Bill Text: HI SB442 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Sunshine Law Boards.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-12-10 - Carried over to 2022 Regular Session. [SB442 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2022-SB442-Introduced.html
THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
442 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to sunshine law boards.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the COVID-19 pandemic forced the implementation of emergency measures suspending certain requirements of the State's Sunshine Law in order to allow boards to virtually meet and conduct necessary business through the use of interactive conference technology, while protecting participants' health and safety and expanding public access to meetings throughout our island State. During the emergency stay-at-home orders and travel restrictions, it was not possible for board members, staff, or members of the public to attend public meetings in person. Through the use of interactive conference technology, however, virtual meetings enabled and enhanced board and public participation. Virtual meetings could be safely held and allowed more people from different islands or parts of islands to effectively participate, often during times when they would not otherwise be physically able to leave their work, homes, or schools to participate in an in-person meeting.
The legislature finds that the increased costs of staffing and technological equipment and resources needed to conduct virtual meetings are offset by the savings in time, convenience, and travel costs for board members and participants, especially those from the neighbor islands. Importantly, virtual meetings help to prevent the spread of disease and protect the health and safety of all participants, particularly those who have disabilities or medical conditions that would place them at greater risks during travel or attendance at in-person public meetings. The legislature also finds that allowing board members to participate in virtual meetings from their homes or private offices, while protecting their privacy and not requiring them to allow members of the public into their homes or private offices, may increase the number of volunteers willing to serve on government boards, particularly when they live on an island different from where the boards' offices are located.
The legislature further finds that the benefits of virtual meetings should continue in non-emergency times and that permanent amendments are needed to the Sunshine Law, part I of chapter 92, Hawaii Revised Statutes. Except for times of emergency, the legislature recognizes the need for boards conducting virtual meetings to also provide for an in-person meeting location where members of the public can observe the virtual meeting or testify in person using interactive conference technology provided by the board, without requiring board members to be at the in-person location. Recognizing that not all boards are equipped with adequate staffing or technological equipment and resources to conduct virtual meetings, the legislature finds that these amendments should permit, but not require, boards to conduct virtual meetings.
The legislature further finds that telecommunications infrastructure can have occasional failures. To promote openness, efficiency, and safety by facilitating meetings using interactive conference technology, it is important that a virtual meeting be allowed to continue without the need to be adjourned when a technological failure occurs.
Therefore, the purpose of this Act is to:
(1) Expand and enhance public participation in public meetings, while protecting the health and safety of board members, staff, testifiers, observers, other participants, and the general public, by allowing boards to use interactive conference technology to conduct virtual meetings under the Sunshine Law; and
(2) Allow a meeting conducted by interactive conference technology to continue without the need to be adjourned when a technological failure occurs.
SECTION 2. Section 92-3.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§92-3.5 Meeting by interactive conference technology;
notice; quorum. (a) A board may hold a meeting by interactive conference
technology; provided that [the]:
(1) The interactive
conference technology used by the board allows interaction among all members of
the board participating in the meeting and all members of the public attending
the meeting[, and the notice required by section 92-7 identifies all of the
locations where participating board members will be physically present and
indicates that members of the public may join board members at any of the
identified locations.];
(2) Board members
shall be visible and audible to other members and the public during the public
meetings; provided that, during executive meetings from which the public has
been excluded, board members shall be audible to other authorized participants
and are not required to be visible;
[(b)] (3) Any board member participating in a meeting
by interactive conference technology shall be considered present at the meeting
for the purpose of determining compliance with the quorum and voting
requirements of the board[.];
(4) At the start of
the meeting, the presiding officer shall announce the names of the participating
members;
(5) Unless
unanimous, votes shall be conducted by roll call so that it is clear how each
board member voted;
(6) To preserve the
executive nature of any portion of a meeting closed to the public, all
participants shall confirm to the presiding officer that no unauthorized person
is present or able to hear them at their remote locations, and the person
organizing the interactive conference technology shall confirm that no unauthorized
person has access to the executive meeting, as indicated on the control panels of
the interactive conference technology being used for the meeting, if
applicable; and
(7) When
practicable, a board shall record meetings and make the recording of any meeting
open to the public electronically available to the public as soon as practicable
after a meeting and until such time as the minutes required by section 92-9 are
electronically posted on the board's website.
