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NEBRASKA
OPEN MEETINGS ACT
NEB. REV. STAT. §§ 84-1407 TO 84-1414 (1999, Cum. Supp.
2004)
A. BASIC PROVISION
B. PUBLIC BODIES WHICH ARE COVERED
C. MEETING DEFINED
D. PUBLIC MEETINGS BY VIDEOCONFERENCING AND TELEPHONE CONFERENCE
CALL
E. PUBLIC MEETINGS; NOTICE REQUIRED AND AGENDA
F. EMERGENCY MEETINGS
G. PUBLIC MEETINGS; MINUTES, VOTING PROCEDURES
H. PUBLIC MEETINGS; RIGHTS OF THE PUBLIC ATTENDING
I. CLOSED SESSIONS OF A PUBLIC BODY
J. CIRCUMVENTION OF THE OPEN MEETINGS ACT
K. ACTIONS FOR ENFORCEMENT
L. CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
A. BASIC PROVISION. The basic statement of our state policy on
public meetings is found at Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-1408. That
statute provides, "[i]t is hereby declared to be the policy
of this state that the formation of public policy is public business
and may not be conducted in secret. Every meeting of a public body
shall be open to the public in order that citizens may exercise
their democratic privilege of attending and speaking at meetings
of public bodies, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution
of the State of Nebraska, federal statutes, and the Open Meetings
Act."
1. History. Section 84-1408
was passed as a part of LB 325 in 1975. That bill repealed previously
existing public meetings provisions and substituted new provisions
which were intended to preserve the features of the previous
law and strengthen and expand their authority. Government
Committee Statement on LB 325, 84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session
(1975). LB 325 was passed to ensure that all meetings of public
bodies would be open to the public, except when protection of
the public interest clearly called for a closed session concerning
specific matters. Id. 2004 Neb. Laws LB 821, § 34 formally established the name of §§ 84-1407
through 84-1414 as the "Open Meetings Act."
2. Purpose. The Nebraska open meetings laws are a statutory commitment
to openness in government. Wasikowski
v. The Nebraska Quality Jobs Board, 264 Neb. 403, 648 N.W.2d 756 (2002); Steenblock
v. Elkhorn Township Board, 245 Neb. 722, 515 N.W.2d 128 (1994); Grein
v. Board of Education of the School District of Fremont, 216 Neb. 158, 343
N.W.2d 718 (1984). Their purpose is to ensure that public policy
is formulated at open meetings of the bodies to which the law is
applicable. Dossett v. First State Bank,
Loomis, NE, 261 Neb. 959,
627 N.W.2d 131 (2001); Marks v. Judicial
Nominating Commission for Judge of the County Court of the
20th Judicial District, 236
Neb. 429, 461 N.W.2d 551 (1990); Pokorny
v. City of Schuyler, 202
Neb. 334, 275 N.W.2d 281 (1979). In Nebraska, the formation of
public policy is public business, which may not be conducted in
secret. Johnson v. Nebraska Environmental
Control Council, 2 Neb.
App. 263, 509 N.W.2d 21 (Neb. Ct. App. 1993).
3. Construction. The open meetings laws should be broadly interpreted
and liberally construed to obtain their objective of openness in
favor of the public. Alderman v. County
of Antelope, 11 Neb. App.
412, 653 N.W.2d 1 (Neb. Ct. App. 2002); Rauert
v. School District I-R of Hall County, 251 Neb. 135, 555 N.W.2d 763 (1996); Grein,
supra.
4. Exceptions. Section 84-1408
requires open meetings except "as
otherwise provided by the Constitution of the State of Nebraska,
federal statutes, and the Open Meetings Act." The Attorney
General has concluded that the Nebraska Legislature is not
covered under the open meetings statutes because the Nebraska
Constitution separately provides for public access to that
body. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 120 (July 25, 1985).
5. Subsequent legislative
limitations. The Legislature holds the
power to decide the scope of citizen access to governmental meetings.
As a result, the Legislature has the right to limit access to public
meetings and the effect of the Open Meetings Act through later
statutory provisions which provide that certain information in
the possession of government should remain confidential without
exception or limitation. Wasikowski v.
The Nebraska Quality Jobs Board, 264 Neb. 403, 648 N.W.2d 756 (2002).
B.
PUBLIC BODIES WHICH ARE COVERED. Under § 84-1409(1), public
bodies covered by the public meetings statutes include: (1) governing
bodies of all state political subdivisions, (2) governing bodies
of all agencies of the executive department of state government
created by law, (3) all independent boards, commissions, bureaus,
committees, councils, subunits, or any other bodies created pursuant
to state law, (4) all study or advisory committees of the executive
department of the state whether of continuing or limited existence,
(5) advisory committees of the governing bodies of political subdivisions,
of the governing bodies of agencies of the executive branch of
state government, or of independent boards, commissions, etc.,
and (6) "instrumentalities exercising essentially public functions."
1. History. The initial portion
of § 84-1409(1) defining
public bodies was originally part of LB 325 passed in 1975. It
has been amended several times to add additional entities to the
list of bodies covered, and the Certificate of Need Review Committee
was removed in 1997. See 1997 Neb. Laws LB 798; 1989 Neb. Laws
LB 429 and LB 311; 1983 Neb. Laws LB 43. The language concerning "instrumentalities
exercising essentially public functions" was added in
1989 to reach entities such as the Nebraska Investment Finance
Authority. Floor Debate on LB 311, 91st Nebraska Legislature,
First Session, May 9, 1989, at 6039, 6040.
2. Cases and Opinions. A number
of cases and opinions all deal with various aspects of the definitions
of public body found in § 84-1409(1).
a. "Political subdivision" is not
defined within the public meetings statutes. However, the Attorney
General has indicated that generally the term denotes any subdivision
of a state which has its purpose carrying out the functions
of the state which are inherent necessities of government and
which have always been regarded as such by the public. 1979-80
Rep. Att'y Gen. 140 (Opinion No. 98, dated April 25, 1979).
Presumably, this term includes cities, counties, villages,
etc., and their governing boards are covered by the open meetings
statutes.
b. In Nixon v. Madison
County Agricultural Society, 217 Neb. 37, 348 N.W.2d 119 (1984), the Court held
that a county agricultural society, organized under the Nebraska
statutes, was subject to the provisions of the open meetings
law. The Court noted that, although the society at issue resembled
a private corporation in some respects, the fact that it had
the right to receive support from the public revenue gave it
a public character. The agricultural society apparently was
an "independent board . . . created
by constitution, statute, or otherwise pursuant to law." Based
upon the Nixon case, the Attorney General concluded that county
extension services which have the right to receive support from
public revenues are subject to the open meetings law. Op. Att'y
Gen. No. 219 (July 24, 1984). Also based upon the Nixon case, the
Attorney General has indicated that county agricultural societies
are subject to the open meetings statutes. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 91007
(January 28, 1991). In addition, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 2-238
(Cum. Supp. 2002) requires that result.
c. In Marks v. Judicial
Nominating Commission for Judge of the County Court of the
20th Judicial District, 236 Neb. 429, 461 N.W.2d
551 (1990), the Court held that the open meetings statutes do not
apply to the activities of a judicial nominating commission which
is meeting to select nominees for judicial vacancies. Such a nomination
procedure does not involve the formulation of public policy subject
to the act.
d. The Nebraska Court of Appeals, in Johnson
v. Nebraska Environmental Control Council, 2 Neb. App. 263, 509 N.W.2d 21 (Neb. Ct. App.
