- All records and meetings of Louisiana public entities are public, unless specifically exempted in law.
- When there is a question about whether a record or meeting should be open to the public, the law should be interpreted in favor of openness.
- A public meeting is a convening of a majority of a public body to deliberate, act or receive information on a matter over which the body has supervision, control, jurisdiction or advisory power.
- A public body may meet behind closed doors in “executive session” only for reasons specified in law. Two-thirds of the members present must vote to go into executive session.
- Public bodies must establish an annual calendar of regular meetings at the beginning of the year. At least 24 hours before any type of meeting including regular, special or rescheduled – the date, time, location and agenda must be posted.
- Each public agency has a “custodian” in control of the agency’s records who receives and processes public record requests.
- A citizen may examine records at no charge.
- A public agency may set reasonable fees for copies of records. State agency rates are set by the Commissioner of Administration. Otherwise, the law does not define what “reasonable rates” are, although courts have ruled some costs charged by public agencies were excessive.
- The custodian must provide a written response to public records requests within five days. If the record is immediately available, it should be provided immediately to the requestor.
- A person who has not received the public record requested or a written response within five days may begin legal proceedings in the district court where the custodian is located.
Top 10 Things to Know About Louisiana’s Sunshine Laws
Latest Publications
-
05.20.2026
Congressional Election Dates Set
- Elections
- Redistricting
The election for Louisiana’s six U.S. House seats, postponed amid the chaotic fallout from the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that declared the congressional map unconstitutional, has been rescheduled for the fall. Voters will cast ballots for the races in the Nov. 3 election.
-
05.18.2026
Voting on Louisiana Proposed Constitutional Amendments 1978-2026
- Louisiana Constitution
Voting on Louisiana Proposed Constitutional Amendments 1978-2026 May 16, 2026 1.) Job Creation Outside the Civil Service System. A vote for would allow lawmakers to remove state government jobs from the civil service system and its protections without needing approval from the Civil Service Commission. A vote against would Retain the current provisions requiring Civil […]
-
05.18.2026
Complete Listing of Proposed and Adopted Amendments to Louisiana’s 1974 Constitution
- Louisiana Constitution
Article Election Ballot # Amendment Pass or Fail Article I: Declaration of Rights I 11/08/22 7 Limits on Involuntary Servitude Fail I 12/10/22 1 Prohibit Voting for People Who Aren’t U.S. Citizens Pass I 11/03/20 1 No Right to Abortion Pass I 11/06/18 1 Felon in Public Office Pass I 11/06/18 2 Unanimous Jury […]
