Sec. 1-200. (Formerly Sec. 1-18a). Definitions. As used in this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the following meanings, except where such terms
are used in a context which clearly indicates the contrary:
(1) "Public agency" or "agency" means:
(A) Any executive, administrative or legislative office of the state or any political
subdivision of the state and any state or town agency, any department, institution, bureau,
board, commission, authority or official of the state or of any city, town, borough, municipal corporation, school district, regional district or other district or other political subdivision of the state, including any committee of, or created by, any such office, subdivision, agency, department, institution, bureau, board, commission, authority or official,
and also includes any judicial office, official, or body or committee thereof but only
with respect to its or their administrative functions;
(B) Any person to the extent such person is deemed to be the functional equivalent
of a public agency pursuant to law; or
(C) Any "implementing agency", as defined in section 32-222.
(2) "Meeting" means any hearing or other proceeding of a public agency, any convening or assembly of a quorum of a multimember public agency, and any communication by or to a quorum of a multimember public agency, whether in person or by means
of electronic equipment, to discuss or act upon a matter over which the public agency
has supervision, control, jurisdiction or advisory power. "Meeting" does not include:
Any meeting of a personnel search committee for executive level employment candidates; any chance meeting, or a social meeting neither planned nor intended for the
purpose of discussing matters relating to official business; strategy or negotiations with
respect to collective bargaining; a caucus of members of a single political party notwithstanding that such members also constitute a quorum of a public agency; an administrative or staff meeting of a single-member public agency; and communication limited to
notice of meetings of any public agency or the agendas thereof. A quorum of the members
of a public agency who are present at any event which has been noticed and conducted
as a meeting of another public agency under the provisions of the Freedom of Information
Act shall not be deemed to be holding a meeting of the public agency of which they are
members as a result of their presence at such event.
(3) "Caucus" means (A) a convening or assembly of the enrolled members of a
single political party who are members of a public agency within the state or a political
subdivision, or (B) the members of a multimember public agency, which members constitute a majority of the membership of the agency, or the other members of the agency
who constitute a minority of the membership of the agency, who register their intention
to be considered a majority caucus or minority caucus, as the case may be, for the
purposes of the Freedom of Information Act, provided (i) the registration is made with
the office of the Secretary of the State for any such public agency of the state, in the
office of the clerk of a political subdivision of the state for any public agency of a political
subdivision of the state, or in the office of the clerk of each municipal member of any
multitown district or agency, (ii) no member is registered in more than one caucus at
any one time, (iii) no such member's registration is rescinded during the member's
remaining term of office, and (iv) a member may remain a registered member of the
majority caucus or minority caucus regardless of whether the member changes his or
her party affiliation under chapter 143.
(4) "Person" means natural person, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, association or society.
(5) "Public records or files" means any recorded data or information relating to the
conduct of the public's business prepared, owned, used, received or retained by a public
agency, or to which a public agency is entitled to receive a copy by law or contract under
section 1-218, whether such data or information be handwritten, typed, tape-recorded,
printed, photostated, photographed or recorded by any other method.
(6) "Executive sessions" means a meeting of a public agency at which the public
is excluded for one or more of the following purposes: (A) Discussion concerning the
appointment, employment, performance, evaluation, health or dismissal of a public officer or employee, provided that such individual may require that discussion be held at
an open meeting; (B) strategy and negotiations with respect to pending claims or pending
litigation to which the public agency or a member thereof, because of the member's
conduct as a member of such agency, is a party until such litigation or claim has been
finally adjudicated or otherwise settled; (C) matters concerning security strategy or the
deployment of security personnel, or devices affecting public security; (D) discussion
of the selection of a site or the lease, sale or purchase of real estate by a political subdivision of the state when publicity regarding such site, lease, sale, purchase or construction
would cause a likelihood of increased price until such time as all of the property has
been acquired or all proceedings or transactions concerning same have been terminated
or abandoned; and (E) discussion of any matter which would result in the disclosure of
public records or the information contained therein described in subsection (b) of section
1-210.
(7) "Personnel search committee" means a body appointed by a public agency,
whose sole purpose is to recommend to the appointing agency a candidate or candidates
for an executive-level employment position. Members of a "personnel search committee" shall not be considered in determining whether there is a quorum of the appointing
or any other public agency.
(8) "Pending claim" means a written notice to an agency which sets forth a demand
for legal relief or which asserts a legal right stating the intention to institute an action
in an appropriate forum if such relief or right is not granted.
(9) "Pending litigation" means (A) a written notice to an agency which sets forth
a demand for legal relief or which asserts a legal right stating the intention to institute
an action before a court if such relief or right is not granted by the agency; (B) the
service of a complaint against an agency returnable to a court which seeks to enforce
or implement legal relief or a legal right; or (C) the agency's consideration of action to
enforce or implement legal relief or a legal right.
(10) "Freedom of Information Act" means this chapter.
(11) "Governmental function" means the administration or management of a program of a public agency, which program has been authorized by law to be administered
or managed by a person, where (A) the person receives funding from the public agency
for administering or managing the program, (B) the public agency is involved in or
regulates to a significant extent such person's administration or management of the
program, whether or not such involvement or regulation is direct, pervasive, continuous
or day-to-day, and (C) the person participates in the formulation of governmental policies or decisions in connection with the administration or management of the program
and such policies or decisions bind the public agency. "Governmental function" shall
not include the mere provision of goods or services to a public agency without the
delegated responsibility to administer or manage a program of a public agency.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 1; P.A. 77-421; 77-609, S. 1, 8; P.A. 83-67, S. 1; 83-372; P.A. 84-546, S. 3, 173; P.A. 87-568, S. 1,
2; P.A. 90-307, S. 2, 5; P.A. 91-140, S. 1, 3; P.A. 93-195, S. 1; P.A. 95-79, S. 2, 189; P.A. 97-47, S. 1; P.A. 00-136, S. 1;
P.A. 01-169, S. 1; P.A. 02-130, S. 17.)
History: P.A. 77-421 deleted reference to court of common pleas, probate court and juvenile court in Subsec. (a); P.A.
77-609 redefined "meeting" and "executive sessions"; P.A. 83-67 amended Subsec. (a) by including any state, municipal
or district authority within the meaning of "agency" or "public agency"; P.A. 83-372 included within the definition of
"agency" or "public agency" any committee formed by a body previously defined as an agency or public agency; P.A. 84-546 included committees of authorities in definition of "public agency"; P.A. 87-568 excluded from definition of "meeting"
any "meeting of a personnel search committee for executive level employment candidates" and added Subsec. (f), defining
"personnel search committee"; P.A. 90-307 added Subsec. (g) re exception to meeting provisions; P.A. 91-140 inserted
new Subsecs. (g) and (h), defining "pending claim" and "pending litigation", and relettered former Subsec. (g) as Subsec.
(i); P.A. 93-195 inserted ", or created by," in definition of "public agency" or "agency" in Subsec. (a); P.A. 95-79 redefined
"person" to include a limited liability company, effective May 31, 1995; P.A. 97-47 replaced alphabetic Subdiv. indicators
with numbers, transferred quorum provisions (formerly Subdiv. (i)) to Subdiv. (2), defining "meeting", and added Subdiv.
(10) defining "Freedom of Information Act"; Sec. 1-18a transferred to Sec. 1-200 in 1999; P.A. 00-136 redefined "public
agency" in Subdiv. (1) to include implementing agencies, as defined in Sec. 32-222; P.A. 01-169 amended definition of
"public agency" in Subdiv. (1) by making technical changes, dividing Subdiv. into Subparas. and adding Subpara. (B) to
include any person to extent such person is deemed the functional equivalent of a public agency, amended definition of
"public records or files" in Subdiv. (5) by adding "or to which a public agency is entitled to receive a copy by law or
contract under section 1-218", made a technical change for the purposes of gender neutrality in Subdiv. (6) and added
Subdiv. (11) defining "governmental function"; P.A. 02-130 made a technical change in Subdiv. (1)(C), substituted "does
not" for "shall not" in Subdiv. (2) and amended definition of "caucus" in Subdiv. (3) to designate existing provisions as
Subpara. (A) and add Subpara. (B) re members of a multimember public agency, effective May 10, 2002.
Annotations to former section 1-18a:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 142. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212
C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.
FOIA, Freedom of Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482. Cited.
Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 641;
Id., 848. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271. Cited. 234 C.
704. Cited. 240 C. 1.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA. Cited. 31 CA 690. Cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited.
Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq.
cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133. Cited. 51 CA 100.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267. Cited. 42 CS 84. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. P.A. 91-140, Sec. 1 cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. 129. Cited. Id., 291. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
Subsec. (a):
Woodstock Academy deemed a "public agency" within meaning of statute. 181 C. 544. Rules committee of superior
court does not perform "administrative functions" within meaning of the statute and is not subject to the provisions of the
Freedom of Information Act. 192 C. 234. Cited. 204 C. 609. Exercise of administrative functions and adjudication discussed.
209 C. 204. Connecticut Humane Society not a public agency within meaning of section; applications of section discussed.
218 C. 757. "Committee" under section refers only to subunits composed entirely of public agency members. 219 C. 685.
P.A. 83-372 cited. Id. Cited. 221 C. 217; Id. 300; Id., 835.
Cited. 18 CA 291. Cited. 19 CA 352. Cited. 36 CA 155. Cited. 42 CA 519; Id., 700; judgment reversed, see 240 C.
835. Cited. 43 CA 133. Domestic Violence Services of Greater New Haven, Inc. not a public agency within meaning of
statute; "functional equivalent" test discussed. 47 CA 466. Gathering of four selectmen, chairman of board of finance and
town controller to discuss future meeting of board of selectmen not a meeting of the board of selectmen since less than a
quorum of board present at the gathering. 48 CA 529.
Cited. 39 CS 257. Cited. 42 CS 129. Cited. 44 CS 230.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 201 C. 685. Cited. 230 C. 441. Cited. 231 C. 922. Section must be construed to contemplate a bifurcated grievance
hearing; judgments of appellate court in Waterbury Teachers Assn. v. Freedom of Information Commission, 42 CA 700
reversed. 240 C. 835.
Cited. 19 CA 352. Cited. 42 CA 402. Grievance hearings involve "negotiations with respect to collective bargaining"
pursuant to the statutory exception of the section. Id., 700; judgment reversed, see 240 C. 835. Grievance arbitration
hearings before Board of Mediation and Arbitration are not public meetings within the meaning of the section. 43 CA 133.
Gathering of Republican members of board of aldermen attended by persons other than Republicans was not a caucus
under this subsection but a public meeting subject to the notice and record requirements of sections 1-7 to 1-21k. 36 CS
117. When members of a public agency who are of the same political party gather for the limited purpose of discussing
and deciding the party's position on matters to come before the agency, that gathering is a caucus under this subsection.
Id. Cited. 39 CS 56. Cited. 42 CS 84.
Subsec. (c):
Cited. 221 C. 217. Cited. 222 C. 361. Cited. 234 C. 624.
Subsec. (d):
Cited. 204 C. 609. Cited. 228 C. 158.
Cited. 4 CA 216. Cited. 44 CA 622. Certain affidavits of town employees and officers prepared by the town attorney's
office to assist town attorney in defending the town against complaint not public records since prepared by town attorney
who is not town employee for his use and not for use of public agency. 48 CA 522.
Subsec. (e):
Cited. 182 C. 138. Cited. 192 C. 183. Cited. 198 C. 498. Subdiv. (1) cited. 199 C. 451. Cited. 213 C. 216. Subdiv. (1):
Court interpreted "appointment" to include term "filling a vacancy" used in Sec. 10-219. Id. Cited. 217 C. 153. Subdiv.
(2): Term "pending claim" discussed. Id. Cited. 221 C. 217. Subdiv. (1) cited. 240 C. 835. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Cited. 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Cited. 19 CA 539. Subdivs. (1) and (5) cited.
20 CA 671. Cited. 42 CA 402.
Cited. 41 CS 267. Subdiv. (1): "Filling a vacancy" as used in Sec. 10-219 constitutes "appointment" within meaning
of this section. Id.
Subsec. (h):
Any action, not restricted to legal action, to implement legal relief or enforce a legal right concerns "pending litigation".
243 C. 427.
Annotations to present section:
Order that documents be disclosed under section was proper. 54 CA 373. Order that documents be disclosed under
section was proper. 54 CA 373. Instructors in master gardener program at University of Connecticut who do not perform
governmental function within meaning of Subdiv. (11) and have no power to govern, regulate or make decisions affecting
government do not constitute public agencies under Subdiv. (1). 90 CA 101.
Subdiv. (1):
In Subpara. (A) "administrative functions" of judicial branch means activities related to budget, personnel, facilities
and physical operations. 278 C. 28.
Subdiv. (2):
Grievance arbitration proceedings are not meetings within meaning of section. 244 C. 487.
Predisciplinary employee conference is not a "meeting". 48 CA 424.
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Sec. 1-201. (Formerly Sec. 1-19c). Division of Criminal Justice deemed not to
be public agency, when. For the purposes of subdivision (1) of section 1-200, the
Division of Criminal Justice shall not be deemed to be a public agency except in respect
to its administrative functions.
(P.A. 84-406, S. 12, 13; P.A. 00-66, S. 4.)
History: P.A. 84-406 effective November 28, 1984, upon certification by secretary of the state of vote on constitutional
amendment re appointment of state's attorneys; Sec. 1-19c transferred to Sec. 1-201 in 1999; P.A. 00-66 changed the
reference to Sec. 1-200(1).
Annotations to former section 1-19c:
Connecticut Freedom of Information Act, Secs. 1-7-1-21k, cited. 206 C. 449. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217. Cited. Id., 300. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act
cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 641. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589.
Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84; Id., 129. Cited. Id., 291. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
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Sec. 1-202. (Formerly Sec. 1-20e). Application of freedom of information provisions to agency committee composed entirely of individuals who are not members
of the agency. Any public agency may petition the Freedom of Information Commission
before establishing a committee of the public agency which is to be composed entirely
of individuals who are not members of the agency, to determine whether such committee
may be exempted from the application of any provision of the Freedom of Information
Act. If the commission, in its judgment, finds by reliable, probative and substantial
evidence that the public interest in exempting the committee from the application of
any such provision clearly outweighs the public interest in applying the provision to the
committee, the commission shall issue an order, on appropriate terms, exempting the
committee from the application of the provision.
(P.A. 93-195, S. 2; P.A. 97-47, S. 7.)
History: P.A. 97-47 substituted "the Freedom of Information Act" for list of sections; Sec. 1-20e transferred to Sec. 1-202 in 1999.
Annotation to former section 1-20e:
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq.
cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
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Secs. 1-203 and 1-204. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 1-205. (Formerly Sec. 1-21j). Freedom of Information Commission. (a)
There shall be a Freedom of Information Commission consisting of five members appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of either house of the General
Assembly, who shall serve for terms of four years from the July first of the year of their
appointment, except that of the members appointed prior to and serving on July 1, 1977,
one shall serve for a period of six years from July 1, 1975, one shall serve for a period
of four years from July 1, 1975, and one shall serve for a period of six years from July
1, 1977. Of the two new members first appointed after July 1, 1977, one shall serve
from the date of such appointment until June 30, 1980, and one shall serve from the
date of such appointment until June 30, 1982. No more than three members shall be
members of the same political party.
(b) Each member shall receive two hundred dollars per day for each day such member is present at a commission hearing or meeting, and shall be entitled to reimbursement
for actual and necessary expenses incurred in connection therewith, in accordance with
the provisions of section 4-1.
