Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 61J2-3.010 - License Reactivation Education for Brokers and Sales Associates
(1) Brokers and sales associates holding an
involuntarily inactive license may only maintain this status for 2 years. The
first day of this allowable 2-year period is the first day the broker or sales
associate failed to hold a valid and current active or voluntarily inactive
license. After the second year, the broker's or sales associate's right to
request an active or voluntarily inactive license automatically expires, by
operation of law.
(2) A licensee
may reactivate a license that has been involuntarily inactive for more than 12
months but less than 24 months by satisfactorily completing 28 hours of a
Commission-prescribed education course derived from the Florida Real Estate
Commission Salesperson Course Syllabus (FREC Course I). The course shall
contain coverage of the following topics: Real Estate License Law and
Qualifications for Licensure (Session 2); Real Estate License Law and
Commission Rules (Session 3); Authorized Relationships, Duties and Disclosure
(Session 4); Real Estate Brokerage Activities and Procedures (Session 5);
Violations of License Law, Penalties and Procedures (Session 6); Federal and
State Laws Pertaining to Real Estate (Session 7); Real Estate Contracts
(Session 11); Real Estate Related Computations and Closing of Transactions
(Session 14); and Real Estate Investments and Business Opportunity Brokerage
(Session 17).
(3) Students failing
the Commission-prescribed end-of-course examination may retest a maximum of one
time within one year of the original examination. Otherwise, students failing
the Commission-prescribed end-of-course examination must repeat the course
prior to being eligible to again take the end-of-course examination. Schools
shall administer a different form of the end-of-course examination to a student
who is retaking the exam or repeating the course.
(a) For all courses approved for classroom
delivery, 50 minute hours means fifty minutes of classsroom instruction,
exclusive of any breaks, recesses, or other time not spent in instruction.
Classroom hours are the hours delivered live by an instructor in a classroom or
by live streaming or any means of video conferencing technology while the
students are in attendance at permitted or approved school locations.
(b) Any school requesting approval for a
distance learning course via streaming video or any other means of video
conferencing technology must submit to the DBPR at the time of course
submission all course materials as well as information on the delivery method
and software platform being used.
(c) When delivered by distance education, the
course and examinaton shall comply with the "Course Approval criteria" as
follows:
1. Distance learning necessitates a
high level of self-direction and should, therefore, require students to read,
conduct research, complete timed exams and similar assignments, designed to
measure the student's competency relative to the required subject matter
objectives. Distance learning study must be offered on a classroom hour per
classroom hour basis.
2. Distance
learning means the delivery of education offerings or courses via the internet
and/or other interactive electronic media. Such offerings or courses shall be
interactive, providing for the interchange of information between the student
and instructor, and shall provide for the registration, evaluation, and
monitoring of students. 50 minute hours for distance learning courses shall be
the equivalent of the 50 minute classroom hour in a classroom delivery
course.
(4) A
licensee may demonstrate satisfactory completion for reactivation by achieving
a grade of 70% or higher on the Commission-prescribed end-of-course
examination. The end-of-course examination shall contain 2 items per
instructional hour or a minimum of 50 questions. The school must develop at
least two forms of the end-of-course examination and submit them to the
Department for approval. All courses shall conform to the requirements of Rule
61J2-3.008, F.A.C. The school
shall test only students who have completed at least 90% of the required hours
of instruction.
(5) The school
offering these Commission-prescribed courses shall inform each student of the
standards and requirements at the commencement of each course and issue a
notice of course completion as prescribed by the Commission in Rule
61J2-3.015, F.A.C.
(6) Accredited universities, colleges,
community colleges in this state, area technical centers or real estate schools
registered pursuant to Section
475.451, F.S., may offer the
Commission-prescribed courses. Satisfactory completion of these courses will
not entitle any person to reactivate an involuntary inactive license as a real
estate broker or sales associate until such person has met all other
requirements of law.
(7) The
Commission will allow an additional 6-month period after the expiration of a
license for brokers and sales associates who cannot complete the reactivation
requirements due to individual hardship. Individual hardship is defined in Rule
61J2-3.013, F.A.C.
(a) Any licensee requesting a hardship shall
make the request to the Commission in writing setting forth the basis of the
alledged hardship. The Commission may require said request to be supported by
additional documentation.
(b) Any
licensee who has received a hardship extension will remain null and void until
a valid reinstatement application for is received with proof of renewal fees
and reactivation education.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 475.05, 475.183(3) FS. Law Implemented 475.04, 475.17, 475.182, 475.183, 475.451 FS.
New 1-1-80, Amended 8-24-80, 9-16-84, Formerly 21V-3.10, Amended 10-13-88, 6-28-93, Formerly 21V-3.010, Amended 12-30-97, 10-25-98, 1-18-00, 3-15-04, 11-8-06, 12-25-07, 8-18-08, 1-17-16, 10-26-16.
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