The Michigan Open Meetings Act and Freedom of Information Act
(NB! The following is my reformatted version of an Adobe Reader pdf to text file
conversion. I have not deleated, added, or changed any part of the original content
as downloaded, on 06/15/09, in its original .pdf format from:
http://www.legislature.mi.gov/documents/Publications/OpenMtgsFreedom.pdf
)
Dear Citizen,
The ideal of a democratic government is too often thwarted by bureaucratic secrecy
and unresponsive officials. Citizens frequently find it difficult to discover what
decisions are being made and what facts lie behind those decisions.
The Michigan Freedom of Information Act, Public Act No. 442 of 1976, establishes
procedures to ensure every citizen’s right of access to government documents. The Act
establishes the right to inspect and receive copies of records of state and local
government bodies.
The Open Meetings Act, Public Act No. 267 of 1976, protects your right to know what’s
going on in government by opening to full public view the processes by which elected
and nonelected officials make decisions on your behalf.
This guide to the Freedom of Information Act and the Open Meetings Act is designed to
make it easier for citizens to keep track of what their government is doing.
Table of Contents
Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act ................................................................................. 1
Text of Freedom of Information Act........................................................................................ 4
Court Decisions on the Freedom of Information Act .............................................................. 11
Opinions of the Attorney General Relating to the Freedom of Information Act .................... 17
Special Note on the Federal Freedom of Information Act ...................................................... 20
Michigan’s Open Meetings Act ............................................................................................... 21
Text of Open Meetings Act...................................................................................................... 24
Court Decisions on the Open Meetings Act ............................................................................ 29
Opinions of the Attorney General Relating to the Open Meetings Act................................... 32
Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act
Public Act No. 442 of 1976, as amended
The following is a general outline of the Freedom of Information Act. When using the
Freedom of Information Act, always rely on the specific provisions of the Act, which
are republished immediately following this outline.
Basic Intent:
The Freedom of Information Act regulates and sets requirements for the disclosure of
public records by all “public bodies” in the state.
Key Definitions:
“Public body” means:
• a state officer, employee, agency, department, division, bureau, board, commission,
council, authority, or other body in the executive branch of the state government,
but does not include the governor or lieutenant governor, the executive office of the
governor or lieutenant governor, or employees thereof;
• an agency, board, commission, or council in the legislative branch of the state
government;
• a county, city, township, village, intercounty, intercity, or regional governing
body, council, school district, special district, or municipal corporation, or a
board, department, commission, council or agency thereof; or
•any other body which is created by state or local authority or which is primarily
funded by or through state or local authority. “Public record” means a writing
prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by a public body in the
performance of an official function, from the time it is created. The term does not
include computer software.
Coverage:
The Freedom of Information Act regulates and sets requirements for the disclosure of
public records by all “public bodies” in the state. All state agencies, county and
other local governments, school boards, other boards, departments, commissions,
councils, and public colleges and universities are covered. The Act does not apply to
the judicial branch and it does not apply to legislators. Any program primarily
funded by the state or local authority is also covered.
Public Records Open to Disclosure:
In general, all records except those specifically cited as exceptions are covered by
the Freedom of Information Act. The records covered include working papers and
research material, minutes of open and closed meetings, officials’ voting records,
staff manuals, final orders or decisions in contested cases and the records on which
they were made, and promulgated rules. Other written statements which implement or
interpret laws, rules or policy, including, but not limited to, guidelines, manuals
and forms with instructions, adopted or used by the agency in the discharge of its
functions, are also included.
It does not matter what form the record is in. The act applies to any handwriting,
typewriting, printing, photostating, photographing, photocopying and every other
means of recording. It includes letters, words, pictures, sounds or symbols, or
combinations thereof, as well as papers, maps, magnetic or punched cards, discs,
drums, or other means of recording or retaining meaningful content, but not computer
software.
Public Records Exempt From Disclosure:
A public body may (but is not required to) withhold from public disclosure certain
categories of public records under the Freedom of Information Act. Among the
categories of information that may be withheld under section 13 of the Act are the
following:
—Specific information about an individual’s private affairs, if their right to have
the information protected from public scrutiny is greater than the public’s right to
the information.
—Investigating records compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent
that disclosure as a public record would do any of the following:
• interfere with law enforcement proceedings;
•deprive a person of the right to a fair trial or impartial administrative adjudication;
• constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
• disclose the identity of a confidential source or, if the record is compiled by a
criminal law enforcement agency in the course of a criminal investigation, disclose
confidential information furnished only by a confidential source;
• disclose law enforcement investigative techniques or procedures; or
• endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement personnel.
—Public records which if disclosed would prejudice a public body’s ability to
maintain the physical security of custodial or penal institutions occupied by persons
arrested or convicted of a crime or admitted because of a mental disability, unless
the public interest in disclosure under this act outweighs the public interest in
nondisclosure.
—Records which if disclosed would violate the Federal (Buckley) Educational Rights
and Privacy Act (primarily student records).
—An exempt public record or exempt information which is furnished by the public body
originally compiling, preparing, or receiving the record or information to a public
officer or public body in connection with the performance of the duties of that
public officer or public body, if the consideration originally giving rise to the
exempt nature of the public record remains applicable.
—Trade secrets or commercial or financial information voluntarily provided to an
agency for use in developing governmental policy.
—Information subject to attorney-client privilege.
—Information subject to other enunciated privileges such as counselor-client and
those recognized by statute or court rule.
—Pending public bids to enter into contracts.
—Appraisals of real property to be acquired by a public body.
—Test questions and answers, scoring keys and other examination instruments.
—Medical counseling or psychological facts which would reveal an individual’s
identity.
—Internal communications and notes between and within public bodies of an advisory
nature to the extent that they cover other than purely factual materials and are
preliminary to a final agency determination of policy or action. This exemption shall
not apply unless the public body shows that in the particular instance the public
interest in encouraging frank communications between officials and employees of
public bodies clearly outweighs the public interest in disclosure. (Note that factual
materials in such memoranda are open records and must be separated out and made
available upon request even if the other material is not.)
—Law enforcement communication codes and deployment plans unless the public interest
in disclosure outweighs the public interest in nondisclosure.
—Information that would reveal the location of archeological sites.
—Product testing data developed by agencies buying products where only one bidder
meets the agency’s specifications.
—A student’s college academic transcript where the student is delinquent on
university payments.
—Records of any campaign committee including any committee that receives moneys from
a state campaign fund. (These records are open to the public under Public Act 388 of
1976.) Records and information pertaining to an investigation or a compliance
conference under Article 15 of the Public Health Code, before a complaint is issued.
These provisions do not apply to any of the following:
—The fact that an allegation has been received and an investigation is being
conducted and the date the allegation was received.
Salary Records:
Salary records of employees or other officials of institutions of higher education,
school districts, intermediate school districts or community college districts must
be made available to the public upon request and under certain conditions.
Fees for Public Records:
A government agency can charge a fee, but it must be limited to actual duplication,
mailing and clerical labor costs. The first $20 of work must be free for a person who
is on welfare or presents facts showing inability to pay because of indigency. A
public body may require a good faith deposit at the time of request. The deposit
shall not exceed 1/2 of the total cost.
Denial of a Record:
If a request for a record is denied, written notice of the denial must be provided to
the requester within five days, or within 15 days under unusual circumstances. A
failure to respond within the time limits, or a failure to respond at all, also
amounts to a denial.
When a request is denied, the public body must provide the requestor with a full
explanation of the reasons for the denial and the requester’s right to seek judicial
review. Notification of the right to judicial review must include notification of the
right to receive attorney’s fees and collect damages.
Enforcement:
A person has the right to commence an action in circuit court to compel disclosure of
public records which are denied. If the request by a person was made verbally, the
person must confirm the request in writing not less than five days before commencing
the action.
The action may be brought in the county where the requester lives, the county where
the requester does business, the county where the public document is located, or a
county where the agency has an office.
Penalties for Violation of the Act:
If the circuit court finds that the public body has arbitrarily and capriciously
violated the Freedom of Information Act by refusal or delay in disclosing or
providing copies of a public record, it may, in addition to any actual or
compensatory damages, award punitive damages of $500 to the person seeking the right
to inspect or receive a copy of a public record.
Requesting a Public Record Pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act
The following is a checklist* for Freedom of Information Act requests:
1) Make sure you are addressing the correspondence to the correct department.
2) Make sure the correspondence is addressed to the Freedom of Information Act
Administrator of that department.
3) Describe the information requested in detail so that it can be located by the
Freedom of Information Act Administrator.
4) Describe the subject matter of the documents requested and, if possible, the date
the documents were created.
5) Advise the department that you are requesting documents pursuant to the Freedom of
Information Act and refer to the Act as MCL 15.231 et seq.
*Use of the checklist is suggested, not mandated. For example, it is not necessary to
cite the Freedom of Information Act statute when making a request. Requests and
responses to requests are governed by the specific language of the Freedom of
Information Act, not by the checklist or this booklet’s general information summary
of the act.
(Rev. 1/16/01)
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT
Act 442, 1976; Eff. Apr. 13, 1977
AN ACT to provide for public access to certain public records of public bodies; to
permit certain fees; to prescribe the powers and duties of certain public officers
and public bodies; to provide remedies and penalties; and to repeal certain acts and
parts of acts.
The People of the State of Michigan enact:
15.231 Short title; public policy.
Sec. 1. (1) This act shall be known and may be cited as the “freedom of information
act”.
(2) It is the public policy of this state that all persons, except those persons
incarcerated in state or local correctional facilities, are entitled to full and
complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts of
those who represent them as public officials and public employees, consistent with
this act. The people shall be informed so that they may fully participate in the
democratic process.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1994, Act 131, Imd. Eff. May 19,
1994;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997;—Am. 1997, Act 6, Imd. Eff. May 16, 1997.
15.232 Definitions.
Sec. 2. As used in this act:
(a) “Field name” means the label or identification of an element of a computer data
base that contains a specific item of information, and includes but is not limited to
a subject heading such as a column header, data dictionary, or record layout.
( b) “FOIA coordinator” means either of the following:
(i) An individual who is a public body.
(ii) An individual designated by a public body in accordance with section 6 to accept
and process requests for public records under this act.
(c) “Person” means an individual, corporation, limited liability company,
partnership, firm, organization, association, governmental entity, or other legal
entity. Person does not include an individual serving a sentence of imprisonment in a
state or county correctional facility in this state or any other state, or in a
federal correctional facility.
(d) “Public body” means any of the following:
(i) A state officer, employee, agency, department, division, bureau, board,
commission, council, authority, or other body in the executive branch of the state
government, but does not include the governor or lieutenant governor, the executive
office of the governor or lieutenant governor, or employees thereof.
(ii) An agency, board, commission, or council in the legislative branch of the state
government.
(iii) A county, city, township, village, intercounty, intercity, or regional
governing body, council, school district, special district, or municipal corporation,
or a board, department, commission, council, or agency thereof.
(iv) Any other body which is created by state or local authority or which is
primarily funded by or through state or local authority.
(v) The judiciary, including the office of the county clerk and employees thereof
when acting in the capacity of clerk to the circuit court, is not included in the
definition of public body.
(e) “Public record” means a writing prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or
retained by a public body in the performance of an official function, from the time
it is created. Public record does not include computer software. This act separates
public records into the following 2 classes:
(i) Those that are exempt from disclosure under section 13.
(ii) All public records that are not exempt from disclosure under section 13 and
which are subject to disclosure under this act.
(f) “Software” means a set of statements or instructions that when incorporated in a
machine usable medium is capable of causing a machine or device having information
processing capabilities to indicate, perform, or achieve a particular function, task,
or result. Software does not include computer-stored information or data, or a field
name if disclosure of that field name does not violate a software license.
(g) “Unusual circumstances” means any 1 or a combination of the following, but only
to the extent necessary for the proper processing of a request:
(i) The need to search for, collect, or appropriately examine or review a voluminous
amount of separate and distinct public records pursuant to a single request.
(ii) The need to collect the requested public records from numerous field offices,
facilities, or other establishments which are located apart from the particular
office receiving or processing the request.
(h) “Writing” means handwriting, typewriting, printing, photostating, photographing,
photocopying, and every other means of recording, and includes letters, words,
pictures, sounds, or symbols, or combinations thereof, and papers, maps, magnetic or
paper tapes, photographic films or prints, microfilm, microfiche, magnetic or punched
cards, discs, drums, or other means of recording or retaining meaningful content.
(i) “Written request” means a writing that asks for information, and includes a
writing transmitted by facsimile, electronic mail, or other electronic means.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1994, Act 131, Imd. Eff. May 19,
1994;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
15.233 Public records; right to inspect, copy, or receive; subscriptions; forwarding
requests; file; inspection and examination; memoranda or abstracts; rules;
compilation, summary, or report of information; creation of new public record;
certified copies.
Sec. 3. (1) Except as expressly provided in section 13, upon providing a public
body’s FOIA coordinator with a written request that describes a public record
sufficiently to enable the public body to find the public record, a person has a
right to inspect, copy, or receive copies of the requested public record of the
public body. A person has a right to subscribe to future issuances of public records
that are created, issued, or disseminated on a regular basis. A subscription shall be
valid for up to 6 months, at the request of the subscriber, and shall be renewable.
An employee of a public body who receives a request for a public record shall
promptly forward that request to the freedom of information act coordinator.
(2) A freedom of information act coordinator shall keep a copy of all written
requests for public records on file for no less than 1 year.
(3) A public body shall furnish a requesting person a reasonable opportunity for
inspection and examination of its public records, and shall furnish reasonable
facilities for making memoranda or abstracts from its public records during the usual
business hours. A public body may make reasonable rules necessary to protect its
public records and to prevent excessive and unreasonable interference with the
discharge of its functions. A public body shall protect public records from loss,
unauthorized alteration, mutilation, or destruction.
(4) This act does not require a public body to make a compilation, summary, or report
of information, except as required in section 11.
(5) This act does not require a public body to create a new public record, except as
required in section 11, and to the extent required by this act for the furnishing of
copies, or edited copies pursuant to section 14(1), of an already existing public
record.
(6) The custodian of a public record shall, upon written request, furnish a
requesting person a certified copy of a public record.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
15.234 Fee; waiver or reduction; affidavit; deposit; calculation of costs;
limitation; provisions inapplicable to certain public records.
Sec. 4. (1) A public body may charge a fee for a public record search, the necessary
copying of a public record for inspection, or for providing a copy of a public
record. Subject to subsections (3) and (4), the fee shall be limited to actual
mailing costs, and to the actual incremental cost of duplication or publication
including labor, the cost of search, examination, review, and the deletion and
separation of exempt from nonexempt information as provided in section 14. A search
for a public record may be conducted or copies of public records may be furnished
without charge or at a reduced charge if the public body determines that a waiver or
reduction of the fee is in the public interest because searching for or furnishing
copies of the public record can be considered as primarily benefiting the general
public. A public record search shall be made and a copy of a public record shall be
furnished without charge for the first $20.00 of the fee for each request to an
individual who is entitled to information under this act and who submits an affidavit
stating that the individual is then receiving public assistance or, if not receiving
public assistance, stating facts showing inability to pay the cost because of
indigency.