1993), held that the open meetings statutes apply to the governing
bodies of all agencies of the executive branch of government, including
the Nebraska Environmental Control Council.
e. Committees of faculty, administration and students created
by the Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska to advise
the Chancellor of the University in his administrative/management
function with respect to budget cuts were part of the management
structure of the University and not public bodies subject to the
open meetings statutes. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 92020 (February 12,
1992).
f. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 11 (January 20, 1983), the Attorney General
indicated that the Environmental Control Council is a public body
subject to the open meetings law. On the other hand, the Department
of Environmental Control is not. Section 84-1409 applies to governing
bodies of state agencies, not the agencies themselves.
g. An employee grievance appeal hearing conducted
by a hearing officer is not a meeting of a public body since
the word "body" is
commonly understood to refer to a group or number of persons,
and thus does not include an individual conducting a hearing.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 210 (May 16, 1984).
h. In 1989, the Attorney General indicated
that the Central Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission
was not subject to the Nebraska open meetings law because it
was a multi-state body which was not created by constitution
or statute and which was not a governing body of a Nebraska
state agency. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 89008 (February 14, 1989).
However, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 71-3521 (the Waste Compact
agreement itself) provided that meetings of the Compact Commission
must be open to the public with reasonable advance publicized notice,
and that the Compact Commission must adopt by-laws consistent in
scope and principle with the open meetings law of the host state.
Section 71-3521 was repealed by 1999 Neb. Laws LB 530, § 2,
and Nebraska withdrew from the Central Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Compact.
i. A county welfare board is subject to the open meetings law
as an independent board created by statute. 1979-80 Rep. Att'y
Gen. 351 (Opinion No. 244, dated March 4, 1980).
j. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 95014 (February 22,
1995), the Attorney General indicated that the Mayor's Citizen
Review Board, appointed by the Mayor of Omaha to advise the
Mayor with respect to alleged misconduct of police officers,
was not subject to the open meetings statutes because it did
not fall under the definition found in § 84-1409
(1), and because the board was essentially an administrative
body which was part of the management structure of the City.
k. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 93065 (July 27, 1993),
the Attorney General concluded that parole reviews under
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 83-1,111
may be closed, and are not subject to open meetings requirements.
l. The Excellence in Education Council created to make recommendations
to the Governor regarding selection of projects for Education Innovation
grants is a public body which is subject to the open meetings statutes,
and its decisions concerning specific recommendations must be done
in open session. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 94092 (November 22, 1994).
m. The Division of Rehabilitation Services of the State Department
of Education is a public body, and its business must be conducted
in compliance with the provisions of the open meetings statutes.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 93091 (October 22, 1993).
n. The Quality Jobs Board created under the
Quality Jobs Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 774901 through
77-4935 is a public body subject to the Open Meetings Act.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 96071 (October 28, 1996).
o. A County Hospital Authority formed under
the Hospital Authorities Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 23-3579
through 23-35,120 is a public body which is subject to the
Open Meetings Act. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 97012 (February 14, 1997).
p. The Nebraska State Board of Agriculture (the State Fair Board)
is not a public body which is subject to the Open Meetings Act,
primarily because it has no statutory right to public revenue and
also because of case law which indicates that it is a private corporation.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 01038 (November 27, 2001).
q. A county clerk, county attorney and county
treasurer acting as a group under § 32567 (3) to make
an appointment to fill a vacancy on a county board constitute
a public body which is subject to the Open Meetings Act.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 97050 (September 18, 1997).
r. The Attorney General has indicated informally
that the Nebraska Board of Pardons and the Board of Inquiry
and Review created under Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 80-317
through 80-319 to receive and act upon applications submitted
for membership in Nebraska Veterans Homes are subject to the
state's open meetings statutes.
3.
Other Statutes. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 2-238 (Cum. Supp. 2004)
requires county agricultural societies and county fair boards to
comply with the open meetings statutes. Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 85-1502
(1999), all coordination activities conducted by the association
of community college area boards are subject to the open meetings
statutes.
4. Exceptions. The latter portion
of § 84-1409(1) provides
that three entities are not public bodies for purposes of the
Open Meetings Act:
a. Subcommittees. Subcommittees
of the various bodies described earlier in § 84-1409 are not public bodies under the Open
Meetings Act unless a quorum of the public body attends a subcommittee
meeting, or unless those subcommittees are holding hearings, making
policy or taking formal action on behalf of the parent body. For
example, in Meyer v. Board of Regents
of the University of Nebraska,
1 Neb. App. 893, 510 N.W.2d 450 (Neb. Ct. App. 1993), the court
indicated that meetings of an executive subcommittee of the University
of Nebraska Board of Regents with the University President to discuss
his tenure were not subject to the open meetings laws because of
that portion of the statute. The language applying the open meetings
statutes to certain subcommittee meetings when there is a quorum
of the public body present was added to § 84-1409(1)
as a result of LB 1019 passed by the Legislature during the
1992 regular session.
b. Entities Conducting Judicial
Proceedings. Entities conducting
judicial proceedings are not public bodies under the Open Meetings
Act unless the court or other judicial body is exercising rule
making authority, deliberating, or deciding upon the issuance of
administrative orders. LB 325, the original open meetings statute
of 1975, was directed strictly at policy-making bodies which were
legislative or quasi-legislative. Floor Debate on LB 325, 84th
Nebraska Legislature, First Session, May 14, 1975, at 4618.
i. In McQuinn v. Douglas
County School District No. 66, 259 Neb.
720, 612 N.W.2d 198 (2000), the Nebraska Supreme Court held that
a hearing before a school board on the question of the nonrenewal
of a probationary certificated teacher's contract where the matters
before the board pertained solely to disputed adjudicative facts
involved a judicial function, and on that basis, the hearing was
not subject to the open meetings statutes. In that context, a school
board exercises a judicial function if it decides a dispute of
adjudicative fact or if a statute requires it to act in a judicial
manner. Adjudicative facts are those ascertained from proof adduced
at an evidentiary hearing which relate to a specific party.
ii. The Attorney General has determined that hearings before various
agencies are judicial and not subject to the open meetings law:
1975-76 Rep. Att'y Gen. 127 (Opinion No. 105, dated July 14, 1975)
(hearing before a County Board of Mental Health); Op. Att'y Gen.
No. 184 (January 31, 1984) (hearing before the Nebraska Equal Opportunity
Commission); Op. Att'y Gen. No. 210 (May 16, 1984) (hearing before
a hearing officer appointed by the State Personnel Board); Op.
