A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Senate panel advances bill expanding school‑board members’ access to district records and limiting nondisclosure agreements

February 03, 2026 | 2026 Legislature FL, Florida


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Senate panel advances bill expanding school‑board members’ access to district records and limiting nondisclosure agreements
Senator Leake introduced SB 1620 as a "School Board Members Bill of Rights," proposing free and timely access for individual board members to district documents, a prohibition on many nondisclosure agreements, and the ability for board members to request information directly from staff without superintendent permission. Sponsors said the bill corrects practices that have frozen out elected members from oversight in some districts.

Volusia County officials — including school‑board chair Ruben Colon, superintendent representatives and several board members — testified at length. Opponents warned the bill could create parallel reporting lines, undermine the superintendent’s managerial authority, and expose personnel and student‑privacy data absent clear guardrails. "SB 16 20 moves away from that clarity in three ways," Ruben Colon said, citing access to nonpublic materials, direct staff contact and attorney‑representation changes.

Supporters — including former teachers and board members — argued the proposal restores transparency and prevents misuse of nondisclosure agreements to shield misconduct. "NDAs add nothing to student safety; instead they shield districts from public scrutiny," said Shane Story, who described being charged for public records as a sitting board member.

Committee debate focused on balancing board oversight with operational clarity: sponsors said the bill will be refined to protect confidential student and health information and to include reasonableness limits on staff contact. The committee reported SB 1620 favorably after debate; sponsors committed to clarifying language to limit unintended operational consequences.

View the Full Meeting & All Its Details

This article offers just a summary. Unlock complete video, transcripts, and insights as a Founder Member.

Watch full, unedited meeting videos
Search every word spoken in unlimited transcripts
AI summaries & real-time alerts (all government levels)
Permanent access to expanding government content
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee