Legislature

19 Oct, 2015

Police, ACLU, open government advocates talk body cam footage

By |2015-10-20T08:44:57-05:00October 19, 2015|Categories: crime records, Legislature|Tags: , , , , |1 Comment

Representatives from police, the ACLU, the Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, the Tennessee Press Association  and one of the largest vendors of body cams offered thoughts today to the state Senate Judiciary Committee on the use of body cameras to record interactions between law enforcement and citizens. Several police departments are moving forward with plans to equip their officers with body cameras, raising issues of how the cameras will be used, how long video will be retained and what is releasable under the state's public records laws. See video: Hearing on body camera footage before the Tennessee State Senate Judiciary Committee (Body cameras start at 2:45) The Knox County Sheriff's Office, [...]

12 Oct, 2015

TN Senate Judiciary hearing to include body camera legislation

By |2015-10-13T07:09:17-05:00October 12, 2015|Categories: crime records, Legislature|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

The Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled a hearing at 10 a.m Monday, Oct. 19, to discuss several criminal justice issues, including the use of body-worn cameras by law enforcement. Many law enforcement agencies across the country are moving toward the use of body cameras as a way to improve policing and accountability after a series of high-profile incidents in which police were perceived to have used excessive force in dealing with suspects. Also, the federal government has begun to fund body-worn cameras at the local level through federal grants. But the use of body cams has raised several questions concerning disclosure of video under public records laws, citizen privacy, the cost of storage and redaction, [...]

28 Apr, 2015

Lawmakers tweak public records law, but avoid new fees for now

By |2015-09-25T17:03:32-05:00April 28, 2015|Categories: fees, Legislature|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |1 Comment

Sponsors delayed action on legislation that could have made accessing public records more expensive for citizens and news media, but lawmakers in the 109th General Assembly moved ahead on other changes to the state's public records law. A new exemption was added to make performance evaluations of more state employees confidential. Another was added to make sure student academic and health information remained private. And yet another reinforced already existing exemptions to protect credit card numbers and email addresses of citizens held by government. The most far-reaching public records bill was one that never made it to committee for discussion —  a proposal to impose new fees on citizens who asked to inspect public [...]

24 Apr, 2015

Knoxville Mercury: Tennessee’s Open-Government Laws Are Outdated and in Danger of Being Undermined

By |2015-04-24T10:19:50-05:00April 24, 2015|Categories: fees, Legislature|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Good piece of reporting by S. Heather Duncan of the Knoxville Mercury on recent goings-on with the Tennessee Public Records Act. Duncan compiles some examples... In the first four months of this year, Knoxville has seen open meetings violations by its 911 board, including the police chief and sheriff; the state Legislature has acknowledged that most of its committees have been regularly holding secret “pre-meetings”; and legislators floated about 25 bills that either attempted or succeeded in reducing public access to records and meetings. Over the last year, several local governments across the state lost high-profile court cases because they “willfully” withheld documents from the public, and still others got [...]

25 Mar, 2015

Bill to allow new public records fees pulled from House consideration

By |2015-04-28T11:33:33-05:00March 25, 2015|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

State Rep. Steve McDaniel this morning took off notice a bill that would allow new charges to be assessed citizens who want to inspect public records. House Bill 315 and its companion in the Senate is a top legislative priority for the Tennessee School Boards Association. Before pulling the bill, McDaniel kept the idea of new public records fees alive by saying the Office of Open Records Counsel has agreed to conduct public hearings in conjunction with the Advisory Committee on Open Government this summer on the proposal, and make a recommendation on the bill by January 2016. Ann Butterworth is the Open Records Counsel who would be in charge of [...]

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