(c) The Governor shall select one of its members as a chairman. The commission
shall maintain a permanent office at Hartford in such suitable space as the Commissioner
of Public Works provides. All papers required to be filed with the commission shall be
delivered to such office.
(d) The commission shall, subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information
Act promptly review the alleged violation of said Freedom of Information Act and issue
an order pertaining to the same. Said commission shall have the power to investigate
all alleged violations of said Freedom of Information Act and may for the purpose of
investigating any violation hold a hearing, administer oaths, examine witnesses, receive
oral and documentary evidence, have the power to subpoena witnesses under procedural
rules adopted by the commission to compel attendance and to require the production
for examination of any books and papers which the commission deems relevant in any
matter under investigation or in question. In case of a refusal to comply with any such
subpoena or to testify with respect to any matter upon which that person may be lawfully
interrogated, the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford, on application of the
commission, may issue an order requiring such person to comply with such subpoena
and to testify; failure to obey any such order of the court may be punished by the court
as a contempt thereof.
(e) The Freedom of Information Commission, and the Department of Information
Technology with respect to access to and disclosure of computer-stored public records,
shall conduct training sessions, at least annually, for members of public agencies for
the purpose of educating such members as to the requirements of sections 1-7 to 1-14,
inclusive, 1-16 to 1-18, inclusive, 1-200 to 1-202, inclusive, 1-205, 1-206, 1-210 to 1-217, inclusive, 1-225 to 1-232, inclusive, 1-240, 1-241 and 19a-342.
(f) Not later than December 31, 2001, the Freedom of Information Commission
shall create, publish and provide to the chief elected official of each municipality a model
ordinance concerning the establishment by any municipality of a municipal freedom of
information advisory board to facilitate the informed and efficient exchange of information between the commission and such municipality. The commission may amend the
model ordinance from time to time.
(g) When the General Assembly is in session, the Governor shall have the authority
to fill any vacancy on the commission, with the advice and consent of either house of
the General Assembly. When the General Assembly is not in session any vacancy shall
be filled pursuant to the provisions of section 4-19. A vacancy in the commission shall
not impair the right of the remaining members to exercise all the powers of the commission and three members of the commission shall constitute a quorum.
(h) The commission shall, subject to the provisions of chapter 67, employ such
employees as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter. The commission may enter into such contractual agreements as may be necessary for the discharge
of its duties, within the limits of its appropriated funds and in accordance with established
procedures.
(i) The Freedom of Information Commission shall not be construed to be a commission or board within the meaning of section 4-9a.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 15, 19; P.A. 77-609, S. 7, 8; 77-614, S. 73, 610; P.A. 78-280, S. 8, 127; 78-315, S. 3, 4; P.A. 79-560,
S. 1, 39; 79-575, S. 1, 4; P.A. 86-390, S. 1, 2, 4; P.A. 87-496, S. 5, 110; P.A. 88-230, S. 1, 12; P.A. 89-251, S. 57, 203;
P.A. 90-98, S. 1, 2; P.A. 91-347, S. 3, 5; P.A. 93-142, S. 4, 7, 8; P.A. 95-220, S. 4-6; P.A. 97-47, S. 13; June 18 Sp. Sess.
P.A. 97-9, S. 27, 50; P.A. 00-136, S. 8, 10; P.A. 06-187, S. 69; P.A. 07-202, S. 13.)
History: P.A. 77-609 increased the number of commission members to five, changed the terms of members to four
years, provided that not more than three members belong to the same political party and added Subsecs. (e) and (f); P.A.
77-614 changed "public works commissioner" to "commissioner of administrative services"; P.A. 78-280 changed "court
of common pleas for the county of Hartford" to "superior court for the judicial district of Hartford-New Britain"; P.A. 78-315 added Subsec. (i); P.A. 79-560 changed "fiscal and budgetary" purposes to "administrative" purposes; P.A. 79-575
changed per diem to $50, allowed for reimbursement for expenses and added Subsecs. (g) and (h); P.A. 86-390 deleted
provision in Subsec. (a) placing commission within the office of the secretary of the state for administrative purposes only
and deleted provision in Subsec. (c) requiring secretary of the state to provide secretarial assistance to the commission;
P.A. 87-496 substituted public works commissioner for administrative services commissioner in Subsec. (c); P.A. 88-230
replaced "judicial district of Hartford-New Britain" with "judicial district of Hartford", effective September 1, 1991; P.A.
89-251 set the fee for documents at not less than $28 per item; P.A. 90-98 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from
September 1, 1991, to September 1, 1993; P.A. 91-347 inserted "and the office of information and technology with respect
to access to and disclosure of computer-stored public records" in Subsec. (e), effective July 1, 1992; P.A. 93-142 changed
the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1993, to September 1, 1996, effective June 14, 1993; P.A. 95-220
changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1996, to September 1, 1998, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 97-47 amended Subsec. (d) by substituting "the Freedom of Information Act" for list of sections; June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-9
amended Subsec. (e) by substituting "Department of Information Technology" for "Office of Information and Technology",
effective July 1, 1997; Sec. 1-21j transferred to Sec. 1-205 in 1999; P.A. 00-136 inserted new Subsec. (f) re a model
ordinance for a municipal freedom of information advisory board, and redesignated former Subsecs. (f) to (i), inclusive,
as (g) to (j), respectively, effective July 1, 2000; P.A. 06-187 amended Subsec. (b) to change rate of compensation for
members from $50 to $200 per day for attendance at commission meetings or hearings, effective May 26, 2006; P.A. 07-202 deleted former Subsec. (i) which had required commission to make printed reports of its decisions available to the
public and redesignated existing Subsec. (j) as Subsec. (i), effective July 10, 2007.
Annotations to former section 1-21j:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 140. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212
C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.,
Freedom of Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Cited. 228
C. 271. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (d):
Subsection specifies sections of general statutes to which Freedom of Information Commission is subject. 181 C. 324.
Cited. 192 C. 183. Cited. 208 C. 453.
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Sec. 1-205a. Recommended appropriations. Allotments. (a) Notwithstanding
any provision of the general statutes, the appropriations recommended for the Freedom
of Information Commission, as established in section 1-205, shall be the estimates of
expenditure requirements transmitted to the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management by the executive director of the commission and the recommended adjustments
and revisions of such estimates shall be the recommended adjustments and revisions,
if any, transmitted by said executive director to the Office of Policy and Management.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of the general statutes, the Governor shall not
reduce allotment requisitions or allotments in force concerning the Freedom of Information Commission.
(P.A. 04-204, S. 11.)
History: P.A. 04-204 effective July 1, 2004.
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Sec. 1-206. (Formerly Sec. 1-21i). Denial of access to public records or meetings. Appeals. Notice. Orders. Civil penalty. Service of process upon commission.
Frivolous appeals. (a) Any denial of the right to inspect or copy records provided for
under section 1-210 shall be made to the person requesting such right by the public
agency official who has custody or control of the public record, in writing, within four
business days of such request, except when the request is determined to be subject to
subsections (b) and (c) of section 1-214, in which case such denial shall be made, in
writing, within ten business days of such request. Failure to comply with a request to
so inspect or copy such public record within the applicable number of business days
shall be deemed to be a denial.
(b) (1) Any person denied the right to inspect or copy records under section 1-210
or wrongfully denied the right to attend any meeting of a public agency or denied any
other right conferred by the Freedom of Information Act may appeal therefrom to the
Freedom of Information Commission, by filing a notice of appeal with said commission.
A notice of appeal shall be filed not later than thirty days after such denial, except in
the case of an unnoticed or secret meeting, in which case the appeal shall be filed not
later than thirty days after the person filing the appeal receives notice in fact that such
meeting was held. For purposes of this subsection, such notice of appeal shall be deemed
to be filed on the date it is received by said commission or on the date it is postmarked,
if received more than thirty days after the date of the denial from which such appeal is
taken. Upon receipt of such notice, the commission shall serve upon all parties, by
certified or registered mail, a copy of such notice together with any other notice or order
of such commission. In the case of the denial of a request to inspect or copy records
contained in a public employee's personnel or medical file or similar file under subsection (c) of section 1-214, the commission shall include with its notice or order an order
requiring the public agency to notify any employee whose records are the subject of an
appeal, and the employee's collective bargaining representative, if any, of the commission's proceedings and, if any such employee or collective bargaining representative
has filed an objection under said subsection (c), the agency shall provide the required
notice to such employee and collective bargaining representative by certified mail, return
receipt requested or by hand delivery with a signed receipt. A public employee whose
personnel or medical file or similar file is the subject of an appeal under this subsection
may intervene as a party in the proceedings on the matter before the commission. Said
commission shall, after due notice to the parties, hear and decide the appeal within one
year after the filing of the notice of appeal. The commission shall adopt regulations
in accordance with chapter 54, establishing criteria for those appeals which shall be
privileged in their assignment for hearing. Any such appeal shall be heard not later than
thirty days after receipt of a notice of appeal and decided not later than sixty days after
the hearing. If a notice of appeal concerns an announced agency decision to meet in
executive session or an ongoing agency practice of meeting in executive sessions, for
a stated purpose, the commission or a member or members of the commission designated
by its chairperson shall serve notice upon the parties in accordance with this section and
hold a preliminary hearing on the appeal not later than seventy-two hours after receipt
of the notice, provided such notice shall be given to the parties at least forty-eight hours
prior to such hearing. During such preliminary hearing, the commission shall take evidence and receive testimony from the parties. If after the preliminary hearing the commission finds probable cause to believe that the agency decision or practice is in violation
of sections 1-200 and 1-225, the agency shall not meet in executive session for such
purpose until the commission decides the appeal. If probable cause is found by the
commission, it shall conduct a final hearing on the appeal and render its decision not
later than five days after the completion of the preliminary hearing. Such decision shall
specify the commission's findings of fact and conclusions of law.
(2) In any appeal to the Freedom of Information Commission under subdivision (1)
of this subsection or subsection (c) of this section, the commission may confirm the
action of the agency or order the agency to provide relief that the commission, in its
discretion, believes appropriate to rectify the denial of any right conferred by the Freedom of Information Act. The commission may declare null and void any action taken
at any meeting which a person was denied the right to attend and may require the production or copying of any public record. In addition, upon the finding that a denial of any
right created by the Freedom of Information Act was without reasonable grounds and
after the custodian or other official directly responsible for the denial has been given
an opportunity to be heard at a hearing conducted in accordance with sections 4-176e
to 4-184, inclusive, the commission may, in its discretion, impose against the custodian
or other official a civil penalty of not less than twenty dollars nor more than one thousand
dollars. If the commission finds that a person has taken an appeal under this subsection
frivolously, without reasonable grounds and solely for the purpose of harassing the
agency from which the appeal has been taken, after such person has been given an
opportunity to be heard at a hearing conducted in accordance with sections 4-176e to
4-184, inclusive, the commission may, in its discretion, impose against that person a
civil penalty of not less than twenty dollars nor more than one thousand dollars. The
commission shall notify a person of a penalty levied against him pursuant to this subsection by written notice sent by certified or registered mail. If a person fails to pay the
penalty within thirty days of receiving such notice, the superior court for the judicial
district of Hartford shall, on application of the commission, issue an order requiring the
person to pay the penalty imposed. If the executive director of the commission has reason
to believe an appeal under subdivision (1) of this subsection or subsection (c) of this
section (A) presents a claim beyond the commission's jurisdiction; (B) would perpetrate
an injustice; or (C) would constitute an abuse of the commission's administrative process, the executive director shall not schedule the appeal for hearing without first seeking
and obtaining leave of the commission. The commission shall provide due notice to the
parties and review affidavits and written argument that the parties may submit and grant
or deny such leave summarily at its next regular meeting. The commission shall grant
such leave unless it finds that the appeal: (i) Does not present a claim within the commission's jurisdiction; (ii) would perpetrate an injustice; or (iii) would constitute an abuse
of the commission's administrative process. Any party aggrieved by the commission's
denial of such leave may apply to the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford,
within fifteen days of the commission meeting at which such leave was denied, for an
order requiring the commission to hear such appeal.
(3) In making the findings and determination under subdivision (2) of this subsection the commission shall consider the nature of any injustice or abuse of administrative
process, including but not limited to: (A) The nature, content, language or subject matter
of the request or the appeal; (B) the nature, content, language or subject matter of prior
or contemporaneous requests or appeals by the person making the request or taking the
appeal; and (C) the nature, content, language or subject matter of other verbal and written
communications to any agency or any official of any agency from the person making
the request or taking the appeal.
(4) Notwithstanding any provision of this subsection to the contrary, in the case of
an appeal to the commission of a denial by a public agency, the commission may, upon
motion of such agency, confirm the action of the agency and dismiss the appeal without
a hearing if it finds, after examining the notice of appeal and construing all allegations
most favorably to the appellant, that (A) the agency has not violated the Freedom of
Information Act, or (B) the agency has committed a technical violation of the Freedom
of Information Act that constitutes a harmless error that does not infringe the appellant's
rights under said act.
(c) Any person who does not receive proper notice of any meeting of a public agency
in accordance with the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act may appeal under
the provisions of subsection (b) of this section. A public agency of the state shall be
presumed to have given timely and proper notice of any meeting as provided for in said
Freedom of Information Act if notice is given in the Connecticut Law Journal or a
Legislative Bulletin. A public agency of a political subdivision shall be presumed to
have given proper notice of any meeting, if a notice is timely sent under the provisions
of said Freedom of Information Act by first-class mail to the address indicated in the
request of the person requesting the same. If such commission determines that notice
was improper, it may, in its sound discretion, declare any or all actions taken at such
meeting null and void.
(d) Any party aggrieved by the decision of said commission may appeal therefrom,
in accordance with the provisions of section 4-183. Notwithstanding the provisions of
section 4-183, in any such appeal of a decision of the commission, the court may conduct
an in camera review of the original or a certified copy of the records which are at issue
in the appeal but were not included in the record of the commission's proceedings, admit
the records into evidence and order the records to be sealed or inspected on such terms
as the court deems fair and appropriate, during the appeal. The commission shall have
standing to defend, prosecute or otherwise participate in any appeal of any of its decisions
and to take an appeal from any judicial decision overturning or modifying a decision
of the commission. If aggrievement is a jurisdictional prerequisite to the commission
taking any such appeal, the commission shall be deemed to be aggrieved. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 3-125, legal counsel employed or retained by said commission shall represent said commission in all such appeals and in any other litigation
affecting said commission. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (c) of section
4-183 and section 52-64, all process shall be served upon said commission at its office.
Any appeal taken pursuant to this section shall be privileged in respect to its assignment
for trial over all other actions except writs of habeas corpus and actions brought by or
on behalf of the state, including informations on the relation of private individuals.
Nothing in this section shall deprive any party of any rights he may have had at common
law prior to January 1, 1958. If the court finds that any appeal taken pursuant to this
section or section 4-183 is frivolous or taken solely for the purpose of delay, it shall
order the party responsible therefor to pay to the party injured by such frivolous or
dilatory appeal costs or attorney's fees of not more than one thousand dollars. Such
order shall be in addition to any other remedy or disciplinary action required or permitted
by statute or by rules of court.
