
number to section 3314.51 of the Revised Code to | 11 |
establish education programs and continuing | 12 |
education requirements for the fiscal officers of | 13 |
townships and municipal corporations, to establish | 14 |
procedures for removing those fiscal officers, | 15 |
county treasurers, and county auditors from | 16 |
office, and to create fiscal accountability | 17 |
requirements for public schools, counties, | 18 |
municipal corporations, and townships. | 19 |
Section 1. That sections 9.39, 121.22, 149.43, 305.03, | 20 |
319.04, 319.26, 321.37, 321.38, 321.46, 2921.44, and 3314.023 be | 21 |
amended; sections 9.831, 117.411, 507.12, 507.15, 733.78, 733.81, | 22 |
3313.30, 3314.50, 3326.211, 3328.16, and 3328.37 of the Revised | 23 |
Code be enacted; and Section 267.50.70 of Am. Sub. H.B. 153 of the | 24 |
129th General Assembly be amended and renumbered as section | 25 |
3314.51 of the Revised Code to read as follows: | 26 |
Sec. 9.39. All public officials are liable for | 27 |
negligent loss of any public money received or collected by them | 28 |
or by their subordinates under color of office. All money received | 29 |
or collected by a public official under color of office and not | 30 |
otherwise paid out according to law shall be paid into the | 31 |
treasury of the public office with which | 32 |
connected to the credit of a trust fund and shall be retained | 33 |
there until claimed by its lawful owner. If not claimed within a | 34 |
period of five years, the money shall revert to the general fund | 35 |
of the public office. | 36 |
Sec. 9.831. (A) As used in this section: | 37 |
(1) "Political subdivision" means a county, municipal | 38 |
corporation, or township. | 39 |
(2) "Public finance officer" means a county auditor, township | 40 |
fiscal officer, village fiscal officer, village clerk-treasurer, | 41 |
auditor of a municipal corporation, or treasurer of a municipal | 42 |
corporation. "Investment officer" means county treasurer. | 43 |
(B) The legislative authority of a political subdivision may | 44 |
purchase a policy or policies of professional indemnity insurance | 45 |
to protect the political subdivision against claims not otherwise | 46 |
covered under general liability insurance policies that are | 47 |
related to the performance of the public finance officer's or | 48 |
investment officer's duties. | 49 |
Sec. 117.411. (A) As used in this section, "legislative | 50 |
authority" means, for a county, the board of county commissioners; | 51 |
for a municipal corporation, the legislative authority of the | 52 |
municipal corporation; and for a township, the board of township | 53 |
trustees. | 54 |
(B) If the public office of a county, municipal corporation, | 55 |
or township has been declared unauditable under section 117.41 of | 56 |
the Revised Code, the auditor of state shall provide written | 57 |
notice of that declaration to the legislative authority of the | 58 |
county, municipal corporation, or township. The auditor of state | 59 |
also shall post the notice on the auditor of state's web site. | 60 |
(C) Not later than forty-five days after receiving the | 61 |
notice, the legislative authority shall provide a written response | 62 |
to the auditor of state. The response shall include all of the | 63 |
following: | 64 |
(1) An overview of the process the legislative authority will | 65 |
use to review and understand the circumstances that led to the | 66 |
county, municipal corporation, or township becoming unauditable; | 67 |
(2) A plan for providing to the auditor of state | 68 |
documentation necessary to complete an audit of the county, | 69 |
municipal corporation, or township and for ensuring that all | 70 |
financial documents are available in the future; and | 71 |
(3) The actions the legislative authority will take to ensure | 72 |
that the plan described in division (C)(2) of this section is | 73 |
implemented. | 74 |
(D)(1) If the public office of a county, municipal | 75 |
corporation, or township fails to make reasonable efforts and | 76 |
continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or | 77 |
reports into an auditable condition within ninety days after being | 78 |
declared unauditable, the auditor of state, in addition to | 79 |
requesting legal action under sections 117.41 and 117.42 of the | 80 |
Revised Code, shall notify the office of budget and management and | 81 |
any other state agency from which the public office receives state | 82 |
funding of the failure. | 83 |
(2) If the auditor of state or a public accountant acting | 84 |
pursuant to section 115.56 of the Revised Code subsequently is | 85 |
able to complete a financial audit of the public office, the | 86 |
auditor of state shall notify the office of budget and management | 87 |
and any other state agency from which the public office receives | 88 |
state funding that the audit has been completed. | 89 |
(E) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in the | 90 |
Revised Code, upon notification by the auditor of state under | 91 |
division (D)(1) of this section that the public office of a | 92 |
county, municipal corporation, or township has failed to make | 93 |
reasonable efforts and continuing progress to bring its accounts, | 94 |
records, files, or reports into an auditable condition following a | 95 |
declaration that the public office is unauditable, the office of | 96 |
budget and management and any other state agency that received the | 97 |
notice shall immediately cease all state funding for that public | 98 |
office, other than benefit assistance to individuals, and shall | 99 |
withhold the state funding until receiving subsequent notification | 100 |
from the auditor of state under division (D)(2) of this section | 101 |
that the auditor of state or a public accountant was able to | 102 |
complete a financial audit of the public office. | 103 |
Sec. 121.22. (A) This section shall be liberally construed | 104 |
to require public officials to take official action and to conduct | 105 |
all deliberations upon official business only in open meetings | 106 |
unless the subject matter is specifically excepted by law. | 107 |
(B) As used in this section: | 108 |
(1) "Public body" means any of the following: | 109 |
(a) Any board, commission, committee, council, or similar | 110 |
decision-making body of a state agency, institution, or authority, | 111 |
and any legislative authority or board, commission, committee, | 112 |
council, agency, authority, or similar decision-making body of any | 113 |
county, township, municipal corporation, school district, or other | 114 |
political subdivision or local public institution; | 115 |
(b) Any committee or subcommittee of a body described in | 116 |
division (B)(1)(a) of this section; | 117 |
(c) A court of jurisdiction of a sanitary district organized | 118 |
wholly for the purpose of providing a water supply for domestic, | 119 |
municipal, and public use when meeting for the purpose of the | 120 |
appointment, removal, or reappointment of a member of the board of | 121 |
directors of such a district pursuant to section 6115.10 of the | 122 |
Revised Code, if applicable, or for any other matter related to | 123 |
such a district other than litigation involving the district. As | 124 |
used in division (B)(1)(c) of this section, "court of | 125 |
jurisdiction" has the same meaning as "court" in section 6115.01 | 126 |
of the Revised Code. | 127 |
(2) "Meeting" means any prearranged discussion of the public | 128 |
business of the public body by a majority of its members. | 129 |
(3) "Regulated individual" means either of the following: | 130 |
(a) A student in a state or local public educational | 131 |
institution; | 132 |
(b) A person who is, voluntarily or involuntarily, an inmate, | 133 |
patient, or resident of a state or local institution because of | 134 |
criminal behavior, mental illness or retardation, disease, | 135 |
disability, age, or other condition requiring custodial care. | 136 |
(4) "Public office" has the same meaning as in section | 137 |
149.011 of the Revised Code. | 138 |
(C) All meetings of any public body are declared to be public | 139 |
meetings open to the public at all times. A member of a public | 140 |
body shall be present in person at a meeting open to the public to | 141 |
be considered present or to vote at the meeting and for purposes | 142 |
of determining whether a quorum is present at the meeting. | 143 |
The minutes of a regular or special meeting of any public | 144 |
body shall be promptly prepared, filed, and maintained and shall | 145 |
be open to public inspection. The minutes need only reflect the | 146 |
general subject matter of discussions in executive sessions | 147 |
authorized under division (G) or (J) of this section. | 148 |
(D) This section does not apply to any of the following: | 149 |
(1) A grand jury; | 150 |
(2) An audit conference conducted by the auditor of state or | 151 |
independent certified public accountants with officials of the | 152 |
public office that is the subject of the audit; | 153 |
(3) The adult parole authority when its hearings are | 154 |
conducted at a correctional institution for the sole purpose of | 155 |
interviewing inmates to determine parole or pardon; | 156 |
(4) The organized crime investigations commission established | 157 |
under section 177.01 of the Revised Code; | 158 |
(5) Meetings of a child fatality review board established | 159 |
under section 307.621 of the Revised Code and meetings conducted | 160 |
pursuant to sections 5153.171 to 5153.173 of the Revised Code; | 161 |
(6) The state medical board when determining whether to | 162 |
suspend a certificate without a prior hearing pursuant to division | 163 |
(G) of either section 4730.25 or 4731.22 of the Revised Code; | 164 |
(7) The board of nursing when determining whether to suspend | 165 |
a license or certificate without a prior hearing pursuant to | 166 |
division (B) of section 4723.281 of the Revised Code; | 167 |
(8) The state board of pharmacy when determining whether to | 168 |
suspend a license without a prior hearing pursuant to division (D) | 169 |
of section 4729.16 of the Revised Code; | 170 |
(9) The state chiropractic board when determining whether to | 171 |
suspend a license without a hearing pursuant to section 4734.37 of | 172 |
the Revised Code; | 173 |
(10) The executive committee of the emergency response | 174 |
commission when determining whether to issue an enforcement order | 175 |
or request that a civil action, civil penalty action, or criminal | 176 |
action be brought to enforce Chapter 3750. of the Revised Code; | 177 |
(11) The board of directors of the nonprofit corporation | 178 |
formed under section 187.01 of the Revised Code or any committee | 179 |
thereof, and the board of directors of any subsidiary of that | 180 |
corporation or a committee thereof; | 181 |
(12) An audit conference conducted by the audit staff of the | 182 |
department of job and family services with officials of the public | 183 |
office that is the subject of that audit under section 5101.37 of | 184 |
the Revised Code; | 185 |
(13) A meeting to consider a complaint alleging misconduct | 186 |
under section 319.26, 321.37, 507.15, or 733.38 of the Revised | 187 |
Code. | 188 |
(E) The controlling board, the industrial technology and | 189 |
enterprise advisory council, the tax credit authority, or the | 190 |
minority development financing advisory board, when meeting to | 191 |
consider granting assistance pursuant to Chapter 122. or 166. of | 192 |
the Revised Code, in order to protect the interest of the | 193 |
applicant or the possible investment of public funds, by unanimous | 194 |
vote of all board, council, or authority members present, may | 195 |
close the meeting during consideration of the following | 196 |
information confidentially received by the authority, council, or | 197 |
board from the applicant: | 198 |
(1) Marketing plans; | 199 |
(2) Specific business strategy; | 200 |
(3) Production techniques and trade secrets; | 201 |
(4) Financial projections; | 202 |
(5) Personal financial statements of the applicant or members | 203 |
of the applicant's immediate family, including, but not limited | 204 |
to, tax records or other similar information not open to public | 205 |
inspection. | 206 |
The vote by the authority, council, or board to accept or | 207 |
reject the application, as well as all proceedings of the | 208 |
authority, council, or board not subject to this division, shall | 209 |
be open to the public and governed by this section. | 210 |
(F) Every public body, by rule, shall establish a reasonable | 211 |
method whereby any person may determine the time and place of all | 212 |
regularly scheduled meetings and the time, place, and purpose of | 213 |
all special meetings. A public body shall not hold a special | 214 |
meeting unless it gives at least twenty-four hours' advance notice | 215 |
to the news media that have requested notification, except in the | 216 |
event of an emergency requiring immediate official action. In the | 217 |
event of an emergency, the member or members calling the meeting | 218 |
shall notify the news media that have requested notification | 219 |
immediately of the time, place, and purpose of the meeting. | 220 |
The rule shall provide that any person, upon request and | 221 |
payment of a reasonable fee, may obtain reasonable advance | 222 |
notification of all meetings at which any specific type of public | 223 |
business is to be discussed. Provisions for advance notification | 224 |
may include, but are not limited to, mailing the agenda of | 225 |
meetings to all subscribers on a mailing list or mailing notices | 226 |
in self-addressed, stamped envelopes provided by the person. | 227 |
(G) Except as provided in division (J) of this section, the | 228 |
members of a public body may hold an executive session only after | 229 |
a majority of a quorum of the public body determines, by a roll | 230 |
call vote, to hold an executive session and only at a regular or | 231 |
special meeting for the sole purpose of the consideration of any | 232 |
of the following matters: | 233 |
(1) To consider the appointment, employment, dismissal, | 234 |
discipline, promotion, demotion, or compensation of a public | 235 |
employee or official, or the investigation of charges or | 236 |
complaints against a public employee, official, licensee, or | 237 |
regulated individual, unless the public employee, official, | 238 |
licensee, or regulated individual requests a public hearing. | 239 |
Except as otherwise provided by law, no public body shall hold an | 240 |
executive session for the discipline of an elected official for | 241 |
conduct related to the performance of the elected official's | 242 |
official duties or for the elected official's removal from office. | 243 |
If a public body holds an executive session pursuant to division | 244 |
(G)(1) of this section, the motion and vote to hold that executive | 245 |
session shall state which one or more of the approved purposes | 246 |
listed in division (G)(1) of this section are the purposes for | 247 |
which the executive session is to be held, but need not include | 248 |
the name of any person to be considered at the meeting. | 249 |
(2) To consider the purchase of property for public purposes, | 250 |
or for the sale of property at competitive bidding, if premature | 251 |
disclosure of information would give an unfair competitive or | 252 |
bargaining advantage to a person whose personal, private interest | 253 |
is adverse to the general public interest. No member of a public | 254 |
body shall use division (G)(2) of this section as a subterfuge for | 255 |
providing covert information to prospective buyers or sellers. A | 256 |
purchase or sale of public property is void if the seller or buyer | 257 |
of the public property has received covert information from a | 258 |
member of a public body that has not been disclosed to the general | 259 |
public in sufficient time for other prospective buyers and sellers | 260 |
to prepare and submit offers. | 261 |
If the minutes of the public body show that all meetings and | 262 |
deliberations of the public body have been conducted in compliance | 263 |
with this section, any instrument executed by the public body | 264 |
purporting to convey, lease, or otherwise dispose of any right, | 265 |
title, or interest in any public property shall be conclusively | 266 |
presumed to have been executed in compliance with this section | 267 |
insofar as title or other interest of any bona fide purchasers, | 268 |
lessees, or transferees of the property is concerned. | 269 |
(3) Conferences with an attorney for the public body | 270 |
concerning disputes involving the public body that are the subject | 271 |
of pending or imminent court action; | 272 |
(4) Preparing for, conducting, or reviewing negotiations or | 273 |
bargaining sessions with public employees concerning their | 274 |
compensation or other terms and conditions of their employment; | 275 |
(5) Matters required to be kept confidential by federal law | 276 |
or regulations or state statutes; | 277 |
(6) Details relative to the security arrangements and | 278 |
emergency response protocols for a public body or a public office, | 279 |
if disclosure of the matters discussed could reasonably be | 280 |
expected to jeopardize the security of the public body or public | 281 |
office; | 282 |
(7) In the case of a county hospital operated pursuant to | 283 |
Chapter 339. of the Revised Code, a joint township hospital | 284 |
operated pursuant to Chapter 513. of the Revised Code, or a | 285 |
municipal hospital operated pursuant to Chapter 749. of the | 286 |
Revised Code, to consider trade secrets, as defined in section | 287 |
1333.61 of the Revised Code. | 288 |
If a public body holds an executive session to consider any | 289 |
of the matters listed in divisions (G)(2) to (7) of this section, | 290 |
the motion and vote to hold that executive session shall state | 291 |
which one or more of the approved matters listed in those | 292 |
divisions are to be considered at the executive session. | 293 |
A public body specified in division (B)(1)(c) of this section | 294 |
shall not hold an executive session when meeting for the purposes | 295 |
specified in that division. | 296 |
(H) A resolution, rule, or formal action of any kind is | 297 |
invalid unless adopted in an open meeting of the public body. A | 298 |
resolution, rule, or formal action adopted in an open meeting that | 299 |
results from deliberations in a meeting not open to the public is | 300 |
invalid unless the deliberations were for a purpose specifically | 301 |
authorized in division (G) or (J) of this section and conducted at | 302 |
