09-002968
Samuel Omega Rollins vs.
Construction Industry Licensing Board
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, November 24, 2009.
Recommended Order on Tuesday, November 24, 2009.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8SAMUEL OMEGA ROLLINS, )
12)
13Petitioner, )
15)
16vs. ) Case No. 09-2968
21)
22CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY LICENSING )
26BOARD, )
28)
29Respondent. )
31)
32RECOMMENDED ORDER
34Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held on
43September 14, 2009, in Tallahassee, Florida, before Ella Jane P.
53Davis, a duly-assigned Administrative Law Judge of the Division
62of Administrative Hearings.
65APPEARANCES
66For Petitioner: J. Steven Carter, Esquire
72Henry, Buchanan, Hudson,
75Suber & Carter, P.A.
792508 Barrington Circle
82Tallahassee, Florida 32308
85For Respondent: Daniel R. Biggins, Esquire
91Department of Legal Affairs
95The Capitol, Plaza Level 01
100Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1050
103STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
107Whether Petitioner is entitled to licensure as a Certified
116Building Contractor or Residential Contractor.
121PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
123Petitioners application for licensure as a certified
130building contractor was addressed by a Notice of Intent to Deny
141dated March 16, 2009.
145Petitioner timely requested a disputed-fact hearing, and on
153or about May 29, 2009, the cause was referred to the Division of
166Administrative Hearings. The Divisions file reflects all
173pleadings, notices, and orders intervening before the disputed-
181fact hearing.
183At hearing, Petitioner presented the oral testimony of
191Chad Banks and testified on his own behalf. He had Exhibits P-
2031, 2, 2A, 3, 4, and 5, admitted in evidence. Respondent
214presented the oral testimony of Jacqueline Watts and had no
224exhibits admitted in evidence.
228A Transcript was filed on September 29, 2009.
236The parties timely filed their respective Proposed
243Recommended Orders on October 19, 2009, each of which has been
254considered.
255FINDINGS OF FACT
2581. Petitioner is a 44-year-old male. He was born and
268raised in Tallahassee, Florida. He is a high school graduate.
2782. Petitioner passed the examination for licensure as a
287certified building contractor. This is a comprehensive
294examination that is designed to test knowledge in all aspects of
305the construction industry. Passing it is a mandatory
313prerequisite before an application can be considered by the
322Florida Construction Industry Licensing Board (FCILB). However,
329passing the examination does not eliminate or modify the
338statutory or rule experience requirements.
3433. Petitioner submitted his application for a certified
351building contractor license on or about March 24, 2008.
3604. By letter of May 2, 2008, the Department of Business
371and Professional Regulation requested additional information.
3775. Petitioner then provided a revised affidavit from
385Chad Banks, a certified building contractor, and a letter from
395the Maintenance Construction Chief of the City of Tallahassees
404Gas Utility Department, each containing more detailed
411information about Petitioners experience. These items were
418received by Respondent on May 23, 2008.
4256. It is not clear whether Petitioner requested and was
435granted a continuance of his appearance with regard to the
445instant license application at an earlier FCILB meeting, but on
455January 15, 2009, the full Board considered Petitioners
463application at a duly-noticed public meeting in Altamonte
471Springs, Florida. At that time, Petitioner was present.
4797. During his appearance before the full Board on
488January 15, 2009, Petitioner was very nervous, but he believes
498that one of the Board members offered him, or at least asked him
511if he would accept, a residential contractors license in place
521of a certified building contractors license, and that he
530answered that he would accept such a license, only to have that
542offer and acceptance voted down by the full Board. However,
552Petitioner does not rule out the possibility that the vote taken
563at the meeting was actually with regard to denying the certified
574building contractor license for which he had applied.
5828. There is no evidence that Petitioner has ever submitted
592an application for a residential contractors license.
5999. By a Notice of Intent to Deny, dated March 16, 2009,
611and mailed March 24, 2009, the FCILB formally denied
620Petitioners application for a certified building contractor
627License stating:
629The applicant failed to demonstrate the
635required experience, pursuant to Section
640489.111, Florida Statutes and Rule 61G4-
64615.001, Florida Administrative Code.
65010. Petitioner seeks licensure as one who has four years
660of active experience and who has learned the trade by serving an
672apprenticeship as a skilled worker or as a foreman, at least one
684year of which experience is as a foreman.
