Sunday, August 18, 2019

Was text message spat a public record? Not to House Speaker Jose Oliva or Rep. Chris Sprowls. (Orlando Sentinel/NSoF)

More flummery, dupery and nincompoopery from the "leaders" of Flori-DHU's dull Republican reprobate "representatives," as repulsive, rebarbative and retromingent a group of sebaceous suckups as ever contaminated a legislature.

In the 1800s, Gladstone called the United States Senate "the world's greatest deliberative body."

No one has ever made that comment about the Florida Legislature in the 21st century.

From Orlando Sentinel and News Service of Florida:








POLITICS NEWS
Was text message spat a public record? Not to House Speaker Jose Oliva or Rep. Chris Sprowls

By ANA CEBALLOS
NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA |
AUG 16, 2019 | 8:40 AM

Was text message spat a public record? Not to House Speaker Jose Oliva or Rep. Chris Sprowls
House speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, presides over session Wednesday April 17, 2019, in Tallahassee. (Steve Cannon / AP / AP)
TALLAHASSEE ― Despite public records law, Florida House Speaker Jose Oliva and his successor say they don’t consider a heated text-message exchange with an embattled lawmaker to be state-related business.
But Rep. Mike Hill, a Pensacola Republican who this year was chastised by members of his party for his response to a suggestion that gay people be put to death, did and turned over the text messages after a public-records request by The News Service of Florida.
The text messages, first reported by Politico Florida, show Hill got angry after Oliva and future House Speaker Chris Sprowls issued a joint statement condemning his refusal to push back against a constituent’s suggestion that he sponsor legislation to allow the state to execute gay people.
“Such callous indifference to an outrageous question is unacceptable, runs contrary to our founding principles, and in no way reflects the beliefs of the Republican caucus in the Florida House,” Oliva and Sprowls said in a statement May 31.
A day later, as Hill drew bipartisan criticism over his response to the constituent’s suggestion, sent a long text message to Oliva and Sprowls.
“You should have called me before you joined the mob,” Hill texted on June 1.
“You need to be more concerned with your own actions before you advise me on mine,” Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, responded.
The clash came to light because Hill considered the text-message exchange to be a public record under Florida’s Sunshine Law.
But Oliva and Sprowls, a Palm Harbor Republican slated to become House speaker after the 2020 elections, said they did not possess any text messages that could be turned over as part of the records request.
Sprowls said he had no text messages to turn over two days after the request was made, while Oliva took 50 days to say there were none.
On Monday, Hill’s office said, “the representative searched his text messages for responsive records” and offered an exchange among the three of them.
When asked about the discrepancy, House spokesman Fred Piccolo said each member has the discretion to determine what should be archived as a public record.
Piccolo then cited this House rule: “Each member shall ensure compliance with this rule for all records created or received by the members of the member’s office.”
And who is the person is charge of making sure public records are kept? The House speaker “shall ensure compliance with this rule for all records created or received by their respective offices and their predecessors in office.”

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