an executive session held in compliance with this section. A | 303 |
resolution, rule, or formal action adopted in an open meeting is | 304 |
invalid if the public body that adopted the resolution, rule, or | 305 |
formal action violated division (F) of this section. | 306 |
(I)(1) Any person may bring an action to enforce this | 307 |
section. An action under division (I)(1) of this section shall be | 308 |
brought within two years after the date of the alleged violation | 309 |
or threatened violation. Upon proof of a violation or threatened | 310 |
violation of this section in an action brought by any person, the | 311 |
court of common pleas shall issue an injunction to compel the | 312 |
members of the public body to comply with its provisions. | 313 |
(2)(a) If the court of common pleas issues an injunction | 314 |
pursuant to division (I)(1) of this section, the court shall order | 315 |
the public body that it enjoins to pay a civil forfeiture of five | 316 |
hundred dollars to the party that sought the injunction and shall | 317 |
award to that party all court costs and, subject to reduction as | 318 |
described in division (I)(2) of this section, reasonable | 319 |
attorney's fees. The court, in its discretion, may reduce an award | 320 |
of attorney's fees to the party that sought the injunction or not | 321 |
award attorney's fees to that party if the court determines both | 322 |
of the following: | 323 |
(i) That, based on the ordinary application of statutory law | 324 |
and case law as it existed at the time of violation or threatened | 325 |
violation that was the basis of the injunction, a well-informed | 326 |
public body reasonably would believe that the public body was not | 327 |
violating or threatening to violate this section; | 328 |
(ii) That a well-informed public body reasonably would | 329 |
believe that the conduct or threatened conduct that was the basis | 330 |
of the injunction would serve the public policy that underlies the | 331 |
authority that is asserted as permitting that conduct or | 332 |
threatened conduct. | 333 |
(b) If the court of common pleas does not issue an injunction | 334 |
pursuant to division (I)(1) of this section and the court | 335 |
determines at that time that the bringing of the action was | 336 |
frivolous conduct, as defined in division (A) of section 2323.51 | 337 |
of the Revised Code, the court shall award to the public body all | 338 |
court costs and reasonable attorney's fees, as determined by the | 339 |
court. | 340 |
(3) Irreparable harm and prejudice to the party that sought | 341 |
the injunction shall be conclusively and irrebuttably presumed | 342 |
upon proof of a violation or threatened violation of this section. | 343 |
(4) A member of a public body who knowingly violates an | 344 |
injunction issued pursuant to division (I)(1) of this section may | 345 |
be removed from office by an action brought in the court of common | 346 |
pleas for that purpose by the prosecuting attorney or the attorney | 347 |
general. | 348 |
(J)(1) Pursuant to division (C) of section 5901.09 of the | 349 |
Revised Code, a veterans service commission shall hold an | 350 |
executive session for one or more of the following purposes unless | 351 |
an applicant requests a public hearing: | 352 |
(a) Interviewing an applicant for financial assistance under | 353 |
sections 5901.01 to 5901.15 of the Revised Code; | 354 |
(b) Discussing applications, statements, and other documents | 355 |
described in division (B) of section 5901.09 of the Revised Code; | 356 |
(c) Reviewing matters relating to an applicant's request for | 357 |
financial assistance under sections 5901.01 to 5901.15 of the | 358 |
Revised Code. | 359 |
(2) A veterans service commission shall not exclude an | 360 |
applicant for, recipient of, or former recipient of financial | 361 |
assistance under sections 5901.01 to 5901.15 of the Revised Code, | 362 |
and shall not exclude representatives selected by the applicant, | 363 |
recipient, or former recipient, from a meeting that the commission | 364 |
conducts as an executive session that pertains to the applicant's, | 365 |
recipient's, or former recipient's application for financial | 366 |
assistance. | 367 |
(3) A veterans service commission shall vote on the grant or | 368 |
denial of financial assistance under sections 5901.01 to 5901.15 | 369 |
of the Revised Code only in an open meeting of the commission. The | 370 |
minutes of the meeting shall indicate the name, address, and | 371 |
occupation of the applicant, whether the assistance was granted or | 372 |
denied, the amount of the assistance if assistance is granted, and | 373 |
the votes for and against the granting of assistance. | 374 |
Sec. 149.43. (A) As used in this section: | 375 |
(1) "Public record" means records kept by any public office, | 376 |
including, but not limited to, state, county, city, village, | 377 |
township, and school district units, and records pertaining to the | 378 |
delivery of educational services by an alternative school in this | 379 |
state kept by the nonprofit or for-profit entity operating the | 380 |
alternative school pursuant to section 3313.533 of the Revised | 381 |
Code. "Public record" does not mean any of the following: | 382 |
(a) Medical records; | 383 |
(b) Records pertaining to probation and parole proceedings or | 384 |
to proceedings related to the imposition of community control | 385 |
sanctions and post-release control sanctions; | 386 |
(c) Records pertaining to actions under section 2151.85 and | 387 |
division (C) of section 2919.121 of the Revised Code and to | 388 |
appeals of actions arising under those sections; | 389 |
(d) Records pertaining to adoption proceedings, including the | 390 |
contents of an adoption file maintained by the department of | 391 |
health under section 3705.12 of the Revised Code; | 392 |
(e) Information in a record contained in the putative father | 393 |
registry established by section 3107.062 of the Revised Code, | 394 |
regardless of whether the information is held by the department of | 395 |
job and family services or, pursuant to section 3111.69 of the | 396 |
Revised Code, the office of child support in the department or a | 397 |
child support enforcement agency; | 398 |
(f) Records listed in division (A) of section 3107.42 of the | 399 |
Revised Code or specified in division (A) of section 3107.52 of | 400 |
the Revised Code; | 401 |
(g) Trial preparation records; | 402 |
(h) Confidential law enforcement investigatory records; | 403 |
(i) Records containing information that is confidential under | 404 |
section 2710.03 or 4112.05 of the Revised Code; | 405 |
(j) DNA records stored in the DNA database pursuant to | 406 |
section 109.573 of the Revised Code; | 407 |
(k) Inmate records released by the department of | 408 |
rehabilitation and correction to the department of youth services | 409 |
or a court of record pursuant to division (E) of section 5120.21 | 410 |
of the Revised Code; | 411 |
(l) Records maintained by the department of youth services | 412 |
pertaining to children in its custody released by the department | 413 |
of youth services to the department of rehabilitation and | 414 |
correction pursuant to section 5139.05 of the Revised Code; | 415 |
(m) Intellectual property records; | 416 |
(n) Donor profile records; | 417 |
(o) Records maintained by the department of job and family | 418 |
services pursuant to section 3121.894 of the Revised Code; | 419 |
(p) Peace officer, parole officer, probation officer, | 420 |
bailiff, prosecuting attorney, assistant prosecuting attorney, | 421 |
correctional employee, community-based correctional facility | 422 |
employee, youth services employee, firefighter, EMT, or | 423 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 424 |
investigation residential and familial information; | 425 |
(q) In the case of a county hospital operated pursuant to | 426 |
Chapter 339. of the Revised Code or a municipal hospital operated | 427 |
pursuant to Chapter 749. of the Revised Code, information that | 428 |
constitutes a trade secret, as defined in section 1333.61 of the | 429 |
Revised Code; | 430 |
(r) Information pertaining to the recreational activities of | 431 |
a person under the age of eighteen; | 432 |
(s) Records provided to, statements made by review board | 433 |
members during meetings of, and all work products of a child | 434 |
fatality review board acting under sections 307.621 to 307.629 of | 435 |
the Revised Code, and child fatality review data submitted by the | 436 |
child fatality review board to the department of health or a | 437 |
national child death review database, other than the report | 438 |
prepared pursuant to division (A) of section 307.626 of the | 439 |
Revised Code; | 440 |
(t) Records provided to and statements made by the executive | 441 |
director of a public children services agency or a prosecuting | 442 |
attorney acting pursuant to section 5153.171 of the Revised Code | 443 |
other than the information released under that section; | 444 |
(u) Test materials, examinations, or evaluation tools used in | 445 |
an examination for licensure as a nursing home administrator that | 446 |
the board of examiners of nursing home administrators administers | 447 |
under section 4751.04 of the Revised Code or contracts under that | 448 |
section with a private or government entity to administer; | 449 |
(v) Records the release of which is prohibited by state or | 450 |
federal law; | 451 |
(w) Proprietary information of or relating to any person that | 452 |
is submitted to or compiled by the Ohio venture capital authority | 453 |
created under section 150.01 of the Revised Code; | 454 |
(x) Information reported and evaluations conducted pursuant | 455 |
to section 3701.072 of the Revised Code; | 456 |
(y) Financial statements and data any person submits for any | 457 |
purpose to the Ohio housing finance agency or the controlling | 458 |
board in connection with applying for, receiving, or accounting | 459 |
for financial assistance from the agency, and information that | 460 |
identifies any individual who benefits directly or indirectly from | 461 |
financial assistance from the agency; | 462 |
(z) Records listed in section 5101.29 of the Revised Code; | 463 |
(aa) Discharges recorded with a county recorder under section | 464 |
317.24 of the Revised Code, as specified in division (B)(2) of | 465 |
that section; | 466 |
(bb) Usage information including names and addresses of | 467 |
specific residential and commercial customers of a municipally | 468 |
owned or operated public utility; | 469 |
(cc) Records described in division (C) of section 187.04 of | 470 |
the Revised Code that are not designated to be made available to | 471 |
the public as provided in that division; | 472 |
(dd) Records described in section 319.26, 321.37, 507.15, or | 473 |
733.38 of the Revised Code that are not designated to be made | 474 |
available to the public as provided in that section. | 475 |
(2) "Confidential law enforcement investigatory record" means | 476 |
any record that pertains to a law enforcement matter of a | 477 |
criminal, quasi-criminal, civil, or administrative nature, but | 478 |
only to the extent that the release of the record would create a | 479 |
high probability of disclosure of any of the following: | 480 |
(a) The identity of a suspect who has not been charged with | 481 |
the offense to which the record pertains, or of an information | 482 |
source or witness to whom confidentiality has been reasonably | 483 |
promised; | 484 |
(b) Information provided by an information source or witness | 485 |
to whom confidentiality has been reasonably promised, which | 486 |
information would reasonably tend to disclose the source's or | 487 |
witness's identity; | 488 |
(c) Specific confidential investigatory techniques or | 489 |
procedures or specific investigatory work product; | 490 |
(d) Information that would endanger the life or physical | 491 |
safety of law enforcement personnel, a crime victim, a witness, or | 492 |
a confidential information source. | 493 |
(3) "Medical record" means any document or combination of | 494 |
documents, except births, deaths, and the fact of admission to or | 495 |
discharge from a hospital, that pertains to the medical history, | 496 |
diagnosis, prognosis, or medical condition of a patient and that | 497 |
is generated and maintained in the process of medical treatment. | 498 |
(4) "Trial preparation record" means any record that contains | 499 |
information that is specifically compiled in reasonable | 500 |
anticipation of, or in defense of, a civil or criminal action or | 501 |
proceeding, including the independent thought processes and | 502 |
personal trial preparation of an attorney. | 503 |
(5) "Intellectual property record" means a record, other than | 504 |
a financial or administrative record, that is produced or | 505 |
collected by or for faculty or staff of a state institution of | 506 |
higher learning in the conduct of or as a result of study or | 507 |
research on an educational, commercial, scientific, artistic, | 508 |
technical, or scholarly issue, regardless of whether the study or | 509 |
research was sponsored by the institution alone or in conjunction | 510 |
with a governmental body or private concern, and that has not been | 511 |
publicly released, published, or patented. | 512 |
(6) "Donor profile record" means all records about donors or | 513 |
potential donors to a public institution of higher education | 514 |
except the names and reported addresses of the actual donors and | 515 |
the date, amount, and conditions of the actual donation. | 516 |
(7) "Peace officer, parole officer, probation officer, | 517 |
bailiff, prosecuting attorney, assistant prosecuting attorney, | 518 |
correctional employee, community-based correctional facility | 519 |
employee, youth services employee, firefighter, EMT, or | 520 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 521 |
investigation residential and familial information" means any | 522 |
information that discloses any of the following about a peace | 523 |
officer, parole officer, probation officer, bailiff, prosecuting | 524 |
attorney, assistant prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, | 525 |
community-based correctional facility employee, youth services | 526 |
employee, firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau of | 527 |
criminal identification and investigation: | 528 |
(a) The address of the actual personal residence of a peace | 529 |
officer, parole officer, probation officer, bailiff, assistant | 530 |
prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, community-based | 531 |
correctional facility employee, youth services employee, | 532 |
firefighter, EMT, or an investigator of the bureau of criminal | 533 |
identification and investigation, except for the state or | 534 |
political subdivision in which the peace officer, parole officer, | 535 |
probation officer, bailiff, assistant prosecuting attorney, | 536 |
correctional employee, community-based correctional facility | 537 |
employee, youth services employee, firefighter, EMT, or | 538 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 539 |
investigation resides; | 540 |
(b) Information compiled from referral to or participation in | 541 |
an employee assistance program; | 542 |
(c) The social security number, the residential telephone | 543 |
number, any bank account, debit card, charge card, or credit card | 544 |
number, or the emergency telephone number of, or any medical | 545 |
information pertaining to, a peace officer, parole officer, | 546 |
probation officer, bailiff, prosecuting attorney, assistant | 547 |
prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, community-based | 548 |
correctional facility employee, youth services employee, | 549 |
firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau of criminal | 550 |
identification and investigation; | 551 |
(d) The name of any beneficiary of employment benefits, | 552 |
including, but not limited to, life insurance benefits, provided | 553 |
to a peace officer, parole officer, probation officer, bailiff, | 554 |
prosecuting attorney, assistant prosecuting attorney, correctional | 555 |
employee, community-based correctional facility employee, youth | 556 |
services employee, firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau | 557 |
of criminal identification and investigation by the peace | 558 |
officer's, parole officer's, probation officer's, bailiff's, | 559 |
prosecuting attorney's, assistant prosecuting attorney's, | 560 |
correctional employee's, community-based correctional facility | 561 |
employee's, youth services employee's, firefighter's, EMT's, or | 562 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 563 |
investigation's employer; | 564 |
(e) The identity and amount of any charitable or employment | 565 |
benefit deduction made by the peace officer's, parole officer's, | 566 |
probation officer's, bailiff's, prosecuting attorney's, assistant | 567 |
prosecuting attorney's, correctional employee's, community-based | 568 |
correctional facility employee's, youth services employee's, | 569 |
firefighter's, EMT's, or investigator of the bureau of criminal | 570 |
identification and investigation's employer from the peace | 571 |
officer's, parole officer's, probation officer's, bailiff's, | 572 |
prosecuting attorney's, assistant prosecuting attorney's, | 573 |
correctional employee's, community-based correctional facility | 574 |
employee's, youth services employee's, firefighter's, EMT's, or | 575 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 576 |
investigation's compensation unless the amount of the deduction is | 577 |
required by state or federal law; | 578 |
(f) The name, the residential address, the name of the | 579 |
employer, the address of the employer, the social security number, | 580 |
the residential telephone number, any bank account, debit card, | 581 |
charge card, or credit card number, or the emergency telephone | 582 |
number of the spouse, a former spouse, or any child of a peace | 583 |
officer, parole officer, probation officer, bailiff, prosecuting | 584 |
attorney, assistant prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, | 585 |
community-based correctional facility employee, youth services | 586 |
employee, firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau of | 587 |
criminal identification and investigation; | 588 |
(g) A photograph of a peace officer who holds a position or | 589 |
has an assignment that may include undercover or plain clothes | 590 |
positions or assignments as determined by the peace officer's | 591 |
