Open Public Meetings Act. The meetings of the governing body of a public agency must, with limited exceptions, be open to the public. Any member of the public who wants to attend such a meeting must be permitted to do so without conditions, such as requiring the provision of a name or address, imposed on attendance. Governing bodies may not adopt any ordinance, resolution, rule, regulation, order, or directive outside of a properly noticed meeting that is open to the public. Any action taken at a meeting that violates these requirements is void. Governing bodies are not required to take public testimony at a meeting.
The governing body may enter into executive session for deliberations, and exclude the members of the public from the executive session, under certain circumstances. Minutes must be taken at all regular and special meetings and subsequently made available for public inspection.
Special Meetings. Special meetings may be held if certain notice requirements are met, including the posting of notice on an agency's website and the prominent display of notice outside of its principal location at least 24 hours prior to the meeting. If the meeting will be held somewhere other than the agency's principal location, then notice must also be posted at that location at least 24 hours prior to the meeting. An agency is not required to post notice of the special meeting on its website if it:
Meetings During Emergencies. When an expedited response from a governing body is needed to respond to an emergency, such as a fire, flood, or earthquake, and compliance with notice requirements is impractical and would increase the likelihood of injury or damage, the governing body may meet at a location other than a regular meeting site, and without first providing notice.
Remote Access to Public Meetings. Any public agency which held at least some public meetings remotely prior to March 1, 2020, may continue to do so with no declared state of emergency if the agency provides an option for the public to listen to the proceedings. Public agencies are encouraged to:
Attendance at Public Meetings. A governing body may limit attendance at a public meeting or hold a meeting remotely during a declared state of emergency if it determines the meeting cannot be held in-person with reasonable safety. The public agency must provide an option for the public, at no cost, to listen to the meeting if in-person attendance is at all restricted. If the public agency has not provided such an option, then no action may be taken at the meeting. Notice provided for a remote meeting or a meeting with limited public attendance must provide instructions for how the public may attend remotely.
Agencies may impose generally applicable conditions on meeting attendance, including at remote meetings or meetings with limited in-person attendance, that the governing body determines are reasonably necessary to protect public health or safety, or against interruption of the meeting. There must be an opportunity for public comment at or before every regular meeting in which a public agency governing body takes final action, except in emergency situations. Public comment may be:
If public comment is offered through written submission, the governing body may set a reasonable deadline for submissions, and comments must be distributed to members of the governing body.
Accommodations. The governing body must, when feasible, provide an opportunity for individuals to provide oral comment remotely upon request if an individual will have difficulty physically attending the meeting if oral public comment is to be taken at the meeting.
Executive Sessions. The purpose for which the governing body of a public agency goes into executive session must be entered into the meeting minutes.
Notice of Public Meetings. An agency may share a website with, or have its website hosted by, another agency. An agency must post regular meeting agendas online at least 24 hours prior to the scheduled meeting unless it is a special purpose district, city, or town:
Notice of Special Meetings. Notice of special meetings must be posted online unless the agency:
Notice of any special meeting held remotely or with limited in-person attendance due to a declared emergency must be posted online if the agency has or shares a website.
Notice of a special meeting does not need to be physically posted at the agency's principal location:
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: This will help save public comment—many folks are not sure whether remote testimony will continue after pandemic measures are lifted. Meeting minutes are not verbatim transcripts and it's difficult to determine if they're accurate without a recording. Provisions encouraging things should be changed to "required"—public agencies should record all meetings, including emergency meetings and executive sessions. This is a compromise product, and many counties will probably take the recommendation to adopt optional procedures. Cities appreciate the work putting this into a form that can be implemented. We're heartened to hear intent to add updates to emergency provisions and make this a more comprehensive Open Public Meetings Act update.