Can the Public Be Excluded from Legislative Committee Hearings or Floor Sessions?
Can the Public Be Excluded from Legislative Committee Hearings or Floor Sessions? By Chris Micheli
As the pandemic recedes, there continue to be limitations on the public’s ability to access some of the committee hearings and floor sessions of the California Legislature. Are these limits on public participation permissible?
Article IV, Section 7(c) sets forth the applicable law. This provision of the state Constitution provides:
(c) (1) Except
as provided in paragraph (3), the proceedings of each house and the committees
thereof shall be open and public. The right to attend open and public
proceedings includes the right of any person to record by audio or video means
any and all parts of the proceedings and to broadcast or otherwise transmit
them; provided that the Legislature may adopt reasonable rules pursuant to
paragraph (5) regulating the placement and use of the equipment for recording
or broadcasting the proceedings for the sole purpose of minimizing disruption
of the proceedings. Any aggrieved party shall have standing to challenge said
rules in an action for declaratory and injunctive relief, and the Legislature
shall have the burden of demonstrating that the rule is reasonable.
(2) Commencing on January 1 of the
second calendar year following the adoption of this paragraph, the Legislature
shall also cause audiovisual recordings to be made of all proceedings subject
to paragraph (1) in their entirety, shall make such recordings public through
the Internet within 24 hours after the proceedings have been recessed or
adjourned for the day, and shall maintain an archive of said recordings, which
shall be accessible to the public through the Internet and downloadable for a
period of no less than 20 years as specified by statute.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1)
and (2), closed sessions may be held solely for any of the following purposes:
(A) To consider the
appointment, employment, evaluation of performance, or dismissal of a public
officer or employee, to consider or hear complaints or charges brought against
a Member of the Legislature or other public officer or employee, or to
establish the classification or compensation of an employee of the Legislature.
(B) To consider matters
affecting the safety and security of Members of the Legislature or its
employees or the safety and security of any buildings and grounds used by the
Legislature.
(C) To confer with, or
receive advice from, its legal counsel regarding pending or reasonably
anticipated, or whether to initiate, litigation when discussion in open session
would not protect the interests of the house or committee regarding the
litigation.
(4) A caucus of the Members of the Senate, the Members of the Assembly, or the Members of both houses, which is composed of the members of the same political party, may meet in closed session.
Let’s take a closer look at these provisions.
First, the proceedings of each house of the California Legislature, as well as their committees “shall be open and public.” California uses the term “shall” to mean something is mandatory (and “may” to mean something is discretionary). As a result, the Floor Sessions of the Assembly and Senate, as well as every type of committee (standing, select, joint, etc.), must be open and public. This also appears to require in-person meetings of the Floors and all of those committees.
Note that an individual may sue the Legislature over their adoption of “reasonable” rules. However, that provision relates only the Legislature adopting rules “regulating the placement and use of the equipment for recording or broadcasting the proceedings of the sole purpose of minimizing disruption of the proceedings.”
Second,
there is a “right to attend open and public proceedings” of each house (i.e.,
the Assembly and Senate) and their committees. This also appears to require
in-person meetings of the Floors and all legislative committees, and for those
Floor sessions and committee hearings must be open to the public with all of
the legislative activities occurring in public.
Third, despite these affirmative
statements of open and public meetings of the Legislature, closed sessions may
be held solely for any of three specified purposes: employment, safety, and
legal proceedings.
Fourth, there is a separate
exemption from open and public meetings for a “caucus” (i.e., members of the
same political party) of legislators in either house or together.
So, does the Legislature have the
authority to exclude the public from legislative proceedings, such as Floor
sessions and committee hearings? The answer is not clear from these provisions
of the state Constitution.
Obviously, there are capacity
limitations, such as physical limits on the size of the Assembly Gallery,
Senate Gallery, and committee hearing rooms. There are also limitations imposed
by the State Fire Marshal. Of course, members of the public could be excluded
if they were violating the law, or engaging in illegal or criminal activities.
And, as we have experienced during
the pandemic, for health reasons, there can be reasonable limitations imposed
on members of the public being able to physically access an otherwise open and
public Floor session or committee hearing. As a result, recent history suggests
that, so long as any limitation or exclusion is reasonably imposed upon members
of the public, it would be consistent with Article IV, Section 7.
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