appointing authority. | 592 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(9) of this section, | 593 |
"peace officer" has the same meaning as in section 109.71 of the | 594 |
Revised Code and also includes the superintendent and troopers of | 595 |
the state highway patrol; it does not include the sheriff of a | 596 |
county or a supervisory employee who, in the absence of the | 597 |
sheriff, is authorized to stand in for, exercise the authority of, | 598 |
and perform the duties of the sheriff. | 599 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(5) of this section, | 600 |
"correctional employee" means any employee of the department of | 601 |
rehabilitation and correction who in the course of performing the | 602 |
employee's job duties has or has had contact with inmates and | 603 |
persons under supervision. | 604 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(5) of this section, | 605 |
"youth services employee" means any employee of the department of | 606 |
youth services who in the course of performing the employee's job | 607 |
duties has or has had contact with children committed to the | 608 |
custody of the department of youth services. | 609 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(9) of this section, | 610 |
"firefighter" means any regular, paid or volunteer, member of a | 611 |
lawfully constituted fire department of a municipal corporation, | 612 |
township, fire district, or village. | 613 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(9) of this section, "EMT" | 614 |
means EMTs-basic, EMTs-I, and paramedics that provide emergency | 615 |
medical services for a public emergency medical service | 616 |
organization. "Emergency medical service organization," | 617 |
"EMT-basic," "EMT-I," and "paramedic" have the same meanings as in | 618 |
section 4765.01 of the Revised Code. | 619 |
As used in divisions (A)(7) and (B)(9) of this section, | 620 |
"investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 621 |
investigation" has the meaning defined in section 2903.11 of the | 622 |
Revised Code. | 623 |
(8) "Information pertaining to the recreational activities of | 624 |
a person under the age of eighteen" means information that is kept | 625 |
in the ordinary course of business by a public office, that | 626 |
pertains to the recreational activities of a person under the age | 627 |
of eighteen years, and that discloses any of the following: | 628 |
(a) The address or telephone number of a person under the age | 629 |
of eighteen or the address or telephone number of that person's | 630 |
parent, guardian, custodian, or emergency contact person; | 631 |
(b) The social security number, birth date, or photographic | 632 |
image of a person under the age of eighteen; | 633 |
(c) Any medical record, history, or information pertaining to | 634 |
a person under the age of eighteen; | 635 |
(d) Any additional information sought or required about a | 636 |
person under the age of eighteen for the purpose of allowing that | 637 |
person to participate in any recreational activity conducted or | 638 |
sponsored by a public office or to use or obtain admission | 639 |
privileges to any recreational facility owned or operated by a | 640 |
public office. | 641 |
(9) "Community control sanction" has the same meaning as in | 642 |
section 2929.01 of the Revised Code. | 643 |
(10) "Post-release control sanction" has the same meaning as | 644 |
in section 2967.01 of the Revised Code. | 645 |
(11) "Redaction" means obscuring or deleting any information | 646 |
that is exempt from the duty to permit public inspection or | 647 |
copying from an item that otherwise meets the definition of a | 648 |
"record" in section 149.011 of the Revised Code. | 649 |
(12) "Designee" and "elected official" have the same meanings | 650 |
as in section 109.43 of the Revised Code. | 651 |
(B)(1) Upon request and subject to division (B)(8) of this | 652 |
section, all public records responsive to the request shall be | 653 |
promptly prepared and made available for inspection to any person | 654 |
at all reasonable times during regular business hours. Subject to | 655 |
division (B)(8) of this section, upon request, a public office or | 656 |
person responsible for public records shall make copies of the | 657 |
requested public record available at cost and within a reasonable | 658 |
period of time. If a public record contains information that is | 659 |
exempt from the duty to permit public inspection or to copy the | 660 |
public record, the public office or the person responsible for the | 661 |
public record shall make available all of the information within | 662 |
the public record that is not exempt. When making that public | 663 |
record available for public inspection or copying that public | 664 |
record, the public office or the person responsible for the public | 665 |
record shall notify the requester of any redaction or make the | 666 |
redaction plainly visible. A redaction shall be deemed a denial of | 667 |
a request to inspect or copy the redacted information, except if | 668 |
federal or state law authorizes or requires a public office to | 669 |
make the redaction. | 670 |
(2) To facilitate broader access to public records, a public | 671 |
office or the person responsible for public records shall organize | 672 |
and maintain public records in a manner that they can be made | 673 |
available for inspection or copying in accordance with division | 674 |
(B) of this section. A public office also shall have available a | 675 |
copy of its current records retention schedule at a location | 676 |
readily available to the public. If a requester makes an ambiguous | 677 |
or overly broad request or has difficulty in making a request for | 678 |
copies or inspection of public records under this section such | 679 |
that the public office or the person responsible for the requested | 680 |
public record cannot reasonably identify what public records are | 681 |
being requested, the public office or the person responsible for | 682 |
the requested public record may deny the request but shall provide | 683 |
the requester with an opportunity to revise the request by | 684 |
informing the requester of the manner in which records are | 685 |
maintained by the public office and accessed in the ordinary | 686 |
course of the public office's or person's duties. | 687 |
(3) If a request is ultimately denied, in part or in whole, | 688 |
the public office or the person responsible for the requested | 689 |
public record shall provide the requester with an explanation, | 690 |
including legal authority, setting forth why the request was | 691 |
denied. If the initial request was provided in writing, the | 692 |
explanation also shall be provided to the requester in writing. | 693 |
The explanation shall not preclude the public office or the person | 694 |
responsible for the requested public record from relying upon | 695 |
additional reasons or legal authority in defending an action | 696 |
commenced under division (C) of this section. | 697 |
(4) Unless specifically required or authorized by state or | 698 |
federal law or in accordance with division (B) of this section, no | 699 |
public office or person responsible for public records may limit | 700 |
or condition the availability of public records by requiring | 701 |
disclosure of the requester's identity or the intended use of the | 702 |
requested public record. Any requirement that the requester | 703 |
disclose the requestor's identity or the intended use of the | 704 |
requested public record constitutes a denial of the request. | 705 |
(5) A public office or person responsible for public records | 706 |
may ask a requester to make the request in writing, may ask for | 707 |
the requester's identity, and may inquire about the intended use | 708 |
of the information requested, but may do so only after disclosing | 709 |
to the requester that a written request is not mandatory and that | 710 |
the requester may decline to reveal the requester's identity or | 711 |
the intended use and when a written request or disclosure of the | 712 |
identity or intended use would benefit the requester by enhancing | 713 |
the ability of the public office or person responsible for public | 714 |
records to identify, locate, or deliver the public records sought | 715 |
by the requester. | 716 |
(6) If any person chooses to obtain a copy of a public record | 717 |
in accordance with division (B) of this section, the public office | 718 |
or person responsible for the public record may require that | 719 |
person to pay in advance the cost involved in providing the copy | 720 |
of the public record in accordance with the choice made by the | 721 |
person seeking the copy under this division. The public office or | 722 |
the person responsible for the public record shall permit that | 723 |
person to choose to have the public record duplicated upon paper, | 724 |
upon the same medium upon which the public office or person | 725 |
responsible for the public record keeps it, or upon any other | 726 |
medium upon which the public office or person responsible for the | 727 |
public record determines that it reasonably can be duplicated as | 728 |
an integral part of the normal operations of the public office or | 729 |
person responsible for the public record. When the person seeking | 730 |
the copy makes a choice under this division, the public office or | 731 |
person responsible for the public record shall provide a copy of | 732 |
it in accordance with the choice made by the person seeking the | 733 |
copy. Nothing in this section requires a public office or person | 734 |
responsible for the public record to allow the person seeking a | 735 |
copy of the public record to make the copies of the public record. | 736 |
(7) Upon a request made in accordance with division (B) of | 737 |
this section and subject to division (B)(6) of this section, a | 738 |
public office or person responsible for public records shall | 739 |
transmit a copy of a public record to any person by United States | 740 |
mail or by any other means of delivery or transmission within a | 741 |
reasonable period of time after receiving the request for the | 742 |
copy. The public office or person responsible for the public | 743 |
record may require the person making the request to pay in advance | 744 |
the cost of postage if the copy is transmitted by United States | 745 |
mail or the cost of delivery if the copy is transmitted other than | 746 |
by United States mail, and to pay in advance the costs incurred | 747 |
for other supplies used in the mailing, delivery, or transmission. | 748 |
Any public office may adopt a policy and procedures that it | 749 |
will follow in transmitting, within a reasonable period of time | 750 |
after receiving a request, copies of public records by United | 751 |
States mail or by any other means of delivery or transmission | 752 |
pursuant to this division. A public office that adopts a policy | 753 |
and procedures under this division shall comply with them in | 754 |
performing its duties under this division. | 755 |
In any policy and procedures adopted under this division, a | 756 |
public office may limit the number of records requested by a | 757 |
person that the office will transmit by United States mail to ten | 758 |
per month, unless the person certifies to the office in writing | 759 |
that the person does not intend to use or forward the requested | 760 |
records, or the information contained in them, for commercial | 761 |
purposes. For purposes of this division, "commercial" shall be | 762 |
narrowly construed and does not include reporting or gathering | 763 |
news, reporting or gathering information to assist citizen | 764 |
oversight or understanding of the operation or activities of | 765 |
government, or nonprofit educational research. | 766 |
(8) A public office or person responsible for public records | 767 |
is not required to permit a person who is incarcerated pursuant to | 768 |
a criminal conviction or a juvenile adjudication to inspect or to | 769 |
obtain a copy of any public record concerning a criminal | 770 |
investigation or prosecution or concerning what would be a | 771 |
criminal investigation or prosecution if the subject of the | 772 |
investigation or prosecution were an adult, unless the request to | 773 |
inspect or to obtain a copy of the record is for the purpose of | 774 |
acquiring information that is subject to release as a public | 775 |
record under this section and the judge who imposed the sentence | 776 |
or made the adjudication with respect to the person, or the | 777 |
judge's successor in office, finds that the information sought in | 778 |
the public record is necessary to support what appears to be a | 779 |
justiciable claim of the person. | 780 |
(9)(a) Upon written request made and signed by a journalist | 781 |
on or after December 16, 1999, a public office, or person | 782 |
responsible for public records, having custody of the records of | 783 |
the agency employing a specified peace officer, parole officer, | 784 |
probation officer, bailiff, prosecuting attorney, assistant | 785 |
prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, community-based | 786 |
correctional facility employee, youth services employee, | 787 |
firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau of criminal | 788 |
identification and investigation shall disclose to the journalist | 789 |
the address of the actual personal residence of the peace officer, | 790 |
parole officer, probation officer, bailiff, prosecuting attorney, | 791 |
assistant prosecuting attorney, correctional employee, | 792 |
community-based correctional facility employee, youth services | 793 |
employee, firefighter, EMT, or investigator of the bureau of | 794 |
criminal identification and investigation and, if the peace | 795 |
officer's, parole officer's, probation officer's, bailiff's, | 796 |
prosecuting attorney's, assistant prosecuting attorney's, | 797 |
correctional employee's, community-based correctional facility | 798 |
employee's, youth services employee's, firefighter's, EMT's, or | 799 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 800 |
investigation's spouse, former spouse, or child is employed by a | 801 |
public office, the name and address of the employer of the peace | 802 |
officer's, parole officer's, probation officer's, bailiff's, | 803 |
prosecuting attorney's, assistant prosecuting attorney's, | 804 |
correctional employee's, community-based correctional facility | 805 |
employee's, youth services employee's, firefighter's, EMT's, or | 806 |
investigator of the bureau of criminal identification and | 807 |
investigation's spouse, former spouse, or child. The request shall | 808 |
include the journalist's name and title and the name and address | 809 |
of the journalist's employer and shall state that disclosure of | 810 |
the information sought would be in the public interest. | 811 |
(b) Division (B)(9)(a) of this section also applies to | 812 |
journalist requests for customer information maintained by a | 813 |
municipally owned or operated public utility, other than social | 814 |
security numbers and any private financial information such as | 815 |
credit reports, payment methods, credit card numbers, and bank | 816 |
account information. | 817 |
(c) As used in division (B)(9) of this section, "journalist" | 818 |
means a person engaged in, connected with, or employed by any news | 819 |
medium, including a newspaper, magazine, press association, news | 820 |
agency, or wire service, a radio or television station, or a | 821 |
similar medium, for the purpose of gathering, processing, | 822 |
transmitting, compiling, editing, or disseminating information for | 823 |
the general public. | 824 |
(C)(1) If a person allegedly is aggrieved by the failure of a | 825 |
public office or the person responsible for public records to | 826 |
promptly prepare a public record and to make it available to the | 827 |
person for inspection in accordance with division (B) of this | 828 |
section or by any other failure of a public office or the person | 829 |
responsible for public records to comply with an obligation in | 830 |
accordance with division (B) of this section, the person allegedly | 831 |
aggrieved may commence a mandamus action to obtain a judgment that | 832 |
orders the public office or the person responsible for the public | 833 |
record to comply with division (B) of this section, that awards | 834 |
court costs and reasonable attorney's fees to the person that | 835 |
instituted the mandamus action, and, if applicable, that includes | 836 |
an order fixing statutory damages under division (C)(1) of this | 837 |
section. The mandamus action may be commenced in the court of | 838 |
common pleas of the county in which division (B) of this section | 839 |
allegedly was not complied with, in the supreme court pursuant to | 840 |
its original jurisdiction under Section 2 of Article IV, Ohio | 841 |
Constitution, or in the court of appeals for the appellate | 842 |
district in which division (B) of this section allegedly was not | 843 |
complied with pursuant to its original jurisdiction under Section | 844 |
3 of Article IV, Ohio Constitution. | 845 |
If a requestor transmits a written request by hand delivery | 846 |
or certified mail to inspect or receive copies of any public | 847 |
record in a manner that fairly describes the public record or | 848 |
class of public records to the public office or person responsible | 849 |
for the requested public records, except as otherwise provided in | 850 |
this section, the requestor shall be entitled to recover the | 851 |
amount of statutory damages set forth in this division if a court | 852 |
determines that the public office or the person responsible for | 853 |
public records failed to comply with an obligation in accordance | 854 |
with division (B) of this section. | 855 |
The amount of statutory damages shall be fixed at one hundred | 856 |
dollars for each business day during which the public office or | 857 |
person responsible for the requested public records failed to | 858 |
comply with an obligation in accordance with division (B) of this | 859 |
section, beginning with the day on which the requester files a | 860 |
mandamus action to recover statutory damages, up to a maximum of | 861 |
one thousand dollars. The award of statutory damages shall not be | 862 |
construed as a penalty, but as compensation for injury arising | 863 |
from lost use of the requested information. The existence of this | 864 |
injury shall be conclusively presumed. The award of statutory | 865 |
damages shall be in addition to all other remedies authorized by | 866 |
this section. | 867 |
