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Published December 22, 2008 06:11 pm - Electronic communications walk the line when it comes to the open meeting law.

Government e-mails pose issues
Openness called into question when discussing official business

By Dan Linehan
Free Press Staff Writer

Mankato Mayor John Brady was looking for records of a recent decision by a committee of city staff members, until he learned minutes were not recorded, as they typically are. The traffic and safety committee had e-mailed the proposal about a concrete barrier on Byron Street to each other but hadn’t discussed it during a meeting.

At Blue Earth County, Commissioner Katy Wortel says she often e-mails interesting items to fellow County Board members, but electronic dialogue about public issues is rare.

And in Eagle Lake, a former city administrator says he resigned because the City Council there discussed items over e-mail and didn’t take the matter seriously after they were told it was probably a violation of state law.

There’s no law in Minnesota that specifically covers when electronic communication turns into a public meeting. Any e-mail between elected officials about public business could constitute a violation.

Mankato’s traffic and safety committee may not technically be a public body — it contains only one council person, not enough to make official decisions — but its e-mail communications are not put into formalized minutes, as its regular meetings are.

Given the convenience of the Internet and its widespread use — and the e-mail accounts and laptops that some cities hand out to council members — it’s only natural that officials would use it to some extent. But different lines are being drawn as to who should send and receive e-mail, and what should be discussed.

E-mail meetings?
In July, Tom Smith abruptly resigned as city administrator of Eagle Lake, citing a number of problems including employee behavior, the city’s organization and the secretary-like nature of his tasks.

He did not specifically mention the open meeting law, but mailed another letter Dec. 5 that said he left because “the city council was/has been conducting city business over the Internet without Public Notice.”

Smith included paper copies of e-mails that apparently show council members discussing an upcoming public housing project. Mayor Tim Auringer sent an e-mail to at least three council members describing the project and giving his opinion about it. Another councilman replied with a few questions.

Smith took that evidence to the city attorney, Chris Kennedy, who wrote a letter to the council, dated April 29, explaining there “appears to be a violation of the Minnesota open meetings law based on these communications.”

Smith took the letter to the council members, who, he claims, didn’t take it seriously. Auringer disputes that.

After the meeting, Smith wrote he was “shut out” in a “hostile work environment.”

“I don’t want to work for people like that,” he said.

Auringer said the council has lately left discussion to the public meetings, which lengthens them quite a bit.

The fact that discussions only happen at monthly meetings “slows government down to a crawl, which has been the rub on government for a long time,” Auringer said.



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