The sole issue presented here is the extent to which the Michigan Department of Education may suppress decisions of the State Tenure Commission under exemption (l)(d) of § 13 of the Michigan Freedom of Information Act. MCL 15.243(l)(d); MSA 4.1801(13)(l)(d). We hold that tenure commission decisions may only be withheld during the administrative stage of a teacher’s appeal. After this point in the review process, the commission decisions may be released in their entirety. We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the circuit court order requiring defendants to release the requested decisions to plaintiffs.
i
On November 3, 1982, plaintiff George Hagen, superintendent of the Bedford School District, on behalf of plaintiffs Bedford Public Schools and Bedford Board of Education, made a Michigan Freedom of Information Act request to the director of the State Tenure Commission for a copy of a certain commission decision. Plaintiffs had a matter pending before the tenure commission, and they wanted to determine if the commission had rendered a decision which would affect it. Mr. Hagen did not indicate in his request whether a redacted version of the decision would be satisfactory. Defendant Phillip Runkel, Superintendent of Public Instruction, denied the request, reasoning that the teacher in the case had opted for a private hearing, that the commission decision was part of the private hearing, and that it did not have to be released until the teacher exhausted the appellate process.
*122Plaintiffs made a subsequent foia request on December 6, 1982, for copies of all tenure commission decisions issued in the previous year in which a closed hearing had been demanded. Counsel for the plaintiffs expressly stated in the request that if the commission was not going to release unredacted copies of the decisions, it would be satisfactory if identifiable information were struck from them. Runkel responded that in the previous twelve months the commission had issued eleven decisions in which a private hearing had been requested. He released three of those decisions in their entirety because the appellate processes had already been exhausted. Runkel denied plaintiffs’ request as to the remaining eight commission decisions because the appellate processes had not been exhausted.
Plaintiffs filed a complaint for declaratory judgment and writ of mandamus in the circuit court, naming Runkel, the Michigan Department of Education, and the State Board of Education as defendants. Plaintiffs sought release of the requested decisions either in their complete form, or with personally identifiable information deleted. Intervening plaintiff Michigan Education Association joined the litigation at that point.
On September 24, 1984, the circuit court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, and ordered defendants to release complete and unexpurgated copies of the documents sought by plaintiffs. The circuit court also granted a stay of its order pending defendants’ appeal, directing defendants to provide plaintiffs with copies of the requested decisions with proper nouns stricken.
The Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the circuit court, using reasoning similar to defendant Runkel’s. 154 Mich App 662; 398 NW2d 485 *123(1986). We granted leave to appeal, limited to the issue stated above. 428 Mich 909 (1987).
n
Plaintiffs made their requests for the tenure commission decisions pursuant to the Michigan Freedom of Information Act. MCL 15.231 et seq.; MSA 4.1801(1) et seq. The requests must therefore be granted or denied pursuant to that statute. The foia requires a public body to disclose all public records which are not specifically exempt from disclosure under the act:
Upon an oral or written request which describes the public record sufficiently to enable the public body to find the public record, a person has a right to inspect, copy, or receive copies of a public record of a public body, except as otherwise expressly provided by section 13. [MCL 15.233(1); MSA 4.1801(3X1).]
This Court has consistently recognized that the thrust of the foia is a policy of full and complete disclosure, as expressed in the act’s statement of public policy:
It is the public policy of this state that all persons are entitled to full and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts of those who represent them as public officials and public employees, consistent with this act. The people shall be informed so that they may fully participate in the democratic process. [MCL 15.231(2); MSA 4.1801(1X2).]
See, e.g., Kestenbaum v Michigan State Univ, 414 Mich 510, 521; 327 NW2d 783 (1982), reh den 417 Mich 1103 (1983); State Employees Ass’n v Dep’t of Management & Budget, 428 Mich 104, 109; 404 NW2d 606 (1987).
*124The foia "presumes records are disclosable,”1 and a public body may deny a request only upon a showing that the requested information falls within one of the exemptions in § 13 of the act. The exemptions must be narrowly construed. State Employees Ass’n, supra, p 110.
The State Tenure Commission, as part of the Michigan Department of Education, is a public body subject to the disclosure requirements of the foia. MCL 15.232(b)(i); MSA 4.1801(2)(b)(i). The tenure act itself acknowledges that the tenure commission is bound by the requirements of the foia:
A writing prepared, owned, used in the possession of, or retained by the commission in the performance of an official function shall be made available to the public in compliance with Act No. 442 of the Public Acts of 1976, being sections 15.231 to 15.246 of the Michigan Compiled Laws. [MCL 38.139(2); MSA 15.2039(2).]
Further, there is no dispute that the tenure commission’s written decisions are public records as defined in the foia. MCL 15.232(c); MSA 4.1801(2)(c).
