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E-mail meetings hurt open government in Virginia.
Date published: 10/19/2003
ROANOKE--There's an old saying that suggests if you're not confused by a complicated
issue, you're clearly misinformed.
The Fredericksburg City Council e-mail case, now headed to the Virginia Supreme
Court, has a lot of folks confused--and a lot more misinformed.
Strip away confusion and misinformation, and what's really at stake is the
commonwealth's decades-old statute that broadly mandates open meetings of governmental
bodies and bans outright any electronic meeting, in any form and at any time,
by any city, county, or town.
In Virginia, we don't recall governors or load a ballot with pure-democracy
initiatives; our form of Madison-type representative government generally empowers
public officials to act on our behalf--and we wait for the next election to
applaud good public servants and throw out the bums.
In the e-mail case, that's threatened.
"Affairs of government are not intended to be conducted in an atmosphere
of secrecy," the Virginia Freedom of Information Act reminds us. Exceptions
to this FOIA mandate are to be narrowly construed; public-meeting guarantees
must be broadly interpreted.
That's so policy deliberation and decision-making--not just pro forma public
votes--occur in the sunshine. Otherwise, James Madison's theories come unraveled.
We can hardly cast informed votes if we can't observe governmental deliberations
as they take place.
Our coalition's board of directors believes "use of e-mails to discuss
public business among three or more public officials (or between two, if a
quorum) must be subject to rules for public meetings."
That issue is at the heart of Beck v. Shelton, named for present Fredericksburg
Mayor Bill Beck and former Vice Mayor Gordon Shelton.
As Fredericksburg Circuit Judge John Scott found, when three or more members
of the Fredericksburg City Council exchanged e-mails, public business got discussed--and
that constituted an impermissible meeting.
(Where we think Judge Scott erred was in holding that one e-meeting was illegal
because "consensus" was reached--and another, lacking such consensus,
was legal. FOIA makes no such distinction, nor should it.)
Gutting the open-meetings law is certainly not Mayor Beck's intent; nor is
it the intent of his allies, the Virginia Municipal League and the Virginia
Association of Counties. All are members of our coalition; all share our open-government
principles. But we're dealing here with an area of untested law; neither Beck
nor his associates, in my judgment, was acting in bad faith. Nor should the
General Assembly be faulted for failing to define fully an e-meeting-by computer;
the law seldom keeps up with technology, in Richmond or elsewhere.
Fatal 'connection'
But the FOI statute explicitly covers "informal assemblages." My
dictionary offers lots of common-sense definitions of "assemblages" and "assemble." One
speaks of "connecting," another of "coming together." Narrowly
(or broadly) interpreted, that covers a "meeting" by computer--a
meeting that's clearly illegal if three or more local officials exchange public-business
messages.
As we've said in a friend-of-the-court brief, because e-mails can so rapidly
be sent, received, responded to, and further discussed, an electronic meeting
occurs before participating members of a local public body even realize it.
Nobody doubts the legality of a one-on-one e-mail exchange (when not involving
a quorum), or the legality of an e-mail sent by one elected official to all
or several other members of a public body. Members of a public body may separately
contact other members to ascertain their positions on any public issue. Recipients
can respond to the sender, or they can have a one-on-one exchange with another
recipient.
What they must not do is click "reply all" or in any way respond
so the whole group is privy to the exchange. At that point the communication
is not like letters, a fax, or voicemail; it must be treated as an illegal
meeting. If elected officials can figure out any e-mail system, they can find
the "reply to sender" button. That's not an onerous expectation;
it won't discourage good people from seeking public office, and it won't paralyze
local government in Fredericksburg, Fairfax, or Fries.
Premising the existence of an illegal meeting on whether messages were exchanged "simultaneously," as
some also urge, simply does not give local officials a workable solution--or
citizens an open-government guarantee.
Public bodies would be left to define simultaneity. "Chat room" and "instant
messaging" discussions obviously would be covered, but what about two "IM" members
exchanging views--and a third providing a deliberately delayed response?
(An unscrupulous official could sit poised by his computer, waiting for the
requisite amount of time to elapse before continuing the exchange--or manipulating
a computer's internal clock to post-date the actual time his e-mail was sent.)
A 1999 opinion by the state attorney general holds that a single member of
a governing body could send e-mail to several other members. Nobody quarrels
with that ruling, for it involves only one-way, "garden variety" e-mail
sent to at least two other elected officials. But it should not be stretched
to cover back-and-forth exchanges among three or more officials. Those who
misstate the opinion do a disservice to the AG.
Voice of authority
Much more on point is the 2001 opinion from the Freedom of Information Advisory
Council--an agency created by the legislature in 2000 to foster FOIA compliance
and provide authoritative, impartial interpretations of open-government law.
Its opinions are "presumed to be correct and entitled to great weight
unless plainly wrong," a senior assistant attorney general has properly
stated.
The advisory council opined that when "e-mail and all subsequent responses
are automatically viewed by all members of the public bodythe nature of the
electronic transmission crosses the line between correspondence and discussion."
To date, that's the only Virginia opinion that's grasped some of the knotty
e-mail issues raised in Beck v. Shelton.
Whatever the various debates about e-mail meetings, one thing remains inarguable:
officials' e-mails are clearly subject to Virginia's public-records law. When
electronic messages deal wholly with public business, they thus can be inspected
and copied by any Virginia citizen (whatever the motive--political mischief
or otherwise). Likewise, if contents are partially exempt from disclosure,
a record custodian must always excise the confidential portions--and disclose
everything else.
Some suggest that e-mails are a great boost to public access, establishing
a "paper" (i.e., digital) trail that never existed when such officials
used the phone or the street corner to govern in the shadows. Indeed, when
e-mails are archived at a single access point, as now occurs in Fredericksburg,
access to documents may well be enhanced.
But this argument ("e-mail meetings don't matter!") fails to address
a potentially far greater downside: If exchanges of electronic mail are not
subject to e-meeting rules, public meetings will become less frequent and more
meaningless--a post-discussion record may be attainable, but only if citizens
have the time or know-how to obtain it. And if obtained, it may come too late
for anybody to have input before a pro forma public vote.
(Even if record access is timely, e-mails won't capture what only the human
eye will observe at a face-to-face meeting.)
To keep local government fully transparent in the Internet age, the Virginia
Supreme Court should uphold the heart of Judge Scott's opinion. For, as the
Fredericksburg Circuit Court wisely sensed, improper electronic meetings can
easily occur when "assemblages" of elected public officials gather
at the computers, simultaneously or not.
FORREST ("FROSTY") LANDON is executive director of the Virginia
Coalition for Open Government.
Date published: 10/19/2003 |