2.2-3700. Short title;
policy.
A. This chapter may be cited as "The
Virginia Freedom of Information Act."
B. By enacting this chapter, the
General Assembly ensures the people of the Commonwealth ready
access to public records in the custody of a public body or its
officers and employees, and free entry to meetings of public bodies
wherein the business of the people is being conducted. 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. Unless a public body
or its officers or employees specifically elect to exercise an
exemption provided by this chapter or any other statute, every
meeting shall be open to the public and all public records shall be
available for inspection and copying upon request. All public
records and meetings shall be presumed open, unless an exemption is
properly invoked.
The provisions of this chapter 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 exemption
from public access to records or meetings shall be narrowly
construed and no record shall be withheld or meeting closed to the
public unless specifically made exempt pursuant to this chapter or
other specific provision of law. This chapter shall not be
construed to discourage the free discussion by government officials
or employees of public matters with the citizens of the
Commonwealth.
All public bodies and their officers
and employees shall make reasonable efforts to reach an agreement
with a requester concerning the production of the records
requested.
Any ordinance adopted by a local
governing body that conflicts with the provisions of this chapter
shall be void.
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2.2-3701.
Definitions
As used in this chapter, unless the
context requires a different meaning:
"Closed meeting" means a meeting from
which the public is excluded.
"Emergency" means an unforeseen
circumstance rendering the notice required by this chapter
impossible or impracticable and which circumstance requires
immediate action.
"Meeting" or "meetings" means the
meetings including work sessions, when sitting physically, or
through telephonic or video equipment pursuant to § 2.2-3708,
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 public body. The
gathering of employees of a public body shall not be deemed a
"meeting" subject to the provisions of this chapter.
"Open meeting" or "public meeting"
means a meeting at which the public may be present.
"Public body" means 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 public institutions of higher
education; and other organizations, corporations or agencies in the
Commonwealth supported wholly or principally by public funds. It
shall include (i) the Virginia Birth-Related Neurological Injury
Compensation Program and its board of directors established
pursuant to Chapter 50 (§ 38.2-5000 et seq.) of Title 38.2 and
(ii) any committee, subcommittee, or other entity however
designated, of the public body created to perform delegated
functions of the public body or to advise the public body. It shall
not exclude any such committee, subcommittee or entity because it
has private sector or citizen members. Corporations organized by
the Virginia Retirement System are "public bodies" for purposes of
this chapter.
For the purposes of the provisions of
this chapter applicable to access to public records, constitutional
officers shall be considered public bodies and, except as otherwise
expressly provided by law, shall have the same obligations to
disclose public records as other custodians of public records.
"Public records" means all writings
and recordings that consist of letters, words or numbers, or their
equivalent, set down by handwriting, typewriting, printing,
photostatting, photography, magnetic impulse, optical or
magneto-optical form, mechanical or electronic recording or other
form of data compilation, however stored, and regardless of
physical form or characteristics, prepared or owned by, or in the
possession of a public body or its officers, employees or agents in
the transaction of public business.
"Scholastic records" means those
records containing information directly related to a student and
maintained by a public body that is an educational agency or
institution or by a person acting for such agency or
institution.
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2.2-3702. Notice of
chapter.
Any person elected, reelected,
appointed or reappointed to any body not excepted from this chapter
shall (i) be furnished by the public body's administrator or legal
counsel with a copy of this chapter within two weeks following
election, reelection, appointment or reappointment and (ii) read
and become familiar with the provisions of this chapter.
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2.2-3703. Public
bodies and records to which chapter inapplicable; voter
registration and election records.
A. The provisions of this chapter
shall not apply to:
1. The Virginia Parole Board, except
that (i) information from the Virginia Parole Board providing the
number of inmates considered by such Board for discretionary
parole, the number of inmates granted or denied parole, and the
number of parolees returned to the custody of the Department of
Corrections solely as a result of a determination by such Board of
a violation of parole shall be open to inspection and available for
release, on a monthly basis, as provided by § 2.2-3704 and
(ii) all records concerning the finances of the Virginia Parole
Board shall be public records and subject to the provisions of this
chapter. The information required by clause (i) shall be furnished
by offense, sex, race, age of the inmate, and the locality in which
the conviction was obtained, upon the request of the party seeking
the information;
2. Petit juries and grand juries;
3. Family assessment and planning
teams established pursuant to § 2.2-5207; and
4. The Virginia State Crime
Commission; and
5. The Commitment Review Committee and
any documents, evaluations, assessments and proceedings involving
the commitment of sexually violent predators under Article 1.1
(§ 37.1-70.1 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 37.1.
B. Public access to voter registration
and election records shall be governed by the provisions of Title
24.2 and this chapter. The provisions of Title 24.2 shall be
controlling in the event of any conflict.
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2.2-3704.
Public records to be open to inspection; procedure for requesting
records and responding to request; charges.
A. Except as otherwise specifically
provided by law, all public records shall be open to inspection and
copying by any citizens of the Commonwealth during the regular
office hours of the custodian of such records. Access to such
records shall not be denied to citizens of the Commonwealth,
representatives of newspapers and magazines with circulation in the
Commonwealth, and representatives of radio and television stations
broadcasting in or into the Commonwealth. The custodian may require
the requester to provide his name and legal address. The custodian
of such records shall take all necessary precautions for their
preservation and safekeeping.
B. A request for public records shall
identify the requested records with reasonable specificity. The
request need not make reference to this chapter in order to invoke
the provisions of this chapter or to impose the time limits for
response by a public body. Any public body that is subject to this
chapter and that is the custodian of the requested records shall
promptly, but in all cases within five working days of receiving a
request, make one of the following responses:
1. The requested records will be
provided to the requester.
2. The requested records will be
entirely withheld because their release is prohibited by law or the
custodian has exercised his discretion to withhold the records in
accordance with this chapter. Such response shall (i) be in
writing, (ii) identify with reasonable particularity the volume and
subject matter of withheld records, and (iii) cite, as to each
category of withheld records, the specific Code section that
authorizes the withholding of the records.
3. The requested records will be
provided in part and withheld in part because the release of part
of the records is prohibited by law or the custodian has exercised
his discretion to withhold a portion of the records in accordance
with this chapter. Such response shall (i) be in writing, (ii)
identify with reasonable particularity the subject matter of
withheld portions, and (iii) cite, as to each category of withheld
records, the specific Code section that authorizes the withholding
of the records. When a portion of a requested record is withheld,
the public body may delete or excise only that portion of the
record to which an exemption applies and shall release the
remainder of the record.
4. It is not practically possible to
provide the requested records or to determine whether they are
available within the five-work-day period. Such response shall be
in writing and specify the conditions that make a response
impossible. If the response is made within five working days, the
public body shall have an additional seven work days in which to
provide one of the three preceding responses.
C. Any public body may petition the
appropriate court for additional time to respond to a request for
records when the request is for an extraordinary volume of records
and a response by the public body within the time required by this
chapter will prevent the public body from meeting its operational
responsibilities. Before proceeding with the petition, however, the
public body shall make reasonable efforts to reach an agreement
with the requester concerning the production of the records
requested.
D. Subject to the provisions of
subsections G and J, no public body shall be required to create a
new record if the record does not already exist. However, a public
body may abstract or summarize information under such terms and
conditions as agreed between the requester and the public body.
E. Failure to respond to a request for
records shall be deemed a denial of the request and shall
constitute a violation of this chapter.
F. A public body may make reasonable
charges not to exceed its actual cost incurred in accessing,
duplicating, supplying, or searching for the requested records. No
public body shall impose any extraneous, intermediary or surplus
fees or expenses to recoup the general costs associated with
creating or maintaining records or transacting the general business
of the public body. Any duplicating fee charged by a public body
shall not exceed the actual cost of duplication. The public body
may also make a reasonable charge for the cost incurred in
supplying records produced from a geographic information system at
the request of anyone other than the owner of the land that is the
subject of the request. However, such charges shall not exceed the
actual cost to the public body in supplying such records, except
that the public body may charge, on a pro rata per acre basis, for
the cost of creating topographical maps developed by the public
body, for such maps or portions thereof, which encompass a
contiguous area greater than 50 acres. All charges for the
supplying of requested records shall be estimated in advance at the
request of the citizen.
G. Public records maintained by a
public body in an electronic data processing system, computer
database, or any other structured collection of data shall be made
available to a requester at a reasonable cost, not to exceed the
actual cost in accordance with subsection F. When electronic or
other databases are combined or contain exempt and nonexempt
records, the public body may provide access to the exempt records
if not otherwise prohibited by law, but shall provide access to the
nonexempt records as provided by this chapter.
Public bodies shall produce nonexempt
records maintained in an electronic database in any tangible medium
identified by the requester, including, where the public body has
the capability, the option of posting the records on a website or
delivering the records through an electronic mail address provided
by the requester, if that medium is used by the public body in the
regular course of business. No public body shall be required to
produce records from an electronic database in a format not
regularly used by the public body. However, the public body shall
make reasonable efforts to provide records in any format under such
terms and conditions as agreed between the requester and public
body, including the payment of reasonable costs. The excision of
exempt fields of information from a database or the conversion of
data from one available format to another shall not be deemed the
creation, preparation or compilation of a new public record.
H. In any case where a public body
determines in advance that charges for producing the requested
records are likely to exceed $200, the public body may, before
continuing to process the request, require the requester to agree
to payment of a deposit not to exceed the amount of the advance
determination. The deposit shall be credited toward the final cost
of supplying the requested records. The period within which the
public body shall respond under this section shall be tolled for
the amount of time that elapses between notice of the advance
determination and the response of the requester.
