Asked & Answered

A&A: Closed sessions to “items discussed not falling within their jurisdiction”

Closed sessions to discuss “items not falling within their jurisdiction.” Q: I am a student at community college. After a board meeting of the Associated Students was adjourned, the president of the board asked all non-board members to leave the room so that the assembled quorum could talk about “items not falling within their jurisdiction.” Was this a violation of the Brown Act? A: According to an opinion of the California Attorney General, meetings of a

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A&A: Closed sessions, labor negotiations, and disclosure of outcome

Closed sessions, labor negotiations, and disclosure of outcome Q: I am a reporter and I recently covered a meeting where the City Council voted to replace the city’s police department with county Sheriff’s services. A number of opponents to this move have suggested that the Brown Act was violated when the council met in closed session to call for the Sheriff’s proposal under the heading of labor negotiations, and did not report the outcome of

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A&A: Closed sessions under the Brown Act

Closed sessions under the Brown Act Q: Members of my school board choose new members as they leave the board. Can this School Board have closed sessions to discuss and decide which new Board member to elect to the Board or do these have to be public discussions? A: If the board of the public charter school is a “legislative body” under the Brown Act, it is subject to the Brown Act and can discuss

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A&A: Minutes and closed sessions

Minutes and closed sessions Q: My question is: Must the minutes reflect a teleconference with the board’s attorney to otherwise justify a closed session under 54956.9 that does not state that the attorney was present at the meeting in the minutes?  Also, if the minutes are simply in error and there actually was a teleconference with the attorney, would this per se invalidate the board action from that closed session, or would only proving the

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A&A: Is a contracted City Attorney a city employee?

Is a contracted City Attorney a city employee? Q: Are contracted City Attorneys considered city employees? I’m asking because the city I cover has scheduled a closed-session meeting to review the job performance of its City Attorney. This comes at a time when a few council members want to replace the current attorney, who charges $130 per hour, with a full-time, in-house attorney that would cost more. If the City Attorney technically is not a

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