Att'y Gen. No. 02016 (May 21, 2002)(contested case hearing before
the Power Review Board on application of electricity suppliers
for construction or acquisition of generation facilities). But
the Attorney General has concluded that a hearing before the Certificate
of Need Review Committee is covered by the open meetings statutes.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 87019 (February 13, 1987).
iii. Parole hearings conducted by the Board of Parole are judicial
in nature and not subject to the open meetings statutes. However,
other statutes specifically pertaining to operation of the Board
of Parole require that such parole hearings be conducted with elements
of notice and in a manner open to the public. Op. Att'y Gen. No.
93065 (July 27, 1993).
iv. When the State Board of Education holds hearings in contested
cases under the state Administrative Procedure Act, such hearings
are not subject to the Open Meetings Act. The Board is not required
to give notice of such hearings to the public under those statutes,
and it may conduct its deliberations and decision-making process
for such hearings by a telephone conference call. Op. Att'y Gen.
No. 99046 (November 15, 1999).
c. Policy
Cabinet. The Policy Cabinet for the State's Health and
Human Services System is not a public body under the Open Meetings
Act.
C.
MEETING DEFINED. Under § 84-1409(2), meetings, for purposes
of the open meetings statutes, are defined as "all regular,
special, or called meetings, formal or informal, of any public
body for the purposes of briefing, discussion of public business,
formation of tentative policy, or the taking of any action of the
public body." Section 84-1410(5) also provides that the open
meetings statutes shall not apply to "chance meetings or to
attendance at or travel to conventions or workshops of members
of a public body at which there is no meeting of the body then
intentionally convened, if there is no vote or other action taken
regarding any matter over which the public body has supervision,
control, jurisdiction, or advisory power."
1. The legislative history of LB 325, from 1975, indicates that
meetings of a public body do not include social meetings or meetings
which were not called by the body. Government Committee
Hearing on LB 325, 84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session (1975) at 3.
2. However, § 84-1409 was amended by LB 43 in 1983 to include "formal
or informal" meetings. The legislative history of that bill
indicates that a meeting between a state senator and the members
of a local school board to discuss legislation would constitute
an "informal called meeting." Government, Military
and Veterans' Affairs Committee Hearing on LB 43, 88th Nebraska
Legislature, First Session (1983) 5-8.
3. The provision of § 84-1410(5) pertaining to "chance" meetings,
etc., was added by LB 43 in 1983.
4. The legislative history of LB 43 from 1983
indicates that a "meeting" does
not occur absent a quorum. Government Military and Veterans'
Affairs Committee Hearing on LB 43, 88th Nebraska Legislature, First Session
(1983) at 19. In addition, the Attorney General has concluded that
the presence of a majority of the members of a public body is necessary
for a meeting to occur. 1975-76 Rep. Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion No.
116, dated August 29, 1975). In Johnson
v. Nebraska Environmental Control Council, 2 Neb. App. 263, 509 N.W.2d 21 (Neb. Ct. App.
1993), the Nebraska Court of Appeals also indicated that "private
quorum conferences" are an evasion of the law.
5. In Johnson v. Nebraska
Environmental Control Council, 2 Neb.
App. 263, 509 N.W.2d 21 (Neb. Ct. App. 1993), the Court of Appeals
held that informational sessions where the Council heard reports
from staff of the Department of Environmental Control were briefings
which were subject to the requirements of the open meetings statutes.
The Court stated that listening and exposing itself to facts, arguments
and statements constitutes a crucial part of a governmental body's
decision making. As a result, receiving information triggers the
requirements of the statutes, and the open meetings law applies
to meetings at which briefing or the formation of tentative policy
takes place, as well as to meetings where action is contemplated
or taken.
6. Rauert v. School District
I-R of Hall County,
251 Neb. 135, 555 N.W.2d 763 (1996), involved allegations by
the plaintiff that a quorum of the defendant school board met
in the office of the superintendent of schools on a regular
basis for "clandestine" meetings
before the beginning of most scheduled board meetings where business
was discussed and decided and checks were signed to pay claims
which had not been approved in public session. The board then allegedly
moved and voted on business at its public meeting with little or
no discussion in order to deprive the public of the right to be
fully informed. The Supreme Court held that the District Court
properly failed to find a violation of the Open Meetings Act with
respect to those allegations in the absence of any evidence as
to the specific dates and details of the alleged "clandestine" meetings.
7. The Attorney General has indicated that
an "emergency
meeting" may be conducted by electronic and telecommunications
equipment including radio and telephone conferences. 1975-76
Rep. Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion No. 116, dated August 29, 1975).
On the other hand, the open meetings statutes do not authorize
the use of telephone conference calls for non-emergency meetings
of a public body, and absent members of a public body may not
be counted to achieve a quorum through the use of a conference
call. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 92019 (February 11, 1992). [Section
84-1411 was amended in 1999 to allow the governing bodies of
joint entities formed under the Interlocal Cooperation Act
or the governing bodies of a risk management pool or its advisory
committees organized in accordance with the Intergovernmental
Risk Management Act to meet in certain circumstances by telephone
conference call. See 1999 Neb. Laws LB 461. That allowance
was extended to agencies formed under the Joint Public Agency
Act in 2000. See 2000 Neb. Laws LB 968.]
8. An "informational and educational" meeting of a public
body governing a political subdivision where members generally
discuss matters pertaining to their subdivision, hear reports from
various department heads of the subdivision as to their duties
and learn the workings of the subdivision is a meeting of the public
body for "briefing" purposes which is subject to the
open meetings statutes. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 92043 (March 17, 1992).
In addition, the Attorney General has also indicated informally
that a meeting of a public body "for the purpose of receiving
training or doing planning (such as a retreat)" should
probably be treated as subject to the Open Meetings Act.
9. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 94035 (May 11, 1994), the Attorney General
indicated that discussions and deliberations by the State Board
of Education in connection with the selection of a Commissioner
of Education were subject to the requirements of the open meetings
statutes. In addition, that opinion indicated that interviews with
individual candidates for the Commissioner position were also subject
to the requirements of the open meetings statutes, if a quorum
of the Board was present for those interviews. However, in the
latter interview situation, a brief closed session (as discussed
below) might be warranted for a candid discussion by the Board
and the candidate which might potentially elicit responses injurious
to the reputation of an individual.
10. A workshop held by the Board of Regents
of the University of Nebraska with a professional facilitator
to discuss communication practices and the roles of the Board
and the University President was not subject to the Open Meetings
Act on the basis of § 84-1410
(5) which exempts chance meetings or attendance at or travel
to conventions or workshops. The University also asserted that
there would be no briefing, discussion of public business,
formation of tentative policy, vote, or taking of other action
at the workshop. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 04027 (October 20, 2004).
D.
PUBLIC MEETINGS BY VIDEOCONFERENCING AND TELEPHONE CONFERENCE
CALL. Section 84-1411 allows certain public bodies to meet by videoconferencing
and by telephone conference call.