(2) A public body may require at the time a request is made a good faith deposit from
the person requesting the public record or series of public records, if the fee
authorized under this section exceeds $50.00. The deposit shall not exceed 1/2 of the
total fee.
(3) In calculating the cost of labor incurred in duplication and mailing and the cost
of examination, review, separation, and deletion under subsection (1), a public body
may not charge more than the hourly wage of the lowest paid public body employee
capable of retrieving the information necessary to comply with a request under this
act. Fees shall be uniform and not dependent upon the identity of the requesting
person. A public body shall utilize the most economical means available for making
copies of public records. A fee shall not be charged for the cost of search,
examination, review, and the deletion and separation of exempt from nonexempt
information as provided in section 14 unless failure to charge a fee would result in
unreasonably high costs to the public body because of the nature of the request in
the particular instance, and the public body specifically identifies the nature of
these unreasonably high costs. A public body shall establish and publish procedures
and guidelines to implement this subsection.
(4) This section does not apply to public records prepared under an act or statute
specifically authorizing the sale of those public records to the public, or if the
amount of the fee for providing a copy of the public record is otherwise specifically
provided by an act or statute.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1988, Act 99, Imd. Eff. Apr. 11,
1988;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
Constitutionality: The disclosure of public records under the freedom of information
act impartially to the general public for the incremental cost of creating the record
is not a granting of credit by the state in aid of private persons and does not
justify nondisclosure on the theory that the information is proprietary information
belonging to a public body. Kestenbaum v. Michigan State University, 414 Mich. 510,
417 N.W.2d 1102 (1982).
15.235 Request to inspect or receive copy of public record; response to request;
failure to respond; damages; contents of notice denying request; signing notice of
denial; notice extending period of response; action by requesting person. Sec. 5. (1)
Except as provided in section 3, a person desiring to inspect or receive a copy of a
public record shall make a written request for the public record to the FOIA
coordinator of a public body. A written request made by facsimile, electronic mail,
or other electronic transmission is not received by a public body’s FOIA coordinator
until 1 business day after the electronic transmission is made.
(2) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing by the person making the request, a public
body shall respond to a request for a public record within 5 business days after the
public body receives the request by doing 1 of the following:
(a) Granting the request.
(b) Issuing a written notice to the requesting person denying the request.
(c) Granting the request in part and issuing a written notice to the requesting
person denying the request in part.
(d) Issuing a notice extending for not more than 10 business days the period during
which the public body shall respond to the request. A public body shall not issue
more than 1 notice of extension for a particular request.
(3) Failure to respond to a request pursuant to subsection (2) constitutes a public
body’s final determination to deny the request. In a circuit court action to compel a
public body’s disclosure of a public record under section 10, the circuit court shall
assess damages against the public body pursuant to section 10(8) if the circuit court
has done both of the following:
(a) Determined that the public body has not complied with subsection (2).
(b) Ordered the public body to disclose or provide copies of all or a portion of the
public record.
(4) A written notice denying a request for a public record in whole or in part is a
public body’s final determination to deny the request or portion of that request. The
written notice shall contain:
(a) An explanation of the basis under this act or other statute for the determination
that the public record, or portion of that public record, is exempt from disclosure,
if that is the reason for denying all or a portion of the request.
(b) A certificate that the public record does not exist under the name given by the
requester or by another name reasonably known to the public body, if that is the
reason for denying the request or a portion of the request.
(c) A description of a public record or information on a public record that is
separated or deleted pursuant to section 14, if a separation or deletion is made.
(d) A full explanation of the requesting person’s right to do either of the
following:
(i) Submit to the head of the public body a written appeal that specifically states
the word “appeal” and identifies the reason or reasons for reversal of the disclosure
denial.
(ii) Seek judicial review of the denial under section 10.
(e) Notice of the right to receive attorneys’ fees and damages as provided in section
10 if, after judicial review, the circuit court determines that the public body has
not complied with this section and orders disclosure of all or a portion of a public
record.
(5) The individual designated in section 6 as responsible for the denial of the
request shall sign the written notice of denial.
(6) If a public body issues a notice extending the period for a response to the
request, the notice shall specify the reasons for the extension and the date by which
the public body will do 1 of the following:
(a) Grant the request.
(b) Issue a written notice to the requesting person denying the request.
(c) Grant the request in part and issue a written notice to the requesting person
denying the request in part.
(7) If a public body makes a final determination to deny in whole or in part a
request to inspect or receive a copy of a public record or portion of that public
record, the requesting person may do either of the following:
(a) Appeal the denial to the head of the public body pursuant to section 10.
(b) Commence an action in circuit court, pursuant to section 10.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1978, Act 329, Imd. Eff. July 11,
1978;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997. 15.236 FOIA coordinator.
Sec. 6. (1) A public body that is a city, village, township, county, or state
department, or under the control of a city, village, township, county, or state
department, shall designate an individual as the public body’s FOIA coordinator. The
FOIA coordinator shall be responsible for accepting and processing requests for the
public body’s public records under this act and shall be responsible for approving a
denial under section 5(4) and (5). In a county not having an executive form of
government, the chairperson of the county board of commissioners is designated the
FOIA coordinator for that county.
(2) For all other public bodies, the chief administrative officer of the respective
public body is designated the public body’s FOIA coordinator.
(3) An FOIA coordinator may designate another individual to act on his or her behalf
in accepting and processing requests for the public body’s public records, and in
approving a denial under section 5(4) and (5). History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13,
1977;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
15.240 Options by requesting person; appeal; orders; venue; de novo proceeding;
burden of proof; private view of public record; contempt; assignment of action or
appeal for hearing, trial, or argument; attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements;
assessment of award; damages.
Sec. 10. (1) If a public body makes a final determination to deny all or a portion of
a request, the requesting person may do 1 of the following at his or her option:
(a) Submit to the head of the public body a written appeal that specifically states
the word “appeal” and identifies the reason or reasons for reversal of the denial.
(b) Commence an action in the circuit court to compel the public body’s disclosure of
the public records within 180 days after a public body’s final determination to deny
a request.
(2) Within 10 days after receiving a written appeal pursuant to subsection (1)(a),
the head of a public body shall do 1 of the following:
(a) Reverse the disclosure denial.
(b) Issue a written notice to the requesting person upholding the disclosure denial.
(c) Reverse the disclosure denial in part and issue a written notice to the
requesting person upholding the disclosure denial in part.
(d) Under unusual circumstances, issue a notice extending for not more than 10
business days the period during which the head of the public body shall respond to
the written appeal. The head of a public body shall not issue more than 1 notice of
extension for a particular written appeal.
(3) A board or commission that is the head of a public body is not considered to have
received a written appeal under subsection (2) until the first regularly scheduled
meeting of that board or commission following submission of the written appeal under
subsection (1)(a). If the head of the public body fails to respond to a written
appeal pursuant to subsection (2), or if the head of the public body upholds all or a
portion of the disclosure denial that is the subject of the written appeal, the
requesting person may seek judicial review of the nondisclosure by commencing an
action in circuit court under subsection (1)(b).
(4) In an action commenced under subsection (1)(b), a court that determines a public
record is not exempt from disclosure shall order the public body to cease withholding
or to produce all or a portion of a public record wrongfully withheld, regardless of
the location of the public record. The circuit court for the county in which the
complainant resides or has his or her principal place of business, or the circuit
court for the county in which the public record or an office of the public body is
located has venue over the action. The court shall determine the matter de novo and
the burden is on the public body to sustain its denial. The court, on its own motion,
may view the public record in controversy in private before reaching a decision.
Failure to comply with an order of the court may be punished as contempt of court.
(5) An action commenced under this section and an appeal from an action commenced
under this section shall be assigned for hearing and trial or for argument at the
earliest practicable date and expedited in every way.
(6) If a person asserting the right to inspect, copy, or receive a copy of all or a
portion of a public record prevails in an action commenced under this section, the
court shall award reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements. If the person
or public body prevails in part, the court may, in its discretion, award all or an
appropriate portion of reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements. The
award shall be assessed against the public body liable for damages under subsection
(7).
(7) If the circuit court determines in an action commenced under this section that
the public body has arbitrarily and capriciously violated this act by refusal or
delay in disclosing or providing copies of a public record, the court shall award, in
addition to any actual or compensatory damages, punitive damages in the amount of
$500.00 to the person seeking the right to inspect or receive a copy of a public
record. The damages shall not be assessed against an individual, but shall be
assessed against the next succeeding public body that is not an individual and that
kept or maintained the public record as part of its public function.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1978, Act 329, Imd. Eff. July 11,
1978;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
15.241 Matters required to be published and made available by state agencies; form of
publications; effect on person of matter not published and made available; exception;
action to compel compliance by state agency; order; attorneys’ fees, costs, and
disbursements; jurisdiction; definitions.
Sec. 11. (1) A state agency shall publish and make available to the public all of the
following:
(a) Final orders or decisions in contested cases and the records on which they were
made.
(b) Promulgated rules.
(c) Other written statements which implement or interpret laws, rules, or policy,
including but not limited to guidelines, manuals, and forms with instructions,
adopted or used by the agency in the discharge of its functions.
(2) Publications may be in pamphlet, loose-leaf, or other appropriate form in
printed, mimeographed, or other written matter.
(3) Except to the extent that a person has actual and timely notice of the terms
thereof, a person shall not in any manner be required to resort to, or be adversely
affected by, a matter required to be published and made available, if the matter is
not so published and made available.
(4) This section does not apply to public records which are exempt from disclosure
under section 13.
(5) A person may commence an action in the circuit court to compel a state agency to
comply with this section. If the court determines that the state agency has failed to
comply, the court shall order the state agency to comply and shall award reasonable
attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements to the person commencing the action. The
circuit court for the county in which the state agency is located shall have
jurisdiction to issue the order.
(6) As used in this section, “state agency”, “contested case”, and “rules” shall have
the same meanings as ascribed to those terms in Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of
1969, as amended, being sections 24.201 to 24.315 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977.
15.243 Exemptions from disclosure; withholding of information required by law or in
possession of executive office.
Sec. 13. (1) A public body may exempt from disclosure as a public record under this
act:
(a) Information of a personal nature where the public disclosure of the information
would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of an individual’s privacy.
(b) Investigating records compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the
extent that disclosure as a public record would do any of the following:
(i) Interfere with law enforcement proceedings.
(ii) Deprive a person of the right to a fair trial or impartial administrative
adjudication.
(iii) Constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
(iv) Disclose the identity of a confidential source, or if the record is compiled by
a law enforcement agency in the course of a criminal investigation, disclose
confidential information furnished only by a confidential source.
(v) Disclose law enforcement investigative techniques or procedures.
(vi) Endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement personnel.
(c) A public record that if disclosed would prejudice a public body’s ability to
maintain the physical security of custodial or penal institutions occupied by persons
arrested or convicted of a crime or admitted because of a mental disability, unless
the public interest in disclosure under this act outweighs the public interest in
nondisclosure.
(d) Records or information specifically described and exempted from disclosure by
statute.
(e) Information the release of which would prevent the public body from complying
with section 444 of subpart 4 of part C of the general education provisions act,
title IV of Public Law 90-247, 20 U.S.C. 1232g, commonly referred to as the family
educational rights and privacy act of 1974.
(f) A public record or information described in this section that is furnished by the
public body originally compiling, preparing, or receiving the record or information
to a public officer or public body in connection with the performance of the duties
of that public officer or public body, if the considerations originally giving rise
to the exempt nature of the public record remain applicable.
(g) Trade secrets or commercial or financial information voluntarily provided to an
agency for use in developing governmental policy if:
(i) The information is submitted upon a promise of confidentiality by the public
body.
(ii) The promise of confidentiality is authorized by the chief administrative officer
of the public body or by an elected official at the time the promise is made.
(iii) A description of the information is recorded by the public body within a
reasonable time after it has been submitted, maintained in a central place within the
public body, and made available to a person upon request. This subdivision does not
apply to information submitted as required by law or as a condition of receiving a
governmental contract, license, or other benefit.
(h) Information or records subject to the attorney-client privilege.
(i) Information or records subject to the physician-patient privilege, the
psychologist-patient privilege, the minister, priest, or Christian Science
practitioner privilege, or other privilege recognized by statute or court rule.
(j) A bid or proposal by a person to enter into a contract or agreement, until the
time for the public opening of bids or proposals, or if a public opening is not to be
conducted, until the deadline for submission of bids or proposals has expired.
(k) Appraisals of real property to be acquired by the public body until (i) an
agreement is entered into; or (ii) 3 years has elapsed since the making of the
appraisal, unless litigation relative to the acquisition has not yet terminated.
(l) Test questions and answers, scoring keys, and other examination instruments or
data used to administer a license, public employment, or academic examination, unless
the public interest in disclosure under this act outweighs the public interest in
nondisclosure.
(m) Medical, counseling, or psychological facts or evaluations concerning an
individual if the individual’s identity would be revealed by a disclosure of those
facts or evaluation.
(n) Communications and notes within a public body or between public bodies of an
advisory nature to the extent that they cover other than purely factual materials and
are preliminary to a final agency determination of policy or action. This exemption
does not apply unless the public body shows that in the particular instance the
public interest in encouraging frank communications between officials and employees
of public bodies clearly outweighs the public interest in disclosure. This exemption
does not constitute an exemption under state law for purposes of section 8(h) of the
open meetings act, Act No. 267 of the Public Acts of 1976, being section 15.268 of
the Michigan Compiled Laws. As used in this subdivision, “determination of policy or
action” includes a determination relating to collective bargaining, unless the public
record is otherwise required to be made available under Act No. 336 of the Public
Acts of 1947, being sections 423.201 to 423.217 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(o) Records of law enforcement communication codes, or plans for deployment of law
enforcement personnel, that if disclosed would prejudice a public body’s ability to
protect the public safety unless the public interest in disclosure under this act
outweighs the public interest in nondisclosure in the particular instance.
(p) Information that would reveal the exact location of archaeological sites. The
secretary of state may promulgate rules pursuant to the administrative procedures act
of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969, being sections 24.201 to 24.328 of
the Michigan Compiled Laws, to provide for the disclosure of the location of
archaeological sites for purposes relating to the preservation or scientific
examination of sites.
(q) Testing data developed by a public body in determining whether bidders’ products
meet the specifications for purchase of those products by the public body, if
disclosure of the data would reveal that only 1 bidder has met the specifications.