I. Before processing a request for
records, a public body may require the requester to pay any amounts
owed to the public body for previous requests for records that
remain unpaid 30 days or more after billing.
J. Every public body of state
government shall compile, and annually update, an index of computer
databases that contains at a minimum those databases created by
them on or after July 1, 1997. "Computer database" means a
structured collection of data or records residing in a computer.
Such index shall be a public record and shall include, at a
minimum, the following information with respect to each database
listed therein: a list of data fields, a description of the format
or record layout, the date last updated, a list of any data fields
to which public access is restricted, a description of each format
in which the database can be copied or reproduced using the public
body's computer facilities, and a schedule of fees for the
production of copies in each available form. The form, context,
language, and guidelines for the indices and the databases to be
indexed shall be developed by the Virginia Information Technologies
Agency in consultation with the Librarian of Virginia and the State
Archivist. The public body shall not be required to disclose its
software security, including passwords.
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2.2-3705. Exclusions to
application of chapter.
A. The following records are excluded
from the provisions of this chapter but may be disclosed by the
custodian in his discretion, except where such disclosure is
prohibited by law:
1. Confidential records of all
investigations of applications for licenses and permits, and all
licensees and permittees made by or submitted to the Alcoholic
Beverage Control Board, the State Lottery Department, the Virginia
Racing Commission, or the Charitable Gaming Commission.
2. State income, business, and estate
tax returns, personal property tax returns, scholastic and
confidential records held pursuant to § 58.1-3.
3. Scholastic records containing
information concerning identifiable individuals, except that such
access shall not be denied to the person who is the subject
thereof, or the parent or legal guardian of the student. However,
no student shall have access to (i) financial records of a parent
or guardian or (ii) records of instructional, supervisory, and
administrative personnel and educational personnel ancillary
thereto, which are in the sole possession of the maker thereof and
that are not accessible or revealed to any other person except a
substitute.
The parent or legal guardian of a
student may prohibit, by written request, the release of any
individual information regarding that student until the student
reaches the age of eighteen years. For scholastic records of
students under the age of eighteen years, the right of access may
be asserted only by his legal guardian or parent, including a
noncustodial parent, unless such parent's parental rights have been
terminated or a court of competent jurisdiction has restricted or
denied such access. For scholastic records of students who are
emancipated or attending a state-supported institution of higher
education, the right of access may be asserted by the student.
Any person who is the subject of any
scholastic record and who is eighteen years of age or older may
waive, in writing, the protections afforded by this subdivision. If
the protections are so waived, the public body shall open such
records for inspection and copying.
4. Personnel records containing
information concerning identifiable individuals, except that access
shall not be denied to the person who is the subject thereof. Any
person who is the subject of any personnel record and who is
eighteen years of age or older may waive, in writing, the
protections afforded by this subdivision. If the protections are so
waived, the public body shall open such records for inspection and
copying.
5. Medical and mental records, except
that such records may be personally reviewed by the subject person
or a physician of the subject person's choice. However, the subject
person's mental records may not be personally reviewed by such
person when the subject person's treating physician has made a part
of such person's records a written statement that in his opinion a
review of such records by the subject person would be injurious to
the subject person's physical or mental health or well-being.
Where the person who is the subject of
medical records is confined in a state or local correctional
facility, the administrator or chief medical officer of such
facility may assert such confined person's right of access to the
medical records if the administrator or chief medical officer has
reasonable cause to believe that such confined person has an
infectious disease or other medical condition from which other
persons so confined need to be protected. Medical records shall
only be reviewed and shall not be copied by such administrator or
chief medical officer. The information in the medical records of a
person so confined shall continue to be confidential and shall not
be disclosed by the administrator or chief medical officer of the
facility to any person except the subject or except as provided by
law.
Where the person who is the subject of
medical and mental records is under the age of 18, his right of
access may be asserted only by his guardian or his parent,
including a noncustodial parent, unless such parent's parental
rights have been terminated or a court of competent jurisdiction
has restricted or denied such access. In instances where the person
who is the subject thereof is an emancipated minor or a student in
a public institution of higher education, the right of access may
be asserted by the subject person.
For the purposes of this chapter,
statistical summaries of incidents and statistical data concerning
patient abuse as may be compiled by the Commissioner of the
Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse
Services shall be open to inspection and copying as provided in
§ 2.2-3704. No such summaries or data shall include any
patient-identifying information.
6. Working papers and correspondence of the
Office of the Governor; Lieutenant Governor; the Attorney General;
the members of the General Assembly or the Division of Legislative
Services; the mayor or chief executive officer of any political
subdivision of the Commonwealth; or the president or other chief
executive officer of any public institution of higher education in
Virginia. However, no record, which is otherwise open to inspection
under this chapter, shall be deemed exempt by virtue of the fact
that it has been attached to or incorporated within any working
paper or correspondence.
As used in this subdivision:
"Office of the Governor" means the
Governor; his chief of staff, counsel, director of policy, Cabinet
Secretaries, and the Director of the Virginia Liaison Office; and
those individuals to whom the Governor has delegated his authority
pursuant to § 2.2-104.
"Working papers" means those records
prepared by or for an above-named public official for his personal
or deliberative use.
7. Written advice of legal counsel to
state, regional or local public bodies or the officers or employees
of such public bodies, and any other records protected by the
attorney-client privilege.
8. Legal memoranda and other work
product compiled specifically for use in litigation or for use in
an active administrative investigation concerning a matter that is
properly the subject of a closed meeting under § 2.2-3711.
9. Confidential letters and statements
of recommendation placed in the records of educational agencies or
institutions respecting (i) admission to any educational agency or
institution, (ii) an application for employment, or (iii) receipt
of an honor or honorary recognition.
10. Library records that can be used
to identify both (i) any library patron who has borrowed material
from a library and (ii) the material such patron borrowed.
11. Any test or examination used,
administered or prepared by any public body for purposes of
evaluation of (i) any student or any student's performance, (ii)
any employee or employment seeker's qualifications or aptitude for
employment, retention, or promotion, or (iii) qualifications for
any license or certificate issued by a public body.
As used in this subdivision, "test or
examination" shall include (a) any scoring key for any such test or
examination and (b) any other document that would jeopardize the
security of the test or examination. Nothing contained in this
subdivision shall prohibit the release of test scores or results as
provided by law, or limit access to individual records as provided
by law. However, the subject of such employment tests shall be
entitled to review and inspect all records relative to his
performance on such employment tests.
When, in the reasonable opinion of
such public body, any such test or examination no longer has any
potential for future use, and the security of future tests or
examinations will not be jeopardized, the test or examination shall
be made available to the public. However, minimum competency tests
administered to public school children shall be made available to
the public contemporaneously with statewide release of the scores
of those taking such tests, but in no event shall such tests be
made available to the public later than six months after the
administration of such tests.
12. Applications for admission to
examinations or for licensure and scoring records maintained by the
Department of Health Professions or any board in that department on
individual licensees or applicants. However, such material may be
made available during normal working hours for copying, at the
requester's expense, by the individual who is the subject thereof,
in the offices of the Department of Health Professions or in the
offices of any health regulatory board, whichever may possess the
material.
13. Records of active investigations
being conducted by the Department of Health Professions or by any
health regulatory board in the Commonwealth.
14. Records recorded in or compiled
exclusively for use in closed meetings lawfully held pursuant to
§ 2.2-3711. However, no record that is otherwise open to
inspection under this chapter shall be deemed exempt by virtue of
the fact that it has been reviewed or discussed in a closed
meeting.
15. Reports, documentary evidence and
other information as specified in §§ 2.2-706 and
63.2-104.
16. Proprietary information gathered
by or for the Virginia Port Authority as provided in §
62.1-132.4 or § 62.1-134.1.
17. Contract cost estimates prepared
for the confidential use of the Department of Transportation in
awarding contracts for construction or the purchase of goods or
services, and records and automated systems prepared for the
Department's Bid Analysis and Monitoring Program.
18. Vendor proprietary information
software that may be in the official records of a public body. For
the purpose of this subdivision, "vendor proprietary software"
means computer programs acquired from a vendor for purposes of
processing data for agencies or political subdivisions of the
Commonwealth.
19. Financial statements not publicly
available filed with applications for industrial development
financings.
20. Data, records or information of a
proprietary nature produced or collected by or for faculty or staff
of public institutions of higher education, other than the
institutions' financial or administrative records, in the conduct
of or as a result of study or research on medical, scientific,
technical or scholarly issues, whether sponsored by the institution
alone or in conjunction with a governmental body or a private
concern, where such data, records or information has not been
publicly released, published, copyrighted or patented.
21. Lists of registered owners of
bonds issued by a political subdivision of the Commonwealth,
whether the lists are maintained by the political subdivision
itself or by a single fiduciary designated by the political
subdivision.
22. Confidential proprietary records,
voluntarily provided by private business pursuant to a promise of
confidentiality from the Department of Business Assistance, the
Virginia Economic Development Partnership, the Virginia Tourism
Authority, or local or regional industrial or economic development
authorities or organizations, used by the Department, the
Partnership, the Authority, or such entities for business, trade
and tourism development; and memoranda, working papers or other
records related to businesses that are considering locating or
expanding in Virginia, prepared by the Partnership, where
competition or bargaining is involved and where, if such records
are made public, the financial interest of the governmental unit
would be adversely affected.
23. Information that was filed as
confidential under the Toxic Substances Information Act (§
32.1-239 et seq.), as such Act existed prior to July 1, 1992.
