McLarty v. Board of Regents was a case before the Georgia Supreme Court in 1973 concerning open meetings laws.
[edit] Important precedents
[edit] Background
The suit was brought against the Board of regents for access to committee meetings of faculty members and students of the University of Georgia. The Dean of Student Affairs organized the committee to review allocation of Student Activity Funds.
The Court and the trial court (Barrow, J.) ruled that that such "advisory groups" do not fall under the Act and they may be closed. However, the Act has been amended to expressly include agency committees since this ruling.
For the first time the Court stressed the importance of the Act:
"What the law seeks to eliminate are closed meetings which engender in the people a distrust of its officials who are clothed with the power to act in their name. It declares that the people, who possess ultimate sovereignty under our form of government, are entitled to observe the actions of those described bodies when exercising the power delegated to them to act on behalf of the people in the name of the State."[1]
[edit] Supporters of the FOIA request
[edit] Criticisms of the FOIA request
[edit] Ruling of the court
[edit] Associated cases
[edit] See Also
[edit] External links
[edit] References