This subdivision does not apply after 1 year has elapsed from the time the public
body completes the testing.
(r) Academic transcripts of an institution of higher education established under
section 5, 6, or 7 of article VIII of the state constitution of 1963, if the
transcript pertains to a student who is delinquent in the payment of financial
obligations to the institution.
(s) Records of any campaign committee including any committee that receives money
from a state campaign fund.
(t) Unless the public interest in disclosure outweighs the public interest in
nondisclosure in the particular instance, public records of a law enforcement agency,
the release of which would do any of the following:
(i) Identify or provide a means of identifying an informer.
(ii) Identify or provide a means of identifying a law enforcement undercover officer
or agent or a plain clothes officer as a law enforcement officer or agent.
(iii) Disclose the personal address or telephone number of law enforcement officers
or agents or any special skills that they may have.
(iv) Disclose the name, address, or telephone numbers of family members, relatives,
children, or parents of law enforcement officers or agents.
(v) Disclose operational instructions for law enforcement officers or agents.
(vi) Reveal the contents of staff manuals provided for law enforcement officers or
agents.
(vii) Endanger the life or safety of law enforcement officers or agents or their
families, relatives, children, parents, or those who furnish information to law
enforcement departments or agencies.
(viii) Identify or provide a means of identifying a person as a law enforcement
officer, agent, or informer.
(ix) Disclose personnel records of law enforcement agencies.
(x) Identify or provide a means of identifying residences that law enforcement
agencies are requested to check in the absence of their owners or tenants.
(u) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, records and information
pertaining to an investigation or a compliance conference conducted by the department
of consumer and industry services under article 15 of the public health code, Act No.
368 of the Public Acts of 1978, being sections 333.16101 to 333.18838 of the Michigan
Compiled Laws, before a complaint is issued. This subdivision does not apply to
records and information pertaining to 1 or more of the following:
(i) The fact that an allegation has been received and an investigation is being
conducted, and the date the allegation was received.
(ii) The fact that an allegation was received by the department of consumer and
industry services; the fact that the department of consumer and industry services did
not issue a complaint for the allegation; and the fact that the allegation was
dismissed.
(v) Records of a public body’s security measures, including security plans, security
codes and combinations, passwords, passes, keys, and security procedures, to the
extent that the records relate to the ongoing security of the public body.
(w) Records or information relating to a civil action in which the requesting party
and the public body are parties.
(x) Information or records that would disclose the social security number of any
individual.
(y) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, an application for the position
of president of an institution of higher education established under section 4, 5, or
6 of article VIII of the state constitution of 1963, materials submitted with such an
application, letters of recommendation or references concerning an applicant, and
records or information relating to the process of searching for and selecting an
individual for a position described in this subdivision, if the records or
information could be used to identify a candidate for the position. However, after 1
or more individuals have been identified as finalists for a position described in
this subdivision, this subdivision does not apply to a public record described in
this subdivision, except a letter of recommendation or reference, to the extent that
the public record relates to an individual identified as a finalist for the position.
(2) This act does not authorize the withholding of information otherwise required by
law to be made available to the public or to a party in a contested case under Act
No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969.
(3) Except as otherwise exempt under subsection (1), this act does not authorize the
withholding of a public record in the possession of the executive office of the
governor or lieutenant governor, or an employee of either executive office, if the
public record is transferred to the executive office of the governor or lieutenant
governor, or an employee of either executive office, after a request for the public
record has been received by a state officer, employee, agency, department, division,
bureau, board, commission, council, authority, or other body in the executive branch
of government that is subject to this act.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977;—Am. 1978, Act 329, Imd. Eff. July 11,
1978;—Am. 1993, Act 82, Eff. Apr. 1, 1994;—Am. 1996, Act 553, Eff. Mar. 31, 1997.
15.243a Salary records of employee or other official of institution of higher
education, school district, intermediate school district, or community college
available to public on request.
Sec. 13a. Notwithstanding section 13, an institution of higher education established
under section 5, 6, or 7 of article 8 of the state constitution of 1963; a school
district as defined in section 6 of Act No. 451 of the Public Acts of 1976, being
section
380.6 of the Michigan Compiled Laws; an intermediate school district as defined in
section 4 of Act No. 451 of the Public Acts of 1976, being section 380.4 of the
Michigan Compiled Laws; or a community college established under Act No. 331 of the
Public Acts of 1966, as amended, being sections 389.1 to 389.195 of the Michigan
Compiled Laws shall upon request make available to the public the salary records of
an employee or other official of the institution of higher education, school
district, intermediate school district, or community college.
History: Add. 1979, Act 130, Imd. Eff. Oct. 26, 1979.
15.244 Separation of exempt and nonexempt material; design of public record;
description of material exempted. Sec. 14. (1) If a public record contains material
which is not exempt under section 13, as well as material which is exempt from
disclosure under section 13, the public body shall separate the exempt and nonexempt
material and make the nonexempt material available for examination and copying.
(2) When designing a public record, a public body shall, to the extent practicable,
facilitate a separation of exempt from nonexempt information. If the separation is
readily apparent to a person requesting to inspect or receive copies of the form, the
public body shall generally describe the material exempted unless that description
would reveal the contents of the exempt information and thus defeat the purpose of
the exemption.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977.
15.245 Repeal of §§ 24.221, 24.222, and 24.223.
Sec. 15. Sections 21, 22 and 23 of Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969, as
amended, being sections 24.221, 24.222 and
24.223 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, are repealed.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977.
15.246 Effective date.
Sec. 16. This act shall take effect 90 days after being signed by the governor.
History: 1976, Act 442, Eff. Apr. 13, 1977.
Court Decisions on the Freedom of Information Act
Michigan courts have rendered decisions which, when published, become precedent and
are the law of the state until changed by a higher court or by the Legislature. The
following list contains the principal published decisions of Michigan’s appellate
courts and is current through July 1997. Court decisions may be obtained in law
libraries or from the courts of record for a fee.
Because the Legislature has amended the Freedom of Information Act from time to time
after its enactment, the cases interpreting and applying the Act may not reflect the
current law. For example, the cases listed below concerning prisoner requests for
public records were decided under the Act before the amendment that excludes
prisoners from the persons entitled to make requests for public records.
1. Kestenbaum v Michigan State University, 97 Mich App 5 (1980), aff’d 414 Mich 510
(1982), reh den
An equally divided Supreme Court affirmed the lower court in holding that a list of
names and addresses of students on a computer tape would appear to be a public
record, but the nature of the information is within an enumerated exception, being
personal, and public disclosure of such tape would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of a person’s privacy.
2. Tobin v Michigan Civil Service Commission, 98 Mich App 604 (1980), aff’d 416 Mich
661 (1982)
The Freedom of Information Act does not compel a public body to conceal information
at the insistence of one who opposes its release.
3. Evening News Association v City of Troy, 417 Mich 481 (1983), reh den
To claim exemption for investigative records used in law enforcement proceedings, the
agency must show how disclosure of particular requested document would interfere with
proceedings. To determine whether an agency has met its burden under the Freedom of
Information Act, the following rules should apply:
a. The burden of proof is on the party claiming exemption from disclosure.
b. The exemptions must be interpreted narrowly.
c. The agency shall separate the exempt and nonexempt material and make the nonexempt
material available for examination and copying.
d. Detailed affidavits describing the material withheld must be supplied by the
agency.
e. The justification for withholding must not be conclusory, i.e., a repetition of
the statutory language.
f. The mere showing of a direct relationship between the records sought and an
investigation is inadequate.
4. UPGWA v State Police, 422 Mich 432 (1985), remanded for determination of costs
Request for a record need not be predicated on core purpose of the Freedom of
Information Act, the disclosure of public records to permit the requesters to
participate in the democratic process.
5. MSEA v Department of Management and Budget, 428 Mich 104 (1987)
The State generally cannot exempt employee lists containing names and home addresses
from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act.
6. Hagen v Department of Education, 431 Mich 118 (1988)
State Tenure Commission decisions may be withheld only during the administrative
stage of a teacher’s appeal.
7. Michigan Tax Management Services v City of Warren, 437 Mich 506 (1991)
The trial court must make an independent determination as to what constitutes the
reasonable fees and expenses of a requester who prevails in a Freedom of Information
Act action.
8. Swickard v Wayne County Medical Examiner, 438 Mich 536 (1991)
To determine whether a disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
privacy, privacy rights as they existed at common law, as well as the constitution
and the customs and mores of the community must be considered. Release of autopsy
test results by a medical examiner is not subject to physician-patient privilege and
is not clearly an unwarranted invasion of privacy as the right to privacy ends with
the deceased’s death.
9. Walen v Department of Corrections, 443 Mich 240 (1993)
The Freedom of Information Act applies to records of department of corrections
disciplinary hearings.
10. Hubka v Pennfield Township, 197 Mich App 117 (1992), rev in part, 443 Mich 864
(1993)
If the requester asks to inspect original records, supplying copies does not meet the
Freedom of Information Act’s requirements. The requester does not have to demonstrate
that copies are inadequate to inspect the originals. Township attorney’s letter to
the township board containing opinions, conclusions, and recommendations is
privileged.
11. Booth Newspapers, Inc v University of Michigan Board of Regents, 444 Mich 211
(1993)
Travel records in connection with a search for a university president are public
records subject to disclosure.
12. Bradley v Saranac Community Schools Board of Education
Lansing Association of School Administrators v Lansing School District Board of
Education, 216 Mich App 79 (1996), 455 Mich 285 (1997). (Consolidated Cases)
Personnel records of public school teachers and administrators including performance
evaluations, disciplinary records and complaints, must be disclosed because they are
public records and are not within any exemption under the Freedom of Information Act.
13. Alpena Title, Inc v Alpena County, 84 Mich App 308 (1978)
A county board of commissioners may charge a reasonable fee for access to, and the
copying of, county tract index information, in accordance with the statute regarding
fees for the inspection of such records.
14. Williams v Martimucci, 88 Mich App 198 (1979)
Action of manager of general office services at state prison in denying inmate’s
request for copies of certain documents in inmate’s file because inmate did not pay
the $3 fee for the cost of processing the request was not arbitrary and capricious,
since manager of general office services checked institutional indigency list for the
month and found that inmate’s name was not on it.
15. Booth Newspapers, Inc v Regents of University of Michigan, 93 Mich App 100 (1979)
Board’s contention that the disclosure of audit reports would produce an unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy is an affirmative defense. The burden of proving that
defense is on defendant. Board not entitled to summary judgment on pleadings alone.
16. Penokie v Michigan Technological University, 93 Mich App 650 (1979)
Disclosure of the names and salaries of employees of the defendant university is not
a “clearly unwarranted” invasion of personal privacy under the Freedom of Information
Act.
17. Bredemeier v Kentwood Board of Education, 95 Mich App 767 (1980)
The Freedom of Information Act does not require that information be recorded by a
public body, but if it is, it must be disclosed. Attorney fees, costs, and
disbursements are awarded to prevailing party under the Act. However, to prevail,
party must show, at a minimum, that prosecution of action could reasonably have been
regarded as necessary, and action had causative effect on delivery of information.
Lack of court-ordered disclosure precludes award of punitive damages under the Act.
18. Nabkey v Kent Community Action Program, 99 Mich App 480 (1980)
Under the Freedom of Information Act, plaintiff, as prevailing party, is entitled to
reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements. Since plaintiff was not
represented by an attorney, no award of attorneys’ fees was possible.
19. Jordan v Martimucci, 101 Mich App 212 (1980)
For plaintiff to prevail in action for punitive damages under the Freedom of
Information Act, the plaintiff must demonstrate that disclosure of information was
result of court order and that defendant acted arbitrarily and capriciously in
failing to timely comply with the disclosure request.
20. Blue Cross/Blue Shield v Insurance Bureau, 104 Mich App 113 (1981), lv den
Information may be revealed under the Freedom of Information Act despite claim of
exemption. Decision to deny disclosure of exempt records is committed to discretion
of agency and should not be disturbed unless abuse of discretion is found. Trade
secret exemption does not apply to information required by law or as a condition of
receiving a government contract, license, or benefit.
21. Schinzel v Wilkerson, 110 Mich App 600 (1981), lv den
A plaintiff appearing in propria persona who prevails in an action commenced pursuant
to the Freedom of Information Act is entitled to an award of his or her actual
expenditures, but is not entitled to an award of attorney fees.
22. Local 79 v Lapeer County Hospital, 111 Mich App 441 (1981)
The circuit court is the proper forum to seek relief from a violation of the Freedom
of Information Act.
23. Ridenour v Dearborn Board of Education, 111 Mich App 798 (1981)
Public disclosure of performance evaluation of school administrators is not an
invasion of privacy as defined by the Freedom of Information Act because people have
a strong interest in public education and because taxpayers are increasingly holding
administrators accountable for expenditures of tax money.
24. Palladium v River Valley School District, 115 Mich App 490 (1982), lv den
The Freedom of Information Act does not prevent the disclosure of the names of
students suspended by school board action.
25. Cashel v Smith, 117 Mich App 405 (1982), lv den
Depositions may sometimes be appropriate in Freedom of Information Act cases, but
they must be justified. The Legislature intended that the flow of information from
public bodies and persons should not be impeded by long court process.
26. Ballard v Department of Corrections, 122 Mich App 123 (1982), lv den
A film made by the Department of Corrections showing a prisoner being forcibly
removed from his prison cell is a public record and must be disclosed.
27. Perlongo v Iron River TV, 122 Mich App 433 (1983)
The Freedom of Information Act does not apply to a nonstock, nonprofit corporation
that was not created by state or local authority.
28. Pennington v Washtenaw County Sheriff, 125 Mich App 556 (1983)
Once a request is made under the Freedom of Information Act, the public body has a
duty to either provide access to or release copies of the records sought unless they
are exempt from disclosure.
29. Bechtel v Treasury Department, 128 Mich App 324 (1983), lv den
The Freedom of Information Act applies to the State Tax Tribunal. Also, where the
requested information contains exempt and nonexempt material, the exempt material
should be deleted in order to allow for the release of the nonexempt sections.
30. Dawkins v Civil Service Department, 130 Mich App 669 (1983), lv den
By prevailing on part of a claim under the Freedom of Information Act, the plaintiff
was entitled to an award of all attorney fees, costs, and disbursements incurred
during the trial and the appeal.
31. Mullin v Detroit Police Department, 133 Mich App 46 (1984)
The court found that the Detroit Police Department was justified in withholding their
traffic accident computer tape because: (a) the tape contained private and
potentially embarrassing private facts; and, (b) the nonprivate information was
available in other forms.
32. Hoffman v Bay City School District, 137 Mich App 333 (1984), lv den
An attorney hired to undertake an investigation for a public body is not a public
body and, thus, is not required to turn over a personal investigatory file under the
Freedom of Information Act. Also, a public body has no duty to create a record.