(e) Within sixty days after the filing of a notice of appeal alleging violation of any
right conferred by the Freedom of Information Act concerning records of the Department
of Environmental Protection relating to the state's hazardous waste program under sections 22a-448 to 22a-454, inclusive, the Freedom of Information Commission shall,
after notice to the parties, hear and decide the appeal. Failure by the commission to hear
and decide the appeal within such sixty-day period shall constitute a final decision
denying such appeal for purposes of this section and section 4-183. On appeal, the court
may, in addition to any other powers conferred by law, order the disclosure of any such
records withheld in violation of the Freedom of Information Act and may assess against
the state reasonable attorney's fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in an
appeal in which the complainant has prevailed against the Department of Environmental
Protection.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 14; P.A. 76-435, S. 25, 82; P.A. 77-403; 77-603, S. 2, 125; 77-609, S. 6, 8; P.A. 78-331, S. 57, 58;
P.A. 81-431, S. 2, 3; P.A. 83-129, S. 1, 2; 83-587, S. 69, 96; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 83-31, S. 1, 2; P.A. 84-112, S. 2, 3; 84-136; 84-311, S. 1, 3; P.A. 86-408, S. 1, 4; P.A. 87-285, S. 2; 87-526, S. 4; P.A. 88-230, S. 1, 12; 88-317, S. 39, 107; 88-353, S. 2, 4; P.A. 90-98, S. 1, 2; 90-307, S. 1, 5; P.A. 92-207, S. 2; P.A. 93-142, S. 4, 7, 8; 93-191, S. 1, 4; P.A. 95-220,
S. 4-6; P.A. 97-47, S. 10-12; P.A. 00-136, S. 6; P.A. 07-202, S. 11.)
History: P.A. 76-435 made technical changes; P.A. 77-403 changed "person" to "party"; P.A. 77-603 required that
court appeals be made in accordance with Sec. 4-183; P.A. 77-609 changed provisions for appeals to freedom of information
commission and provided that legal counsel represent the commission in court appeals; P.A. 78-331 made technical changes,
reiterating amendments of P.A. 77-603; P.A. 81-431 added provisions in Subsec. (b) clarifying time of filing of notice of
appeal and authorizing imposition of civil penalties for unreasonable denials, added a provision in Subsec. (d) re service
of process upon the commission and deleted reference to commission's authority to impose fines for wilful and unreasonable
denials; P.A. 83-129 amended Subsec. (b) to allow the commission to penalize those who bring frivolous appeals and
amended Subsec. (d) by allowing the court to order those engaged in dilatory or frivolous appeals to pay the injured party's
costs or attorney's fees; P.A. 83-587 made technical change in Subsec. (c); June Sp. Sess. P.A. 83-31 established an
expedited hearing procedure for appeals involving executive sessions, effective July 1, 1984; P.A. 84-112 increased civil
penalty for denial of right of access to records from $500 to $1,000; P.A. 84-136 provided for extended appeal period in
the case of an unnoticed or secret meeting; P.A. 84-311 added provision re commission standing in appeals in Subsec. (d);
P.A. 86-408 changed time limit for hearing and decision on appeal to one year after filing of notice and required that
commission adopt regulations establishing criteria for privileged assignment for hearing for certain appeals which must
be decided within 90 days after filing; P.A. 87-285 amended Subsec. (b) to require notice to the employee of any appeal
to the commission regarding denial of access to his personnel or medical files, and to allow the employee to intervene as
a party in the proceedings; P.A. 87-526 amended Subsec. (d) to allow court to conduct in camera review of records which
are at issue in appeal but not included in record of commission's proceedings; P.A. 88-230 replaced "judicial district of
Hartford-New Britain" with "judicial district of Hartford", effective September 1, 1991; P.A. 88-317 amended references
to Ch. 54 and Secs. 4-177 to 4-184 in Subsec. (b) to include new sections added to Ch. 54 and substituted "subsection (c)
of section 4-183" for "subsection (b) of section 4-183" in Subsec. (d), effective July 1, 1989, and applicable to all agency
proceedings commencing on or after that date; P.A. 88-353 added requirement in Subsec. (b) re notice to collective bargaining representative; P.A. 90-98 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1991, to September 1,
1993; P.A. 90-307, S. 1, re appeals re records of environmental protection department relating to state hazardous waste
program, was added editorially by the Revisors as Subsec. (e) in 1991; P.A. 92-207 amended Subsec. (a) to allow 10 days
for the denial of the right to inspect and copy records and to require that denial be made in writing pursuant to Subsecs.
(b) and (c) of Sec. 1-20a; P.A. 93-142 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1993, to September
1, 1996, effective June 14, 1993; P.A. 93-191 amended Subsec. (b) by adding Subdiv. designations, adding Subdiv. (2)
provision regarding appeals which present a claim beyond the commission's jurisdiction, would perpetrate an injustice or
would constitute an abuse of the commission's administrative process, adding Subdiv. (3) regarding considerations in
determining injustice or abuse of administrative process, and adding Subdiv. (4) regarding dismissal without hearing,
effective July 1, 1993; P.A. 95-220 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1996, to September 1,
1998, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 97-47 amended Subsecs. (b), (c) and (e) by substituting "the Freedom of Information
Act" for list of sections; Sec. 1-21i transferred to Sec. 1-206 in 1999; P.A. 00-136 amended Subdiv. (b)(4) to insert Subpara.
(A) designator and to add new language as Subpara. (B) re technical violations that constitute harmless error; P.A. 07-202
amended Subsec. (b)(1) to require commission to take evidence and receive testimony during the preliminary hearing, to
require the decision to specify commission's findings of fact and conclusions of law and to make technical changes,
effective July 10, 2007.
See Sec. 1-2a re construing of references to "United States mail" or "postmark" to include references to any delivery
service designated by the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to Section 7502 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 or any
successor to the code, as amended, and to any date recorded or marked as described in said Section 7502 by a designated
delivery service and construing of "registered or certified mail" to include any equivalent designated by the Secretary of
the Treasury pursuant to said Section 7502.
Annotations to former section 1-21i:
Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 142. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Cited. 198 C. 498.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212
C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA,
Freedom of Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217. Cited. Id., 300. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.; Id.,
393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271. Cited. 240 C. 835.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Cited. 4 CA 216. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210
C. 646. Board of pardons not an aggrieved party. Id. Freedom of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539;
20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA
589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Cited. Id., 700; judgment reversed, see 240 C. 835.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 204 C. 609.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 182 C. 138. Time requirements are mandatory. 198 C. 498. Time limits mandatory. 199 C. 451. Cited. 201 C.
421. Cited. Id., 448. Cited. 204 C. 609. Cited. 205 C. 767. Where successive requests made for records are denied, appeals
may be made within thirty days of any denial. 208 C. 442. Cited. 209 C. 204. "... affords a right to appeal to the FOIC any
denial, whether written or statutory, of a request for disclosure of public records". 218 C. 256. Cited. 221 C. 217. Subdiv.
(1) cited. 233 C. 28. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id. Cited. 234 C. 704. Subdiv. (1) cited. 240 C. 1.
Cited. 16 CA 49. Cited. 35 CA 111. Subdiv. (2): Fines were valid when ordered after plaintiff refused to disclose records
as ordered. 54 CA 373. Commission must ensure that employee whose records are the subject of an appeal has received
notice of proceedings where the employer has failed to give required notice. 60 CA 584. Order of disclosure may not be
issued until employee whose records are the subject of an appeal has been given proper notice and opportunity for a hearing
to assert the personal privacy exemption. Id.
Failure of commission to hold a hearing and issue a decision on complaint within time periods prescribed by this
subsection did not void its jurisdiction, those time limits being directory, not mandatory. 36 CS 117. Cited. 39 CS 56. A
finding that commission violated the law is equivalent to a finding that commission individually and collectively violated
the law and therefore were the individuals "directly responsible for such denial". 40 CS 233.
Subsec. (c):
An appeal to superior court under this statute is the route to test whether Freedom of Information Commission acted
erroneously in failing to order a public hearing. 2 CA 600.
Subsec. (d):
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 177 C. 584. Cited. 201 C. 421. Cited. 204 C. 609. Cited. 205 C. 767. Board of Pardons v.
FOIC, 14 CA 380, judgment reversed on issue of aggrievement. Id., 646. Cited. 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Cited. 217 C. 153.
Cited. 218 C. 335. Party status not necessary to standing for appeal of FOIC decision, only aggrievement by the decision
must be shown. 221 C. 217. Cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 848. Cited. 234 C. 624. Cited. 240 C. 1; Id., 824. Cited. 242
C. 79.
Plaintiff as intervenor, not party, without standing to appeal pursuant to section. 13 CA 315. Cited. 14 CA 380; judgment
reversed, see 210 C. 646. Cited. 19 CA 489. Cited. 36 CA 155. Cited. 41 CA 641; judgment reversed, see 240 C. 824.
Cited. 42 CA 39; judgment reversed, see 241 C. 310.
Cited. 35 CS 186. Cited. 39 CS 176; Id., 257. Cited. 41 CS 267. Cited. 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291. Cited. 43 CS 246.
Cited. 44 CS 230.
Annotations to present section:
Subsec. (b):
Legislature intended that the civil penalty provided by Subdiv. (2) would be the exclusive remedy for violation of a
right conferred by Freedom of Information Act. 267 C. 669.
Subdiv. (2): Fines were valid when ordered after plaintiff refused to disclose records as ordered. 54 CA 373. Commission
must ensure that employee whose records are the subject of an appeal has received notice of proceedings where the employer
has failed to give required notice. 60 CA 584. Order of disclosure may not be issued until employee whose records are the
subject of an appeal has been given proper notice and opportunity for a hearing to assert the personal privacy exemption. Id.
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Secs. 1-207 to 1-209. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 1-210. (Formerly Sec. 1-19). Access to public records. Exempt records. (a)
Except as otherwise provided by any federal law or state statute, all records maintained or
kept on file by any public agency, whether or not such records are required by any law
or by any rule or regulation, shall be public records and every person shall have the right
to (1) inspect such records promptly during regular office or business hours, (2) copy
such records in accordance with subsection (g) of section 1-212, or (3) receive a copy
of such records in accordance with section 1-212. Any agency rule or regulation, or part
thereof, that conflicts with the provisions of this subsection or diminishes or curtails in
any way the rights granted by this subsection shall be void. Each such agency shall keep
and maintain all public records in its custody at its regular office or place of business
in an accessible place and, if there is no such office or place of business, the public
records pertaining to such agency shall be kept in the office of the clerk of the political
subdivision in which such public agency is located or of the Secretary of the State, as
the case may be. Any certified record hereunder attested as a true copy by the clerk,
chief or deputy of such agency or by such other person designated or empowered by
law to so act, shall be competent evidence in any court of this state of the facts contained
therein.
(b) Nothing in the Freedom of Information Act shall be construed to require disclosure of:
(1) Preliminary drafts or notes provided the public agency has determined that the
public interest in withholding such documents clearly outweighs the public interest in
disclosure;
(2) Personnel or medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute an invasion of personal privacy;
(3) Records of law enforcement agencies not otherwise available to the public which
records were compiled in connection with the detection or investigation of crime, if the
disclosure of said records would not be in the public interest because it would result in
the disclosure of (A) the identity of informants not otherwise known or the identity of
witnesses not otherwise known whose safety would be endangered or who would be
subject to threat or intimidation if their identity was made known, (B) signed statements
of witnesses, (C) information to be used in a prospective law enforcement action if
prejudicial to such action, (D) investigatory techniques not otherwise known to the
general public, (E) arrest records of a juvenile, which shall also include any investigatory
files, concerning the arrest of such juvenile, compiled for law enforcement purposes,
(F) the name and address of the victim of a sexual assault under section 53a-70, 53a-70a, 53a-71, 53a-72a, 53a-72b or 53a-73a, or injury or risk of injury, or impairing of
morals under section 53-21, or of an attempt thereof, or (G) uncorroborated allegations
subject to destruction pursuant to section 1-216;
(4) Records pertaining to strategy and negotiations with respect to pending claims
or pending litigation to which the public agency is a party until such litigation or claim
has been finally adjudicated or otherwise settled;
(5) (A) Trade secrets, which for purposes of the Freedom of Information Act, are
defined as information, including formulas, patterns, compilations, programs, devices,
methods, techniques, processes, drawings, cost data, customer lists, film or television
scripts or detailed production budgets that (i) derive independent economic value, actual
or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by
proper means by, other persons who can obtain economic value from their disclosure
or use, and (ii) are the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to
maintain secrecy; and
(B) Commercial or financial information given in confidence, not required by
statute;
(6) Test questions, scoring keys and other examination data used to administer a
licensing examination, examination for employment or academic examinations;
(7) The contents of real estate appraisals, engineering or feasibility estimates and
evaluations made for or by an agency relative to the acquisition of property or to prospective public supply and construction contracts, until such time as all of the property has
been acquired or all proceedings or transactions have been terminated or abandoned,
provided the law of eminent domain shall not be affected by this provision;
(8) Statements of personal worth or personal financial data required by a licensing
agency and filed by an applicant with such licensing agency to establish the applicant's
personal qualification for the license, certificate or permit applied for;
(9) Records, reports and statements of strategy or negotiations with respect to collective bargaining;
(10) Records, tax returns, reports and statements exempted by federal law or state
statutes or communications privileged by the attorney-client relationship;
(11) Names or addresses of students enrolled in any public school or college without
the consent of each student whose name or address is to be disclosed who is eighteen
years of age or older and a parent or guardian of each such student who is younger than
eighteen years of age, provided this subdivision shall not be construed as prohibiting
the disclosure of the names or addresses of students enrolled in any public school in a
regional school district to the board of selectmen or town board of finance, as the case
may be, of the town wherein the student resides for the purpose of verifying tuition
payments made to such school;
(12) Any information obtained by the use of illegal means;
(13) Records of an investigation or the name of an employee providing information
under the provisions of section 4-61dd;
(14) Adoption records and information provided for in sections 45a-746, 45a-750
and 45a-751;
(15) Any page of a primary petition, nominating petition, referendum petition or
petition for a town meeting submitted under any provision of the general statutes or
of any special act, municipal charter or ordinance, until the required processing and
certification of such page has been completed by the official or officials charged with
such duty after which time disclosure of such page shall be required;
(16) Records of complaints, including information compiled in the investigation
thereof, brought to a municipal health authority pursuant to chapter 368e or a district
department of health pursuant to chapter 368f, until such time as the investigation is
concluded or thirty days from the date of receipt of the complaint, whichever occurs first;
(17) Educational records which are not subject to disclosure under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, 20 USC 1232g;
(18) Records, the disclosure of which the Commissioner of Correction, or as it
applies to Whiting Forensic Division facilities of the Connecticut Valley Hospital, the
Commissioner of Mental Health and Addiction Services, has reasonable grounds to
believe may result in a safety risk, including the risk of harm to any person or the
risk of an escape from, or a disorder in, a correctional institution or facility under the
supervision of the Department of Correction or Whiting Forensic Division facilities.
