Showing posts with label Open Government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open Government. Show all posts

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Who is in charge here?

One day, [Frank] Gibson [currently with Tennessee Commission on Open Government] said, two newspaper reporters refused to leave when the Legislature was discussing the regulation of lobbyists.

The chairman tried to find a sergeant at arms to remove the two reporters, but was unable. The committee adjourned, and the following day, the Senate banned The Tennessean from reporting on the floor. It instead had to cover the legislature from the gallery.

The Tennessean sued in federal court, which ruled that the Senate’s ban on the newspaper was unconstitutional.

A public meetings law followed soon after in February 1972. Chattanooga Pulse

Let's hope that sort of action isn't required again. The difference between now and then--streaming video, You Tube, cell phones (with cameras), BlueTooth and WiFi and plenty of laptops (not to mention old fashioned pens and pencils) are at the ready. It's not just a couple of print reporters anymore. The Tennessean may buy ink by the barrel but Blogspot gives pixels away for free.

Gentlemen, we don't want to go there. Do the right thing.

See Regressive Government post.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Regressive politics

Open meetings are essential to our republic. Allowing and encouraging discussions to go back to the cloakroom is not progress. Our new Vice Mayor, touted as the progressives candidate, is discouraging discussion during council meetings telling councilmen they should have asked those questions during committee meetings. That may make for shorter meetings but it's also less sunlight.

From the Memphis Commercial Appeal:

"Frank deliberation is very hard to do in public. We elect public officials to represent us," said Nashville lawyer Ogden Stokes, a former Tennessee Municipal League official and a public member of the legislative committee.

He's right if you define hard as requiring:

  • prior preparation about the subject on the agenda,
  • being willing to ask a question or two during hearings that are illuminating but could make someone (as Phil Valentine says) 'uncomfortable',
  • a backbone which enables you to stand your ground for your constituents,
  • the ability to be willing to listen to opposing opinions with an open mind and, if necessary, publicly state you've changed your mind and why.

"When this law was passed, it was aimed at preventing the old pre-meetings. When it passed, we (TML) thought it applied to quorums."

Oops. Now you know. What you 'think' matters less than what the law says. It's amazing how often law writers write badly worded laws.

The TML, Tennessee School Boards Association, the association of county governments and others have presented wish lists for new exemptions to the meetings and records laws -- including closed school board meetings on job performance of the schools superintendent and other "sensitive issues."
To include our own Metro Nashville School Board. There may be some issues that are very sensitive (such as the testimony of a young child about abuse) but usually these sensitive issues are more about not having a record that can referred to later when election time or contract negotiations come around.

The legislative panel also recommended personal fines of up to $1,000 or half of the monthly salary, whichever is less, for officials who violate the law. Current law contains no such penalties.

Shouldn't this be whichever is greater instead?
You have a few people like (state Rep.) Ulysses Jones [D-Memphis] who is leading the charge to weaken these laws but you also have a lot of legislators who are being silent when they should be standing up and representing the people who elected them," [Volunteer leader of Tennessee Tax Revolt Ben] Cunningham said.
Cunningham is exactly right. Silence is complicity. They've only got themselves to blame. Legislators didn't clean up their own house and so now they have the uncomfortable task of having to deal with others as the cleaning is done for them.