Florida Statutes 282.802 – Government Technology Modernization Council
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(1) The Government Technology Modernization Council, an advisory council as defined in s. 20.03(7), is created within the department. Except as otherwise provided in this section, the advisory council shall operate in a manner consistent with s. 20.052.
(2) The purpose of the council is to study and monitor the development and deployment of new technologies and provide reports on recommendations for procurement and regulation of such systems to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(3) The council shall be composed of the following members:
(a) The Lieutenant Governor as chair.
Terms Used In Florida Statutes 282.802
- Cybersecurity: means the protection afforded to an automated information system in order to attain the applicable objectives of preserving the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of data, information, and information technology resources. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
- Data: means a subset of structured information in a format that allows such information to be electronically retrieved and transmitted. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
- Department: means the Department of Management Services. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
- Enterprise: means state agencies and the Department of Legal Affairs, the Department of Financial Services, and the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
- Ex officio: Literally, by virtue of one's office.
- Information technology: means equipment, hardware, software, firmware, programs, systems, networks, infrastructure, media, and related material used to automatically, electronically, and wirelessly collect, receive, access, transmit, display, store, record, retrieve, analyze, evaluate, process, classify, manipulate, manage, assimilate, control, communicate, exchange, convert, converge, interface, switch, or disseminate information of any kind or form. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
- Joint meeting: An occasion, often ceremonial, when the House and Senate each adopt a unanimous consent agreement
- Remainder: An interest in property that takes effect in the future at a specified time or after the occurrence of some event, such as the death of a life tenant.
- Standards: means required practices, controls, components, or configurations established by an authority. See Florida Statutes 282.0041
(b) The state chief information officer.
(c) The Secretary of Commerce or his or her designee.
(d) The Secretary of Health Care Administration or his or her designee.
(e) The Secretary of Transportation or his or her designee.
(f) The executive director of the Department of Law Enforcement or his or her designee.
(g) Five representatives with senior level experience or expertise in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, identity management, data science, machine learning, government procurement, financial technology, education technology, and constitutional law, with three appointed by the Governor, one appointed by the President of the Senate, and one appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(h) One member of the Senate, appointed by the President of the Senate.
(i) One member of the House of Representatives, appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(4) Members shall serve for terms of 4 years, except that sitting members of the Senate and the House of Representatives shall serve terms that correspond with their terms of office. For the purpose of providing staggered terms, the initial appointments of members made by the Governor shall be for terms of 2 years. A vacancy shall be filled for the remainder of the unexpired term in the same manner as the initial appointment. All members of the council are eligible for reappointment.
(5) The Secretary of Management Services, or his or her designee, shall serve as the ex officio, nonvoting executive director of the council.
(6) Members of the council shall serve without compensation but are entitled to receive reimbursement for per diem and travel expenses pursuant to s. 112.061.
(7)(a) The council shall meet at least quarterly to:
1. Recommend legislative and administrative actions that the Legislature and state agencies as defined in s. 282.318(2) may take to promote the development of data modernization in this state.
2. Assess and provide guidance on necessary legislative reforms and the creation of a state code of ethics for artificial intelligence systems in state government.
3. Assess the effect of automated decision systems or identity management on constitutional and other legal rights, duties, and privileges of residents of this state.
4. Evaluate common standards for artificial intelligence safety and security measures, including the benefits of requiring disclosure of the digital provenance for all images and audio created using generative artificial intelligence as a means of revealing the origin and edit of the image or audio, as well as the best methods for such disclosure.
5. Assess the manner in which governmental entities and the private sector are using artificial intelligence with a focus on opportunity areas for deployments in systems across this state.
6. Determine the manner in which artificial intelligence is being exploited by bad actors, including foreign countries of concern as defined in s. 287.138(1).
7. Evaluate the need for curriculum to prepare school-age audiences with the digital media and visual literacy skills needed to navigate the digital information landscape.
(b) At least one quarterly meeting of the council must be a joint meeting with the Florida Cybersecurity Advisory Council.
(8) By December 31, 2024, and each December 31 thereafter, the council shall submit to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives any legislative recommendations considered necessary by the council to modernize government technology, including:
(a) Recommendations for policies necessary to:
1. Accelerate adoption of technologies that will increase productivity of state enterprise information technology systems, improve customer service levels of government, and reduce administrative or operating costs.
2. Promote the development and deployment of artificial intelligence systems, financial technology, education technology, or other enterprise management software in this state.
3. Protect Floridians from bad actors who use artificial intelligence.
(b) Any other information the council considers relevant.