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VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION
SUPPORTED WHOLLY OR PRINCIPALLY BY PlJBLIC FUNDS SUBJECT TO ACT.
January 28, 1983
The Honorable David T. Stitt
County Attorney for Fairfax County
82-83 719
This is in reply to your letter of January 11, 1983, requesting an
Opinion whether the Virginia Freedom of Information Act,
§§2.1-340 through 2.1-346.1 of the Code of Virginia (the
"Act"), applies to the Fairfax Hospital Association (the
"Association").
You have advised that the Association is a non-profit, non-stock
corporation organized under Ch. 2, Title 13.1, of the Code, and that
it operates the Fairfax Hospital and other facilities under a lease
with the county. The construction of Fairfax Hospital was financed by
county bonds. You do not indicate whether the county contributes to
the Association's operating budget. You have advised, however, that
the Board of Supervisors of Fairfax County has appointed three of its
members to the board of trustees of the Association as provided in
the lease. In light of this arrangement, you have specifically
asked:
"1. Whether meetings of the Board of Trustees of the FHA
[Fairfax Hospital Association] are subject to the open
meeting requirements of Va. Code §2.1-343 (Supp.) due to the
presence and participation of three of the nine members of the
Fairfax County Board of Supervisors as trustees.
2. Whether the FHA is an `other organization, corporation, or
agency in the State, supported wholly or principally by public
funds' such that it is a `public body ' within the meaning of Va.
Code §2.1-341(e) (Supp.), subject to the VFOIA."
I will address your questions in inverse order.
Section 2.1-341(e) defines "public body" to mean "any of the
groups, agencies or organizations enumerated in subsection (a) of
this section."
Subsection (a) of 2.1-341 provides:
"`Meeting ' or `meetings' means the meetings, when
sitting as a body or entity, or as an informal assemblage of (i)
as many as three members, or (ii) a quorum, if less than three, of
the constituent membership, wherever held, with or without minutes
being taken, whether or not votes are cast, of any legislative
body, authority, board, bureau, commission, district or agency of
the Commonwealth or of any political subdivision of the
Commonwealth, including cities, towns and counties; municipal
councils, governing bodies of counties, school boards and planning
commissions; boards of visitors of State institutions of higher
education; and other organizations, corporations or agencies in
the Commonwealth, supported wholly or principally by public funds.
Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to make unlawful the
gathering or attendance of two or more members of a body or entity
at any place or function where no part of the purpose of such
gathering or attendance is the discussion or transaction of any
public business, and such gathering or attendance was not called
or prearranged with any purpose of discussing or transacting any
business of the body or entity." (Emphasis added.)
The question of whether the Association is supported principally
by public funds, which would bring it within the scope of the Act, is
a factual one. Webster s New Collegiate Dictionary (1979) defines
"principal" as "most important, consequential, or influential."
Black's Law Dictionary 1073 (5th ed. 1979) defines "principal" as
"[c]hief; leading; most important or considerable; primary;
original." As you will note, no objective standard is set forth.
Although the Association clearly receives public support by use of
facilities owned or financed by government, I Cannot conclude from
the information available to me that it is "principally" supported by
public funds. If it is determined that the principal support of the
Association is from public funds, it would be a public body subject
to the Act.
The question remains that, even if the Association is not deemed
to be supported principally by public funds, would it still be
subject to the open meeting requirements of the Act (§2.1-344)
because three members of the board of trustees of the Association are
also members of the Board of Supervisors of Fairfax County. The
question here is actually whether the assemblage of three members of
the board of supervisors constitutes a meeting of the board of
supervisors which would be subject to the Act. I fully recognize the
sound purpose of the Act and the liberal construction to which its
provisions are entitled Nevertheless, I do not believe that the mere
presence of three members of a board of supervisors on an entirely
different and otherwise private board transforms the second board '
into a public body subject to the Act. While the three members will
undoubtedly promote the public interest, they are gathered to conduct
the business of the Association, not the board of supervisors
Accordingy, I conclude that the Association does not become a "public
body" subject to the Act simply because three of its members are also
members of the board of supervisors.
To summarize, I am of the opinion that if a determination is made
that the Association is supported wholly or principally by public
funds, it is deemed to be a public body which is subject to the Act.
Otherwise, based on the facts presented, the Association would not be
subject to the Act.
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