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VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Honor Committee Elected By
Student Body Annually To Administer And Enforce University Honor Code
Subject to requirements of Act, but trials and deliberations not
subject to open meeting; trial transcript and other scholastic
records exempt from public disclosure.
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES Family Educational Rights And Privacy
Act (Buckley Amendments)-Identities of individuals not revealed in
trial synopses submitted to Honor Committee.
RECORDS Scholastic Records Trial transcript of Honor Committee of
University exempt from public disclosure of Freedom of Information
Act.
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Trial Synopses Submitted To
Honor Committee Prior To Trial Never Reveal Identities Of Individuals
Involved "Official records" subject to public inspection and
copying.
March 22, 1978
THE HONORABLE JAMES B. MURRAY
Member, House of Delegates
77-78 482
You have asked (1) whether the Honor Committee is subject to the
requirements of the Freedom of Information Act; and if it is subject
to the Act, (2) whether trial synopses prepared by counsel appearing
before the Committee in honor violation trials are records subject to
public inspection, and (3) whether correspondence, evidence, trial
transcripts and other records compiled and submitted to the Committee
in honor trials are records subject to public inspection. This last
question raises the issue whether honor trials must satisfy the
public meeting requirements of the Act.
(I) Honor Committee
You say that the Honor Committee is a continuing committee whose
members are elected by the student body annually to administer and
enforce the University honor code. The Committee is maintained by the
University Board of Visitors and receives regular funding from the
Board. Furthermore, it has the in dependent authority to dismiss any
student from the University for violation of the honor code. In
summary, the Board of Visitors has delegated to the Committee its
authority to establish and enforce the University honor code. The
Freedom of Information Act requirements are applicable to "public
bodies" as defined by §2.1 -341(a) and (e), Code of Virginia
(1950), as amended. Section 2.1-341(a) sets forth the types of public
bodies covered by the Act as follows:
any legislative body, authority, board, bureau,
commission, district or agency of the ... State, including cities,
towns and counties; municipal councils, governing bodies of
counties, school boards and planning commissions; and other
organizations, corporations or agencies in the State, supported
wholly or principally by public funds. (Emphasis added.)
The University Board of Visitors is clearly a public body within
the meaning of §2.1-341 (a), though it enjoys a qualified
exemption with regard to open meetings under §2.1-345(5). Since
the Board funds and maintains the Honor Committee and has delegated
to the Committee its power to establish and enforce the student honor
code, I am of the opinion that the Honor Committee is subject to the
requirements of the Act. See Opinion to the Honorable L. Douglas
Wilder, dated April 21, 1975, and found in the Report
of the Attorney General (1974-75) at 584.
(2) Trial Synopses
You say that trial synopses prepared by student counsel for the
accused and accusors are submitted to the Committee prior to trial,
at the Committee's request, and contain a brief statement of the
issues presented and factual con tentions of the accused and accusors
involved in trial. You further indicate that synopses never reveal
identities of any individuals involved. Such synopses are "official
records" of the Honor Committee within the meaning of §2.
l-34l(b) since they are received by the Committee in the tran saction
of its official functions. See §2.l-34l(b). Accordingly, I am of
the opinion that they are subject to public inspection and copying
upon proper request under the terms of §2.l-342(a), unless
otherwise provided by law. Moreover, as long as such synopses do not
contain information concerning identifiable individual students their
disclosure will not violate the provisions of the Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (the Buckley Amend ments). See 20
U.S.C. §l232(g), et seq. For the same reasons, the Virginia
Privacy Protection Act of 1976 would have no application. See
§2.1-379, paragraph 2. (If it is possible that in some cases the
synopses, without naming a student, could contain personally
identifiable information, release would then be prohibited by the
Buckley Amendments.)
(3) Trial and Records
The trial transcript and other records must necessarily contain
information about individually identifiable students. They are,
therefore, "scholastic records"' as defined by §2.1-34l(f). I am
therefore of the opinion that they are exempt from required public
disclosure under the provisions of §2.1-342(b)(3). Trials and
deliberations of the Honor Council are not subject to the open
meeting requirements of §2.1-343. Such proceedings are student
disciplinary proceedings. Section §2.1-344(a)(3) of the Act
exempts personal matters unrelated to public business. Student
disciplinary proceedings fall within that exemption. See Report of
the Attorney General (1974-75) at 344.
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