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April 25, 2001
Ms. Lisa St. Martin
The staff of the Freedom of
Information Advisory Council is authorized to issue advisory
opinions. The ensuing staff advisory opinion is based solely upon
the information presented in your phone conversation of March 22,
2001.
Dear Ms. St. Martin:
You have asked whether the student government at a state
university is a public body under the Virginia Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA). You indicate that the student government
recently met in closed session to discuss whether a recent student
government election should be re-held, and voted on the issue while
still in the closed session. When members of the student newspaper
objected to the closed-session vote as a violation of FOIA, the
question arose as to whether the student government was indeed a
public body subject to FOIA.
Section 2.1-341 of the Code of Virginia defines a public body as
any legislative body; any 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. (Emphasis added) If an entity
fits this definition of a public body, then all of its records must
be open for inspection by citizens of the Commonwealth unless
specifically exempted by law, and all meetings of public bodies
must be open to the public unless specifically exempted by §
2.1-344. The policy of FOIA, set forth at § 2.1-340.1,
dictates that its provisions be liberally construed.
The Attorney General of Virginia has opined that the student
senate of a public university is an organization supported wholly
or principally by public funds, and thus subject to FOIA.[fn1] In
reaching this conclusion, the Attorney General noted that the
student senate in that case controlled a budget generated from
student fees, allocated funds to various other student
organizations, and was responsible for the general management of
student government.
Based on the information that you provided to this office, it
would appear that the student government in question serves a
similar role to the one described by the Attorney General. You
indicate that the student government oversees student organizations
and controls the budget delegated by the university for such
organizations, and oversees student government elections. As such,
the student government would fall under the definition of a public
body and be subject to all of the requirements of FOIA. In specific
reference to the vote taken by the student government in closed
session, subsection B of § 2.1-344 states that [n]o
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 which
shall have its substance reasonably identified in the open
meeting. Therefore, the action taken by the student government
would not become effective until a vote is held in open
session.
Thank you for contacting this office. I hope that I have been of
assistance.
Sincerely,
Maria J.K. Everett
Executive Director
Footnotes:
1. 1984-85 Op. Atty. Gen. Va. 431.
While this opinion was written pursuant to a prior version of FOIA,
both the current and prior versions of the law contain identical
language which includes entities supported wholly or principally by
public funds in the definition of a public body.
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