33. Capitol Info Assn v Ann Arbor Police Dept, 138 Mich App 655 (1984)
A request for a copy of “all correspondence with all federal law enforcement/
investigative agencies . . . pertaining to persons living in Ann Arbor, Michigan” was
found “absurdly overbroad”. The public body was not required to comply.
34. Soave v Department of Education, 139 Mich App 99 (1984)
Under the Federal Rehabilitation Act regulations, records that may be harmful to a
former participant in the vocational rehabilitation program can be withheld. This is
sufficient to withhold those same records under the “exempted from disclosure by
statute” exemption (section 13(1)(d) of the Freedom of Information Act).
35. Cashel v University of Michigan Regents, 141 Mich App 541 (1985)
The Freedom of Information Act requires that a public body furnish “a reasonable
opportunity for inspection and examination of its public records.” A request to
access extremely large quantities of documents was found to be an excessive and
unreasonable interference with the public body’s function and, therefore, access
could be limited to a reasonable length of time.
36. Paprocki v Jackson Clerk, 142 Mich App 785 (1985), reconsideration den
The county in which a prisoner is incarcerated is not the county in which a suit may
be brought under the Freedom of Information Act. Jurisdiction for such a suit, where
the prisoner “resides”, refers to the place where the prisoner last lived before
being sent to prison. (See the Curry case below.)
37. Milford v Gilb, 148 Mich App 778 (1985)
Documents pertaining to the city’s urban renewal projects must be disclosed because
the city failed to show that the documents were: (a) other than purely factual
material; and (b) preliminary to a final determination of policy or action. Even if
these two requirements had been met, the public body’s interest in frank
communication must outweigh the public interest in disclosure.
38. Curry v Jackson Circuit Court, 151 Mich App 754 (1986)
The term “resides”, as used in section 10(1) of the Freedom of Information Act, means
a person’s legal residence or domicile. A prisoner may establish the county in which
the prison is located as his or her legal residence or domicile.
39. Health Central v Commissioner of Insurance, 152 Mich App 336 (1986)
Nondisclosure of public records is at the discretion of the public body applying the
Freedom of Information Act’s enumerated exceptions. The Act does not confer the right
to prevent disclosure and, therefore, a third party must have a basis independent of
the Act in order to prohibit the public body from disclosing a public record.
40. DeMaria v Department of Management and Budget, 159 Mich App 729 (1987)
Communications of independent consultants to a public body are not “communications
and notes within a public body,” and are, therefore, not exempt under section
13(1)(n) of the Freedom of Information Act.
41. Laracey v Financial Inst Bureau, 163 Mich App 437 (1987), lv den
An attorney representing himself or herself in a Freedom of Information Act claim is
not entitled to attorney fees.
42. Walloon Water v Melrose Township, 163 Mich App 726 (1987)
The defendant-township violated the Freedom of Information Act when it disposed of a
letter after the plaintiff made a request for it. The court awards plaintiff costs,
fees, and punitive damages.
43. Mithrandir v Department of Corrections, 164 Mich App 143 (1987), lv den
Prison can set reasonable restrictions on a prisoner’s right to inspect its public
records.
44. Free Press v Oakland Sheriff, 164 Mich App 656 (1987)
Release of “mug shots” is not a clearly unwarranted invasion of an individual’s
privacy. Therefore, the “mug shots” may be disclosed.
45. Jones v Wayne Prosecutor, 165 Mich App 62 (1987), lv den
Information available through county clerk covered by court rule need not be released
by another agency under a request made under the Freedom of Information Act.
46. Kearney v Mental Health Department, 168 Mich App 406 (1988)
Release of mental health records not sufficiently in public interest so as to require
copies to be provided without cost.
47. Ratepayer Consortium v PSC #2, 168 Mich App 476 (1987)
Agency is not precluded from raising defenses in court for nondisclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, if defenses not raised at administrative level.
48. Oakland Press v Pontiac Stadium Building Authority, 173 Mich App 41 (1988)
Whichever balancing test suggested by MSEA v Department of Management and Budget is
used, the authority must give the names and addresses of the lessees of stadium
suites, if claim is made that the release would be a violation of the privacy
protections of the Act.
49. Booth Newspapers v Kent County Treasurer, 175 Mich App 523 (1989)
Corporations have no right of privacy in corporate tax records.
50. Payne v Grand Rapids Police, 178 Mich App 193 (1989), lv den
To find exemption from disclosure information that would interfere with law
enforcement proceedings, it is insufficient for summary disposition purposes to find
the information could interfere with law enforcement proceedings.
51. Easley v University of Michigan, 178 Mich App 723 (1989), lv den
Court will not order an award or impose sanctions for an agency’s failure to produce
a record it cannot locate even if the agency agrees that the record once existed.
52. Post-Newsweek Stations, Michigan, Inc v Detroit, 179 Mich App 331 (1989)
The trial court must do one of the following in analyzing a claim that records are
exempt from disclosure:
1) Receive complete and particularized justification for nondisclosure; or
2) Conduct an in camera, de novo review to determine whether complete, particularized
justification for nondisclosure exists; or
3) Make the records available to the requesting party’s attorney to inspect in camera
under special agreement.
53. Kincaid v Department of Corrections, 180 Mich App 176 (1989)
Department’s denial of a request for a record on the basis that the record did not
exist was arbitrary and capricious when department’s own files acknowledged existence
of record.
54. Booth Newspapers, Inc v Kalamazoo School Dist, 181 Mich App 752 (1989), lv den
Following the settlement of a tenure action, the disclosure of a tenure proceeding
report from which the name of the teacher involved was deleted is not a clearly
unwarranted invasion of privacy.
55. Tallman v Cheboygan Schools, 183 Mich App 123 (1990)
A board’s adoption of a policy is not an act or statute permitting the board to
charge more for a copy of a record than the actual cost of copying.
56. Hartzell v Mayville School District, 183 Mich App 782 (1990)
If a requested record does not exist, the public body must so inform the requester.
57. Traverse City Record Eagle v Traverse City Area Public Schools, 184 Mich App 609
(1990), lv den
A tentative bargaining agreement between a school and a union is exempt from
compelled disclosure under the exemption for advisory communications preliminary to a
final decision of a public body.
58. Wayne Prosecutor v Detroit, 185 Mich App 265 (1990), lv den
A public person is as entitled to the release of public information under the Freedom
of Information Act as is a private person.
59. Clerical-Technical Union of Michigan State University v Michigan State
University, 190 Mich App 300 (1991), lv den
The names and addresses of anonymous, and the addresses of non-anonymous, donors to a
public university are exempt from disclosure under the privacy exemption of the
Freedom of Information Act because the release of that information would constitute a
clearly unwarranted invasion of the donors’ privacy and disclosure would serve no
public interest.
60. Lepp v Cheboygan Area Schools, 190 Mich App 726 (1991)
The privacy exemption of the Freedom of Information Act is inapplicable when the
requested information pertains to the party making the request.
61. Favors v Department of Corrections, 192 Mich App 131 (1991), lv den
A worksheet used in determining whether a prisoner should be awarded disciplinary
credits is exempt from disclosure because it: (a) contains material that is not
purely factual; (b) is only recommendatory, and (c) is preliminary to a final
determination. Further, the public interest in keeping this communication private
encourages frank discussions within the department of corrections that clearly
outweighs the public interest in the worksheet’s disclosure.
62. Wilson v Eaton Rapids, 196 Mich App 671 (1992)
A plaintiff in a Freedom of Information Act action may not recover attorney fees or
costs when judicial action is not necessary to force the disclosure of the requested
documents.
63. Yarbrough v Department of Corrections, 199 Mich App 180 (1993)
Documents compiled during an internal sexual harassment claim investigation are for
the purpose of law enforcement and exempt from disclosure while the investigation is
ongoing. The plaintiff prevails for the purpose of awarding costs and fees if the
action is reasonably necessary to compel disclosure and it had a substantial
causative effect on the delivery of the information.
64. Patterson v Allegan County Sheriff, 199 Mich App 638 (1993).
A jail inmate’s booking photograph is a public record subject to disclosure.
65. Densmore, Jr v Department of Corrections, 203 Mich App 363 (1994) The department
need not release a record that a prisoner has already received without a showing that
the first copy was not adequate.
66. Newark Morning Ledge Co v Saginaw County Sheriff, 204 Mich App 215 (1994)
The location of the requested records in personnel files does not determine the
application of the exemption for personnel records.
67. Curley v Cheboygan Area Schools
Quatrine v Mackinaw City Public Schools, 204 Mich App 342 (1994) (Consolidated cases)
The Freedom of Information Act does not require school districts to disclose pupil
records if they have not received a parental release.
68. Detroit News, Inc v City of Detroit, 204 Mich App 720 (1994)
Expense records of public officials and employees in performance of official
functions are public records subject to the Freedom of Information Act. A record
created by a nonpublic body can become a public record.
69. Mackey v Department of Corrections, 205 Mich App 330 (1994)
A record about a prison inmate falls under the exemption for records that would
jeopardize prison security if the record is requested by another inmate.
70. Hyson v Department of Corrections, 205 Mich App 422 (1994)
If documents would reveal an informer’s identity or jeopardize prison security,
disclosure is not required.
71. In re Subpoena Duces Tecum to Wayne County Prosecutor, 205 Mich App 700 (1994),
lv den
The qualified privilege from disclosure for agency evaluative and deliberative
documents does not extend to information in those documents of a purely factual
nature. The privilege can be overcome by a showing that the requester’s need
outweighs the public interest promoted by the privilege.
72. Local 312 of American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, AFL-
CIO v City of Detroit, 207 Mich App 472 (1994), lv den
The Freedom of Information Act does not include an exemption from disclosure for
documents that are sought for purposes of litigation.
73. Farrell v City of Detroit, 209 Mich App 7 (1995)
Computer records are public records that are disclosable under the Freedom of
Information Act. If a person requests computer records in the form of a computer
backup tape, supplying a computer printout of the information does not meet the
requirements for disclosure under the Act.
74. Thomas v Board of Law Examiners, 210 Mich App 279 (1995)
The judiciary and judicial agencies are excluded from the definition of public body
under the Freedom of Information Act.
75. Michigan Council of Trout Unlimited v Department of Military Affairs, 213 Mich
App 203 (1995)
The circuit court has jurisdiction over a complaint against the department under the
Freedom of Information Act concerning a Michigan Army National Guard matter.
76. Jackson v Eastern Michigan University Foundation, 215 Mich App 240 (1996)
A foundation funded primarily by a state university is a public body subject to the
Freedom of Information Act.
77. Grebner v Clinton Charter Twp, 216 Mich App 736 (1996)
A statute must specifically authorize sale of government information to collect a fee
that is greater than the incremental costs of complying with a Freedom of Information
Act request under the Act.
78. Nicita v City of Detroit, 194 Mich App 657 (1992); on rem, 216 Mich App 746
(1996), lv den
The exemption for bids only applies to solicited bids and does not exempt any bid
from disclosure after a bid has been selected. Business records do not quality for
the exemption for records that invade personal privacy. A defendant must give more
than general allegations to support the claim that records qualify for an exemption
from disclosure.
79. Grebner v Oakland County Clerk, 220 Mich App 513 (1996)
The county in which the plaintiff resides is proper venue for an action under the
Freedom of Information Act.
80. Schroeder v City of Detroit, 221 Mich App 364 (1997)
A police officer preemployment psychological exam is exempt from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act’s exemption for examination instruments used for public
employment.
81. Oakland Prosecutor v Department of Corrections, 222 Mich App 654 (1997)
Department of corrections records of a prisoner’s psychological examination are not
privileged or exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, if sought
by the prosecutor for use in proceedings relating to parole of the prisoner.
82. Central Michigan University Supervisory-Technical Ass’n v Board of Trustees of
Central Michigan University, 223 Mich App 727 (1997)
Court rules governing discovery in litigation do not conflict with the Freedom of
Information Act so as to exempt a public body from complying with a plaintiff’s
request for public records. (Partially overruling Jones v Wayne Prosecutor,above).
83. The Herald Co v Ann Arbor Public Schools, 224 Mich App 266 (1997)
A memorandum containing personal information was disclosable because it addressed a
legitimate public concern and the public interest in disclosing observations
regarding a teacher convicted of carrying a concealed weapon outweighed privacy
interests. The physician-patient privilege applies to attendance and medical records
only as to statements made for the purpose of obtaining medical treatment. Records of
a discussion with an attorney are disclosable since the interview was adversarial and
not for the purpose of obtaining legal advice.
Opinions of the Attorney General Relating
to the Freedom of Information Act
The Attorney General has issued numerous Opinions of the Attorney General (OAG) which
explain various applications of the Freedom of Information Act. This list of the
principal opinions issued is current through July of 1997. Copies of OAGs may be
obtained by writing to:
Attorney General Frank Kelley
525 West Ottawa
Law Building, 7th Floor
Lansing, Michigan 48913
Because the Legislature has amended the Freedom of Information Act from time to time
after its enactment, the Opinions of the Attorney General interpreting and applying
the Act may not pertain to its current provisions. For example, the opinions listed
below concerning prisoner requests for public records were rendered under the Act
before the amendment that excludes prisoners from the persons entitled to make
requests for public records.
1. Unless exempt from disclosure by law, records of the Brown-McNeely insurance fund
are public records. Attorney General Opinion No. 5156, p. 66, March 24, 1977.
2. The office of county sheriff is subject to the provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5419, p. 758, December 29, 1978.
3. Since certain records are protected from disclosure by the Social Welfare Act,
they are exempt from disclosure under section 13(1)(d) of the Freedom of Information
Act, which section exempts records that are exempted from disclosure by another
statute. Attorney General Opinion No. 5436, p. 31, February 1, 1979.
4. The Insurance Commissioner is required to charge a rate for making copies of
public records requested in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act. Attorney
General Opinion No. 5465, p. 104, March 26, 1979.
