|
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Meeting Of Members Of City
Council And Planning Commission Must Comply With Act Meeting held
outside of State does not affect.
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Joint Meeting Of Two Public
Bodies Does Not Alter Public Meeting Requirements Of Act.
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Meetings Of Public Bodies;
Minutes Must Be Kept; Notice Of Meeting Must Be Furnished To Any
Citizen Who Requests Such Notice In Writing.
September 28, 1977
THE HONORABLE BERNARD G. BARROW
Member, House of Delegates
77-78 485
I am in receipt of your recent letter in which you inquire as
follows:
"I wish to request your opinion concerning whether the
Freedom of Information Act is applicable to a meeting recently
held by several members of the Virginia Beach City Council and
Planning Commission. Specifically, my inquiry is:
"Is it a violation of the Freedom of Information Act,
§2.1-340 et seq., Virginia Code for five members of the
Virginia Beach City Council and six members of the Virginia
Beach Planning Commission to attend a 'workshop' at a cottage,
owned by the Chairman of the Planning Commission and located in
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, where during a period of two and a
half hours the city's growth and a proposed Comprehensive Plan
to be adopted in accordance with state law were discussed?
"According to newspaper reports following the meeting, a
weekend gathering of members of the City Council and Planning
Commission was planned six weeks prior to the weekend."
It is, furthermore, my understanding that minutes were not
recorded at the aforementioned gathering and that certain individuals
and organizations which had previously requested notice of each
meeting of City Council, pursuant to §2.1-343, Code of Virginia
(1950), as amended, were not notified of these proceedings.
The gathering you describe did constitute a "meeting" of the
Council and Planning Commission as defined in the Freedom of
Information Act. See §2.1-341(a). The 1977 General Assembly
amended the definition of the term "meeting" to exclude therefrom
gatherings of the membership of public bodies at social and other
functions where such gathering was not prearranged for the purpose of
discussing public business. Assuming the facts you have supplied that
the gathering in question was prearranged with the purpose of
discussing matters of public business, then this gathering would not
fall within the terms of this exclusion.
All meetings of public bodies, except as otherwise specifically
provided by law, are required to be held in compliance with §
2.1-343, which requires: (1) the meeting must be a public one, at
which the public may be present, (2) minutes shall be kept, and (3)
notice of the meeting must be furnished to any citizen who requests
such notice in writing. You indicate that no minutes of the
proceedings were recorded and that notice to individuals requesting
the same was not provided. On the basis of this criteria alone, I
conclude that the meeting did violate the requirements of
§2.1-343. In an Opinion to the, Honorable A. Joseph Canada, Jr.,
Member, Senate of Virginia, dated November 5, 1975, and found in the
Report of the
Attorney General (1975-76) at 411-412, a similar conclusion was
reached, where members of City Council met at a Council member's home
and discussed public business without recording minutes or notifying
persons who had requested notice of Council meetings. Accordingly, it
is my opinion that both the City Council and the Planning Commission
met in violation of the Act.
The fact that the meeting was a joint gathering of two public
bodies does not alter the public meeting requirements of the Freedom
of Information Act. See §2.1 -344(d). Further, the occurrence of
the meeting outside the State does not affect my conclusion that the
Act has been violated. Section 2.1-343 requires that all meetings be
public meetings except as specifically otherwise provided.
|