When a Delaware city manager and parks staff meet privately with a charter school to talk about converting a public park into baseball fields, does that count as a 'public body' meeting that has to be open under FOIA?
Plain-English summary
Newark City Council had scheduled a January 27, 2025 meeting to consider a recommendation to enter into an agreement with Newark Charter School. The plan: let the school build baseball and softball fields on Folk Memorial Park, City parkland, under a long-term lease arrangement. After "extensive public comment," the agenda item was pulled. A group of eleven petitioners, including former Rep. John Kowalko III and the Delaware Coalition for Open Government, then filed a FOIA petition.
Their petition raised three things. (1) The City had not publicly announced its intent to give a portion of the park to the school. (2) The minutes of "contract discussions" had been kept secret. (3) The park was being "sold in secrecy." They argued that City staff had been talking to the school for months without going through any public process.
The City's response, supported by the City Manager's affidavit, told a different story. The City Manager, Parks Director, and Deputy Parks Director had met three times with Newark Charter School. There were also phone calls and emails. But no contract was negotiated, no field layout was approved, and no City "public body" (i.e., the City Council itself or any committee of it) sat in those meetings. The matter went to City Council in executive session, after which Council scheduled it for a public meeting. The agenda for that public meeting was inaccurately worded ("Recommendation to Enter into an Agreement..."), and once the City realized the inaccuracy, it pulled the item and announced it would hold a public information session.
The Deputy AG concluded the City did not violate FOIA. Two of the three claims (about the capital budget process and what matters Council "must" approve) were outside FOIA's scope; FOIA reaches only the open-meetings and open-records statute, not municipal governance generally. The remaining claim (illegal private meetings) failed because:
- The City Manager is treated under prior AG opinions as a "body of one," and 29 Del. C. § 10004(h)(6) exempts public bodies of one from open-meetings requirements.
- A city manager consulting his own administrative staff does not lose that exemption.
- Three meetings between City staff and an outside group (Newark Charter School) did not create a new "public body" under the two-part test (was it created or authorized by the General Assembly or a public body, and is it publicly funded or charged with reporting). Neither prong was met.
The City had also publicly committed to a future public information session on the proposal.
What this means for you
If you sit on a Delaware city or town council
Your administrative staff (city manager, department heads, planners) can meet privately with outside parties to discuss a proposal before it ever comes to Council. That is not a public-body meeting. The line gets crossed when Council members or a committee of Council meet with the outside party, or when the staff group is formally tasked by Council with negotiating, advising, or reporting back. If a project is politically sensitive (parkland, school deals, infrastructure swaps), have your solicitor sketch out what tasking language to avoid, because the moment you charge a working group with "advising the Council," you may have created a public body subject to FOIA.
If you're a citizen watching a city decision unfold and you suspect a backroom deal
This opinion is honest about the limits of FOIA as a tool. Two things to know: (1) FOIA does not require a city to use any particular budget process, and decisions about what Council must approve are governed by the city charter and code, not FOIA; (2) staff conversations with outside groups can lawfully proceed in private, and your remedy if you don't like the result is to be at the public meeting when it finally happens. The petitioners here did show up, and they got the agenda item pulled and a public information session committed.
If you're representing a school, developer, or other outside party negotiating with a Delaware municipality
The opinion is a green light for early-stage informational meetings with city staff. It is not a green light for negotiating final terms in private and then "rubber-stamping" them at a public meeting. Watch for the moment a "discussion" transitions into a "deal" with terms; once you have terms in motion, expect the eventual public meeting to be substantive, with real public comment.
If you're a Delaware solicitor advising a town
Two practice tips out of this opinion. First, the agenda item that started this fire was inaccurately worded ("Recommendation to Enter into an Agreement..." when no agreement existed). Inaccurate agenda items invite FOIA petitions even when nothing illegal happened. Second, the City Manager's affidavit was the workhorse of the win. Make sure your FOIA Coordinator or City Manager swears to the meeting cadence and the participants by role; that level of detail is what defeats a "secret meeting" allegation.
Common questions
Q: What's a "body of one" and why does it not have open-meetings duties?