5. The following responses to specific inquiries are found in Attorney General
Opinion No. 5500, published on July 23, 1979:
a. A government agency does not fall within the meaning of “person” for purposes of
obtaining information under the Act. p. 261
b. The Civil Service Commission is subject to the provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act. p. 261
c. Since the President’s Council of State Colleges and Universities is wholly funded
by state universities and colleges, it is a public body as defined by the Freedom of
Information Act. p. 262
d. A board of trustees of a county hospital may refuse to make available records of
its proceedings or reports received and records compiled, if disclosure would
constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of an individual’s privacy under section
13(1)(a) of the Act; or if the records disclose medical, counseling, or psychological
facts or evaluations concerning a named individual under section 13(m) of the Act; or
if disclosure would violate the physician-patient or psychologist- patient privilege
under section 13(1)(i) of the Act. p. 263
e. Transcripts of depositions taken in the course of an administrative hearing are
subject to disclosure to a person who was not a party to the proceeding, as there is
no specific exemption in section 13(1) of the Act or any other statute that exempts a
deposition or a document referring to the deposition from disclosure. These documents
may, however, contain statements that are exempt from disclosure and, therefore,
pursuant to section 14 of the Act, where a person who is not a party to the
proceeding requests a copy, it will be necessary to separate the exempt material and
make only the nonexempt records available. p. 263
f. Stenographer’s notes or the tape recordings or dictaphone records of a municipal
meeting used to prepare minutes are public records under the Act and must be made
available to the public. p. 264
g. Computer software developed by and in the possession of a public body is not a
public record. p. 264
h. Although a state university must release a report of the performance of its
official functions in its files, regardless of who prepared it, if a report prepared
by an outside agency is retained only by the private agency, it is not subject to
public disclosure. p. 265
i. Copyrighted materials are not subject to the Act. p. 266
j. If a public body maintains a file of the names of employees it has fired or
suspended over a certain designated period of time, it must disclose the list if
requested. p. 268
k. A public body may charge a fee for providing a copy of a public record. p. 268
l. A request for data that refers to an extensive period of time and contains no
other reference by which the public record may be found does not comply with the
requirement of section 3 of the Act that the request describe the public record
sufficiently to enable the public body to find it. p. 268
m. The five-day response provision begins the day after the public body has received
the request sufficiently describing the public record. If the request does not
contain sufficient information describing the public record, it may be denied on that
ground. If, subsequently, additional information is provided that sufficiently
describes the public record, the period within which the response must be made dates
from the time that the additional information is received. p. 269
n. A school board may meet in closed session pursuant to the Open Meetings Act to
consider matters which are exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information
Act. p. 270
o. The names and addresses of students may be released unless the parent of the
student or the student has informed the institution in writing that such information
should not be released. p. 281
p. A law enforcement agency may refuse to release the name of a person who has been
arrested, but not charged in a complaint or information, with the commission of a
crime. p. 282
q. Since motor vehicle registration lists have not been declared to be confidential,
they are required to be open to public inspection. p. 300
6. File photographs routinely taken of criminal suspects by law enforcement agencies
are public records as defined by the Freedom of Information Act. To the extent that
the release of a photograph of a person would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy, a public body may refuse to permit a person to inspect
or make copies of the photograph. Attorney General Opinion No. 5593, p. 468, November
14, 1979.
7. The exemption contained in section 13(1)(n) of the Freedom of Information Act for
communications and notes within a public body or between public bodies of an advisory
nature does not constitute an exemption for the purposes of the Open Meetings Act in
view of a specific statutory provision which states that this exemption does not
constitute an exemption for the purposes of section 8(h) of the Open Meetings Act.
Attorney General Opinion No. 5608, p. 496, December 17, 1979.
8. The meetings of a board of education expelling a student from school must list a
student’s name. Unedited minutes must be furnished to the public on request in
accordance with law. Attorney General Opinion No. 5632, p. 563, January 24, 1980.
9. The confidentiality mandated by the Banking Code of 1969 is not limited to facts
and information furnished by state chartered banks, but applies to all facts and
information received by the Financial Institutions Bureau. Such facts and information
are not subject to disclosure pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act. Attorney
General Opinion No. 5725, p. 842, June 23, 1980.
10. Since the Law Enforcement Information Network (LEIN) Policy Council does not
receive and maintain records in the LEIN system, it does not possess copies of
records and as a result has no material to furnish persons seeking such records under
the Freedom of Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5797, p. 1038, October
14, 1980.
11. A public body is not required to disclose both the questions and answers of a
sheriff’s promotional test unless the public body finds it in the public interest to
disclose both the test questions and answers. Attorney General Opinion No. 5832, p.
1125, December 18, 1980.
12. Employment records disclosing salary history and employment dates are subject to
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6019,
p. 507, December 29, 1981.
13. Copies of receipts maintained by a register of deeds for amounts paid as real
estate transfer taxes fall within the mandatory exemption from disclosure established
by section 11b of 1966 P.A. 134 and are exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6023, p. 518, January 8, 1982.
14. A township is not required to enact its own freedom of information act in order
to comply with the state Freedom of Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No.
6042, p. 584, February 25, 1982.
15. A school district must furnish the records of a student upon request of another
school district in which the student is enrolled as an incident to the operation of
free public elementary and secondary schools required by section 2 of article VIII of
the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and is precluded from withholding the records
because the student or his or her parents is indebted to the school district
possessing the records for fees or other charges. Attorney General Opinion No. 6064,
p. 641, April 30, 1982.
16. Records of a public body showing the number of days a public employee is absent
from work are not exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act.
Attorney General Opinion No. 6087, p. 698, July 28, 1982.
17. A county sheriff may exempt from disclosure “jail booking records” where
disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy of a person
booked into the county jail. Attorney General Opinion No. 6389, p. 374, September 24,
1986.
18. State legislators are exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of Information
Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6390, p. 375, September 26, 1986.
19. The specific exemption of information evaluating worker’s compensation
magistrates from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act does not exempt the
information from disclosure under any other law that may require disclosure. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6504, p. 295, March 4, 1988.
20. The Freedom of Information Act does not apply to private bodies, whether or not
primarily funded by or through state or local authority, because the title of the Act
refers only to public bodies. Attorney General Opinion No. 6563, p. 27, January 26,
1989.
21. The personal records of the Auditor General are excluded from the Freedom of
Information Act’s disclosure requirements, but the general records of that office are
subject to disclosure. Attorney General Opinion No. 6613, p. 299, March 14, 1990.
22. The provision of the Open Meetings Act permitting a public body to meet in closed
session for a personnel evaluation is not a statute that specifically describes and
exempts the evaluation from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act so as to
exempt the personnel evaluation from disclosure. Evaluations prepared by individual
members of a board are subject to disclosure, if there is no intervening deliberative
process between the creation of the individual evaluations and the adoption of a
final evaluation by the board. Attorney General Opinion No. 6668, p. 409, November
28, 1990.
23. A public body that provides information to an indigent person and waives the fee
cannot refuse to provide additional copies of identical records, but need not again
waive the fee. Attorney General Opinion No. 6766, p. 52, August 19, 1993.
24. Only the department of state police must search for and disclose records on the
STATUS system upon a request under the Freedom of Information Act. A participating
law enforcement agency need only respond to a request under the Act for STATUS system
information if it downloads the information or provides the information to the
system. Attorney General Opinion No. 6820, p. 196, October 11, 1994.
25. A public body may establish a fee in advance of providing a requested record if
the fee is calculated based on actual costs as specified in the Freedom of
Information Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6923, p. 224, October 23, 1996.
26. A private, voluntary, unincorporated association of lake property owners is not
subject to the Freedom of Information Act. A resort owners association incorporated
under 1929 PA 137 must comply with the Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6942, p.
____, July 3, 1997.
Special Note on the Federal Freedom of Information Act
Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act is a law which guarantees public access to
vital public information held at the state level. There is also a federal Freedom of
Information Act which opens files of the United States government to all citizens.
For information on the federal Freedom of Information Act, contact the Member of
Congress from your community or write to:
The Honorable Carl Levin
United States Senator
459 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
or
The Honorable Debbie Stabenow
United States Senator
Washington, D.C. 20510
You should also know that an excellent publication entitled Using the Freedom of
Information Act: A Step by Step Guide is made available by the American Civil
Liberties Union. A copy of that guide may be obtained by sending $4.00 (check or
money order) to ACLU Publications, 122 Maryland Ave., N.E., Washington, D.C. 20002;
(202) 544-5380.
20 (Rev. 1/16/01)
Michigan’s Open Meetings Act
Public Act No. 267 of 1976, as amended
The following is a general outline and digest of the Open Meetings Act. When
asserting any rights under the Open Meetings Act, always refer to the specific
provisions of the Act, which are republished immediately following this outline.
Basic Intent:
The basic intent of the Open Meetings Act is to strengthen the right of all Michigan
citizens to know what goes on in government by requiring public bodies to conduct
nearly all business at open meetings.
Key Definitions:
“Public body” means any state or local legislative or governing body, including a
board, commission, committee, subcommittee, authority, or council, which is empowered
by state constitution, statute, charter, ordinance, resolution, or rule to exercise
governmental or proprietary authority or perform a governmental or proprietary
function, or a lessee thereof performing an essential public purpose and function
pursuant to the lease agreement.
“Meeting” means the convening of a public body at which a quorum is present for the
purpose of deliberating toward or
rendering a decision on a public policy.
“Closed session” means a meeting or part of a meeting of a public body which is
closed to the public.
“Decision” means a determination, action, vote or disposition upon a motion,
proposal, recommendation, resolution, order, ordinance, bill or measure on which a
vote by members of a public body is required and by which a public body effectuates
or formulates public policy.
Coverage:
The coverage of the new law is very broad, including the state Legislature as well as
the legislative or governing bodies of all cities, villages, townships, charter
townships and all county units of government.
The law also applies to:
• local and intermediate school districts;
• government boards of community colleges,
state colleges and universities; and
• special boards and commissions created by law (i.e., public hospital authorities,
road commissions, health boards and zoning boards, etc.). Several public bodies are
exempted from the requirements of the act when they are deliberating the merits of a
case. They are the Worker’s Compensation Appeal Board, the Employment Security
Appeals Board, the Michigan Veterans’ Trust Fund Board (or a county or district
committee when the board of trustees or county or district committee is deliberating
the merits of an emergent need), the Teacher Tenure Commission (when acting as a
board of review), the Michigan Public Service Commission, and arbitration panels
selected by the Employment Relations Commission or under other laws.
The act also does not apply to a meeting of a public body which is a social or chance
gathering not designed to avoid the law.
Notification of Meetings:
The law states that within 10 days of the first meeting of a public body in each
calendar or fiscal year, the body must publicly post a list stating the dates, times
and places of all its regular meetings at its principal office.
If a public body does not have a principal office, the notice would be posted in the
office of the county clerk for a local public body or the office of the Secretary of
State for a state public body.
If there is a change in schedule, within three days of the meeting in which the
change is made, the public body must post a notice stating the new dates, times and
places of regular meetings.
Special and Irregular Meetings:
For special and irregular meetings, public bodies must post a notice indicating the
date, time and place at least 18 hours before the meetings.
NOTE: A regular meeting of a public body, which is recessed for more than 36 hours,
can only be reconvened if a notice is posted 18 hours in advance.
Emergency Meetings:
Public bodies may hold emergency sessions without a written notice or time
constraints if the public health, safety or welfare is severely threatened and if
two-thirds of the body’s members vote to hold the emergency meeting.
Individual Notification of Meetings by Mail:
Any citizen can request that public bodies put them on a mailing list so that they
are notified in advance of all meetings.
Section 6 of the new law states that:
“Upon the written request of an individual, organization, firm or corporation, and
upon the requesting party’s
payment of a yearly fee of not more than the reasonable estimated cost for printing
and postage of such notices, a
public body shall send to the requesting party by first-class mail, a copy of any
notice required to be posted . . .”.
In addition, upon written request, public bodies are required to send free notices of
meetings to newspapers, radio and television stations at the same time that they are
required to post those notices.
Closed Meetings:
The law provides for closed meetings in a few specified circumstances. In order for a
public body to hold a closed meeting, two-thirds of its members must vote
affirmatively in a roll call. Also, the purpose for which the closed meeting is being
called has to be stated in the meeting when the roll call is taken.
Closed meetings may be called without a two-thirds vote for the following reasons:
(1) considering the dismissal, suspension or disciplining of, or to hear complaints
or charges brought against a public officer, employee, staff member or individual
when the person requests a closed hearing;
(2) considering the dismissal, suspension or disciplining of a student of a public
school when the student or guardian requests a closed hearing;
(3) strategy and negotiation sessions necessary in reaching a collective bargaining
agreement when either party requests a closed hearing; and
(4) partisan caucuses of the State Legislature.
(5) for a compliance conference the department of commerce conducts under MCL
§333.16231, concerning an investigation of certain licensed medical professionals.
(6) to conduct searches for a university president, until the board has narrowed the
search to 5 candidates. Other reasons a public body may hold a closed meeting are:
(1) to consider the purchase or lease of real property;
(2) to consult with its attorney about trial or settlement strategy in pending
litigation, but only when an open meeting would have detrimental financial effect on
the public body’s position;
(3) to review the contents of an application for employment or appointment to a
public office when the candidate requests the application to remain confidential.
However, all interviews by a public body for employment or appointment to a public
office have to be conducted in an open meeting; and
(4) to consider material exempt from discussion or disclosure by state or federal
statute.
Minutes of a Meeting:
Minutes must be kept for all meetings and are required to contain:
(1) a statement of the time, date and place of the meeting;
(2) the members present as well as absent;
(3) a record of any decisions made at the meeting and a record of all roll call
votes; and
(4) an explanation for the purpose(s) if the meeting is a closed session.
Except for minutes taken during a closed session, all minutes are considered public
records, open for public inspection, and must be available for review as well as
copying at the address designated on the public notice for the meeting. Proposed
minutes must be available for public inspection within 8 business days after a
meeting. Approved minutes must be available within 5 business days after the meeting
at which they were approved. Corrections in the minutes must be made no later than
the next meeting after the meeting to which the minutes refer. Corrected minutes must
be available no later than the next meeting after the correction and must show both
the original entry and the correction.
Explanation of Minutes of Closed Meeting:
Minutes of closed meetings must also be recorded although they are not available for
public inspection and would only be disclosed if required by a civil action. These
minutes may be destroyed one year and one day after approval of the minutes of the
regular meeting at which the closed session was approved.
Enforcement of the Act:
Under the law, the attorney general, prosecutor or any citizen can challenge in
circuit court the validity of a decision of a public body made in violation of its
provisions. If a decision is made by the body in violation of the law, that decision
can be invalidated by the court.
In any case where an action has been initiated to invalidate a decision of a public
body, the public body may reenact the disputed decision in conformity with the act. A
decision reenacted in this manner shall be effective from the date of reenactment and
will not be declared invalid by reason of a deficiency in the procedure used for its
initial enactment.
Penalties Under the Act:
The first time a public official intentionally breaks the law, he or she can be
punished by a maximum fine of $1,000. For a second offense within the same term of
office, he or she can be fined up to $2,000, jailed for a maximum of one year or
both. A public official who intentionally violates the act is also personally liable
for actual and exemplary damages up to $500, plus court costs and attorney fees.
OPEN MEETINGS ACT
Act 267 of 1976; Eff. Mar. 31, 1977
AN ACT to require certain meetings of certain public bodies to be open to the public;
to require notice and the keeping of minutes of meetings; to provide for enforcement;
to provide for invalidation of governmental decisions under certain circumstances; to
provide penalties; and to repeal certain acts and parts of acts.
