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In -Depth Sunshine Law Requirements for Multi -site and Remote <br />Meetings, Effective January 1, 2022 <br />(October 2021) <br />Act 220, Session Laws of Hawaii 2021, amended the Sunshine Law to allow <br />public meetingsto be remotely conducted online, effective January 1, 2022. This <br />summary of the new multi-siteand remote meeting provisions explains the reasonswhy <br />the Sunshine Law was amended to allow for remote meetings and describes the different <br />meeting options now available underthe Sunshine Law. <br />Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Sunshine Law allowed boards to use <br />interactive conference technology (ICT) to connectmultiple public meeting siteswhere <br />board members would be physically present. ICT was defined in section 92-2, Hawaii <br />Revised Statutes (HRS), as "any form of audio or audio and visual conference <br />technology, including teleconference, videoconference, and voice over internet protocol, <br />that facilitates interaction between the public and board members." While meetings <br />could be conducted using ICT, including an audio -only connection, board members were <br />still required to be present in person atone of the noticed public meeting sites, with a <br />limited exception for disabled members. <br />The pandemic, however, forced the implementation of emergency measures that <br />suspended the requirementfor board members to meet in person at public meeting sites. <br />These measures allowed meetings using ICT in which board members and the public <br />could participate remotely online from theirprivate homes, businesses, orother locations <br />(remote meetings) and thus enabled boards to conduct necessarybusinesswhile <br />protecting participants' health and safety and expanding public access to meetings <br />throughoutthe State. Recognizing that remote meetings had proved viable and popular <br />for Sunshine Law boards, the 2021 Legislature passed Senate Bill 1034, S.D. 1, H.D. 2, <br />C.D. 1, which was enacted as Act 220 and can be found on OIP's Legislation page. <br />Act 220 slightly amended the ICT definition' and created anew section in the <br />Sunshine Law that allows boards to hold remote meetings for which board members are <br />not required to attend at an in -person meeting site, although the board must still provide <br />an in -person site for members of the publicwho have no desire or ability to participate <br />using ICT. Act 220 also established new requirements for remote meetings and anew <br />notice requirement for all meetings subject to the Sunshine Law. <br />As amended, the Sunshine Law's requirements for holding meetings using ICT <br />are summarized below. <br />Three Options to Hold Public Meetings <br />1 As amended by Act 220, Section 92-2, HRS, defines ICT as "any form of audio and <br />visual conference technology, or audio conference technology where permitted under this part, <br />including teleconference, videoconference, and voice over internet protocol, that facilitates <br />interaction between the public and board members." The effect is to generally require some <br />level of board member visibility for remote meetings. <br />In -Depth Sunshine Law Requirements for Remote Meetings, Effective 1/1/2022 Page 1 <br />