Thе principal question raised by these proceedings is whether the defendant is required under the Right to Know Law (RSA ch. 91-A (Supp. 1973)) to open to the public, including the press, its collective bargaining sessions with the Concord Education Association concerning teacher salary scales, fringe bеnefits and other related matters. The plaintiffs brought a petition for an injunction pursuant to RSA 91-A:7 (Supp. 1973) to enjoin the defendant from excluding them from suсh collective bargaining sessions. After an evidentiary hearing, the Trial Court (Keller, C.J.) denied the plaintiffs’ request for a temporary injunction on the grounds that such a remedy would disrupt negotiations and delay the adoption of the school budget. The parties subsequently agreed that the hearing for the temporary injunction should be treated as if it had been a hearing for a permanent injunction. The trial court reserved and transferred the plaintiffs’ exception to its denial of the petition.
The basic facts of this case are not in dispute. The defendant school district is a corрoration organized by special act of the legislature and is empowered by law to conduct the public schools within the geograрhic boundaries of the district, which includes a major portion of the city of Concord. Laws 1961, ch. 355, as amended, Laws 1967, ch. 560 and Laws 1971, ch. 262. All powers of the district are vеsted in a board of education composed of nine members. The Concord Education Association is a local teachers organization which is recognized by the board as the bargaining representative of the teachers in the district. The parties entered into a “negotiations contract” which establishes in pertinent part procedures governing negotiations between the parties concerning “salaries and other matters”. It provides that the parties shall meet on the written request of either of them at a mutually convenient time to exchаnge “facts, opinions, proposals and counter-proposals . . . freely and in good faith during the meeting or meetings (and between meetings, if аdvisable) in an effort to reach mutual understanding and agreement.” In practice, the negotiations between the parties *534 are conducted in an informal manner by committees appointed by each of them. These committees have no authority to bind the parties to the terms of any collective bargaining agreement, but must return to their principals for approval of their recommendations. Although the bargaining sessions between the committees have been traditionally closed to the public, the recommendations of the committees are rеceived and voted upon by the board in an open meeting.
The present action arose from the board’s refusal to permit the plaintiff Roger G. Talbot, a reporter for the Concord Monitor, to attend one or more of the bargaining committees’ sessions. The parties have agreed that none of the exceptions to the Right to Know Law (RSA 91-A:3 (Supp. 1973)) are applicable to these facts, and the narrow issue presented by this сase is whether the bargaining sessions of the committees are within the purview of the act.
The parties have drawn this court’s attention to two lеgislative policies which bear on this issue. The first policy is that of the Right to Know Law which is to protect the democratic process by making public the decisions and considerations on which government action is based.
Carter v. Nashua,
There is nothing in the legislative history of the Right
*535
to Know Law to indicate that the legislature specifically considered the impact of its provisions on public sector bargaining. However, it is improbable that the legislature intended the law to apply in such a fashion as to destroy the very process it was attempting to open to the public.
See
Annot.,
The record is replete with evidence indicating that the presence of the public and the press at negotiаting sessions would inhibit the free exchange of views and freeze negotiators into fixed positions from which they could not *536 recede without loss of face. Moreover, in the opinion of one witness, the opening of such sessions to the public could result in the employment of professional negotiators, thus removing the local representatives from the bargaining process. See Mont. Rev. Code Ann. § 75-6127 (1971) (opening professional negotiating sessions, but closing preliminary deliberations of school board).
We agree with the Florida Supreme Court “that meaningful collective bargaining in the circumstances here would be destroyed if full publicity were accorded at each step of the negotiations”
(Bassett v. Braddock,
Plaintiffs’ exception overruled.