Such records shall include, but are not limited to:
(A) Security manuals, including emergency plans contained or referred to in such
security manuals;
(B) Engineering and architectural drawings of correctional institutions or facilities
or Whiting Forensic Division facilities;
(C) Operational specifications of security systems utilized by the Department of
Correction at any correctional institution or facility or Whiting Forensic Division facilities, except that a general description of any such security system and the cost and quality
of such system may be disclosed;
(D) Training manuals prepared for correctional institutions and facilities or Whiting
Forensic Division facilities that describe, in any manner, security procedures, emergency plans or security equipment;
(E) Internal security audits of correctional institutions and facilities or Whiting Forensic Division facilities;
(F) Minutes or recordings of staff meetings of the Department of Correction or
Whiting Forensic Division facilities, or portions of such minutes or recordings, that
contain or reveal information relating to security or other records otherwise exempt
from disclosure under this subdivision;
(G) Logs or other documents that contain information on the movement or assignment of inmates or staff at correctional institutions or facilities; and
(H) Records that contain information on contacts between inmates, as defined in
section 18-84, and law enforcement officers;
(19) Records when there are reasonable grounds to believe disclosure may result
in a safety risk, including the risk of harm to any person, any government-owned or
leased institution or facility or any fixture or appurtenance and equipment attached to,
or contained in, such institution or facility, except that such records shall be disclosed
to a law enforcement agency upon the request of the law enforcement agency. Such
reasonable grounds shall be determined (A) (i) by the Commissioner of Public Works,
after consultation with the chief executive officer of an executive branch state agency,
with respect to records concerning such agency; and (ii) by the Commissioner of Emergency Management and Homeland Security, after consultation with the chief executive
officer of a municipal, district or regional agency, with respect to records concerning
such agency; (B) by the Chief Court Administrator with respect to records concerning
the Judicial Department; and (C) by the executive director of the Joint Committee on
Legislative Management, with respect to records concerning the Legislative Department. As used in this section, "government-owned or leased institution or facility" includes, but is not limited to, an institution or facility owned or leased by a public service
company, as defined in section 16-1, a certified telecommunications provider, as defined
in section 16-1, a water company, as defined in section 25-32a, or a municipal utility
that furnishes electric, gas or water service, but does not include an institution or facility
owned or leased by the federal government, and "chief executive officer" includes, but
is not limited to, an agency head, department head, executive director or chief executive
officer. Such records include, but are not limited to:
(i) Security manuals or reports;
(ii) Engineering and architectural drawings of government-owned or leased institutions or facilities;
(iii) Operational specifications of security systems utilized at any government-owned or leased institution or facility, except that a general description of any such
security system and the cost and quality of such system, may be disclosed;
(iv) Training manuals prepared for government-owned or leased institutions or
facilities that describe, in any manner, security procedures, emergency plans or security
equipment;
(v) Internal security audits of government-owned or leased institutions or facilities;
(vi) Minutes or records of meetings, or portions of such minutes or records, that
contain or reveal information relating to security or other records otherwise exempt
from disclosure under this subdivision;
(vii) Logs or other documents that contain information on the movement or assignment of security personnel;
(viii) Emergency plans and emergency preparedness, response, recovery and mitigation plans, including plans provided by a person to a state agency or a local emergency
management agency or official; and
(ix) With respect to a water company, as defined in section 25-32a, that provides
water service: Vulnerability assessments and risk management plans, operational plans,
portions of water supply plans submitted pursuant to section 25-32d that contain or reveal
information the disclosure of which may result in a security risk to a water company,
inspection reports, technical specifications and other materials that depict or specifically
describe critical water company operating facilities, collection and distribution systems
or sources of supply;
(20) Records of standards, procedures, processes, software and codes, not otherwise
available to the public, the disclosure of which would compromise the security or integrity of an information technology system;
(21) The residential, work or school address of any participant in the address confidentiality program established pursuant to sections 54-240 to 54-240o, inclusive;
(22) The electronic mail address of any person that is obtained by the Department
of Transportation in connection with the implementation or administration of any plan
to inform individuals about significant highway or railway incidents;
(23) The name or address of any minor enrolled in any parks and recreation program
administered or sponsored by any public agency;
(24) Responses to any request for proposals or bid solicitation issued by a public
agency or any record or file made by a public agency in connection with the contract
award process, until such contract is executed or negotiations for the award of such
contract have ended, whichever occurs earlier, provided the chief executive officer of
such public agency certifies that the public interest in the disclosure of such responses,
record or file is outweighed by the public interest in the confidentiality of such responses,
record or file.
(c) Whenever a public agency receives a request from any person confined in a
correctional institution or facility or a Whiting Forensic Division facility, for disclosure
of any public record under the Freedom of Information Act, the public agency shall
promptly notify the Commissioner of Correction or the Commissioner of Mental Health
and Addiction Services in the case of a person confined in a Whiting Forensic Division
facility of such request, in the manner prescribed by the commissioner, before complying
with the request as required by the Freedom of Information Act. If the commissioner
believes the requested record is exempt from disclosure pursuant to subdivision (18) of
subsection (b) of this section, the commissioner may withhold such record from such
person when the record is delivered to the person's correctional institution or facility
or Whiting Forensic Division facility.
(d) Whenever a public agency, except the Judicial Department or Legislative Department, receives a request from any person for disclosure of any records described in
subdivision (19) of subsection (b) of this section under the Freedom of Information
Act, the public agency shall promptly notify the Commissioner of Public Works or the
Commissioner of Emergency Management and Homeland Security, as applicable, of
such request, in the manner prescribed by such commissioner, before complying with
the request as required by the Freedom of Information Act and for information related
to a water company, as defined in section 25-32a, the public agency shall promptly
notify the water company before complying with the request as required by the Freedom
of Information Act. If the commissioner, after consultation with the chief executive
officer of the applicable agency or after consultation with the chief executive officer of
the applicable water company for information related to a water company, as defined
in section 25-32a, believes the requested record is exempt from disclosure pursuant to
subdivision (19) of subsection (b) of this section, the commissioner may direct the
agency to withhold such record from such person. In any appeal brought under the
provisions of section 1-206 of the Freedom of Information Act for denial of access to
records for any of the reasons described in subdivision (19) of subsection (b) of this
section, such appeal shall be against the chief executive officer of the executive branch
state agency or the municipal, district or regional agency that issued the directive to
withhold such record pursuant to subdivision (19) of subsection (b) of this section,
exclusively, or, in the case of records concerning Judicial Department facilities, the
Chief Court Administrator or, in the case of records concerning the Legislative Department, the executive director of the Joint Committee on Legislative Management.
(e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivisions (1) and (16) of subsection (b)
of this section, disclosure shall be required of:
(1) Interagency or intra-agency memoranda or letters, advisory opinions, recommendations or any report comprising part of the process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated, except disclosure shall not be required of a preliminary
draft of a memorandum, prepared by a member of the staff of a public agency, which
is subject to revision prior to submission to or discussion among the members of such
agency;
(2) All records of investigation conducted with respect to any tenement house, lodging house or boarding house as defined in section 19a-355, or any nursing home, residential care home or rest home, as defined in section 19a-490, by any municipal building
department or housing code inspection department, any local or district health department, or any other department charged with the enforcement of ordinances or laws
regulating the erection, construction, alteration, maintenance, sanitation, ventilation or
occupancy of such buildings; and
(3) The names of firms obtaining bid documents from any state agency.
(1957, P.A. 428, S. 1; 1963, P.A. 260; 1967, P.A. 723, S. 1; 1969, P.A. 193; 1971, P.A. 193; P.A. 75-342, S. 2; P.A.
76-294; P.A. 77-609, S. 2, 8; P.A. 79-119; 79-324; 79-575, S. 2, 4; 79-599, S. 3; P.A. 80-483, S. 1, 186; P.A. 81-40, S. 2;
81-431, S. 1; 81-448, S. 2; P.A. 83-436; P.A. 84-112, S. 1; 84-311, S. 2, 3; P.A. 85-577, S. 22; P.A. 90-335, S. 1; P.A. 91-140, S. 2, 3; P.A. 94-246, S. 14; P.A. 95-233; P.A. 96-130, S. 37; P.A. 97-47, S. 4; 97-112, S. 2; 97-293, S. 14, 26; P.A.
99-156, S. 1; P.A. 00-66, S. 5; 00-69, S. 3, 4; 00-134, S. 1; 00-136, S. 2; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 00-1, S. 20, 46; P.A. 01-26,
S. 1; P.A. 02-133, S. 1, 2; 02-137, S. 2; P.A. 03-200, S. 17; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 104; P.A. 05-287, S. 26; P.A.
07-202, S. 12; 07-213, S. 22; 07-236, S. 5; P.A. 08-18, S. 1.)
History: 1963 act required that public records be kept in accessible place at regular office and at office of town clerk
or secretary of the state if no regular office exists; 1967 act excluded certain records from definition of "public record" for
disclosure purposes and required public agencies to keep records of proceedings; 1969 act provided that certified copies
would be admitted as evidence in court proceedings; 1971 act required disclosure of records of investigations re tenement,
lodging or boarding houses; P.A. 75-342 changed "town clerk" to "clerk of any political subdivision," rewrote provisions
regarding exclusion of certain records from consideration as public records for disclosure purposes and specifically required
disclosure of records of investigations re nursing or rest homes or homes for the aged; P.A. 76-294 clarified meaning of
"arrest records of a juvenile"; P.A. 77-609 prohibited requiring disclosure of names and addresses of public school or
college students; P.A. 79-119 replaced provision in Subsec. (a) which had allowed inspection or copying of records at
reasonable time determined by their custodian with provision allowing inspection during office or business hours and
copying as provided in Sec. 1-15; P.A. 79-324 clarified Subsec. (c); P.A. 79-575 provided exception to disclosure of
students' names and addresses for use by towns in verifying tuition payments and prohibited requiring disclosure of
information obtained illegally; P.A. 79-599 prohibited requiring disclosure of records or name of state employee providing
information for "whistle blowing" investigation; P.A. 80-483 made technical changes; P.A. 81-40 amended Subsec. (b)
to exclude adoption records and information provided for in Secs. 45-68e and 45-68i from disclosure requirements; P.A.
81-431 amended Subsec. (c) to specifically require disclosure of memoranda and other documents which constitute part
of the process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated with a limited exception for preliminary drafts
of memoranda, rather than of "all records of investigation..." as previously provided; P.A. 81-448 protected from disclosure
name and address of victim of sexual assault, injury or risk of injury or impairing or attempting to impair morals; P.A. 83-436 amended Subsec. (c) to require disclosure of names of firms obtaining bid documents from any state agency; P.A. 84-112 amended Subsec. (a) to provide that agency rules or regulations that conflict with that subsection or diminish rights
granted by that subsection are void; P.A. 84-311 amended disclosure exemption for trade secrets in Subsec. (b) by eliminating limitation to information obtained from the public; P.A. 85-577 added Subsec. (b)(15) regarding pages of a primary
petition, a nominating petition, a referendum petition or a petition for a town meeting; P.A. 90-335 added Subsec. (b)(3)(F)
re uncorroborated allegations subject to destruction pursuant to Sec. 1-20; P.A. 91-140 substituted "pending claims or
pending litigation" for "pending claims and litigation" in Subsec. (b); P.A. 94-246 amended Subsec. (b)(3)(A) to add
provision re disclosure of "the identity of witnesses not otherwise known whose safety would be endangered or who would
be subject to threat or intimidation if their identity was made known" and insert a new Subpara. (B) re disclosure of "signed
statements of witnesses", relettering the remaining Subparas. accordingly; P.A. 95-233 added Subsec. (b)(16) re records
of municipal health authorities and district departments of health complaints; P.A. 96-130 amended Subsec. (b)(14) by
adding reference to Sec. 45a-751; P.A. 97-47 amended Subsec. (b) by substituting "the Freedom of Information Act" for
list of sections; P.A. 97-112 substituted "residential care home" for "home for the aged" in Subsec. (c); P.A. 97-293 added
Subsec. (b)(17) re educational records, effective July 1, 1997; Sec. 1-19 transferred to Sec. 1-210 in 1999; P.A. 99-156
added Subsec. (b)(18) re records that Commissioner of Correction believes may result in safety risk if disclosed and added
new Subsec. (c) re requests for disclosure by persons confined in correctional institutions or facilities, relettering former
Subsec. (c) as Subsec. (d); P.A. 00-66 made a technical change in Subsec. (b)(18); P.A. 00-69 added Subsec. (b)(19) re
certain records that may result in a safety risk, inserted new Subsec. (d) re requests under Subdiv. (b)(19) made to a public
agency other than the Judicial Department, and redesignated former Subsec. (d) as Subsec. (e), effective May 16, 2000;
P.A. 00-134 amended Subsec. (b)(8) to substitute "the applicant's" for "his" and to add new Subdiv. (20) re records not
otherwise available to the public, the disclosure of which would compromise the security or integrity of an information
technology system; P.A. 00-136 redefined trade secrets in Subsec. (b)(5) and added Subpara. and clause designators in
Subsec. (b)(5); June Sp. Sess. P.A. 00-1 amended Subsec. (b)(18) and Subsec. (c) to add references to Whiting Forensic
Division facilities of Connecticut Valley Hospital and to Commissioner of Mental Health and Addiction Services, effective
June 21, 2000; P.A. 01-26 made a technical change in Subsec. (b)(5)(A)(i); P.A. 02-133 amended Subsec. (b)(19) to provide
that records be disclosed to a law enforcement agency upon request, substitute "government-owned" for "state-owned" re
facilities, provide that reasonable grounds shall be determined by the Commissioner of Public Works after consultation
with the chief executive officer of the agency, the Chief Court Administrator or the executive director of the Joint Committee
on Legislative Management, insert new Subpara. designators "(A)" to "(C)", define "government-owned or leased institution or facility" and "chief executive officer", substitute "records include" for "records shall include" and "records" for
"recordings", substitute clause designators "(i)" to "(vii)" for Subpara. designators "(A)" to "(G)", respectively, delete
reference to emergency plans in clause (i) and add new clause (viii) re emergency plans and emergency recovery or response
plans and amended Subsec. (d) to add provisions re the Legislative Department and to add "after consultation with the
chief executive officer of the applicable agency" re the determination by the Commissioner of Public Works that a requested
record is exempt from disclosure; P.A. 02-137 amended Subsec. (a) to designate existing provisions re right to inspect and
receive copy as Subdivs. (1) and (3), add Subdiv. (2) re copying of records in accordance with Sec. 1-212(g), and delete
"the provisions of" in Subdiv. (3); P.A. 03-200 added Subsec. (b)(21) re address of participant in address confidentiality
program, effective January 1, 2004; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 amended Subsec. (b)(19) by inserting "a water company,
as defined in section 25-32a," in definition of "government-owned or leased institution or facility" and adding new clause
(ix) re water company materials and amended Subsec. (d) by adding provisions re information related to a water company,
effective August 20, 2003; P.A. 05-287 added Subsec. (b)(22) re electronic mail addresses obtained by the Department of
Transportation in connection with the administration of any plan to inform individuals about significant highway or railway
incidents, effective July 13, 2005; P.A. 07-202 amended Subsec. (b)(19) to require Commissioner of Public Works to make
reasonable grounds determinations concerning executive branch agencies and Commissioner of Emergency Management
and Homeland Security to make such determinations concerning municipal, district or regional agencies, to delete provision
re government-owned or leased institutions or facilities in clause (vii), to add provision re emergency preparedness and
mitigation plans in clause (viii) and to make technical changes, and made conforming changes in Subsec. (d); P.A. 07-213
added Subsec. (b)(23) re name or address or minor enrolled in parks and recreation program and (24) re request for proposals
or bid solicitation responses and contract award record or file; P.A. 07-236 amended Subsec. (b)(5)(A) to exclude from
requirements of disclosure film or television scripts or detailed production budgets, effective July 6, 2007; P.A. 08-18
amended Subsec. (a) to eliminate requirement re making, keeping and maintaining a record of proceedings of agency
meetings, effective April 29, 2008.
See Sec. 10-151c re records of teacher performance and evaluation not public records.
See Sec. 10a-154a re performance and evaluation records of faculty and professional staff members of the constituent
units of the state system of higher education not public records.
See Sec. 11-25(b) re confidentiality of public library circulation records.
See Sec. 16a-14 re exemption for certain commercial and financial information.
See Secs. 52-165, 52-166, 52-167 re copies of records.
Annotations to former section 1-19:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 176 C. 622. Statute provides for exceptions under federal and state statutes. 178 C. 700. Cited.