24. Confidential records, including
victim identity, provided to or obtained by staff in a rape crisis
center or a program for battered spouses.
25. Computer software developed by or
for a state agency, state-supported institution of higher education
or political subdivision of the Commonwealth.
26. Investigator notes, and other
correspondence and information, furnished in confidence with
respect to an active investigation of individual employment
discrimination complaints made to the Department of Human Resource
Management or to such personnel of any local public body, including
local school boards as are responsible for conducting such
investigations in confidence. However, nothing in this section
shall prohibit the disclosure of information taken from inactive
reports in a form that does not reveal the identity of charging
parties, persons supplying the information or other individuals
involved in the investigation.
27. Fisheries data that would permit
identification of any person or vessel, except when required by
court order as specified in § 28.2-204.
28. Records of active investigations
being conducted by the Department of Medical Assistance Services
pursuant to Chapter 10 (§ 32.1-323 et seq.) of Title 32.1.
29. Records and writings furnished by
a member of the General Assembly to a meeting of a standing
committee, special committee or subcommittee of his house
established solely for the purpose of reviewing members' annual
disclosure statements and supporting materials filed under §
30-110 or of formulating advisory opinions to members on standards
of conduct, or both.
30. Customer account information of a
public utility affiliated with a political subdivision of the
Commonwealth, including the customer's name and service address,
but excluding the amount of utility service provided and the amount
of money paid for such utility service.
31. Investigative notes and other
correspondence and information furnished in confidence with respect
to an investigation or conciliation process involving an alleged
unlawful discriminatory practice under the Virginia Human Rights
Act (§ 2.2-3900 et seq.) or under any local ordinance adopted
in accordance with the authority specified in § 2.2-2638, or
adopted pursuant to § 15.2-965, or adopted prior to July 1,
1987, in accordance with applicable law, relating to local human
rights or human relations commissions. However, nothing in this
section shall prohibit the distribution of information taken from
inactive reports in a form that does not reveal the identity of the
parties involved or other persons supplying information.
32. Investigative notes; proprietary
information not published, copyrighted or patented; information
obtained from employee personnel records; personally identifiable
information regarding residents, clients or other recipients of
services; and other correspondence and information furnished in
confidence to the Department of Social Services in connection with
an active investigation of an applicant or licensee pursuant to
Chapters 17 (§ 63.2-1700 et seq.) and 18 (§ 63.2-1800 et
seq.) of Title 63.2. However, nothing in this section shall
prohibit disclosure of information from the records of completed
investigations in a form that does not reveal the identity of
complainants, persons supplying information, or other individuals
involved in the investigation.
33. Personal information, as defined
in § 2.2-3801, (i) filed with the Virginia Housing Development
Authority concerning individuals who have applied for or received
loans or other housing assistance or who have applied for occupancy
of or have occupied housing financed, owned or otherwise assisted
by the Virginia Housing Development Authority; (ii) concerning
persons participating in or persons on the waiting list for
federally funded rent-assistance programs; (iii) filed with any
local redevelopment and housing authority created pursuant to
§ 36-4 concerning persons participating in or persons on the
waiting list for housing assistance programs funded by local
governments or by any such authority; or (iv) filed with any local
redevelopment and housing authority created pursuant to § 36-4
or any other local government agency concerning persons who have
applied for occupancy or who have occupied affordable dwelling
units established pursuant to § 15.2-2304 or § 15.2-2305.
However, access to one's own information shall not be denied.
34. Records regarding the siting of
hazardous waste facilities, except as provided in § 10.1-1441,
if disclosure of them would have a detrimental effect upon the
negotiating position of a governing body or on the establishment of
the terms, conditions and provisions of the siting agreement.
35. Appraisals and cost estimates of
real property subject to a proposed purchase, sale or lease, prior
to the completion of such purchase, sale or lease.
36. Records containing information on
the site specific location of rare, threatened, endangered or
otherwise imperiled plant and animal species, natural communities,
caves, and significant historic and archaeological sites if, in the
opinion of the public body that has the responsibility for such
information, disclosure of the information would jeopardize the
continued existence or the integrity of the resource. This
exemption shall not apply to requests from the owner of the land
upon which the resource is located.
37. Records, memoranda, working
papers, graphics, video or audio tapes, production models, data and
information of a proprietary nature produced by or for or collected
by or for the State Lottery Department relating to matters of a
specific lottery game design, development, production, operation,
ticket price, prize structure, manner of selecting the winning
ticket, manner of payment of prizes to holders of winning tickets,
frequency of drawings or selections of winning tickets, odds of
winning, advertising, or marketing, where such official records
have not been publicly released, published, copyrighted or
patented. Whether released, published or copyrighted, all
game-related information shall be subject to public disclosure
under this chapter upon the first day of sales for the specific
lottery game to which it pertains.
38. Records of studies and
investigations by the State Lottery Department of (i) lottery
agents, (ii) lottery vendors, (iii) lottery crimes under
§§ 58.1-4014 through 58.1-4018, (iv) defects in the law
or regulations that cause abuses in the administration and
operation of the lottery and any evasions of such provisions, or
(v) the use of the lottery as a subterfuge for organized crime and
illegal gambling where such official records have not been publicly
released, published or copyrighted. All studies and investigations
referred to under clauses (iii), (iv) and (v) shall be open to
inspection and copying upon completion of the study or
investigation.
39. Those portions of engineering and
construction drawings and plans submitted for the sole purpose of
complying with the Building Code in obtaining a building permit
that would identify specific trade secrets or other information the
disclosure of which would be harmful to the competitive position of
the owner or lessee. However, such information shall be exempt only
until the building is completed. Information relating to the safety
or environmental soundness of any building shall not be exempt from
disclosure.
Those portions of engineering and
construction drawings and plans that reveal critical structural
components, security equipment and systems, ventilation systems,
fire protection equipment, mandatory building emergency equipment
or systems, elevators, electrical systems, telecommunications
equipment and systems, and other utility equipment and systems
submitted for the purpose of complying with the Uniform Statewide
Building Code (§ 36-97 et seq.) or the Statewide Fire
Prevention Code (§ 27-94 et seq.), the disclosure of which
would jeopardize the safety or security of any public or private
commercial office, multi-family residential or retail building or
its occupants in the event of terrorism or other threat to public
safety, to the extent that the owner or lessee of such property,
equipment or system in writing (i) invokes the protections of this
paragraph; (ii) identifies the drawings, plans, or other materials
to be protected; and (iii) states the reasons why protection is
necessary.
Nothing in this subdivision shall
prevent the disclosure of information relating to any building in
connection with an inquiry into the performance of that building
after it has been subjected to fire, explosion, natural disaster or
other catastrophic event.
40. Records concerning reserves
established in specific claims administered by the Department of
the Treasury through its Division of Risk Management as provided in
Article 5 (§ 2.2-1832 et seq.) of Chapter 18 of this title, or
by any county, city, or town; and investigative notes,
correspondence and information furnished in confidence with respect
to an investigation of a claim or a potential claim against a
public body's insurance policy or self-insurance plan. However,
nothing in this subdivision shall prohibit the disclosure of
information taken from inactive reports upon expiration of the
period of limitations for the filing of a civil suit.
41. Information and records collected
for the designation and verification of trauma centers and other
specialty care centers within the Statewide Emergency Medical
Services System and Services pursuant to Article 2.1 (§
32.1-111.1 et seq.) of Chapter 4 of Title 32.1.
42. Reports and court documents
required to be kept confidential pursuant to § 37.1-67.3.
43. Investigative notes,
correspondence and information furnished in confidence, and records
otherwise exempted by this chapter or any Virginia statute,
provided to or produced by or for the (i) Auditor of Public
Accounts; (ii) Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission; (iii)
Department of the State Internal Auditor with respect to an
investigation initiated through the State Employee Fraud, Waste and
Abuse Hotline; or (iv) committee or the auditor with respect to an
investigation or audit conducted pursuant to § 15.2-825.
Records of completed investigations shall be disclosed in a form
that does not reveal the identity of the complainants or persons
supplying information to investigators. Unless disclosure is
prohibited by this section, the records disclosed shall include,
but not be limited to, the agency involved, the identity of the
person who is the subject of the complaint, the nature of the
complaint, and the actions taken to resolve the complaint. If an
investigation does not lead to corrective action, the identity of
the person who is the subject of the complaint may be released only
with the consent of the subject person.
44. Data formerly required to be
submitted to the Commissioner of Health relating to the
establishment of new or the expansion of existing clinical health
services, acquisition of major medical equipment, or certain
projects requiring capital expenditures pursuant to former §
32.1-102.3:4.
45. Documentation or other information
that describes the design, function, operation or access control
features of any security system, whether manual or automated, which
is used to control access to or use of any automated data
processing or telecommunications system.
46. Confidential financial statements,
balance sheets, trade secrets, and revenue and cost projections
provided to the Department of Rail and Public Transportation,
provided such information is exempt under the federal Freedom of
Information Act or the federal Interstate Commerce Act or other
laws administered by the Surface Transportation Board or the
Federal Railroad Administration with respect to data provided in
confidence to the Surface Transportation Board and the Federal
Railroad Administration.