69211. Petitioner has never worked as a full-time employee of
702a commercial or residential contractor.
70712. Petitioner got early experience in construction
714working around eight rental properties owned by his father. He
724performed light carpentry, deck construction, general handyman
731repairs, and some plumbing and roofing when he was approximately
74116 to 21 years of age.
74713. However, Petitioner essentially relies on a work
755history that includes working as a plumber for Jim Bennett
765Plumbing from 1987 to 1993; as a foreman for the City of
777Tallahassee Gas Department from 1995 to 2005; as a contractor
787trainee for Chad Banks from 1999 to 2002; as having volunteered
798as superintendent for Gulf Coast Painting from 2003 to 2007; and
809as a maintenance man for the City of Tallahassee Parks
819Department from 2006 to 2007.
82414. Petitioners dates of employment overlap, because his
832volunteer experience was acquired mostly on weekends, holidays,
840in hours after he had already completed a full work day for the
853City of Tallahassee, or on time off from his regular
863employments with the City. Petitioner is a hard worker and
873wanted to learn the construction trade, but his volunteer
882construction jobs were intermittent, and he provided no clear
891assessment of the number of hours per week or month that he put
904in for any of them.
90915. From 1987 to 1993, Petitioner worked for Jim Bennett
919Plumbing. He started as a plumbers helper and progressed to
929greater responsibility. In that position, he acquired a wide
938range of experience in plumbing for some residential, but mostly
948commercial, buildings. During this period, he also did some
957light cosmetic carpentry and tile work to restore building parts
967damaged by the installation of plumbing apparatus.
97416. Much of Petitioners construction experience relates
981to his association with Chad Banks, who testified that at all
992times material, Petitioner had hands on experience, working
1000for him and that Petitioner was a competent worker.
100917. Petitioner has never been a W-2 employee of Mr.
1019Banks, but there is no specific statutory or rule requirement
1029that the experience necessary to qualify for the certified
1038building contractor or the residential contractor license must
1046be as a W-2 employee. Cf . Conclusions of Law.
105618. Mr. Banks was not licensed as a certified building
1066contractor until 1999.
106919. Petitioner did some work for Mr. Banks when Mr. Banks
1080was working as a sub-contractor on commercial projects
1088(specifically one or more Super-Lube buildings) prior to
1096Mr. Banks obtaining his certified building contractors license
1104in 1999. Most of this employment involved pouring concrete
1113slabs. Petitioner claims experience in elevated slabs,
1121limited to the construction of a single Super-Lube building,
1130which Petitioner described as laying a slab below ground level
1140for mechanics to stand on and an at-ground level slab for cars
1152to drive onto the lift for an oil change. He described no truly
1165elevated slabs or floors above ground level on this project,
1175and Petitioners and Mr. Banks testimony was vague as to
1185Petitioners responsibilities on this project and as to the
1194projects duration. The general contractor on this project for
1203whom Mr. Banks subbed did not testify.
121020. From this, and other employments, Petitioner has
1218experience pouring foundation slabs, but he has never worked on
1228a foundation slab in excess of 20,000 square feet.
123821. Petitioner also assisted in Mr. Banks construction of
1247some rental sheds, but it is unclear if this was before or after
1260Mr. Banks was licensed.
126422. Petitioner worked for Mr. Banks d/b/a C. B.
1273Construction, Inc., in a volunteer capacity on exclusively
1281residential construction from 1999 to 2002, and again from
1290February 2004 to March 2008. During these periods, Petitioner
1299and Mr. Banks considered Petitioner a contractor trainee, but
1309Petitioners work for Mr. Banks was neither exclusive nor
1318continuous; both men described it as volunteer work; and some
1328of it seems to have amounted to Petitioner's looking over work
1339done personally by Mr. Banks and having Mr. Banks explain to
1350him, via a plan sheet, what Mr. Banks had already done
1361personally. There is no evidence that during this time frame
1371Petitioner worked for Mr. Banks as a foreman.
137923. Petitioner has the ability to read many types of
1389construction plans.
139124. Petitioner has experience with slab footers, but he
1400has not constructed red iron structural steel qualified for
1409framing a building.
141225. Petitioner has experience in decorative masonry walls,
1420but he has not constructed structural masonry walls of a type
1431that would support framing members of a building or other
1441vertical construction.