181 C. 324. Sales tax delinquent lists are public records not exempt from disclosure under statute. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190
C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 166; Id., 310. Cited. 201 C. 421. Autopsy reports are not records accessible to general public under
this section; judgment of appellate court reversed. Id., 448. Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767;
206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590 (see 217 C. 19, which overruled Board of Education
v. Freedom of Information Commission (210 C. 590 et seq.) to the extent that it required a balancing test for the interpretation
of the exemptions contained in Sec. 1-19(b)(2)); 212 C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204;
210 C. 590 (see 217 C. 193, which overruled Board of Education v. Freedom of Information Commission (210 C. 590 et
seq.) to the extent that it required a balancing test for the interpretation of the exemptions contained in Sec. 1-19(b)(2));
Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Cited. Id., 322. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300. Cited. 221
C. 393. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482. Cited. Id., 549. Freedom
of Information Act cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 641; Id., 751. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158; Id., 271. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Cited. 233 C. 28. Cited. 240
C. 1.
Cited. 1 CA 384. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468. Cited. 8 CA 216. Freedom of Information Act cited.
14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49. Cited. 18 CA 212. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 19 CA 539; Id., 352; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Cited. 31 CA 178. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111.
Cited. 36 CA 155. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act,
Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133. Statute requires evidentiary showing
that the records sought are to be used in a law enforcement action and that disclosing such records would be prejudicial
to the law enforcement action. 51 CA 100. Order that documents be disclosed under section was proper. 54 CA 373. A
record request that is simply burdensome does not make that request one requiring research. 56 CA 683. Review of records
to determine if one is exempt from disclosure does not constitute research. Id.
Cited. 31 CS 392. Construed as permitting public access to raw real estate assessment data. 32 CS 583. Document need
not be connected with an official or completed transaction to be a public record. Id., 588. Cited. 38 CS 675. Cited. 39 CS
176. Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267. Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84. Cited. Id., 129.
Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Cited. Id., 291. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Cited. 43 CS 246.
Presumed legislature, by insertion of exception clause, intended to exclude from operation of statute exclusive power
over admission to bar vested in superior court by Sec. 51-80. 4 Conn. Cir. Ct. 313. State's right to inspect records relating
to building permits cannot be defeated by city ordinance. Id., 511. Section construed broadly in conjunction with statutes
creating state boards of registration for professional engineers and architects. Id. Medical files public record, when. 6 Conn.
Cir. Ct. 633.
Subsec. (a):
Woodstock Academy deemed a "public agency" within meaning of statute. Id., 544. Cited. 201 C. 448. Disclosure
requirements do not apply to information that may be released under Sec. 29-170. 204 C. 609. Cited. 205 C. 767. Cited.
207 C. 698. Cited. 211 C. 339. Cited. 213 C. 126. Secs. 5-225 and 5-237 provide exceptions to this section. 214 C. 312.
Cited. 219 C. 685. Cited. 221 C. 300; Id., 393. Cited. 222 C. 98. Cited. 228 C. 158. Cited. 241 C. 310.
Cited. 4 CA 468. General disclosure requirement of Sec. 1-19(a) does not prevail over specific limitation of disclosure
obligations under Sec. 1-83. 18 CA 212. Cited. Id., 291. Cited. 22 CA 316. Cited. 29 CA 821. Cited. 35 CA 384. Cited.
39 CA 154. Cited. 41 CA 67. Cited. 44 CA 611; Id., 622. Cited. 45 CA 413.
Cited. 42 CS 291.
Subsec. (b):
Subdiv. (1): Term "preliminary drafts or notes" relates to advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations comprising part of process by which government decisions and policies are formulated; they reflect that aspect of the agency's
function that precedes formal and informal decision making. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 142. Subdiv. (3): Cited. 186 C.
153. Subdiv. (3): Cited. 197 C. 698. Subdiv. (10): Cited. 198 C. 498. Cited. 201 C. 448. Subdiv. (3)(B): Cited. 204 C. 609.
Subdiv. (4): Commission's order of disclosure proper after city failed to establish on record that information falls within
exemption. 205 C. 767. Subdiv. (10): Cited. Id. Subdiv. (2): Cited. 210 C. 590 (see 217 C. 193, which overruled Board of
Education v. Freedom of Information Commission (210 C. 590 et seq.) to the extent that it required a balancing test for
the interpretation of the exemptions contained in this Subdiv.). Subdiv. (1): Cited. 211 C. 339. Subdiv. (2): Cited. 214 C.
312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Subdiv. (10) cited. 217 C. 153. Subdiv. (1) cited. Id., 193. Subdiv. (2): Ruling in Board of Education
v. Freedom of Information Commission (210 C. 590) overruled to the extent that it required a balancing test for the
interpretation of the exemptions contained in this Subdiv. 217 C. 193. Subdiv. (11): Permits withholding of names of
employees whose student status is a condition of their employment. Id., 322. Subdiv. (2): Section purports to protect an
individual's personal privacy; retirees should be afforded opportunity to show a reasonable expectation of privacy in their
addresses. 218 C. 256; Subdiv. (2) does not prevent disclosure of substance of public agency vote on motion concerning
personnel matter. 221 C. 217. Subdiv. (4) cited. Id., 300. Subdiv. (3) cited. Id. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id., 393; Id., 482; Id., 549.
Subdiv. (2): Municipal permits to carry pistols or revolvers in public are not "similar" files entitled to exemption from
disclosure under this section. 222 C. 621. Subdiv. (2) cited. 224 C. 325. Subdiv. (3)(E) cited. 226 C. 618. Cited. 227 C.
641. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id., 751. Subdiv. (2): Records request under FOIA for disclosure of numerical data concerning
employees' attendance records including sick leave does not constitute invasion of personal privacy within meaning of
the statute. 228 C. 158. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id., 271. Subdiv. (2) cited. 233 C. 28. Subdiv. (1) cited. Id., 28, 37. Subdiv. (9)
cited. 234 C. 704. Subdiv. (4): Section applicable to bar disclosure of the report in question; judgment of appellate court
in Stamford v. Freedom of Information Commission, 42 CA 39 reversed. 241 C. 310. Subdiv. (2) cited. 242 C. 79. Subdiv.
(1): Unfinished report by attorney hired by municipality, as well as interview summaries and affidavits created solely to
serve as supporting documentation for that report, constituted "preliminary drafts or notes". 245 C. 149. Subdiv. (10):
Documents prepared by attorney hired by a public agency are protected from disclosure as privileged attorney-client
communications if certain conditions are met. Id.
Subdiv. (4) cited. 4 CA 216. Subdiv. (10) cited. Id., 216. Subdiv. (1) cited. Id., 468. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id. Subdiv. (3):
Autopsy report was not exempt from disclosure under this statute. Id. Cited. 4 CA 468. Subdiv. (2) cited. 14 CA 380;
judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Cited. 19 CA 489; Id., 539. Subdiv. (2): Shield of confidentiality protects records of
prisoner applicants for pardons. Id. Subdiv. (10) cited. Id., 671. Subdiv. (2) cited. 23 CA 479. Cited. 35 CA 384. Subdiv.
(2) cited. 39 CA 154. Subdiv. (7) cited. 41 CA 67. Cited. Id., 649. Subdiv. (4) cited. 42 CA 39; judgment reversed, see
241 C. 310. Subdiv. (9) cited. 43 CA 133. Subdiv. (1) cited. 44 CA 611. Subdiv. (10) cited. Id. Cited. Id., 622. Subdiv. (1)
cited. Id. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id. Subdiv. (3): Legislature has determined that disclosure would not be in the public interest
and that no balancing is required. Id. Subdiv. (3)(G): Legislature has not required a balancing test prior to determination
that a document is exempt from disclosure. Id. Disclosure of the names of employees disciplined by Department of Children
and Families in connection with death of infant who was the subject of department investigation does not constitute an
invasion of their personal privacy. 48 CA 467. Freedom of Information Act and rules of discovery provide independent
methods of obtaining information except when it would limit discovery rights; legislative change from "effect" to "limit"
discussed. 52 CA 12.
Subdiv. (2) cited. 39 CS 176. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id., 257. Subdiv. (6): Test questions and examination data already
administered as well as those not yet administered are included in the exemption from disclosure. The exemption is
characterized as "absolute". Id. Subdiv. (4) cited. 42 CS 84. P.A. 91-140 cited. Id. Subdiv. (10) cited. Id. Subdiv. (1) cited.
Id., 129. Subdiv. (3)(B) cited. Id., 291. Subdiv. (4) cited. Id. Subdiv. (3)(A) cited. Id.
Subsec. (c):
Subdiv. (1) cited. 211 C. 339. Subdiv. (1): Legislature did not intend to require disclosure of drafts of memoranda
prepared by persons who, although not staff members of the public agency, are hired on a contractual basis to perform
tasks that are indistinguishable from those which may be performed by agency personnel. 245 C. 149.
Subdiv. (1) cited. 44 CA 611.
Annotations to present section:
Order that documents be disclosed under section was proper. 54 CA 373.
Subsec. (a):
Questions of discovery under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are not what is meant by the phrase "otherwise provided
by any federal law". 252 C. 377.
PowerPoint materials prepared by instructors in master gardener program at University of Connecticut not prepared,
owned, used, received or retained by university not held to be records maintained or kept on file by public agency. 90 CA
101. Because Sec. 17a-101k mandates confidentiality of information regarding child abuse, records of child abuse, wherever
located, are exempted from the general rule of disclosure. 104 CA 150.
Subsec. (b):
Irrespective of the facts, complainant's identity and related information in a sexual harassment complaint is not always
exempt from disclosure. 255 C. 651. Home addresses of public employees held not subject to disclosure where no public
interest was served by exposing such information and the employees had taken significant steps to keep such information
private. 256 C. 764. Subdiv. (10) does not violate separation of powers clause because it preserves powers of the judicial
branch and does not delegate to Freedom of Information Commission the power to define attorney-client privilege. 260
C. 143. Subdiv. (2): Freedom of Information Act does not provide private right of action for FOIA violations. 267 C. 669.
Party claiming exemption pursuant to Subdiv. (19) has burden of seeking public safety determination from Commissioner
of Public Works. 274 C. 179.
Any and all public records consisting of preliminary drafts eligible for nondisclosure under subsection regardless of
where originated. Consideration of abandonment of project on nondisclosure of preliminary drafts. 73 CA 89. Disclosure
of PowerPoint materials prepared by instructors in master gardener program at University of Connecticut that are not
exempted under Subsec. is not required because exemption applies only to public records, and materials determined initially
not to be public records. 90 CA 101. Subdiv. (1): There is no requirement that public agency provide its rationale for
withholding disclosure of applicable records at a specific time. 91 CA 521.
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Sec. 1-211. (Formerly Sec. 1-19a). Disclosure of computer-stored public records. Contracts. Acquisition of system, equipment, software to store or retrieve
nonexempt public records. (a) Any public agency which maintains public records in
a computer storage system shall provide, to any person making a request pursuant to
the Freedom of Information Act, a copy of any nonexempt data contained in such records,
properly identified, on paper, disk, tape or any other electronic storage device or medium
requested by the person, if the agency can reasonably make such copy or have such
copy made. Except as otherwise provided by state statute, the cost for providing a copy
of such data shall be in accordance with the provisions of section 1-212.
(b) Except as otherwise provided by state statute, no public agency shall enter into
a contract with, or otherwise obligate itself to, any person if such contract or obligation
impairs the right of the public under the Freedom of Information Act to inspect or copy
the agency's nonexempt public records existing on-line in, or stored on a device or
medium used in connection with, a computer system owned, leased or otherwise used
by the agency in the course of its governmental functions.
(c) On and after July 1, 1992, before any public agency acquires any computer
system, equipment or software to store or retrieve nonexempt public records, it shall
consider whether such proposed system, equipment or software adequately provides for
the rights of the public under the Freedom of Information Act at the least cost possible
to the agency and to persons entitled to access to nonexempt public records under the
Freedom of Information Act. In meeting its obligations under this subsection, each state
public agency shall consult with the Department of Information Technology as part of
the agency's design analysis prior to acquiring any such computer system, equipment
or software. The Department of Information Technology shall adopt written guidelines
to assist municipal agencies in carrying out the purposes of this subsection. Nothing in
this subsection shall require an agency to consult with said department prior to acquiring
a system, equipment or software or modifying software, if such acquisition or modification is consistent with a design analysis for which such agency has previously consulted
with said department. The Department of Information Technology shall consult with
the Freedom of Information Commission on matters relating to access to and disclosure
of public records for the purposes of this subsection. The provisions of this subsection
shall not apply to software modifications which would not affect the rights of the public
under the Freedom of Information Act.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 4; P.A. 90-307, S. 3, 5; P.A. 91-347, S. 1, 5; P.A. 97-47, S. 5; June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-9, S. 26, 50.)
History: P.A. 90-307 added Subsec. (b) re disclosure of copy of voter registration data maintained in a computer storage
system; P.A. 91-347 repealed former Subsec. (a) which had required agencies to provide printouts of data, relettered former
Subsec. (b) as Subsec. (a), amending provisions to apply to "public records" instead of "voter registration records", to
substitute "nonexempt data contained in such records" for "voter registration data", to add clause "if the agency can
reasonably make such copy or have such copy made" and to add a sentence re cost for a copy, added new Subsec. (b) re
prohibition on contracts and obligations impairing public's right to inspect or copy computerized nonexempt public records,
and added Subsec. (c) re agency requirements before acquiring computer system, equipment or software to store or retrieve
nonexempt public records, effective July 1, 1992; P.A. 97-47 substituted "the Freedom of Information Act" for "this
chapter"; June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-9 amended Subsec. (c) by substituting "Department of Information Technology" for
"Office of Information and Technology", effective July 1, 1997; Sec. 1-19a transferred to Sec. 1-211 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-19a:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 234; Id., 310. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312; 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et
seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of
Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Printout copies, not computer diskettes, are appropriate responses
to information requests. 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15
et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act
cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84. Cited. Id., 129. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
Cited. Id., 291. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
Annotation to present section:
Subsec. (a):
Applicable to request for digital copy of all fields of information typically produced for every adult within Department
of Correction database. 261 C. 86.
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Sec. 1-212. (Formerly Sec. 1-15). Copies and scanning of public records. Fees.
(a) Any person applying in writing shall receive, promptly upon request, a plain or
certified copy of any public record. The fee for any copy provided in accordance with
the Freedom of Information Act:
(1) By an executive, administrative or legislative office of the state, a state agency
or a department, institution, bureau, board, commission, authority or official of the state,
including a committee of, or created by, such an office, agency, department, institution,
bureau, board, commission, authority or official, and also including any judicial office,
official or body or committee thereof but only in respect to its or their administrative
functions, shall not exceed twenty-five cents per page; and
(2) By all other public agencies, as defined in section 1-200, shall not exceed fifty
cents per page. If any copy provided in accordance with said Freedom of Information
Act requires a transcription, or if any person applies for a transcription of a public record,
the fee for such transcription shall not exceed the cost thereof to the public agency.
