News

15 Aug, 2017

TCOG raises serious concerns about museum commission’s restrictive speech policy

By |2017-08-16T16:12:07-05:00August 15, 2017|Categories: Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , , |1 Comment

The Joint Government Operations Committee held a public hearing today on the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission's new restrictive speech policy for its commissioners. Below are comments I delivered as TCOG's executive director outlining why the policy is at odds with open government, the Tennessee Constitution and the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. My comments were part of the public comments part of the hearing, which followed about an hour of questions from members of the joint committee, led by its two chairmen state Sen. Mike Bell and state Rep. Jeremy Faison. Almost all of the lawmakers expressed deep concern about the commission's new policy and how it came about. [...]

3 Aug, 2017

Sumner County School Board blames the Office of Open Records Counsel for bad advice

By |2018-11-16T15:13:59-06:00August 3, 2017|Categories: public records lawsuits Tennessee, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

The Sumner County Board of Education blames the Office of Open Records Counsel for bad advice that led it on a journey of spending almost $250,000 of taxpayer money to defend, then appeal, a public records lawsuit that it lost. From The Tennessean: "We are disappointed that the court decided that the board’s former policy did not comply with a 2008 version of Tennessee’s public records statute, especially because the Office of Open Records Counsel, which has the legal duty to interpret the act, informed the board that its policy was lawful and that its response to Mr. Jakes’ request was appropriate under the law," a statement reads. "The board [...]

3 Aug, 2017

Would Gatlinburg fire records be released if not for citizen, media pressure?

By |2017-08-07T12:38:44-05:00August 3, 2017|Categories: Public Records|Tags: |0 Comments

After eight months of delay, officials with the city of Gatlinburg and Sevier County say they will release public records related to the November 2016 fire that killed 14 people. (Read story in Knoxville News Sentinel) It's worth contemplating whether they would be doing this if not for the continued pressure of citizens and the state's news media. Many of the Gatlinburg fire records requested are basic: Incident reports, E-911 call recordings and emergency radio traffic.  Citizens still question why an evacuation wasn't ordered, or at least wasn't ordered until the fire was already burning down structures. And so far, the answers from officials just haven't seemed enough. Citizens deserve [...]

2 Aug, 2017

Appellate court upholds ruling: Sumner County Schools violated public records law

By |2017-08-03T08:06:28-05:00August 2, 2017|Categories: public records lawsuits Tennessee|Tags: , , , , , , , |1 Comment

The Court of Appeals has affirmed a Sumner County trial court's ruling that the denial of a public records request because it was sent by email violated the Tennessee Public Records Act. Sumner County Board of Education attorney Jim Fuqua. In March 2014, the Sumner County Board of Education denied Ken Jakes' request to see the board's public records policy, saying he had to make the request in person, or send it via U.S. Postal Service. Jakes sued, the Sumner County trial court found in his favor, and the school board voted to appeal the ruling. The school board's attorney, Jim Fuqua, testified that he was relying on [...]

28 Jul, 2017

Appeals Court: Records in Memphis police chief search not public

By |2020-02-23T10:10:18-06:00July 28, 2017|Categories: functional equivalent, public records lawsuits Tennessee|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

The Court of Appeals ruled this week that applications sent to a police association charged with interviewing and identifying finalists for a new Memphis police chief last year do not have to be released under the state's public records law. The International Association of Chiefs of Police was contracted by the city of Memphis for $40,000 to conduct a search for a new director of police, identify and interview semifinalists and "recommend a group (approximately six) of the most highly qualified candidates for further on-site evaluation." Last summer, a reporter with The Commercial Appeal requested to see all applications, noting he was "primarily interested in the finalists," but the city [...]

Go to Top