COVID-19

14 May, 2021

Local government boards resume in-person meetings but they don’t necessarily look like before

By |2021-05-14T17:41:05-05:00May 14, 2021|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

This month, local governing bodies across the state resumed in-person meetings after 58 weeks under a governor's executive order allowing electronic meetings. The order, which had lifted requirements of state law so that governing bodies could meet electronically due to COVID-19, expired on April 28 without renewal by Gov. Bill Lee. In a spot check of governing bodies, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government found that some resumed physical meetings just as before the pandemic. Others resumed physical meetings but continued citizen-friendly measures that they were not doing before the pandemic — such as livestreaming more meetings and posting the video to YouTube. Some resumed meeting in their regular meeting rooms [...]

13 Apr, 2021

Utility boards continue push to allow phone-in votes; other bills allowing electronic meetings also on tap

By |2021-04-13T09:05:26-05:00April 13, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , |0 Comments

A bill that would allow members of hundreds of utility boards across the state to phone into a public meeting and cast their votes is scheduled to go before the House State Government Committee today. State Rep. Clark Boyd It is one of three pieces of legislation expected to be heard this week that seeks to lift requirements of state law and expand the ability of members of public governing bodies to participate and vote in public meetings electronically without having to attend in person. The three pieces of legislation have differing levels of standards and requirements for remote participation by governing bodies, but all appear to have [...]

4 Mar, 2021

Is Tennessee ready for the slippery slope of legislating by phone?

By |2021-03-04T12:12:38-06:00March 4, 2021|Categories: Legislature, Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

During the pandemic, members of local and state governing bodies have been allowed to conduct meetings electronically per executive order by Gov. Bill Lee. They have not had to hold physical meetings in a physical place. They can hold meetings on Zoom or even by telephone conference call, as long as they allow the public real-time live audio or video access and follow other rules. In some instances, this has meant that the governing body is on videoconference, and the public must show up physically at city hall to watch them through a government computer. It has not been ideal for citizens, who have lost the benefit of interaction with [...]

19 Oct, 2020

WUOT reporter obtains White House COVID-19 report

By |2020-10-19T15:14:21-05:00October 19, 2020|Categories: Journalism, state records|Tags: , |1 Comment

WUOT 91.9 FM reporter Claire Heddles demonstrated last week that making a public records request to the right person is sometimes all it takes. The White House Coronavirus Task Force is distributing to governors a weekly report on the COVID-19 epidemic. The task force does not make the reports available to the public, but they have been released in some states by local and state officials. In Tennessee, however, Gov. Bill Lee downplayed the importance of releasing those reports in a press conference last week with Health Commissioner Lisa Piercey. And the Center for Public Integrity, which has been compiling the task force reports from various states, lists Tennessee among [...]

16 Oct, 2020

Family members, others shut out of court proceedings in Davidson County

By |2020-10-16T16:39:13-05:00October 16, 2020|Categories: Open Courts, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , |0 Comments

I arrived at the Justice A.A. Birch Building at about 8:15 a.m. this morning to see for myself what others have told me: Family members of people with court dates in General Sessions court are not allowed to accompany their loved ones into the building. It took only a few minutes to witness someone being told by a security guard to wait outside where others like them already waited in the cool morning air. There I found a grandmother who had intended to be a character witness for her grandson, a wife whose husband was there about a restraining order and a girlfriend of a man with a probation violating [...]

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