144326. Petitioner also worked for the City of Tallahassee as
1453a W-2 employee, mostly as a foreman overseeing a crew of four
1465workers, from 1995 to 2005. In that capacity, he worked on a
1477church, but the church itself had been constructed several years
1487previously, and Petitioners crews contribution was tying-in
1494several gas lines during a roadway development project and
1503keeping all the utilities up and running during the project,
1513while a private contractor worked on the church.
152127. With regard to the foregoing project and many others
1531for the City Utilities Department, Petitioner directed a crew
1540that built sidewalks and gutters or that tied these features
1550into existing roadways and driveways. In that capacity, he
1559often coordinated activities with residential contractors. Over
1566his ten years employment with the City Utilities, Petitioner
1575also directed a crew that exclusively created underground vaults
1584for the housing and shelter of utility apparatus. However, none
1594of his endeavors for the City Utilities involved vertical
1603structural construction for floors above ground.
160928. Petitioner has also built new gas stations for the
1619Citys natural gas vehicles, and has erected pre-fab utility
1628buildings, including much slab work, but the nature and duration
1638of these endeavors is not sufficiently clear to categorize them
1648as qualifying him for the certified building contractor license.
165729. Most of Petitioners experience with the City, as
1666substantiated by the letter of the City Utilities Maintenance
1675Construction Chief, Mr. Lavine, has been in the construction of
1685driveways, roads, gutters, storm drains, sidewalks, culverts,
1692underground utility structures, plumbing and gas lines. While
1700it is accepted that Petitioner has worked on such projects, this
1711type of work more properly falls in the categories of plumbing
1722was not demonstrated to have any certification/licensure in a
1731category appropriate to Petitioners application. ( See
1738Conclusions of Law.)
174130. Sometime after 2005, for approximately a year,
1749Petitioner was employed by the City of Tallahassee Parks and
1759Recreation Department and in that capacity participated in at
1768least one construction of a dugout and a concession stand at one
1780of its playgrounds. He also did repairs on several dugouts and
1791concession stands, but this latter work would not be classified
1801as structural construction.
180431. Petitioners experience in precast concrete structures
1811is limited to his work with gas utility structures, but does not
1823include work on precast tilt walls, which are the type of walls
1835that are constructed off-site, delivered to the job site, placed
1845on the slab foundation, and raised in place as part of an on-
1858going commercial building project.
186232. Petitioner has no experience in column erection.
1870Columns in this context within the construction trade refers
1879to supports for upper level structural members, which would
1888entail vertical construction.
189133. Petitioners experience in concrete formwork does not
1899include experience in the structurally reinforced concrete
1906formwork that would be used in vertical buildings, such as all
1917floors above ground level.
192134. FCILBs Chairman testified that the Board interprets
1929the type of experience necessary to comply with the statutes and
1940rules, more particularly Florida Administrative Code Rule 61G4-
194815.001(2), to be structural experience.
195335. There is no affirmative evidence that Petitioner has
1962ever notified the Clerk of the Agency that he was relying on a
1975right to a default license.
1980CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
198336. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
1990jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of this cause,
2000pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes
2008(2009).
200937. In addition to asserting that he is substantively
2018entitled to a certified building contractors license,
2025Petitioner also contends that he is entitled to a license by
2036default, because his application was not timely granted or
2045denied after all information requested had been received by the
2055Agency/Board on May 23, 2008, and because his application was
2065not granted or denied within 15 days of the January 15, 2009,
2077public hearing by the FCILB on his license application.
208638. Petitioner further contends that he is entitled to a
2096residential contractors license because of his interchange with
2104one Board member at the hearing on January 15, 2009. ( See
2116Finding of Fact 7.)
212039. Petitioner bears the duty to go forward and prove
2130entitlement to the requested license by a preponderance of the
2140evidence. Department of Banking and Finance v. Osborne Stern
2149and Company , 670 So. 2d 932 (Fla. 1996); Antel v. Department of
2161Professional Regulation, Florida Real Estate Commission , 522 So.
21692d 1056 (Fla. 5th DCA 1988).
