Legislature

20 Dec, 2016

House Republican caucus meetings to be open unless it’s “family discussion”, chairman says

By |2016-12-20T11:45:57-06:00December 20, 2016|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , , |1 Comment

House Republican Caucus Chairman Ryan Williams told the Capitol Hill press corps last week that caucus meetings would be presumed to be open while the legislature is in session, according to a report in The Tennessean. However, he said, if a member wanted to have a "family discussion," the caucus would take a vote on closing the meeting. State Rep. Ryan Williams The meeting with the press corps came after the House caucus, departing from tradition, held a closed door session in early December to discuss the state budget surplus and the fires in Sevier County. The press corps asked to discuss what appeared to be a new [...]

9 Dec, 2016

Capitol Press Corps asks to discuss closed meetings of Republican caucus

By |2016-12-09T17:59:51-06:00December 9, 2016|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

The Capitol Press Corp has requested to meet with the House's Republican Caucus Chair, Ryan Williams, R-Cookeville, to discuss an apparent change in policy where journalists are no longer allowed to cover caucus meetings. Chas Sisk, chairman of the Capitol Press Corps “Past practice — especially since Republicans gained supermajority status — has been that the meetings are open unless closed by caucus vote. If that is to change, we think it’s important for both sides to understand the rules of the road going forward,” wrote Chas Sisk, news reporter for WPLN and chairman of the Tennessee Capitol Press Corps, in a letter to Williams. “…Our fundamental concern is [...]

7 Sep, 2016

Advisory Committee on Open Government aims for body camera study, public hearings

By |2016-10-10T14:27:47-05:00September 7, 2016|Categories: crime records, Legislature, Office of Open Records Counsel|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

The Advisory Committee on Open Government (ACOG) took the first steps toward a police body camera study last week, discussing ideas for public hearings around the state and how it would develop broad input and conversation. State Rep. Bob Ramsey, R-Maryville, and Chair of House State Government Committee The 14-member group, which is appointed by the Comptroller's Office, represents a wide range of media, government and citizen organizations and is authorized by law to provide written comment on proposed legislation regarding open records and meetings. The House State Government Committee, chaired by state Rep. Bob Ramsey, R-Maryville, asked the open government committee to study the body cam issue after [...]

13 Jul, 2016

Jeremy Durham investigation committee banks on the power of transparency

By |2019-09-11T18:56:44-05:00July 13, 2016|Categories: Legislature, Public Records|Tags: , |0 Comments

The special House committee investigating allegations of sexual harassment by state House Rep. Jeremy Durham, R-Franklin, did the right thing today in releasing its findings. The investigative report, which the committee posted online, is the outcome of a months-long investigation by Attorney General Herbert Slatery at the request of the committee.  It included 78 interviews, 22 of them with women who described encounters with Durham. Durham's attorney tried to get an injunction to stop the release of the report, but Davidson County Chancellor Russell Perkins said it was in the public's interest for the report to be released and denied the request. The media rushes to pick up copies of [...]

28 Apr, 2016

So what ever happened to the fees to inspect bill?

By |2022-02-11T09:31:45-06:00April 28, 2016|Categories: fees, Legislature|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Last year at this time, open government advocates in the state had successfully convinced lawmakers to delay action on an ill-conceived proposal to allow government to charge fees to inspect public records. Already, the law allows charging citizens fees to get copies of records and the rules have led to out-of-control labor costs with few limits or recourse for citizens and journalists. The free inspection option is the law's safety valve, and the last protection for a citizen or journalist who can't afford the prices and the fights with government officials over costs. The sponsors of the legislation, who were carrying it at the request of the Tennessee School Boards [...]

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