A: Section 10004(h)(6) of FOIA says open meetings rules do not apply to public bodies with only one member. The City Manager is either not a "public body" at all, or is a body of one, but either way is exempt. Prior DE AG opinions (e.g., 18-IB08) have applied this to the Newark City Manager specifically.
Q: Doesn't the City Manager become part of a "public body" when he meets with department heads?
A: No. Long-running DE AG and case law treat staff consultations as part of executive function, not as creating a new public body. See Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB08; 01-IB15.
Q: When does an informal group become a "public body" subject to FOIA?
A: Two-part test under 29 Del. C. § 10002(k): (1) was the entity established or authorized by the General Assembly, by a body the General Assembly established, or appointed by a public official or state governmental entity; AND (2) is it supported by public funds, expending public funds, or charged with reporting. Both must be true. Here, the school-staff group was none of those things.
Q: Can I FOIA the minutes of those staff/school meetings?
A: Internal staff meetings with outside parties are not "meetings of a public body" and so are not required to have minutes. Documents about them (memos, emails, notes) might be FOIA-able as records, subject to other exemptions. The petition here did not directly seek records, only a violation finding on the meetings.
Q: What about the executive session of City Council before the January 27 meeting?
A: The City flagged that Council met in executive session to decide that the Folk Memorial Park proposal "should be set for a public discussion." Executive sessions are allowed only for purposes listed in 29 Del. C. § 10004(b). The opinion does not analyze the executive session in depth, but the petition did not focus on it; if you wanted to challenge it, that would be a separate petition.
Q: Is the City required to hold a public information session?
A: FOIA does not require it. The City committed to one voluntarily. A future public meeting where Council acts on a final proposal would be subject to the agenda, notice, and public-comment rules; the information session is a separate, optional citizen-engagement step.
Citations
- 29 Del. C. § 10002(k), definition of public body and two-part test
- 29 Del. C. § 10004, open meetings framework
- 29 Del. C. § 10004(h)(6), public bodies of one are exempt
- 29 Del. C. § 10005(c), burden on public body
- 29 Del. C. § 10005(e): AG authority limited to FOIA violations
- Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Univ. of Del., 267 A.3d 996 (Del. 2021), affidavit standard
- Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB08 (Feb. 12, 2018), Newark City Manager treated as body of one; staff consultation does not lose exemption
- Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB28 (Jun. 1, 2018), two-part test for new public body
- Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 20-IB28 (Nov. 9, 2020), municipal-law issues outside AG FOIA jurisdiction
- Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 01-IB15 (Oct. 23, 2001), body-of-one staff consultation rule
Source
- Landing page: https://attorneygeneral.delaware.gov/2025/03/03/25-ib15-3-03-25-foia-opinion-letter-to-the-honorable-john-kowalko-iii-et-al-re-city-of-newark/
- Original PDF: https://attorneygeneral.delaware.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/50/2025/03/Attorney-General-Opinion-25-IB15.pdf
Original opinion text
PRINT VERSION: Attorney General Opinion 25-IB15
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
Attorney General Opinion No. 25-IB15
March 3, 2025
VIA EMAIL
The Honorable John Kowalko, III
Connie Merlet
Amy Roe
Caitlin Custer-Hufe
Barbara Ward
Laura Campbell
Sheila Lynch
Elizabeth Wickersham
Mike Ingram
Linda Gould
John Flaherty, Delaware Coalition for Open Government
RE: FOIA Petition Regarding the City of Newark
Dear Petitioners:
We write in response to your correspondence, alleging that the City of Newark violated Delaware's Freedom of Information Act, 29 Del. C. §§ 10001-10008 ("FOIA"). We treat this correspondence as a Petition for a determination pursuant to 29 Del. C. § 10005 of whether a violation of FOIA has occurred or is about to occur. As discussed more fully herein, we determine that the City did not violate FOIA's open meeting requirements by meeting with the Newark Charter School on the three identified occasions to discuss the Folk Memorial Park proposal. The remaining allegations are not FOIA claims that this Office is authorized to consider.