(b) The fee for any copy provided in accordance with subsection (a) of section 1-211 shall not exceed the cost thereof to the public agency. In determining such costs
for a copy, other than for a printout which exists at the time that the agency responds
to the request for such copy, an agency may include only:
(1) An amount equal to the hourly salary attributed to all agency employees engaged
in providing the requested computer-stored public record, including their time performing the formatting or programming functions necessary to provide the copy as
requested, but not including search or retrieval costs except as provided in subdivision
(4) of this subsection;
(2) An amount equal to the cost to the agency of engaging an outside professional
electronic copying service to provide such copying services, if such service is necessary
to provide the copying as requested;
(3) The actual cost of the storage devices or media provided to the person making
the request in complying with such request; and
(4) The computer time charges incurred by the agency in providing the requested
computer-stored public record where another agency or contractor provides the agency
with computer storage and retrieval services. Notwithstanding any other provision of
this section, the fee for any copy of the names of registered voters shall not exceed three
cents per name delivered or the cost thereof to the public agency, as determined pursuant
to this subsection, whichever is less. The Department of Information Technology shall
monitor the calculation of the fees charged for copies of computer-stored public records
to ensure that such fees are reasonable and consistent among agencies.
(c) A public agency may require the prepayment of any fee required or permitted
under the Freedom of Information Act if such fee is estimated to be ten dollars or more.
The sales tax provided in chapter 219 shall not be imposed upon any transaction for
which a fee is required or permissible under this section or section 1-227.
(d) The public agency shall waive any fee provided for in this section when:
(1) The person requesting the records is an indigent individual;
(2) The records located are determined by the public agency to be exempt from
disclosure under subsection (b) of section 1-210;
(3) In its judgment, compliance with the applicant's request benefits the general
welfare; or
(4) The person requesting the record is an elected official of a political subdivision
of the state and the official (A) obtains the record from an agency of the political subdivision in which the official serves, and (B) certifies that the record pertains to the official's
duties.
(e) Except as otherwise provided by law, the fee for any person who has the custody
of any public records or files for certifying any copy of such records or files, or certifying
to any fact appearing therefrom, shall be for the first page of such certificate, or copy
and certificate, one dollar; and for each additional page, fifty cents. For the purpose of
computing such fee, such copy and certificate shall be deemed to be one continuous
instrument.
(f) The Secretary of the State, after consulting with the chairperson of the Freedom
of Information Commission, the Commissioner of Correction and a representative of the
Judicial Department, shall propose a fee structure for copies of public records provided to
an inmate, as defined in section 18-84, in accordance with subsection (a) of this section.
The Secretary of the State shall submit such proposed fee structure to the joint standing
committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to government administration, not later than January 15, 2000.
(g) Any individual may copy a public record through the use of a hand-held scanner.
A public agency may establish a fee structure not to exceed ten dollars for an individual
to pay each time the individual copies records at the agency with a hand-held scanner. As
used in this section, "hand-held scanner" means a battery operated electronic scanning
device the use of which (1) leaves no mark or impression on the public record, and (2)
does not unreasonably interfere with the operation of the public agency.
(1949 Rev., S. 3625; 1959, P.A. 352, S. 1; P.A. 75-342, S. 5; P.A. 77-609, S. 3, 8; P.A. 89-251, S. 56, 203; P.A. 90-307, S. 4, 5; P.A. 91-347, S. 2, 5; P.A. 93-188, S. 1, 2; P.A. 94-112, S. 1; P.A. 95-144, S. 1; P.A. 97-47, S. 2, 3; June 18
Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-9, S. 25, 50; P.A. 99-71, S. 2; 99-156, S. 2; P.A. 00-66, S. 6; P.A. 02-137, S. 3.)
History: 1959 act doubled fees for certifying copies of records; P.A. 75-342 provided that copies of public records be
provided upon written request, that fees for copies, printouts or transcriptions of public records not exceed their cost and
that fees be waived in certain cases; P.A. 77-609 differentiated between fees charged for copies and fees charged for
printouts or transcriptions, allowed agencies to require prepayment of fees and prohibited charging sales tax for fees
estimated to be $10.00 or more; P.A. 89-251 increased the maximum fee for copies from $0.25 per page to $0.50 per page;
P.A. 90-307 deleted provisions re maximum fee for a "printout" and added sentence re maximum fees for copies provided
under Sec. 1-19a(b); P.A. 91-347 divided section into Subsecs., deleted reference to Subsec. (a) of Sec. 1-19a in Subsec.
(a) and added provisions in Subsec. (b) re costs for a copy other than a printout, effective July 1, 1992; P.A. 93-188 amended
Subsec. (b) to apply provisions re agency determination of costs to printout which does not exist at time agency responds
to request for a copy and delete provisions giving secretary of office of policy and management jurisdiction over fee
disputes re computer-stored records, effective June 23, 1993; P.A. 94-112 amended Subsec. (a) by deleting reference to
Sec. 1-21j, adding reference to Sec. 1-21l, adding Subdiv. (1) re offices for which the fee for providing copies shall not
exceed $0.25 per page and adding reference to "all other public agencies" in Subdiv. (2), and added new Subsec. (f) re fee
structure proposal; P.A. 95-144 added implied reference to "1-21j" and deleted "1-21l" in Subsec. (a); P.A. 97-47 amended
Subsecs. (a) and (c) by substituting "the Freedom of Information Act" for list of sections and for "this chapter", respectively;
June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-9 amended Subsec. (b) by substituting "Department of Information Technology" for "Office of
Information and Technology", effective July 1, 1997; Sec. 1-15 transferred to Sec. 1-212 in 1999; P.A. 99-71 deleted
former Subsec. (f) which had required Secretary of the State to propose fee structure for copies of public records; P.A. 99-156 added Subsec. (g), codified by the Revisors as Subsec. (f), re proposed fee structure for copies provided to inmates;
P.A. 00-66 made a technical change in Subsec. (f); P.A. 02-137 added new Subsec. (d)(4) re records provided to an elected
official of a political subdivision and added new Subsec. (g) re the use of a hand-held scanner.
Annotations to former section 1-15:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 138. Cited. (Reference made to Public Acts 1977, No. 77-609.) Id.,
142. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C.
698. Cited. 208 C. 442. Cited. 210 C. 590. Cited. 212 C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204;
210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216
C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 217 C. 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 641. Cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Freedom
of Information Act cited. Id., 271. Cited. 240 C. 1.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Cited. 22 CA 316. Printout copies, not computer diskettes, are
appropriate responses to information requests. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Cited. 29 CA 547. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Cited. 36 CA 155.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Cited. 41 CA 67. Freedom of Information Act,
Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267. Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84. Cited. Id., 129.
Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Cited. Id., 291. Cited. 43 CS 246.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 241 C. 310.
Annotations to present section:
To meet the requirements of the term "certified", document needs to be attested to as a true copy of the original, in
writing, by an official with the authority to do so. 108 CA 471.
Subsec. (e):
The term "page" means one side of a piece of printed matter. 108 CA 471.
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Sec. 1-213. (Formerly Sec. 1-19b). Agency administration. Disclosure of personnel, birth and tax records. Disclosure of voice mails by public agencies. Judicial
records and proceedings. (a) The Freedom of Information Act shall be:
(1) Construed as requiring each public agency to open its records concerning the
administration of such agency to public inspection; and
(2) Construed as requiring each public agency to disclose information in its personnel files, birth records or confidential tax records to the individual who is the subject of
such information.
(b) Nothing in the Freedom of Information Act shall be deemed in any manner to:
(1) Affect the status of judicial records as they existed prior to October 1, 1975, nor
to limit the rights of litigants, including parties to administrative proceedings, under the
laws of discovery of this state;
(2) Require disclosure of any record of a personnel search committee which, because of name or other identifying information, would reveal the identity of an executive
level employment candidate without the consent of such candidate; or
(3) Require any public agency to transcribe the content of any voice mail message
and retain such record for any period of time. As used in this subdivision, "voice mail"
means all information transmitted by voice for the sole purpose of its electronic receipt,
storage and playback by a public agency.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 3; P.A. 79-118; P.A. 87-568, S. 3; P.A. 94-246, S. 15; P.A. 97-47, S. 6; P.A. 04-171, S. 1.)
History: P.A. 79-118 provided that Secs. 1-15, 1-18a, 1-19 to 1-19b and 1-21 to 1-21k be construed to require public
agencies to open records concerning their administration and to disclose personnel, birth and tax records to individuals;
P.A. 87-568 added Subsec. (b)(2), specifying when disclosure of any record of a personnel search committee not required;
P.A. 94-246 amended Subsec. (b)(1) to replace "affect the rights of litigants" with "limit the rights of litigants"; P.A. 97-47 substituted "the Freedom of Information Act" for list of sections; Sec. 1-19b transferred to Sec. 1-213 in 1999; P.A.
04-171 added Subsec. (b)(3) re voice mail messages, effective June 1, 2004.
Annotations to former section 1-19b:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. FOIA, Freedom of
Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited.
218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 641. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of
Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 213 C. 126. Cited. 221 C. 300. Cited. 233 C. 28. Subdiv. (1) cited. 241 C. 310.
Subdiv. (1) cited. 42 CA 39; judgment reversed, see 241 C. 310.
Cited. 42 CS 291.
Annotations to present section:
Subsec. (b):
That nothing in the act shall "limit the rights of litigant ... under the laws of discovery of this state ..." means requests
for records under the act are to be determined by reference to provisions of the act, irrespective of whether they are or
otherwise would be disclosable under the rules of state discovery, whether civil or criminal. 252 C. 377.
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Sec. 1-214. (Formerly Sec. 1-20a). Public employment contracts as public record. Objection to disclosure of personnel or medical files. (a) Any contract of employment to which the state or a political subdivision of the state is a party shall be deemed
to be a public record for the purposes of section 1-210.
(b) Whenever a public agency receives a request to inspect or copy records contained in any of its employees' personnel or medical files and similar files and the agency
reasonably believes that the disclosure of such records would legally constitute an invasion of privacy, the agency shall immediately notify in writing (1) each employee concerned, provided such notice shall not be required to be in writing where impractical
due to the large number of employees concerned and (2) the collective bargaining representative, if any, of each employee concerned. Nothing herein shall require an agency
to withhold from disclosure the contents of personnel or medical files and similar files
when it does not reasonably believe that such disclosure would legally constitute an
invasion of personal privacy.
(c) A public agency which has provided notice under subsection (b) of this section
shall disclose the records requested unless it receives a written objection from the employee concerned or the employee's collective bargaining representative, if any, within
seven business days from the receipt by the employee or such collective bargaining
representative of the notice or, if there is no evidence of receipt of written notice, not
later than nine business days from the date the notice is actually mailed, sent, posted or
otherwise given. Each objection filed under this subsection shall be on a form prescribed
by the public agency, which shall consist of a statement to be signed by the employee
or the employee's collective bargaining representative, under the penalties of false statement, that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief there is good ground to
support it and that the objection is not interposed for delay. Upon the filing of an objection
as provided in this subsection, the agency shall not disclose the requested records unless
ordered to do so by the Freedom of Information Commission pursuant to section 1-206.
Failure to comply with a request to inspect or copy records under this section shall
constitute a denial for the purposes of section 1-206. Notwithstanding any provision of
this subsection or subsection (b) of section 1-206 to the contrary, if an employee's
collective bargaining representative files a written objection under this subsection, the
employee may subsequently approve the disclosure of the records requested by submitting a written notice to the public agency.
(P.A. 73-271; P.A. 78-331, S. 1, 58; P.A. 87-285, S. 1; P.A. 88-353, S. 1, 4; P.A. 92-207, S. 1.)
History: P.A. 78-331 deleted reference to repealed Sec. 1-20; P.A. 87-285 added Subsecs. (b) and (c), granting employees
the right to object to the disclosure of their personnel or medical files and establishing standards and procedures for such
objections; P.A. 88-353 added Subsec. (b)(2) re notice to collective bargaining representative, and amended Subsec. (c)
to allow collective bargaining representative to object to disclosure of records, to require objection to be on agency form
signed under penalties of false statement and to allow employee to approve disclosure if collective bargaining representative
objects; P.A. 92-207 amended Subsec. (c) by increasing the number of days for receiving a written objection from an
employee or collective bargaining representative re disclosure of records from four to seven and increasing the time limit
re the nonreceipt of the written notice from seven to nine; Sec. 1-20a transferred to Sec. 1-214 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-20a:
Connecticut Freedom of Information Act, Secs. 1-7-1-21k, cited. 206 C. 449. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Cited. 227 C. 751. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act cited. Id. Cited. 233 C. 28.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 16 CA 49; 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA
821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited.
37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 228 C. 158.
Commission must ensure that an employee whose records are the subject of an appeal has received notice of proceedings
where the employer has failed to give required notice. 60 CA 584.
Annotation to present section:
Subsec. (b):
Commission must ensure that employee whose records are the subject of an appeal has received notice of proceedings
where employer has failed to give required notice. 60 CA 584.
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Sec. 1-214a. Disclosure of public agency termination, suspension or separation agreement containing confidentiality provision. Any agreement entered into by
any public agency, as defined in section 1-200, with an employee or personal services
contractor providing for the termination, suspension or separation from employment of
such employee or the termination or suspension of the provision of personal services
by such contractor, as the case may be, that contains a confidentiality provision that
prohibits or restricts such public agency from disclosing the existence of the agreement
or the cause or causes for such termination, suspension or separation including, but not
limited to, alleged or substantiated sexual abuse, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation
or sexual assault by such employee or contractor, shall be subject to public disclosure
under this chapter.
(P.A. 06-132, S. 1.)
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Sec. 1-215. (Formerly Sec. 1-20b). Record of an arrest as public record. Exception. (a) Notwithstanding any provision of the general statutes to the contrary, and except
as otherwise provided in this section, any record of the arrest of any person, other than
a juvenile, except a record erased pursuant to chapter 961a, shall be a public record from
the time of such arrest and shall be disclosed in accordance with the provisions of section
1-212 and subsection (a) of section 1-210, except that disclosure of data or information
other than that set forth in subdivision (1) of subsection (b) of this section shall be subject
to the provisions of subdivision (3) of subsection (b) of section 1-210. Any personal
possessions or effects found on a person at the time of such person's arrest shall not be
disclosed unless such possessions or effects are relevant to the crime for which such
person was arrested.
(b) For the purposes of this section, "record of the arrest" means (1) the name and
address of the person arrested, the date, time and place of the arrest and the offense for
which the person was arrested, and (2) at least one of the following, designated by the
law enforcement agency: The arrest report, incident report, news release or other similar
report of the arrest of a person.
(P.A. 83-272, S. 1; P.A. 94-117, S. 4; 94-246, S. 13.)
History: P.A. 94-117 added provision prohibiting disclosure of personal possessions or effects found on person at time
of arrest unless such possessions or effects are relevant to the crime; P.A. 94-246 divided Sec. into Subsecs., amended
Subsec. (a) to add exception that disclosure of data or information other than that set forth in Subsec. (b)(1) is subject to
Sec. 1-19(b)(3) and added Subsec. (b)(2) re arrest report, incident report, news release or other similar report of the arrest
of a person; Sec. 1-20b transferred to Sec. 1-215 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-20b:
Connecticut Freedom of Information Act, Secs. 1-7-1-21k, cited. 206 C. 449. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Section provides for both a requirement of disclosure and a limit on the extent of that disclosure.
It does not require full disclosure of arrest reports during pendency of a criminal prosecution. 227 C. 641. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 16 CA 49; 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA
821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited.
37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84; Id., 129. Cited. Id., 291. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
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Sec. 1-216. (Formerly Sec. 1-20c). Review and destruction of records consisting of uncorroborated allegations of criminal activity. Except for records the
retention of which is otherwise controlled by law or regulation, records of law enforcement agencies consisting of uncorroborated allegations that an individual has engaged
in criminal activity shall be reviewed by the law enforcement agency one year after
the creation of such records. If the existence of the alleged criminal activity cannot be
corroborated within ninety days of the commencement of such review, the law enforcement agency shall destroy such records.
