Dear Senator Madla:
You ask whether a municipality's disclosure to a municipally-appointed citizen
advisory board of information pertaining to a municipally-owned power utility that is
reasonably related to a competitive matter waives the municipality's claim to withhold such
information under section 552.131 of the Government Code. See Act of May 27, 1999, 76th
Leg., R.S., ch. 405, § 46, 1999 Tex. Gen. Laws 2543, 2618 (codified at Gov't Code
§ 552.131). We understand the legal issue presented by your question to be whether the
disclosure of information to a citizen advisory board constitutes a voluntary disclosure to the
public under section 552.007(b) of the Government Code. We conclude that such disclosure
constitutes an intra-governmental transfer of information and, therefore, would not prevent
the governmental body from thereafter asserting an exception under the Public Information
Act (the "Act") to public disclosure of the information.
Section 552.007 of the Government Code states:
(a) This chapter [Chapter 552, Government Code] does not
prohibit a governmental body or its officer for public
information from voluntarily making part or all of its
information available to the public, unless the disclosure is
expressly prohibited by law or the information is confidential
under law.
(b) Public information made available under Subsection (a)
must be made available to any person.
This provision prohibits a governmental body from selectively disclosing to the
public information that is not confidential by law, but for which a governmental body may
otherwise assert one or more of the Act's exceptions to required public disclosure. For
example, in Open Records Decision No. 400 (1983), a governmental body disclosed
information to a member of the public but subsequently wanted to withhold the same
information under section 552.111 of the Government Code from another member of the
public. This office declined to consider the section 552.111 assertion and found, pursuant
to the statutory predecessor to section 552.007, that the governmental body had waived the
section 552.111 assertion. Id. In considering what constitutes a release to the public that
would implicate the Act's selective disclosure prohibition, this office has long held that the
intra-agency transfer of information within a governmental body does not constitute such a
release. See Attorney General Opinion JM-119 at 2 (1983) (finding that disclosure of
information to a member of a board of trustees does not amount to a public disclosure); see
also Open Records Decision Nos. 468 at 3 (1987) (allowing employee access to records does
not constitute a disclosure to the public), 464 at 5 (1987) (distribution of evaluations by
university faculty members among faculty members does not waive exceptions to disclosure
with respect to general public) (overruled on other grounds by Open Records Decision
No. 615 (1993)). For instance, a member of a governmental body who is acting in his or her
official capacity is not a member of the public for purposes of access to information in the
governmental body's possession. Thus, an authorized official may review records of the
governmental body without implicating the Act's prohibition against selective disclosure.
See id. In order to determine whether the disclosure of information to a citizen advisory
board of a municipally-owned power utility would implicate the section 552.007(b) selective
disclosure prohibition, we must look to the relationship between the governmental body and
the citizen advisory board.
In your letter, you point out that some home rule municipalities operate their own
municipal electric utilities. Section 552.131 of the Government Code excepts from
disclosure information or records reasonably related to a competitive matter of the public
power utility as determined by the public utility governing body. As a result of deregulation
of the utility industry, private utility companies may compete with public power utilities.
Because public power utilities are subject to the Act and private companies are not subject
to the Act, section 552.131 was enacted to protect from public release the public power
utilities' disclosure of competitive matters. In some of these cities, the city council
designates an independent board to have authority over the municipal electric utility which
constitutes the "public power utility governing body" as defined in section 552.131.
However, in other cities, such as the City of Garland, the city council is the "public power
utility governing body;" but the city council appoints a citizen advisory board to study and
advise the city council on electric utility issues. You explain that members of the advisory
boards are not city employees, but private citizens of the city who serve without
compensation.
We have also received briefs from various cities concerning the formation and
function of citizen advisory boards with regard to municipally-owned power utilities.