BACKGROUND
The City of Newark's Council scheduled a public meeting for January 27, 2025, where it planned to discuss the agenda item, "Recommendation to Enter into an Agreement with Newark Charter School for a Proposed Project at Folk Memorial Park." [1] The proposed project was to allow the Newark Charter School to construct baseball and softball fields on City parkland pursuant to a long-term agreement. This item was removed from the agenda and this discussion was delayed following "extensive public comment." [2] This Petition followed.
The Petition alleges that the City, through the actions of the City Manager and Mayor, violated FOIA in three ways: (1) by not publishing their intent to initiate a contract to convert a municipal park to a baseball field, (2) by keeping secret the minutes of their contract discussions and not allowing any public review or discussion of this major capital project, and (3) by selling a Newark Park in secrecy. You state that typically, major capital projects such as this conversion of a park, are part of a public process to develop a capital budget. You believe that secret discussions have been occurring for fifty years to give the Folk Memorial Park to the Newark Charter School Head without the consent or knowledge of City residents or City Council members. You allege that there has been no public notice or input into this matter, and you think that statements made by the Head of the Newark Charter School suggest a specific contract with the City is already in place.
The City, through its legal counsel, replied to the Petition and enclosed the affidavit of the City Manager ("Response"), who attests that the Response is true and correct to the best of his knowledge. The City denies violating FOIA, as there were no "secret negotiations" involving any City public body. [3] The City alleges that the Newark Charter School representatives, in late 2024, contacted the City Manager, Parks Director, and Deputy Parks Director about using one of three potential sites for their playing fields. In addition to a few phone calls and emails, the City asserts that these City employees had three meetings with Newark Charter School to learn about the Folk Memorial Park proposal, but a contract was not negotiated, nor was the field layout approved; rather, the Charter School provided a copy of another lease as a possible template and a list of terms important to the Charter School. The City alleges after these preliminary discussions, the matter went before City Council in executive session, where it was determined that this item should be set for a public discussion; the item then was scheduled for the January meeting with "the sole purpose being to ascertain if there was any interest in pursuing this concept any further." [4] However, the City states that the agenda item inaccurately suggested a vote on a contract would occur, and upon discovery of this mistake, the City removed the item from the agenda and announced at the January 27, 2025 meeting that a public information session would take place to allow public discussion of the proposal.
Based on these facts, the City argues that FOIA's open meeting requirements do not apply here, as only City employees engaged in discussions with the Newark Charter School, and prior to the January 27, 2025 meeting, no City public body held discussions about this matter with Newark Charter School representatives. Further, despite the inaccurate agenda item, the City states that "no contract has ever existed on this proposal." [5] Rather, the City submits that "FOIA does not prevent City employees from engaging in meetings with Newark residents that may have an idea they believe is for the betterment of the City" and "[t]hat is literally all that happened here." [6] Finding otherwise "would seriously jeopardize the governance of municipalities such as Newark." [7]
DISCUSSION
The public body carries the burden of proof to demonstrate compliance with the FOIA statute. [8] In certain circumstances, a sworn affidavit may be required to meet that burden. [9] Initially, we note that this Office's authority is limited to determining "whether a violation of [the FOIA statute] has occurred or is about to occur." [10] Two of the Petition's claims are not related to the FOIA statute, specifically the City's requirements to incorporate this project into the City's capital budget process and the City's determination of what matters are required to be discussed or approved by Council. This Office does not have the authority to address those claims in the Petition. [11]
The remaining claim is that the City improperly held private meetings to negotiate a contract with the Newark Charter School, without following the open meeting requirements of FOIA. FOIA mandates that public bodies meet specific requirements when holding public meetings, including advance notice, posting notices and agendas, an opportunity for public comment, and maintaining meeting minutes. [12] These open meeting requirements only apply to a "public body" as defined by the FOIA statute.
