COVID-19 has changed the way charter school boards must operate. And it’s made transparency both more important and more complicated.
Whether or not your state has issued clear guidelines with regards to entities that have to comply with the state’s open meeting law but must operate remotely, compliance and transparency are still expected.
The first three steps to continuing to adhere to open meeting laws:
If your bylaws refer to in-person meetings or specifics about compliance with the state’s open meeting laws, you might need to amend them or put a temporary resolution in place.
Even if your state eased public comment requirements, consider the spirit of the law. Ensure that your board adopts appropriate procedures to allow public voices to be heard even while you’re meeting virtually.
And confirm that people have left the virtual meeting room before deliberating.
You might have a separate login for the closed session, so board members log out of one virtual meeting and log in to another for the closed session.
Or, depending on the technology you use, you might have one login for board members and a separate one that is for the public.
It’s prudent to maintain a record of how you operated and made decisions during these challenging times.
Most video conferencing tools have built-in recording functionality. So recording each meeting is easy to do. And unless required by law, you don’t have to share or post your recordings or transcripts.
Watch our on-demand webinar, Open Meeting Law Essentials.
Our experts will answer your questions and walk you through our approach to understanding and simplifying OML compliance.