Gov. Rick Scott will sign a bill that would change the Orlando-Orange County Expressway Authority into a new, regional transportation agency.

Scott's office confirmed he will sign the bill to create the Central Florida Expressway Authority, or CFX.

The CFX will include Seminole, Lake, Orange and Osceola counties. The agency will have nine governing board members. Four will each be appointed by the heads of the counties, the governor will appoint three more, and then the mayors of Orange County and City of Orlando will round out the board.

The bill also provides ethics and disclosure rules for board members, requiring that members not have any business with agencies that might want to do business with CFX.

The change comes as former Expressway Authority member Scott Batterson faces charges for dealings involving the agency. He was indicted last month on three felony charges for solicitation for bribery by public servant, solicitation for receiving unlawful compensation and solicitation for exerting influence.

New documents released Tuesday afternoon purportedly show Batterson offered a multimillion dollar engineering consulting contract to CH2MHill through consultant Mark Callahan if the firm hired some people he knew.

According to 543 pages of court documents, the alleged bribe took place in July 2013, at the CaddyShanks sports bar in Baldwin Park.

Callahan is the complainant in the bribery by a public servant case. He is also a geographic manager and an Expressway Authority consultant. Callahan claimed Batterson issued a veiled threat that the company could lose an existing contract on Wekiva Parkway project because they hired former Expressway Authority Director Max Crumit.

During his testimony, Callahan said Batterson told him he was “highly confident” he would become the chairman of the Expressway Authority and told him “things may change.”

However, at the time, another firm already had the contract that was reportedly offered up in the bribe and Batterson was only the vice chairman.

Meanwhile, after allegedly being offered the contract, Callahan said Batterson told him, “If we do that… there may be some folks that I want you to consider putting on your team.”

Callahan told investigators he was under the impression that “folks” were Batterson’s friends.

Meanwhile, Crumit told investigators Batterson liked to portray himself as the “Big Man on Campus.” He didn’t think Batterson would be able to make the new contract happen.

Batterson was appointed by Gov. Rick Scott in 2011. He was immediately suspended by the governor last month after being indicted.

Batterson is due back in court in July.

Meanwhile, Batterson is one of three people still under investigation for possible violation of Florida’s open meetings law.

The other two are current Orlando-Orange County Expressway Authority board member Noranne Downs and Marco Peña, who resigned from the board last week.

The grand jury is expected to meet again next month and State Attorney Jeff Ashton said more indictments could be coming soon.