Safe Air for Everyone v. Idaho State Department of Agriculture

177 P.3d 378, 145 Idaho 164, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 7
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2008
Docket33729
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 P.3d 378 (Safe Air for Everyone v. Idaho State Department of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safe Air for Everyone v. Idaho State Department of Agriculture, 177 P.3d 378, 145 Idaho 164, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 7 (Idaho 2008).

Opinion

EISMANN, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a claim that employees of the Idaho State Department of Agriculture violated the Open Meetings Act when they attended an inter *165 governmental meeting to discuss issues relating to crop residue burning. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In August 2002, the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (IDEQ), and the Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) entered into a memorandum of agreement relating to agricultural field burning. The parties agreed to coordinate, to the maximum extent possible, the implementation of their respective smoke management plans, including the sharing of information, equipment, personnel, other resources, and data. The parties also agreed to form a technical advisory group to develop and implement a plan of operations for 2003 and future burn seasons. The agreement expressly provided that it did not constitute any waiver of sovereign immunity by either the State or the Tribe and was intended solely to facilitate intergovernmental cooperation between the parties.

In July 2005, the Nez Perce Tribe, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the IDEQ, and the ISDA entered into a similar agreement to jointly develop and implement a long-term smoke management strategy. They agreed to coordinate and assist each other in agricultural smoke management; to share information and data; to develop documents, reports, and materials; and to work together to coordinate bum decisions. They also agreed to coordinate on annual program evaluations in order to work together toward program improvements. Like the earlier agreement, this agreement also expressly provided that it did not constitute a waiver of sovereign immunity by any of the parties and was intended solely to facilitate intergovernmental cooperation.

The ISDA invited representatives from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, the Nez Perce Tribe, the IDEQ, the EPA and others to attend what was called the “Idaho Crop Residue End-of-Year Meeting” to be held on December 6 and 7, 2005. The meeting was not open to the public. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss various issues regarding crop residue burning and to reach consensus on any suggested changes. During the meeting, those present agreed upon various things ranging from changes to the ISDA website, to adding subjects to training programs, to changing the burn protocol to increase the Boundary County burn limit from 2400 acres to 3000 acres.

On January 4, 2006, the Plaintiff commenced this lawsuit alleging that the ISDA employees who attended the meeting violated the Idaho Open Meetings Act, I.C. §§ 67-2340 et. seq. The Defendants are the ISDA and those employees. The Defendants moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted, holding that the Open Meetings Act did not apply because the ISDA employees who attended the meeting were not a governing board. The Plaintiff then appealed.

II. ANALYSIS

The issue presented by this appeal is whether the participation by ISDA employees at the Idaho crop residue end-of-year meeting violated the Idaho Open Meetings Act. Idaho Code § 67-2342 provides, “[A]ll meetings of a governing body of a public agency shall be open to the public.” In order for the Act to apply, the ISDA employees would have to constitute a “governing body of a public agency.”

The governing body of a public agency must consist of at least two members who have authority to make decisions for or recommendations to that agency. 1 In addition, a governing body must be required to make its decisions by majority vote at which a quorum is present. 2

*166 The ISDA is not headed by a governing body. It is headed by a director who is authorized to “exercise all of the powers and duties necessary to carry out the proper administration of the department of agriculture.” I.C. § 22-101. The director cannot be a governing body because the director is only one person and is not required to make decisions by majority vote at which a quorum is present. I.C. § 67-2341(1) & (5).

The Plaintiff contends that the ISDA employees who attended the meeting would constitute a governing body of a subagency within the ISDA. The director of the ISDA has organized the department into several divisions, with smaller organizational groups of employees within each division. Eight ISDA employees work in the crop residue disposal program, which is part of the division of agricultural resources. Those employees consist of three full-time employees, who are the supervisor, the program manager, the program coordinator, and five part-time employees, who are the field coordinators. The individuals named as defendants are the program manager, Sherman Takatori, and the five field coordinators. Mr. Takatori coordinated the end-of-the-year meeting at issue in this ease, and he and the five field coordinators attended it. The Plaintiff argues that because these employees participated in making policy decisions at that meeting, they constitute a governing body of a subagency.

The legislature did not make application of the Open Meetings Act depend upon whether a particular decision could be classified as a policy decision. The Act does not contain any definition of “policy,” and the definition of “decision” does not include that word. Whether or not the Act applies depends upon the body making the decision and the formalities required for it to make that decision. 3 The decision must be made by a governing body of a public agency, and that body must be required to make the decision by majority vote with a quorum present. I.C. § 67-2341(5) & (1).

The crop residue disposal program is not a public agency. Although the term “public agency” includes “any subagency of a public agency which is created by or pursuant to statute, ordinance, or other legislative act,” I.C. § 67-2341(4)(d), that program was not created by or pursuant to statute. It was created by the director as part of the organizational structure that the director implemented for the more efficient operation of the department. As part of that organizational structure, the director assigned a small group of ISDA employees to the particular task of overseeing crop residue burning.

There are statutorily created subagencies within the ISDA, such as the state soil conservation commission, I.C, § 22-2718; the Idaho honey advertising commission, I.C. § 22-2804; the alfalfa and clover seed commission, I.C. § 22-4204; the state board of sheep commissioners, I.C. § 25-126; and the Idaho hop grower’s commission, I.C. § 22-3104. However, there is no statute creating or authorizing the creation of a group of people within the ISDA who are to have the responsibility for overseeing crop residue burning.

Likewise, the ISDA employees who work in the crop residue disposal program are not members of a governing body. A governing body must be two or more “members of any public agency ...

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Bluebook (online)
177 P.3d 378, 145 Idaho 164, 2008 Ida. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safe-air-for-everyone-v-idaho-state-department-of-agriculture-idaho-2008.