During its meeting, the board proposed adjourning into an executive session to discuss the employment history of a particular staff member. "Motion is to adjourn to executive session to discuss the employment history of a particular staff member," said the presiding officer (unnamed). The presiding officer asked, "Can I get a motion?" and identified Mr. Luminess as mover and Ms. Miggots as second.
Why it matters: Executive sessions are closed portions of public meetings used to consider certain personnel matters and limit public discussion; the motion here named the topic as the employment history of a particular staff member.
The presiding officer called for a vote: "All those in favor of going to executive session?" An unidentified board member then said, "I I will excuse to recuse myself in that session." The presiding officer said the board anticipated returning to public session to continue the agenda immediately afterward.
The transcript records the motion, the named mover and seconder, the vote being called, and a stated intention by one member to recuse, but it does not record the vote tally or whether the motion was formally adopted. No additional details about the staff member, the grounds for recusal, or any subsequent discussion were included in the excerpt provided.
The meeting's public portion was expected to resume after the executive session, according to the presiding officer's remark that the board would "return[] to public session to continue the agenda immediately following." The transcript excerpt contains no further agenda actions or outcomes related to this item.
For transparency, future minutes or a later public statement would typically note whether the board entered executive session and any formal votes taken; those details were not present in the supplied transcript excerpt.