217540. Applicable to the issue of default is the following
2185statute, quoted only in pertinent part:
2191120.60 Licensing. --
2194(1) Upon receipt of an application for a
2202license, an agency shall examine the
2208application and, within 30 days after such
2215receipt, notify the applicant of any
2221apparent errors or omissions and request any
2228additional information the agency is
2233permitted by law to require. . . . An
2242application shall be considered complete
2247upon receipt of all requested information
2253and correction of any error or omission for
2261which the applicant was timely notified or
2268when the time for such notification has
2275expired. Every application for a license
2281shall be approved or denied within 90 days
2289after receipt of a completed application
2295unless a shorter period of time for agency
2303action is provided by law. The 90-day time
2311period shall be tolled by the initiation of
2319a proceeding under ss. 120.569 and 120.57.
2326Any application for a license that is not
2334approved or denied within the 90-day or
2341shorter time period, within 15 days after
2348conclusion of a public hearing held on the
2356application, or within 45 days after a
2363recommended order is submitted to the agency
2370and the parties, whichever action and
2376timeframe is latest and applicable, is
2382considered approved unless the recommended
2387order recommends that the agency deny the
2394license. . . . Any applicant for licensure
2402seeking to claim licensure by default under
2409this subsection shall notify the agency
2415clerk of the licensing agency, in writing,
2422of the intent to rely upon the default
2430license provision of this subsection, and
2436shall not take any action based upon the
2444default license until after receipt of such
2451notice by the agency clerk.
245641. Section 120.60(1), Florida Statutes, establishes a
2463timetable for agency action on a license application. If an
2473agency has not taken action within the prescribed time periods,
2483an application for a license or for an examination required for
2494licensure is considered approved. Johnson v. Dept. of Business
2503& Professional Regulation , 634 So .2d 666 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994).
2514If the Agency has not taken action within the prescribed time
2525periods, and the applicant notifies the Agency Clerk in writing
2535that s/he claims a default license, then s/he is entitled to the
2547default license.
254942. Within 30 days after the receipt of an application for
2560a license, the agency must examine the application, notify the
2570applicant of any apparent errors or omissions, and request any
2580additional information. In this case, the Agency did not
2589request further information until the thirty-ninth day (March 24
2598to May 2, 2008). The burden of responding to the request for
2610further information is upon the applicant, if he chooses to go
2621that route, and the duty to notify the Agency Clerk in writing
2633is upon the applicant if, at that point, he seeks a default
2645license. In this case, there is no evidence that Petitioner
2655notified the Agency Clerk concerning a claimed default license,
2664but rather, there is evidence that Petitioner supplemented his
2673application with additional material on May 23, 2008.
268143. The Agency had 90 days from May 23, 2008, within which
2693to grant or deny the license. However, to take advantage of the
2705Agencys delay at that point (August 23, 2008), Petitioner would
2715have to have notified the Agency Clerk in writing that he was
2727exercising his default rights. There is no evidence that he
2737notified the Agency Clerk at that point.
274444. If a public hearing is held on the application, and
2755if, in this case, that public hearing occurred on January 15,
27662009, 1/ the notification of action on the application needed to
2777be provided by the Board to Petitioner Applicant within 15 days
2788after the conclusion of the public hearing, even if this is
2799beyond the statutory 90-day period. Herein, the Board did not
2809notify Petitioner by the fifteenth day (January 30, 2009). It
2819did not notify him until March 24, 2009, which was 54 days past
2832the public hearing date.
283645. However, there is no evidence that Petitioner has ever
2846provided written notification to the Clerk of the Agency that he
2857was invoking the default provision of Section 120.60, Florida
2866Statutes. Instead, he requested a disputed-fact hearing.
287346. If a proceeding under Sections 120.569 and 120.57,
2882Florida Statutes (such as the instant one) is initiated, the 90-
2893day period is tolled and the application must then be approved
2904or denied within 45 days after a recommended order (this
2914Recommended Order) is submitted to the agency and the parties,
2924unless the Recommended Order denies the license.
293147. Former Section 120.60, was amended in 2003, to remove
2941language providing that an agencys lapse of time in making its
2952decision after completion of the application resulted in the
2961license, first appears in the statute at that time. The
2972amendment effectively removed the requirement that an agency had
2981to take action to "deem approved" an application that the agency
2992had not timely acted upon in the first place. Thus, an
3003applicant exercising his right to a default license today no
3013longer has to await an already laggardly agency eventually
3022getting around to deeming him to have a default license. Now,
3033once the applicant properly notifies the Agency Clerk that he
3043has a right to a default license, the applicant (now licensee)
3054may proceed as if he were licensed, without waiting for the
3065Agency to do anything more.
