The San Leandro City Council on Monday approved a directive to begin audio and video recordings of closed‑session meetings for the purpose of preparing a minute book. Council Member Simon said the primary purpose was to "improve the accuracy and validity of internal investigations" and to have a definitive record of what was said in closed session.
City Attorney guidance emphasized legal constraints and protections under the Brown Act. The attorney explained that the minute book and any recording used to create it are confidential: "The minute book shall be available only to members of the city council, or if a violation of the Brown Act is alleged to have occurred at a closed session, then to the court of general jurisdiction." The attorney also advised that recordings could become discoverable in limited litigation settings and that those discovery risks should be weighed in drafting retention and access protocols.
IT staff described potential storage options (the city's Microsoft 365 government cloud) and noted some additional security configuration or outside retention could add cost. Council members raised a mix of support (arguing recordings would clarify disputes and help investigators) and concern (risk of discoverability in litigation, storage security, and whether an investigator who is not a council member could be given direct access to recordings without a separate vote). Council asked staff and the city attorney to return with a formal resolution specifying retention, access, and security procedures.