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.
1 Mar, 2021

Bill would make confidential police video, contact info of those arrested and detained

By |2021-03-01T13:21:56-06:00March 1, 2021|Categories: crime records, Legislature|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Proposed legislation by state Rep. Glen Casada and state Sen. Jack Johnson would make confidential police video of someone arrested or detained and not subject to the public records law. The bill also would close contact information of those arrested, including the home address and phone number. HB 910 is scheduled to heard by the House Public Service Subcommittee at its Wednesday meeting, which starts at 9 a.m. The bill would add an exemption to the public records act that says: (1) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, personal identifying information compiled by and in the possession of municipal and county law enforcement agencies and detention facilities concerning any [...]

26 Feb, 2021

Lawmakers scheduled to hear proposed exception to the Open Meetings Act, public records bills next week

By |2021-02-26T15:27:02-06:00February 26, 2021|Categories: Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|0 Comments

With the General Assembly in full swing, several bills affecting government transparency are scheduled for hearings in subcommittees and committees next week. Although some lawmakers may be planning to introduce amendments to these bills, as of this writing amendments for next week's bills were not yet posted to the Amendment Packet page of the website that lists House amendments. (The Senate does not post amendments until after they've been adopted in committee.) The legislation with probably the widest impact is a proposal to allow county commissioners to participate in meetings electronically, such as by calling in on a phone to a meeting that is otherwise being held in person. That [...]

14 Feb, 2021

New ‘proprietary’ exemption would shield data about state insurance plan

By |2021-02-14T20:07:48-06:00February 14, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Public Records|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

A proposed public records exemption would make confidential "all proprietary information" received by the state from its health insurance contractors, including but not limited to information or data about reimbursement rates paid through the state's self-funded employee health plan. Access to information showing the disparities in payments to health care providers for the same services became an issue in 2019 when then-state Rep. Martin Daniel of Knoxville sought to get data to see if the state was reaping savings it should. After Daniel sought the information, the three large health care companies who contract with the state to administer the state’s employee health care plan — BlueCross Blue Shield of [...]

14 Feb, 2021

Bills would allow more governing bodies to meet electronically outside of Open Meetings Act rules

By |2021-02-16T12:10:48-06:00February 14, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , |3 Comments

Several bills seek to waive electronic participation rules for governing bodies so that public officials can attend more freely by phone instead of in person Permission for governing bodies to meet electronically during the COVID-19 epidemic has whet the appetite of some government officials to change the law permanently. Lawmakers have filed several bills that would give various types of governing bodies more exceptions to meet electronically — either allowing an entire governing body to meet by conference call or video conference or allowing certain members of a governing body to patch into a physical meeting by phone or video. Only one of the bills requires that meetings held electronically [...]

12 Feb, 2021

House subcommittee to consider expanding confidentiality of college president searches

By |2021-02-14T18:31:49-06:00February 12, 2021|Categories: Legislature, state records|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

A House subcommittee is scheduled on Tuesday to consider a bill that would expand the confidentiality around applicants for the chief executive positions at state colleges. State Rep. Mark White is sponsoring a bill to expand the confidentiality related to filling top positions of president and chancellor at all state colleges. HB 473, sponsored by state Rep. Mark White, R-Memphis, would allow a search committee to keep confidential the identity of applicants for the president or chancellor positions at all state colleges except for the finalist or finalists selected. The bill would allow a search committee to reveal only the single finalist they select, although the committee [...]

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