tennessee

About Deborah Fisher

Deborah Fisher has been executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government since 2013. Previously she spent 25 years in the news industry as a journalist.
18 May, 2021

Knox County Commission mulls changes to public notices

By |2021-06-22T16:32:04-05:00May 18, 2021|Categories: adequate public notice|Tags: , , , , , , |0 Comments

The Knox County Commission is proposing an ordinance that would create a new central repository on its website for all public and legal notices required by law, with the idea that it might be able to eliminate the expense of buying ads in local newspapers to publicize items like upcoming meetings, tax-delinquent sales and government bid opportunities. [...]

14 May, 2021

Local government boards resume in-person meetings but they don’t necessarily look like before

By |2021-05-14T17:41:05-05:00May 14, 2021|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

This month, local governing bodies across the state resumed in-person meetings after 58 weeks under a governor's executive order allowing electronic meetings. The order, which had lifted requirements of state law so that governing bodies could meet electronically due to COVID-19, expired on April 28 without renewal by Gov. Bill Lee. In a spot check of governing bodies, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government found that some resumed physical meetings just as before the pandemic. Others resumed physical meetings but continued citizen-friendly measures that they were not doing before the pandemic — such as livestreaming more meetings and posting the video to YouTube. Some resumed meeting in their regular meeting rooms [...]

13 May, 2021

General Assembly ends session with no expansion of electronic meetings

By |2021-05-14T12:28:53-05:00May 13, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: |0 Comments

Although lawmakers introduced several bills in the Tennessee Legislature this year to expand the ability of governing bodies to conduct electronic meetings without members having to be there in person, none passed. Of the nine bills tracked by TCOG, six failed or stalled. The other three were modified to keep the status quo on electronic participation and not expand it. The Open Meetings Act already allows members of state boards to participate in meetings electronically under certain conditions and rules. These rules are found in Section 108 of the Open Meetings Act. Members of school boards are also allowed to participate in meetings electronically within certain limits. Bill would have [...]

15 Apr, 2021

Body cam footage from officer-involved shooting inside a Knoxville school may be confidential for a long while

By |2021-04-15T16:35:22-05:00April 15, 2021|Categories: crime records|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Police body camera footage from a shooting that left a 17-year-old dead inside a Knox County high school is likely to be kept confidential for a while, and it's possible some of it may be confidential forever based on state laws protecting juveniles and mandating confidentiality of some types of body camera footage. Anthony J. Thompson Jr., 17, was killed in the shooting. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has said that police were responding to reports of a student in the school possibly armed with a gun. A school resource officer was shot and injured, but it was from a bullet from a police weapon, the TBI has said. Knoxville [...]

15 Apr, 2021

Senate eases toward allowing electronic meetings post-pandemic with key committee vote last night

By |2021-04-15T13:01:16-05:00April 15, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , |0 Comments

When citizens go to a public meeting of their local board of aldermen or county commission, they expect their representatives to be there. Sen. Richard Brigg, R-Knoxville They expect their representatives to discuss issues in public and vote in public. They expect to look them in the eye when they address them during public comment periods and public hearings. They hope to be able to talk to their representatives before and after a meeting, and many do. But a bill that passed a key Senate committee in a 5-4 vote last night would chip away at that tradition. SB301 would allow members of county and municipal governing bodies, [...]

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