In Re: Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 7, 2019
DocketSC18-847
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators (In Re: Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators, (Fla. 2019).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC18-847 ____________

IN RE: AMENDMENTS TO THE FLORIDA RULES FOR QUALIFIED AND COURT-APPOINTED PARENTING COORDINATORS.

November 7, 2019 CORRECTED OPINION

PER CURIAM.

The Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy Committee (ADRR&P

Committee or Committee) proposes amendments to Part II (Discipline) of the

Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators. 1 We have

jurisdiction 2 and adopt the proposed amendments, with the modifications explained

below.

BACKGROUND

1. The Committee proposes the amendments pursuant to In re Committee on Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy, Fla. Admin. Oder No. AOSC16- 40 (June 28, 2016), which charges the Committee with proposing rules governing alternative dispute resolution, and a request from this Court.

2. See art. V, § 2(a), Fla. Const.; ch. 2019-98, § 3, Laws of Fla. (adding § 61.125(11), Fla. Stat.). In In re Amendments to the Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure; New

Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators, 142 So. 3d 831

(Fla. 2014), the Court adopted the Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed

Parenting Coordinators (Parenting Coordinator Rules). As explained in that

opinion,

Part I [of the Parenting Coordinator Rules] sets forth ethical standards for parenting coordinators and reinforces the concepts of communication, negotiation, and facilitation upon which parenting coordination is based, as well as explaining the role of the parenting coordinator. . . . Part II [of the rules] addresses discipline and provides simply [in rule 15.210] that complaints alleging violations of the standards for qualified and court-appointed parenting coordinators shall be filed with the Dispute Resolution Center which shall be responsible for enforcing the standards. Id. at 832. The ADRR&P Committee proposes amendments to existing rule

15.210 (Procedure) in Part II of the rules. The Committee also proposes adding

new rules 15.220 through 15.370 to Part II, which will supersede and codify in the

Parenting Coordinator Rules, with some changes, the disciplinary procedures for

parenting coordinators that the Court originally adopted, by administrative order,

as the Parenting Coordinator Discipline Operating Procedures (Operating

Procedures). See In re Parenting Coordinator Operating Procedures, Fla. Admin.

Order No. AOSC17-18 (March 13, 2017).

Before filing its rule proposals with the Court, the ADRR&P Committee

published the proposals for comment and revised several of the proposals in

-2- response to the comments the Committee received. After the Committee’s

proposals were filed, the Court published the proposals for comment. The Court

received comments from one individual. The Committee further revised several of

its proposals in response to those comments. At the request of the Court,3 the

ADRR&P Committee also filed a supplemental report addressing the Court’s

authority to adopt proposed rule 15.350 (Confidentiality). In the supplemental

report, the Committee proposes a revised confidentiality rule, which the

Committee modeled after Rule for Certification and Regulation of Spoken

Language Court Interpreters 14.440 (Confidentiality of Disciplinary Proceedings).

See In re Amends. to the Fla. Rules for Certification & Regulation of Court

Interpreters, 136 So. 3d 584, 587 (Fla. 2014) (amending rule 14.440 to be

consistent with Florida Rule of Judicial Administration 2.420(c)(3)(B)).

AMENDMENTS

After considering the ADRR&P Committee’s proposed amendments to the

Parenting Coordinator Rules, the comments, the Committee’s responses to the

comments, and the Committee’s supplemental report, we adopt the majority of the

Committee’s proposals with only minor technical revisions. However, we have

modified the notice and publication requirements in proposed rules 15.290(j) and

3. See In re Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court- Appointed Parenting Coordinators, No. SC18-847 (Fla. order filed May 24, 2019).

-3- 15.300(k) and (l) to require the redaction of information that is “confidential under

Florida Rule of Judicial Administration 2.420,” which governs the confidentiality

of judicial branch records.4

Accordingly, the Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting

Coordinators are amended as set forth in the appendix to this opinion. New

language is underscored; deleted language is struck through. The committee notes

are offered for explanation only and are not adopted as an official part of the rules.

The amendments shall become effective immediately upon the release of this

opinion.

It is so ordered.

CANADY, C.J., and POLSTON, LABARGA, LAWSON, LAGOA, LUCK, and MUÑIZ, JJ., concur.

THE FILING OF A MOTION FOR REHEARING SHALL NOT ALTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THESE AMENDMENTS.

Original Proceeding – Supreme Court Committee on Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy

Honorable Michael S. Orfinger, Chair, Committee on Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy, Daytona Beach, Florida; Honorable Rodney Smith, Past Chair, Committee on Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy,

4. See Fla. R. Jud. Admin. 2.420(a) (providing that rule 2.420 governs public access to and the protection of judicial branch records); 2.420(c) (listing the judicial branch records that are confidential and exempt from the public’s right of access under article I, section 24(a) of the Florida Constitution).

-4- Miami, Florida; and Juan R. Collins, Senior Attorney, Dispute Resolution Center, Tallahassee, Florida,

for Petitioner

Valorie Hoppenworth, Tallahassee, Florida,

Responding with comments

-5- APPENDIX

FLORIDA RULES FOR QUALIFIED AND COURT-APPOINTED PARENTING COORDINATORS

PART II. DISCIPLINE RULE 15.210. PROCEDURESCOPE AND PURPOSE Any complaint alleging violations of the Rules For Qualified And Court- Appointed Parenting Coordinators, Part I: STANDARDS, shall be filed with the Dispute Resolution Center which shall be responsible for enforcing these Standards.The purpose of these disciplinary rules is to provide a means for enforcing the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators (rules). These rules apply to all proceedings before rules violation complaint committees and hearing panels of the Parenting Coordinator Review Board (PCRB) involving the discipline of qualified parenting coordinators and court-appointed parenting coordinators. The PCRB shall be responsible for the enforcement of these rules, with the exception of rule 15.220, Responsibilities of Chief Judge, and rule 15.370, Chief Judge Review.

RULE 15.220. RESPONSIBILITIES OF CHIEF JUDGE

The chief judge or the judge’s designee in each judicial circuit shall have responsibility for:

(a) the qualification and disqualification of parenting coordinators; (b) any disciplinary proceedings regarding: (1) a qualified parenting coordinator’s failure to continue to meet the minimum qualifications in section 61.125, Florida Statutes; (2) a qualified parenting coordinator experiencing any of the disqualifying circumstances described in section 61.125, Florida Statutes; and

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In Re: Amendments to the Florida Rules for Qualified and Court-Appointed Parenting Coordinators, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amendments-to-the-florida-rules-for-qualified-and-court-appointed-fla-2019.