The following update provides guidance on the Brown Act provisions waived under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order, and information about the procedures your governing board can use to conduct board meetings during this unique time.
Governor Newsom’s Executive Order:
On March 12, 2020, Gov. Newsom issued an executive order that, in part, authorized governing boards to hold public meetings via teleconference and to make public meetings accessible by telephone or otherwise electronically to members of the public during this time, waiving those provisions of the Brown Act that would otherwise prohibit such meetings for boards. Board members may therefore attend regular, special and emergency meetings by phone or video conference. Governing boards must still provide advanced notice of each public meeting in accordance with the Brown Act, and must notice at least one publicly accessible location from which members of the public can observe and offer public comment at the meeting.
Under the executive order, boards do not need to have a quorum of members participate from locations within the boundaries of the district, do not need to publicly notice each teleconference location or allow members of the public to access each teleconference location, and do not need to have any members of the board be physically present at the location specified in the notice of the meeting.
Convening regular, special and emergency meetings:
Regular meetings: Under Government Code section 54954.2, the agenda for a regular school board meeting must still be posted at least 72 hours prior to the meeting in a location that is freely accessible to the public and on the district’s website, if the district has a website.
Special meetings: Under Government Code section 54956, special meetings of the board may be called at any time by the presiding officer or a majority of the board members. Written notice of the special meeting shall be posted at least 24 hours before the meeting in a location freely accessible to the public. The notice shall specify the time and place of the meeting and the business to be transacted or discussed. No other business shall be considered at this meeting.
Emergency meetings: In the case of an emergency situation for which prompt action is necessary due to the disruption or threatened disruption of public facilities and services, the board may hold an emergency meeting without complying with the 24-hour notice requirement for special meetings. The board must comply with all other requirements for special meetings during an emergency meeting.
Boards should work with their district counsel to determine whether the COVID-19 related items in need of discussion meet the definition of an emergency under the Brown Act. Under Government Code section 54956.5, an emergency meeting or situation means either of the following: (1) an emergency, which is defined as a work stoppage, crippling activity, or other activity that severely impairs public health and/or safety as determined by a majority of the members of the board; or (2) a dire emergency, which is defined as a crippling disaster, mass destruction, terrorist activity, or threatened terrorist act that poses peril so immediate and significant that requiring the board to provide one-hour notice before holding an emergency meeting may endanger the public health and/or safety as determined by a majority of the members of the board. Except in the case of a dire emergency, the board president or designee shall give notice of the emergency meeting by telephone at least one hour before the meeting to the local media that have requested notice of special meetings. In the case of a dire emergency, the board president or designee shall give such notice at or near the time the other members of the board are notified about the meeting.
Non-agenda items during regular meetings:
While generally a board may not discuss any item that does not appear on the agenda posted for a regular meeting, the following exceptions allow the board to discuss and take actions on items that are not on the regular agenda:
A two-thirds vote: An action may be taken on an item that does not appear on the posted agenda if two-thirds of the members of the governing board vote that there is a need to take immediate action and that the need for action came to the attention of the board subsequent to the agenda being posted. If less than two-thirds of members of a board are present, then the vote must be unanimous.
An emergency situation: Boards that have already posted an agenda for a regular meeting may wish to discuss an emergency situation at the regular meeting, instead of scheduling a separate emergency meeting. Under the emergency situation exception, boards may discuss and take action on a non-agenda item during a regular meeting upon a determination by a majority vote of the board that an emergency situation exists, as defined in Government Code section 54956.5.
For more information, please refer to your district’s Board Bylaw 9320 (Meetings and Notices), Board Bylaw 9322 (Agenda/Meeting Materials), and Board Bylaw 9323.2 (Actions By The Board).
Please note that the information provided here by CSBA is for informational purposes and is not legal advice. Please contact your district or county office of education’s legal counsel for legal questions related to this information.