Open Meetings Act

27 Jun, 2019

Resident says Lebanon City councilwoman created Open Meetings Act violation through emails

By |2019-06-27T13:49:04-05:00June 27, 2019|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , |2 Comments

A Lebanon resident, who was barred from entering a city council meeting, is claiming the Lebanon City Council has violated the Tennessee Open Meetings Act multiple times in recent months and is requesting the city get training on the law and reconsider its actions on a recent rezoning decision. Lorrie Hicks, through her attorney Paul McAdoo, has sent a letter to the Mayor Bernie Ash of the Lebanon City Council, explaining the alleged violations.  She told TCOG she has not yet heard back from the city, although the mayor was quoted in the local newspaper as saying he had turned over her letter to the city attorney. “I don’t know [...]

22 Feb, 2016

Ashe, officials clash over closing state museum board meeting, News Sentinel reports

By |2016-02-22T08:26:33-06:00February 22, 2016|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Tom Humphrey with the Knoxville News Sentinel reports that Victor Ashe, a former lawmaker and former Knoxville mayor, has clashed with the state museum board on which he sits over a plan to close a meeting to discuss selection of a new museum director. An excerpt from the story: The board governing the Tennessee State Museum, officially known as the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission, has scheduled an eight-hour "workshop" for March 28 to discuss the selection of a new museum executive director to succeed Lois Riggins-Ezzell at some point. In an exchange of email with Tom Smith of Nashville, who chairs a museum board committee on "succession planning" that [...]

22 Jun, 2015

Sneaky Six in Chattanooga carry on troubling tradition of Hamilton County Commission

By |2015-08-18T10:11:20-05:00June 22, 2015|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Is it open, transparent government when six Hamilton County commissioners, after weeks of public meetings where they and the public heard detailed budget requests, vote to give themselves $100,000 each out of the county's rainy-day fund with no public discussion or explanation? No. Times Free Press columnist Jay Greeson called them the Sneaky Six in a Sunday column, and it's a moniker that deserves to stick. The Hamilton County Commission has skated the edges of the Open Meetings Act and its principles before. These are the same county commissioners who keep phones at their dais and make private calls to each other during the meeting -- covering their mouths so their microphones [...]

15 Jan, 2015

Hamilton County commissioner says “Sunshine law stinks”

By |2015-02-16T14:13:38-06:00January 15, 2015|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , |1 Comment

During a public meeting yesterday, Hamilton County commissioners took aim at the requirement in the state's Open Meetings Act, sometimes referred to as the sunshine law, that formation of public policy must be done in public. One even went so far as to say, "The sunshine law stinks." The comments came on the heels of a story by the Times Free Press about commissioners using telephones to call each other during the meeting to talk privately. After their comments on Wednesday, the commissioners explained their negative view of the sunshine law to reporter Louie Brogdon.  Brogdon also called TCOG for comment, allowing us to explain the importance of open and public [...]

3 Dec, 2014

TCOG, SPJ-East TN: Arguments in Open Meetings case make a mockery of state’s Sunshine Law

By |2019-09-11T18:52:34-05:00December 3, 2014|Categories: Open Meetings, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 3, 2014 CONTACTS:  Deborah Fisher, executive director, Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, [email protected], (615) 602-4080; Michael T. Martinez, president of the East Tennessee Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, [email protected], (865) 314-5256 NASHVILLE -- The Tennessee Coalition for Open Government and the East Tennessee Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists have issued a joint statement of concern about efforts to interpret the Tennessee Open Meetings Act that could fundamentally reduce citizen access to public meetings. (See PDF of Press Release here). The Industrial Development Board of Greeneville and Greene County and the private company US Nitrogen contend in a lawsuit that the Tennessee Open [...]

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