1. Videoconferencing. Section 84-1411 was amended
by LB 635 in 1993 to allow meetings of certain public bodies
by means of videoconferencing. Under the amended § 84-1411(2),
various bodies of state government including state agencies,
boards, commissions, and councils, together with their advisory
committees, organizations created under the Interlocal Cooperation
Act or the Municipal Cooperative Financing Act and the governing
bodies of public power districts with territories of more than
50 counties may hold meetings by videoconferencing if: (1)
reasonable advance publicized notice is given, (2) reasonable
arrangements are made to accommodate the public's right to
attend, hear and speak at the meeting, including seating, recording
by audio and visual recording devices, and an reasonable opportunity
for input such as public comment or questions to at least the
same extent as would be provided absent videoconferencing,
(3) at least one copy of all documents being considered is
available to the public at each site of the videoconference,
(4) at least one member of the public body is present at each
site of the videoconference, and (5) no more than one-half
of the public body's meetings in a calendar year are held by
videoconferencing.
a. Under an amended § 84-1409(3), videoconferencing is defined
as "conducting a meeting involving participants at two
or more locations through the use of audio-video equipment
which allows participants at each location to hear and see
each meeting participant at each other location, including
public input. Interaction between meeting participants shall
be possible at all meeting locations."
b. Under 84-1411(5) a public body may allow a member of the public
or any other witness other than a member of the public body to
appear before the public body by means of video or telecommunications
equipment.
c. 1999 Neb. Laws LB 87, § 100 added
organizations created under the Joint Public Agency Act to
the list of entities permitted to conduct meetings by videoconferencing.
2. Telephone Conference Call. Section 84-1411 was also amended
in 1999 by LB 461 to allow the governing body of a joint entity
formed under the Interlocal Cooperation Act or the governing body
of a risk management pool or its advisory committees organized
in accordance with the Intergovernmental Risk Management Act to
meet by telephone conference call if: (1) the territory represented
by the member public agencies of the entity or pool covers more
than one county, (2) reasonable advance publicized notice is given
which identifies each telephone conference location at which a
member of the entity's or pool's governing body will be present,
(3) all telephone conference meeting sites identified in the notice
are located within public buildings used by members of the entity
or pool or at a place which will accommodate the anticipated audience,
(4) reasonable arrangements are made to accommodate the public's
right to attend, hear, and speak at the meeting, including seating,
recordation by audio recording devices, and a reasonable opportunity
for input such as public comment or questions to at least the same
extent as would be provided if a telephone conference call was
not used, (5) at least one copy of all documents being considered
is available to the public at each site of the telephone conference
call, (6) at least one member of the governing body of the entity
or pool is present at each site of the telephone conference call
identified in the public notice, (7) the telephone conference call
lasts no more than one hour and (8) no more than one-half of the
entity's or pool's meetings in a calendar year are held by telephone
conference call. Nothing in this section dealing with telephone
conference calls prevents the participation in the call by consultants,
members of the press, and other nonmembers of the governing body
at sites not identified in the public notice. These telephone conference
calls may not be used to circumvent any of the public government
purposes established in the Open Meetings Act.
a. 1999 Neb. Laws LB 47, § 2 also provides
that certain meetings of the Judicial Resources Commission
may be held by telephone conference if the criteria for
videoconferencing listed above are met.
b. Section 84-1411 was amended by 2000 Neb.
Laws LB 968, § 85
to provide that certain meetings of an entity formed under
the Joint Public Agency Act may be held by telephone conference
if the criteria for videoconferencing listed above are
met.
3. Circumvention
of Open Meetings Act. Videoconferencing, telephone
conferencing or conferencing by other electronic communication
may not be used to circumvent any of the public government purposes
established by the Open Meetings Act.
E.
PUBLIC MEETINGS; NOTICE REQUIRED AND AGENDA. Section 84-1411
sets out several requirements for the notice which must be given
for a public meeting and for the agenda which must be published:
(1) the public body must give reasonable advance publicized notice
of the time and place of each meeting by a method designated by
the body and recorded in its minutes, (2) that notice must be transmitted
to all members of the body and to the public, (3) the notice must
contain an agenda of subjects known at the time of the publicized
notice or a statement that such an agenda is readily available
for inspection at the principal office of the public body.
1. Agenda. Under § 84-1411(1), an agenda
maintained at the office of a public body for public inspection
must be kept continually current and may not be altered later
than 24 hours before the scheduled commencement of the public
meeting (or 48 hours before commencement of a meeting of a
city council if that meeting is noticed outside the corporate
limits of the municipality). A public body may modify an agenda
to include items of an emergency nature only at such public
meeting.
2. News Media. Section 84-1411(4) requires that the secretary
or other designee of each public body shall maintain a list of
news media requesting notification of meetings and shall make reasonable
efforts to provide advance notification to that list of media of
the time and place of each meeting and the subjects to be discussed
at that meeting.
3. History. The provision of § 84-1411
which prohibits altering an agenda within 24 hours of a meeting
was added in 1983 to prevent addition of last minute matters
to an agenda which did not really represent emergencies. Floor
Debate on LB 43, 88th Nebraska Legislature, First Session,
March 22, 1983, at 1896.
4. In Rauert v. School
District I-R of Hall County, 251 Neb. 135,
555 N.W.2d 763 (1996), the court stated that the Open Meetings
Act requires public bodies to give reasonable advance publicized
notice of the time and place of their meetings, in part so that
the public may attend and speak at those meetings.
5. The purpose of the agenda requirement is to give some notice
of the matters to be considered at the meeting so that persons
who are interested will know which matters are under consideration.
Pokorny v. City of Schuyler, 202 Neb. 334, 275 N.W.2d 281 (1979).
In Pokorny, the agenda at issue, considered with all the previous
records of the city council involved, was sufficient to satisfy
the open meetings statutes. Pokorny also indicates that posting
notice at 10 p.m. on March 15 before a meeting at 10:30 a.m. on
March 16 does not constitute reasonable notice. Posting notice
one week ahead does.
6. In Hansmeyer v. Nebraska
Public Power District,
6 Neb. App. 889, 578 N.W.2d 476 (1998), aff'd, 256 Neb. 1,
588 N.W.2d 589 (1999), the Court of Appeals considered whether
an agenda item which simply stated "Work Order Reports" was
sufficient to give adequate public notice of a decision to
approve a work order which involved expenditure of over $47
million for the construction of a 96-mile power transmission
line across privately held property to connect two power substations.
The Court held that the agenda item was insufficient under
the Open Meetings Act. The court also seemed to suggest, based
upon the Pokorny case, that the sufficiency of an agenda item
might by measured, at least to some degree, in the context
of the other meetings of the public body immediately prior
to the public meeting in question.
7. A member of the public should not be required to hunt up and
read the documents underlying an agenda of a public body to determine
what is actually on that agenda. Hansmeyer
v. Nebraska Public Power District, 6 Neb. App. 889, 578 N.W.2d 476 (1998), aff'd, 256 Neb.
1, 588 N.W.2d 589 (1999).
8. If a public body uses or publishes its agenda
to give the required notice for a particular meeting, then
the notice contained in the agenda must comport with the law
for giving notice of what is to be considered at the meeting.