The People of the State of Michigan enact:
15.261 Short title; effect of act on certain charter provisions, ordinances, or
resolutions.
Sec. 1. (1) This act shall be known and may be cited as the “Open meetings act”.
(2) This act shall supersede all local charter provisions, ordinances, or resolutions
which relate to requirements for meetings of local public bodies to be open to the
public.
(3) After the effective date of this act, nothing in this act shall prohibit a public
body from adopting an ordinance, resolution, rule, or charter provision which would
require a greater degree of openness relative to meetings of public bodies than the
standards provided for in this act.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.262 Definitions.
Sec. 2. As used in this act:
(a) “Public body” means any state or local legislative or governing body, including a
board, commission, committee, subcommittee, authority, or council, which is empowered
by state constitution, statute, charter, ordinance, resolution, or rule to exercise
governmental or proprietary authority or perform a governmental or proprietary
function, or a lessee thereof performing an essential public purpose and function
pursuant to the lease agreement.
(b) “Meeting” means the convening of a public body at which a quorum is present for
the purpose of deliberating toward or rendering a decision on a public policy.
(c) “Closed session” means a meeting or part of a meeting of a public body which is
closed to the public.
(d) “Decision” means a determination, action, vote, or disposition upon a motion,
proposal, recommendation, resolution, order, ordinance, bill, or measure on which a
vote by members of a public body is required and by which a public body effectuates
or formulates public policy.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.263 Meetings, decisions, and deliberations of public body; requirements; attending
or addressing meeting of public body; tape-recording, videotaping, broadcasting, and
telecasting proceedings; rules and regulations; exclusion from meeting; exemptions.
Sec. 3. (1) All meetings of a public body shall be open to the public and shall be
held in a place available to the general public. All persons shall be permitted to
attend any meeting except as otherwise provided in this act. The right of a person to
attend a meeting of a public body includes the right to tape-record, to videotape, to
broadcast live on radio, and to telecast live on television the proceedings of a
public body at a public meeting. The exercise of this right shall not be dependent
upon the prior approval of the public body. However, a public body may establish
reasonable rules and regulations in order to minimize the possibility of disrupting
the meeting.
(2) All decisions of a public body shall be made at a meeting open to the public.
(3) All deliberations of a public body constituting a quorum of its members shall
take place at a meeting open to the public except as provided in this section and
sections 7 and 8.
(4) A person shall not be required as a condition of attendance at a meeting of a
public body to register or otherwise provide his or her name or other information or
otherwise to fulfill a condition precedent to attendance.
(5) A person shall be permitted to address a meeting of a public body under rules
established and recorded by the public body. The legislature or a house of the
legislature may provide by rule that the right to address may be limited to
prescribed times at hearings and committee meetings only.
(6) A person shall not be excluded from a meeting otherwise open to the public except
for a breach of the peace actually committed at the meeting.
(7) This act does not apply to the following public bodies only when deliberating the
merits of a case:
(a) The worker’s compensation appeal board created under the worker’s disability
compensation act of 1969, Act No. 317 of the Public Acts of 1969, as amended, being
sections 418.101 to 418.941 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(b) The employment security board of review created under the Michigan employment
security act, Act No. 1 of the Public Acts of the Extra Session of 1936, as amended,
being sections 421.1 to 421.73 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(c) The state tenure commission created under Act No. 4 of the Public Acts of the
Extra Session of 1937, as amended, being sections 38.71 to 38.191 of the Michigan
Compiled Laws, when acting as a board of review from the decision of a controlling
board.
(d) An arbitrator or arbitration panel appointed by the employment relations
commission under the authority given the commission by Act No. 176 of the Public Acts
of 1939, as amended, being sections 423.1 to 423.30 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(e) An arbitration panel selected under chapter 50A of the revised judicature act of
1961, Act No. 236 of the Public Acts of 1961, being sections 600.5040 to 600.5065 of
the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(f) The Michigan public service commission created under Act No. 3 of the Public Acts
of 1939, being sections 460.1 to 460.8 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.
(8) This act does not apply to an association of insurers created under the insurance
code of 1956, Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956, being sections 500.100 to
500.8302 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, or other association or facility formed under
Act No. 218 of the Public Acts of 1956 as a nonprofit organization of insurer
members.
(9) This act does not apply to a committee of a public body which adopts a
nonpolicymaking resolution of tribute or memorial which resolution is not adopted at
a meeting.
(10) This act does not apply to a meeting which is a social or chance gathering or
conference not designed to avoid this act.
(11) This act shall not apply to the Michigan veterans’ trust fund board of trustees
or a county or district committee created under Act No. 9 of the Public Acts of the
first extra session of 1946, being sections 35.601 to 35.610 of the Michigan Compiled
Laws, when the board of trustees or county or district committee is deliberating the
merits of an emergent need. A decision of the board of trustees or county or district
committee made under this subsection shall be reconsidered by the board or committee
at its next regular or special meeting consistent with the requirements of this act.
“Emergent need” means a situation which the board of trustees, by rules promulgated
under the administrative procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of
1969, as amended, being sections 24.201 to 24.328 of the Michigan Compiled Laws,
determines requires immediate action.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977;—Am. 1981, Act 161, Imd. Eff. Nov. 30,
1981;—Am. 1986, Act 269, Imd. Eff. Dec. 19, 1986;—Am. 1988, Act 158, Imd. Eff. June
14, 1988;—Am. 1988, Act 278, Imd. Eff. July 27, 1988.
Administrative rules: R 35.621 of the Michigan Administrative Code.
15.264 Public notice of meetings generally; contents; places of posting.
Sec. 4. The following provisions shall apply with respect to public notice of
meetings:
(a) A public notice shall always contain the name of the public body to which the
notice applies, its telephone number if one exists, and its address.
(b) A public notice for a public body shall always be posted at its principal office
and any other locations considered appropriate by the public body. Cable television
may also be utilized for purposes of posting public notice.
(c) If a public body is a part of a state department, part of the legislative or
judicial branch of state government, part of an institution of higher education, or
part of a political subdivision or school district, a public notice shall also be
posted in the respective principal office of the state department, the institution of
higher education, clerk of the house of representatives, secretary of the state
senate, clerk of the supreme court, or political subdivision or school district.
(d) If a public body does not have a principal office, the required public notice for
a local public body shall be posted in the office of the county clerk in which the
public body serves and the required public notice for a state public body shall be
posted in the office of the secretary of state. History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31,
1977;—Am. 1984, Act 87, Imd. Eff. Apr. 19, 1984.
15.265 Public notice of regular meetings, change in schedule of regular meetings,
rescheduled regular meetings, or special meetings; time for posting; statement of
date, time, and place; applicability of subsection (4); recess or adjournment;
emergency sessions; meeting in residential dwelling; notice.
Sec. 5. (1) A meeting of a public body shall not be held unless public notice is
given as provided in this section by a person designated by the public body.
(2) For regular meetings of a public body, there shall be posted within 10 days after
the first meeting of the public body in each calendar or fiscal year a public notice
stating the dates, times, and places of its regular meetings.
(3) If there is a change in the schedule of regular meetings of a public body, there
shall be posted within 3 days after the meeting at which the change is made, a public
notice stating the new dates, times, and places of its regular meetings.
(4) Except as provided in this subsection or in subsection (6), for a rescheduled
regular or a special meeting of a public body, a public notice stating the date,
time, and place of the meeting shall be posted at least 18 hours before the meeting.
The requirement of 18-hour notice shall not apply to special meetings of
subcommittees of a public body or conference committees of the state legislature. A
conference committee shall give a 6-hour notice. A second conference committee shall
give a 1-hour notice. Notice of a conference committee meeting shall include written
notice to each member of the conference committee and the majority and minority
leader of each house indicating time and place of the meeting. This subsection does
not apply to a public meeting held pursuant to section 4(2) to (5) of Act No. 239 of
the Public Acts of 1955, as amended, being section 200.304 of the Michigan Compiled
Laws.
(5) A meeting of a public body which is recessed for more than 36 hours shall be
reconvened only after public notice, which is equivalent to that required under
subsection (4), has been posted. If either house of the state legislature is
adjourned or recessed for less than 18 hours, the notice provisions of subsection (4)
are not applicable. Nothing in this section shall bar a public body from meeting in
emergency session in the event of a severe and imminent threat to the health, safety,
or welfare of the public when 2/3 of the members serving on the body decide that
delay would be detrimental to efforts to lessen or respond to the threat.
(6) A meeting of a public body may only take place in a residential dwelling if a
nonresidential building within the boundary of the local governmental unit or school
system is not available without cost to the public body. For a meeting of a public
body which is held in a residential dwelling, notice of the meeting shall be
published as a display advertisement in a newspaper of general circulation in the
city or township in which the meeting is to be held. The notice shall be published
not less than 2 days before the day on which the meeting is held, and shall state the
date, time, and place of the meeting. The notice, which shall be at the bottom of the
display advertisement and which shall be set off in a conspicuous manner, shall
include the following language: “This meeting is open to all members of the public
under Michigan’s open meetings act”.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977;—Am. 1978, Act 256, Imd. Eff. June 21,
1978;—Am. 1982, Act 134, Imd. Eff. Apr. 22, 1982;—Am. 1984, Act 167, Imd. Eff. June
29, 1984.
15.266 Providing copies of public notice on written request; fee.
Sec. 6. (1) Upon the written request of an individual, organization, firm, or
corporation, and upon the requesting party’s payment of a yearly fee of not more than
the reasonable estimated cost for printing and postage of such notices, a public body
shall send to the requesting party by first class mail a copy of any notice required
to be posted pursuant to section 5(2) to (5).
(2) Upon written request, a public body, at the same time a public notice of a
meeting is posted pursuant to section 5, shall provide a copy of the public notice of
that meeting to any newspaper published in the state and to any radio and television
station located in the state, free of charge.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.267 Closed sessions; roll call vote; separate set of minutes.
Sec. 7. (1) A 2/3 roll call vote of members elected or appointed and serving is
required to call a closed session, except for the closed sessions permitted under
section 8(a), (b), (c), (g), (i), and (j). The roll call vote and the purpose or
purposes for calling the closed session shall be entered into the minutes of the
meeting at which the vote is taken.
(2) A separate set of minutes shall be taken by the clerk or the designated secretary
of the public body at the closed session. These minutes shall be retained by the
clerk of the public body, are not available to the public, and shall only be
disclosed if required by a civil action filed under section 10, 11, or 13. These
minutes may be destroyed 1 year and 1 day after approval of the minutes of the
regular meeting at which the closed session was approved. History: 1976, Act 267,
Eff. Mar. 31, 1977;—Am. 1993, Act 81, Eff. Apr. 1, 1994;—Am. 1996, Act 464, Imd. Eff.
Dec. 26, 1996.
15.268 Closed sessions; permissible purposes.
Sec. 8. A public body may meet in a closed session only for the following purposes:
(a) To consider the dismissal, suspension, or disciplining of, or to hear complaints
or charges brought against, or to consider a periodic personnel evaluation of, a
public officer, employee, staff member, or individual agent, if the named person
requests a closed hearing. A person requesting a closed hearing may rescind the
request at any time, in which case the matter at issue shall be considered after the
rescission only in open sessions.
(b) To consider the dismissal, suspension, or disciplining of a student if the public
body is part of the school district, intermediate school district, or institution of
higher education that the student is attending, and if the student or the student’s
parent or guardian requests a closed hearing.
(c) For strategy and negotiation sessions connected with the negotiation of a
collective bargaining agreement if either negotiating party requests a closed
hearing.
(d) To consider the purchase or lease of real property up to the time an option to
purchase or lease that real property is obtained.
(e) To consult with its attorney regarding trial or settlement strategy in connection
with specific pending litigation, but only if an open meeting would have a
detrimental financial effect on the litigating or settlement position of the public
body.
(f) To review and consider the contents of an application for employment or
appointment to a public office if the candidate requests that the application remain
confidential. However, except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, all
interviews by a public body for employment or appointment to a public office shall be
held in an open meeting pursuant to this act. This subdivision does not apply to a
public office described in subdivision (j).
(g) Partisan caucuses of members of the state legislature.
(h) To consider material exempt from discussion or disclosure by state or federal
statute.
(i) For a compliance conference conducted by the department of commerce under section
16231 of the public health code, Act No. 368 of the Public Acts of 1978, being
section 333.16231 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, before a complaint is issued.
(j) In the process of searching for and selecting a president of an institution of
higher education established under section 4, 5, or 6 of article VIII of the state
constitution of 1963, to review the specific contents of an application, to conduct
an interview with a candidate, or to discuss the specific qualifications of a
candidate if the particular process of searching for and selecting a president of an
institution of higher education meets all of the following requirements:
(i) The search committee in the process, appointed by the governing board, consists
of at least 1 student of the institution, 1 faculty member of the institution, 1
administrator of the institution, 1 alumnus of the institution, and 1 representative
of the general public. The search committee also may include 1 or more members of the
governing board of the institution, but the number shall not constitute a quorum of
the governing board. However, the search committee shall not be constituted in such a
way that any 1 of the groups described in this subparagraph constitutes a majority of
the search committee.
(ii) After the search committee recommends the 5 final candidates, the governing
board does not take a vote on a final selection for the president until at least 30
days after the 5 final candidates have been publicly identified by the search
committee.
(iii) The deliberations and vote of the governing board of the institution on
selecting the president take place in an open session of the governing board.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977;—Am. 1984, Act 202, Imd. Eff. July 3,
1984;—Am. 1993, Act 81, Eff. Apr. 1, 1994;—Am. 1996, Act 464, Imd. Eff. Dec. 26,
1996.
15.269 Minutes generally.
Sec. 9. (1) Each public body shall keep minutes of each meeting showing the date,
time, place, members present, members absent, any decisions made at a meeting open to
the public, and the purpose or purposes for which a closed session is held. The
minutes shall include all roll call votes taken at the meeting. Corrections in the
minutes shall be made not later than the next meeting after the meeting to which the
minutes refer. Corrected minutes shall be available no later than the next subsequent
meeting after correction. The corrected minutes shall show both the original entry
and the correction.
(2) Minutes shall be public records open to public inspection and shall be available
at the address designated on posted public notices pursuant to section 4. Copies of
the minutes shall be available to the public at the reasonable estimated cost for
printing and copying.
(3) Proposed minutes shall be available for public inspection not more than 8
business days after the meeting to which the minutes refer. Approved minutes shall be
available for public inspection not later than 5 business days after the meeting at
which the minutes are approved by the public body.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977;—Am. 1982, Act 130, Imd. Eff. Apr. 20,
1982.
