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Public Act 094-1058
Public Act 1058 94TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 094-1058 |
SB0585 Enrolled |
LRB094 04323 JAM 34352 b |
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| AN ACT concerning government.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing | Sections
1.02, 2.01, 2.05, and 2.06 and by adding Section 7 as | follows:
| (5 ILCS 120/1.02) (from Ch. 102, par. 41.02)
| Sec. 1.02. For the purposes of this Act:
| "Meeting" means any gathering , whether in person or by | video or audio conference, telephone call, electronic means | (such as, without limitation, electronic mail, electronic | chat, and instant messaging), or other means of contemporaneous | interactive communication, of a majority of a quorum of the | members of a
public body held for the purpose of discussing | public
business.
| "Public body" includes all legislative, executive, | administrative or advisory
bodies of the State, counties, | townships, cities, villages, incorporated
towns, school | districts and all other municipal corporations, boards, | bureaus,
committees or commissions of this State, and any | subsidiary bodies of any
of the foregoing including but not | limited to committees and subcommittees
which are supported in | whole or in part by tax revenue, or which expend tax
revenue, | except the General Assembly and committees or commissions | thereof.
"Public body" includes tourism boards and convention | or civic center
boards located in counties that are contiguous | to the Mississippi River with
populations of more than 250,000 | but less than 300,000. "Public body"
includes the Health | Facilities Planning Board. "Public body" does not
include a | child death review team or the Illinois Child Death Review | Teams
Executive Council established under
the Child Death | Review Team Act or an ethics commission acting under the State |
| Officials and
Employees Ethics Act.
| (Source: P.A. 92-468, eff. 8-22-01; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| (5 ILCS 120/2.01) (from Ch. 102, par. 42.01)
| Sec. 2.01. All meetings required by this Act to be public | shall be held at
specified times and places which are | convenient and open
to the public. No meeting
required by this | Act to be public shall be held on a legal holiday unless
the | regular meeting day falls on that holiday.
| A quorum of members of a public body must be physically | present at the location of an open meeting. If, however, an | open meeting of a public body (except one with jurisdiction | limited to a specific geographic area that is less than | statewide) is held simultaneously at one of its offices and one | or more other locations in a public building, which may include | other of its offices, through an interactive video conference | and the public body provides public notice and public access as | required under this Act for all locations, then members | physically present in those locations all count towards | determining a quorum. "Public building", as used in this | Section, means any building or portion thereof owned or leased | by any public body. The requirement that a quorum be physically | present at the location of an open meeting shall not apply, | however, to State advisory boards or bodies that do not have | authority to make binding recommendations or determinations or | to take any other substantive action.
| A quorum of members of a public body that is not a public | body with statewide jurisdiction must be physically present at | the location of a closed meeting. Other members who are not | physically present at a closed meeting of such a public body | may participate in the meeting by means of a video or audio | conference.
| (Source: P.A. 88-621, eff. 1-1-95.)
| (5 ILCS 120/2.05) (from Ch. 102, par. 42.05)
| Sec. 2.05. Recording meetings.
Subject to the provisions of |
| Section
8-701 of the Code of Civil Procedure
"An Act in | relation
to the rights of witnesses at proceedings conducted by | a court,
commission, administrative agency or other tribunal in | this
State which are televised or broadcast or at which motion
| pictures are taken", approved July 14, 1953, as amended , any | person may
record the
proceedings at meetings required to be | open by this Act by tape, film or
other means. The authority
| holding the meeting shall prescribe reasonable rules to govern
| the right to make such recordings.
| If a witness at any meeting required to be open by this Act
| which is conducted by a commission, administrative agency or
| other tribunal, refuses to testify on the grounds that he may
| not be compelled to testify if any portion of his testimony is
| to be broadcast or televised or if motion pictures are to be
| taken of him while he is testifying, the authority holding the
| meeting shall prohibit such recording during the testimony of
| the witness. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
| extend the right to refuse to testify at any meeting not
| subject to the provisions of Section 8-701 of the Code of Civil | Procedure
"An Act in relation to the rights
of witnesses at | proceedings conducted by a court, commission,
administrative | agency or other tribunal in this State which are
televised or | broadcast or at which motion pictures are taken",
approved July | 14, 1953, as amended .
| (Source: P.A. 82-378.)
| (5 ILCS 120/2.06) (from Ch. 102, par. 42.06)
| Sec. 2.06. Minutes. | (a) All public bodies shall keep written minutes of all | their
meetings, whether open or closed,
and a verbatim
record | of all their closed meetings in the form of an audio or video | recording.