The court may reduce an award of statutory damages or not | 868 |
award statutory damages if the court determines both of the | 869 |
following: | 870 |
(a) That, based on the ordinary application of statutory law | 871 |
and case law as it existed at the time of the conduct or | 872 |
threatened conduct of the public office or person responsible for | 873 |
the requested public records that allegedly constitutes a failure | 874 |
to comply with an obligation in accordance with division (B) of | 875 |
this section and that was the basis of the mandamus action, a | 876 |
well-informed public office or person responsible for the | 877 |
requested public records reasonably would believe that the conduct | 878 |
or threatened conduct of the public office or person responsible | 879 |
for the requested public records did not constitute a failure to | 880 |
comply with an obligation in accordance with division (B) of this | 881 |
section; | 882 |
(b) That a well-informed public office or person responsible | 883 |
for the requested public records reasonably would believe that the | 884 |
conduct or threatened conduct of the public office or person | 885 |
responsible for the requested public records would serve the | 886 |
public policy that underlies the authority that is asserted as | 887 |
permitting that conduct or threatened conduct. | 888 |
(2)(a) If the court issues a writ of mandamus that orders the | 889 |
public office or the person responsible for the public record to | 890 |
comply with division (B) of this section and determines that the | 891 |
circumstances described in division (C)(1) of this section exist, | 892 |
the court shall determine and award to the relator all court | 893 |
costs. | 894 |
(b) If the court renders a judgment that orders the public | 895 |
office or the person responsible for the public record to comply | 896 |
with division (B) of this section, the court may award reasonable | 897 |
attorney's fees subject to reduction as described in division | 898 |
(C)(2)(c) of this section. The court shall award reasonable | 899 |
attorney's fees, subject to reduction as described in division | 900 |
(C)(2)(c) of this section when either of the following applies: | 901 |
(i) The public office or the person responsible for the | 902 |
public records failed to respond affirmatively or negatively to | 903 |
the public records request in accordance with the time allowed | 904 |
under division (B) of this section. | 905 |
(ii) The public office or the person responsible for the | 906 |
public records promised to permit the relator to inspect or | 907 |
receive copies of the public records requested within a specified | 908 |
period of time but failed to fulfill that promise within that | 909 |
specified period of time. | 910 |
(c) Court costs and reasonable attorney's fees awarded under | 911 |
this section shall be construed as remedial and not punitive. | 912 |
Reasonable attorney's fees shall include reasonable fees incurred | 913 |
to produce proof of the reasonableness and amount of the fees and | 914 |
to otherwise litigate entitlement to the fees. The court may | 915 |
reduce an award of attorney's fees to the relator or not award | 916 |
attorney's fees to the relator if the court determines both of the | 917 |
following: | 918 |
(i) That, based on the ordinary application of statutory law | 919 |
and case law as it existed at the time of the conduct or | 920 |
threatened conduct of the public office or person responsible for | 921 |
the requested public records that allegedly constitutes a failure | 922 |
to comply with an obligation in accordance with division (B) of | 923 |
this section and that was the basis of the mandamus action, a | 924 |
well-informed public office or person responsible for the | 925 |
requested public records reasonably would believe that the conduct | 926 |
or threatened conduct of the public office or person responsible | 927 |
for the requested public records did not constitute a failure to | 928 |
comply with an obligation in accordance with division (B) of this | 929 |
section; | 930 |
(ii) That a well-informed public office or person responsible | 931 |
for the requested public records reasonably would believe that the | 932 |
conduct or threatened conduct of the public office or person | 933 |
responsible for the requested public records as described in | 934 |
division (C)(2)(c)(i) of this section would serve the public | 935 |
policy that underlies the authority that is asserted as permitting | 936 |
that conduct or threatened conduct. | 937 |
(D) Chapter 1347. of the Revised Code does not limit the | 938 |
provisions of this section. | 939 |
(E)(1) To ensure that all employees of public offices are | 940 |
appropriately educated about a public office's obligations under | 941 |
division (B) of this section, all elected officials or their | 942 |
appropriate designees shall attend training approved by the | 943 |
attorney general as provided in section 109.43 of the Revised | 944 |
Code. In addition, all public offices shall adopt a public records | 945 |
policy in compliance with this section for responding to public | 946 |
records requests. In adopting a public records policy under this | 947 |
division, a public office may obtain guidance from the model | 948 |
public records policy developed and provided to the public office | 949 |
by the attorney general under section 109.43 of the Revised Code. | 950 |
Except as otherwise provided in this section, the policy may not | 951 |
limit the number of public records that the public office will | 952 |
make available to a single person, may not limit the number of | 953 |
public records that it will make available during a fixed period | 954 |
of time, and may not establish a fixed period of time before it | 955 |
will respond to a request for inspection or copying of public | 956 |
records, unless that period is less than eight hours. | 957 |
(2) The public office shall distribute the public records | 958 |
policy adopted by the public office under division (E)(1) of this | 959 |
section to the employee of the public office who is the records | 960 |
custodian or records manager or otherwise has custody of the | 961 |
records of that office. The public office shall require that | 962 |
employee to acknowledge receipt of the copy of the public records | 963 |
policy. The public office shall create a poster that describes its | 964 |
public records policy and shall post the poster in a conspicuous | 965 |
place in the public office and in all locations where the public | 966 |
office has branch offices. The public office may post its public | 967 |
records policy on the internet web site of the public office if | 968 |
the public office maintains an internet web site. A public office | 969 |
that has established a manual or handbook of its general policies | 970 |
and procedures for all employees of the public office shall | 971 |
include the public records policy of the public office in the | 972 |
manual or handbook. | 973 |
(F)(1) The bureau of motor vehicles may adopt rules pursuant | 974 |
to Chapter 119. of the Revised Code to reasonably limit the number | 975 |
of bulk commercial special extraction requests made by a person | 976 |
for the same records or for updated records during a calendar | 977 |
year. The rules may include provisions for charges to be made for | 978 |
bulk commercial special extraction requests for the actual cost of | 979 |
the bureau, plus special extraction costs, plus ten per cent. The | 980 |
bureau may charge for expenses for redacting information, the | 981 |
release of which is prohibited by law. | 982 |
(2) As used in division (F)(1) of this section: | 983 |
(a) "Actual cost" means the cost of depleted supplies, | 984 |
records storage media costs, actual mailing and alternative | 985 |
delivery costs, or other transmitting costs, and any direct | 986 |
equipment operating and maintenance costs, including actual costs | 987 |
paid to private contractors for copying services. | 988 |
(b) "Bulk commercial special extraction request" means a | 989 |
request for copies of a record for information in a format other | 990 |
than the format already available, or information that cannot be | 991 |
extracted without examination of all items in a records series, | 992 |
class of records, or | 993 |
use or forward the copies for surveys, marketing, solicitation, or | 994 |
resale for commercial purposes. "Bulk commercial special | 995 |
extraction request" does not include a request by a person who | 996 |
gives assurance to the bureau that the person making the request | 997 |
does not intend to use or forward the requested copies for | 998 |
surveys, marketing, solicitation, or resale for commercial | 999 |
purposes. | 1000 |
(c) "Commercial" means profit-seeking production, buying, or | 1001 |
selling of any good, service, or other product. | 1002 |
(d) "Special extraction costs" means the cost of the time | 1003 |
spent by the lowest paid employee competent to perform the task, | 1004 |
the actual amount paid to outside private contractors employed by | 1005 |
the bureau, or the actual cost incurred to create computer | 1006 |
programs to make the special extraction. "Special extraction | 1007 |
costs" include any charges paid to a public agency for computer or | 1008 |
records services. | 1009 |
(3) For purposes of divisions (F)(1) and (2) of this section, | 1010 |
"surveys, marketing, solicitation, or resale for commercial | 1011 |
purposes" shall be narrowly construed and does not include | 1012 |
reporting or gathering news, reporting or gathering information to | 1013 |
assist citizen oversight or understanding of the operation or | 1014 |
activities of government, or nonprofit educational research. | 1015 |
Sec. 305.03. (A)(1) Whenever any county officer, except the | 1016 |
county auditor or county treasurer, fails to perform the duties of | 1017 |
office for ninety consecutive days, except in case of sickness or | 1018 |
injury as provided in divisions (B) and (C) of this section, the | 1019 |
office shall be deemed vacant. | 1020 |
(2) Whenever any county auditor or county treasurer fails to | 1021 |
perform the duties of office for thirty consecutive days, except | 1022 |
in case of sickness or injury as provided in divisions (B) and (C) | 1023 |
of this section, the office shall be deemed vacant. | 1024 |
(B) Whenever any county officer is absent because of sickness | 1025 |
or injury, the officer shall cause to be filed with the board of | 1026 |
county commissioners a physician's certificate of the officer's | 1027 |
sickness or injury. If | 1028 |
board within ten days after the expiration of thirty consecutive | 1029 |
days, in the case of a county auditor or county treasurer, or | 1030 |
within ten days after the expiration of ninety consecutive days of | 1031 |
absence, in the case of all other county officers, the office | 1032 |
shall be deemed vacant. | 1033 |
(C) Whenever a county officer files a physician's certificate | 1034 |
under division (B) of this section, but continues to be absent for | 1035 |
an additional thirty days commencing immediately after the last | 1036 |
day on which this certificate may be filed under division (B) of | 1037 |
this section, the office shall be deemed vacant. | 1038 |
(D) If at any time two county commissioners in a county are | 1039 |
absent and have filed a physician's certificate under division (B) | 1040 |
of this section, the county coroner, in addition to performing the | 1041 |
duties of coroner, shall serve as county commissioner until at | 1042 |
least one of the absent commissioners returns to office or until | 1043 |
the office of at least one of the absent commissioners is deemed | 1044 |
vacant under this section and the vacancy is filled. If the | 1045 |
coroner so requests, the coroner shall be paid a per diem rate for | 1046 |
the coroner's service as a commissioner. That per diem rate shall | 1047 |
be the annual salary specified by law for a county commissioner of | 1048 |
that county whose term of office began in the same year as the | 1049 |
coroner's term of office began, divided by the number of days in | 1050 |
the year. | 1051 |
While the coroner is serving as a county commissioner, the | 1052 |
coroner shall be considered an acting county commissioner and | 1053 |
shall perform the duties of the office of county commissioner | 1054 |
until at least one of the absent commissioners returns to office | 1055 |
or until the office of at least one of the absent commissioners is | 1056 |
deemed vacant. Before assuming the office of acting county | 1057 |
commissioner, the coroner shall take an oath of office as provided | 1058 |
in sections 3.22 and 3.23 of the Revised Code. The coroner's | 1059 |
service as an acting county commissioner does not constitute the | 1060 |
holding of an incompatible public office or employment in | 1061 |
violation of any statutory or common law prohibition against the | 1062 |
simultaneous holding of more than one public | 1063 |
employment. | 1064 |
The coroner shall give a new bond in the same amount and | 1065 |
signed and approved as provided in section 305.04 of the Revised | 1066 |
Code. The bond shall be conditioned for the faithful discharge of | 1067 |
the coroner's duties as acting county commissioner and for the | 1068 |
payment of any loss or damage that the county may sustain by | 1069 |
reason of the coroner's failure in those duties. The bond, along | 1070 |
with the oath of office and approval of the probate judge indorsed | 1071 |
on it, shall be deposited and paid for as provided for the bonds | 1072 |
in section 305.04 of the Revised Code. | 1073 |
(E) Any vacancy declared under this section shall be filled | 1074 |
in the manner provided by section 305.02 of the Revised Code. | 1075 |
(F) This section shall not apply to a county officer while in | 1076 |
the active military service of the United States. | 1077 |
Sec. 319.04. (A) Each county auditor who is elected to a | 1078 |
full term of office shall attend and successfully complete at | 1079 |
least sixteen hours of continuing education courses during the | 1080 |
first year of the auditor's term of office, and complete at least | 1081 |
another eight hours of such courses by the end of that term. Each | 1082 |
such county auditor shall include at least two hours of ethics and | 1083 |
substance-abuse training in the total twenty-four hours of | 1084 |
required courses. To be counted toward the twenty-four hours | 1085 |
required by this section, a course must be approved by the county | 1086 |
auditors association of Ohio. Any county auditor who teaches an | 1087 |
approved course shall be entitled to credit for the course in the | 1088 |
same manner as if the county auditor had attended the course. | 1089 |
That association shall record and, upon request, verify the | 1090 |
completion of required course work for each county auditor, and | 1091 |
issue a statement to each county auditor of the number of hours of | 1092 |
continuing education the county auditor has successfully | 1093 |
completed. Each year the association shall send a list of the | 1094 |
continuing education courses, and the number of hours each county | 1095 |
auditor has successfully completed, to the auditor of state and | 1096 |
the tax commissioner, and shall provide a copy of this list to any | 1097 |
other individual who requests it. | 1098 |
The | 1099 |
completion to each county auditor who completes the continuing | 1100 |
education courses required by this section. The auditor of state | 1101 |
shall issue a "notice of failure" to any county auditor required | 1102 |
to complete continuing education courses under this section who | 1103 |
fails to successfully complete at least sixteen hours of | 1104 |
continuing education courses during the first year of the county | 1105 |
auditor's term of office or to complete a total of at least | 1106 |
twenty-four hours of such courses by the end of that term. This | 1107 |
notice is for informational purposes only and does not affect any | 1108 |
individual's ability to hold the office of county auditor. If a | 1109 |
county auditor does not complete the continuing education courses | 1110 |
required by this section, the board of county commissioners may | 1111 |
not purchase a policy or policies of professional indemnity | 1112 |
insurance for the county auditor under section 9.831 of the | 1113 |
Revised Code. | 1114 |
(B) Each board of county commissioners shall approve, from | 1115 |
money appropriated to the county auditor, a reasonable amount | 1116 |
requested by the county auditor of its county to cover the costs | 1117 |
the county auditor must incur to meet the requirements of division | 1118 |
(A) of this section, including registration fees, lodging and meal | 1119 |
expenses, and travel expenses. | 1120 |
Sec. 319.26. | 1121 |
(A)(1) If a county auditor
| 1122 |
1123 | |
1124 | |
1125 | |
1126 | |
1127 | |
1128 | |
1129 | |
1130 | |
1131 | |
1132 | |
expressly imposed by law with respect to the public office, or | 1133 |
negligently does any act expressly forbidden by law with respect | 1134 |
to the public office, the county treasurer or a majority of the | 1135 |
board of county commissioners may submit an affidavit particularly | 1136 |
describing the alleged violation along with supporting evidence of | 1137 |
the violation to the auditor of state according to criteria | 1138 |
established by rule by the auditor of state. The auditor of state | 1139 |
shall examine the evidence within ten business days. If the | 1140 |
auditor of state finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | 1141 |
one or more of the allegations is sustained and that one or more | 1142 |
of the criteria are met, then the auditor of state shall submit | 1143 |
those findings in writing to the attorney general and the county | 1144 |
auditor. | 1145 |
The attorney general shall examine the evidence within ten | 1146 |
business days after referral from the auditor of state. If the | 1147 |
attorney general finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | 1148 |
one or more of the allegations is sustained and that the criteria | 1149 |
established by rule by the auditor of state has been met, then the | 1150 |
attorney general shall notify, by certified mail, the county | 1151 |
treasurer or the board of county commissioners initiating the | 1152 |
complaint and the county auditor. The attorney general, within | 1153 |
forty-five days of the notification to the county treasurer or the | 1154 |
board of county commissioners initiating the complaint and the | 1155 |
county auditor, shall cause suit to be instituted against the | 1156 |
county auditor and against the auditor's surety or sureties for | 1157 |
