A bill is on its way to the Maryland General Assembly that would grant the Open Meetings Compliance Board the authority to fine public bodies that illegally close public meetings.
“Currently their opinions are only advisory and tend to be ignored,” said Del. Dan Morhaim, chairman of the Government Operations subcommittee, the author of the bill. He pointed out there is a new, online course on the workings of Open Meetings Act “so excuses of not knowing the act are less convincing.”
The civil penalties could reach $1,000 for the first offense and $10,000 for a third offense. Even if the board chooses not to impose the fines, the members of any public body violating the act would have to personally sign an acknowledgement that the Open Meetings board had ruled against them. The findings of the three-member board could also be admitted as evidence in a lawsuit.
Citizens who responded to MarylandReporter’s requests for comments on problems with the Open Meetings Act said the lack of any penalties for violating the law was the biggest problem with the current law.
Morhaim also serves on the Joint Committee on Transparency and Open Government, which held a hearing on the act in November.
Morhaim followed up that hearing with research of his own, and found that the violations of the act, based on citizen complaints, were often handled entirely by attorneys, with little direct involvement of the members of the public body that may have violated the act. Under his proposal, the members would have to acknowledge the ruling on the closing of the meeting, and “that just makes it a little more tangible.”
“It’s time for a little bit of enforcement,” Morhaim said
by Len Lazarick
[email protected]
Read more: https://marylandreporter.com/2013/01/07/legislation-would-create-fines-for-violating-open-meetings-act/#ixzz2HUejbIyp
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Thomas E. Taylor says
Where does the fine money come from? Members who vote to close a meeting, as opposed to those who do not vote to close, or the entire group? I hope the fine is not paid for with tax money. Where does the fine money go?? Thomas Taylor
craig o'donnell says
No one’s seen the bill so your questions can’t be answered. But let’s say it’s the entire public body. Let’s say they pay out of tax money. Let’s say you’re a voter and get tired of having your taxes go to paying for closed meeting violations. Let’s say you vote against the elected officials who have done this.
That’s one general answer. However there are public bodies that aren’t elected but rather appointed. Your guess about how effective this would be is as good as mine.
The logical thing to put in the bill would be that the members of the public body split the fine from their own pockets. But like I said: we don’t know.