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Recent Amendment to Michigan’s Open Meetings Act Allows Electronic Meetings of Public Bodies
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More Government & Public Sector Aricles → Latest Firm's PressDykema Michigan’s Open Meetings Act (“OMA”) was officially amended this past Friday when Governor Whitmer signed SB 1108 (now Public Act 228 of 2020). The new law permits public bodies to conduct electronic meetings under certain circumstances and for a set period of time. The amendments to the OMA were prompted by a recent Michigan Supreme Court decision that effectively eliminated emergency executive orders issued by Governor Whitmer after April 30, 2020. Among the emergency orders was Executive Order No. 2020-154, which temporarily suspended certain requirements of the OMA and allowed public bodies to meet electronically during the COVID-19 pandemic. With the new amendments in place, public bodies should be sure to conduct electronic meetings—when permitted—in full compliance with the amended OMA requirements. Failure to do so could result in challenges to decisions made by public bodies. Significantly, the amendments are retroactive to March 18, 2020. From March 18, 2020, through January 1, 2021, public bodies are permitted to meet by electronic means under any circumstances, if decisions are rendered at electronic meetings in compliance with the Act’s requirements. Beginning January 1, 2021, a public body may meet electronically only under certain circumstances, including military duty, a medical condition affecting a member of the public body, or a statewide or local state of emergency or state of disaster declared pursuant to law. If a public body relies on a local state of emergency or local state of disaster, electronic meetings are permitted only when: (1) a member resides of the public body in the affected area; or (2) the public body holds its meeting in the affected area. After December 31, 2021, a member of a public body will be permitted to participate electronically only when absent due to military duty. The changes make the OMA similar to electronic meeting requirements in previously-issued executive orders, and include some new requirements:
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