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24-OMD-056

March 8, 2024

In re: Lisa Gannoe/Eastern Kentucky University

Summary: The Office lacks jurisdiction to consider a complaint alleging
that Eastern Kentucky University (“the University”) violated the Open
Meetings Act (“the Act”) because the complaint was not first submitted
to the presiding officer of a “public agency” subject to the Act.

Open Meetings Decision

Lisa Gannoe (“Appellant”) submitted a written complaint to the University’s
general counsel and Office of Legal Services alleging its Department of Applied
Human Sciences (“the Department”) violated the Act by excluding her from its faculty
committee meetings. The Appellant’s requested remedy was that she be permitted to
attend the Department’s faculty committee meetings in the future. In a timely
response, the University denied any violation of the Act. First, the University noted
that the Appellant did not submit her complaint to the presiding officer of the public
agency accused of violating the Act. See KRS 61.846(1). Further, the University
denied that its Department faculty committee qualifies as a “public agency,” and
therefore, its faculty meetings are not subject to the Act. This appeal followed.

As an initial matter, the Office must be assured of its jurisdiction to render a
decision under KRS 61.846(2). A complainant’s request for the Attorney General to
review an agency’s denial of a complaint submitted under the Act is a statutory
proceeding created by the General Assembly as an act of legislative grace. As such, a
complainant must strictly comply with KRS 61.846 before invoking the Attorney
General’s jurisdiction to review the complaint. See, e.g., 22-OMD-177.

To invoke the Attorney General’s review under KRS 61.846(2), a complainant
“shall begin enforcement” under subsection (1) of the statute. KRS 61.846(1). That
provision requires the complainant to “submit a written complaint to the presidingofficer of the public agency suspected of” violating the Act. Id. Accordingly, to begin
enforcement, the complaint may not be submitted to just any person at “the public
agency suspected” of committing the violation, but to the agency’s “presiding officer”
specifically. In 22-ORD-177, the Office dismissed a complaint alleging the Jefferson
County Public Schools Site Based Decision Making Council had violated the Act
because the complainant failed to submit his complaint to the presiding officer of that
agency. Rather, he submitted his complaint to the Superintendent of the Jefferson
County Public Schools and the school district’s general counsel. Similarly, here, the
complainant submitted her complaint to the University’s general counsel, not to any
person who could arguably be considered to be “the presiding officer” of a public
agency subject to the Act.

In addition, the Appellant cannot comply with KRS 61.846(1) because the
Department’s faculty committee is not a “public agency” subject to the Act. The Act
states, “All meetings of a quorum of the members of any public agency at which any
public business is discussed or at which any action is taken by the agency, shall be
public meetings, open to the public at all times.” KRS 61.810(1). Further, the Act
defines “member” as “a member of the governing body of the public agency and does
not include employees or licensees of the agency.” KRS 61.805(4). Thus, the Act is not
implicated when several employees of a public agency gather to discuss public
business. The University explains that the members of the Department’s faculty
committee are faculty, i.e., employees, of the University. Thus, their meeting could
only be subject to the Act if the Department’s faculty committee itself qualifies as a
“public agency.” Under KRS 61.805(2), “public agency” means:

(a)
Every state or local government board, commission, and
authority;

(b)
Every state or local legislative board, commission, and committee;

(c)
Every county and city governing body, council, school district
board, special district board, and municipal corporation;

(d)
Every state or local government agency, including the policy-
making board of an institution of education, created by or
pursuant to state or local statute, executive order, ordinance,
resolution, or other legislative act;(e)
Any body created by or pursuant to state or local statute, executive
order, ordinance, resolution, or other legislative act in the
legislative or executive branch of government;

(f)
Any entity when the majority of its governing body is appointed
by a “public agency” as defined in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d), (e),
(g), or (h) of this subsection, a member or employee of a “public
agency,” a state or local officer, or any combination thereof;

(g)
Any board, commission, committee, subcommittee, ad hoc
committee, advisory committee, council, or agency, except for a
committee of a hospital medical staff or a committee formed for
the purpose of evaluating the qualifications of public agency
employees, established, created, and controlled by a “public
agency” as defined in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), or (h) of
this subsection; and

(h)
Any interagency body of two (2) or more public agencies where
each “public agency” is defined in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d), (e),
(f), or (g) of this subsection.

The Department faculty committee is not a “state . . . government board,
commission, [or] authority.” KRS 61.805(2)(a). Nor does it serve any legislative
functions. See KRS 61.805(2)(b) and (c). It has not been created by a statute, executive
order, ordinance, resolution, or other legislative act. KRS 61.805(2)(e). And it is not
an interagency body of two or more public agencies. KRS 61.805(2)(h).

