On January 3, 2012, an amendment to the Open Meetings Law was enacted that impacts governmental agencies such as school districts and municipalities. The amendment was enacted in response to recommendations made by the Committee on Open Government and has been codified as Section 103(e) of the Public Officers Law. The law goes into effect on Thursday, February 2, 2012.

The new legislation requires two things:

This Open Meetings Law amendment aims to facilitate the public's ability to follow discussions at open meetings by giving the public the opportunity to obtain copies of the same documents that are provided to board members, as long as those documents would otherwise be subject to disclosure under FOIL. Thus, if the government agency can point to a specific FOIL exception that would permit a document to be withheld from disclosure, the document would not have to be made available to the public under this amendment to the Open Meetings Law. In addition, as with any FOIL request, if the governmental agency makes paper copies of the record(s) available prior to or at a meeting, it may charge individuals seeking copies the same fees that it would charge in responding to a FOIL request for those same records.

Section 103(e) authorizes each governmental agency to determine what is "practicable" regarding making its records available. This flexibility is intended to allow the new provision to be implemented reasonably and without unnecessary burden or cost to governmental agencies. For instance, if a board is discussing a 500-page document, it likely would not be practicable to have hard copies of the document available for distribution prior to or at the meeting, even if it is requested. However, it may be practicable for the agency to post an electronic copy of the document on its website prior to the meeting.

Practically speaking, if a governmental agency has a website that is regularly and routinely updated and has a high speed internet connection, full compliance with the new provision will likely not be overly burdensome and/or costly. When a public body posts its meeting agenda, the best practice would be to simultaneously post electronic copies of all documents the public body is scheduled to discuss at the meeting.

If you have any questions regarding your obligations under this amendment to the Open Meetings Law, please contact:

In Buffalo / Niagara Falls call 716-566-2800 or e-mail:

James J. Rooney jrooney@bsk.com

In the Capital District, call 518-533-3000 or e-mail:

Raymond A. Meier rmeier@bsk.com
Richard L. Smith rsmith@bsk.com

In Central New York, call 315-218-8000 or e-mail:

Paul W. Reichel preichel@bsk.com
Brody D. Smith bsmith@bsk.com

In the Mohawk Valley, call 315-738-1223 or e-mail:

Raymond A. Meier rmeier@bsk.com
Linda E. Romano lromano@bsk.com

On Long Island, call 516-267-6300 or e-mail:

Terry O'Neil toneil@bsk.com

In New York City, call 646-253-2300 or e-mail:

Ernest R. Stolzer estolzer@bsk.com

In Northern New York, call 315-343-9116 or e-mail:

John D. Allen jdallen@bsk.com

In the Rochester Region, call 585-362-4700 or e-mail:

Edward P. Hourihan, Jr. ehourihan@bsk.com