open meetings lawsuits

13 Jun, 2022

Center Square lawsuit says blanket closure of judicial conference violates First Amendment

By |2022-06-15T06:40:32-05:00June 13, 2022|Categories: Open Courts, open meetings lawsuits|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

A national news organization with operations in Tennessee has filed a federal lawsuit against the director of Tennessee's court administration, claiming the blanket closure of upcoming judicial conference meetings violates First Amendment rights of access to courts.

10 Jun, 2022

TN Supreme Court: Political party executive committees not subject to open meetings law

By |2022-06-14T11:01:47-05:00June 10, 2022|Categories: open meetings lawsuits|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Friday that the open meetings law applies to political parties' primary boards, but not their executive committees when the committees are determining the "bona fides" of a potential candidate.

6 Jun, 2022

Judge: State Republican party violated open meetings law when it removed Starbuck from ballot

By |2022-06-07T07:35:40-05:00June 6, 2022|Categories: open meetings lawsuits|Tags: , , , |1 Comment

A judge ruled that the Tennessee Republican Party's executive committee violated open meetings law when it met and decided to remove Robby Starbuck from the ballot. Starbuck wants to run in the newly redrawn 5th Congressional District race.

5 May, 2022

Citizen suit against Athens targets meeting minutes, redaction costs

By |2022-05-05T16:29:43-05:00May 5, 2022|Categories: fees, minutes, open meetings lawsuits|Tags: , , , , , , , |0 Comments

A citizen's lawsuit against the city of Athens and its city manager takes aim at multiple potential violations of the open meetings and public records laws, including overcharging for copies and failing to keep minutes of meetings involving a suspension of the city manager.

28 Sep, 2020

AG’s office did not serve the public interest in seeking loophole to Open Meetings Act

By |2020-10-09T15:16:28-05:00September 28, 2020|Categories: Open Meetings, open meetings lawsuits, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

A Davidson County chancellor took much-needed action last week. She gave public accountability a boost and set the Attorney General’s Office straight on the Open Meetings Act. Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle ruled on Friday that the Tennessee Registry of Election Finance violated the Open Meetings Act by holding an email vote — outside a public meeting and without public notice — to approve a settlement with a lawmaker, substantially reducing his outstanding fines.  The finance board did this with advice of the Attorney General’s Office. So what happened here? Earlier this year, the Attorney General’s Office advised the Registry’s executive director how to get a vote — without a public [...]

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