the amount due, with a ten per cent penalty on that amount. | 1158 |
Nothing in this section is intended to remove the authority of the | 1159 |
attorney general to enter into mediation, settlement, or | 1160 |
resolution of the claims brought prior to or following the filing | 1161 |
of any complaint. | 1162 |
The suit shall be instituted by the attorney general by the | 1163 |
filing of a complaint for the removal of the county auditor with | 1164 |
the court of common pleas of the county in which the county | 1165 |
auditor against whom the complaint is filed holds office. The suit | 1166 |
shall have precedence over all civil business. The judge or clerk | 1167 |
of the court of common pleas shall cause to be served upon the | 1168 |
county auditor the complaint and a notice of hearing, at least ten | 1169 |
days before the hearing upon the complaint. The hearing shall be | 1170 |
held not later than thirty days after the date of the filing of | 1171 |
the complaint unless good cause is shown for its continuance. At | 1172 |
the hearing or prior to, upon a showing of good cause, the court | 1173 |
may issue an order restraining the county auditor from entering or | 1174 |
conducting the affairs of the office pending a hearing on the | 1175 |
complaint. If such order is issued, the court may continue the | 1176 |
order until the conclusion of proceedings. | 1177 |
(2) The county auditor is entitled, with or without counsel, | 1178 |
to appear and introduce evidence at the hearing and trial. | 1179 |
Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, the | 1180 |
county shall be responsible for payment of reasonable attorney's | 1181 |
fees for counsel for the county auditor. If a judgment is entered | 1182 |
against the county auditor, the court shall order the county | 1183 |
auditor to reimburse the county for attorney's fees and costs up | 1184 |
to a reasonable amount as determined by the court. | 1185 |
(B) Removal proceedings shall be tried before a judge of the | 1186 |
court of common pleas who shall be the trier of fact unless either | 1187 |
party demands a trial by jury. Otherwise, the proceedings shall be | 1188 |
governed by Rule 38 and Rule 39 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. | 1189 |
If the court or jury find, by a preponderance of the evidence, one | 1190 |
or more of the allegations in the complaint are sustained, a | 1191 |
judgment of removal from public office shall be issued against the | 1192 |
county auditor, the office shall be deemed vacated, and the | 1193 |
vacancy shall be filled as provided in section 305.02 of the | 1194 |
Revised Code. | 1195 |
If the court is the trier of fact, findings of fact and | 1196 |
conclusions of law shall be issued. Rule 62 of the Rules of Civil | 1197 |
Procedure applies to any stay proceedings, and the court retains | 1198 |
authority to issue appropriate orders where public dollars may be | 1199 |
at risk, including an order restraining the county auditor from | 1200 |
entering and conducting the business of the office held. | 1201 |
(C)(1) The decision of the court of common pleas for the | 1202 |
removal of a county auditor may be reviewed on appeal by the court | 1203 |
of appeals. Upon the filing of any notice of appeal by any party | 1204 |
to the proceedings, the court of appeals shall handle the case as | 1205 |
an expedited appeal pursuant to Rule 11.2 of the Rules of | 1206 |
Appellate Procedure. | 1207 |
(2) In all cases before the court of appeals involving the | 1208 |
removal of a county auditor under this section, the county auditor | 1209 |
has the right of review or appeal to the supreme court. | 1210 |
(D) In removal proceedings instituted under this section, the | 1211 |
court of common pleas may subpoena witnesses and compel their | 1212 |
attendance in the same manner as in civil cases. Process shall be | 1213 |
served by the sheriff of the county in which a witness resides. | 1214 |
Witness fees and other fees in connection with the removal | 1215 |
proceedings shall be the same as in civil cases, and the expenses | 1216 |
incurred in removal proceedings shall be paid out of the county | 1217 |
general revenue fund. | 1218 |
(E) Immediately following a final decision that the county | 1219 |
auditor shall be removed from office, the vacancy shall be filled | 1220 |
as provided in section 305.02 of the Revised Code. | 1221 |
(F) Any individual removed from office under this section is | 1222 |
not entitled to hold another public office for at least four years | 1223 |
following the date of the judgment, and is not entitled to hold | 1224 |
public office until the settlement is made or restitution and | 1225 |
costs are recovered. Nothing in this section shall remove the | 1226 |
authority of the attorney general to resolve claims as provided in | 1227 |
section 9.24 of the Revised Code. | 1228 |
(G)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1229 |
121.22 of the Revised Code, all meetings of the legislative | 1230 |
authority called to discuss and initiate a complaint under these | 1231 |
provisions shall be closed to the public. | 1232 |
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1233 |
149.43 of the Revised Code, the complaint and evidence before the | 1234 |
auditor of state and attorney general shall not be made available | 1235 |
to the public for inspection or copying until the attorney general | 1236 |
issues a written report under this provision or files a complaint | 1237 |
for removal. | 1238 |
(3) No member, employee, or agent of the auditor of state or | 1239 |
the attorney general shall divulge any information or any books, | 1240 |
papers, or documents in printed or electronic form presented in | 1241 |
the complaint and review process, without the consent, in writing, | 1242 |
of the auditor of state or attorney general. | 1243 |
(4) No complainant, or person acting at the direction of the | 1244 |
complainant, shall disclose that a complaint and evidence has been | 1245 |
filed with the auditor of state or the attorney general until such | 1246 |
time as the attorney general releases a written report regarding | 1247 |
disposition of the allegations brought under this provision or | 1248 |
files a complaint for removal in a court of record. | 1249 |
Any person who violates this division shall be fined not more | 1250 |
than five hundred dollars. | 1251 |
Sec. 321.37. (A) If the county treasurer negligently fails to | 1252 |
1253 | |
perform a duty expressly imposed by law with respect to the public | 1254 |
office, or negligently does any act expressly forbidden by law | 1255 |
with respect to the public office, the county auditor or a | 1256 |
majority of the board of county commissioners may submit a sworn | 1257 |
affidavit particularly describing the alleged violation along with | 1258 |
supporting evidence of such violation to the auditor of state | 1259 |
according to criteria established by rule by the auditor of state. | 1260 |
The auditor of state shall examine the evidence within ten | 1261 |
business days. If the auditor of state finds, by a preponderance | 1262 |
of the evidence, that one or more of the allegations is sustained | 1263 |
and that one or more of the criteria are met, then the auditor of | 1264 |
state shall submit those findings in writing to the attorney | 1265 |
general and the county treasurer. | 1266 |
The attorney general shall examine the evidence within ten | 1267 |
business days after referral from the auditor of state. If the | 1268 |
attorney general finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | 1269 |
one or more of the allegations is sustained and that the criteria | 1270 |
established by rule by the auditor of state has been met, then the | 1271 |
attorney general shall notify, by certified mail, the county | 1272 |
auditor or board of county commissioners initiating the complaint | 1273 |
and the county treasurer. The attorney general, within forty-five | 1274 |
days of the notification to the county auditor or board of county | 1275 |
commissioners initiating the complaint and the county treasurer, | 1276 |
shall cause suit to be instituted against such treasurer and
| 1277 |
the treasurer's surety or sureties for the amount due, with a ten | 1278 |
per cent penalty on such amount, which suit shall have precedence | 1279 |
1280 |
Nothing in this section is intended to remove the authority | 1281 |
of the attorney general to enter into mediation, settlement, or | 1282 |
resolution of the claims brought prior to or following the filing | 1283 |
of any complaint. | 1284 |
The suit shall be instituted by the attorney general by the | 1285 |
filing of a complaint for removal of the county treasurer with the | 1286 |
court of common pleas of the county in which the county treasurer | 1287 |
against whom the complaint is filed holds office. | 1288 |
(B)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1289 |
121.22 of the Revised Code, all meetings of the legislative | 1290 |
authority called to discuss and initiate a complaint under these | 1291 |
provisions shall be closed to the public. | 1292 |
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1293 |
149.43 of the Revised Code, the complaint and evidence before the | 1294 |
auditor of state and attorney general shall not be made available | 1295 |
to the public for inspection or copying until the attorney general | 1296 |
issues a written report under this provision or files a complaint | 1297 |
for removal. | 1298 |
(3) No member, employee, or agent of the auditor of state or | 1299 |
the attorney general shall divulge any information or any books, | 1300 |
papers, or documents in printed or electronic form presented in | 1301 |
the complaint and review process, without the consent, in writing, | 1302 |
of the auditor of state or attorney general. | 1303 |
(4) No complainant, or person acting at the direction of the | 1304 |
complainant, shall disclose that a complaint and evidence has been | 1305 |
filed with the auditor of state or the attorney general until such | 1306 |
time as the attorney general releases a written report regarding | 1307 |
disposition of the allegations brought under this provision or | 1308 |
files a complaint for removal in a court of record. | 1309 |
Any person who violates this division shall be fined not more | 1310 |
than five hundred dollars. | 1311 |
Sec. 321.38. | 1312 |
a suit | 1313 |
1314 | |
1315 | |
1316 | |
1317 | |
cause to be served upon the county treasurer the complaint and a | 1318 |
notice of hearing, at least ten days before the hearing upon the | 1319 |
complaint. The hearing shall be held not later than thirty days | 1320 |
after the date of the filing of the complaint unless good cause is | 1321 |
shown for its continuance. At the hearing or prior to, upon a | 1322 |
showing of good cause, the court may issue an order restraining | 1323 |
the county treasurer from entering or conducting the affairs of | 1324 |
the office pending a hearing on the complaint. If such order is | 1325 |
issued, the court may continue the order until the conclusion of | 1326 |
proceedings. | 1327 |
(2) The county treasurer is entitled, with or without | 1328 |
counsel, to appear and introduce evidence at the hearing and | 1329 |
trial. Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, | 1330 |
the county shall be responsible for payment of reasonable | 1331 |
attorney's fees for counsel for the county treasurer. If a | 1332 |
judgment is entered against the county treasurer, the court shall | 1333 |
order the county treasurer to reimburse the county for attorney's | 1334 |
fees and costs up to a reasonable amount as determined by the | 1335 |
court. | 1336 |
(B) Removal proceedings shall be tried before a judge of the | 1337 |
court of common pleas who shall be the trier of fact unless either | 1338 |
party demands trial by jury. Otherwise, the proceedings shall be | 1339 |
governed by Rule 38 and Rule 39 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. | 1340 |
If the court or jury find, by a preponderance of the evidence, one | 1341 |
or more of the allegations in the complaint are sustained, a | 1342 |
judgment of removal from public office shall issue against the | 1343 |
county treasurer, the office shall be deemed vacated, and the | 1344 |
vacancy shall be filled as provided in section 305.02 of the | 1345 |
Revised Code. | 1346 |
If the court is the trier of fact, findings of fact and | 1347 |
conclusions of law shall issue. Rule 62 of the Rules of Civil | 1348 |
Procedure applies to any stay proceedings, and the court retains | 1349 |
authority to issue appropriate orders where public dollars may be | 1350 |
at risk, including an order restraining the county treasurer from | 1351 |
entering and conducting the business of the office held. | 1352 |
(C)(1) The decision of the court of common pleas for the | 1353 |
removal of a county treasurer may be reviewed on appeal by the | 1354 |
court of appeals. Upon the filing of any notice of appeal by any | 1355 |
party to the proceedings, the court of appeals shall handle the | 1356 |
case as an expedited appeal pursuant to Rule 11.2 of the Rules of | 1357 |
Appellate Procedure. | 1358 |
(2) In all cases before the court of appeals involving the | 1359 |
removal of a county treasurer under this section, the county | 1360 |
treasurer has the right of review or appeal to the supreme court. | 1361 |
(D) In removal proceedings under this section, the court of | 1362 |
common pleas may subpoena witnesses and compel their attendance in | 1363 |
the same manner as in civil cases. Process shall be served by the | 1364 |
sheriff of the county in which a witness resides. Witness fees and | 1365 |
other fees in connection with the removal proceedings shall be the | 1366 |
same as in civil cases, and the expenses incurred in removal | 1367 |
proceedings shall be paid out of the general revenue fund of the | 1368 |
county. | 1369 |
(E) Immediately following a final decision that the county | 1370 |
treasurer shall be removed from office, the vacancy shall be | 1371 |
filled as provided in section 305.02 of the Revised Code. | 1372 |
(F) Any individual removed from office under this section is | 1373 |
not entitled to hold public office for at least four years | 1374 |
following the date of the judgment and is not entitled to hold | 1375 |
public office until the settlement is made or restitution and | 1376 |
costs are recovered. Nothing in this section shall remove the | 1377 |
authority of the attorney general to resolve claims as provided in | 1378 |
section 9.24 of the Revised Code. | 1379 |
Sec. 321.46. (A) To enhance the background and working | 1380 |
knowledge of county treasurers in governmental accounting, | 1381 |
portfolio reporting and compliance, investments, and cash | 1382 |
management, the auditor of state and the treasurer of state shall | 1383 |
conduct education programs for persons elected for the first time | 1384 |
to the office of county treasurer and shall hold biennial | 1385 |
continuing education programs for persons who continue to hold the | 1386 |
office of county treasurer. Education programs for newly elected | 1387 |
county treasurers shall be held between the first day of December | 1388 |
and the first Monday of September next following that person's | 1389 |
election to the office of county treasurer. Similar initial | 1390 |
training may also be provided to any county treasurer who is | 1391 |
appointed to fill a vacancy or who is elected at a special | 1392 |
election. | 1393 |
(B)(1) The auditor of state shall determine the manner and | 1394 |
content of the education programs in the subject areas of | 1395 |
governmental accounting and portfolio reporting and compliance. In | 1396 |
those areas, newly elected county treasurers shall take at least | 1397 |
thirteen hours of education before taking office. | 1398 |
(2) The treasurer of state shall determine the manner and | 1399 |
content of the education programs in the subject areas of | 1400 |
investments and cash management. In those areas, newly elected | 1401 |
county treasurers shall take at least thirteen hours of education | 1402 |
before taking office. | 1403 |
(3)(a) After completing one year in office, a county | 1404 |
treasurer shall take not less than twenty-four hours of continuing | 1405 |
education during each biennial cycle. For purposes of division | 1406 |
(B)(3)(a) of this section, a biennial cycle for continuing | 1407 |
education shall be every two calendar years after the treasurer's | 1408 |
first year in office. The treasurer of state shall determine the | 1409 |
manner and content of the education programs in the subject areas | 1410 |
of investments, cash management, the collection of taxes, ethics, | 1411 |
and any other subject area that the treasurer of state determines | 1412 |
is reasonably related to the duties of the office of the county | 1413 |
treasurer. The auditor of state shall determine the manner and | 1414 |
content of the education programs in the subject areas of | 1415 |
governmental accounting, portfolio reporting and compliance, | 1416 |
office management, and any other subject area that the auditor of | 1417 |
state determines is reasonably related to the duties of the office | 1418 |
of the county treasurer. | 1419 |
(b) A county treasurer who accumulates more than twenty-four | 1420 |
hours of continuing education in a biennial cycle described in | 1421 |
division (B)(3)(a) of this section may credit the hours in excess | 1422 |
of twenty-four hours to the next biennial cycle. However, | 1423 |
regardless of the total number of hours earned, no more than six | 1424 |
hours in the education programs determined by the treasurer of | 1425 |
state pursuant to division (B)(3)(a) of this section and six hours | 1426 |
in the education programs determined by the auditor of state | 1427 |
pursuant to that division shall be carried over to the next | 1428 |
biennial cycle. | 1429 |
(c) A county treasurer who participates in a training program | 1430 |
or seminar established under section 109.43 of the Revised Code | 1431 |
may apply the three hours of training to the twenty-four hours of | 1432 |
continuing education required in a biennial cycle under division | 1433 |
(B)(3)(a) of this section. | 1434 |
(C) The auditor of state and the treasurer of state may each | 1435 |
charge counties a registration fee that will meet actual and | 1436 |
necessary expenses of the training of county treasurers, including | 1437 |
instructor fees, site acquisition costs, and the cost of course | 1438 |
materials. The necessary personal expenses of county treasurers as | 1439 |
a result of attending the training programs shall be borne by the | 1440 |
counties the treasurers represent. | 1441 |
