The Kansas Open Meetings Act (KOMA), KSA 75-4317, et seq., recognizes “that a representative government is dependent upon an informed electorate” and declares the policy of the State of Kansas is one where “meetings for the conduct of governmental affairs and the transaction of governmental business be open to the public.”
The Kansas Supreme Court has recognized KOMA is to be “interpreted liberally and exceptions narrowly construed” to carry out the purpose of the law. [Mem’l Hosp. Ass’n v. Knutson, 239 Kan. 663, 669 (1986)]
State and Local Public Bodies Covered by KOMA
State Bodies Covered by KOMA
Local Governments Covered by KOMA
The following local governments are covered by KOMA:
Public Bodies Excluded from KOMA
Certain state and local bodies or entities are excluded from the requirements of KOMA, including the following:
Meetings: What are They?
KOMA covers meetings, which are defined in KSA 75-4317a as a gathering or assembly with the following characteristics:
Social gatherings are not subject to KOMA as long as there is not a majority of the membership present or there is no discussion of business of the public body between a majority of the membership.
Serial Meetings
The Attorney General has said serial communications among a majority of a quorum of a public body constitute a meeting if the purpose is to discuss a common topic of business or affairs of that body by the members.
Such a meeting may occur through calling trees, email, or the use of an agent (staff member) of the body (Att’y. Gen. Op. 98-26 and 98-49).
The use of instant messaging also would qualify as a meeting. KSA 75-4318(f) now deems interactive communications in a series to be subject to open meetings requirements if the communications:
Collectively involve a majority of the membership of the body or agency;
Share a common topic of discussion concerning the business or affairs of the body or agency; and
Are intended by any or all of the participants to reach agreement on a matter that would require binding action to be taken by the body or agency.
Is Binding Action the Trigger?
In regard to discussing “the business or affairs of the body,” binding action or voting is not necessary. It is the discussion itself that triggers the requirements of KOMA (KSA 75-4317a).
Notice of Meetings, Agendas, Minutes, Conduct of Meeting, and Cameras
Notice Required Only When Requested
KOMA does not require notice of meetings to be published. According to KSA 75-4318(b), notice must be given to any person or organization requesting it. Notice requests may expire at the end of a fiscal year, but the public body has a duty to notify the person of the pending expiration before terminating notice. The presiding officer has the duty to provide notice, but that duty may be delegated. No time limit is imposed for receipt of notice prior to the meeting.
Notice may be given in writing or orally, but it must be made individually to the person requesting it. Posting or publication in a newspaper is insufficient. A single notice can suffice for regularly scheduled meetings. There is also a duty to notify of any special meetings. No fee for notice may be charged.
Petitions for notice may be submitted by groups of people, but notice need be provided only to one person on the list, that person being designated as required by law. All members of an employee organization or trade association are deemed to have received a notice if one is furnished to the executive officer of the organization.
Agenda Not Required
KSA 75-4318(d) states, “Prior to any meeting…, any agenda relating to the business to be transacted at such meeting shall be made available to any person requesting the agenda.” In Stevens v. City of Hutchinson, 11 Kan. App. 2d 290 (1986), the court concluded while the law does not require an agenda be created, if a body chooses to create an agenda, the agenda should include topics planned for discussion.
Requirements for Minutes
The only KOMA requirement for minutes pertains to closed or executive sessions. KSA 75-4319(a) requires any motion to recess for a closed or executive meeting be recorded in the meeting minutes. (See “Executive Sessions: Procedure and Subjects Allowed” on the following page for additional information.)
Conduct of Meetings
Any person may attend open meetings, but the law does not require the public be allowed to speak or have an item placed on the agenda. KOMA does not dictate the location of a meeting, the size of the room used (or even that a room must be used) or other accommodation-type considerations. The court has determined (see Stevens) a meeting is “open” if it is accessible to the public.
KSA 75-4318(a) prohibits the use of secret ballots for any binding action. The public must be able to ascertain how each member voted.
Use of Cameras
Subject to reasonable rules, cameras and recording devices must be allowed at open meetings (KSA 75-4318(e)).
Executive Session: Justification and Procedure
Pursuant to KSA 75-4319, only a limited number of subjects may be discussed in executive session. Some of these are listed below.
Personnel Matters of Non-elected Personnel
The purpose of this justification is to protect the privacy interests of individuals. Discussions of consolidation of departments or overall salary structure are not proper topics for executive session. This personnel justification applies only to employees of the public agency. The Attorney General has opined the personnel justification does not apply to appointments to boards or committees, or nomination of public officers, nor does it apply to independent contractors (Att’y. Gen. Op. 2016-03).
