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204.4 Closed Sessions

CLOSED SESSIONS
 
Generally, board meetings shall be open meetings, unless a closed session is provided for by law.  The board shall hold a closed session in the situations stated below.
 
Exceptions to the Open Meetings Law
 
Closed sessions take place as part of an open meeting.  The item for discussion in the closed session shall be listed as part of the tentative agenda on the public notice.  The motion for a closed session, stating the purpose for the closed session, shall be made and seconded during the open meeting.  A minimum of two-thirds of  the board, or all of the board members present, must vote in favor of the motion on a roll call vote.  Closed sessions shall be tape recorded and have detailed minutes kept by the board secretary.  Final action on matters discussed in the closed session shall be taken in a open meeting.
 
The minutes and the tape recording will restate the motion made in the open meeting, the roll call vote, the members present, and the time the closed session began and ended.  The tape recordings and the written minutes shall be kept for one year from the date of the meeting.  Real estate related minutes and tapes will be made public after the real estate transactions completed.
 
The detailed minutes and tape recording shall be sealed and shall not be public records open to public inspection.  The minutes and tape recording shall only be opened upon court order in an action to enforce the requirements of the open meetings law.  The board has complete discretion as to who may be present at a closed session.
 
Reasons for the board entering into a closed session from an open meeting include, but are not limited to, the following:
1.           To review or discuss records which are required or authorized by state or federal law to be kept confidential or to be kept confidential as a condition for the board’s possession or receipt of federal funds.
2.           To discuss strategy with legal counsel in matters presently in litigation, or where litigation is imminent, if disclosure would be likely to prejudice or disadvantage the board.
3.           To discuss whether to conduct a hearing for suspension or expulsion of a student, unless an open meeting is requested by the student or the parent of the student.
4.           To evaluate the professional competency of an individual whose appointment, hiring, performance, or discharge is being considered when a closed session is necessary to prevent needless and irreparable injury to that individual’s reputation and that individual requests a closed session.
5.           To discuss the purchase of particular real estate, but only when premature disclosures could be reasonably expected to increase the price the board would have to pay for the property.
 
Exemptions to the Open Meetings Law
 
Board meetings at which a quorum is not present, or gatherings of the board for purely ministerial or social purposes when there is no discussion of policy or no intent to avoid the purposes of the open meetings law, are exempt from the open meetings law requirements.  Since gatherings of this type are exempt from the open meetings requirements, they can be held without public notice, be separate from an open meeting, be held without taping the gathering or taking minutes, and be held without a vote or motion.  The board may hold an exempt session for the following:
1.           negotiating sessions, strategy meetings of public employers or employee organizations, mediation and the deliberative process of arbitration;
2.           to discuss strategy in matters relating to employment conditions of employees not covered by the collective bargaining law; and
3.           to conduct a private hearing relating to the recommended termination of a teacher's contract.  However, the private hearing in the teacher’s contract termination shall be recorded verbatim by a court reporter.
 
 
Approved:  Aug. 12, 1985         
 
Reviewed:   Feb. 10, 1997
March 12, 2001
December 19, 2005
September, 2008
January 20, 2014       
 
Revised:   Aug. 9, 1993