Your local governing bodies — including your county board of supervisors, city councils and school district boards as well as many of their subsidiary boards and commissions — exist to do the business of the public. They serve you.
Accordingly, their meetings must be open to the public and allow you, as a member of the public, an opportunity to express your opinions during the meeting. You need not register, give your name or complete or show any documentation to attend or participate.
Local government bodies must also provide an agenda listing the items that will be discussed, no later than 72 hours in advance of the meeting. You can usually obtain information about their meeting calendar and agendas of upcoming meetings on their websites. The governing body may not vote on issues not on the agenda or without providing members of the public with an opportunity to comment on the agenda item prior to their vote, except in an emergency.
You have the right to directly address the local government body at specified times during the meeting.
The "Consent Calendar" consists of agenda items that the governing body believes are routine and/or do not require discussion. The body may take the recommended actions on these items in one vote, without further discussion. But it must provide you an opportunity to comment on those items before it takes such action.
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