Beth Harwell

16 Jan, 2019

House makes it easier for public to see bill amendments earlier

By |2019-01-16T09:49:35-06:00January 16, 2019|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , |0 Comments

In what may seem like a small tweak, the Tennessee House of Representatives has added a new feature to the bill tracking process online that will add a great deal more public transparency into amendments earlier. Tennessee House Speaker Glen Casada said that amendments that are added in a House subcommittee will now go directly online so that the public can see them instead of waiting until the amendment passes a full committee. Amendments adopted in House subcommittees will now be accessible through the subcommittee's webpage. Previously, those amendments did not go on the website until after the full standing committee had voted to adopt the amendment. Previously, bill amendments [...]

30 Jan, 2018

538 public records exemptions in Tennessee law

By |2019-09-11T19:02:12-05:00January 30, 2018|Categories: exemptions, Legislature|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

By JONATHAN MATTISE Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A report has found that there are now 538 exemptions to Tennessee's public records law, about six times as many as there were three decades ago. According to the state comptroller's office, the Tennessee Public Records Act only had two statutory exceptions when it was enacted in 1957. By 1988, a legislative committee reported there were 89 exceptions. In its report released Tuesday, the comptroller's Office of Open Records Counsel found that number has grown to include hundreds of exceptions in Tennessee Code. "I will tell you, they are hodgepodge all over the Tennessee Code Annotated," Jason Mumpower, comptroller's office chief of [...]

26 Jan, 2018

Senate committee to hear report on public records exemptions

By |2018-01-26T16:30:40-06:00January 26, 2018|Categories: exemptions, Office of Open Records Counsel|Tags: , , |1 Comment

The Senate State and Local Government Committee is scheduled to hear a report on exemptions to the Public Records Act on Tuesday. The House State Government Committee is also scheduled to hear the report at its Tuesday meeting. Lt. Gov Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge Last year, Lt. Gov. Randy McNally (R-Oak Ridge) and House Speaker Beth Harwell (R-Nashville) asked the state's Office of Open Records Counsel to conduct a comprehensive review of exemptions and produce a detailed list. "In the interest of transparent and open government, we would like to review this list in order to remove or place in sunset at least some of the various exemptions," [...]

17 Mar, 2017

McNally, Harwell seek review of Tennessee open records exemptions

By |2017-03-17T12:39:23-05:00March 17, 2017|Categories: exemptions, Legislature, Office of Open Records Counsel|Tags: , , , , |2 Comments

The speakers of the House and Senate have asked the Office of Open Records Counsel for a "thorough and comprehensive review" of the various exemptions to the Tennessee Public Records Act, reports Joel Ebert in a story in The Tennessean. Letter from McNally and Harwell asking for a thorough review of the exemptions to the Public Records Act. "We ask that a detailed list of current exemptions in the Tennessee Code Annotated be compiled as soon as possible," says the letter from State Sen. Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, and State Rep. Beth Harwell, R-Nashville, to Open Records Counsel Ann Butterworth. "In the interest of transparent and open government, [...]

27 Feb, 2017

Weekly notice of House pre-meetings will help the public

By |2017-02-27T16:26:38-06:00February 27, 2017|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , , |0 Comments

The schedule for Tennessee House pre-meetings will now be announced weekly on the General Assembly's website, as well as posted on hallway bulletin boards at Legislative Plaza -- a significant move that will allow the public and journalists to know when and where the meetings occur if they want to attend. Posted notice of pre-meetings, Bill Review, at Legislative Plaza Pre-meetings, also called Committee Bill Review, are held in lawmaker conference rooms, which do not have equipment for live-streaming.  Though more informal than regular committee and subcommittee meetings, which are live-streamed and recorded, lawmakers, lobbyists and other government officials can discuss significant information about proposed legislation in the pre-meetings. [...]

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