307048. However, in the instant case, there is no evidence
3080that Petitioner ever gave written notice to the Agency Clerk
3090that he was relying on a default license, and his request for a
3103disputed-fact hearing does not substitute therefor.
3109Accordingly, Petitioner is not entitled to licensure by default
3118at this stage of the proceedings.
312449. As to the effect of FCILBs public hearing on
3134January 15, 2009, it is not clear what the single member said to
3147Petitioner. He may have been inquiring about whether Petitioner
3156was entitled to one or more licenses, but a simple question
3167posed by a single Board member is meaningless. Moreover, this
3177question, however vague, does not, as Petitioner has suggested,
3186indicate a bias of the Board against an applicant whose
3196experience has been gained in the public sector. In fact, the
3207rule specifically recognizes the value of public sector
3215experience. See , infra .
321950. Without an application for a residential construction
3227license plus a favorable majority vote of the whole collegial
3237body to approve that residential license application, Petitioner
3245is not entitled to a residential license. Certainly, there is
3255no entitlement to any license simply because a single Board
3265member asked Petitioner about his interest in a residential
3274application/license.
327551. On the substantive issue, the standards that
3283Petitioner must meet for licensure are contained in Section
3292489.111, Florida Statutes (2008), which provides, in pertinent
3300part, as follows:
3303489.111 Licensure by examination. --
3308(1) Any person who desires to be certified
3316shall apply to the department in writing.
3323(2) A person shall be eligible for
3330licensure by examination if the person:
3336(a) Is 18 years of age;
3342(b) Is of good moral character; and
3349(c) Meets eligibility requirements
3353according to one of the following criteria:
3360* * *
33632. Has a total of at least 4 years of
3373active experience as a worker who has
3380learned the trade by serving an
3386apprenticeship as a skilled worker who is
3393able to command the rate of a mechanic in
3402the particular trade or as a foreman who is
3411in charge of a group of workers and usually
3420is responsible to a superintendent or a
3427contractor or his or her equivalent,
3433provided, however, that at least 1 year of
3441active experience shall be as a foreman.
3448(Emphasis supplied.)
345052. Also applicable is Florida Administrative Code Rule
345861G4-15.001(2), which provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
3466(1)(a) . . . Active experience in the
3474category in which the applicant seeks to
3481qualify shall be verified by affidavits
3487prepared or signed by a state certified
3494Florida contractor, or an architect or
3500engineeer, in the applicants category, who
3506is licensed in good standing or a licensed
3514building official, who is active in the
3521applicants category, employed by a
3526political subdivision of any state,
3531territory or possession of the United States
3538who is responsible for inspections of
3544construction improvements, listing
3547chronologically the active experience in the
3553trade, including the name and address of
3560employers and dates of employment (which may
3567be corroborated by investigation by the
3573Board). Said affidavit shall be subscribed
3579to in front of a notary.
3585(b) Applicants shall follow the guidelines
3591set forth in this section when seeking to
3599verify active experience in accordance with
3605paragraph 61G4-15.001(1)(a), F.A.C.
3608If the applicants category is: The
3614following licensees can verify the
3619applicants experience:
36211. General General contractor
36252. Building General and/or Building contractor
36313. Residential General, Building and/or Residential
3637contractor
36384. P l u m b i n g General, Building, Residential,
3650Plumbing and/or Underground Utility
3654and Excavation contractor
365715. Underground Utility and General, Building, Residential,
3664Excavation Contractor Underground utility and exca vation,
3671and/or Plumbing contractor
3674(2)(a) In the case of applicants for
3681certification in the general or building
3687contractor categories, the phrases active
3692experience and proven experience as used
3698in Section 489.111(2)(c)1., 2., or 3., F.S.,
3705shall be defined to mean construction
3711experience in four or more of the following
3719areas :
37211. Foundation/Slabs in excess of twenty
3727thousand (20,000) square feet.
37322. Masonry walls.
37353. Steel erection.
37384. Elevated slabs.
37415. Precast concrete structures.
37456. Column erection.
37487. Formwork for structural reinforced
3753concrete. [2/] (Emphasis supplied.)