47. Records of the Virginia Retirement
System, acting pursuant to § 51.1-124.30, or of a local
retirement system, acting pursuant to § 51.1-803, or of the
Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia, acting pursuant
to § 23-76.1, relating to the acquisition, holding or
disposition of a security or other ownership interest in an entity,
where such security or ownership interest is not traded on a
governmentally regulated securities exchange, to the extent that:
(i) such records contain confidential analyses prepared for the
Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia, prepared by the
retirement system or provided to the retirement system under a
promise of confidentiality, of the future value of such ownership
interest or the future financial performance of the entity, and
(ii) disclosure of such confidential analyses would have an adverse
effect on the value of the investment to be acquired, held or
disposed of by the retirement system or the Rector and Visitors of
the University of Virginia. Nothing in this subdivision shall be
construed to prevent the disclosure of records relating to the
identity of any investment held, the amount invested, or the
present value of such investment.
48. Confidential proprietary records
related to inventory and sales, voluntarily provided by private
energy suppliers to the Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy,
used by that Department for energy contingency planning purposes or
for developing consolidated statistical information on energy
supplies.
49. Confidential proprietary
information furnished to the Board of Medical Assistance Services
or the Medicaid Prior Authorization Advisory Committee pursuant to
Article 4 (§ 32.1-331.12 et seq.) of Chapter 10 of Title
32.1.
50. Proprietary, commercial or
financial information, balance sheets, trade secrets, and revenue
and cost projections provided by a private transportation business
to the Virginia Department of Transportation and the Department of
Rail and Public Transportation for the purpose of conducting
transportation studies needed to obtain grants or other financial
assistance under the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century
(P.L. 105-178) for transportation projects, provided such
information is exempt under the federal Freedom of Information Act
or the federal Interstate Commerce Act or other laws administered
by the Surface Transportation Board or the Federal Railroad
Administration with respect to data provided in confidence to the
Surface Transportation Board and the Federal Railroad
Administration. However, the exemption provided by this subdivision
shall not apply to any wholly owned subsidiary of a public
body.
51. Names and addresses of subscribers
to Virginia Wildlife magazine, published by the Department of Game
and Inland Fisheries, provided the individual subscriber has
requested in writing that the Department not release such
information.
52. Information required to be
provided pursuant to § 54.1-2506.1.
53. Confidential information
designated as provided in subsection D of § 2.2-4342 as trade
secrets or proprietary information by any person who has submitted
to a public body an application for prequalification to bid on
public construction projects in accordance with subsection B of
§ 2.2-4317.
54. All information and records
acquired during a review of any child death by the State Child
Fatality Review team established pursuant to § 32.1-283.1,
during a review of any child death by a local or regional child
fatality review team established pursuant to § 32.1-283.2, and
all information and records acquired during a review of any death
by a family violence fatality review team established pursuant to
§ 32.1-283.3.
55. Financial, medical, rehabilitative
and other personal information concerning applicants for or
recipients of loan funds submitted to or maintained by the
Assistive Technology Loan Fund Authority under Chapter 11 (§
51.5-53 et seq.) of Title 51.5.
56. Confidential proprietary records
that are voluntarily provided by a private entity pursuant to a
proposal filed with a public entity or an affected local
jurisdiction under the Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995
(§ 56-556 et seq.) or the Public-Private Education Facilities
and Infrastructure Act of 2002 (§ 56-575.1 et seq.), pursuant
to a promise of confidentiality from the responsible public entity
or affected local jurisdiction, used by the responsible public
entity or affected local jurisdiction for purposes related to the
development of a qualifying transportation facility or qualifying
project; and memoranda, working papers or other records related to
proposals filed under the Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995
or the Public-Private Education Facilities and Infrastructure Act
of 2002, where, if such records were made public, the financial
interest of the public or private entity involved with such
proposal or the process of competition or bargaining would be
adversely affected. In order for confidential proprietary
information to be excluded from the provisions of this chapter, the
private entity shall (i) invoke such exclusion upon submission of
the data or other materials for which protection from disclosure is
sought, (ii) identify the data or other materials for which
protection is sought, and (iii) state the reasons why protection is
necessary. For the purposes of this subdivision, the terms
"affected local jurisdiction", "public entity" and "private entity"
shall be defined as they are defined in the Public-Private
Transportation Act of 1995 or in the Public-Private Education
Facilities and Infrastructure Act of 2002. However, nothing in this
subdivision shall be construed to prohibit the release of
procurement records as required by § 56-573.1 or §
56-575.16. Procurement records shall not be interpreted to include
proprietary, commercial or financial information, balance sheets,
financial statements, or trade secrets that may be provided by the
private entity as evidence of its qualifications.
57. Plans and information to prevent or respond
to terrorist activity, the disclosure of which would jeopardize the
safety of any person, including (i) critical infrastructure sector
or structural components; (ii) vulnerability assessments,
operational, procedural, transportation, and tactical planning or
training manuals, and staff meeting minutes or other records; and
(iii) engineering or architectural records, or records containing
information derived from such records, to the extent such records
reveal the location or operation of security equipment and systems,
elevators, ventilation, fire protection, emergency, electrical,
telecommunications or utility equipment and systems of any public
building, structure or information storage facility. The same
categories of records of any governmental or nongovernmental person
or entity submitted to a public body for the purpose of
antiterrorism response planning may be withheld from disclosure if
such person or entity in writing (a) invokes the protections of
this subdivision, (b) identifies with specificity the records or
portions thereof for which protection is sought, and (c) states
with reasonable particularity why the protection of such records
from public disclosure is necessary to meet the objective of
antiterrorism planning or protection. Such statement shall be a
public record and shall be disclosed upon request. Nothing in this
subdivision shall be construed to prohibit the disclosure of
records relating to the structural or environmental soundness of
any building, nor shall it prevent the disclosure of information
relating to any building in connection with an inquiry into the
performance of that building after it has been subjected to fire,
explosion, natural disaster or other catastrophic event.
58. All records of the University of
Virginia or the University of Virginia Medical Center or Eastern
Virginia Medical School, as the case may be, that contain
proprietary, business-related information pertaining to the
operations of the University of Virginia Medical Center or Eastern
Virginia Medical School, as the case may be, including business
development or marketing strategies and activities with existing or
future joint venturers, partners, or other parties with whom the
University of Virginia Medical Center or Eastern Virginia Medical
School, as the case may be, has formed, or forms, any arrangement
for the delivery of health care, if disclosure of such information
would be harmful to the competitive position of the Medical Center
or Eastern Virginia Medical School, as the case may be.
59. Patient level data collected by
the Board of Health and not yet processed, verified, and released,
pursuant to § 32.1-276.9, to the Board by the nonprofit
organization with which the Commissioner of Health has contracted
pursuant to § 32.1-276.4.
60. Records of the Virginia
Commonwealth University Health System Authority pertaining to any
of the following: an individual's qualifications for or continued
membership on its medical or teaching staffs; proprietary
information gathered by or in the possession of the Authority from
third parties pursuant to a promise of confidentiality; contract
cost estimates prepared for confidential use in awarding contracts
for construction or the purchase of goods or services; data,
records or information of a proprietary nature produced or
collected by or for the Authority or members of its medical or
teaching staffs; financial statements not publicly available that
may be filed with the Authority from third parties; the identity,
accounts or account status of any customer of the Authority;
consulting or other reports paid for by the Authority to assist the
Authority in connection with its strategic planning and goals; and
the determination of marketing and operational strategies where
disclosure of such strategies would be harmful to the competitive
position of the Authority; and data, records or information of a
proprietary nature produced or collected by or for employees of the
Authority, other than the Authority's financial or administrative
records, in the conduct of or as a result of study or research on
medical, scientific, technical or scholarly issues, whether
sponsored by the Authority alone or in conjunction with a
governmental body or a private concern, when such data, records or
information have not been publicly released, published, copyrighted
or patented.
61. Confidential proprietary
information or trade secrets, not publicly available, provided by a
private person or entity to the Virginia Resources Authority or to
a fund administered in connection with financial assistance
rendered or to be rendered by the Virginia Resources Authority
where, if such information were made public, the financial interest
of the private person or entity would be adversely affected, and,
after June 30, 1997, where such information was provided pursuant
to a promise of confidentiality.
62. Confidential proprietary records
that are provided by a franchisee under § 15.2-2108 to its
franchising authority pursuant to a promise of confidentiality from
the franchising authority that relates to the franchisee's
potential provision of new services, adoption of new technologies
or implementation of improvements, where such new services,
technologies or improvements have not been implemented by the
franchisee on a nonexperimental scale in the franchise area, and
where, if such records were made public, the competitive advantage
or financial interests of the franchisee would be adversely
affected. In order for confidential proprietary information to be
excluded from the provisions of this chapter, the franchisee shall
(i) invoke such exclusion upon submission of the data or other
materials for which protection from disclosure is sought, (ii)
identify the data or other materials for which protection is
sought, and (iii) state the reason why protection is necessary.
63. Records of the Intervention
Program Committee within the Department of Health Professions, to
the extent such records may identify any practitioner who may be,
or who is actually, impaired to the extent disclosure is prohibited
by § 54.1-2517.
64. Records submitted as a grant
application, or accompanying a grant application, to the
Commonwealth Neurotrauma Initiative Advisory Board pursuant to
Chapter 3.1 (§ 51.5-12.1 et seq.) of Title 51.5, to the extent
such records contain (i) medical or mental records, or other data
identifying individual patients or (ii) proprietary business or
research-related information produced or collected by the applicant
in the conduct of or as a result of study or research on medical,
rehabilitative, scientific, technical or scholarly issues, when
such information has not been publicly released, published,
copyrighted or patented, if the disclosure of such information
would be harmful to the competitive position of the applicant.
