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A TRUE COPY <br />CERTIFICATION ON LAST PAGE <br />J.R. SMITH, CLERK <br />Sunshine Law applies to private entities that provide services to governmental agencies and that act on <br />behalf of those agencies in the agencies' performance of their public duties. If a public agency delegates <br />the performance of its public purpose to a private entity, then, to the extent that private entity is performing <br />that public purpose, the Government in the Sunshine Law applies. For example, if a volunteer fire <br />department provides firefighting services to a governmental entity and uses facilities and equipment <br />purchased with public funds, then the Government in the Sunshine Law applies to board of directors for <br />that volunteer fire department. Thus, to the extent that the Government in the Sunshine Law applies to the <br />Sub -Recipient based upon the funds provided under this Agreement, the meetings of the Sub -Recipient's <br />governing board or the meetings of any subcommittee making recommendations to the governing board <br />may be subject to open government requirements. These meetings shall be publicly noticed, open to the <br />public, and the minutes of all the meetings shall be public records, available to the public in accordance <br />with Chapter 119, Florida Statutes. <br />h. Florida's Public Records Law provides a right of access to the records of the State and <br />Local governments as well as to private entities acting on their behalf. Unless specifically exempted from <br />disclosure by the Legislature, all materials made or received by a governmental agency (or a private entity <br />acting on behalf of such an agency), in conjunction with official business which are used to perpetuate, <br />communicate, or formalize knowledge, qualify as public records subject to public inspection. The mere <br />receipt of public funds by a private entity, standing alone, is insufficient to bring that entity within the ambit <br />of the public record requirements. However, when a public entity delegates a public function to a private <br />entity, the records generated by the private entity's performance of that duty become public records. Thus, <br />the nature and scope of the services provided by a private entity determine whether that entity is acting on <br />behalf of a public agency and is therefore subject to the requirements of Florida's Public Records Law. <br />i. The Sub -Recipient shall maintain all records for the Sub -Recipient and for all <br />subcontractors or consultants to be paid from funds provided under this Agreement, including <br />documentation of all program costs, in a form sufficient to determine compliance with the requirements and <br />objectives of Attachments A and B to this Agreement ("Budget and Scope of Work" and "Program Statutes <br />and Regulations" respectively), and all other applicable laws and regulations. <br />IF THE CONTRACTOR HAS QUESTIONS REGARDING THE <br />APPLICATION OF CHAPTER 119, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO THE <br />CONTRACTOR'S DUTY TO PROVIDE PUBLIC RECORDS RELATING TO <br />THIS CONTRACT, CONTACT THE CUSTODIAN OF PUBLIC RECORDS <br />AT: (850) 815-4156, Records@em.myflorida.com, or 2555 Shumard Oak <br />Boulevard, Tallahassee, FL 32399. <br />(11) AUDITS <br />a. The Sub -Recipient shall comply with the audit requirements contained in 2 C.F.R. Part <br />200, Subpart F. <br />10 <br />