(P.A. 88-227, S. 2, 4.)
History: P.A. 88-227 effective July 1, 1989; Sec. 1-20c transferred to Sec. 1-216 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-20c:
FOIA, Freedom of Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom
of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589.
Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133. Nothing
in public act establishing section suggests that it was to apply only to allegations of criminal activity made by police rather
than allegations made to police. 44 CA 622. P.A. 88-227 cited. Id.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Sec. 1-217. (Formerly Sec. 1-20f). Nondisclosure of residential addresses of
certain individuals. (a) No public agency may disclose, under the Freedom of Information Act, the residential address of any of the following persons:
(1) A federal court judge, federal court magistrate, judge of the Superior Court,
Appellate Court or Supreme Court of the state, or family support magistrate;
(2) A sworn member of a municipal police department, a sworn member of the
Division of State Police within the Department of Public Safety or a sworn law enforcement officer within the Department of Environmental Protection;
(3) An employee of the Department of Correction;
(4) An attorney-at-law who represents or has represented the state in a criminal
prosecution;
(5) An attorney-at-law who is or has been employed by the Public Defender Services
Division or a social worker who is employed by the Public Defender Services Division;
(6) An inspector employed by the Division of Criminal Justice;
(7) A firefighter;
(8) An employee of the Department of Children and Families;
(9) A member or employee of the Board of Pardons and Paroles;
(10) An employee of the judicial branch;
(11) An employee of the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services who
provides direct care to patients; or
(12) A member or employee of the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities.
(b) The business address of any person described in this section shall be subject to
disclosure under section 1-210. The provisions of this section shall not apply to Department of Motor Vehicles records described in section 14-10.
(P.A. 95-163; P.A. 96-83, S. 1, 3; P.A. 97-219, S. 2; P.A. 99-26, S. 27, 39; 99-77, S. 1; 99-156, S. 3; P.A. 01-186, S.
17; P.A. 02-53, S. 1; P.A. 04-234, S. 2; 04-257, S. 114; P.A. 05-108, S. 2; P.A. 08-120, S. 1; 08-186, S. 1.)
History: P.A. 96-83 added Subdiv. (6) re nondisclosure of residential address of inspector employed by Division of
Criminal Justice (Revisor's note: In 1997 references throughout the general statutes to "Motor Vehicle(s) Commissioner"
and "Motor Vehicle(s) Department" were replaced editorially by the Revisors with "Commissioner of Motor Vehicles"
or "Department of Motor Vehicles", as the case may be, for consistency with customary statutory usage); P.A. 97-219
added Subdiv. (7) re nondisclosure of residential address of a firefighter; Sec. 1-20f transferred to Sec. 1-217 in 1999; P.A.
99-26 added Subdiv. (8) re nondisclosure of residential address of an employee of the Department of Children and Families,
effective May 7, 1999; P.A. 99-77 inserted Subsec. indicators and added Subsec. (a)(9) re nondisclosure of residential
address of a member or employee of the Board of Parole and delete provision requiring any of the enumerated persons
who seeks nondisclosure of such person's residential address to submit a written request for such nondisclosure and furnish
his business address to the executive head of the department, agency, board, council, commission or institution; P.A. 99-156 substituted "public agency" for "state department, agency, board, council, commission or institution" in introductory
provision; P.A. 01-186 amended Subsec. (a)(5) by including social workers employed by Public Defender Services Division
and by added Subdiv. (10) re employees of judicial branch; P.A. 02-53 added Subsec. (a)(11) re members and employees
of the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities; P.A. 04-234 replaced Board of Parole with Board of Pardons and
Paroles in Subsec. (a)(9), effective July 1, 2004; P.A. 04-257 amended Subsec. (a)(9) to delete reference to an employee
of the Board of Parole, effective June 14, 2004; P.A. 05-108 amended Subsec. (a)(9) to restore reference to an "employee"
of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, effective June 7, 2005; P.A. 08-120 added new Subsec. (a)(11) re employees of
Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services who provide direct care to patients and redesignated existing Subsec.
(a)(11) as Subsec. (a)(12), effective May 27, 2008; P.A. 08-186 amended Subsec. (a)(2) to add sworn law enforcement
officer within Department of Environmental Protection, effective June 12, 2008.
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Sec. 1-218. Certain contracts for performance of governmental functions.
Records and files subject to Freedom of Information Act. Each contract in excess
of two million five hundred thousand dollars between a public agency and a person for
the performance of a governmental function shall (1) provide that the public agency is
entitled to receive a copy of records and files related to the performance of the governmental function, and (2) indicate that such records and files are subject to the Freedom
of Information Act and may be disclosed by the public agency pursuant to the Freedom
of Information Act. No request to inspect or copy such records or files shall be valid
unless the request is made to the public agency in accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act. Any complaint by a person who is denied the right to inspect or copy
such records or files shall be brought to the Freedom of Information Commission in
accordance with the provisions of sections 1-205 and 1-206.
(P.A. 01-169, S. 2.)
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Sec. 1-219. Veterans' military records. (a) As used in this section: (1) "Armed
forces" means the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard or Air Force of the United
States; (2) "veteran" means any person honorably discharged from, or released under
honorable conditions from active service or reserve status in the armed forces; (3) "military discharge document" means a United States Department of Defense form, including, but not limited to, a DD 214 form, or any valid paper that evidences the service,
discharge or retirement of a veteran from the armed forces that contains personal information such as a service number or Social Security number; (4) "person" means any
individual or entity, including, but not limited to, a relative of a veteran, a licensed funeral
director or embalmer, an attorney-at-law, an attorney-in-fact, an insurance company or
a veterans' advocate; and (5) "public agency" or "agency" means a public agency, as
defined in section 1-200.
(b) A veteran or designee may file a military discharge document with the town
clerk of the town in which the veteran resides or with any other public agency if the
military discharge document is related to the business of the town or other agency,
and the town or agency shall maintain and record the military discharge document in
accordance with this section.
(c) Notwithstanding any provision of chapter 55, or any provision of section 11-8
or 11-8a, any military discharge document filed by or on behalf of a veteran with a
public agency before, on or after October 1, 2002, except a military discharge document
recorded before October 1, 2002, on the land records of a town, shall be retained by the
agency separate and apart from the other records of the agency. The contents of such
document shall be confidential for at least seventy-five years from the date the document
is filed with the public agency, except that:
(1) The information contained in the document shall be available to the veteran, or
a conservator of the person of the veteran or a conservator of the estate of the veteran,
at all times;
(2) Any information contained in such military discharge document which is necessary to establish, or that aids in establishing, eligibility for any local, state or federal
benefit or program applied for by, or on behalf of, the veteran, including, but not limited
to, the name of the veteran, the veteran's residential address, dates of qualifying active
or reserve military service, or military discharge status, shall be available to the public
at all times; and
(3) In addition to the information available under subdivision (2) of this subsection,
any other information contained in the document shall be available to (A) any person
who may provide a benefit to, or acquire a benefit for, the veteran or the estate of the
veteran, provided the person needs the information to provide the benefit and submits
satisfactory evidence of such need to the agency, (B) the State Librarian as required for
the performance of his or her duties, and (C) a genealogical society incorporated or
authorized by the Secretary of the State to do business or conduct affairs in this state or
a member of such genealogical society.
(d) The provisions of this section concerning the maintenance and recording of
Department of Defense documents shall not apply to the State Library Board or the
State Librarian.
(P.A. 02-137, S. 1.)
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Secs. 1-220 to 1-224. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 1-225. (Formerly Sec. 1-21). Meetings of government agencies to be public. Recording of votes. Schedule and agenda of meetings to be filed and posted on
web sites. Notice of special meetings. Executive sessions. (a) The meetings of all
public agencies, except executive sessions, as defined in subdivision (6) of section 1-200, shall be open to the public. The votes of each member of any such public agency
upon any issue before such public agency shall be reduced to writing and made available
for public inspection within forty-eight hours and shall also be recorded in the minutes
of the session at which taken. Within seven days of the session to which such minutes
refer, such minutes shall be available for public inspection and posted on such public
agency's Internet web site, if available. Each such agency shall make, keep and maintain
a record of the proceedings of its meetings.
(b) Each such public agency of the state shall file not later than January thirty-first
of each year in the office of the Secretary of the State the schedule of the regular meetings
of such public agency for the ensuing year and shall post such schedule on such public
agency's Internet web site, if available, except that such requirements shall not apply
to the General Assembly, either house thereof or to any committee thereof. Any other
provision of the Freedom of Information Act notwithstanding, the General Assembly
at the commencement of each regular session in the odd-numbered years, shall adopt,
as part of its joint rules, rules to provide notice to the public of its regular, special,
emergency or interim committee meetings. The chairperson or secretary of any such
public agency of any political subdivision of the state shall file, not later than January
thirty-first of each year, with the clerk of such subdivision the schedule of regular meetings of such public agency for the ensuing year, and no such meeting of any such public
agency shall be held sooner than thirty days after such schedule has been filed. The
chief executive officer of any multitown district or agency shall file, not later than January thirty-first of each year, with the clerk of each municipal member of such district
or agency, the schedule of regular meetings of such public agency for the ensuing year,
and no such meeting of any such public agency shall be held sooner than thirty days
after such schedule has been filed.
(c) The agenda of the regular meetings of every public agency, except for the General Assembly, shall be available to the public and shall be filed, not less than twenty-four hours before the meetings to which they refer, (1) in such agency's regular office
or place of business, and (2) in the office of the Secretary of the State for any such public
agency of the state, in the office of the clerk of such subdivision for any public agency
of a political subdivision of the state or in the office of the clerk of each municipal
member of any multitown district or agency. For any such public agency of the state,
such agenda shall be posted on the public agency's and the Secretary of the State's web
sites. Upon the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members of a public agency present
and voting, any subsequent business not included in such filed agendas may be considered and acted upon at such meetings.
(d) Notice of each special meeting of every public agency, except for the General
Assembly, either house thereof or any committee thereof, shall be posted not less than
twenty-four hours before the meeting to which such notice refers on the public agency's
Internet web site, if available, and given not less than twenty-four hours prior to the
time of such meeting by filing a notice of the time and place thereof in the office of the
Secretary of the State for any such public agency of the state, in the office of the clerk
of such subdivision for any public agency of a political subdivision of the state and in
the office of the clerk of each municipal member for any multitown district or agency.
The secretary or clerk shall cause any notice received under this section to be posted in
his office. Such notice shall be given not less than twenty-four hours prior to the time
of the special meeting; provided, in case of emergency, except for the General Assembly,
either house thereof or any committee thereof, any such special meeting may be held
without complying with the foregoing requirement for the filing of notice but a copy of
the minutes of every such emergency special meeting adequately setting forth the nature
of the emergency and the proceedings occurring at such meeting shall be filed with the
Secretary of the State, the clerk of such political subdivision, or the clerk of each municipal member of such multitown district or agency, as the case may be, not later than
seventy-two hours following the holding of such meeting. The notice shall specify the
time and place of the special meeting and the business to be transacted. No other business
shall be considered at such meetings by such public agency. In addition, such written
notice shall be delivered to the usual place of abode of each member of the public agency
so that the same is received prior to such special meeting. The requirement of delivery
of such written notice may be dispensed with as to any member who at or prior to the
time the meeting convenes files with the clerk or secretary of the public agency a written
waiver of delivery of such notice. Such waiver may be given by telegram. The requirement of delivery of such written notice may also be dispensed with as to any member
who is actually present at the meeting at the time it convenes. Nothing in this section shall
be construed to prohibit any agency from adopting more stringent notice requirements.
(e) No member of the public shall be required, as a condition to attendance at a
meeting of any such body, to register the member's name, or furnish other information,
or complete a questionnaire or otherwise fulfill any condition precedent to the member's
attendance.
(f) A public agency may hold an executive session, as defined in subdivision (6) of
section 1-200, upon an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members of such body
present and voting, taken at a public meeting and stating the reasons for such executive
session, as defined in section 1-200.
(g) In determining the time within which or by when a notice, agenda, record of
votes or minutes of a special meeting or an emergency special meeting are required to
be filed under this section, Saturdays, Sundays, legal holidays and any day on which
the office of the agency, the Secretary of the State or the clerk of the applicable political
subdivision or the clerk of each municipal member of any multitown district or agency,
as the case may be, is closed, shall be excluded.
(1957, P.A. 468, S. 1; 1967, P.A. 723, S. 2; 1971, P.A. 499; P.A. 75-342, S. 6; P.A. 76-435, S. 63, 82; P.A. 77-609, S.
4, 8; P.A. 83-67, S. 2; 83-148; P.A. 84-546, S. 4, 173; P.A. 85-613, S. 3, 154; P.A. 97-47, S. 8; P.A. 99-71, S. 1; P.A. 00-66, S. 7; P.A. 07-213, S. 23; P.A. 08-18, S. 2; June 11 Sp. Sess. P.A. 08-3, S. 11.)
History: 1967 act required filing schedules for meetings of public bodies with secretary of the state or clerks in political
subdivisions of the state and made provisions regarding special meetings; 1971 act required that votes taken in closed
executive sessions be available for public inspection and recorded in the minutes; P.A. 75-342 excluded the general assembly
and its committees from provision requiring that schedule of meetings be filed, expanded provisions re special meetings
and changed vote margin required to hold closed executive session from simple majority to two-thirds majority; P.A. 76-435 made technical changes; P.A. 77-609 required that the general assembly provide in its joint rules for giving notice of
meetings, made provisions regarding agendas for regular public meetings and required that written notice of special meetings be sent to agency members; P.A. 83-67 required multitown districts and agencies to notify their member towns of the
schedule of regular and special meetings and to file minutes of such meetings; P.A. 83-148 added a new Subsec. (b) which
clarifies the method to be used in determining the time in which a notice or agenda is required to be given, deleting
provisions in former language, now Subsec. (a), made redundant by its inclusion and adding provisions in Subsec. (a)
requiring secretary or clerk to post notice in his office and requiring that notice be given at least 24 hours before time of
special meeting; P.A. 84-546 amended Subsec. (b) to apply provisions to "offices of the clerk of each municipal member
of any multitown district or agency"; P.A. 85-613 made technical changes, deleting reference to Sec. 2-45; P.A. 97-47
substituted "the Freedom of Information Act" for list of sections; Sec. 1-21 transferred to Sec. 1-225 in 1999; P.A. 99-71
amended Subsec. (b) by substituting "record of votes or minutes of a special meeting or an emergency special meeting
are" for "or other information is" and repealing "given, made available, posted or" before "filed"; P.A. 00-66 divided
former Subsec. (a) into multiple subsections, relettered former Subsec. (b) as Subsec. (g) and made technical changes;
P.A. 07-213 amended Subsec. (c) to revise agenda filing requirement and require the posting of agendas on the public
agency's and the Secretary of the State's web sites for agencies of the state; P.A. 08-18 amended Subsec. (a) to add provision
requiring each agency to make, keep and maintain a record of proceedings of its meetings, effective April 29, 2008; June
11 Sp. Sess. P.A. 08-3 amended Subsec. (a) to require that within seven days of session to which minutes refer, they be
available for public inspection and posted on agency's web site, if available, amended Subsec. (b) to require that schedule
be posted on agency's web site, if available, and amended Subsec. (d) to require that notice be posted not less than 24
hours before meeting to which notice refers on agency's web site, if available.
See Secs. 1-227 to 1-231, inclusive, for requirements applicable with respect to public meetings, hearings and executive
sessions of public agencies.
Annotations to former section 1-21:
Where statute requires vote of each board member be recorded, absence of record of dissenting vote indicated affirmative
vote. 148 C. 622. Cited. 170 C. 588. Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 138; Id., 142. Cited. 184 C. 102.
Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 183; Id., 234; Id., 310. Cited. 198 C. 498. Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609;
205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208
C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214
C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act, cited. 217
C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757. Cited. 219 C. 685. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18 et seq. cited. 220 C. 225. Cited. 221 C. 217. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom
of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271. Cited. 234 C. 704. Cited. 240 C. 835. Notice
under Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) was adequate for a site inspection under the Inland Wetlands Act. 243 C. 266.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Cited. 4 CA 216. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210
C. 646. Cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Cited. 31 CA 690. Cited. 35 CA
111. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA
589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Cited. Id., 700; judgment reversed, see 240 C. 835.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133. Cited. Id., 227.
Plaintiff newspaper reporter as a member of the public has standing to challenge the closing of a town council meeting
without required vote. Provision of the Enfield charter that all meetings of the town council be open to the public must
yield to state statutes. Where council is exercising its administrative and executive powers, it may close its sessions. 31
CS 329. The commission's interpretation that an emergency meeting may be held only when there is no time for a special
meeting notice to be posted twenty-four hours in advance was considered reasonable. 39 CS 56. Cited. 40 CS 233. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267. Cited. Id. Cited. 42 CS 84. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.; Id., 129;
Id., 291.
Presumed legislature, by insertion of exception clause in section 1-19, intended to exclude from operation of "right to
know" statutes exclusive power over admission to bar vested in superior court by section 51-80. 4 Conn. Cir. Ct. 313.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 213 C. 216. Cited. 217 C. 153. Cited. 218 C. 757. Cited. 221 C. 393. Cited. 230 C. 441.
Cited. 19 CA 352-354; Id., 539,. Cited. 42 CA 402. Cited. 43 CA 133.
Annotations to present section:
Subsec. (a):
Section's open meeting requirements inapplicable to grievance arbitration proceedings. 244 C. 487.
Subsec. (c):
Plain language of subsec. requires that new agenda item, not previously published, may be added to agenda only after
an affirmative vote to add that item by two-thirds of the members present and voting. 66 CA 279.
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Sec. 1-226. (Formerly Sec. 1-21a). Recording, broadcasting or photographing
meetings. (a) At any meeting of a public agency which is open to the public, pursuant
to the provisions of section 1-225, proceedings of such public agency may be recorded,
photographed, broadcast or recorded for broadcast, subject to such rules as such public
agency may have prescribed prior to such meeting, by any person or by any newspaper,
radio broadcasting company or television broadcasting company. Any recording, radio,
television or photographic equipment may be so located within the meeting room as to
permit the recording, broadcasting either by radio, or by television, or by both, or the
photographing of the proceedings of such public agency. The photographer or broadcaster and its personnel, or the person recording the proceedings, shall be required to
handle the photographing, broadcast or recording as inconspicuously as possible and
in such manner as not to disturb the proceedings of the public agency. As used herein
the term television shall include the transmission of visual and audible signals by cable.
(b) Any such public agency may adopt rules governing such recording, photography
or the use of such broadcasting equipment for radio and television stations but, in the
absence of the adoption of such rules and regulations by such public agency prior to the
meeting, such recording, photography or the use of such radio and television equipment
shall be permitted as provided in subsection (a) of this section.
(c) Whenever there is a violation or the probability of a violation of subsections (a)
and (b) of this section the superior court, or a judge thereof, for the judicial district in
which such meeting is taking place shall, upon application made by affidavit that such
violation is taking place or that there is reasonable probability that such violation will
take place, issue a temporary injunction against any such violation without notice to the
adverse party to show cause why such injunction should not be granted and without the
plaintiff's giving bond. Any person or public agency so enjoined may immediately
appear and be heard by the court or judge granting such injunction with regard to dissolving or modifying the same and, after hearing the parties and upon a determination that
such meeting should not be open to the public, said court or judge may dissolve or
modify the injunction. Any action taken by a judge upon any such application shall be
immediately certified to the court to which such proceedings are returnable.
(1967, P.A. 851, S. 1, 2; 1969, P.A. 706; P.A. 74-183, S. 161, 291; P.A. 75-342, S. 12; P.A. 76-435, S. 24, 82; 76-436,
S. 562, 681; P.A. 77-609, S. 5, 8; P.A. 78-280, S. 1, 127; P.A. 05-288, S. 3.)
History: 1969 act added Subsec. (c); P.A. 74-183 changed "circuit court" to "court of common pleas" and "circuit" to
"county or judicial district"; P.A. 75-342 amended section to specifically include photography and newspaper coverage
of open meetings and cable transmissions; P.A. 76-435 made technical changes; P.A. 76-436 changed "court of common
pleas" to "superior court", effective July 1, 1978; P.A. 77-609 allowed recording equipment at open meetings; P.A. 78-280 deleted "county"; Sec. 1-21a transferred to Sec. 1-226 in 1999; P.A. 05-288 made a technical change in Subsec. (b),
effective July 13, 2005.
Annotations to former section 1-21a:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 182 C. 142. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212
C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id.
FOIA, Freedom of Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id.,
549. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom
of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 42 CA 402. Parties to a grievance arbitration hearing do not have right pursuant to the section to tape record the
proceedings. 43 CA 133.
Annotations to present section:
Subsec. (a):
Section's recording provisions inapplicable to grievance arbitration proceedings. 244 C. 487.
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Sec. 1-227. (Formerly Sec. 1-21c). Mailing of notice of meetings to persons
filing written request. Fees. The public agency shall, where practicable, give notice
by mail of each regular meeting, and of any special meeting which is called, at least one
week prior to the date set for the meeting, to any person who has filed a written request
for such notice with such body, except that such body may give such notice as it deems
practical of special meetings called less than seven days prior to the date set for the
meeting. Such notice requirement shall not apply to the General Assembly, either house
thereof or to any committee thereof. Any request for notice filed pursuant to this section
shall be valid for one year from the date on which it is filed unless a renewal request is
filed. Renewal requests for notice shall be filed within thirty days after January first of
each year. Such public agency may establish a reasonable charge for sending such notice
based on the estimated cost of providing such service.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 7.)
History: Sec. 1-21c transferred to Sec. 1-227 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21c:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 234; Id., 310. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of
Information Act cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited.
218 C. 256. Cited. Id., 757. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id.; 220 C. 225. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information
Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Sec. 1-228. (Formerly Sec. 1-21d). Adjournment of meetings. Notice. The public agency may adjourn any regular or special meeting to a time and place specified in
the order of adjournment. Less than a quorum may so adjourn from time to time. If all
members are absent from any regular meeting the clerk or the secretary of such body
may declare the meeting adjourned to a stated time and place and shall cause a written
notice of the adjournment to be given in the same manner as provided in section 1-225,
for special meetings, unless such notice is waived as provided for special meetings. A
copy of the order or notice of adjournment shall be conspicuously posted on or near the
door of the place where the regular or special meeting was held, within twenty-four
hours after the time of the adjournment. When an order of adjournment of any meeting
fails to state the hour at which the adjourned meeting is to be held, it shall be held at
the hour specified for regular meetings, by ordinance, resolution, by law or other rule.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 8.)
History: Sec. 1-21d transferred to Sec. 1-228 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21d:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Sec. 1-229. (Formerly Sec. 1-21e). Continued hearings. Notice. Any hearing
being held, or noticed or ordered to be held, by the public agency at any meeting may
by order or notice of continuance be continued or recontinued to any subsequent meeting
of such agency in the same manner and to the same extent set forth in section 1-228,
for the adjournment of meeting, provided, that if the hearing is continued to a time less
than twenty-four hours after the time specified in the order or notice of hearing, a copy
of the order or notice of continuance of hearing shall be posted on or near the door of
the place where the hearing was held immediately following the meeting at which the
order or declaration of continuance was adopted or made.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 9.)
History: Sec. 1-21e transferred to Sec. 1-229 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21e:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Sec. 1-230. (Formerly Sec. 1-21f). Regular meetings to be held pursuant to
regulation, ordinance or resolution. The public agency shall provide by regulation,
in the case of a state agency, or by ordinance or resolution in the case of an agency of
a political subdivision, the place for holding its regular meetings. If at any time any
regular meeting falls on a holiday, such regular meeting shall be held on the next business
day. If it shall be unsafe to meet in the place designated, the meetings may be held at
such place as is designated by the presiding officer of the public agency; provided a
copy of the minutes of any such meeting adequately setting forth the nature of the
emergency and the proceedings occurring at such meeting shall be filed with the Secretary of the State or the clerk of the political subdivision, as the case may be, not later
than seventy-two hours following the holding of such meeting.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 10.)
History: Sec. 1-21f transferred to Sec. 1-230 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21f:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Sec. 1-231. (Formerly Sec. 1-21g). Executive sessions. (a) At an executive session of a public agency, attendance shall be limited to members of said body and persons
invited by said body to present testimony or opinion pertinent to matters before said
body provided that such persons' attendance shall be limited to the period for which
their presence is necessary to present such testimony or opinion and, provided further,
that the minutes of such executive session shall disclose all persons who are in attendance
except job applicants who attend for the purpose of being interviewed by such agency.
(b) An executive session may not be convened to receive or discuss oral communications that would otherwise be privileged by the attorney-client relationship if the
agency were a nongovernmental entity, unless the executive session is for a purpose
explicitly permitted pursuant to subdivision (6) of section 1-200.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 11; P.A. 81-431, S. 5; P.A. 86-226; P.A. 97-47, S. 9.)
History: P.A. 81-431 exempted names of job applicants interviewed during executive session from disclosure; P.A.
86-226 added Subsec. (b) prohibiting convening of executive session to receive or discuss oral communications that would
otherwise be privileged by the attorney-client privilege unless session is for a purpose explicitly permitted under Sec. 1-18a(e); P.A. 97-47 made a technical change in Subsec. (b); Sec. 1-21g transferred to Sec. 1-231 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21g:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA, Freedom of Information Act,
cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited. 218 C. 256.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 34 CA 772. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id.
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Sec. 1-232. (Formerly Sec. 1-21h). Conduct of meetings. In the event that any
meeting of a public agency is interrupted by any person or group of persons so as to
render the orderly conduct of such meeting unfeasible and order cannot be restored by
the removal of individuals who are wilfully interrupting the meetings, the members of
the agency conducting the meeting may order the meeting room cleared and continue
in session. Only matters appearing on the agenda may be considered in such a session.
Duly accredited representatives of the press or other news media, except those participating in the disturbance, shall be allowed to attend any session held pursuant to this section.
Nothing in this section shall prohibit such public agency from establishing a procedure
for readmitting an individual or individuals not responsible for wilfully disturbing the
meeting.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 13.)
History: Sec. 1-21h transferred to Sec. 1-232 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21h:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212
C. 100. Freedom of Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 216 C. 253. FOIA,
Freedom of Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information
Act cited. Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 16 CA 49; 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA
316. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA
402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
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Secs. 1-233 to 1-239. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 1-240. (Formerly Sec. 1-21k). Penalties. (a) Any person who wilfully, knowingly and with intent to do so, destroys, mutilates or otherwise disposes of any public
record without the approval required under section 1-18 or unless pursuant to chapter
47 or 871, or who alters any public record, shall be guilty of a class A misdemeanor
and each such occurrence shall constitute a separate offense.
(b) Any member of any public agency who fails to comply with an order of the
Freedom of Information Commission shall be guilty of a class B misdemeanor and each
occurrence of failure to comply with such order shall constitute a separate offense.
(P.A. 75-342, S. 16; P.A. 79-631, S. 24, 111; P.A. 82-188, S. 2, 3.)
History: P.A. 79-631 made technical changes; P.A. 82-188 amended Subsec. (a) by adding the exception of records
destroyed pursuant to chapter 871; Sec. 1-21k transferred to Sec. 1-240 in 1999.
Annotations to former section 1-21k:
Cited. 174 C. 308. Cited. 181 C. 324. Cited. 184 C. 102. Cited. 190 C. 235. Cited. 192 C. 310. Freedom of Information
Act cited. 204 C. 609; 205 C. 767; 206 C. 449; 207 C. 698. Cited. 208 C. 442; 210 C. 590; 212 C. 100. Freedom of
Information Act cited. 208 C. 442; 209 C. 204; 210 C. 590; Id., 646; 212 C. 100; 213 C. 126; Id., 216. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 214 C. 312. Cited. 216 C. 253. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id. FOIA, Freedom of
Information Act, cited. 217 C. 153. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. Id., 193. Freedom of Information Act cited.
218 C. 256. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-18a et seq. cited. Id., 757; 220 C. 225. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 221 C. 217; Id., 300; Id., 393. Freedom of Information Act cited. Id., 482; Id., 549. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) cited. 222 C. 621. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 228 C. 158. Freedom of Information Act cited.
Id., 271.
Cited. 2 CA 600. Freedom of Information Act cited. 4 CA 468; 14 CA 380; judgment reversed, see 210 C. 646. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 19 CA 352; Id., 539; 20 CA 671. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 22 CA 316. Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 29 CA 821. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cited. 35 CA 111. Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom
of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
Freedom of Information Act cited. 41 CS 31; Id., 267; 42 CS 84; Id., 129; Id., 291.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 198 C. 498. Cited. 210 C. 646.
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Sec. 1-241. (Formerly Sec. 1-21l). Injunctive relief from frivolous, unreasonable or harassing freedom of information appeals. A public agency, as defined in
subdivision (1) of section 1-200, may bring an action to the Superior Court against any
person who was denied leave by the Freedom of Information Commission to have his
appeal heard by the commission under subsection (b) of section 1-206 because the
commission determined and found that such appeal or the underlying request would
perpetrate an injustice or would constitute an abuse of the commission's administrative
process. The action authorized under this section shall be limited to an injunction prohibiting such person from bringing any further appeal to the commission which would
perpetrate an injustice or would constitute an abuse of the commission's administrative
process. If, after such an injunction is ordered, the person subject to the injunction brings
a further appeal to the Freedom of Information Commission and the commission determines that such appeal would perpetrate an injustice or would constitute an abuse of
the commission's administrative process, such person shall be conclusively deemed to
have violated the injunction and such agency may seek further injunctive and equitable
relief, damages, attorney's fees and costs, as the court may order.
(P.A. 93-191, S. 2, 4; P.A. 97-47, S. 14.)
History: P.A. 93-191 effective July 1, 1993; P.A. 97-47 made a technical change; Sec. 1-21l transferred to Sec. 1-241
in 1999.
Annotation to former section 1-21l:
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Sec. 1-15 et seq. cited. 37 CA 589. Freedom of Information Act, Sec. 1-15 et seq.
cited. 42 CA 402. Freedom of Information Act cited. 43 CA 133.
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Sec. 1-242. Actions involving provisions of the Freedom of Information Act.
Notice of litigation to the Freedom of Information Commission. Intervention by
commission. (a) In any action involving the assertion that a provision of the Freedom
of Information Act has been violated or constitutes a defense, the court to which such
action is brought shall make an order requiring the party asserting such violation or
defense, as applicable, to provide the Freedom of Information Commission with notice
of the action and a copy of the complaint and all pleadings in the action by first-class
mail or personal service to the address of the commission's office.
(b) Upon the filing of a verified pleading by the commission, the court to which an
action described in subsection (a) of this section is brought may grant the commission's
motion to intervene in the action for purposes of participating in any issue involving a
provision of the Freedom of Information Act.
(P.A. 04-206, S. 1.)
History: P.A. 04-206 effective June 3, 2004.
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Secs. 1-243 to 1-259. Reserved for future use.
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