[(c) A meeting held by interactive conference technology
shall be terminated when audio communication cannot be maintained with all
locations where the meeting by interactive conference technology is being held,
even if a quorum of the board is physically present in one location. If copies of visual aids required by, or brought
to the meeting by board members or members of the public, are
not available to all meeting participants, at all locations where audio-only
interactive conference technology is being used, within fifteen minutes after
audio-only communication is used, those agenda items for which visual aids are
not available for all participants at all meeting locations cannot be acted
upon at the meeting.
(d)]
(b) Notwithstanding the other
provisions of this section to the contrary, a board member with a disability
that limits or impairs the member's ability to physically attend the meeting
may participate in a board meeting from a location not accessible to the public;
provided that the member with a disability is connected to other members of the
board and the public by both visual and audio means, and the member identifies
where the member is located and who, if anyone, is present at that location
with the member. When practicable, meetings
held by interactive conference technology may be recessed for not more than one
hour when audio communication cannot be maintained with a quorum of members or with
the public location where the meeting by interactive conference technology is being
held.
(c)
A board holding a meeting by interactive
conference technology pursuant to this section shall not be required to allow members
of the public to join board members at non-public locations where board members
are physically present or to identify those locations in the notice required by
section 92-7; provided that, at the meeting, each board member shall identify who,
if anyone, is present at the non-public location with the member; and provided further
that the notice required by section 92-7 shall:
(1) List at least one
meeting location that is open to the public; and
(2) Inform members of
the public how to:
(A) Remotely
view the video and audio of the meeting through Internet streaming or other means;
and
(B) Provide
oral testimony through an Internet link, telephone conference, or other means.
(d) Notwithstanding section 92-3, a board may require
members of the public attending a meeting in person to:
(1) Provide their names
and contact information for the purpose of contact tracing; and
(2) Abide by the board's
requirements for facial coverings, physical distancing, or other safety measures;
when the governor has previously declared a state of emergency for a contagious illness and, without regard to whether the state of emergency is still in effect, a board reasonably believes that those requirements are necessary because of the continuing prevalence of the contagious illness for which the state of emergency was declared."
SECTION 3. Section 92-7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) The board shall give written public notice of any regular, special, emergency, or rescheduled meeting, or any executive meeting when anticipated in advance. The notice shall include an agenda that lists all of the items to be considered at the forthcoming meeting; the date, time, and place of the meeting; the board's contact information for submission of written testimony by electronic mail and postal mail; instructions on how to request an auxiliary aid or service or an accommodation due to a disability, including a response deadline, if one is provided, that is reasonable; and in the case of an executive meeting, the purpose shall be stated. If an item to be considered is the proposed adoption, amendment, or repeal of administrative rules, an agenda meets the requirements for public notice pursuant to this section if it contains a statement on the topic of the proposed rules or a general description of the subjects involved, as described in section 91-3(a)(1)(A), and a statement of when and where the proposed rules may be viewed in person and on the Internet as provided in section 91-2.6. The means specified by this section shall be the only means required for giving notice under this part notwithstanding any law to the contrary."
SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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By Request |
Report Title:
Maui County Council Package; Public Agency Meetings; Interactive Conference Technology
Description:
Clarifies laws regarding public meetings held by interactive conference technology by, among other things, requiring board members to be visible and audible to other members and the public, authorizing a board to require attendees to provide their names and contact information for contact tracing during certain states of emergency, and repealing the requirement that a meeting held by interactive conference technology be terminated when audio communication cannot be maintained with all locations where the meeting by interactive conference technology is being held.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.