ARIZONA STATE SENATE
Phoenix, Arizona
REVISED
city and town unification
(NOW: open meeting; agenda; exception)
Purpose
Allows a member of a public
body, during a public meeting, to present a brief summary of current events
without listing in the agenda the specific matters to be summarized.
Background
Arizona’s Open Meeting Law
(OML) requires that meetings of public bodies be conducted openly and that
notices and agendas be provided for such meeting that contain such information
as is reasonably necessary to inform the public of the matters to be discussed
or decided. The Legislature adopted the
OML in 1962 to ensure that the public’s business is conducted openly, and that
the public is able to attend and listen to the deliberations and proceedings of
public bodies.
A public body is defined as
the Legislature, all boards and commissions of the state or political
subdivisions, all multimember governing bodies of departments, agencies,
institutions and instrumentalities whose boards of directors are appointed or
elected by the state or political subdivision.
Public body includes quasi-judicial bodies and all standing, special or
advisory committees or subcommittees of, or appointed by, such public body.
The OML requires a public
body to give notice of all public meetings to members of the public and to
members of the public body. The notice must include an agenda that lists the
specific matters to be discussed, considered or decided at the meeting. Current
statute allows the chief administrator or presiding officer of a public body to
present a brief summary of current events without listing in the agenda the
specific matters to be summarized. This
is allowed only if the overall subject is listed on the agenda and the public
body does not propose, discuss, deliberate or take legal action at the meeting
on any matter in the summary. H.B. 2364
allows other members of the public body to present a brief summary of current
events.
There is no anticipated
fiscal impact to the state general fund associated with this legislation.
Provisions
1. Allows a member of a public body, during a public meeting, to present a brief summary of current events without listing in the agenda the specific matters to be summarized. Stipulates that the overall summary must be listed on the agenda and the public body may not propose, discuss, deliberate or take legal action at the meeting on any matter in the summary unless the specific matter is properly noticed for legal action.
2. Provides for a general effective date.
Amendment
Adopted by Committee
· The strike everything amendment was adopted.
Senate Action House Action
GOV 4/5/02 DPA/SE 5-1-0-0 Final Read 5/16/02 57-0-3-0
3rd Read 5/6/02 25-2-3-0
Signed by Governor 5/20/02
Chapter 247
Prepared by Senate Staff
May 29, 2002