The Gazette: The Colorado Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday concerning Woodland Park RE-2 Board of Education’s efforts to “cure” an open-meetings violation in 2022 on Tuesday.
A parent of district students who filed the complaint is asking the court to reject a judicially created “cure” doctrine and rule that the district should pay the parent’s attorney’s fees since it was ultimately found to have violated state open meeting law.
The school district’s attorney, Bryce Carlson, argued that the district operated within legal boundaries since corrective actions had already been taken.
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