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BOARDS OF SUPERVISORS. MEETINGS. CONSTITUTION. MAY NOT CLOSE
PUBLIC MEETINGS TO BROADCAST OR RECORDING, BUT MAY IMPOSE REASONABLE
RULES.
June 13, 1980
The Honorable Frank M. Slayton
Member, House of Delegates
79-80 56
In separate communication you inquire whether a board of
supervisors may close its public meetings to direct broadcast by
radio, or to recording for later broadcast.
Section 15.1-539 of the Code of Virginia (1950), as amended,
provides that boards of supervisors shall sit with open doors, and
all persons conducting themselves in an orderly manner may attend
meetings. Compare § 1 S. 1-810 [sic] (rules and officers
of council; open meetings). Further, §2.1-343 (part of the
Virginia Freedom of Information Act) provides generally that all
meetings of public bodies are to be public meetings.
At the same time, §2.1-343 creates no vested right to
televise, photograph or record the transaction of public business at
such meetings, and §15.1-539 authorizes boards of supervisors to
make such rules and take such measures as are necessary for the
orderly transaction of public business. See Opinion to the Honorable
James T. Edmunds, Member, Senate of Virginia, dated April 23, 1974,
found in Report of the Attorney General (1973-1974) at 457.
Nevertheless, any such rules and measures may have an impact upon
constitutional rights, and must be justified as necessary for the
maintenance of orderly proceedings. See Opinion to the Honorable Jose
R. Davila, Jr., Commonwealth Attorney for the City of Richmond, dated
April 11, 1972, found in Report of the Attorney General (1971-1972)
at 56. The constitutional protection for news gathering is limited to
information generally available to the public, and is subject to such
reasonable rules and restrictions as are imposed equally on the
public. Opinion to the Honorable James T. Edmunds, Member, Senate of
Virginia, dated October 16, 1978, found in Report of the Attorney
General (1978-1979) at 224.
Accordingly, I find that a board of supervisors may not close its
public meetings to direct broadcast by radio, or to recording for
later broadcast, although the board of supervisors may impose
reasonable rules and restrictions upon the broadast and recording
activities such as are imposed equally on the public.
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