According to the City of Austin, citizen advisory boards are comprised of citizens appointed
by the city council to evaluate issues and policies and to make recommendations. The brief
states that "a citizen advisory board is merely performing tasks that the City Council is
authorized to perform itself, and therefore it is acting on behalf of the City." The Austin City
Code provides for the creation of the Electrical Utility Commission to advise the city council
on utility issues. The City of Austin found it necessary to create the Electrical Utility
Commission because of the "complex issues, large costs, importance of electricity generation
and impact of the utility on the community." According to the City Code, the Electrical
Utility Commission reviews and analyzes "all policies and procedures of the electric utility
including, but not limited to, the following areas: the electric rate structure, fuel costs and
charges, customer services, capital investments, new generation, facilities, selection of types
of fuel, purchase of fuel, transportation of fuel, billing procedures, and the transfer of electric
utility revenues from the utility fund to the general fund . . . ."
In the City of Denton, a Public Utilities Board was created by city charter to advise
the city council on electric utility issues. The city council appoints the members of the
Public Utilities Board, which is comprised of seven citizen members, with the City Manager
and Assistant City Manager for Utilities serving as ex-officio members. The city explains
that "the Public Utility Board is charged with the responsibility to review confidential
information regarding competitive matters in order to make informed recommendations to
the City Council in accordance with its duties specified in [the City Charter]." The City of
Denton also states that the Public Utilities Board is supported by public funds.
In San Antonio, a board of trustees, the City Public Service Board, was created to act
as the city's public power utility governing body. A Citizen Advisory Committee was
created by a city resolution to assist the City Public Service Board and act as a sounding
board for the community and provide input into the business activities of the public power
utility. According to the resolution, committee members will be selected to represent the
various geographic, ethnic or racial, business and community groups served by the utility.
According to the City of San Antonio, the citizen advisory board is "a volunteer board,
advisory in nature, [which] will receive no compensation for [members'] participation. [San
Antonio] will be financially responsible for administration of and operating costs associated
with the [citizen advisory committee]." In the brief, the city states that "the governmental
body creates these advisory boards so that board members can share community perspectives
as to the utility's programs and services and, upon being provided with information by the
utility's staff, provide feedback to be used in the formulation or refinement of plans or
programs by the governing body."
Having reviewed the submitted information, we see that, generally, the citizen
advisory boards are created by city code or ordinance to assist and advise the city council or
the public power utility governing body with or regarding matters related to the public power
utility. Further, the city council or public power utility governing body provides competitive
information to the citizen advisory boards in order for the citizen advisory boards to
formulate recommendations on electric utility issues. Although the citizen advisory boards
are typically merely advisory in nature and the members are not necessarily compensated, the
boards are likely to be supported by public funds and to be provided with the administrative
support of staff members of the governmental body. The citizen advisory boards have
essentially been delegated the task of studying public power utility issues and making
recommendations to the city council or the public power utility governing body. The
members thus act in a similar capacity to that of an employee of the governmental body.
Based on the facts presented in the briefs concerning the function of the citizen
advisory board and its relationship with the governmental body, we conclude that a citizen
advisory board which studies electric utility issues and provides recommendations to the city
on public utilities matters is, for purposes of the Act, a part of the governmental body that
created it. As such, the governmental body's disclosure of information to the citizen
advisory board is merely an intra-agency transfer of information. See Attorney General
Opinion JM-119 at 2 (1983); see also Open Records Decision Nos. 468 at 3 (1987), 464 at 5
(1987). Because such a transfer of information does not amount to a public disclosure that
triggers the section 552.007(b) selective disclosure prohibition, the governmental body that
provides information to its citizen advisory board is not prevented from thereafter claiming
an exception under the Act to the public disclosure of the information.
S U M M A R Y
A municipality's disclosure to a municipally-appointed citizen advisory
board of information pertaining to a municipally-owned power utility does
not constitute a release to the public as contemplated under section 552.007
of the Government Code, and therefore does not prevent the governmental
body from thereafter asserting an exception under the Public Information Act
to the public release of the information.
Yours very truly,
J O H N C O R N Y N
Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR
First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN
Deputy Attorney General - General Counsel
KATHERINE MINTER CARY
Interim Division Chief, Open Records Division
Jennifer Bialek
Assistant Attorney General, Open Records Division
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