(D) The auditor of state and the treasurer of state may allow | 1442 |
any other interested person to attend any of the education | 1443 |
programs that are held pursuant to this section, provided that | 1444 |
before attending any such education program, the interested person | 1445 |
shall pay to either the auditor of state or the treasurer of | 1446 |
state, as appropriate, the full registration fee set for the | 1447 |
education program. | 1448 |
(E)(1) If a county treasurer fails to complete the initial | 1449 |
education programs required by this section before taking office, | 1450 |
the treasurer's authority to invest county funds and to manage the | 1451 |
county portfolio immediately is suspended, and this authority is | 1452 |
transferred to the county's investment advisory committee until | 1453 |
full compliance with the initial education programs is determined | 1454 |
by the treasurer of state. | 1455 |
(2) If a county treasurer fails to complete continuing | 1456 |
education programs as required by this section, the county | 1457 |
treasurer is subject to divisions (B) to (E) of section 321.47 of | 1458 |
the Revised Code, including possible suspension of the treasurer's | 1459 |
authority to invest county funds and to manage the county | 1460 |
portfolio and transfer of this authority to the county's | 1461 |
investment advisory committee. | 1462 |
(3) If a county treasurer fails to complete the initial | 1463 |
education programs and continuing education programs required by | 1464 |
this section, the board of county commissioners may not purchase a | 1465 |
policy or policies of professional indemnity insurance for the | 1466 |
county treasurer under section 9.831 of the Revised Code. | 1467 |
(F)(1) Notwithstanding divisions (B) and (E) of this section, | 1468 |
a county treasurer who fails to complete the initial or continuing | 1469 |
education programs required by this section shall invest only in | 1470 |
the Ohio subdivisions fund pursuant to division (A)(6) of section | 1471 |
135.35 of the Revised Code, in no load money market mutual funds | 1472 |
pursuant to division (A)(5) of section 135.35 of the Revised Code, | 1473 |
or in time certificates of deposit or savings or deposit accounts | 1474 |
pursuant to division (A)(3) of section 135.35 of the Revised Code. | 1475 |
(2) A county treasurer who has failed to complete the initial | 1476 |
education programs required by this section and invests in other | 1477 |
than the investments permitted by division (F)(1) of this section | 1478 |
immediately shall have the county treasurer's authority to invest | 1479 |
county funds and to manage the county portfolio suspended, and | 1480 |
this authority shall be transferred to the county's investment | 1481 |
advisory committee until full compliance with the initial | 1482 |
education programs is determined by the treasurer of state. | 1483 |
(3) If a county treasurer fails to complete continuing | 1484 |
education programs required by this section and invests in other | 1485 |
than the investments permitted by division (F)(1) of this section, | 1486 |
the county treasurer is subject to divisions (B) to (E) of section | 1487 |
321.47 of the Revised Code, including possible suspension of the | 1488 |
treasurer's authority to invest county funds and to manage the | 1489 |
county portfolio and transfer of this authority to the county's | 1490 |
investment advisory committee. | 1491 |
(G)(1) There is hereby created in the state treasury the | 1492 |
county treasurer education fund, to be used by the treasurer of | 1493 |
state for actual and necessary expenses of education programs held | 1494 |
pursuant to this section and section 135.22 of the Revised Code. | 1495 |
All registration fees collected by the treasurer of state under | 1496 |
this section and section 135.22 of the Revised Code shall be paid | 1497 |
into that fund. | 1498 |
(2) All registration fees collected by the auditor of state | 1499 |
under this section shall be paid into the auditor of state | 1500 |
training program fund established under section 117.44 of the | 1501 |
Revised Code. | 1502 |
(H) The treasurer of state, with the advice and consent of | 1503 |
the auditor of state, may adopt reasonable rules not inconsistent | 1504 |
with this section for the implementation of this section. | 1505 |
Sec. 507.12. (A) To enhance the background and working | 1506 |
knowledge of township fiscal officers in government and fund | 1507 |
accounting, budgeting and financing, financial report preparation, | 1508 |
portfolio reporting and compliance, investments, cash management, | 1509 |
charts of accounts, audits, and ethics, including rules adopted by | 1510 |
the auditor of state, the auditor of state shall conduct education | 1511 |
programs for individuals elected for the first time to the office | 1512 |
of township fiscal officer and shall conduct biennial continuing | 1513 |
education courses for individuals who continue to hold the office | 1514 |
of township fiscal officer. The Ohio township association also may | 1515 |
conduct such education programs and biennial continuing education | 1516 |
courses. Similar initial training also may be provided to any | 1517 |
township fiscal officer who is appointed to fill a vacancy. The | 1518 |
auditor of state, in conjunction with the Ohio township | 1519 |
association, shall determine the manner and content of the | 1520 |
education programs and continuing education courses in | 1521 |
governmental finance. | 1522 |
(B) Each newly elected township fiscal officer, prior to | 1523 |
commencing the term of office to which elected or during the first | 1524 |
year in office, shall attend and successfully complete six hours | 1525 |
of education programs offered or approved by the auditor of state | 1526 |
as described in division (A) of this section. Thereafter, in the | 1527 |
remaining three years of the term, the township fiscal officer | 1528 |
shall complete eighteen hours of continuing education. A township | 1529 |
fiscal officer who is elected to a subsequent term of office shall | 1530 |
attend and successfully complete twelve hours of education | 1531 |
programs. | 1532 |
An officer who participates and successfully completes a | 1533 |
training program held under section 117.44 of the Revised Code may | 1534 |
apply those hours towards the six hours of education programs | 1535 |
required to be completed prior to commencing the term of office or | 1536 |
during the first year in office. | 1537 |
The eighteen hours of education required to be completed | 1538 |
during the three years remaining in the officer's first term shall | 1539 |
include at least two hours of ethics and substance abuse training. | 1540 |
An officer who teaches an approved course is entitled to | 1541 |
credit for the course in the same manner as if the officer had | 1542 |
attended the course. | 1543 |
As used in this division, "newly elected" means a person who | 1544 |
did not hold the office of township fiscal officer on the date the | 1545 |
person was elected as township fiscal officer. | 1546 |
(C) A certified public accountant who serves as a township | 1547 |
fiscal officer may apply to the continuing education hours | 1548 |
required by division (B) of this section, for the second year in | 1549 |
office or a later year, any hours of continuing education | 1550 |
completed under section 4701.11 of the Revised Code after being | 1551 |
elected or appointed as a township fiscal officer. | 1552 |
(D) A township fiscal officer may apply to the continuing | 1553 |
education hours required by division (B) of this section, for the | 1554 |
second year in office or a later year, any hours of continuing | 1555 |
education completed under section 135.22 of the Revised Code after | 1556 |
being elected or appointed as a township fiscal officer. | 1557 |
(E) The auditor of state shall establish rules for the | 1558 |
completion and verification of education programs and continuing | 1559 |
education courses required under this section. The auditor of | 1560 |
state shall issue a certificate of completion to each township | 1561 |
fiscal officer who completes the education programs and continuing | 1562 |
education courses required by this section. The auditor of state | 1563 |
shall issue a "failure to complete" notice to any township fiscal | 1564 |
officer who is required to complete education programs and | 1565 |
continuing education courses under this section, but who fails to | 1566 |
do so. The notice is for informational purposes only and does not | 1567 |
affect any individual's ability to hold the office of township | 1568 |
fiscal officer. If a township fiscal officer does not complete the | 1569 |
education programs and continuing education courses required by | 1570 |
this section, the board of township trustees may not purchase a | 1571 |
policy or policies of professional indemnity insurance for the | 1572 |
township fiscal officer under section 9.831 of the Revised Code. | 1573 |
(F) Each board of township trustees shall approve a | 1574 |
reasonable amount requested by the township fiscal officer to | 1575 |
cover the costs the township fiscal officer is required to incur | 1576 |
to meet the requirements of this section, including registration | 1577 |
fees, lodging and meal expenses, and travel expenses. | 1578 |
Sec. 507.15. (A)(1) If a township fiscal officer negligently | 1579 |
fails to perform a duty expressly imposed by law with respect to | 1580 |
the public office, or negligently commits any act expressly | 1581 |
forbidden by law with respect to the public office, a majority of | 1582 |
the board of township trustees may submit a sworn affidavit | 1583 |
particularly describing the alleged violation along with | 1584 |
supporting evidence of such violation to the auditor of state | 1585 |
according to criteria established by rule by the auditor of state. | 1586 |
The auditor of state shall examine the evidence within ten | 1587 |
business days. If the auditor of state finds, by a preponderance | 1588 |
of the evidence, that one or more of the allegations is sustained | 1589 |
and that one or more of the criteria are met, then the auditor of | 1590 |
state shall submit those findings in writing to the attorney | 1591 |
general and the township fiscal officer. | 1592 |
The attorney general shall examine the evidence within ten | 1593 |
business days after referral from the auditor of state. If the | 1594 |
attorney general finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, one or | 1595 |
more of the allegations is sustained and that the criteria | 1596 |
established by rule by the auditor of state has been met, then the | 1597 |
attorney general shall notify, by certified mail, the board of | 1598 |
township trustees initiating the complaint and the township fiscal | 1599 |
officer. The attorney general, within forty-five days of the | 1600 |
notification to the board of township trustees initiating the | 1601 |
complaint and the township fiscal officer, shall cause suit to be | 1602 |
instituted against the officer and against the officer's surety or | 1603 |
sureties for the amount due, with a ten per cent penalty on that | 1604 |
amount. Nothing in this section is intended to remove the | 1605 |
authority of the attorney general to enter into mediation, | 1606 |
settlement, or resolution of the claims brought prior to or | 1607 |
following the filing of any complaint. | 1608 |
The suit shall be instituted by the attorney general by the | 1609 |
filing of a complaint for the removal of the township fiscal | 1610 |
officer with the court of common pleas of the county in which the | 1611 |
township fiscal officer against whom the complaint is filed holds | 1612 |
office. The suit shall have precedence over all civil business. | 1613 |
The judge or clerk of the court of common pleas shall cause to be | 1614 |
served upon the township fiscal officer the complaint and a notice | 1615 |
of hearing, at least ten days before the hearing upon the | 1616 |
complaint. The hearing shall be held not later than thirty days | 1617 |
after the date of the filing of the complaint unless good cause is | 1618 |
shown for its continuance. At the hearing or prior to, upon a | 1619 |
showing of good cause, the court may issue an order restraining | 1620 |
the township fiscal officer from entering or conducting the | 1621 |
affairs of the office pending a hearing on the complaint. If such | 1622 |
order is issued, the court may continue the order until the | 1623 |
conclusion of proceedings. | 1624 |
(2) The township fiscal officer is entitled, with or without | 1625 |
counsel, to appear and introduce evidence at the hearing and | 1626 |
trial. Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, | 1627 |
the township shall be responsible for payment of reasonable | 1628 |
attorney's fees for legal counsel for the township fiscal officer. | 1629 |
If a judgment is entered against the fiscal officer the court | 1630 |
shall order the fiscal officer to reimburse the township for | 1631 |
attorney's fees and costs up to a reasonable amount as determined | 1632 |
by the court. | 1633 |
(B) Removal proceedings shall be tried before a judge, of the | 1634 |
court of common pleas who shall be the trier of fact unless either | 1635 |
party demands trial by jury. Otherwise, the proceedings shall be | 1636 |
governed by Rule 38 and Rule 39 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. | 1637 |
If the court or jury find, by a preponderance of the evidence, one | 1638 |
or more of the allegations in the complaint are sustained, a | 1639 |
judgment of removal from public office shall be issued against the | 1640 |
township fiscal officer, the office shall be deemed vacated, and | 1641 |
the vacancy shall be filled as provided in section 503.24 of the | 1642 |
Revised Code. | 1643 |
If the court is the trier of fact, findings of fact and | 1644 |
conclusions of law shall be issued. Rule 62 of the Rules of Civil | 1645 |
Procedure applies to any stay proceedings, and the court retains | 1646 |
authority to issue appropriate orders where public dollars may be | 1647 |
at risk, including an order restraining the fiscal officer from | 1648 |
entering and conducting the business of the office held. | 1649 |
(C)(1) The decision of the court of common pleas for the | 1650 |
removal of a township fiscal officer may be reviewed on appeal by | 1651 |
the court of appeals. Upon the filing of any notice of appeal by | 1652 |
any party to the proceedings, the court of appeals shall handle | 1653 |
the case as an expedited appeal pursuant to Rule 11.2 of the Rules | 1654 |
of Appellate Procedure. | 1655 |
(2) In all cases before the court of appeals involving the | 1656 |
removal of a township fiscal officer under this section, the | 1657 |
township fiscal officer has the right of review or appeal to the | 1658 |
supreme court. | 1659 |
(D) In removal proceedings instituted under this section, the | 1660 |
court of common pleas may subpoena witnesses and compel their | 1661 |
attendance in the same manner as in civil cases. Process shall be | 1662 |
served by the sheriff of the county in which a witness resides. | 1663 |
Witness fees and other fees in connection with the removal | 1664 |
proceedings shall be the same as in civil cases, and the expenses | 1665 |
incurred in removal proceedings shall be paid out of the general | 1666 |
revenue fund of the township. | 1667 |
(E) Immediately following a final decision that the township | 1668 |
fiscal officer shall be removed from office, the vacancy shall be | 1669 |
filled as provided in section 503.24 of the Revised Code. | 1670 |
(F) Any individual removed from office under this section is | 1671 |
not entitled to hold public office for at least four years | 1672 |
following the date of the judgment, and is not entitled to hold | 1673 |
public office until the settlement is made or restitution and | 1674 |
costs are recovered. Nothing in this section shall remove the | 1675 |
authority of the attorney general to resolve claims as provided in | 1676 |
section 9.24 of the Revised Code. | 1677 |
(G)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1678 |
121.22 of the Revised Code, all meetings of the legislative | 1679 |
authority called to discuss and initiate a complaint under these | 1680 |
provisions shall be closed to the public. | 1681 |
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1682 |
149.43 of the Revised Code, the complaint and evidence before the | 1683 |
auditor of state and attorney general shall not be made available | 1684 |
to the public for inspection or copying until the attorney general | 1685 |
issues a written report under this provision or files a complaint | 1686 |
for removal. | 1687 |
(3) No member, employee, or agent of the auditor of state or | 1688 |
the attorney general shall divulge any information or any books, | 1689 |
papers, or documents in printed or electronic form presented in | 1690 |
the complaint and review process, without the consent, in writing, | 1691 |
of the auditor of state or attorney general. | 1692 |
(4) No complainant, or person acting at the direction of the | 1693 |
complainant, shall disclose that a complaint and evidence has been | 1694 |
filed with the auditor of state or the attorney general until such | 1695 |
time as the attorney general releases a written report regarding | 1696 |
disposition of the allegations brought under this provision or | 1697 |
files a complaint for removal in a court of record. | 1698 |
Any person who violates this division shall be fined not more | 1699 |
than five hundred dollars. | 1700 |
Sec. 733.78. (A) As used in this section, "fiscal officer" | 1701 |
means a village fiscal officer, a village clerk-treasurer, a | 1702 |
village clerk, an auditor of a municipal corporation, or a | 1703 |
treasurer of a municipal corporation. | 1704 |
(B)(1) If a fiscal officer negligently fails to perform a | 1705 |
duty expressly imposed by law with respect to the public office, | 1706 |
or negligently commits any act expressly forbidden by law with | 1707 |
respect to the public office, the legislative authority of the | 1708 |
political subdivision may submit a sworn affidavit particularly | 1709 |
describing the alleged violation along with supporting evidence of | 1710 |
such violation to the auditor of state according to criteria | 1711 |
established by rule by the auditor of state. The auditor of state | 1712 |
shall examine the evidence within ten business days. If the | 1713 |
auditor of state finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | 1714 |
one or more of the allegations is sustained and that one or more | 1715 |
of the criteria are met, then the auditor of state shall submit | 1716 |