KRS 61.805(2)(d) also does not apply because the Department’s faculty
committee is not “the policy-making board of an institution of education.” Rather, the
University correctly notes that its Board of Regents is its governing body, and thus,
“the policy-making board of an institution of education” that qualifies as a “public
agency” under KRS 61.805(2)(d). See KRS 164.321. In contrast to its Board of
Regents, which makes policy for the University, the Department’s faculty committee
meets as “‘an informal working group . . . for coordination of . . . respective duties and
responsibilities’ of the various needs within the academic department.” See 95-OMD-
71 (holding that “the President’s Cabinet and the President’s Leadership Team” of a
local community college were not “public agencies” subject to the Act). As such, the
Department’s faculty committee meetings can “be characterized as staff meetings, oradministrative personnel meetings,” which are not meetings of a public agency
subject to the Act. Id.

The Department’s faculty committee also does not qualify as a “public agency”
under KRS 61.805(2)(g) because it was not created or controlled by a public agency,
as defined by KRS 61.805(2). Rather, it was created, and its members are selected,
by the Chair of the Department and the Dean of the College of Education and Applied
Human Sciences, neither of which are themselves the policy-making body of the
University. Accordingly, the only subsection under which the Department’s faculty
committee could arguably be considered a public agency is KRS 61.805(2)(f). That is
because “[a]ny entity when the majority of its governing body is appointed by a ‘public
agency’ as defined in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (g), or (h) of this subsection, a
member or employee of a “public agency,” a state or local officer, or any combination
thereof” qualifies as a public agency. KRS 61.805(2)(f) (emphasis added). Thus,
KRS 61.805(2)(f) could arguably be interpreted such that a mere employee of a public
agency can create a “public agency” by appointing a majority of “governing members”
of the entity. And here, the Chair and Dean are themselves employees of a public
agency and they appoint all members of the Department’s faculty committee.

However, KRS 61.805(2)(f) has existed in its current form since the Act was
amended in 1992. See 1992 Ky. ch. 162 § 2. Since then, the Office has held that routine
faculty meetings are not meetings of public agencies that are required to be open to
the public. See, e.g., 04-OMD-082 (public school faculty meetings). At some point, the
topics of discussion become so focused on the administrative functions of the agency,
as opposed to the deliberative process of public policy formation, that the group
cannot seriously be considered a “public agency” subject to all of the procedural
requirements of the Act.1 See 18-OMD-101 (the University’s Council of Academic
Affairs was not subject to the Act, notwithstanding its members were appointed by
the Provost, because it “merely functions to advise the Board of Regents, with no
policy or decision-making authority”). The Office finds little difference between the
Department’s faculty committee and the University’s Council of Academic Affairs, 18-
OMD-101, or Western Kentucky University’s Budget Council, 17-OMD-264. As such,
the Office concludes that the Department’s faculty committee is not a “public agency”
subject to the Act.

1
After all, if the Department’s faculty committee is a “public agency,” it not only would have to allow
public attendance, but would also be required to have a regular schedule of meetings, KRS 61.820; be
constricted in calling special meetings, KRS 61.823; and take formal minutes, KRS 61.835.A party aggrieved by this decision may appeal it by initiating an action in the
appropriate circuit court pursuant to KRS 61.846(4)(a). The Attorney General shall
be notified of any action in circuit court, but shall not be named as a party in that
action or in any subsequent proceedings. The Attorney General will accept notice of
the complaint emailed to OAGAppeals@ky.gov.

Russell Coleman

Attorney General

/s/ Marc Manley

Marc Manley

Assistant Attorney General

#143

Distributed to:

Lisa Gannoe
Dana Daughetee Fohl

LLM Summary
The decision in 24-OMD-056 addresses a complaint regarding an alleged violation of the Open Meetings Act by Eastern Kentucky University's Department of Applied Human Sciences. The Office of the Attorney General determined it lacked jurisdiction to consider the complaint because it was not submitted to the presiding officer of the public agency as required by KRS 61.846(1). Additionally, it was concluded that the Department's faculty committee does not qualify as a 'public agency' under the Act, and therefore, its meetings are not subject to the Open Meetings Act.
Disclaimer:
The Sunshine Law Library is not exhaustive and may contain errors from source documents or the import process. Nothing on this website should be taken as legal advice. It is always best to consult with primary sources and appropriate counsel before taking any action.
Requested By:
Lisa Gannoe
Agency:
Eastern Kentucky University
Cites (Untracked):
  • 22-ORD-177
Forward Citations:
Neighbors

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