65. Information that would disclose
the security aspects of a system safety program plan adopted
pursuant to 49 C.F.R. Part 659 by the Commonwealth's designated
Rail Fixed Guideway Systems Safety Oversight agency; and
information in the possession of such agency, the release of which
would jeopardize the success of an ongoing investigation of a rail
accident or other incident threatening railway safety.
66. Documents and other information of
a proprietary nature furnished by a supplier of charitable gaming
supplies to the Charitable Gaming Commission pursuant to subsection
E of § 18.2-340.34.
67. Personal information, as defined
in § 2.2-3801, provided to the Board of the Virginia College
Savings Plan or its employees by or on behalf of individuals who
have requested information about, applied for, or entered into
prepaid tuition contracts or savings trust account agreements
pursuant to Chapter 4.9 (§ 23-38.75 et seq.) of Title 23.
Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to prohibit
disclosure or publication of information in a statistical or other
form that does not identify individuals or provide personal
information. Individuals shall be provided access to their own
personal information.
68. Any record copied, recorded or
received by the Commissioner of Health in the course of an
examination, investigation or review of a managed care health
insurance plan licensee pursuant to §§ 32.1-137.4 and
32.1-137.5, including books, records, files, accounts, papers,
documents, and any or all computer or other recordings.
69. Engineering and architectural drawings,
operational, procedural, tactical planning or training manuals, or
staff meeting minutes or other records, the disclosure of which
would reveal surveillance techniques, personnel deployments, alarm
or security systems or technologies, or operational and
transportation plans or protocols, to the extent such disclosure
would jeopardize the security of any governmental facility,
building or structure or the safety of persons using such facility,
building or structure.
70. Records and reports related to
Virginia apple producer sales provided to the Virginia State Apple
Board pursuant to §§ 3.1-622 and 3.1-624.
71. Records of the Department of
Environmental Quality, the State Water Control Board, State Air
Pollution Control Board or the Virginia Waste Management Board
relating to (i) active federal environmental enforcement actions
that are considered confidential under federal law and (ii)
enforcement strategies, including proposed sanctions for
enforcement actions. Upon request, such records shall be disclosed
after a proposed sanction resulting from the investigation has been
proposed to the director of the agency. This subdivision shall not
be construed to prohibit the disclosure of records related to
inspection reports, notices of violation, and documents detailing
the nature of any environmental contamination that may have
occurred or similar documents.
72. As it pertains to any person,
records related to the operation of toll facilities that identify
an individual, vehicle, or travel itinerary including, but not
limited to, vehicle identification data, vehicle enforcement system
information; video or photographic images; Social Security or other
identification numbers appearing on driver's licenses; credit card
or bank account data; home addresses; phone numbers; or records of
the date or time of toll facility use.
73. Records of the Virginia Office for
Protection and Advocacy consisting of documentary evidence received
or maintained by the Office or its agents in connection with
specific complaints or investigations, and records of
communications between employees and agents of the Office and its
clients or prospective clients concerning specific complaints,
investigations or cases. Upon the conclusion of an investigation of
a complaint, this exclusion shall no longer apply, but the Office
may not at any time release the identity of any complainant or
person with mental illness, mental retardation, developmental
disabilities or other disability, unless (i) such complainant or
person or his legal representative consents in writing to such
identification or (ii) such identification is required by court
order.
74. Information furnished in
confidence to the Department of Employment Dispute Resolution with
respect to an investigation, consultation, or mediation under
Chapter 10 (§ 2.2-1000 et seq.) of this title, and memoranda,
correspondence and other records resulting from any such
investigation, consultation or mediation. However, nothing in this
section shall prohibit the distribution of information taken from
inactive reports in a form that does not reveal the identity of the
parties involved or other persons supplying information.
75. Trade secrets, as defined in the
Uniform Trade Secrets Act (§ 59.1-336 et seq.) of Title 59.1,
submitted by CMRS providers as defined in § 56-484.12 to the
Wireless Carrier E-911 Cost Recovery Subcommittee created pursuant
to § 56-484.15, relating to the provision of wireless E-911
service.
76. Records of the State Lottery
Department pertaining to (i) the social security number, tax
identification number, state sales tax number, home address and
telephone number, personal and lottery banking account and transit
numbers of a retailer, and financial information regarding the
nonlottery operations of specific retail locations, and (ii)
individual lottery winners, except that a winner's name, hometown,
and amount won shall be disclosed.
77. Records, information and
statistical registries required to be kept confidential pursuant to
§§ 63.2-102 and 63.2-104.
78. Personal information, as defined
in § 2.2-3801, including electronic mail addresses, furnished
to a public body for the purpose of receiving electronic mail from
the public body, provided that the electronic mail recipient has
requested that the public body not disclose such information.
However, access shall not be denied to the person who is the
subject of the record.
79. (For effective date, see note) All
data, records, and reports relating to the prescribing and
dispensing of covered substances to recipients and any abstracts
from such data, records, and reports that are in the possession of
the Prescription Monitoring Program pursuant to Chapter 25.2
(§ 54.1-2519 et seq.) of Title 54.1 and any material relating
to the operation or security of the Program.
80. Communications and materials
required to be kept confidential pursuant to § 2.2-4119 of the
Virginia Administrative Dispute Resolution Act.
81. The names, addresses and telephone
numbers of complainants furnished in confidence with respect to an
investigation of individual zoning enforcement complaints made to a
local governing body.
82. Records relating to the
negotiation and award of a specific contract where competition or
bargaining is involved and where the release of such records would
adversely affect the bargaining position or negotiating strategy of
the public body. Such records shall not be withheld after the
public body has made a decision to award or not to award the
contract. In the case of procurement transactions conducted
pursuant to the Virginia Public Procurement Act (§ 2.2-4300 et
seq.), the provisions of this subdivision shall not apply, and any
release of records relating to such transactions shall be governed
by the Virginia Public Procurement Act.
83. Records submitted as a grant
application, or accompanying a grant application, to the
Commonwealth Health Research Board pursuant to Chapter 22 (§
23-277 et seq.) of Title 23 to the extent such records contain
proprietary business or research-related information produced or
collected by the applicant in the conduct of or as a result of
study or research on medical, rehabilitative, scientific, technical
or scholarly issues, when such information has not been publicly
released, published, copyrighted or patented, if the disclosure of
such information would be harmful to the competitive position of
the applicant.
84. Records of the Board for Branch
Pilots relating to the chemical or drug testing of a person
regulated by the Board, where such person has tested negative or
has not been the subject of a disciplinary action by the Board for
a positive test result.
85. Security plans and specific
vulnerability assessment components of school safety audits, as
provided in § 22.1-279.8.
Nothing in this subdivision shall be
construed to prohibit the disclosure of records relating to the
effectiveness of security plans after (i) any school building or
property has been subjected to fire, explosion, natural disaster or
other catastrophic event, or (ii) any person on school property has
suffered or been threatened with any personal injury.
86. Records, investigative notes,
correspondence, and information pertaining to the planning,
scheduling and performance of examinations of holder records
pursuant to the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act
(§ 55-210.1 et seq.) prepared by or for the State Treasurer,
his agents, employees or persons employed to perform an audit or
examination of holder records.
87. Records of the Virginia Birth-Related Neurological Injury
Compensation Program required to be kept confidential pursuant to
§ 38.2-5002.2.
B. Neither any provision of this chapter nor any
provision of Chapter 38 (§ 2.2-3800 et seq.) of this title
shall be construed as denying public access to (i) contracts
between a public body and its officers or employees, other than
contracts settling public employee employment disputes held
confidential as personnel records under subdivision 4. of
subsection A; (ii) records of the position, job classification,
official salary or rate of pay of, and records of the allowances or
reimbursements for expenses paid to any officer, official or
employee of a public body; or (iii) the compensation or benefits
paid by any corporation organized by the Virginia Retirement System
or its officers or employees. The provisions of this subsection,
however, shall not require public access to records of the official
salaries or rates of pay of public employees whose annual rate of
pay is $10,000 or less.
C. No provision of this chapter or Chapter 21 (§
30-178 et seq.) of Title 30 shall be construed to afford any rights
to any person incarcerated in a state, local or federal
correctional facility, whether or not such facility is (i) located
in the Commonwealth or (ii) operated pursuant to the Corrections
Private Management Act (§ 53.1-261 et seq.). However, this
subsection shall not be construed to prevent an incarcerated person
from exercising his constitutionally protected rights, including,
but not limited to, his rights to call for evidence in his favor in
a criminal prosecution.
D. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as
denying public access to the nonexempt portions of a report of a
consultant hired by or at the request of a local public body or the
mayor or chief executive or administrative officer of such public
body if (i) the contents of such report have been distributed or
disclosed to members of the local public body or (ii) the local
public body has scheduled any action on a matter that is the
subject of the consultant's report.
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2.2-3706. Disclosure of criminal
records; limitations.
A. As used in this section:
"Criminal incident information" means
a general description of the criminal activity reported, the date
and general location the alleged crime was committed, the identity
of the investigating officer, and a general description of any
injuries suffered or property damaged or stolen.
B. Law-enforcement agencies shall make
available upon request criminal incident information relating to
felony offenses. However, where the release of criminal incident
information is likely to jeopardize an ongoing investigation or
prosecution, or the safety of an individual; cause a suspect to
flee or evade detection; or result in the destruction of evidence,
such information may be withheld until the above-referenced damage
is no longer likely to occur from release of the information.
Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prohibit the
release of those portions of such information that are not likely
to cause the above-referenced damage.
C. Information in the custody of
law-enforcement agencies relative to the identity of any
individual, other than a juvenile, who is arrested and charged, and
the status of the charge or arrest shall be released.