15.270 Decisions of public body; presumption; civil action to invalidate;
jurisdiction; venue; reenactment of disputed decision.
Sec. 10.
(1) Decisions of a public body shall be presumed to have been adopted in compliance
with the requirements of this act. The attorney general, the prosecuting attorney of
the county in which the public body serves, or any person may commence a civil action
in the circuit court to challenge the validity of a decision of a public body made in
violation of this act.
(2) A decision made by a public body may be invalidated if the public body has not
complied with the requirements of section 3(1), (2), and (3) in making the decision
or if failure to give notice in accordance with section 5 has interfered with
substantial compliance with section 3(1), (2), and (3) and the court finds that the
noncompliance or failure has impaired the rights of the public under this act.
(3) The circuit court shall not have jurisdiction to invalidate a decision of a
public body for a violation of this act unless an action is commenced pursuant to
this section within the following specified period of time:
(a) Within 60 days after the approved minutes are made available to the public by the
public body except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b).
(b) If the decision involves the approval of contracts, the receipt or acceptance of
bids, the making of assessments, the procedures pertaining to the issuance of bonds
or other evidences of indebtedness, or the submission of a borrowing proposal to the
electors, within 30 days after the approved minutes are made available to the public
pursuant to that decision.
(4) Venue for an action under this section shall be any county in which a local
public body serves or, if the decision of a state public body is at issue, in Ingham
county.
(5) In any case where an action has been initiated to invalidate a decision of a
public body on the ground that it was not taken in conformity with the requirements
of this act, the public body may, without being deemed to make any admission contrary
to its interest, reenact the disputed decision in conformity with this act. A
decision reenacted in this manner shall be effective from the date of reenactment and
shall not be declared invalid by reason of a deficiency in the procedure used for its
initial enactment.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.271 Civil action to compel compliance or enjoin noncompliance; commencement;
venue; security not required; commencement of action for mandamus; court costs and
attorney fees. Sec. 11. (1) If a public body is not complying with this act, the
attorney general, prosecuting attorney of the county in which the public body serves,
or a person may commence a civil action to compel compliance or to enjoin further
noncompliance with this act.
(2) An action for injunctive relief against a local public body shall be commenced in
the circuit court, and venue is proper in any county in which the public body serves.
An action for an injunction against a state public body shall be commenced in the
circuit court and venue is proper in any county in which the public body has its
principal office, or in Ingham county. If a person commences an action for injunctive
relief, that person shall not be required to post security as a condition for
obtaining a preliminary injunction or a temporary restraining order.
(3) An action for mandamus against a public body under this act shall be commenced in
the court of appeals.
(4) If a public body is not complying with this act, and a person commences a civil
action against the public body for injunctive relief to compel compliance or to
enjoin further noncompliance with the act and succeeds in obtaining relief in the
action, the person shall recover court costs and actual attorney fees for the action.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.272 Violation as misdemeanor; penalty.
Sec. 12. (1) A public official who intentionally violates this act is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000.00.
(2) A public official who is convicted of intentionally violating a provision of this
act for a second time within the same term shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall
be fined not more than $2,000.00, or imprisoned for not more than 1 year, or both.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.273 Violation; liability.
Sec. 13. (1) A public official who intentionally violates this act shall be
personally liable in a civil action for actual and exemplary damages of not more than
$500.00 total, plus court costs and actual attorney fees to a person or group of
persons bringing the action.
(2) Not more than 1 action under this section shall be brought against a public
official for a single meeting. An action under this section shall be commenced within
180 days after the date of the violation which gives rise to the cause of action.
(3) An action for damages under this section may be joined with an action for
injunctive or exemplary relief under section 11.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.273a Selection of president by governing board of higher education institution;
violation; civil fine.
Sec. 13a. If the governing board of an institution of higher education established
under section 4, 5, or 6 of article VIII of the state constitution of 1963 violates
this act with respect to the process of selecting a president of the institution at
any time after the recommendation of final candidates to the governing board, as
described in section 8(j), the institution is responsible for the payment of a civil
fine of not more than $500,000.00. This civil fine is in addition to any other remedy
or penalty under this act. To the extent possible, any payment of fines imposed under
this section shall be paid from funds allocated by the institution of higher
education to pay for the travel and expenses of the members of the governing board.
History: Add. 1996, Act 464, Imd. Eff. Dec. 26, 1996.
15.274 Repeal of §§ 15.251 to 15.253.
Sec. 14. Act No. 261 of the Public Acts of 1968, being sections 15.251 to 15.253 of
the Compiled Laws of 1970, is repealed.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
15.275 Effective date.
Sec. 15. This act shall take effect January 1, 1977.
History: 1976, Act 267, Eff. Mar. 31, 1977.
Court Decisions on the Open Meetings Act
Michigan courts have rendered decisions which, when published, become precedent and
are the law of the state until changed by a higher court or by the Legislature. The
following list contains the principal published decisions of Michigan’s appellate
courts and is current through July 1997. Court decisions may be obtained in law
libraries or from the courts of record at a nominal fee.
Because the Legislature has amended the Open Meetings Act after its enactment, the
cases interpreting and applying the Act may not reflect the current law. For example,
the cases listed below concerning university presidential searches were decided under
the Act before the effective date of the amendment that permits closed meetings at
early stages of university presidential searches.
1. In re “Sunshine Law” 1976 PA 267, 400 Mich 660 (1977)
Section of the Open Meetings Act that retains the requirement that the Act applies
“to a court while exercising rulemaking authority and while deliberating or deciding
upon the issuance of an administrative order” is unconstitutional as intrusion into
exercise of constitutionally derived judicial powers.
2. Midland Township v Michigan State Boundary Commission, 401 Mich 641 (1977), reh
den, app dis 435 US 1004
An annexation proceeding is not a “contested case” even though the Boundary
Commission must hold a public hearing and representatives of a city, village, or
township and other persons have a right to be heard at such a hearing before the
commission makes its determination. Affording the public an opportunity to be heard
on an annexation decision does not create a substantive personal right in the
decision which requires procedural protection under the Administrative Procedures
Act.
3. Hubka v Department of Corrections, 197 Mich App 117 (1992); rev in part, 443 Mich
864 (1993)
The 60-day period for bringing action to invalidate a decision taken at a meeting
closed in violation of the Open Meetings Act did not apply to divest circuit court of
jurisdiction to determine that the meeting violated the Act and to require disclosure
of the meeting minutes.
4. Booth Newspapers, Inc v University of Michigan Board of Regents, 192 Mich App 574
(1992); rev in part 444 Mich 211 (1993)
A university board of regents must comply with Open Meetings Act requirements in the
process of selecting a university president, when conducting interviews, undertaking
deliberations, and making decisions about candidates, whether or not a vote is taken.
5. Wexford County Prosecuting Attorney v Pranger, 83 Mich App 197 (1978)
Closed session exceptions of the Open Meetings Act are to be construed strictly to
limit the situations that are not open to the public.
6. Esperance v Chesterfield Township, 89 Mich App 456 (1979)
Those seeking to have decision of public body invalidated under the Open Meetings Act
must allege not only that the public body failed to comply with the Act, but also
that such failure impaired rights of the public.
7. Booth Newspapers, Inc v Regents of University of Michigan, 93 Mich App 100 (1979)
Written opinion of counsel to university board of regents was “material” that need
not have been disclosed under the Freedom of Information Act, and, thus, was exempt
from open meeting requirement of the Open Meetings Act.
8. Southland Corporation v Liquor Control Commission, 95 Mich App 466 (1980)
Plaintiff’s claim that committee had violated the Open Meetings Act because certain
committee members’ votes were counted although they had not been present for
deliberations or for the final vote on the rules was sufficient to withstand a motion
for summary judgment for failure to state a claim.
9. Regents of University of Michigan v Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid,
97 Mich App 532 (1980), lv den
The Open Meetings Act permits public body to exclude those who breach the peace at
meeting by reconvening at new location, accompanied by notice to general public of
new time and location.
10. Arnold Transit Company v City of Mackinac Island, 99 Mich App 266 (1980), aff’d
415 Mich 362 (1982); reh den; app dis 464 US 804; reh den
Rigid adherence to procedural mandate of the Open Meetings Act will not be required
if it is clear that a substantial compliance provides realistic fulfillment of the
purpose for which the mandate was included in the statute. Public bodies cannot call
themselves “committees” to avoid the requirements of the Act.
11. Coldwater Township v City of Coldwater, 101 Mich App 322 (1980)
The State Boundary Commission must notify interested parties of the public hearing on
an annexation petition by publication at least seven days before date of hearing, by
sending notification by certified mail to clerks of the affected townships, and by
giving notice in the manner required by the Open Meetings Act.
12. Felice v Cheboygan County Zoning Commission, 103 Mich App 742 (1981)
Where plaintiff stipulated to dismiss the claim for injunctive relief and abandoned
invalidation action, obviating the necessity for the court to make a finding and
order such relief, plaintiff has not succeeded in obtaining “relief in the action” so
as to allow award of costs and attorney fees under the Open Meetings Act.
13. Rochester Board of Education v Michigan State Board of Education, 104 Mich App
569 (1981)
Where the State Board of Education provided parties with the full panoply of
procedural safeguards guaranteed by the Administrative Procedures Act in contested
cases, it should not allow parties or nonparties to address it concerning the merits
of a contested case at a public meeting, because the Administrative Procedures Act
requires that contested cases be decided solely on record evidence.
14. Local 79 v Lapeer County Hospital, 111 Mich App 441 (1981)
The circuit court is the proper forum to seek relief for a violation of the Open
Meetings Act.
15. Ridenour v Dearborn Board of Education, 111 Mich App 798 (1981)
The evaluation of the performance of school administrators is not an action that is
exempt from the requirements of the Open Meetings Act.
16. Palladium Publishing Company v River Valley School District, 115 Mich App 490
(1982), lv den
The Open Meetings Act requires the naming of a suspended or expelled student at the
meeting and in the board’s minutes when a student is expelled or suspended by action
of a board of education.
17. Perlongo v Iron River TV, 122 Mich App 433 (1983)
The Open Meetings Act does not apply to a nonstock, nonprofit corporation that was
created independent of state or local authority and without the assistance of public
funds.
18. Menominee County Taxpayers v Menominee Clerk, 139 Mich App 814 (1984), lv den
When the county clerk, county prosecutor, and probate judge, come together to appoint
a county treasurer, pursuant to statute, they constituted a “public body” for
purposes of the Open Meetings Act.
19. Rasch v East Jordan, 141 Mich App 336 (1985)
An action under section 13 of the Open Meetings Act must be commenced within 180 days
after the date of the violation. Where the 180 days have elapsed, the action is
barred.
20. Goode v DSS, 143 Mich App 756 (1985), lv den
A hearing conducted by teleconference over speaker phones where all interested
persons are allowed to attend, conforms with the requirements of the Open Meetings
Act. Also, the release of a written opinion to the public rather than calling a
second hearing to announce the same, would meet the requirements of the Act.
21. Cape v Howell Board of Education, 145 Mich App 459 (1985)
In extending the time period of an option contract, the Board of Education made a
“decision” requiring compliance with the Open Meetings Act. Also, the time period for
commencing an action under the Open Meetings Act begins to run when the minutes of
the meeting in question are approved and made available to the public.
22. Crowley v Governor, 167 Mich App 539 (1988), lv den
Legislative leadership committee does not deliberate on or make decisions regarding
legislation or public policy and is not subject to the Open Meetings Act.
23. Booth Newspapers v Wyoming, 168 Mich App 459 (1988)
Public body may not hold closed sessions with attorney under the attorney-client
privilege, if the discussion is of nonlegal matters.
24. Detroit News v Detroit, 185 Mich App 296 (1990), lv den Burden of establishing
that a meeting of a public body is exempt from the Open Meetings Act is on the public
body.
25. St. Aubin v Ishpeming City Council, 197 Mich App 100 (1992)
An informal canvas by one member of a public body of all the members of the body is
not a meeting for purposes of the Open Meetings Act.
26. Jackson v Eastern Michigan University Foundation, 215 Mich App 240 (1996)
A foundation empowered to exercise delegated authority by resolution of a university
board of regents is a public body subject to the Open Meetings Act.
27. Meyers v Patchkowski, 216 Mich App 513 (1996)
The public body is a necessary party to an action seeking injunctive relief for
noncompliance with the Open Meetings Act.
28. Wilkins v Gagliardi, 219 Mich App 260 (1996)
A person must allege facts that show impairment of public rights when seeking to
invalidate a decision made at a legislative meeting held in violation of the Open
Meetings Act. The speech or debate clause of the Michigan Constitution of 1963
provides immunity for the chair of a legislative committee in a suit alleging
violation of the Act.
29. Federated Publications, Inc v Board of Trustees of Michigan State University, 221
Mich App 103 (1997)
Universities’ constitutional autonomy does not preclude application of the Open
Meetings Act to university presidential searches.
30. Moore v Fennville Public Schools Board of Education, 223 Mich App 196 (1997)
A public body may arrive at a conclusion as to negotiating strategy at a closed
meeting. That conclusion is not a “decision” that the Open Meetings Act requires to
be made at an open meeting.
Opinions of the Attorney General Relating to the Open Meetings Act
The Attorney General has issued numerous Opinions of the Attorney General (OAG) which
explain various applications of the Open Meetings Act. This list of the principal
opinions issued is current through July 1997. Copies of OAGs may be obtained by
writing to:
Attorney General Frank Kelley
525 West Ottawa
Law Building, 7th Floor
Lansing, Michigan 48913
Because the Legislature has amended the Open Meetings Act after its enactment, the
Opinions of the Attorney General interpreting and applying the Act may not pertain to
its current provisions. For example, opinions concerning university presidential
searches were rendered under the Act before the effective date of the amendment that
permits closed meetings at early stages of university presidential searches.