those findings in writing to the attorney general and the fiscal | 1717 |
officer. | 1718 |
The attorney general shall examine the evidence within ten | 1719 |
business days after referral from the auditor of state. If the | 1720 |
attorney general finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | 1721 |
one or more of the allegations is sustained and that the criteria | 1722 |
established by rule by the auditor of state has been met, then the | 1723 |
attorney general shall notify, by certified mail, the legislative | 1724 |
authority initiating the complaint and the fiscal officer. The | 1725 |
attorney general, within forty-five days of the notification to | 1726 |
the legislative authority initiating the complaint and the fiscal | 1727 |
officer, shall cause suit to be instituted against the fiscal | 1728 |
officer and against the officer's surety or sureties for the | 1729 |
amount due, with a ten per cent penalty on that amount. Nothing in | 1730 |
this section is intended to remove the authority of the attorney | 1731 |
general to enter into mediation, settlement, or resolution of the | 1732 |
claims brought prior to or following the filing of any complaint. | 1733 |
The suit shall be instituted by the attorney general by the | 1734 |
filing of a complaint for the removal of the fiscal officer with | 1735 |
the court of common pleas of the county in which the fiscal | 1736 |
officer against whom the complaint is filed holds office. The suit | 1737 |
shall have precedence over all civil business. The judge or clerk | 1738 |
of the court of common pleas shall cause to be served upon the | 1739 |
fiscal officer the complaint and a notice of hearing, at least ten | 1740 |
days before the hearing upon the complaint. The hearing shall be | 1741 |
held not later than thirty days after the date of the filing of | 1742 |
the complaint unless good cause is shown for its continuance. At | 1743 |
the hearing or prior to, upon a showing of good cause, the court | 1744 |
may issue an order restraining the township fiscal officer from | 1745 |
entering or conducting the affairs of the office pending a hearing | 1746 |
on the complaint. If such order is issued, the court may continue | 1747 |
the order until the conclusion of proceedings. | 1748 |
(2) The fiscal officer is entitled, with or without counsel, | 1749 |
to appear and introduce evidence at the hearing and trial. | 1750 |
Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, the | 1751 |
legislative authority initiating the action shall be responsible | 1752 |
for payment of reasonable attorney's fees for legal counsel for | 1753 |
the fiscal officer. If a judgment is entered against the fiscal | 1754 |
officer the court shall order the fiscal officer to reimburse the | 1755 |
political subdivision for attorney's fees and costs up to a | 1756 |
reasonable amount as determined by the court. | 1757 |
(C) Removal proceedings shall be tried before a judge of the | 1758 |
court of common pleas who shall be the trier of fact unless either | 1759 |
party demands a trial by jury. Otherwise, the proceedings shall be | 1760 |
governed by Rule 38 and Rule 39 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. | 1761 |
If the court or jury find, by a preponderance of the evidence, one | 1762 |
or more of the allegations in the complaint are sustained, a | 1763 |
judgment of removal from public office shall issue against the | 1764 |
fiscal officer, the office shall be deemed vacated, and the | 1765 |
vacancy shall be filled as provided in section 733.31 of the | 1766 |
Revised Code. | 1767 |
If the court is the trier of fact, findings of fact and | 1768 |
conclusions of law shall issue. Rule 62 of the Rules of Civil | 1769 |
Procedure applies to any stay proceedings, and the court retains | 1770 |
authority to issue appropriate orders where public dollars may be | 1771 |
at risk, including an order restraining the fiscal officer from | 1772 |
entering and conducting the business of the office held. | 1773 |
(D)(1) The decision of the court of common pleas for the | 1774 |
removal of a fiscal officer may be reviewed on appeal by the court | 1775 |
of appeals. Upon the filing of any notice of appeal by any party | 1776 |
to the proceedings, the court of appeals shall handle the case as | 1777 |
an expedited appeal pursuant to Rule 11.2 of the Rules of | 1778 |
Appellate Procedure. | 1779 |
(2) In all cases before the court of appeals involving the | 1780 |
removal of a fiscal officer under this section, the fiscal officer | 1781 |
has the right of review or appeal to the supreme court. | 1782 |
(E) In removal proceedings instituted under this section, the | 1783 |
court of common pleas may subpoena witnesses and compel their | 1784 |
attendance in the same manner as in civil cases. Process shall be | 1785 |
served by the sheriff of the county in which a witness resides. | 1786 |
Witness fees and other fees in connection with the removal | 1787 |
proceedings shall be the same as in civil cases, and the expenses | 1788 |
incurred in removal proceedings shall be paid out of the general | 1789 |
revenue fund of the municipal corporation. | 1790 |
(F) Immediately following a final decision that the fiscal | 1791 |
officer shall be removed from office, the legislative authority of | 1792 |
the municipal corporation, upon a majority vote, may appoint a | 1793 |
successor, who shall give bond and take the oath of office | 1794 |
prescribed for fiscal officers and, so long as otherwise qualified | 1795 |
under law, shall serve the remainder of the removed fiscal | 1796 |
officer's unexpired term. | 1797 |
(G) Any individual removed from office under this section is | 1798 |
not entitled to hold public office for at least four years | 1799 |
following the date of the judgment, and is not entitled to hold | 1800 |
public office until the settlement is made or restitution and | 1801 |
costs are recovered. Nothing in this section shall remove the | 1802 |
authority of the attorney general to resolve claims as provided in | 1803 |
section 9.24 of the Revised Code. | 1804 |
(H) If a municipal corporation's charter establishes a | 1805 |
procedure for the removal of officers from office that conflicts | 1806 |
with the removal procedure established by this section, the | 1807 |
procedure for the removal of officers in the charter prevails. | 1808 |
(I)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1809 |
121.22 of the Revised Code, all meetings of the legislative | 1810 |
authority called to discuss and initiate a complaint under these | 1811 |
provisions shall be closed to the public. | 1812 |
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section | 1813 |
149.43 of the Revised Code, the complaint and evidence before the | 1814 |
auditor of state and attorney general shall not be made available | 1815 |
to the public for inspection or copying until the attorney general | 1816 |
issues a written report under this provision or files a complaint | 1817 |
for removal. | 1818 |
(3) No member, employee, or agent of the auditor of state or | 1819 |
the attorney general shall divulge any information or any books, | 1820 |
papers, or documents in printed or electronic form presented in | 1821 |
the complaint and review process, without the consent, in writing, | 1822 |
of the auditor of state or attorney general. | 1823 |
(4) No complainant, or person acting at the direction of the | 1824 |
complainant, shall disclose that a complaint and evidence has been | 1825 |
filed with the auditor of state or the attorney general until such | 1826 |
time as the attorney general releases a written report regarding | 1827 |
disposition of the allegations brought under this provision or | 1828 |
files a complaint for removal in a court of record. | 1829 |
Any person who violates this division shall be fined not more | 1830 |
than five hundred dollars. | 1831 |
Sec. 733.81. (A) As used in this section, "fiscal officer" | 1832 |
means the auditor of a municipal corporation, treasurer of a | 1833 |
municipal corporation, village fiscal officer, village | 1834 |
clerk-treasurer, village clerk, and, in the case of a municipal | 1835 |
corporation that does not have an elected fiscal officer, the | 1836 |
appointed head of the municipal corporation's finance department. | 1837 |
(B) To enhance the background and working knowledge of fiscal | 1838 |
officers in government and fund accounting, budgeting and | 1839 |
financing, financial report preparation, portfolio reporting and | 1840 |
compliance, investments, cash management, charts of accounts, | 1841 |
audits, ethics, and rules adopted by the auditor of state, the | 1842 |
auditor of state shall conduct education programs for individuals | 1843 |
elected or appointed for the first time to the office of fiscal | 1844 |
officer and shall conduct biennial continuing education courses | 1845 |
for individuals who continue to hold the office of fiscal officer. | 1846 |
The Ohio municipal league also may conduct such education programs | 1847 |
and biennial continuing education courses. Similar initial | 1848 |
training also may be provided to any fiscal officer who is | 1849 |
appointed to fill a vacancy or who is elected at a special | 1850 |
election. The auditor of state, in conjunction with the Ohio | 1851 |
municipal league, shall determine the manner and content of the | 1852 |
education programs and continuing education courses in | 1853 |
governmental finance. | 1854 |
(C) Each newly elected fiscal officer, prior to commencing | 1855 |
the term of office to which elected or during the first year in | 1856 |
office, shall attend and successfully complete six hours of | 1857 |
education programs offered or approved by the auditor of state as | 1858 |
described in division (A) of this section. Thereafter, in the | 1859 |
remaining three years of the term, the fiscal officer shall | 1860 |
complete eighteen hours of continuing education. A fiscal officer | 1861 |
who is elected to a subsequent term of office shall attend and | 1862 |
successfully complete at least twelve hours of education programs. | 1863 |
A fiscal officer who participates and successfully completes | 1864 |
a training program held under section 117.44 of the Revised Code | 1865 |
may apply those hours towards the six hours of education programs | 1866 |
required to be completed prior to commencing the term of office or | 1867 |
during the first year in office. | 1868 |
The eighteen hours of education required to be completed | 1869 |
during the three years remaining of the fiscal officer's first | 1870 |
term shall include at least two hours of ethics and substance | 1871 |
abuse training. | 1872 |
An officer who teaches an approved course is entitled to | 1873 |
credit for the course in the same manner as if the officer had | 1874 |
attended the course. | 1875 |
As used in this division, "newly elected" means a person who | 1876 |
did not hold the office of fiscal officer on the date the person | 1877 |
was elected as township fiscal officer. | 1878 |
(D) A certified public accountant who serves as a fiscal | 1879 |
officer may apply to the continuing education hours required by | 1880 |
division (C) of this section, for the second year in office or a | 1881 |
later year, any hours of continuing education completed under | 1882 |
section 4701.11 of the Revised Code after being elected or | 1883 |
appointed as a fiscal officer. | 1884 |
(E) A fiscal officer may apply to the continuing education | 1885 |
hours required by division (C) of this section, for the second | 1886 |
year in office or a later year, any hours of continuing education | 1887 |
completed under section 135.22 of the Revised Code after being | 1888 |
elected or appointed as a fiscal officer. | 1889 |
(F) The auditor of state shall establish rules for the | 1890 |
completion and verification of education programs and continuing | 1891 |
education courses required under division (C) of this section for | 1892 |
each of the municipal corporation's fiscal officers. | 1893 |
(G) The auditor of state shall issue a certificate of | 1894 |
completion to each fiscal officer who completes the education | 1895 |
programs and continuing education courses required by this | 1896 |
section. The auditor of state shall issue a "failure to complete" | 1897 |
notice to any fiscal officer who is required to complete education | 1898 |
programs and continuing education courses under this section, but | 1899 |
who fails to do so. The notice is for informational purposes only | 1900 |
and does not affect any individual's ability to hold the office to | 1901 |
which the individual was elected or appointed. If a fiscal officer | 1902 |
does not complete the education programs and continuing education | 1903 |
courses required by this section, the legislative authority of the | 1904 |
municipal corporation may not purchase a policy or policies of | 1905 |
professional indemnity insurance for the fiscal officer under | 1906 |
section 9.831 of the Revised Code. | 1907 |
(H) A legislative authority of a municipal corporation shall | 1908 |
approve a reasonable amount requested by the fiscal officer to | 1909 |
cover the costs the fiscal officer is required to incur to meet | 1910 |
the requirements of this section, including registration fees, | 1911 |
lodging and meal expenses, and travel expenses. | 1912 |
Sec. 2921.44. (A) No law enforcement officer shall | 1913 |
negligently do any of the following: | 1914 |
(1) Fail to serve a lawful warrant without delay; | 1915 |
(2) Fail to prevent or halt the commission of an offense or | 1916 |
to apprehend an offender, when it is in the law enforcement | 1917 |
officer's power to do so alone or with available assistance. | 1918 |
(B) No law enforcement, ministerial, or judicial officer | 1919 |
shall negligently fail to perform a lawful duty in a criminal case | 1920 |
or proceeding. | 1921 |
(C) No officer, having charge of a detention facility, shall | 1922 |
negligently do any of the following: | 1923 |
(1) Allow the detention facility to become littered or | 1924 |
unsanitary; | 1925 |
(2) Fail to provide persons confined in the detention | 1926 |
facility with adequate food, clothing, bedding, shelter, and | 1927 |
medical attention; | 1928 |
(3) Fail to control an unruly prisoner, or to prevent | 1929 |
intimidation of or physical harm to a prisoner by another; | 1930 |
(4) Allow a prisoner to escape; | 1931 |
(5) Fail to observe any lawful and reasonable regulation for | 1932 |
the management of the detention facility. | 1933 |
(D) No public official of the state shall recklessly create a | 1934 |
deficiency, incur a liability, or expend a greater sum than is | 1935 |
appropriated by the general assembly for the use in any one year | 1936 |
of the department, agency, or institution of the state with which | 1937 |
the public official is connected. | 1938 |
(E) No public servant shall recklessly fail to perform a duty | 1939 |
expressly imposed by law with respect to the public servant's | 1940 |
office, or recklessly do any act expressly forbidden by law with | 1941 |
respect to the public servant's office. | 1942 |
(F) Whoever violates this section is guilty of dereliction of | 1943 |
duty, a misdemeanor of the second degree. | 1944 |
(G) A public servant who is a county treasurer, county | 1945 |
auditor, township fiscal officer, auditor of a municipal | 1946 |
corporation, treasurer of a municipal corporation, village fiscal | 1947 |
officer, village clerk-treasurer, school district treasurer, | 1948 |
fiscal officer of a community school established under Chapter | 1949 |
3314. of the Revised Code, treasurer of a science, technology, | 1950 |
engineering, and mathematics school established under Chapter | 1951 |
3326. of the Revised Code, or fiscal officer of a | 1952 |
college-preparatory boarding school established under Chapter | 1953 |
3328. of the Revised Code and is convicted of or pleads guilty to | 1954 |
dereliction of duty is disqualified from holding any public | 1955 |
office, employment, or position of trust in this state for four | 1956 |
years following the date of conviction or of entry of the plea, | 1957 |
and is not entitled to hold another public office until any | 1958 |
repayment or restitution required by the court is satisfied. | 1959 |
(H) As used in this section, "public servant" includes | 1960 |
following: | 1961 |
(1) An officer or employee of a contractor as defined in | 1962 |
section 9.08 of the Revised Code; | 1963 |
(2) A fiscal officer employed by the operator of a community | 1964 |
school established under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code or by | 1965 |
the operator of a college-preparatory boarding school established | 1966 |
under Chapter 3328. of the Revised Code. | 1967 |
Sec. 3313.30. (A) If the auditor of state or a public | 1968 |
accountant, pursuant to section 117.41 of the Revised Code, | 1969 |
declares a school district to be unauditable, the auditor of state | 1970 |
shall provide written notification of that declaration to the | 1971 |
district and the department of education. The auditor of state | 1972 |
also shall post the notification on the auditor of state's web | 1973 |
site. | 1974 |
(B) If the district's current treasurer held that position | 1975 |
during any year for which the district is unauditable, upon | 1976 |
receipt of the notification under division (A) of this section, | 1977 |
the district board of education shall suspend the treasurer until | 1978 |
the auditor of state or a public accountant has completed an audit | 1979 |
of the district. Suspension of the treasurer may be with or | 1980 |
without pay, as determined by the district board based on the | 1981 |
circumstances that prompted the auditor of state's declaration. | 1982 |
The district board shall appoint a person to assume the duties of | 1983 |
the treasurer during the period of the suspension. If the | 1984 |
appointee is not licensed as a treasurer under section 3301.074 of | 1985 |
the Revised Code, the appointee shall be approved by the | 1986 |
superintendent of public instruction prior to assuming the duties | 1987 |
of the treasurer. The state board of education may take action | 1988 |
under section 3319.31 of the Revised Code to suspend, revoke, or | 1989 |
limit the license of a treasurer who has been suspended under this | 1990 |
division. | 1991 |
(C) Not later than forty-five days after receiving the | 1992 |
notification under division (A) of this section, the district | 1993 |
board shall provide a written response to the auditor of state. | 1994 |
The response shall include the following: | 1995 |
(1) An overview of the process the district board will use to | 1996 |
review and understand the circumstances that led to the district | 1997 |
