District Of Columbia 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

District Of Columbia Council Bill PR26-0156 Enrolled / Bill

Filed 04/01/2025

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A RESOLUTION 
  
26-91   
IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 
 
April 1, 2025 
 To declare the existence of an emergency with respect to the need to amend the Open Meetings 
Act to clarify the definition of meeting, to provide for a public body’s ability to be briefed 
about potential terrorist or public health threats so long as no official action is taken, to exempt from the act meetings between the Council and the Mayor provided that no official action is taken at such meetings, and to provide that a meeting shall be deemed 
open to the public if the public body takes steps reasonably calculated to allow the public to view or hear the meeting while the meeting is taking place, or, if doing so is not technologically feasible, as soon thereafter as reasonably practicable.   
 
RESOLVED, BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 
resolution may be cited as the “Open Meetings Clarification Emergency Declaration Resolution 
of 2025”. 
 
Sec. 2. (a) The Open Meetings Act, effective March 31, 2011 (D.C. Law 18-	350; D.C. 
Official Code § 2-571 et seq.), became effective on March 31, 2011.   
(b) The Open Meetings Act requires that any gathering of a quorum of a public body 
where members consider, conduct, or advise on public business offers the opportunity for the 
public to observe the meeting. The public must be given proper notice of these meetings and afforded the opportunity to review recordings of these meetings upon request. 	The Open 
Meetings Act also exempts several governmental entities from these requirements based on the 
definition of the term “public body	.” Exempted entities include the District of Columbia courts, 
the Mayor’s cabinet, and Advisory Neighborhood Commissioners (“ANC”), but not the Council. 
(c) In recent months, the District government has had to deal with a variety of 
consequential, large-scale business and economic development propositions, most notably, the 
effort to retain Monumental Sports and Entertainment in the District. This effort involved significant negotiations between the parties, much of which had to be kept confidential until 
agreements in principle were reached.  
(d) The District is currently facing the prospect of having to cut approximately $1.1 
billion from its FY 2025 budget (in the middle of the fiscal year) based on 	Congress’s passage of 
a continuing resolution that requires federal spending to be consistent with FY 2024 levels and     	ENROLLED ORIGINAL 
 
 
 
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Congress’s choice to treat the District as a federal agency as opposed to allowing the District to 
spend local funds at approved levels as had been the case for many years prior.  
(e) Each of the described circumstances called for a certain level of awareness and	, in the 
case of the budget, coordination among the District’s elected officials – including the members 
of the Council – to develop a workable strategy to effectively respond to the situation. 	While 
such coordination is relatively simple for the Executive and the Office of the Attorney General, 
since these entities are not “public bodies” under the Open Meetings Act, current law creates 
significant barriers for 13 members of the Council to prepare to function as a single unit in times 
of crisis.   
(f) Beyond that, there is a legitimate expectation that further circumstances like those 
described in subsections (c) and (d) of this section are imminent and will require a significant 
degree of organizational nimbleness on the part of the Council, as well as other public bodies 
within the District government, in order to respond in a timely and appropriate manner. For this 
reason, several U.S. states exempt completely, or make special exceptions for, their state 
legislatures with respect to open meetings laws.  
(g) While the official action of a public body to make or adopt public policy is, and 
should be, required to be made public, the preparation put into moving toward official action, 
including background research and briefings, organizational discussions, and information 
gathering (under certain circumstances) does not necessarily need to be. In fact, in certain 
circumstances, particularly circumstances related to threats to the health, safety, and welfare of 
the public or members of the public body, provisional and pre -decisional information should not 
be disclosed prematurely.  
(h) This emergency legislation is particularly necessary in the current political climate to 
allow the Council to be briefed as a body in a timely manner , to develop appropriate responses to 
rapidly unfolding issues, and to ensure that other public bodies in the District are able to receive, 
discuss and analyze relevant information securely, while also ensuring that the process for taking 
any official action with respect to that information is conducted publicly	. 
 
Sec. 3. The Council of the District of Columbia determines that the circumstances 
enumerated in section 2 constitute emergency circumstances making it necessary that the Open 
Meetings Clarification Emergency Amendment Act of 2025 be adopted after a single reading. 
 
Sec. 4. This resolution shall take effect immediately