Hansmeyer v. Nebraska Public Power District, 6 Neb. App. 889,
578 N.W.2d 476 (1998), aff’d,
256 Neb. 1, 588 N.W.2d 589 (1999).
9. A notice of a hearing, given by a school board, which stated
that a hearing would be held, and that an agenda would be available
for inspection, once established, is not proper notice. An agenda
must be available. Allen v. Greeley County
School District No 501,
1994 WL 272223 (Neb. Ct. App. 1994) (Not approved for publication)
10. The Attorney General has concluded that "advance publicized
notice" means a separate, specific advance notice must
be given for each meeting. 1971-72 Rep. Att'y Gen. 314 (Opinion
No. 137, dated August 8, 1972).
11. The Attorney General has also determined that: (1) an agenda
may not be used as the minutes of a meeting, (2) reasonable notice
under the statute means notice reasonably calculated to give appropriate
notice to citizens of the time and place of a meeting and notice
which complies with the formal requirements of the statute. 1975-76
Rep. Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion No. 116, dated August 29, 1975).
12. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 96071 (October 28,
1996), the Attorney General indicated that the Quality Jobs
Board should give its normal 10-day published notice of meeting
rather than an "informal" notice
where the Board had recessed a previous meeting on a tax credit
application pending a renewed meeting call from the Governor
after issuance of an opinion from the Attorney General.
F.
EMERGENCY MEETINGS. Section 84-1411(5) allows public bodies
to hold emergency meetings without reasonable advance public notice.
There are several statutory requirements with respect to such emergency
meetings: (1) the nature of the emergency shall be stated in the
minutes, and any formal action taken shall pertain only to the
emergency, (2) the provisions of § 84-1411(4) dealing with
notice to the media shall be complied with in connection with an
emergency meeting, (3) complete minutes of the emergency meeting
specifying the nature of the emergency and any formal action taken
at the meeting shall be made available to the public no later than
the end of the next regular business day.
1. Under § 84-1411(5), emergency meetings
may be held by electronic or telecommunications equipment.
2. In Steenblock v. Elkhorn
Township Board,
245 Neb. 722, 515 N.W.2d 128 (1994), the Court indicated, in
a case involving allegations of a violation of the open meetings
statutes, that an emergency is defined as "any event or occasional combination of circumstances
which calls for immediate action or remedy; pressing necessity;
exigency; a sudden or unexpected happening; an unforeseen occurrence
or condition." In that case, the Court held that a township
board meeting to consider the job status of a township employee,
convened as an emergency meeting because of a snowstorm, was
not a proper emergency meeting because the employee was given
two week's notice of his resultant termination, and because
the reasons given for the employee's termination were based
upon his past performance.
3. The Attorney General has also stated that an item of an emergency
nature is one that requires immediate resolution by the public
body, and one which has arisen in circumstances impossible to anticipate
at a time sufficient to place on the agenda of a regular, called,
or special meeting of the body. 1975-76 Rep. Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion
No. 116, dated August 29, 1975).
4. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 95063 (August 9, 1995), the Attorney
General indicated that action taken during a meeting of the Nebraska
Equal Opportunity Commission by a telephone conference call which
did not comply with the requirements of the open meetings statutes
for emergency meetings was void.
G.
PUBLIC MEETINGS; MINUTES, VOTING PROCEDURES. Section 84-1413
contains several provisions regarding the minutes which are to
be maintained by public bodies and regarding voting procedures
for public bodies.
1. Minutes. Every public body shall keep minutes of all meetings
showing the time, place, members present and absent, and the substance
of all matters discussed. The minutes of all meetings and evidence
or documentation received or disclosed during open session shall
be public records, open to public inspection during normal business
hours. Minutes shall be written and available for inspection within
10 working days or prior to the next convened meeting, whichever
occurs earlier.
2. Voting procedures. Any action taken on any question or motion
duly made and seconded shall be by roll call vote of the public
body in open session, and the record shall state how each member
voted or if the member was absent or not voting. The roll call
or viva voce vote requirements shall be satisfied by a municipality
which uses an electronic voting device which allows the vote of
each member of the body to be readily seen. The vote to elect leadership
within a public body may be by secret ballot, but the total number
of votes for each candidate shall be recorded in the minutes.
3. In State ex rel. Schuler
v. Dunbar, 208
Neb. 69, 302 N.W.2d 674 (1984), the Supreme Court held that
the requirement of § 84-1413(2)
that the record shall state how each member of a body voted
could not be satisfied by a nunc pro tunc amendment to the
body's minutes showing that the recording of the vote in the
minutes was performed prior to the time the actual recording
in the minutes took place. However, when the same case was
before the court a second time, the court held that, as a general
rule, a public body may, if no intervening rights of a third
person have arisen, order the minutes of its own proceedings
at a previous meeting to be corrected according to the facts
to make them speak the truth. State ex
rel. Schuler v. Dunbar,
214 Neb. 85, 333 N.W.2d 652 (1983).
4. Section 84-1413 is violated by a failure to make or take a
vote in accordance with the statute rather than a failure to record
a properly taken vote. State ex rel. Schuler
v. Dunbar (1983),
supra.
5. Section 84-1413(2) dealing with roll call votes does not require
the record to state that the vote was by roll call but only requires
that the record show if and how each member voted. Neither does
that statute set a time limit for recording the results of a vote.
State ex rel. Schuler v. Dunbar (1983), supra.
6. The statutory requirements here dealing with voting and minutes
are mandatory since the Legislature provided that action taken
in violation of this statute is void. State
ex rel. Schuler v. Dunbar (1981), supra.
7. The legislative history of the original open meetings statutes,
LB 325 from 1975, indicates that the requirement of a roll call
vote was directed at votes on questions that would bind the particular
public body. Other procedural questions were not covered. Government
Committee Hearing on LB 325, 84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session,
(1975) at 10.
8. The Attorney General has stated that nothing in the open meetings
statutes requires approval of the minutes of a public body prior
to their publication. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 162 (December 28, 1981).
9. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 98045 (November 4,
1998), the Attorney General indicated that detailed minutes
of all matters discussed need not be maintained when a public
body is meeting in closed or executive session, so long as
the requirements of § 84-1410
pertaining specifically to the minute entries necessary for
a closed session are met.
H.
PUBLIC MEETINGS; RIGHTS OF THE PUBLIC ATTENDING. Section 84-1412
establishes the rights of members of the public attending a meeting
of a public body.
1. Members of the public have the right to
attend and the right to speak at meetings of public bodies,
and all or any part of a public meeting except closed sessions
under § 84-1410, may
be videotaped, recorded, televised, broadcast, photographed,
etc. by any person.
2. Public bodies may make and enforce reasonable rules and regulations
regarding the conduct of persons attending, speaking at, videotaping,
or recording their meetings. A public body is not required to allow
citizens to speak at each meeting, but it may not forbid public
participation at all meetings.
3. Members of the public cannot be required to identify themselves
as a condition for admission to a public meeting. The public body
may require persons desiring to address the body to identify themselves.
4. No public body shall, to circumvent the open meetings laws,
hold its meeting in a place known to be too small to accommodate
the anticipated audience. However, a public body shall not be in
violation of this prohibition if it meets in its traditional meeting
place in this state.
