A Guide to the Freedom of
Information Act for Members of
Boards, Councils, Commissions, and Other Deliberative Public Bodies
Prepared by the Virginia Freedom
of Information Advisory Council
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 and
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.[1]
Public
Records
What
is a public record?
For the purposes of FOIA, a
public record is 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.[2]
All public records are open to the public
unless a specific exemption in law allows the record to be withheld and a
public body invokes such exemption.
What
about retention of public records?
Public records must be retained according to
retention schedules set by the Library of Virginia pursuant to the Virginia
Public Records Act (§ 42.1-76 et seq.). The length of retention depends on the
content of the record. After expiration of the applicable retention period, the
records may be destroyed or discarded.
What about electronic mail?
Emails that relate to public
business are public records, regardless of whether a home or office computer or
phone is used and regardless of whether the communication is through text or a
form of social media or other electronic application. It is the content of the
record, not the equipment or account that is used, that controls.
Emails that qualify as public
records must be retained as required by the Virginia Public Records Act. For
additional information, see the Freedom of Information Advisory Council handout
entitled "Email: Use, Access, and Retention" available on the FOIA
Council website.
Public
Meetings[3]
What is considered a meeting under FOIA for
public bodies?
For the purposes of FOIA, a public
meeting of a public body is any gathering, including work sessions, of the
constituent membership of the public body convened physically or through
electronic communication means pursuant to § 2.2-3708.2 or 2.2-3708.3 where the
members discuss or transact public business of the public body. This meaning
applies:
·
To the public body or to an informal
assemblage of (i) as many as three members or (ii) a quorum, if less than
three, of the constituent membership;
·
Wherever the gathering is held; and
·
Regardless of whether minutes are taken
or votes are cast.
NOTE: This
requirement also applies to any meeting, including work sessions, of any
subgroup of the public body, regardless of how the subgroup is designated (e.g.,
a committee, subcommittee, task force, work group, panel, etc.).
What is public business under FOIA?
For purposes of public meetings,
public business means any activity a public body has undertaken or proposes to
undertake on behalf of the people it represents.[4]
What is not
a meeting under FOIA?
·
The gathering of employees of the public
body; or
·
The gathering or attendance of two or
more public body members 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, and no discussion or transaction of public business takes place among
the members of the public body; or
·
A public forum, informational
gathering, candidate appearance, meeting of another public body, or debate, the
purpose of which is to inform the electorate or to gather information from the
public and not to transact public business or to hold discussions relating to
the transaction of public business, where no discussion or transaction of
public business takes place among the members of the public body, even though
the performance of the members individually or collectively in the conduct of
public business may be a topic of discussion or, debate, or question presented
by others at such public meeting.
Specific
Aspects of Public Meetings
Minutes: Minutes
are required for any meeting of the public body or a subgroup of the public
body.
Voting: No
secret or written ballots are allowed. Votes must be taken at a public meeting
conducted in accordance with FOIA.
Polling: Individual members may be contacted separately
(one-on-one) to ascertain their positions by phone, letter, or email, so long
as the contact is done on a basis that does not constitute a meeting.
Closed Meetings: A closed meeting is allowed only for certain limited purposes as
specifically authorized by FOIA in § 2.2-3711 or other law and requires a
motion stating the purpose, the subject of the closed meeting, and the specific
Code section that authorizes the closed meeting. See § 2.2-3711 of FOIA for
allowable purposes for closed meetings and §§ 2.2-3711 and 2.2-3712 of FOIA for
procedures for holding a closed meeting.
Electronic Meetings: Meetings held through electronic communication means are allowed for public
bodies under heightened procedural and reporting requirements depending on the
type of electronic meeting (i.e., a meeting during a declared state of
emergency, an in-person meeting with individual member(s) using remote
participation, or an all-virtual public meeting). See §§ 2.2-3708.2 and
2.2-3708.3 of FOIA for specific requirements for meetings held under these
circumstances.
Email and Meetings:
The Virginia Supreme Court has held that emails may constitute a
"meeting" as defined under FOIA if there is simultaneous email
communication between three or more members of a public body.[5]
Avoid "reply all" as a general rule. For additional information, see
the FOIA Council handout entitled "Email and Meetings" available on
the FOIA Council's website.
**************************
Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory
Council
Alan
Gernhardt, Executive Director
Joseph
Underwood, Senior Attorney
Updated July 2024
[1] See Subsection B of § 2.2-3700 of the Code of Virginia, the first section of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act.
[2] See the definition of "public records" in § 2.2-3701.
[3] See the definition of "meeting" in § 2.2-3701.
[4]
Id.
[5] See Hill v. Fairfax Cnty. Sch. Bd., 284 Va. 306, 727 S.E.2d 75 (2012); Beck v. Shelton, 267 Va. 482, 494, 593 S.E.2d 195 (2004).