Chapter
321
2005 -- H 6539 AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/15/05
A N A C T
RELATING TO
SEPARATION OF POWERS
Introduced
By: Representatives E Coderre, Crowley, and Kilmartin
Date
Introduced: May 26, 2005
It is enacted by the General Assembly as
follows:
SECTION 1.
Sections 42-64-8 and 42-64-28 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64
entitled "Rhode Island Economic Development
Corporation" are hereby amended to read as
follows:
42-64-8.
Directors, officers, and employees. -- (a) (1) The powers of the corporation
shall be vested in a board of directors
consisting of thirteen (13) nine (9) members.
(1) The
governor shall serve as a member of the board and as chairperson, ex-officio,
(who shall vote only in the event of a tie).
(2) In addition
to the governor, the The membership of the board shall consist of
eight (8)
public members to be appointed by the governor.
(3) Each
gubernatorial appointee shall be subject to with the advice and
consent of the
senate, and no one shall be eligible
for appointment unless he or she is a resident of this state.
two (2) members from the house of
representatives to be appointed by the speaker of the house of
representatives, one of whom shall be from the
minority party, one member from the senate who
shall be appointed by the president of the
senate, and one member of the minority party from the
senate who shall be appointed by the president
of the senate. The public member next appointed
after August 8, 1996, and each of his or her
successors,
One of the public members shall serve as
small business ombudsperson, and shall be an
owner or principal of a small business doing
business and located in this state, which
that is independently owned and operated and not dominant in
this its field, and which that employs one hundred
(100) or fewer persons at the time of his or her
appointment. The small business ombudsperson
shall advocate all action as Directors that may be
necessary and proper to maintain and encourage
the continued viability of small businesses in the
state. The second One other of the
public member members next appointed after August 8, 1996,
and each of his or her successors, shall be a representative
of organized labor. The remaining One
other of the public member members
shall be appointed on an interim basis by the governor when
a project plan of the corporation situated on
federal land is disapproved by the governing body of
a municipality in accordance with subsection
(a)(4) of section 42-64-13. The member shall be the
mayor of the municipality within whose borders
all or a majority of the project plan is to be
carried out, or in a municipality which has no
mayor, the member shall be the president of the
town or city council. The appointed interim
member shall have all the powers of other members
of the board only in its deliberations and
action on the disapproval of the project plan situated on
federal land and within the borders of his or
her municipality. Upon final action by the board
pursuant to subsection (a)(5) of section
42-64-13, the interim member's term of appointment shall
automatically terminate.
(4) It shall be
the responsibility of the corporation to conduct a training course for newly
appointed and qualified members and new
designees of ex-officio members within six (6) months
of their qualification or designation. The
course shall be developed by the executive director of
the corporation or his or her designee, be
approved by the board, and conducted by the executive
director or his or her designee. The board may
approve the use of any board or staff members or
other individuals to assist with training. The
training course shall include instruction in the
following areas: the provisions of the entirety
of chapter 42-64 and of chapters 42-46, 36-14, and
38-2 of Rhode Island general laws; and the
board's rules and regulations. The director of the
department of administration shall, within ninety
(90) days of the effective date of this act,
prepare and disseminate materials relating to
the provisions of chapters 42-46, 36-14, and 38-2.
(5) Members of
the board shall be removable by the governor, pursuant to the provisions
of section 36-1-7 of the general laws and for
cause only, and removal solely for partisan or
personal reasons unrelated to capacity or
fitness for the office shall be unlawful.
(2) (6)
The members of the board of directors who are not appointees of the speaker or
president and, furthermore, were duly appointed
before the effective date of this act of the Rhode
Island port authority and economic development
corporation in office on July 1, 1995 shall
continue as directors of the corporation for the
remainder of their appointed terms, and thereafter
until their successors are appointed to the
board of directors and have qualified. Annually during
the month of January, the governor shall appoint
a member or members to succeed the member or
members whose terms will then next expire to
serve for a term of four (4) years commencing on
the first day of February and then next
following, and thereafter until the successors are appointed
and qualified. The members of the board shall
be eligible to succeed themselves, but only upon
reappointment and with senate advice and
consent.
The governor shall appoint the additional
member authorized by this act to serve for a
term expiring January 31, 1999. The legislative
members of the board of directors shall cease
to be on the board as of the effective date of this
act. serve as members until the expiration of the
balance of the legislative term which they are
serving at the time of their appointment to the
board of directors, and thereafter until their
successors are appointed to the board of
directors and have qualified.
(7) In the
event of a vacancy occurring in the office of a member by death, resignation or
otherwise, that vacancy shall be filled in the
same manner as an original appointment, but only for
the remainder of the term of the former member.
(b) The directors
shall receive no compensation for the performance of their duties under
this chapter, but each director shall be
reimbursed for his or her reasonable expenses incurred in
carrying out those duties. A director may engage
in private employment, or in a profession or
business.
(c) The
chairperson shall designate a vice chairperson from among the members of the
board who shall serve at the pleasure of the
chairperson. Five (5) directors shall constitute a
quorum, and, except as otherwise provided in
section 42-64-13, any action to be taken by the
corporation under the provisions of this chapter
may be authorized by resolution approved by a
majority of the directors present and entitled
to vote at any regular or special meeting at which a
quorum is present. A vacancy in the membership
of the board of directors shall not impair the
right of a quorum to exercise all of the rights
and perform all of the duties of the corporation.
(d) The chief
executive officer of the corporation shall be executive director of the
corporation, appointed by the governor with the
advice and consent of the senate. The executive
director of the corporation shall be entitled to
receive for his or her services any reasonable
compensation as the board of directors may
determine.