5. A public body may hold a meeting outside
the State of Nebraska only if all the following conditions
are met: a. a member entity of the public body is located outside
of the state and the meeting is in that member's jurisdiction,
b. all out-of-state locations identified in the notice of meeting
are located within public buildings used by members of the
entity or at a place which will accommodate the anticipated
audience, c. reasonable arrangements are made to accommodate
the public's rights to attend, hear and speak at the meeting,
including making a telephone conference call available at an
instate location to members, the public, or the press, if requested
twenty-four hours in advance, d. no more than 25% of the public
body's meetings in a calendar year are held out-of-state, e.
out-of-state meetings are not used to circumvent any of the
public government purposes established by the Open Meetings Act,
f. reasonable arrangements are made to provide viewing at other
instate locations for a videoconference meeting if requested
fourteen days in advance and if economically and reasonably
available in the area, and g. the public body publishes notice
of the out-of-state meeting at least 21 days before the date
of the meeting in a legal newspaper of statewide circulation.
These requirements for out-of-state meetings were added to § 84-1412 by 2001 Neb. Laws. LB 250, § 2.
6. A public body shall, upon request, make a reasonable effort
to accommodate the public's right to hear discussion and testimony
at a public meeting. Public bodies shall make at least one copy
of reproducible written material discussed at an open meeting available
at the meeting or at the instate location for a telephone conference
call or video conference for examination and copying by members
of the public.
7. History. Many of the provisions in § 84-1412
dealing with the rights of the public were added as a result
of LB 43 in 1983.
8. The language requiring a reasonable effort to allow all parties
to hear a public meeting does not involve an absolute requirement
that all persons present shall be able to hear. Floor Debate
on LB 43, 88th Nebraska Legislature, First Session, March 21, 1983,
at 1794-1795.
I.
CLOSED SESSIONS OF A PUBLIC BODY. Section 84-1410, pertaining
to closed sessions of public body, has generated the most controversy
of all the portions of the open meetings statutes. Section 84-1410(1)
provides that any public body may hold a closed session by the
affirmative vote of a majority of its voting members if a closed
session is clearly necessary (1) for the protection of the public
interest, or (2) for the prevention of needless injury to an individual,
if such individual has not requested a public meeting. Closed meetings
may not be held for discussion of the appointment or election of
a new member to any public body. Nothing in § 841410 should
be construed to require that any meeting be closed to the public.
1. Under § 84-1410(1), examples of reasons
for a closed session include:
a. Strategy sessions with respect to collective bargaining, real
estate purchases, pending litigation, or litigation which is imminent
as evidenced by communication of a claim or threat of litigation
to or by the public body.
b. Discussion regarding deployment of security personnel or devices.
c. Investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal
misconduct.
d. Evaluation of the job performance of a person when necessary
to prevent needless injury to the reputation of a person and if
such person has not requested a public meeting.
These examples are not exclusive; they are merely examples, and
other reasons may exist. Government Committee Hearing on LB
325,
84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session (1975) at page 3; 1975-76
Rep. Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion No. 116, dated August 29, 1975); Op.
Att'y Gen. No. 65 (April 17, 1985).
2. The vote to hold a closed session must be
taken in open session, and the vote of each member on the question
of holding a closed session, the reason for the closed session,
and the time when the closed session commences and ends must
be recorded in the minutes. Only those purposes set forth in
the minutes as the reason for the closed session may be considered
during the closed session. The meeting must be reconvened in
open session before any formal action may be taken, and "formal action" in that context
is defined in § 84-1410(2) to mean a collective decision or
a collective commitment or promise to make a decision on any question,
motion, proposal, resolution, order, or ordinance or formation
of a position or policy. Under an amendment to § 84-1410(2)
effected by LB 621 in 1994, formal action by the body in that context
does not include, "negotiating guidance given by members
of the public body to legal counsel or other negotiators in a
closed [strategy] session authorized [for collective bargaining,
real estate purchases, etc.] under subdivision 1 (a) of [Section
84-1410]."
3. Any member of the public body can challenge the continuation
of a closed session if he or she determines that the session has
exceeded the original reason for the closed session, or if he or
she contends that the closed session is neither clearly necessary
for the protection of the public interest or the prevention of
needless injury to the reputation of an individual. Such a challenge
can only be overruled by a majority vote of the members of the
public body. Such challenge and its disposition shall be recorded
in the minutes.
4. History. One of the purposes for the initial open meetings
statute, LB 325 from 1975, was to tighten restrictions on closed
or executive sessions of public bodies. Introducer's Statement
of Purpose for LB 325, 84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session
(1975). The fourth example of reasons for closed meetings was added
by LB 43 in 1983. The provisions dealing with pending or imminent
litigation and defining formal action in a closed session were
added as a part of LB 1019 in 1992.
5. It is not entirely clear what vote of the
public body is necessary to go into closed session. The statute
states that "an affirmative
vote of a majority of [the body's] voting members" is necessary
for a closed session. On its face, the normal meaning of this language
would presumably be a majority of those members present and voting.
This is particularly true since the later subsection (3) of § 84-1410
requires a "majority vote of the members of the public body" to
overrule a challenge to the continuation of the closed session.
However, the legislative history of LB 325 makes it quite clear
that the legislators intended to make the requirement for a closed
session a vote of the majority of the body rather than a vote of
the majority of those present and voting. Floor Debate on
LB 325,
84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session, May 14 and May 20, 1975,
at 4616, 5015. Moreover, there is some indication that "voting" members
in § 84-1410(1) refers to particular members of bodies such
as the Board of Regents which has both voting and non-voting
members. Government Committee Hearing on LB 325, 84th Nebraska
Legislature, First Session (1975) at 27-28. The safer approach
is to authorize a closed session of the public body by a majority
vote of the members of the body rather than by a majority vote
of just those members present.
6. The landmark case for what is permissible in a closed session
is Grein v. Board of Education of the School
District of Fremont,
216 Neb. 158, 343 N.W.2d 718 (1984). Grein involved a closed session
by a school board for discussion of the low bid on a construction
project. The supreme court held that the closed session was improper.
That case indicates:
a. Provisions of the statute permitting closed sessions must be
narrowly and strictly construed.
b. The public interest which is protected
in § 84-1410(1)
is "that shared by citizens in general and by the community
at large concerning pecuniary or legal rights and liabilities." 216
Neb. at 165, 343 N.W.2d at 723; Wasikowski
v. The Nebraska Quality Jobs Board, 264 Neb. 403, 648 N.W.2d 756 (2002).
c. Good faith motivation for a closed session is not a cure for
non-compliance with the public meetings laws.
d. The prohibition against decisions or formal actions in a closed
session proscribes crystallization of a secret decision and then
ceremonial acceptance in open session.
e. There is a guiding principle with respect
to closed sessions: "If
a public body is uncertain about the type of session to be conducted,
open or closed, bear in mind the policy of openness promoted by
the Public Meetings Laws and opt for a meeting in the presence
of the public." 216 Neb. at 168, 343 N.W.2d at 724.