D. The identity of any victim, witness
or undercover officer, or investigative techniques or procedures
need not but may be disclosed unless disclosure is prohibited or
restricted under § 19.2-11.2.
E. The identity of any individual
providing information about a crime or criminal activity under a
promise of anonymity shall not be disclosed.
F. The following records are excluded
from the provisions of this chapter, but may be disclosed by the
custodian, in his discretion, except where such disclosure is
prohibited by law:
1. Complaints, memoranda,
correspondence, case files or reports, witness statements, and
evidence relating to a criminal investigation or prosecution, other
than criminal incident information as defined in subsection A;
2. Adult arrestee photographs when
necessary to avoid jeopardizing an investigation in felony cases
until such time as the release of the photograph will no longer
jeopardize the investigation;
3. Reports submitted in confidence to
(i) state and local law-enforcement agencies, (ii) investigators
authorized pursuant to § 53.1-16 or § 66-3.1, and (iii)
campus police departments of public institutions of higher
education established pursuant to Chapter 17 (§ 23-232 et
seq.) of Title 23;
4. Portions of records of local
government crime commissions that would identify individuals
providing information about crimes or criminal activities under a
promise of anonymity;
5. Records of local law-enforcement
agencies relating to neighborhood watch programs that include the
names, addresses, and operating schedules of individual
participants in the program that are provided to such agencies
under a promise of anonymity;
6. All records of persons imprisoned
in penal institutions in the Commonwealth provided such records
relate to the imprisonment;
7. Records of law-enforcement
agencies, to the extent that such records contain specific tactical
plans, the disclosure of which would jeopardize the safety or
security of law-enforcement personnel or the general public;
and
8. All records of adult persons under
(i) investigation or supervision by a local pretrial services
agency in accordance with Article 5 (§ 19.2-152.2 et seq.) of
Chapter 9 of Title 19.2; (ii) investigation, probation supervision
or monitoring by a local community-based probation program in
accordance with Article 2 (§ 53.1-180 et seq.) of Chapter 5 of
Title 53.1; or (iii) investigation or supervision by state
probation and parole services in accordance with Article 2 (§
53.1-141 et seq.) of Chapter 4 of Title 53.1.
G. Records kept by law-enforcement
agencies as required by § 15.2-1722 shall be subject to the
provisions of this chapter except:
1. Those portions of noncriminal
incident or other investigative reports or materials containing
identifying information of a personal, medical or financial nature
provided to a law-enforcement agency where the release of such
information would jeopardize the safety or privacy of any
person;
2. Those portions of any records
containing information related to plans for or resources dedicated
to undercover operations; or
3. Records of background
investigations of applicants for law-enforcement agency employment
or other confidential administrative investigations conducted
pursuant to law.
H. In the event of conflict between
this section as it relates to requests made under this section and
other provisions of law, this section shall control.
Back to Index
2.2-3707. Meetings to be
public; notice of meetings; recordings; minutes.
A. All meetings of public bodies shall
be open, except as provided in § 2.2-3711.
B. 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, except as provided in §§
2.2-3708, 2.2-3709 or as may be specifically provided in Title 54.1
for the summary suspension of professional licenses.
C. Every public body shall give notice
of the date, time, and location of its meetings by placing the
notice in a prominent public location at which notices are
regularly posted and in the office of the clerk of the public body,
or in the case of a public body that has no clerk, in the office of
the chief administrator. Publication of meeting notices by
electronic means shall be encouraged. The notice shall be posted at
least three working days prior to the meeting. Notices for meetings
of state public bodies on which there is at least one member
appointed by the Governor shall state whether or not public comment
will be received at the meeting and, if so, the approximate point
during the meeting when public comment will be received
D. Notice, reasonable under the
circumstance, of special or emergency meetings shall be given
contemporaneously with the notice provided members of the public
body conducting the meeting.
E. Any person may annually file a
written request for notification with a public body. The request
shall include the requester's name, address, zip code, daytime
telephone number, electronic mail address, if available, and
organization, if any. The public body receiving such request shall
provide notice of all meetings directly to each such person.
Without objection by the person, the public body may provide
electronic notice of all meetings in response to such requests.
F.
At least one copy of all agenda packets and, unless exempt, all
materials furnished to members of a public body for a meeting shall
be made available for public inspection at the same time such
documents are furnished to the members of the public body.
G. Nothing in this chapter shall be
construed to prohibit the gathering or attendance of two or more
members of a public body (i) 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 public body or (ii)
at a public forum, candidate appearance, or debate, the purpose of
which is to inform the electorate and not to transact public
business or to hold discussions relating to the transaction of
public business, even though the performance of the members
individually or collectively in the conduct of public business may
be a topic of discussion or debate at such public meeting. The
notice provisions of this chapter shall not apply to informal
meetings or gatherings of the members of the General Assembly.
H. Any person may photograph, film,
record or otherwise reproduce any portion of a meeting required to
be open. The public body conducting the meeting may adopt rules
governing the placement and use of equipment necessary for
broadcasting, photographing, filming or recording a meeting to
prevent interference with the proceedings.
I. Minutes shall be recorded at all
open meetings. However, minutes shall not be required to be taken
at deliberations of (i) standing and other committees of the
General Assembly, (ii) legislative interim study commissions and
committees, including the Virginia Code Commission, (iii) study
committees or commissions appointed by the Governor, or (iv) study
commissions or study committees, or any other committees or
subcommittees appointed by the governing bodies or school boards of
counties, cities and towns, except where the membership of any such
commission, committee or subcommittee includes a majority of the
governing body of the county, city or town or school board.
Minutes, including draft minutes, and all other records of open
meetings, including audio or audio/visual records shall be deemed
public records and subject to the provisions of this chapter. Audio
or audio/visual records of open meetings shall be public records
that shall be produced in accordance with § 2.2-3704.
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2.2-3707.1. Posting
of minutes for state boards and commissions.
All boards, commissions, councils, and
other public bodies created in the executive branch of state
government and subject to the provisions of this chapter shall post
minutes of their meetings on the global information system known as
the Internet. Those executive branch public bodies that promulgate
regulations may post minutes of their meetings on a web site
administered by the Department of Planning and Budget. Executive
branch public bodies that do not promulgate regulations may post
minutes on an electronic calendar maintained by the Virginia
Information Technologies Agency. Draft minutes of meetings shall be
posted as soon as possible but no later than ten working days after
the conclusion of the meeting. Final approved meeting minutes shall
be posted within three working days of final approval of the
minutes.
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2.2-3708.
Electronic communication meetings.
A. It shall be a violation of this
chapter for any political subdivision or any governing body,
authority, board, bureau, commission, district or agency of local
government or any committee thereof 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. Nothing in this section shall be
construed to prohibit the use of interactive audio or video means
to expand public participation.
B. For purposes of this section,
"public body" means any public body of the Commonwealth, but
excludes any political subdivision or any governing body,
authority, board, bureau, commission, district or agency of local
government.
State public bodies may conduct any
meeting, except closed meetings held pursuant to § 2.2-3711,
wherein the public business is discussed or transacted through
telephonic or video means. Where a quorum of a public body of the
Commonwealth is physically assembled at one location for the
purpose of conducting a meeting authorized under this section,
additional members of such public body may participate in the
meeting through telephonic means provided such participation is
available to the public.
C. Notice of any meetings held
pursuant to this section shall be provided at least 30 days in
advance of the date scheduled for the meeting. The notice shall
include the date, time, place and purpose for the meeting and shall
identify the locations for the meeting. All locations for the
meeting shall be made accessible to the public. All persons
attending the meeting at any of the meeting locations shall be
afforded the same opportunity to address the public body as persons
attending the primary or central location. Any interruption in the
telephonic or video broadcast of the meeting shall result in the
suspension of action at the meeting until repairs are made and
public access restored.
Thirty-day notice shall not be
required for telephonic or video meetings continued to address an
emergency as provided in subsection F or to conclude the agenda of
a telephonic or video meeting of the public body for which the
proper notice has been given, when the date, time, place and
purpose of the continued meeting are set during the meeting prior
to adjournment.
The public body shall provide the
Virginia Information Technologies Agency with notice of all public
meetings held through telephonic or video means pursuant to this
section.
D. An agenda and materials that will
be distributed to members of the public body and that have been
made available to the staff of the public body in sufficient time
for duplication and forwarding to all locations where public access
will be provided shall be made available to the public at the time
of the meeting. Minutes of all meetings held by telephonic or video
means shall be recorded as required by § 2.2-3707. Votes taken
during any meeting conducted through telephonic or video means
shall be recorded by name in roll-call fashion and included in the
minutes. In addition, the public body shall make an audio recording
of the meeting, if a telephonic medium is used, or an audio/visual
recording, if the meeting is held by video means. The recording
shall be preserved by the public body for a period of three years
following the date of the meeting and shall be available to the
public.
E. No more than 25 percent of all
meetings held annually by a public body, including meetings of any
ad hoc or standing committees, may be held by telephonic or video
means. Any public body that meets by telephonic or video means
shall file with the Virginia Information Technologies Agency by
July 1 of each year a statement identifying the total number of
meetings held during the preceding fiscal year, the dates on which
the meetings were held and the number and purpose of those
conducted through telephonic or video means.
F. Notwithstanding the limitations
imposed by subsection E, a public body may meet by telephonic or
video means as often as needed if an emergency exists and the
public body is unable to meet in regular session. Public bodies
conducting emergency meetings through telephonic or video means
shall comply with the provisions of subsection D requiring minutes,
recordation and preservation of the audio or audio/visual recording
of the meeting. The nature of the emergency shall be stated in the
minutes.