1. The following responses to specific inquiries are from Attorney General Opinion
No. 5183, dated March 8, 1977:
a. The Open Meetings Act provisions apply to Michigan Employment Security Commission
referee hearings. p. 29
b. The Michigan Traffic Safety Information Council is a “public body” within the
definition of the Open Meetings Act. p. 29 c. The Michigan Environmental Review Board
and the Interdepartmental Environmental Review Committee are subject to the
provisions of the Open Meetings Act. p. 29
d. The Blind Stand Operators Advisory Committee is not controlled by the provisions
of the Open Meetings Act. p. 30
e. Hearings under the Teachers Tenure Act fall within the provisions of the closed
meeting exceptions provided for in section 8(a) of the Open Meetings Act. p. 32
f. Section 8(b) of the Act allows the school district to consider dismissal,
suspension, or disciplining of a student in closed session when requested by the
student or the student’s parent or guardian. p. 32
g. The Boundary Commission is prohibited from adopting and approving findings of fact
and order through a conference call meeting under the provisions of the Open Meetings
Act. p. 32
h. Where a large organized group knows in advance that it will attend a public
meeting and the regular meeting place of the public body is insufficient to contain
the number of persons wishing to attend the meeting, the group is required to give
advance notice to the public body. However, the public body is under a duty to
exercise sincere efforts to accommodate the number of people who may reasonably be
expected to attend. p. 33
i. To facilitate the orderly conduct of the meeting and communication between persons
who wish to address the public body, it is reasonable to require a person to identify
himself or herself and give advance indication that he or she wishes to speak. Such a
condition may be adopted as a rule in accordance with section 3(5)of the Act. p. 34
j. Organizations are not required to establish a regular meeting schedule as a result
of the Open Meetings Act. p. 37
k. The provisions of section 8(f) of the Act apply to employment interviews for the
position of school superintendent with the local K-12 school boards. p. 41
l. Where an ex officio member of a committee is authorized to appoint or designate
another person to represent him or her at a meeting, the designee is the proper
attendant at the meeting and it is his or her presence or absence that should be
noted in the minutes as required in section 9(1) of the Act. p. 43
2. A single member officer, whether serving in an adjudicative capacity or rendering
a policy decision, is not subject to the requirement of the Open Meetings Act.
Attorney General Opinion No. 5183-A, p. 97, April 18, 1977.
3. The provision in the Open Meetings Act which defines a public body so as to
include a lessee performing an essential public purpose is unconstitutional because
the title of the Act does not refer to organizations other than “public bodies”.
Attorney General Opinion No. 5207, p. 157, June 24, 1977.
4. A board of education may not: (a) deny a person the right to address a meeting of
the board on the sole ground that that person is a representative of an organization
of board employees; (b) limit the subject and issues that certain persons may cover
in the course of addressing the meeting; (c) require persons to exhaust
administrative remedies before addressing issues at a public meeting; nor (d)
prohibit a person from addressing it on grounds the matter to be addressed is or
might be the subject of a closed meeting. Attorney General Opinion No. 5218, p. 224,
September 13, 1977.
5. A legislative committee is included within the purview of the Open Meetings Act
and may not engage in the practice of “round-robining” by which votes on a measure
are obtained by a member of the committee going to other members and obtaining their
signatures on a tally sheet. Attorney General Opinion No. 5222, p. 216, September 1,
1977.
6. The Huron River Watershed Council established pursuant to the local river
management act is a public body performing a governmental function and must comply
with the provisions of the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5256, p.
329, January 23, 1978.
7. The Open Meetings Act prohibits a voting procedure at a public meeting which
prevents citizens from knowing how members of the public body have voted. Attorney
General Opinion No. 5262, p. 338, January 31, 1978.
8. Meetings of the tax boards of review must comply with the requirements of the Open
Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5281, p. 377, March 8, 1978.
9. A public body may not hold a closed session for the purpose of discussing the
disposition of real property by sale or lease. Attorney General Opinion No. 5284, p.
389, March 21, 1978.
10. Section 8(c) of the Open Meetings Act authorizes a city council to meet in closed
session to discuss strategy connected with collective bargaining agreements. Attorney
General Opinion No. 5286, p. 403, March 31, 1978.
11. A political party caucus at which a quorum of the members of the board of county
commissioners are present to discuss business that will arise at a meeting of the
board is subject to the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5298, p. 434,
May 2, 1978.
12. Meetings of legislative joint conference committees are subject to the Open
Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5300, p. 451, May 22, 1978.
13. Every decision of the Michigan Public Service Commission must be discussed at an
open meeting except those specifications exempted under section 8 of the Open
Meetings Act, discussions of matters involving section 11 of the Motor Carriers Act
and accident reports and certain trade secrets pursuant to the Gas Safety Standards
Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5310, p. 465, June 7, 1978.
14. A public body may adopt a rule imposing time limits during which a member of the
public may address the public body. Attorney General Opinion No. 5332, p. 536, July
13, 1978.
15. A public body may adopt a rule prohibiting a personal attack on an officer,
employee, or board member only if the personal attack is totally unrelated to the
manner in which the officer, employee, or board member performs his or her duties.
Attorney General Opinion No. 5332, p. 536, July 13, 1978.
16. A public body may meet in a closed session to vote upon the rejection of an
owner’s offer to sell at a designated price. Attorney General Opinion No. 5364, p.
606, September 7, 1978.
17. A public body may meet in a closed session to direct its agents as to their
limits in negotiating for the purchase of real property. Attorney General Opinion No.
5364, p. 606, September 7, 1978.
18. The designated electors of constituent school districts may elect members of an
intermediate school board by secret ballot. Attorney General Opinion No. 5412, p.
737, December 20, 1978.
19. The exemption from the Open Meetings Act which permits members of a public body
constituting a quorum to attend a conference permits members of the public body to
listen to the concerns of members of the public or of persons with special knowledge
in the presence of other interested persons. It does not permit public bodies to
conduct closed sessions to listen to presentations by department heads and
administrators of the public body. Attorney General Opinion No. 5433, p. 29, January
31, 1979.
20. Youth Parole and Review Board proceedings are subject to the Open Meetings Act.
Part of the Board proceedings may be closed pursuant to section 8(h) of the Open
Meetings Act, however, when confidential records are discussed. Attorney General
Opinion No. 5436, p. 31, February 1, 1979.
21. When members of a public body constituting a quorum are unaware that they are
being brought together by another, this is a “chance gathering” that is exempt from
the provisions of the Open Meetings Act and there is no violation of the Act as long
as matters of public policy are not discussed by the members with each other at that
meeting. Attorney General Opinion No. 5437, p. 36, February 2, 1979.
22. A city council must hold an open meeting pursuant to the Open Meetings Act when
it wishes to discuss the course of action to be taken in resolving a dispute between
the police department and the city council. Attorney General Opinion No. 5444, p. 55,
February 21, 1979.
23. A public body may not take final action on any matter during a closed meeting.
Attorney General Opinion No. 5445, p. 57, February 22, 1979.
24. The following responses to specific inquiries are from Attorney General Opinion
No. 5500, dated July 23, 1979:
a. Access to notes of a public meeting may not be denied solely because the notes may
be revised. p. 264
b. School boards may meet in closed sessions to consider matters exempt from
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. p. 270
25. The promotion and tenure committee and the budget committee of a state university
are advisory boards and are therefore not subject to the provisions of the Open
Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5505, p. 221, July 3, 1979.
26. When a public body convenes in a closed session in accordance with section 8 of
the Open Meetings Act, it may request its officers, employees, or certain private
citizens to meet with it in closed session to assist in its consideration. Attorney
General Opinion No. 5532, p. 324, August 7, 1979.
27. Although a public meeting of a public body need not be held within the boundaries
of the governmental unit, such a meeting may not be held at a distance from the
governmental unit that would make it difficult or inconvenient for citizens residing
in the area served by the public body to attend. Attorney General Opinion No. 5560,
p. 386, September 13, 1979.
28. The Open Meetings Act does not permit a public body to sequester witnesses at a
public meeting convened to consider a contract grievance. Attorney General Opinion
No. 5595, p. 474, November 20, 1979.
29. A public body may not meet in closed session to consider an evaluation of its
officers and employees. Attorney General Opinion No. 5608, p. 496, December 17, 1979.
30. A public body may not exclude a member of the public from its public meeting for
failing to stand for the pledge of allegiance. Attorney General Opinion No. 5614, p.
519, December 21, 1979.
31. Where a larger than anticipated group wishes to attend a public meeting, the Open
Meetings Act does not require the public body to adjourn the meeting to a larger
meeting room, but the public body should exercise reasonable efforts to accommodate
interested members of the public, including reconvening the meeting in a larger room
where practicable. Attorney General Opinion No. 5614, p. 519, December 31, 1979.
32. The meetings of a board of education expelling a student from school for repeated
violations of rules and regulations must list a student’s name. Unedited minutes must
be furnished to the public on request in accordance with law. Attorney General
Opinion No. 5632, p. 563, January 24, 1980.
33. The practice of the Criminal Justice Commission providing that the members of the
public may address the commission at the end of its official business is consistent
with the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5716, p. 812, June 4, 1980.
34. The minimum 18-hour notice required for a special meeting of a public body is not
fulfilled if the public is denied access to the notice of the meeting for any part of
the 18 hours. The requirement may be met by posting a notice at least 18 hours in
advance of the special meeting at the main entrance of the building that houses the
principal office of the public body. Attorney General Opinion No. 5724, p. 840, June
20, 1980.
35. The state Board of Ethics is subject to the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General
Opinion No. 5760, p. 935, August 26, 1980.
36. When either a committee comprising a quorum of a public body or subcommittees of
a public body that constructively constitute a quorum of the public body collectively
deliberate on or render decisions on the appointment of a person to fill a vacancy in
a public office in a closed session, failure to open such meetings to the public is a
violation of the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 5788, p. 1015,
September 23, 1980.
37. The public does not have any right to ask questions during an interview of a
candidate for public employment held at an open meeting. Minutes of a closed session
of a public body may not be released to the public without a court order. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6019, p. 507, December 29, 1981.
38. A resident alien who has not yet become a United States citizen may not vote at
the annual meeting of a township. Attorney General Opinion No. 6031, p. 535, January
22, 1982.
39. A township is not required to enact its own freedom of information act in order
to comply with the provisions of the state Freedom of Information Act. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6042, p. 584, February 25, 1982.
40. The legislature has not required student advisory committees making
recommendations to state university officers to be subject to the provisions of the
Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6053, p. 616, April 13, 1982.
41. A public body may, without complying with the Open Meetings Act, attend a
conference or informational gathering designed to focus upon issues of general
concern and intended primarily to provide training and/or background information,
provided that a public body may not, without complying with the Open Meetings Act,
engage in discussions or deliberations during such a meeting or otherwise enter into
the process of addressing or resolving issues of public policy. Attorney General
Opinion No. 6074, p. 662, June 11, 1982.
42. Members of a township’s volunteer fire department, who are not authorized to make
final decisions on applications for membership or upon matters of public policy
generally, do not constitute a “public body” subject to the Open Meetings Act.
Attorney General Opinion No. 6077, p. 676, June 16, 1982.
43. A board of education of a school district may not conduct the public business of
evaluation of the performance of the superintendent at private meetings of two or
more committees of the board, each composed of less than a quorum of the members of
the board and including the president of the board to provide continuity in the
evaluation deliberations, from which the members of the public are excluded. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6091, p. 711, August 18, 1982.
44. A bargaining committee authorized by a board of education to conduct negotiations
with school officers and employees, may conduct such negotiations in closed sessions.
Attorney General Opinion No. 6172, p. 161, July 20, 1983.
45. A public body is required to furnish a copy of its posted notice of meeting to
Michigan newspapers, television stations, and radio stations, when a written request
for such a copy is made. It should be sent by first class mail, postage paid, free of
charge. Attorney General Opinion No. 6305, p. 115, July 18, 1985.
46. Hearings before the Michigan High School Athletic Association’s executive
committee or representative council are not subject to the provisions of the Open
Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6352, p. 252, April 8, 1986.
47. A public officer, elected or appointed, may request that a meeting be closed
where allowed by the Open Meetings Act. The minutes of a closed session held pursuant
to section 8 of the Act, may only be disclosed upon order of a court in accordance
with the Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6353, p. 255, April 11, 1986. 48. The
following responses to specific inquiries are found in Attorney General Opinion No.
6358, p. 269, April 29, 1986:
a. A public body conducting a lawful closed session meeting under the Open Meetings
Act, may selectively include certain individuals while excluding others such as
elected municipal officers, department heads, and other officers and individuals who
are not members of the public body. p. 269 b. A public body conducting a lawful
closed session meeting with its attorney concerning pending litigation may exclude
co-parties to the litigation from attending. p.270
c. A public body may, if necessary, exclude an unauthorized individual who intrudes
upon a closed session by either: (i) having the individual forcibly removed; or (ii)
by recessing and moving the session to a new location. p. 271
d. A public body that recesses and moves a meeting to a new location need not satisfy
the 18-hour notice requirement if done within 36 hours. p. 272
49. A public body may meet in closed session in order to approve the minutes of a
closed session. Attorney General Opinion No. 6365, p. 288, June 2, 1986.
50. A senior citizen organization that is a private, nonprofit corporation is not
subject to the provisions of the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No.
6386, p. 369, September 16, 1986.
51. The governing board of the Senate Fiscal Agency is a “public body” and is subject
to the provisions of the Open Meetings Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6487, p.
242, January 14, 1988.
52. A teacher may close a disciplinary hearing if cameras will be present even if the
teacher had not originally requested a closed hearing. A public body may impose
reasonable restrictions on the filming of a public meeting. Attorney General Opinion
No. 6499, p. 280, February 24, 1988.
53. If a joint meeting of two committees of a public board is held and a quorum of
the board results, the Open Meetings Act applies to that meeting. If some of the
members of a public board serve on a second public board and other members of the
first board attend a meeting of the second board as observers and a quorum of the
first board results, no meeting of the first board is held requiring notice. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6636, p. 253, October 23, 1989.
54. Hunting area control committees are subject to the Open Meetings Act. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6652, p. 359, July 25, 1990.
55. A regular meeting of a public body may recess to hold committee meetings for
which no notice has been posted only if all of these conditions exist: 1) a quorum of
the public body will not be present, 2) the committees are of an advisory nature, and
3) the committees will not deliberate on a common topic leading to a decision of the
public body. Attorney General Opinion No. 6752, p. 18, March 10, 1993.
56. A public officer’s conviction of a violation of the Open Meetings Act does not
automatically create a vacancy in the office. Attorney General Opinion No. 6800, p.
139, May 11, 1994.
57. A public body must make its decisions at meetings that are open to the public.
The public body must take minutes of closed sessions that include the place, date,
and time of the meeting, the members present and absent, and the purposes of the
session. Attorney General Opinion No. 6817, p. 190, September 14, 1994.
58. The Open Meetings Act requires the notice of a special meeting to state the
general nature of the business to be conducted. Stating that the purpose of the
closed meeting is to discuss an issue does not preclude the body from acting on the
matter. Attorney General Opinion No. 6821, p. 199, October 18, 1994.
59. The Open Meetings Act does not preclude an intermediate school district from
allowing representatives of member districts to attend a meeting via interactive
television. Attorney General Opinion No. 6835, p. 10, February 13, 1995.
60. The Open Meetings Act does not require an advisory board formed by a board of
education to recommend athletic policy to open its meetings to the public. Attorney
General Opinion No. 6935, p. ____, April 2, 1997.
61. A private, voluntary, unincorporated association of lake property owners is not
subject to the Open Meetings Act. A resort owners association incorporated under 1929
PA 137 must comply with the Act. Attorney General Opinion No. 6942, p. ____, July 3,
1997.
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