7. Pokorny v. City of
Schuyler, supra, indicates that there is
nothing in the open meetings statutes which requires that negotiations
for the purchase of land be conducted in open meeting, but deliberations
of a public body as to whether an offer to purchase should be made
must be done in an open meeting.
8. In a case involving the revocation of a
land surveyor's license, the supreme court held that a closed
session was improper since there was no showing of either necessity
or of the reasons set out in § 84-1410(1). Simonds
v. Board of Examiners of Land Surveyors, 213 Neb. 259, 329 N.W.2d
92 (1983).
9. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 79-832 (1996), dealing
with hearings involving cancellation, amendment or termination
of a teacher's contract mandates a closed hearing upon an affirmative
vote of a majority of the school board's members present and
voting and upon specific request of the certificated employee
or the certificated employee's representative. However, under
that section, formal action by the school board requires that
the school board reconvene in open session. Stephens
v. Board of Education of School District No. 5, Pierce County, 230 Neb.
38, 429 N.W.2d 722 (1988).
10. The provisions of the open meetings statutes dealing with
closed sessions, in part, reflect the Legislature's judgment of
the appropriate balance between the public's interest in open discussion
of governmental issues and the rights of individuals, such as state
employees, to have their performance as employees considered in
private if they so choose. Meyer v. Board
of Regents of the University of Nebraska, 1 Neb. App. 893, 510 N.W.2d 450 (Neb. Ct. App. 1993).
11. If the primary purpose for a closed session of a public body
is authorized under the open meetings statutes, then any necessary
discussion of incidental matters is also authorized. Meyer
v. Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska, 1 Neb. App. 893, 510
N.W.2d 450 (Neb. Ct. App. 1993). In the Meyer case, the Nebraska
Court of Appeals indicated that the University Board of Regents
could properly discuss the appointment of an interim president
for the University during a closed session called to evaluate and
consider the employment status of the president.
12. If a person who is present at a meeting of a public body observes
an alleged violation of the Open Meetings Act in the form of an
improper closed session and fails to object, then that person waives
his or her right to object to the closed session at a later date.
Wasikowski v. The Nebraska Quality Jobs
Board, 264 Neb. 403, 648
N.W.2d 756 (2002). However, such a waiver applies only to individuals
present at the meeting who observed the allegedly improper closed
session, and does not prevent other citizens from objecting to
the propriety of the closed session in a later action. Id.
13. The statutory provision allowing public
bodies to hold closed sessions for "strategy sessions" regarding
litigation or threatened litigation by necessity encompasses
discussions and decisions regarding whether to make or reject
a settlement offer. Such decisions regarding litigation strategy
should not have to be discussed publicly, during an open session,
in front of the body's opponent. Becker
v. Allen, 1996 WL 106217
(Neb. Ct. App. 1996) (Not approved for publication). In addition,
the strategic meetings which a public body has with its attorney
when threatened with or engaged in litigation, in which the
public body may give direction to its attorney, are protected
by the attorney-client privilege. Id.
14. Opinions of the Attorney General:
a. A closed session is not proper simply because matters permitting
a closed session might arise. Such a closed session is permitted
only when such matters do arise and must be dealt with. Op. Att'y
Gen. No. 94035 (May 11, 1994); Op. Att'y Gen. No. 11 (January 20,
1983).
b. Discussions of legal matters between a county board and a county
attorney involving pending litigation or legal consequences of
specific action are suitable for a closed session. 1975-76 Rep.
Att'y Gen. 150 (Opinion No. 116, dated August 29, 1975).
c. A public body can go into a proper closed session for discussion
of personnel matters and then reconvene for a public vote with
no lengthy explanation of the rationale underlying the decision.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 89063 (October 12, 1989).
d. The closed session exception for prevention of needless injury
to reputation is for the protection of individual employees and
not for the protection of governmental officers on the public body.
Id.
e. In Op. Att'y Gen. No. 98045 (November
4, 1998), the Attorney General indicated that detailed minutes
of all matters discussed need not be maintained when a
public body is meeting in closed or executive session, so
long as the requirements of § 84-1410
pertaining specifically to the minute entries necessary for
a closed session are met.
f. A county clerk, county attorney and county
treasurer acting as a group under § 32567 (3) to make an appointment to fill
a vacancy on a county board may not go into closed session for
evaluation of the merits of the candidates based upon the express
language of § 84-1410 (1). Op. Att'y Gen. No. 97050
(September 18, 1997).
g. The Attorney General has indicated informally
that developing testimony for an upcoming Legislative hearing
is not a proper reason for a state agency to go into closed
session. On the other hand, the Attorney General has also
indicated informally that discussion of "sensitive medical and financial information" pertaining
to specific individuals who applied for admission to a state
home could be conducted in a closed session so long as
the actual vote on admission was done in an open meeting.
J.
CIRCUMVENTION OF THE OPEN MEETINGS ACT. Section 84-1410(4)
prohibits a person or a public body from circumventing the purpose
of the open meetings statutes by failing to invite a portion of
its members to a meeting or by designating itself as a subcommittee
of the whole body. That section also prohibits the use of any closed
session, informal meeting, chance meeting, social gathering, e-mail,
fax or other electronic communication for the purpose of circumventing
the requirements of the open meetings statutes.
1. This provision was added to the open meetings statutes by LB
43 in 1983. This section was directed at the intentional circumvention
of the open meetings statutes rather than inadvertent acts. Government,
Military and Veterans' Affairs Committee Hearing on LB 43, 88th
Nebraska Legislature, First Session (1983) at 5.
2. 2004 Neb. Laws LB 1179 added e-mails, faxes and other electronic
communications to the list of mediums which could not be used to
circumvent the requirements of the Open Meetings Act.
3. The Attorney General has indicated that
intent is a necessary element of the conduct prohibited by § 84-1410
(4), and that members of a public body can communicate with
other members of that body by electronic means, even if that
communication is directed to a quorum of the body, so long
as there is no course of communication which becomes sufficiently
involved so as to evidence an intent or purpose to circumvent
the Open Meetings Act. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 04007 (March 8, 2004).
K.
ACTIONS FOR ENFORCEMENT. Section 84-1414 sets out various enforcement
options available to individuals who believe that the open meetings
statutes have been violated.
1. Any motion, resolution, rule, ordinance, or formal action of
a public body made or taken in violation of the public meetings
statutes shall be declared void by the district court if the suit
is commenced within 120 days of the meeting of the public body
at which the alleged violation occurred. Any such motion or other
action taken in substantial violation of the public meeting statutes
shall be voidable by the district court if the suit is commenced
after more than 120 days but within one year of the meeting of
the public body in which the alleged violation occurred. A suit
to void any final action shall be commenced within one year of
the action.
2. Under § 84-1414(3), any citizen of this state may commence
a suit in the district court of the county in which the public
body ordinarily meets or in which the plaintiff resides for the
purpose of requiring compliance with or preventing violations of
the open meetings statutes, for the purpose of declaring an action
of a public body void, or for the purpose of determining the applicability
of the open meetings statutes to discussions or decisions of the
public body. The court may order payment of reasonable attorney's
fees and court costs to a successful plaintiff in a suit brought
under § 84-1414(3).