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2.2-3709.
(Effective until July 1, 2005) Meetings of Board of Visitors of the
University of Virginia.
A. Members of the Board of Visitors of
the University of Virginia may participate by video, telephone, or
video and telephone at their meetings or meetings of their
committees, including closed meetings convened in accordance with
the procedures of § 2.2-3712, where (i) at least a quorum of
such board or its committees is physically assembled at its
regular, primary location or other location, (ii) any such meeting
is duly convened with advance public notice in accordance with
§ 2.2-3707, including advance public notice of the location of
the physically assembled quorum, and (iii) a speaker phone is
provided at the location where the quorum of such membership is
physically present.
No more than 25 percent of all
meetings held annually by such board or its committees, including
meetings of any ad hoc committees, may be held by telephonic or
video means.
B. Where at least two-thirds of such
board or its committees is physically assembled at one location for
the purpose of conducting a meeting authorized under this section,
additional members of such board or its committees may participate
in the meeting through telephonic means provided the public is
permitted to hear such participation during any open meeting. Any
interruption in the telephonic or video broadcast of the meeting
shall result in the suspension of action at the open meeting until
repairs are made and public access is restored.
C. Except as otherwise provided in
this section, all meetings shall be conducted in accordance with
this chapter. Any meeting conducted pursuant to this section shall
not be considered an "electronic communication meeting" for
purposes of § 2.2-3708, provided such board or its committees
comply with the provisions of subsection D of § 2.2-3708,
requiring minutes, recordation and preservation of the audio or
audio/visual recording of the meeting. Votes taken by those
participating by telephone or video shall also be publicly recorded
by name in roll-call fashion and shall be included in the minutes,
which shall be approved by such board or its committees in public
session.
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2.2-3710. Transaction of
public business other than by votes at meetings
prohibited.
A. Unless otherwise specifically
provided by law, no vote of any kind of the membership, or any part
thereof, of any public body shall be taken to authorize the
transaction of any public business, other than a vote taken at a
meeting conducted in accordance with the provisions of this
chapter. No public body shall vote by secret or written ballot, and
unless expressly provided by this chapter, no public body shall
vote by telephone or other electronic communication means.
B. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
nothing contained herein shall be construed to prohibit (i)
separately contacting the membership, or any part thereof, of any
public body for the purpose of ascertaining a member's position
with respect to the transaction of public business, whether such
contact is done in person, by telephone or by electronic
communication, provided the contact is done on a basis that does
not constitute a meeting as defined in this chapter or (ii) the
House of Delegates or the Senate of Virginia from adopting rules
relating to the casting of votes by members of standing committees.
Nothing in this subsection shall operate to exclude any public
record from the provisions of this chapter.
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2.2-3711. Closed meetings
authorized for certain limited purposes.
A.
Public bodies may hold closed meetings only for the following
purposes:
1. Discussion, consideration or
interviews of prospective candidates for employment; assignment,
appointment, promotion, performance, demotion, salaries,
disciplining or resignation of specific public officers, appointees
or employees of any public body; and evaluation of performance of
departments or schools of public institutions of higher education
where such evaluation will necessarily involve discussion of the
performance of specific individuals. Any teacher shall be permitted
to be present during a closed meeting in which there is a
discussion or consideration of a disciplinary matter that involves
the teacher and some student and the student involved in the matter
is present, provided the teacher makes a written request to be
present to the presiding officer of the appropriate board.
2. Discussion or consideration of
admission or disciplinary matters or any other matters that would
involve the disclosure of information contained in a scholastic
record concerning any student of any Virginia public institution of
higher education or any state school system. However, any such
student, legal counsel and, if the student is a minor, the
student's parents or legal guardians shall be permitted to be
present during the taking of testimony or presentation of evidence
at a closed meeting, if such student, parents or guardians so
request in writing and such request is submitted to the presiding
officer of the appropriate board.
3. Discussion or consideration of the acquisition
of real property for a public purpose, or of the disposition of
publicly held real property, where discussion in an open meeting
would adversely affect the bargaining position or negotiating
strategy of the public body.
4. The protection of the privacy of individuals in
personal matters not related to public business.
5. Discussion concerning a prospective
business or industry or the expansion of an existing business or
industry where no previous announcement has been made of the
business' or industry's interest in locating or expanding its
facilities in the community.
6. The investing of public funds where
competition or bargaining is involved, where, if made public
initially, the financial interest of the governmental unit would be
adversely affected.
7. Consultation with legal counsel and briefings
by staff members or consultants pertaining to actual or probable
litigation, where such consultation or briefing in open meeting
would adversely affect the negotiating or litigating posture of the
public body; and consultation with legal counsel employed or
retained by a public body regarding specific legal matters
requiring the provision of legal advice by such counsel. For the
purposes of this subdivision, "probable litigation" means
litigation that has been specifically threatened or on which the
public body or its legal counsel has a reasonable basis to believe
will be commenced by or against a known party. Nothing in this
subdivision shall be construed to permit the closure of a meeting
merely because an attorney representing the public body is in
attendance or is consulted on a matter.
8. In the case of boards of visitors
of public institutions of higher education, discussion or
consideration of matters relating to gifts, bequests and
fund-raising activities, and grants and contracts for services or
work to be performed by such institution. However, the terms and
conditions of any such gifts, bequests, grants and contracts made
by a foreign government, a foreign legal entity or a foreign person
and accepted by a public institution of higher education in
Virginia shall be subject to public disclosure upon written request
to the appropriate board of visitors. For the purpose of this
subdivision, (i) "foreign government" means any government other
than the United States government or the government of a state or a
political subdivision thereof; (ii) "foreign legal entity" means
any legal entity created under the laws of the United States or of
any state thereof if a majority of the ownership of the stock of
such legal entity is owned by foreign governments or foreign
persons or if a majority of the membership of any such entity is
composed of foreign persons or foreign legal entities, or any legal
entity created under the laws of a foreign government; and (iii)
"foreign person" means any individual who is not a citizen or
national of the United States or a trust territory or protectorate
thereof.
9. In the case of the boards of
trustees of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Virginia Museum
of Natural History, and The Science Museum of Virginia, discussion
or consideration of matters relating to specific gifts, bequests,
and grants.
10. Discussion or consideration of
honorary degrees or special awards.
11. Discussion or consideration of
tests, examinations or other records excluded from this chapter
pursuant to subdivision A 11 of § 2.2-3705.
12. Discussion, consideration or
review by the appropriate House or Senate committees of possible
disciplinary action against a member arising out of the possible
inadequacy of the disclosure statement filed by the member,
provided the member may request in writing that the committee
meeting not be conducted in a closed meeting.
13. Discussion of strategy with respect to the
negotiation of a hazardous waste siting agreement or to consider
the terms, conditions, and provisions of a hazardous waste siting
agreement if the governing body in open meeting finds that an open
meeting will have an adverse effect upon the negotiating position
of the governing body or the establishment of the terms, conditions
and provisions of the siting agreement, or both. All discussions
with the applicant or its representatives may be conducted in a
closed meeting.
14. Discussion by the Governor and any
economic advisory board reviewing forecasts of economic activity
and estimating general and nongeneral fund revenues.
15. Discussion or consideration of
medical and mental records excluded from this chapter pursuant to
subdivision A 5 of § 2.2-3705.
16. Deliberations of the State Lottery
Board in a licensing appeal action conducted pursuant to subsection
D of § 58.1-4007 regarding the denial or revocation of a
license of a lottery sales agent; and discussion, consideration or
review of State Lottery Department matters related to proprietary
lottery game information and studies or investigations exempted
from disclosure under subdivisions A 37 and A 38 of §
2.2-3705.
17. Those portions of meetings by
local government crime commissions where the identity of, or
information tending to identify, individuals providing information
about crimes or criminal activities under a promise of anonymity is
discussed or disclosed.
18. Discussion, consideration, review
and deliberations by local community corrections resources boards
regarding the placement in community diversion programs of
individuals previously sentenced to state correctional
facilities.
19. Those portions of meetings in
which the Board of Corrections discusses or discloses the identity
of, or information tending to identify, any prisoner who (i)
provides information about crimes or criminal activities, (ii)
renders assistance in preventing the escape of another prisoner or
in the apprehension of an escaped prisoner, or (iii) voluntarily or
at the instance of a prison official renders other extraordinary
services, the disclosure of which is likely to jeopardize the
prisoner's life or safety.
20. Discussion of plans to protect public safety
as it relates to terrorist activity and briefings by staff members,
legal counsel, or law-enforcement or emergency service officials
concerning actions taken to respond to such activity or a related
threat to public safety.
21. Discussion by the Board of the
Virginia Retirement System, acting pursuant to § 51.1-124.30,
or of any local retirement system, acting pursuant to §
51.1-803, or of the Rector and Visitors of the University of
Virginia, acting pursuant to § 23-76.1, regarding the
acquisition, holding or disposition of a security or other
ownership interest in an entity, where such security or ownership
interest is not traded on a governmentally regulated securities
exchange, to the extent that such discussion (i) concerns
confidential analyses prepared for the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia, prepared by the retirement system or
provided to the retirement system under a promise of
confidentiality, of the future value of such ownership interest or
the future financial performance of the entity, and (ii) would have
an adverse effect on the value of the investment to be acquired,
held or disposed of by the retirement system or the Rector and
Visitors of the University of Virginia. Nothing in this subdivision
shall be construed to prevent the disclosure of information
relating to the identity of any investment held, the amount
invested or the present value of such investment.
