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VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Newspaper Advertisement Paid
For By Private Citizens; Coupons From It Received By Individual Board
Members Are Not Official Records Members need not retain or make
available to public.
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT Petition Presented To Board Of
Supervisors Is Official Record Must be made available to public.
January 13, 1978
THE HONORABLE H. BEN JONES, JR.
County Attorney of Fauquier County
77-78 486
I respond to your letter which reads as follows:
"This is to request that you render an opinion regarding
interpretation of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act as the
same applies in the following factual situation.
"The Thursday, October 27, 1977, edition of the
Fauquier Democrat, a newspaper published and having
general circulation in Fauquier County, contained a full page
advertisement, a copy of which is attached hereto. In the lower
right hand corner of said advertisement subscribers were
encouraged to register their opinion by clipping and mailing a
'coupon' to their individual Supervisors.
"Since that publication the individual members of the Board
of Supervisors of Fauquier County have received a number of
coupons. Additionally the Board has received certain petitions
bearing upon the question of recent revisions to the County's
Comprehensive Plan.
"In my opinion, any formal petition received by the Board
would doubtless be included in the definition of 'official
records' set out in §2.1-341 of the 1950 Code of Virginia,
as amended. Question has been raised as to, first, whether
coupons, a sample of which I have enclosed with this letter,
received by the Supervisors in their individual capacities
should be considered official records for the purpose of the
Freedom of Information Act, and second, if so, whether or not
the individual Supervisors are under an obligation under
§2.1-341 of said Code to maintain and preserve said
coupons for public inspection."
The newspaper advertisement containing the coupons in question
was, I note, placed and paid for by a group of private
citizens.
The Virginia Freedom of Information Act requires that official
records of public bodies and agencies of the State and its political
subdivisions shall be made available for public inspection and
copying upon proper request by any citizen of this State. See
§2.1-342(a), Code of Virginia (1950), as amended. The definition
of "official records" is found in §2.1-341(b) of the Code and
reads as follows:
"Official records" means all written or printed books,
papers, letters, documents, maps and tapes, photographs, films,
sound recordings, reports or other material, regardless of
physical form or characteristics, made and received in pursuance
of law by the public officers of the State and its counties,
municipalities and subdivisions of government in the transaction
of public business."
Upon consideration of the foregoing statutory provision, I am of
the opinion that the newspaper coupons received by individual Board
members under the circumstances you describe are not official records
"received in pursuance of law" or "in the transaction of public
business" within the meaning of §2.1-341(b). Your first inquiry
is, therefore, answered in the negative. Inasmuch as the newspaper
coupons received by individual Board members are not official
records, I am of the opinion that there is no legal requirement that
Board members retain the coupons or make them available for public
inspection.
With respect to any written petition which is presented to the
Board of Supervisors, I am of the opinion that such a document would
clearly constitute an official record of the Board within the terms
of §2.1-341(b). Accordingly, such official records are required
to be made available for public inspection upon proper request in
accordance with §2.1-342(a).
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