SEC. 67.6. CONDUCT OF BUSINESS; TIME AND PLACE FOR MEETINGS.

§ 67.6

ComplexCould be simpler
In plain language

Policy bodies in San Francisco must establish regular meeting times and places by resolution, hold meetings within the city except in specific circumstances (state/federal law, property inspection, meeting with residents), reschedule holidays to the next business day, and may relocate temporarily due to emergencies with public notice. Special meetings require 72 hours' notice to members and media; advisory bodies have modified notice requirements.

San Francisco boards and commissions must set regular meeting schedules and hold meetings in the city. If a regular meeting falls on a holiday, it moves to the next business day instead. If an emergency like a fire makes the regular location unsafe, the board can meet elsewhere and must quickly tell the media and the public where. For special meetings, the board must give members and local news media 72 hours' notice saying what time, where, and what business will be discussed. Advisory boards that choose to have regular meetings don't need special notice for those regular meetings, but do need notice for any special ones.

  • Complex:Subsection (f) is lengthy and contains multiple overlapping conditions, exceptions, and provisions about notice requirements, waivers, and alternate locations that could be difficult for a non-lawyer to parse.
  • Could be simpler:The distinction between "passive meeting bodies" in subsection (e) and other advisory bodies, along with the different notice rules, could be clarified by explicitly defining what counts as a passive meeting body or consolidating the advisory body notice rules.

AI-generated · claude-haiku-4-5 · informational only, not legal advice.

Official text

(Added by Ord. 265-93, App. 8/18/93; amended by Proposition G, 11/2/99)

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