Defendant Runkel denied both of plaintiffs’ requests on the basis of exception (l)(d) of § 13 of the foia, which allows nondisclosure of public records which another statute specifically exempts from disclosure.2_
*125A public body may exempt from disclosure as a public record under this act:
(d) Records or information specifically described and exempted from disclosure by statute. [MCL 15.243(l)(d); MSA 4.1801(13)(l)(d).]
The statute which Runkel claimed exempted the tenure commission decisions from disclosure is art IV, § 4 of the teacher tenure act, which permits a teacher facing discharge or demotion to opt for a private, rather than a public, hearing before the local board of education. The relevant portions of § 4 provide:
a. The hearing shall be public or private at the option of the teacher affected.
f. Any hearing held for the dismissal or demotion of a teacher, as provided in this act, must be concluded by a decision in writing, within 15 days after the termination of the hearing. A copy of such decision shall be furnished the teacher affected within 5 days after the decision is rendered. [MCL 38.104; MSA 15.2004.]
Article IV, § 4, while referring to a local school board’s initial review, also applies to a subsequent review by the State Tenure Commission, pursuant to art VI, § 1 of the tenure act. MCL 38.121; MSA 15.2021.
Defendants and the Court of Appeals interpreted "hearing” as used in § 4(f) as encompassing the written decision, because the hearing must be "concluded by” the decision. According to that interpretation, a decision rendered following a private hearing is part of that hearing and is also private, pursuant to art IV, § 4 of the tenure act. That provision, in turn, qualifies it as a statutory *126exemption from disclosure for purposes of the foia. The Court of Appeals thus held:
If article IV, § 4, of the tenure act is to be interpreted as including within the meaning of the word "hearing” the rendering of a decision with the right to a private hearing, then the decision as a whole, and not just the personal identifying information in the decision, must be found to be exempt from disclosure. Consequently, no part of the decision of the commission, where a private hearing has been requested and the appellate process has not yet been exhausted, is subject to disclosure under the foia. [154 Mich App 673.]
Plaintiffs contend that the defendants and the Court of Appeals have misconstrued the plain meaning of art IV, § 4. Plaintiffs assert that while a hearing before the tenure commission may be private, the decision rendered after a private hearing is not part of it, and hence is not exempt from disclosure under the foia.
We find it unnecessary to answer the narrow question whether, in art IV, § 4(f), the Legislature intended to incorporate "decision” within the term "hearing.” The correct reading of § 4(f) is not dispositive of the present issue. Rather, the spirit of art IV, § 4, to provide teachers with the option of a private hearing, can only be maintained by keeping the decisions private also. Thus, on the basis of art IV, § 4, when a private hearing has been requested, the decisions of the local board and the tenure commission are exempt from disclosure under the statutory exemption in the foia.
Such exemption, however, allows nondisclosure only to the extent that a private hearing is statutorily provided for. Under art IV, § 4 of the tenure act, a teacher is entitled to a private hearing only *127before the local board of education and, pursuant to art VI, § 1, before the State Tenure Commission. There is no assertion, for example, that a teacher who exercises the right to circuit court review of a commission decision3 has a statutory right to a closed proceeding at the circuit court level. Nor is there a suggestion that such a right exists if further review is granted by the Court of Appeals or this Court. The statutory right to a private hearing in tenure proceedings exists only at the administrative level. Therefore, beyond this phase of the review process, there is no basis under the statutory exemption in the foia for withholding a tenure commission decision, and a request for disclosure of a decision must be honored.4 This holding applies to any commission decision, regardless of whether the teacher seeks judicial review of the commission ruling. Further, absent an exception to justify nondisclosure, the commission decisions are subject to "full and complete” disclosure under the foia. Hence, the circuit court in the present case properly ordered the release of unexpurgated copies of the decisions.
Finally, defendants’ reliance on the foia to support the withholding of tenure commission decisions which are under judicial review is improper. The foia excludes the judiciary from the act’s definition of a "public body.” MCL 15.232(b)(v); MSA 4.1801(2)(b)(v)._
*128III
Defendant Runkel and the Court of Appeals relied on Royal Oak School Dist v Schulman, 68 Mich App 589; 243 NW2d 673 (1976), in finding that tenure commission decisions following a private hearing must be withheld throughout the administrative and judicial appeal process. In Schulman, the appellant tenured teacher, facing charges of unsatisfactory performance, exercised his right under the teacher tenure act and requested a private hearing before the appellee’s school board. After the hearing, the board issued a decision dismissing the teacher. He appealed to the State Tenure Commission, alleging that the board erroneously failed to render its decision at a public meeting, as required under § 561 of the School Code of 1955, MCL 340.561; MSA 15.3561.5 The tenure commission agreed that the decision did not satisfy the public notice requirements, but the circuit court reversed, finding that once the teacher elected a private hearing, that hearing encompassed the decision also, and it did not have to be rendered publicly. The Court of Appeals affirmed:
We hold that where a teacher elects a private hearing the board of education’s decision to dismiss or demote may be kept private until the teacher has exhausted the appellate processes. [68 Mich App 593.]
