At the start of the Feb. 4 Wilmington Planning Commission meeting, commissioners debated a proposed change to the minutes format that would shift from a detailed narrative to a summarized record.
Commissioner Pollack said the draft minutes "look like a presentation outline" and that they do not constitute an accurate memorial of the meeting. Miss Painter, representing planning staff, said the department is shifting to a more summarized format to reduce the risk of unconscious bias in a lengthy narrative record and pointed commissioners to online video archives for verbatim review. "We also have videos which show the full discussion," Painter said, noting the videos are accessible with an item-specific link.
The commission's legal advisor clarified the governing guidance, saying, in response to a question, that minutes are intended to record what actions were taken at a meeting rather than provide a verbatim transcript: "Minutes are a record of what is done at a meeting, not a record of what was said." The commission then moved to approve the minutes as presented and completed a roll-call vote.
Commissioners noted tension between transparency for downstream bodies (such as City Council) and the administrative burden and potential bias of long-form minutes. Several members suggested a middle path or added assurances about when fuller narrative context would be provided to council or the public. The planning department said the attorney is reviewing the policy and that videos remain available for anyone seeking verbatim remarks.
The debate highlights an operational change in how planning records will be kept and how the public and elected officials will access the full record of deliberations.