Judges: Patricia R. Gleason Assistant Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/9/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Frank C. Chavers Executive Director Housing Authority of the City of Cocoa Cocoa
QUESTIONS:
1. Does the Government in the Sunshine Law permit the board of commissioners of a municipal housing authority to exclude the executive director and other members of the authority's staff from the public meetings of the board when the board is discussing personnel matters?
2. If the answer to question 1 is in the negative, is such an exclusion permissible if members of the news media are present at the meeting?
3. If the first two questions are answered in the negative, is such an exclusion permissible if no other members of the public have chosen to attend the meeting of the board?
SUMMARY:
The Government in the Sunshine Law prohibits the governing body of a municipal housing authority from excluding the executive director and other members of the authority's staff from a public meeting in which the board discusses personnel matters, regardless of whether members of the news media are in attendance or whether any other members of the public are present.
Since your questions are interrelated, they will be answered together.
The Government in the Sunshine Law, s.
(1) All meetings of any board or commission . . . of any agency or authority of any county, municipal corporation or any political subdivision . . . at which official acts are to be taken are declared to be public meetings open to the public at all times . . . . (Emphasis supplied.)
The governing body of a municipal housing authority operating under Ch. 421, F. S., is a public agency within the purview of the Sunshine Law; therefore, the meetings of that body must be ``open to the public.' Attorney General Opinion 076-102. Webster's ThirdInternational Dictionary, at page 1836, defines ``public' to mean ``the people as a whole.' Clearly, the staff of a municipal housing authority are members of the public as well as employees of the authority; hence, such persons may not be excluded from the meetings of the board of commissioners of the authority unless the meetings themselves are exempted by law from the requirements of s.
Moreover, it might be noted that no law permits a public body to discuss personnel matters in secret (except collective bargaining sessions to the extent provided in s.
``[P]ersonnel Matters' are not sacred nor legally privilged, nor do they enjoy any insulation from legislative control. Here we are aided by the history of the act's passage, and conclude that the legislature specifically intended to include ``personnel matters' within the ``open meetings' mandate of the act. (Emphasis supplied by the court.)
See also Wolfson v. State,
Accordingly, your questions are answered in the negative.
Prepared by:
Patricia R. Gleason Assistant Attorney General