becoming unauditable; | 1998 |
(2) A plan for providing the auditor of state with the | 1999 |
documentation necessary to complete an audit of the district and | 2000 |
for ensuring that all financial documents are available in the | 2001 |
future; | 2002 |
(3) The actions the district board will take to ensure that | 2003 |
the plan described in division (C)(2) of this section is | 2004 |
implemented. | 2005 |
(D) If the school district fails to make reasonable efforts | 2006 |
and continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or | 2007 |
reports into an auditable condition within ninety days after being | 2008 |
declared unauditable, the auditor of state, in addition to | 2009 |
requesting legal action under sections 117.41 and 117.42 of the | 2010 |
Revised Code, shall notify the district and the department of the | 2011 |
district's failure. If the auditor of state or a public accountant | 2012 |
subsequently is able to complete a financial audit of the | 2013 |
district, the auditor of state shall notify the district and the | 2014 |
department that the audit has been completed. | 2015 |
(E) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in Chapter | 2016 |
3317. of the Revised Code or any other provision of law, upon | 2017 |
notification by the auditor of state under division (D) of this | 2018 |
section that the district has failed to make reasonable efforts | 2019 |
and continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or | 2020 |
reports into an auditable condition, the department shall | 2021 |
immediately cease all payments to the district under Chapter 3317. | 2022 |
of the Revised Code and any other provision of law. Upon | 2023 |
subsequent notification from the auditor of state under that | 2024 |
division that the auditor of state or a public accountant was able | 2025 |
to complete a financial audit of the district, the department | 2026 |
shall release all funds withheld from the district under this | 2027 |
section. | 2028 |
Sec. 3314.023. In order to provide monitoring and technical | 2029 |
assistance, a representative of the sponsor of a community school | 2030 |
shall meet with the governing authority or | 2031 |
officer of the school and shall review the financial and | 2032 |
enrollment records of the school at least once every month. Not | 2033 |
later than ten days after each review, the sponsor shall provide | 2034 |
the governing authority and fiscal officer with a written report | 2035 |
regarding the review. | 2036 |
Sec. 3314.50. No community school shall, on or after the | 2037 |
effective date of this section, open for operation in any school | 2038 |
year unless the governing authority of the school has posted a | 2039 |
surety bond in the amount of fifty thousand dollars with the | 2040 |
auditor of state. In lieu of a surety bond, a community school | 2041 |
governing authority may deposit with the auditor of state cash in | 2042 |
the amount of fifty thousand dollars as a guarantee of payment. | 2043 |
The bond or cash guarantee shall be used, in the event the school | 2044 |
closes, to pay the auditor of state any moneys owed by the school | 2045 |
for the costs of audits conducted by the auditor of state or a | 2046 |
public accountant under Chapter 117. of the Revised Code. | 2047 |
Immediately upon the filing of a surety bond or the deposit | 2048 |
of cash, the auditor of state shall deliver the bond or cash to | 2049 |
the treasurer of state, who shall hold it in trust for the | 2050 |
purposes prescribed in this section. The treasurer of state shall | 2051 |
be responsible for the safekeeping of all surety bonds filed or | 2052 |
cash deposited under this section. The auditor of state shall | 2053 |
notify the department of education when the school's governing | 2054 |
authority has filed the bond or deposited the cash guarantee. | 2055 |
When the auditor of state finds that a community school has | 2056 |
closed and cannot pay for the costs of audits, the auditor of | 2057 |
state shall declare the surety bond or cash deposit forfeited. The | 2058 |
auditor of state shall certify the amount of forfeiture to the | 2059 |
treasurer of state who shall pay money from the named surety or | 2060 |
from the school's cash deposit as needed to reimburse the auditor | 2061 |
of state or public accountant for costs incurred in conducting | 2062 |
audits of the school. | 2063 |
| 2064 |
| 2065 |
accountant, pursuant to section 117.41 of the Revised Code, | 2066 |
declares a community school
| 2067 |
2068 | |
state shall provide written notification of that declaration to | 2069 |
the school, the school's sponsor, and the | 2070 |
2071 | |
shall post the notification on the | 2072 |
state's web site. | 2073 |
(B) If the community school's current fiscal officer held | 2074 |
that position during any year for which the school is unauditable, | 2075 |
upon receipt of the notification under division (A) of this | 2076 |
section, the governing authority of the school shall suspend the | 2077 |
fiscal officer until the auditor of state or a public accountant | 2078 |
has completed an audit of the school, except that if the school | 2079 |
has an operator and the operator employs the fiscal officer, the | 2080 |
operator shall suspend the fiscal officer for that period. | 2081 |
Suspension of the fiscal officer may be with or without pay, as | 2082 |
determined by the entity imposing the suspension based on the | 2083 |
circumstances that prompted the auditor of state's declaration. | 2084 |
The entity imposing the suspension shall appoint a person to | 2085 |
assume the duties of the fiscal officer during the period of the | 2086 |
suspension. If the appointee is not licensed as a treasurer under | 2087 |
section 3301.074 of the Revised Code, the appointee shall be | 2088 |
approved by the superintendent of public instruction prior to | 2089 |
assuming the duties of the fiscal officer. The state board of | 2090 |
education may take action under section 3319.31 of the Revised | 2091 |
Code to suspend, revoke, or limit the license of a fiscal officer | 2092 |
who has been suspended under this division. | 2093 |
(C) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in | 2094 |
2095 | |
law, | 2096 |
2097 | |
2098 | |
contracts with any additional community schools under section | 2099 |
3314.03 of the Revised Code | 2100 |
date of the declaration under division (A) of this section and the | 2101 |
date the | 2102 |
completed a financial audit of | 2103 |
| 2104 |
notification | 2105 |
section | 2106 |
community school shall provide a written response to the
| 2107 |
auditor of | 2108 |
response to the community school. The response shall include the | 2109 |
following: | 2110 |
(1) An overview of the process the sponsor will use to review | 2111 |
and understand the circumstances that led to the community school | 2112 |
becoming unauditable; | 2113 |
(2) A plan for providing the | 2114 |
with the documentation necessary to complete an audit of the | 2115 |
community school and for ensuring that all financial documents are | 2116 |
available in the future; | 2117 |
(3) The actions the sponsor will take to ensure that the plan | 2118 |
described in division | 2119 |
| 2120 |
efforts and continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, | 2121 |
files, or reports into an auditable condition within ninety days | 2122 |
after being declared unauditable, the | 2123 |
state, in addition to requesting legal action under sections | 2124 |
117.41 and 117.42 of the Revised Code, shall notify the | 2125 |
school's sponsor and the department of the school's failure. If | 2126 |
the | 2127 |
subsequently is able to complete a financial audit of the school, | 2128 |
the | 2129 |
school's sponsor and the department that the audit has been | 2130 |
completed. | 2131 |
| 2132 |
2133 | |
provision of law, upon notification by the | 2134 |
2135 | |
community school has failed to make reasonable efforts and | 2136 |
continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or | 2137 |
reports into an auditable condition | 2138 |
2139 | |
immediately cease all payments to the school under | 2140 |
2141 | |
Upon subsequent notification from the | 2142 |
state under that division that the | 2143 |
or a public accountant was able to complete a financial audit of | 2144 |
the community school, the
| 2145 |
funds withheld from the school under this section. | 2146 |
Sec. 3326.211. (A) If the auditor of state or a public | 2147 |
accountant, pursuant to section 117.41 of the Revised Code, | 2148 |
declares a science, technology, engineering, and mathematics | 2149 |
school to be unauditable, the auditor of state shall provide | 2150 |
written notification of that declaration to the school and the | 2151 |
department of education. The auditor of state also shall post the | 2152 |
notification on the auditor of state's web site. | 2153 |
(B) If the STEM school's current treasurer held that position | 2154 |
during any year for which the school is unauditable, upon receipt | 2155 |
of the notification under division (A) of this section, the | 2156 |
governing body of the school shall suspend the treasurer until the | 2157 |
auditor of state or a public accountant has completed an audit of | 2158 |
the school. Suspension of the treasurer may be with or without | 2159 |
pay, as determined by the governing body based on the | 2160 |
circumstances that prompted the auditor of state's declaration. | 2161 |
The governing body shall appoint a person to assume the duties of | 2162 |
the treasurer during the period of the suspension. If the | 2163 |
appointee is not licensed as a treasurer under section 3301.074 of | 2164 |
the Revised Code, the appointee shall be approved by the | 2165 |
superintendent of public instruction prior to assuming the duties | 2166 |
of the treasurer. The state board of education may take action | 2167 |
under section 3319.31 of the Revised Code to suspend, revoke, or | 2168 |
limit the license of a treasurer who has been suspended under this | 2169 |
division. | 2170 |
(C) Not later than forty-five days after receiving the | 2171 |
notification under division (A) of this section, the governing | 2172 |
body of the STEM school shall provide a written response to the | 2173 |
auditor of state. The response shall include the following: | 2174 |
(1) An overview of the process the governing body will use to | 2175 |
review and understand the circumstances that led to the school | 2176 |
becoming unauditable; | 2177 |
(2) A plan for providing the auditor of state with the | 2178 |
documentation necessary to complete an audit of the school and for | 2179 |
ensuring that all financial documents are available in the future; | 2180 |
(3) The actions the governing body will take to ensure that | 2181 |
the plan described in division (C)(2) of this section is | 2182 |
implemented. | 2183 |
(D) If the STEM school fails to make reasonable efforts and | 2184 |
continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or | 2185 |
reports into an auditable condition within ninety days after being | 2186 |
declared unauditable, the auditor of state, in addition to | 2187 |
requesting legal action under sections 117.41 and 117.42 of the | 2188 |
Revised Code, shall notify the school and the department of the | 2189 |
school's failure. If the auditor of state or a public accountant | 2190 |
subsequently is able to complete a financial audit of the school, | 2191 |
the auditor of state shall notify the school and the department | 2192 |
that the audit has been completed. | 2193 |
(E) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in this | 2194 |
chapter or any other provision of law, upon notification by the | 2195 |
auditor of state under division (D) of this section that the STEM | 2196 |
school has failed to make reasonable efforts and continuing | 2197 |
progress to bring its accounts, records, files, or reports into an | 2198 |
auditable condition, the department shall immediately cease all | 2199 |
payments to the school under this chapter and any other provision | 2200 |
of law. Upon subsequent notification from the auditor of state | 2201 |
under that division that the auditor of state or a public | 2202 |
accountant was able to complete a financial audit of the school, | 2203 |
the department shall release all funds withheld from the school | 2204 |
under this section. | 2205 |
Sec. 3328.16. (A) Each college-preparatory boarding school | 2206 |
established under this chapter shall have a designated fiscal | 2207 |
officer. The auditor of state may require by rule that the fiscal | 2208 |
officer of any college-preparatory boarding school, before | 2209 |
entering upon duties as fiscal officer, execute a bond in an | 2210 |
amount and with surety to be approved by the school's board of | 2211 |
trustees, payable to the state, conditioned for the faithful | 2212 |
performance of all the official duties required of the fiscal | 2213 |
officer. Any such bond shall be deposited with the school's board | 2214 |
of trustees, and a copy of the bond shall be certified by the | 2215 |
board and filed with the county auditor. | 2216 |
(B) Prior to assuming the duties of fiscal officer, the | 2217 |
fiscal officer designated under this section shall be licensed as | 2218 |
a treasurer under section 3301.074 of the Revised Code. No | 2219 |
college-preparatory boarding school shall allow a person to serve | 2220 |
as fiscal officer who is not licensed as required by this | 2221 |
division. | 2222 |
Sec. 3328.37. (A) If the auditor of state or a public | 2223 |
accountant, pursuant to section 117.41 of the Revised Code, | 2224 |
declares a college-preparatory boarding school established under | 2225 |
this chapter to be unauditable, the auditor of state shall provide | 2226 |
written notification of that declaration to the school and the | 2227 |
department of education. The auditor of state also shall post the | 2228 |
notification on the auditor of state's web site. | 2229 |
(B) If the college-preparatory boarding school's current | 2230 |
fiscal officer held that position during any year for which the | 2231 |
school is unauditable, upon receipt of the notification under | 2232 |
division (A) of this section, the board of trustees of the school | 2233 |
shall suspend the fiscal officer until the auditor of state or a | 2234 |
public accountant has completed an audit of the school, except | 2235 |
that if the fiscal officer is employed by the school's operator, | 2236 |
the operator shall suspend the fiscal officer for that period. | 2237 |
Suspension of the fiscal officer may be with or without pay, as | 2238 |
determined by the entity imposing the suspension based on the | 2239 |
circumstances that prompted the auditor of state's declaration. | 2240 |
The entity imposing the suspension shall appoint a person to | 2241 |
assume the duties of the fiscal officer during the period of the | 2242 |
suspension. If the appointee is not licensed as a treasurer under | 2243 |
section 3301.074 of the Revised Code, the appointee shall be | 2244 |
approved by the superintendent of public instruction prior to | 2245 |
assuming the duties of the fiscal officer. The state board of | 2246 |
education may take action under section 3319.31 of the Revised | 2247 |
Code to suspend, revoke, or limit the license of a fiscal officer | 2248 |
who has been suspended under this division. | 2249 |
(C) Not later than forty-five days after receiving the | 2250 |
notification under division (A) of this section, the board of | 2251 |
trustees of the college-preparatory boarding school shall provide | 2252 |
a written response to the auditor of state. The response shall | 2253 |
include the following: | 2254 |
(1) An overview of the process the board will use to review | 2255 |
and understand the circumstances that led to the school becoming | 2256 |
unauditable; | 2257 |
(2) A plan for providing the auditor of state with the | 2258 |
documentation necessary to complete an audit of the school and for | 2259 |
ensuring that all financial documents are available in the future; | 2260 |
(3) The actions the board will take to ensure that the plan | 2261 |
described in division (C)(2) of this section is implemented. | 2262 |
(D) If the college-preparatory boarding school fails to make | 2263 |
reasonable efforts and continuing progress to bring its accounts, | 2264 |
records, files, or reports into an auditable condition within | 2265 |
ninety days after being declared unauditable, the auditor of | 2266 |
state, in addition to requesting legal action under sections | 2267 |
117.41 and 117.42 of the Revised Code, shall notify the school and | 2268 |
the department of the school's failure. If the auditor of state or | 2269 |
a public accountant subsequently is able to complete a financial | 2270 |
audit of the school, the auditor of state shall notify the school | 2271 |
and the department that the audit has been completed. | 2272 |
(E) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in this | 2273 |
chapter or any other provision of law, upon notification by the | 2274 |
auditor of state under division (D) of this section that the | 2275 |
college-preparatory boarding school has failed to make reasonable | 2276 |
efforts and continuing progress to bring its accounts, records, | 2277 |
files, or reports into an auditable condition, the department | 2278 |
shall immediately cease all payments to the school under this | 2279 |
chapter and any other provision of law. Upon subsequent | 2280 |
notification from the auditor of state under that division that | 2281 |
the auditor of state or a public accountant was able to complete a | 2282 |
financial audit of the school, the department shall release all | 2283 |
funds withheld from the school under this section. | 2284 |
Section 2. (A) That existing sections 9.39, 121.22, 149.43, | 2285 |
305.03, 319.04, 319.26, 321.37, 321.38, 321.46, 2921.44, and | 2286 |
3314.023 and section 319.25 of the Revised Code are hereby | 2287 |
repealed. | 2288 |
(B) That existing Section 267.50.70 of Am. Sub. H.B. 153 of | 2289 |
the 129th General Assembly is hereby repealed. | 2290 |
Section 3. Section 149.43 of the Revised Code is presented | 2291 |
in this act as a composite of the section as amended by both Am. | 2292 |
Sub. H.B. 487 and Am. Sub. S.B. 314 of the 129th General Assembly. | 2293 |
The General Assembly, applying the principle stated in division | 2294 |
(B) of section 1.52 of the Revised Code that amendments are to be | 2295 |
harmonized if reasonably capable of simultaneous operation, finds | 2296 |
that the composite is the resulting version of the section in | 2297 |
effect prior to the effective date of the section as presented in | 2298 |
this act. | 2299 |