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OPEN PUBLIC MEETINGS ACT AND
TECHNOLOGY Over the last few months New Jersey School
Boards Association staff have received a number of inquiries regarding the Open
Public Meetings Act (OPMA) and the use of telephone conference calls and e-mail
as a means of communication among board members and administration.
Attempting to answer those questions has been challenging, primarily
because the sunshine law was drafted long before the advent of widespread use of
Internet technology. Therefore, it is difficult to provide definitive answers.
However, cases from jurisdictions outside New Jersey have begun to
provide us some guidance. In addition, the spirit of the sunshine law has aided us in
making certain generalizations that we can share with you and your having an
understanding of the spirit of the law should assist you in making decisions
regarding your own communication with other board members. The
Open Public Meetings Act
Understanding
the parameters must begin with the Open Public Meetings Act itself, which was
promulgated to protect the publics right of access to governmental policy and
decision making processes. In
drafting New Jerseys sunshine law, which is similar to sunshine laws in the
other 49 states, the Legislature declared that trust in government is paramount.
Therefore, the public must have the right to witness in full detail
all phases of the deliberation, policy formation, and decision making of public
bodies. In other words, the
public is entitled to advance notice and the right to attend all meetings of
public bodies where discussion and deliberation of public business take place.
The Act itself then assists us by defining a
meeting as a gathering whether corporeal or by means of communication
equipment which is attended by, or open to, all members of the public body
to discuss or act as a unit upon specific public business.
The Act also concludes that a meeting does not mean or include such a
gathering attended by less than an effective majority of the membersor
attended by or open to all the members of three or more similar public bodies at
a convention or similar gathering. From this definition, we can conclude that
whenever a quorum is discussing or acting upon public business, the OPMA
applies. Therefore, it does not
matter if your board calls such a gathering a retreat or a training session.
If the gathering is open to a quorum of the board and you intend to
discuss public business, then the Act applies and the public must be provided
with notice and the right to attend. Telephone
Conference Calls and Speakerphones As
noted above, the sunshine law applies to gatherings of a quorum, including those
by means of communication equipment. Use
of the telephone could then be an issue in two ways; 1) if a quorum of board
members, each in their respective offices or homes, were to communicate via
telephone conferencing and 2) if an absent member of the board wanted to
participate in a public meeting via a speakerphone. The
first scenario, involving a quorum of the board communicating simultaneously by
telephone conference, would most likely be a violation of the sunshine law
unless the public was provided with advance notice and an opportunity to witness
such communication. Witnessing the
meeting would of course present practical problems if there were no central
location. However, as technology is
advancing at such a rapid pace, it is not unlikely that in the very near future
a board could schedule a public meeting where members are in attendance from
remote locations with the public viewing the proceedings via a video screen.
In that event, the board should absolutely comply with the notice and
right to attend provisions of the OPMA. The
second scenario, involving an absent board member wishing to participate via
speakerphone, is much more likely to occur, and the answer is not as clear, due
to the way in which different New Jersey courts have addressed this issue.
In Hegarty and Romeo v. Old Bridge Board of Education, the
appellate division affirmed a superior court order that permitted two absent
board members to participate in a reorganization meeting via speakerphone.
As this decision is unreported, it is not binding on any other court
therefore, it is merely instructive that at least one court believes that such
participation should be allowed. It
is possible that the court permitted speakerphone participation because the
reorganization meeting is one that must be conducted within a statutory
timeframe, making it impossible for the board to reschedule this particular
meeting to a later date. However,
whether this was taken into consideration is not clear from the courts
written decision. In
a similar situation, Koch v. Bd. of Educ. of Jackson Twp., the Honorable
Eugene D. Serpentelli refused to allow a board member to participate in the
reorganization meeting by speakerphone as it would be contrary to the
purposes and intent of the Open Public Meetings Act.
