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VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. EFFECTIVE JULY 1,1984. MEETINGS
MAY NOT BE HELD BY TELEPHONE CONFERENCE CALL.
June 28, 1984
The Honorable Johnas F. Hockaday,
Chancellor, Virginia Community College System
83-84 440
You ask whether the State Board for Community Colleges (the
"Board"), or its committees, may officially take action upon the
consensus of its constituent membership obtained by individual
telephone calls to each member if such action is later confirmed or
reported at a subsequent meeting of the Board, or its committee. For
the reasons which follow, I must answer your question in the
negative.
Your inquiry correctly assumes that House Bill 241,
which amends the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (the
"Act")2 will prohibit the members
of the Board, or its committees, from conducting meetings by
telephone conference calls.3
Although the Act, as amended, does not expressly require that all
official Board or committee action be taken or authorized at a
meeting of the membership, I am of the view that such conclusion is
inescapable when one considers the preamble to the Act4,
as well as the legislative intent manifested in enacting House Bill
24. Accordingly, any official action of the Board, or committee, as
the case may be, must be taken or authorized at a meeting of the
Board, or committee, where the membership thereof is physically
present.
I further observe that State Board bylaws also appear to prohibit
official action based only upon a consensus obtained pursuant to
telephone calls. Sections 2.7 and 4.7 of your bylaws provide:
"The act of the majority of the members present at a
meeting shall be the act of the Board.
* * *
[A]ny action of that Committee to be effective must
be authorized by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
members thereof present at the meeting." (Emphasis
added.)
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FOOTNOTES
1 Ch. 252, Acts of Assembly of 1984.
2 Section 2.1-340 et seq. of the Code of
Virginia.
3 House Bill 24 provides, in pertinent part: "
§ 2.1-341(a). No meeting shall be conducted through telephonic,
video, electronic, or other communication means where the members are
not physically assembled to discuss or transact public business. . .
."
§ 2.1-343.1. It is a violation of this Act for any public
body to conduct a meeting wherein the public business is discussed or
transacted through telephonic, video, electronic or other
communication means where the members are not physically
assembled."
The Bill may fairly be characterized as a legislative response to
the Virginia Supreme Court's decision in Roanoke City School Bd.
v. Times-World Corporation, 226 Va. 176, 307 S.E.2d 256 (1983).
In Times World, the Court held that telephone conference calls
are not a violation of the Act because they do not constitute
meetings of the members of a public body.
4 Section 2.1-340.1 provides: "This chapter
recognizes that the affairs of government are not intended to be
conducted in an atmosphere of secrecy since at all times the public
is to be the beneficiary of any action taken at any level of
government. To the end that the purposes of this chapter may be
realized, it shall be liberally construed to promote an increased
awareness by all persons of governmental activities and afford every
opportunity to citizens to witness the operations of government. Any
exception or exemption from applicability shall be narrowly construed
in order that no thing which should be public may be hidden from any
person." (Emphasis added.)
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