Judges: Charlie Crist Attorney General
Filed Date: 2/16/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Ms. Elizabeth M. Hernandez Coral Gables City Attorney Post Office Box 141549 Coral Gables, Florida 33114-1549
Dear Ms. Hernandez:
You ask the following question:
May the City of Coral Gables require persons who wish to attend public meetings of its boards held in facilities where sensitive documents may be stored to present identification as a condition of attendance?
You state that the city has established a number of public boards that are subject to the provisions of the Government in the Sunshine Law, section
The Government in the Sunshine Law, section
Public access to meetings of public boards or commissions is a key element of the Sunshine Law. This office has stated that the term "public" means "the people as a whole" and that the phrase "open to the public" means open to all persons who choose to attend.4 Section
This office has advised public boards or commissions to avoid holding meetings in places not easily accessible to the public. Thus, for example, this office suggested that a public board avoid the use of luncheon meetings to conduct board business since such meetings may have a chilling effect on the public's willingness or desire to attend.5
In Attorney General Opinion 96-55, this office was asked whether a city's police pension board could hold its meetings in a facility where the public has limited access and where there may be a chilling effect on the public's willingness to attend by requiring the public to provide identification, to leave such identification while attending the meeting, and to request permission before entering the room where the meeting is held. This office was concerned that persons wishing to attend the pension board meeting may be reluctant to attend a meeting at a place not normally open to the public where they must provide identification to enter and leave such identification while in the building. This office considered that such a requirement could have a chilling effect on the public's willingness to attend, and this was one of the reasons the board was advised not to hold its meetings at such a facility.
Similarly, the requirement that members of the public must provide identification prior to their attendance at a public meeting could have a chilling effect on the public's willingness to attend. Nothing in the Sunshine Law imposes such a requirement. This office has recognized that, in providing an opportunity for public participation, reasonable rules and policies that ensure the orderly conduct of a public meeting and that require orderly behavior on the part of those attending may be adopted. However, the requirement that persons attending a public meeting must provide identification as a condition of their attendance would not appear to be related to those goals. This is not to say however, that an agency may not impose certain security measures on members of the public entering a public building, such as requiring the public to go through metal detectors or have their purses or briefcases searched.
You note that the boards may address issues touching on security matters. However, as noted above, in the absence of a specific exemption provided by law, boards or commissions subject to the Sunshine Law must conduct meetings that are open to the public, i.e., to all persons who choose to attend. You also state that the building in which the meetings are held may store documents and other information related to security functions. Most, if not all, public offices will contain public records, some of which contain exempt material. The fact that the building may contain records containing confidential material would not appear to justify imposing a condition, such as requiring proof of identification, that may have a chilling effect on the public's willingness to attend. I would note that in an analogous situation, this office, when considering whether an agency may require a person requesting public records to disclose his or her name or address, has previously stated that such a requirement is, in the absence of statute, impermissible as a condition to accessing public records.6 To the extent that meetings have been held in a limited access facility, this office would suggest, as it did in Attorney General Opinion 96-55, that such meetings be held where there is greater public access.
Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the City of Coral Gables may not require persons who wish to attend public meetings of its boards to present identification as a condition of attendance.
Sincerely,
Charlie Crist Attorney General
CC/tjw