375753. The rule is clear on its face that without evidence
3768from the appropriate type(s) of licensed contractor, covering at
3777least four years, one of which years Petitioner worked as a
3788foreman, Petitioners application must be denied. Petitioners
3795employment with the City Utilities was not the type of
3805employment that would qualify him for a certified building
3814contractor license, and while his City supervisors
3821qualifications might support Petitioner in other categories of
3829licensure, they did not fit the category for which he was
3840applying.
384154. Likewise, Petitioners employment history with Mr.
3848Banks did not qualify.
385255. An agencys interpretation of its own rules is
3861entitled to great weight. See Woodley v. Department of Health
3871and Rehabilitative Services , 505 So. 2d 676 (Fla. 1st DCA 1987).
3882However, here, the rule is clear with or without the evidence of
3894the Chairman of the Board that structural, as opposed to
3904decorative, proficiency in the correct categories is necessary
3912to qualify.
391456. Section 489.111(2)(c), Florida Statutes, provides that
3921experience shall be in the category for which the person seeks
3932to qualify, and that the experience shall be as a skilled worker
3944who can command the rate of a mechanic on a particular trade, or
3957as a foreman who is in charge of a group of workers and is
3971responsible to a superintendent or a contractor or the
3980equivalent, with at least one of the four years being the
3991foreman. It is inherent in the statute that the experience
4001shall be full-time, which would amount to 40 hours per week for
4013at least 50 weeks each year, of qualified employment
4022experience. 3/
402457. Petitioner has not demonstrated the required
4031experience in any of the seven categories.
4038RECOMMENDATION
4039Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
4049Law, it is
4052RECOMMENDED that the Florida Construction Industry
4058Licensing Board enter a Final Order denying Petitioners
4066application for licensure as a Certified Building Contractor.
4074DONE AND ENTERED this 24th day of November, 2009, in
4084Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
4088S
4089ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
4093Administrative Law Judge
4096Division of Administrative Hearings
4100The DeSoto Building
41031230 Apalachee Parkway
4106Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
4109(850) 488-9675
4111Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
4115www.doah.state.fl.us
4116Filed with the Clerk of the
4122Division of Administrative Hearings
4126this 24th day of November, 2009.
4132ENDNOTES
41331/ Respondent asserts the Board held a public meeting and not
4144one before the Division of Administrative Hearings.
41512/ This rule was last amended effective 11-26-08. It remained
4161the same at all times material to the application and through
4172the disputed-fact hearing. However, the rule, as noticed in
4181Vol. 34, No. 10, March 7, 2008, of the Florida Administrative
4192Weekly, was withdrawn as of November 20, 2009, per publication
4202of Florida Administrative Weekly, Vol. 35 No. 46.
42103/ Respondent suggests that the 2,000 hours provided for full-
4221time equivalency of proven experience of one year named in
4231Florida Statutes Section 489.111(2)(c)1., with regard to those
4239seeking licensure through a four years baccalaureate program
4247and one year of experience applies here, as well.
4256COPIES FURNISHED :
4259Daniel R. Biggins, Esquire
4263Department of Legal Affairs
4267The Capitol, Plaza Level 01
4272Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1050
4275J. Steven Carter, Esquire
4279Henry, Buchanan, Hudson,
4282Suber & Carter, P.A.
42862508 Barrington Circle
4289Tallahassee, Florida 32308
4292G. W. Harrell, Executive Director
4297Construction Industry Licensing Board
4301Department of Business and
4305Professional Regulation
4307Northwood Centre
43091940 North Monroe Street
4313Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792
4316Reginald Dixon, General Counsel
4320Department of Business and
4324Professional Regulation
4326Northwood Centre
43281940 North Monroe Street
4332Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792
4335NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
4341All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
435115 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
4362to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
4373will issue the Final Order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 11/24/2009
- Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held September 14, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/24/2009
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- Date: 09/29/2009
- Proceedings: Transcript of Proceedings filed.
- Date: 09/14/2009
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/09/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for September 14, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 06/05/2009
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Providing the Information Required by Initial Order filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
- Date Filed:
- 05/29/2009
- Date Assignment:
- 05/29/2009
- Last Docket Entry:
- 11/12/2019
- Location:
- Tallahassee, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- Other
Counsels
-
Daniel Biggins, Esquire
Address of Record -
J. Steven Carter, Esquire
Address of Record