We find Schulman’s novel interpretation of art IV, § 4 unpersuasive for the reasons discussed in *129section ii. In addition, there are several differences between Schulman and the present case which undermine Schulman’s relevance.
The Schulman plaintiff alleged error under the public board meetings act (repealed and replaced by the Open Meetings Act). Plaintiffs here allege error under the foia. The motive behind each plaintiff’s case is different. Plaintiffs in the present case sought copies of decisions of the Teacher Tenure Commission. The plaintiff in Schulman was not concerned with obtaining a decision, but instead wanted to somehow attack the decision rendered. He did so by claiming it should have been released at a public meeting. Thus, the focus of the Court of Appeals analysis in each case was different.6
Significantly, Schulman predates the April, 1977, effective date of Michigan’s foia. After the foia was enacted, the teacher tenure act was amended to include MCL 38.139(2); MSA 15.2039(2), which states that the tenure commission is subject to the disclosure requirements of the foia. It is unlikely the Schulman panel would have reached the same result in light of the foia, and the tenure act’s statutory acknowledgment of it.
Other than the present Court of Appeals opinion, Schulman is the only Michigan case which deals with the present issue. An Attorney General opinion also addressed a similar question, however. In 1 PAG, 1959-1960, No 3296, p 177 (September 1, *1301959), the Attorney General framed the issue as follows:
When a teacher requests a private hearing under the Tenure of Teachers Act, what matters, if any, of the proceedings taken before either the school board or tenure commission can be revealed as public information?
The statement of the issue readily indicates that the case only involved part of the present issue: the extent of privacy at the administrative level, i.e., before the local school board and the tenure commission. The case did not pose the additional question presented here: whether the tenure commission decision in a private hearing remains confidential in the judicial stage of the appeal process.
The Attorney General’s resolution of the more narrow question it addressed does not contradict the present holding:
[I]t is clear that the legislature itself has continued the protection through the appeal process to include the hearing before the tenure commission, at the election of the teacher. It follows that if the teacher elects to have a private hearing on appeal, both procedures are in that event protected by the statute.
Summing up, then, a private hearing remains private throughout the hearing and decision process, until a final decision is reached. The text of the decision becomes public when the decision becomes final, and no appeal lies. [Id., pp 178-179.]
When read in isolation, the last sentence of the above quotation seems to support defendants’ argument that the decision should remain confidential *131throughout the judicial review process also. However, considered in the context of the entire quotation and the analysis which precedes it, it is clear that the Attorney General was not even addressing that broader question. When he referred to the "final decision,” he was referring to the decision of the tenure commission, which he had previously discussed.
We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the circuit court order granting summary judgment for plaintiffs. The order’s requirement that defendants fully disclose the requested decisions is limited, for the reasons previously stated, to those final decisions of the tenure commission in which the appeal period of the Administrative Procedures Act has run.
Riley, C.J., and Archer and Griffin, JJ., concurred with Cavanagh, J.UPGWA v Dep’t of State Police, 422 Mich 432, 441; 373 NW2d 713 (1985) (opinion by Levin, J.).
In his denial of plaintiffs’ first request, defendant Runkel also mentioned the privacy exemption of the foia as a basis for nondisclosure. MCL 15.243(l)(a); MSA 4.1801(13)(l)(a). Defendants abandoned this defense in circuit court, and the Court of Appeals based its decision solely on exemption (l)(d) without discussing the privacy exemption.
Nestell v Bridgeport-Spaulding Bd of Ed, 138 Mich App 401, 404; 360 NW2d 200 (1984), clarified that judicial review of a tenure commission decision is properly sought under MCL 24.302; MSA 3.560(202), since the teacher tenure act does not specifically provide for judicial review.
Specifically, a tenure commission decision following a private hearing is subject to disclosure after the expiration of the sixty-day limit established for filing a motion for rehearing before the commission. 1979 AC, R 38.158. Of course, if rehearing is granted, the administrative process is not complete and the decision is not yet subject to disclosure.
The School Code of 1955 has been replaced by the School Code of 1976, which contains a parallel "public meetings” section. MCL 380.1201; MSA 15.41201. Likewise, the public board meetings act, MCL 15.251 et seq.; MSA 4.1800(1) et seq., which governed the boards’ notice requirements for such meetings, was replaced in 1977 by the Open Meetings Act. MCL 15.261 et seq.; MSA 4.1800(11) et seq.
In fact, the Schulman Court may have used the wrong analysis in addressing the plaintiff’s claim. The Court accepted the plaintiff’s premise that the decision, which is required to be in writing, would normally have to be rendered at a public meeting. Since the plaintiff had opted for a private hearing, however, the Court deemed the requirement inapplicable. Instead, the logical approach would seem to have been to hold that the requirement of an open meeting does not apply to the release of a written decision, whether the teacher chose a public or private hearing.