3. The Attorney General and the county attorney of the county
in which the public body ordinarily meets shall enforce the provisions
of the open meetings statutes.
4. History. The original version of § 84-1414(1),
which was a part of LB 325 passed in 1975, simply provided
that actions taken in violation of the public meetings statutes
should be void. The void/voidable distinction was added by
LB 43 in 1983. The apparent intent of that later language was
to allow a court to void an action by a public body taken when
there was any violation of the open meetings statutes if the
action was filed within four months of the meeting in question.
After four months, the violation of the open meetings statutes
would have to be substantial to allow a court to void the action
of the public body. In any event, no action could be brought
after one year of the public meeting in question. Floor
Debate on LB 43, 88th Nebraska Legislature, First Session, March 22,
1983, at 1892.
5. The legislative history of LB 325 from 1975 indicates that
the initial intent of that statute was to have the county attorney
responsible for enforcement proceedings involving public bodies
at a local level. The Attorney General would be responsible for
enforcement against state entities. Floor Debate on LB 325, 84th
Nebraska Legislature, First Session, May 14 1975, at 4620.
6. The Nebraska Supreme Court has indicated that action by a public
body which is proper under the open meetings statutes may cure
defects in actions previously taken by the same public body. In
such an instance, an action by a public body which previously might
have been declared void will be declared proper. Pokorny
v. City of Schuyler, supra. On the other hand, under those circumstances,
the original improper meeting itself is still void. Steenblock
v. Elkhorn Township Board, 245 Neb. 722, 515 N.W.2d 128 (1994).
Pokorny also indicates that the effect of an invalid public meeting
under the open meetings laws is the same as if the meeting had
never occurred.
7. A county lacks capacity to maintain an action to declare its
official conduct void for noncompliance with the open meetings
statutes. County of York v. Johnson, 230 Neb. 403, 432 N.W.2d 215
(1988).
8. Where teachers had notice of a termination hearing, appeared,
and no objection was made to a failure of the school board to give
proper notice under the open meetings statutes, those teachers
waived any objection they might have had to violations of the open
meetings law. Alexander v. School District
No. 17 of Thurston County,
197 Neb. 251, 248 N.W.2d 335 (1976).
9. Any person who has notice of a meeting and attends the meeting
is required to object specifically to a lack of public notice at
the meeting or waive his rights to object on that ground under
the open meetings statutes. A timely objection will permit the
public body to remedy its mistake promptly and defer formal action
until the required public notice can be given. Wasikowski
v. The Nebraska Quality Jobs Board, 264 Neb. 403, 648 N.W.2d 756 (2002);
Otey v. State, 240 Neb. 813, 485 N.W.2d 153 (1992); Witt
v. School District No. 70, Frontier County, 202 Neb. 63, 273 N.W. 2d 669
(1979).
10. If a person present at a meeting observes
and fails to object to an alleged open meetings violation in
the form of a failure to conduct rollcall votes before taking
action on questions or motions pending, that person waives
his or her right to object at a later date. Hauser
v. Nebraska Police Standards Advisory Council, 264 Neb. 944, 653 N.W.2d
240 (2002). Similarly, if a person who attends a meeting of
a public body believes that copies of documents discussed by
the body should be made available to the public at the meeting,
a timely objection should be made, or that person waives his
or her right to object. Stoetzel & Sons, Inc. v.
City of Hastings, 265 Neb. 637, 658 N.W.2d 636 (2003).
11. To preserve objections to the conduct of
a public meeting, the person raising those objections must
make them to the public body itself, or to one of its members.
Stoetzel & Sons, Inc.
v. City of Hastings, 265 Neb. 637, 658 N.W.2d 636 (2003).
12. Actions for relief under the open meetings
statutes are tried as equitable cases, given the fact that
the relief sought is in the nature of a declaration that particular
action taken in violation of the laws is void or voidable.
Such cases are also considered as equitable cases on appeal.
Stoetzel & Sons, Inc. v. City
of Hastings, 265 Neb. 637, 658 N.W.2d 636 (2003); Hauser
v. Nebraska Police Standards Advisory Council, 264 Neb. 944, 653
N.W.2d 240 (2002); Hansmeyer v. Nebraska
Public Power District,
6 Neb. App. 889, 578 N.W.2d 476 (1998), aff'd, 256 Neb. 1,
588 N.W.2d 589 (1999).
13. The Hansmeyer case also discusses the distinction
between "void" and "voidable" under § 84-1414. "Void" means
ineffectual and having no legal force or binding effect, while "voidable" means
that which may be avoided or declared void, not absolutely
void. In Hansmeyer, the court considered factors such as whether
any purpose would be served or whether decisions were made
in secret without public discussion in determining whether
a voidable vote by the Nebraska Public Power District should,
in fact, be voided.
14. Once a meeting has been declared void pursuant to the Open
Meetings Act, the members of the public body involved are prohibited
from considering any information which they obtained at the illegal
meeting. Alderman v. County of Antelope, 11 Neb. App. 412, 653
N.W.2d 1 (2002).
15. The decision to award attorneys fees to
a "successful
plaintiff' in an action under § 84-1414 is discretionary with
the trial court. Hansmeyer v. Nebraska
Public Power District, 6
Neb. App. 889, 578 N.W.2d 476 (1998), all' d, 256 Neb. 1, 588 N.W.2d
589 (1999). The court in Hansmeyer also held that the plaintiffs
in that case were "successful plaintiffs" who could recover
attorneys fees under § 84-1414 because there was a finding
that a substantial violation of the open meetings statutes
had occurred, and because the public body involved amended
its practices to prepare proper agendas after the plaintiffs
filed their action. The court reached that conclusion even
though it ultimately determined that the improper action of
the public body at issue should not be voided.
L.
CRIMINAL SANCTIONS. Section 84-1414(4) provides that any member
of a public body who knowingly violates or conspires to violate
the Open Meetings Act, or who attends or remains at a meeting knowing
that the public body is in violation of any provision of that Act,
shall be guilty of a Class IV misdemeanor for a first offense,
and a Class III misdemeanor for a second or subsequent offense.
1. The legislative history of LB 325 from 1975 indicates that
the criminal sanctions included in this section were originally
directed at intentional behavior rather than at inadvertence. Government
Committee Hearing on LB 325, 84th Nebraska Legislature, First Session
(1975) at 16.
2. The criminal sanctions for violation of the open meetings statutes
were increased to their present level as a result of LB 1019 passed
in 1992. Also, that same bill in 1992 added language which made
knowingly remaining at or attending a meeting in violation of the
open meetings statutes a crime. The present language which applies
criminal sanctions to those members of a public body who remain
at a meeting knowing that the public body is in violation of the
open meetings statutes was added by LB 621 in 1994.
3. Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-106 (Cum.
Supp. 2004), a Class IV misdemeanor is punishable by a fine
of from $100 to $500 and no imprisonment. In addition, a Class
Ill misdemeanor is punishable by up to 3 months imprisonment
or up to a $500 fine, or both. A Class III misdemeanor has
no minimum penalty.
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