REQUESTED BY: James S. Jansen Douglas County Attorney
In your opinion request letter dated September 10, 1997, which we received on September 12, 1997, you requested our opinion as to certain matters involving the Nebraska Public Meetings Statutes, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§
In our Op. Att'y Gen. No. 88024 (March 17, 1988), we stated that we would issue formal opinions of the Attorney General to County Attorneys in Nebraska only with respect to questions involving "criminal matters" and "matters relating to the public revenue." That policy was based upon our statutory authority and the resources available to this office. We continue to adhere to that policy.
In the present instance, the questions you raised regarding the Public Meetings Statutes do not appear, on their face, to involve either criminal matters or matters relating to the public revenue. However, possible sanctions for violation of the Nebraska Public Meetings Statutes include criminal prosecution along with other types of enforcement actions. Consequently, we will offer our opinion as to the two questions which you raised, since they do involve criminal matters in a sense, and since we could be called upon to enforce the public meetings laws with respect to the appointment procedures at issue. Our conclusions stated below, therefore, reflect our enforcement policy in connection with the questions which you raised.
From the materials which you provided to us, we understand that a vacancy has been created on the Douglas County Board of Commissioners due to the resignation of one of its members. Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Vacancies in office shall be filled as follows:
* * *
(3) In the membership of the county board, by the county clerk, county attorney, and county treasurer,
Beyond that language in §
You first ask, "[d]oes the group making the appointment under §
Section
all independent boards, commissions, bureaus, committees, councils, subunits, or any other bodies, now or hereafter created by the Constitution of Nebraska, statute, or otherwise pursuant to law,
In this case, the group making the appointment to fill the vacancy on the Douglas County Board is authorized and required to do so under the specific statutory authority of §
Our conclusion regarding your initial question is supported by several aspects of the public meeting laws. First of all, the very breadth of the listing of entities subject to the Public Meetings Statutes under §
We are also aware of the decision in Marks v. JudicialNominating Commission for Judge of the County Court of the 20thJudicial District,
Your second question goes to the use of a closed or executive session in the appointment process. You ask, "[i]f the appointing persons are subject to the provisions of §
We have also enclosed a copy of our Op. Att'y Gen. No. 94035 (May 11, 1994) for your additional information. In that opinion, we indicated that discussions and deliberations by the State Board of Education in connection with the selection of a Commissioner of Education were subject to the requirements of the public meetings statutes. In addition, that opinion concluded that interviews with individual candidates for the Commissioner position were also subject to the requirements of the public meetings statutes, if a quorum of the Board was present for those interviews. However, in the latter interview situation, a brief closed session under §
Sincerely yours,
DON STENBERG Attorney General
Dale A. Comer Assistant Attorney General
Enclosure
Approved by:
Don Stenberg Attorney General