Minutes
shall include, but need not be limited to:
| (1) the date, time and place of the meeting;
| (2) the members of the public body recorded as either | present or absent and whether the members were physically | present or present by means of video or audio conference ;
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| and
| (3) a summary of discussion on all matters proposed, | deliberated,
or decided, and a record of any votes taken.
| (b) The minutes of meetings open to the public shall be | available for
public inspection within 7 days of the approval | of such minutes by the public
body. Beginning July 1, 2006, at | the time it complies with the other requirements of this | subsection, a public body that has a website that the full-time | staff of the public body maintains shall post the minutes of a | regular meeting of its governing body open to the public on the | public body's website within 7 days of the approval of the | minutes by the public body. Beginning July 1, 2006, any minutes | of meetings open to the public posted on the public body's | website shall remain posted on the website for at least 60 days | after their initial posting.
| (c) The verbatim record may be destroyed without | notification to or the
approval of a records commission or the | State Archivist under the Local Records
Act or the State | Records Act no less than 18 months after the completion of the
| meeting recorded but only after:
| (1) the public body
approves the destruction of a | particular recording; and
| (2) the public body approves minutes of the closed | meeting that meet the
written minutes requirements of | subsection (a) of this Section.
| (d) Each public body shall periodically, but no less than
| semi-annually,
meet to review minutes of all closed meetings. | At such
meetings a determination shall be made, and reported in | an open session that
(1) the need for confidentiality still | exists as to all or part of those
minutes or (2) that the | minutes or portions thereof no
longer require
confidential
| treatment and are available for public inspection. The failure | of a public body to strictly comply with the semi-annual review | of closed session written minutes, whether before or after the | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General | Assembly, shall not cause the written minutes or related |
| verbatim record to become public or available for inspection in | any judicial proceeding, other than a proceeding involving an | alleged violation of this Act, if the public body, within 60 | days of discovering its failure to strictly comply with the | technical requirements of this subsection, reviews the closed | session minutes and determines and thereafter reports in open | session that either (1) the need for confidentiality still | exists as to all or part of the minutes or verbatim record, or | (2) that the minutes or recordings or portions thereof no | longer require confidential treatment and are available for | public inspection.
| (e) Unless the public body has made a determination that | the verbatim
recording no longer requires confidential | treatment or otherwise consents to
disclosure, the verbatim | record of a meeting closed to the public shall not be
open for | public inspection or subject to discovery in any administrative
| or judicial proceeding other than one brought to enforce this | Act. In the case of a civil
action brought to enforce this Act, | the court, if the judge believes such an examination is | necessary, must conduct such in camera
examination of the | verbatim record as it finds appropriate in order to
determine | whether there has been a violation of this Act. In the case of | a
criminal proceeding, the court may conduct an
examination in | order to
determine what portions, if any, must be made | available to the parties for use
as evidence in the | prosecution. Any such initial inspection must be held in | camera. If the court
determines that a complaint or suit | brought for noncompliance under this Act
is valid it may, for | the purposes of discovery, redact from the minutes of the
| meeting closed to the public any information deemed to qualify | under the
attorney-client privilege. The provisions of this | subsection do not supersede
the privacy or confidentiality | provisions of State or federal law.
| (f) Minutes of meetings closed to the public shall be | available only after
the public body determines that it is no | longer necessary to protect the public
interest or the privacy |
| of an individual by keeping them confidential.
| (Source: P.A. 93-523, eff. 1-1-04; 93-974, eff. 1-1-05; 94-28, | eff. 1-1-06; 94-542, eff. 8-10-05; revised 8-19-05.)
| (5 ILCS 120/7 new)
| Sec. 7. Attendance by a means other than physical presence.
| (a) If a
quorum of the members of the public body is | physically present as required by Section 2.01, a majority of | the public body may allow a member of that body to attend the | meeting by other means if the member is prevented from | physically
attending because of: (i) personal illness or | disability; (ii) employment purposes or
the
business of the | public body; or (iii) a family or other emergency.
"Other | means" is by video or audio conference.
| (b) If a member wishes to attend a meeting by other means, | the
member must notify the
recording secretary or clerk of the
| public body before the meeting unless
advance notice is | impractical.
| (c) A majority of the public body may allow a member to | attend a meeting by other means only in accordance with and to | the extent allowed by rules adopted by the public body. The | rules must conform to the requirements and restrictions of this | Section, may further limit the extent to which attendance by | other means is allowed, and may provide for the giving of | additional notice to the public or further facilitate public | access to meetings.
| (d) The limitations of this Section shall not apply to (i) | closed meetings of public bodies with statewide jurisdiction or | (ii) open or closed meetings of State advisory boards or bodies | that do not have authority to make binding recommendations or | determinations or to take any other substantive action. State | advisory boards or bodies and public bodies with statewide | jurisdiction, however, may permit members to attend meetings by | other means only in accordance with and to the extent allowed | by specific procedural rules adopted by the body.
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Effective Date: 1/1/2007
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