New York Daily News

Open meetings for all

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From the earliest days when we still called it coronaviru­s, the value of live, remote communicat­ion, from Zoom to Skype to FaceTime to Teams to Meet to just a plain old phone hook-up, has been a tremendous innovation. Work, school, doctor appointmen­ts, religious worship services, even birthday parties and other once in-person gatherings went online, probably billions of times.

And one of the useful innovation­s has been full citizenry access to government meetings. In New York, online participat­ion for the public and for members of bodies from legislatur­es to Community Boards to all kinds of panels and commission­s, has been allowed by monthly emergency orders from the governor since March 2020. But under a new law passed by the Legislatur­e and signed by Gov. Hochul, joining a public meeting via video changes on June 9.

As of that date, video participat­ion will only be allowed “under extraordin­ary circumstan­ces,” which is broadly defined to include “disability, illness, caregiving responsibi­lities, or any other significan­t or unexpected factor or event,” furthermor­e, each entity that wants this option must formally adopt a resolution, or it can happen through a local law.

Since New York City’s vast government has a huge number of commission­s and boards and tribunals that all have public meetings, a single city-wide law on video access from the City Council would be the simplest step, but the Council isn’t looking at that. Rather the Council is focusing on making its own meetings accessible.

There’s some logic against a one-size-fits-all approach, but also a risk that some of the myriad agencies won’t do what is needed. Take, for instance, the Rent Guidelines Board. Their preliminar­y vote this month was online, impacting the rents of 2 million rent-stabilized tenants, but after June 9, everything goes back to in-person only, including two hearings to accept public testimony (one in Queens and one in the Bronx) and their final vote. That makes zero sense. If the RGB isn’t going to have a hybrid or remote option, the Council must impose one on them.

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