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Conducting Effective Meetings and Hearings. Overview. Municipalities must conduct many proceedings to create and maintain an effective land use process Different types of proceedings for different purposes This section explores the different types of proceedings land use officials will conduct
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Overview • Municipalities must conduct many proceedings to create and maintain an effective land use process • Different types of proceedings for different purposes • This section explores the different types of proceedings land use officials will conduct • Explores rules of procedure and ethics • Explores process requirements for decision-making
Three Types of Public Assemblies • Meetings • Legislative hearings • Quasi-judicial hearings
Meetings versus Hearings • Meetings are different from hearings • Meetings are LEGISLATIVE - General applicability • Hearings may be LEGISLATIVE Or QUASI-JUDICIAL - Application limited either to particular subject or to specific parties
Conducting Effective Meetings • Meetings are generally legislative event • Occurs when a quorum of a public body convenes to discuss the business of the body or to take action • This is the trigger for the Open Meeting law
Basic Open Meeting Law Requirements • Minutes • Meeting must be publicly noticed • Meeting must be open to the public • Public must have opportunity to comment
Conducting Effective Meetings: Public Notice • Regular meetings: noticedesignated at organizational meeting • Special meetings: 24 hours notice required • Emergency meetings: no notice required
Open Meeting Exception: Executive Session • Exception to open meeting law to discuss specific subjects authorized by statute, such as: - Personnel issues - Certain contract discussions • Different from deliberative session • Rarely used by land use boards • Perhaps could be used to assist legislative body or manager to evaluate administrative officer
Conducting Effective Meetings: Role of the Chair • Chair runs meeting • Public must have opportunity to comment • A meeting IN the public, not OF the public
Conducting Effective Meetings: Role of the Chair • Chair should strike balance between encouraging public participation and efficiency of the board • Board should adopt rules of procedure • Board should use an agenda
Conducting Effective Legislative Hearings • Often referred to in statute, but not defined. • A legislative hearing is a public assembly for the purpose of listening to the public • Example: public hearing to receive comment on a proposed bylaw • Frequently mandated by statute (town plan & bylaw approval)
Notice Requirements for Legislative Hearings • For municipal plan: - 24 V.S.A § § 4384, 4385 • For municipal bylaws: - 24 V.S.A § § 4441, 4442 • Requires notice in newspaper (including text or summary of plan/bylaw proposal), plus posting in three places
Roles of Public and Chair in Legislative Hearings • Chair runs meeting • Board’s role: To encourage public participation and listen to public comment • “Hearings”are aptly named • Public’s opportunity to comment is the reason for the hearing • Consider rules of procedure and agenda
Alternative Public Hearings • Alternative public hearings can provide collaborative opportunity to assemble stakeholders: - Developer - Neighbors - Interest Groups - Civic Organizations • Useful for public discussion on a unique property or issue
Alternative Public Hearings • How to provide public notice? - As either a legislative hearing or a meeting - Most likely will be considered a meeting
Quasi-Judicial Hearings • A quasi-judicial hearing occurs when an appropriate municipal panel convenes to hear an application for land development. • Rules are different, and stricter, in quasi-judicial hearings than in legislative hearings and meetings.
Examples of Quasi-Judicial Hearings Applications For: • Site plan review • Subdivision review • Conditional use review • Variances • Appeals
Five Hallmarks of a Quasi-Judicial Hearing • Rights of parties are being considered • All parties can present evidence • All parties can cross-examine witnesses/question evidence • Written decision • Appealable
Constitutional Due Process • Parties have a property right protected by the Constitution • Parties include applicant and interested persons • “. . . No state shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . .” • 14th Amendment to U.S. Constitution
The Essence of Due Process • Notice • Opportunity to be heard
Three Additional Components of Due Process • Maintaining order • Managing evidence • Avoiding conflicts of interest
Rules of Procedure and Ethics • Protecting due process is critical • Well-drafted and applied rules give boards the tools to protect due process rights • Required by state law • Ensure efficient board proceedings
Rules of Procedure and Ethics: Topics for Rules • Address alternate board members • Script for hearings • Role of officers • Administrative documentation of participants (required by law) • Ex parte communication • Voting protocols • Anything else deemed appropriate
Rules of Procedure: Alternate Board Members • Should have alternates available to sit • Excellent for dealing with conflicts • Useful for busy boards • Rules should address use of alternates
Rules: A Script for Hearings • See Rules of Procedure and Ethics manual for examples • Chair runs proceedings consistently • Addresses order of participation
Rules: Role of Officers • Addresses role of chair, vice chair, clerk, and board staff
Documentation of Participants • Required by state law • Each AMP should have the discussion about interested persons • Two methods to approach: - Will the board make a status determination? - Will the board allow the Environmental Court to make the determination?
Documentation of Participants • Most boards allow anyone to participate • Some limit participation to statutorily “interested persons” • See sign-in sheet for attendees and interested persons in model rules of procedure.
Documentation of Participants • For appeals of administrative officer decisions, state law REQUIRES AMP to determine whether appellant is an interested person
Conflicts of Interest • Not acceptable in government • Erode public trust in development review process • Land use regulation seems discretionary; removal of conflicts helps to make process more objective • Parties have constitutional right to a fair process
Categories of Conflicts of Interest • Financial influences: where board member stands to benefit financially from decision • Associational interests: business, personal, and family relationships
Categories of Conflicts of Interest • Prejudice/bias: board member makes statements that reflect prejudgment of the merits of an application • Ex parte contacts: Define first: A communication between a board member and a party outside of a public hearing concerning the application
Ex Parte Communication • Inappropriate – should only take place at open hearing • Ex parte communication can create a conflict of interest • Corrective action: introduce ALL written and oral communication into the record
How to Manage Conflicts of Interest • Adopt rules of procedure • Learn rules & follow them • Recuse oneself when necessary • Use alternates appropriately • Public confidence is the currency of your board
Rules of Procedure: MAPA • Municipal Administrative Procedure Act • Requires slightly formalized proceedings, including: - Audiotape - More comprehensive written decisions - Allows DRBs to adopt local Act 250 Review
Deliberations & Decisions Two methods: • Private deliberative session • Public deliberations What is deliberative session? - An exception to the open meeting law - Allows board to deliberate in private, like a jury
Deliberations & Decisions • No need to take minutes • No need to publicly declare votes • No need to warn/notice
Deliberative Session Rules • When can we use it? - To make decisions after hearing evidence in a quasi-judicial proceeding • Many boards deliberate in public (Rules of Procedure I)
Making Decisions • Must be in writing • Minutes may suffice • Must include a statement of the factual bases on which AMP has made its conclusions • Must provide a statement of conclusions AMP made in reaching decision • Templates: www.vpic.info
Making Decisions: Whose Job Is It? • Occasionally administrative officer/staff planner • Occasionally board members, who should rotate drafting duties • Occasionally board assistant • Timeline: AMP must issue decision within 45 days of close of final public hearing • Failure could result in deemed approval
Conducting Effective Meetings and Hearings: Summary • Three types of proceedings – Know which one you are conducting • Adopt rules of procedure • Use them and amend them on an annual basis • Understand the legal principles that underlie your decision-making process • Educate yourself and your board members