The City submitted its Response under oath and asserted that no City public body was involved in the three identified meetings with the Newark Charter School representatives. The City clarified that these meetings involved the City Manager, Parks Director, and Deputy Parks Director. The open meeting requirements of FOIA do not apply to the City Manager, [13] and consultation with his administrative staff does not transform those meetings into meetings of a public body. [14]
The final inquiry is whether the meetings between these two groups, the City employees and the Newark Charter School representatives, constituted the creation of a new public body. [15] To make this determination, a two-part analysis is required. [16] The first inquiry is whether the entity is a "regulatory, administrative, advisory, executive, appointive or legislative body of the State, or of any political subdivision of the State," which includes a ". . . committee, . . . advisory board and committee . . . association, group, panel, council, or any other entity or body established by an act of the General Assembly of the State, or established by any body established by the General Assembly of the State, or appointed by any body or public official of the State or otherwise empowered by any state governmental entity." [17] If the first part is met, we then must determine whether the entity is supported in whole or in part by any public funds, expends or disburses any public funds, or "is impliedly or specifically charged by any other public official, body, or agency to advise or to make reports, investigations or recommendations." [18]
In this case, this first prong is not met. There is no evidence in the parties' submissions that this group of City and Newark Charter School employees was "established by an act of the General Assembly of the State, or established by any body established by the General Assembly of the State, or appointed by any body or public official of the State or otherwise empowered by any state governmental entity." [19] Instead, this "gathering appears to be an informational gathering of two groups of employees whose actions are not otherwise subject to FOIA's open meetings provisions." [20]
Thus, we find that the City did not violate FOIA when the City Manager and his staff met with the Newark Charter School representatives on those three occasions to discuss the Folk Memorial Park proposal without following open meeting requirements. We note that the City Council has committed to allow public input on this Folk Memorial Park proposal at a future session. [21]
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the City did not violate FOIA's open meeting requirements by meeting with the Newark Charter School on the three identified occasions to discuss the Folk Memorial Park proposal. The remaining allegations are not FOIA claims that this Office is authorized to consider.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Dorey L. Cole
Dorey L. Cole
Deputy Attorney General
Approved:
/s/ Patricia A. Davis
Patricia A. Davis
State Solicitor
cc: Paul E. Bilodeau, City Solicitor
[1] Petition.
[2] Response.
[3] Id.
[4] Id.
[5] Id.
[6] Id.
[7] Id.
[8] 29 Del. C. § 10005(c).
[9] Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Univ. of Del. , 267 A.3d 996 (Del. 2021).
[10] 29 Del. C. § 10005(e).
[11] See Del. Op. Att'y Gen . 20-IB28, 2020 WL 7663557, at *2 (Nov. 9, 2020) ("These matters of municipal law, concerning the authority of the Council President or Mayor, are outside the scope of the FOIA statute, and thus, we make no determination regarding these issues.").
[12] 29 Del. C. § 10004.
[13] Either the City Manager is not considered a public body or is a public body of one, to which open meeting requirements do not apply. See 29 Del. C. § 10004(h)(6) ("[FOIA] shall not apply to the proceedings of . . . public bodies having only 1 member."); Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB08, 2018 WL 1061278, at *1 (Feb. 12, 2018) ("Pursuant to the City's Code of Ordinances, the City Manager [of Newark] is appointed by the City Council and acts as 'the chief administrative officer' of the City. Assuming, arguendo , that the City Manager is a public body, he is a 'body of one' to whom the open meetings provisions do not apply.").
[14] Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB08, 2018 WL 1061278, at 1 ("As we have previously noted, the exemption from FOIA's open meetings provisions is not lost if a body of one consults with his or her staff."); Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 01-IB15, 2001 WL 1593115, at 2 (Oct. 23, 2001) ("This statutory exemption is not lost if an executive official consults with his or her staff to obtain facts to make an informed executive decision.").
[15] The Petition does not present the allegation that the Newark Charter School representatives as a group constitute a separate public body that would trigger the open meeting requirements, nor do the submissions specify the Charter School's attendees of the meetings. That issue is therefore not addressed.
[16] Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB28, 2018 WL 2994706, at *1 (Jun. 1, 2018).
[17] 29 Del. C. § 10002(k).
[18] Id.
[19] Id.
[20] Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB08, 2018 WL 1061278, at *2.
[21] Response, Minutes of City Council, Jan. 27, 2025 Meeting ("While some may wish to speak on the matter of Folk Memorial Park, the decision was made yesterday to postpone that agenda item. A public information session will be held shortly, during which all proposal details will be shared, and residents will be allowed to participate.").