22. Those portions of meetings in
which individual child death cases are discussed by the State Child
Fatality Review team established pursuant to § 32.1-283.1, and
those portions of meetings in which individual child death cases
are discussed by a regional or local child fatality review team
established pursuant to § 32.1-283.2, and those portions of
meetings in which individual death cases are discussed by family
violence fatality review teams established pursuant to §
32.1-283.3.
23. Those portions of meetings of the
University of Virginia Board of Visitors or the Eastern Virginia
Medical School Board of Visitors, as the case may be, and those
portions of meetings of any persons to whom management
responsibilities for the University of Virginia Medical Center or
Eastern Virginia Medical School, as the case may be, have been
delegated, in which there is discussed proprietary,
business-related information pertaining to the operations of the
University of Virginia Medical Center or Eastern Virginia Medical
School, as the case may be, including business development or
marketing strategies and activities with existing or future joint
venturers, partners, or other parties with whom the University of
Virginia Medical Center or Eastern Virginia Medical School, as the
case may be, has formed, or forms, any arrangement for the delivery
of health care, if disclosure of such information would adversely
affect the competitive position of the Medical Center or Eastern
Virginia Medical School, as the case may be.
24. In the case of the Virginia
Commonwealth University Health System Authority, discussion or
consideration of any of the following: the acquisition or
disposition of real or personal property where disclosure would
adversely affect the bargaining position or negotiating strategy of
the Authority; operational plans that could affect the value of
such property, real or personal, owned or desirable for ownership
by the Authority; matters relating to gifts, bequests and
fund-raising activities; grants and contracts for services or work
to be performed by the Authority; marketing or operational
strategies where disclosure of such strategies would adversely
affect the competitive position of the Authority; members of its
medical and teaching staffs and qualifications for appointments
thereto; and qualifications or evaluations of other employees.
25. Those portions of the meetings of
the Intervention Program Committee within the Department of Health
Professions to the extent such discussions identify any
practitioner who may be, or who actually is, impaired pursuant to
Chapter 25.1 (§ 54.1-2515 et seq.) of Title 54.1.
26. Meetings or portions of meetings
of the Board of the Virginia College Savings Plan wherein personal
information, as defined in § 2.2-3801, which has been provided
to the Board or its employees by or on behalf of individuals who
have requested information about, applied for, or entered into
prepaid tuition contracts or savings trust account agreements
pursuant to Chapter 4.9 (§ 23-38.75 et seq.) of Title 23 is
discussed.
27. Discussion or consideration, by
the Wireless Carrier E-911 Cost Recovery Subcommittee created
pursuant to § 56-484.15, of trade secrets, as defined in the
Uniform Trade Secrets Act (§ 59.1-336 et seq.) of Title 59.1,
submitted by CMRS providers as defined in § 56-484.12, related
to the provision of wireless E-911 service.
28. Those portions of disciplinary
proceedings by any regulatory board within the Department of
Professional and Occupational Regulation or Department of Health
Professions conducted pursuant to § 2.2-4019 or §
2.2-4020 during which the board deliberates to reach a decision or
meetings of health regulatory boards or conference committees of
such boards to consider settlement proposals in pending
disciplinary actions or modifications to previously issued board
orders as requested by either of the parties.
29. Discussion or consideration by a
responsible public entity or an affected local jurisdiction, as
those terms are defined in § 56-557, of confidential
proprietary records excluded from this chapter pursuant to
subdivision A 56 of § 2.2-3705.
30. Discussion of the award of a
public contract involving the expenditure of public funds,
including interviews of bidders or offerors, and discussion of the
terms or scope of such contract, where discussion in an open
session would adversely affect the bargaining position or
negotiating strategy of the public body.
31. Discussion or consideration by the
Commonwealth Health Research Board of grant application records
excluded from this chapter pursuant to subdivision A 83 of §
2.2-3705.
B. No resolution, ordinance, rule,
contract, regulation or motion adopted, passed or agreed to in a
closed meeting shall become effective unless the public body,
following the meeting, reconvenes in open meeting and takes a vote
of the membership on such resolution, ordinance, rule, contract,
regulation or motion that shall have its substance reasonably
identified in the open meeting.
C. Public officers improperly selected
due to the failure of the public body to comply with the other
provisions of this section shall be de facto officers and, as such,
their official actions are valid until they obtain notice of the
legal defect in their election.
D. Nothing in this section shall be
construed to prevent the holding of conferences between two or more
public bodies, or their representatives, but these conferences
shall be subject to the same procedures for holding closed meetings
as are applicable to any other public body.
E.
This section shall not be construed to (i) require the disclosure
of any contract between the Intervention Program Committee within
the Department of Health Professions and an impaired practitioner
entered into pursuant to Chapter 25.1 (§ 54.1-2515 et seq.) of
Title 54.1 or (ii) require the board of directors of any authority
created pursuant to the Industrial Development and Revenue Bond Act
(§ 15.2-4900 et seq.), or any public body empowered to issue
industrial revenue bonds by general or special law, to identify a
business or industry to which subdivision A 5 applies. However,
such business or industry shall be identified as a matter of public
record at least thirty days prior to the actual date of the board's
authorization of the sale or issuance of such bonds.
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2.2-3712. Closed meetings
procedures; certification of proceedings.
A. No closed meeting shall be held
unless the public body proposing to convene such meeting has taken
an affirmative recorded vote in an open meeting approving a motion
that (i) identifies the subject matter, (ii) states the purpose of
the meeting and (iii) makes specific reference to the applicable
exemption from open meeting requirements provided in §
2.2-3707 or subsection A of § 2.2-3711. The matters contained
in such motion shall be set forth in detail in the minutes of the
open meeting. A general reference to the provisions of this
chapter, the authorized exemptions from open meeting requirements,
or the subject matter of the closed meeting shall not be sufficient
to satisfy the requirements for holding a closed meeting.
B. The notice provisions of this
chapter shall not apply to closed meetings of any public body held
solely for the purpose of interviewing candidates for the position
of chief administrative officer. Prior to any such closed meeting
for the purpose of interviewing candidates, the public body shall
announce in an open meeting that such closed meeting shall be held
at a disclosed or undisclosed location within fifteen days
thereafter.
C. The public body holding a closed
meeting shall restrict its discussion during the closed meeting
only to those matters specifically exempted from the provisions of
this chapter and identified in the motion required by subsection
A.
D. At the conclusion of any closed
meeting, the public body holding such meeting shall immediately
reconvene in an open meeting and shall take a roll call or other
recorded vote to be included in the minutes of that body,
certifying that to the best of each member's knowledge (i) only
public business matters lawfully exempted from open meeting
requirements under this chapter and (ii) only such public business
matters as were identified in the motion by which the closed
meeting was convened were heard, discussed or considered in the
meeting by the public body. Any member of the public body who
believes that there was a departure from the requirements of
clauses (i) and (ii), shall so state prior to the vote, indicating
the substance of the departure that, in his judgment, has taken
place. The statement shall be recorded in the minutes of the public
body.
E. Failure of the certification
required by subsection D to receive the affirmative vote of a
majority of the members of the public body present during a meeting
shall not affect the validity or confidentiality of such meeting
with respect to matters considered therein in compliance with the
provisions of this chapter. The recorded vote and any statement
made in connection therewith, shall upon proper authentication,
constitute evidence in any proceeding brought to enforce the
provisions of this chapter.
F. A public body may permit nonmembers
to attend a closed meeting if such persons are deemed necessary or
if their presence will reasonably aid the public body in its
consideration of a topic that is a subject of the meeting.
G. Except as specifically authorized
by law, in no event may any public body take action on matters
discussed in any closed meeting, except at an open meeting for
which notice was given as required by § 2.2-3707.
H.
Minutes may be taken during closed meetings of a public body, but
shall not be required. Such minutes shall not be subject to
mandatory public disclosure.
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2.2-3713. Proceedings
for enforcement of chapter.
A. Any person, including the attorney
for the Commonwealth acting in his official or individual capacity,
denied the rights and privileges conferred by this chapter may
proceed to enforce such rights and privileges by filing a petition
for mandamus or injunction, supported by an affidavit showing good
cause, addressed to the general district court or the court of
record of the county or city from which the public body has been
elected or appointed to serve and in which such rights and
privileges were so denied. Failure by any person to request and
receive notice of the time and place of meetings as provided in
§ 2.2-3707 shall not preclude any person from enforcing his or
her rights and privileges conferred by this chapter.
B. Any petition alleging denial of
rights and privileges conferred by this chapter by a board, bureau,
commission, authority, district or agency of the state government
or by a standing or other committee of the General Assembly, shall
be addressed to the general district court or the circuit court of
the residence of the aggrieved party or of the City of Richmond. In
any action brought before a general district court, a corporate
petitioner may appear through its officer, director or managing
agent without the assistance of counsel, notwithstanding any
provision of law or Rule of the Supreme Court of Virginia to the
contrary.
C. The petition for mandamus or
injunction shall be heard within seven days of the date when the
same is made. However, any petition made outside of the regular
terms of the circuit court of a county that is included in a
judicial circuit with another county or counties, the hearing on
the petition shall be given precedence on the docket of such court
over all cases that are not otherwise given precedence by law.
D. The petition shall allege with
reasonable specificity the circumstances of the denial of the
rights and privileges conferred by this chapter. A single instance
of denial of the rights and privileges conferred by this chapter