This declaration is particularly interesting as Judge Serpentelli was on
a committee designated by the League of Municipalities in 1975 to assist the
Legislature in drafting the sunshine law. However,
the decision itself is devoid of Judge Serpentellis rationale for concluding
that speakerphone participation would be contrary to the OPMA. In
an attempt to receive clarification on the issue of participation by
speakerphone, an attorney who represents boards of education requested an
opinion from the Office of the Attorney General of New Jersey.
The Attorney General responded in a letter dated April 12, 2000. The
Attorney General began his response by noting that he is not authorized to
render legal advice to boards of education, as they are not instrumentalities of
state government. He did point out,
however, that the Sunshine Law defines meeting to include gatherings by
means of communications equipment. He
further advised, on
a number of occasions members of State boards and public bodies subject to the
Open Public Meetings Act and represented by this office have participated in
public meetings by means of speaker telephones without first obtaining a court
order. In those instances all of
the other requirements of the OPMA were followed and appropriate measures were
taken to ensure that members of the public attending the meeting had the
opportunity to hear the member who was not physically present participate in and
take action in connection with the public meeting. The
Attorney General opinion, while providing information to boards of education, is
not to be construed as legal advice to districts.
Also, as neither of the court decisions is binding precedent and because
each decision comes to a completely different conclusion, NJSBA has taken the
position that the most prudent course of action regarding a board member wanting
to participate by speakerphone, would be to seek a court order before allowing
participation. This would protect
any action taken at that meeting from legal challenge.
Of course, contacting your own board attorney regarding this issue is
critical. E-mail Based upon the above understanding of the
sunshine law, we can assume that having a one way flow of information via e-mail
is unlikely to create a violation of the OPMA. This electronic dissemination of information could be
analogized to information packets sent to board members prior to the meeting.
Using technology in such a way could be an effective mechanism for
delivering up to date information. It
would also seem to be appropriate for individual board members to e-mail
requests for supplemental materials. On the other hand, if a quorum of the board
engaged in a real-time chat, or instant messaging, this would appear to qualify
as a meeting by electronic communication equipment, requiring the board to
comply with the notice and right to attend provisions of the sunshine law.
This scenario would raise a problem regarding the publics right of
access in two ways. First, the lack of a central location for witnessing the
deliberations would create the same difficulty referenced above in the
discussion of telephone conferencing. Second,
and more importantly, even if the public were provided notice that a meeting
would take place on-line at a given time, not every member of the community has
access to a computer, raising the question of whether this is truly providing
the public the right to attend. Without New Jersey case law to guide us, it is
difficult to predict with any certainty how a court would view an on-line
meeting if a community member chose to challenge such a meeting.
For each of those reasons, NJSBA recommends that board members not engage
in e-mail discussions or communication with a quorum of its membership.
Whether an exchange of e-mail among less than
a quorum of the board would violate the Act is a more difficult question.
This type of dialogue could be analogized to a committee meeting, which
is exempt from the OPMA as it involves less than a quorum of the board. And, to
the extent that such e-mail communication were strictly limited to prevent a
quorum from participating, it probably would not be a violation of the sunshine
law for a committee of less than a quorum to communicate with each other in this
way. However, board members should be aware that at
least one state has reviewed the interplay between e-mail and its Open Public
Meetings Act to conclude that two way communication between board members via
e-mail could be a violation of its sunshine law.
In opinion 98-28 the Attorney General of Florida concluded that if one
board member e-mails another board member a report to be discussed at an
upcoming meeting, the Florida sunshine law has not been violated.
If that same board member were to e-mail the report and invite comments
from other board members, a violation has occurred.
Although this case is not binding in New Jersey, and there are subtle
differences between the two states laws, it is instructive that at least one
state has concluded that e-mail communication could violate the law. As a guiding principle, therefore, board
members should be aware that once members begin to engage in two way
communication, or a string of communication involving additional board
members, each step brings the board closer to the possibility that the boards
action could be challenged as a violation of the sunshine law.
In addition, having a written memorial of such discussion raises issues
regarding the publics right of access to the e-mail as a public record.
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