Consultation with an Attorney
For the body or agency to be deemed privileged in the attorney client relationship, all elements of privilege must be present:
Additional Justifications
Additional justifications for executive session are as follows:
Executive Session: Procedure
Requirements and restrictions on closed or executive sessions are contained in KSA 75-4319. Executive sessions are permitted only for the purposes specified. First, the public body must convene an open meeting and then recess into an executive session. Binding action may not be taken in executive session. Reaching a consensus in executive session is not in itself a violation of KOMA (O’Hair v. United Sch. Dist. No. 300, 15 Kan. App. 2d 52 (1991)). A “consensus,” however, may constitute binding action and violate the law if a body fails to follow up with a formal open vote on a decision that normally would require a vote. The law does not require an executive session; the decision to hold an executive session is discretionary.
Generally, only the members of a public body may attend an executive session. The Attorney General indicates a public body may designate certain persons with essential information to assist in executive session deliberations. Inclusion of general observers means the meeting should be open to all members of the public.
Procedures for going into executive session include the following:
Compliance with KOMA during an Emergency Declaration
In March 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Kansas, the State Rules and Regulation Board approved a temporary regulation proposed by the Attorney General to address compliance with KOMA during an emergency declaration. The regulation applies only during a state of disaster emergency or other emergency declaration lawfully declared (emergency), in the territory affected by the declaration, and to the extent emergency responses prevent or impede the ability of members of a body or agency subject to KOMA to meet by physically gathering in person or of members of the public to attend or observe public meetings by physically attending the meetings.
The regulation provides that all KOMA requirements remain in force and effect during an emergency, unless expressly suspended by order of the governor, as specifically outlined in the regulation.
The regulation specifies how a public body or agency may comply with KOMA’s requirement that a meeting be “open to the public” by using a telephone or other medium for interactive communication, if the members of the body or agency are not gathering in person in a physical location to conduct the open meeting. These provisions include certain requirements related to technology, notice, and meeting procedure that must be met.
The regulation also contains similar provisions setting forth requirements that must be met to comply with KOMA if emergency responses prevent or impede the ability of the public to physically attend a public meeting occurring in person, and physical access of the public to the meeting place is limited.
Both the temporary regulation and a best practices document to aid in its implementation are available at https://ag.ks.gov/open-government. The Attorney General has announced his intent to seek permanent adoption of the temporary regulation.
Enforcement of KOMA
HB 2256 (L. 2015, ch. 68) changed enforcement of both KOMA and the Kansas Open Records Act (KORA). The law requires the Attorney General to provide and coordinate KOMA and KORA training throughout the state, including through coordination with appropriate organizations (KSA 75-761). Further, the statute gives the Attorney General or a county or district attorney various subpoena and examination powers in KOMA and KORA investigations (KSA 45-228; KSA 75-4320b).
Among other enforcement provisions, the bill allows the Attorney General or a county or district attorney to accept a consent judgment with respect to a KOMA or KORA violation, in lieu of filing an action in district court, and allows the Attorney General to enter into a consent order with a public agency or issue a finding of violation to the public agency upon discovery of a KORA or KOMA violation (KSA 75-4320d; KSA 45-4320f).
HB 2290 (L. 2019, ch. 62) provides for repayment by a state agency to the Tort Claims Fund of the cost of defense or indemnification provided for the agency or employee arising out of an alleged violation of KOMA (KSA 75-6617).
Pursuant to KSA 75-753, the Attorney General compiles and publishes an annual report for each fiscal year with information about complaints and investigations involving KOMA and KORA. For fiscal year 2019, the Office of the Attorney General reported no complaints under KOMA against state agencies resulting in corrective action, two complaints against cities resulting in corrective action, six complaints against counties resulting in corrective action, and one complaint against a board of education resulting in corrective action. Additionally, 5 complaints were referred to county or district attorney offices, and 26 complaints resulted in a finding of no violation of KOMA.
For questions regarding application or suspected violations of KOMA, please contact the Office of the Attorney General. Limitations under Kansas law do not allow the Kansas Legislative Research Department to provide legal advice, interpretation of statute, or the legislative intent of a statute.
Robert Gallimore, Managing Research Analyst
Robert.Gallimore@klrd.ks.gov
Jill Shelley, Principal Research Analyst
Jill.Shelley@klrd.ks.gov