(e) The board of
directors shall appoint a secretary and such additional officers and staff
members as they shall deem appropriate and shall
determine the amount of reasonable
compensation, if any, each shall receive. The
board of directors may vest in the executive director
or the director's subordinates the authority to
appoint additional staff members and to determine
the amount of compensation each individual shall
receive.
(f) No full-time
employee shall during the period of his or her employment by the
corporation engage in any other private
employment, profession or business, except with the
approval of the board of directors.
(g)
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, it shall not be or constitute a
conflict
of interest for a director, officer, or employee
of any financial institution, investment banking
firm, brokerage firm, commercial bank, trust
company, building-loan association, architecture
firm, insurance company, or any other firm,
person, or corporation to serve as a director of the
corporation, nor shall any contract or
transaction between the corporation and a financial
institution, investment banking firm, brokerage
firm, commercial bank, trust company, building-
loan association, architecture firm, insurance
company, or other firm, person, or corporation be
void or voidable by reason of that service as
director of the corporation. If any director, officer, or
employee of the corporation shall be interested
either directly or indirectly, or shall be a director,
officer, or employee of or have an ownership
interest (other than as the owner of less than one
percent (1%) of the shares of a publicly-held
corporation) in any firm or corporation interested
directly or indirectly in any contract with the
corporation, that interest shall be disclosed to the
corporation and set forth in the minutes of the corporation,
and the director, officer, or employee
having that ownership interest shall not
participate on behalf of the corporation in the
authorization of that contract. Interested
directors may be counted in determining the presence of
a quorum at a meeting of the board of directors
of the corporation which authorizes the contract
or transaction.
(h) Any action
taken by the corporation under the provisions of this chapter may be
authorized by vote at any regular or special
meeting, and each vote shall take effect immediately.
All meetings shall be open to the public and all
records shall be a matter of public record except
that if a majority of the board of directors
decides that it would be in the best interests of the
corporation and the state to hold an executive
session in private, then the board of directors is
authorized to transact any business it deems
necessary at that executive session in private, and the
record of the executive session shall not become
a matter of public record until the transaction
discussed has in the opinion of the board of
directors been completed.
(i) The board of
directors may designate from among its members an executive
committee and one or more other committees each
of which, to the extent authorized by the board
of directors, shall have and may exercise all of
the authority of the board of directors, but no
executive committee shall have the authority of
the board of directors in reference to the
disposition of all or substantially all of the property
and assets of the corporation, amending the
by-laws of the corporation, exercising the
condemnation power conferred upon the corporation by
section 42-64-9 or taking actions described or
referred to in section 42-64-13(a).
(j) Any action required
by this chapter to be taken at a meeting of the board of directors,
or any action which may be taken at a meeting of
the board of directors, or committee of the
board of directors, may be taken without a
meeting if a consent in writing, setting forth the action
to be taken, shall be signed before or after
that action by all of the directors, or all of the members
of the committee, as the case may be.
(k) Employees of
the corporation shall not, by reason of their employment, be deemed to
be employees of the state for any purpose, any
other provision of the general laws to the contrary
notwithstanding, including, without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, chapters 29, 39, and
42 of title 28 and chapters 4, 8, 9, and 10 of
title 36.
42-64-28. Annual
report. –Annual financial reports and performance report. -- The
board shall approve and the corporation shall
submit to the governor, the president pro-tem of the
senate, and the speaker of the
house of representatives, and the secretary of state, within six (6)
months eleven (11) months after the close of
its fiscal year, a complete and detailed financial
reports and a performance report. These
reports shall cover the corporation and its subsidiaries
and shall be posted electronically on the
general assembly and the secretary of state's websites as
prescribed in section 42-20-8.1.
(a) The
financial reports shall setting set forth the
corporation's:
(1) its
operations and accomplishments;
(2) its receipts
and expenditures during the fiscal year in accordance with the categories
and classifications established by the
corporation for its operating and capital outlay purposes
including a listing of all private consultants
engaged by the corporation on a contract basis and a
statement of the total amount paid to each
private consultant;, a listing of any staff supported by
these funds, and a summary of any clerical,
administrative or technical support received;
(3) its
assets and liabilities at the end of its fiscal year including a schedule of
its leases
and mortgages and the status of the reserve,
special or other funds; and
(4) a
schedule of the bonds and notes outstanding at the end of its fiscal year
together
with a statement of amounts redeemed and
incurred during the fiscal year.
(5) The
reports shall be prepared by independent certified public accountants in
accordance with generally accepted principles of
accounting.
(b) The
performance report shall include:
(1) a summary
of performance during the previous fiscal year including
accomplishments, shortcomings in general and
relative to plan, and actions to be taken to remedy
such shortcomings;
(2) for all
board meetings and public hearings held by the corporation: the subjects
addressed, decisions rendered, actions
considered and their disposition; and, the minutes of these
meetings and hearings if requested by the
governor, the president of the senate, the speaker of the
house of representatives, or the secretary of
state;
(3) rules or
regulations promulgated by the board or corporation, a summary of studies
conducted, policies and plans developed,
approved, or modified, and programs administered,
initiated or terminated;
(4) a synopsis of
hearings, complaints, suspensions, or other legal matters related to the
authority of the board or corporation;
(5) a summary
of any training courses held pursuant to subsection 42-64-8(a)(5);
(6) a briefing
on anticipated plans and activities in the upcoming fiscal year; and findings
and recommendations for improvements.
(c) The
director of the department of administration shall be responsible for the
enforcement of the provisions of this section.
SECTION 2.
Severability. If any provision of this act or the application thereof to any
person or circumstances is held invalid, such
invalidity shall not affect other provisions or
applications of the act, which can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application, and
to this end the provisions of this act are
declared to be severable.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect
upon passage.
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LC03405
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