Public bodies may continue to hold remote meetings through July 15 of 2022 under new legislation enacted last week. The statute, Chapter 22 of the Acts of 2022, also extends quorum reductions for town meetings, and remote meetings of representative town meetings.

Remote Meetings:

Under the amended Open Meeting Law, a quorum of a public body may meet remotely without the chair or any other member being physically present in a meeting location. In addition, a public body may continue to hold “hybrid” meetings, where the board meets in person and the public attends only through remote means so long as the public has “adequate, alternative means of public access” that provide “transparency and permit timely and effective public access to the deliberations of the public body, including, but not limited to, providing public access through telephone, internet, satellite enabled audio or video conferencing or any other technology that enables the public to clearly follow the proceedings of the public body.”

Individuals required to appear and present before a public body remotely must be given the same level of remote access as members of the public body (being promoted to “panelist” or “presenter”, rather than simply observing a livecast or participating through audio only).

Other Extensions:

In addition to allowing for continued remote access to public meetings, Chapter 22 of the Acts of 2022 also:

  • Authorizes the reduction of the quorum at any town meeting through July 15, 2022; and

  • Allows representative town meetings to meet by remote participation through July 15, 2022.

The statute contains an emergency preamble and therefore takes effect immediately. 

Please contact a member of Mirick O’Connell’s Public and Municipal Law Group with specific questions on the new law.