public records request

28 Jan, 2015

Judge’s order in case about Sumner County Board of Education’s restrictive request policy

By |2015-01-28T12:26:49-06:00January 28, 2015|Categories: public records lawsuits Tennessee, requests|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Sumner County Judge Dee David Gay signed an order last week denying a summary judgment to the Sumner County Board of Education in a public records case about its restrictive request policy. The order reflects the findings in a hearing on Jan. 9, when the school board argued that it had the right to essentially ban citizens from calling or emailing to make a request to view public records, and instead to require all such requests to be mailed by U.S. Postal Service, or made in person. The lawsuit was filed by Ken Jakes, who had emailed the school board's community relations supervisor, Jeremy Johnson, asking to see the district's public [...]

19 Jan, 2015

Friedmann seeks appeal of public records request case on in-person appearance requirement

By |2019-09-11T18:53:20-05:00January 19, 2015|Categories: requests|Tags: , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Alex Friedmann, managing editor of Prison Legal News, has filed a request to appeal a Marshall County chancery court ruling last year that ordered release of records he requested, but declined to rule that one of his requests was denied because he would not appear in person to make the request. Friedmann began his request Feb. 3, 2014, with a letter to the Marshall County Sheriff's Department requesting disclosures of jail policies concerning inmate mail, inmate grievance policy, inmate medical care policies, whether the jail maintains a formulatory of medications for inmates, a copy of the jail's phone service contract, a contingency request if the jail is paid a commission on prisoner [...]

13 Jan, 2015

The Tennessean gives state Tuesday deadline to fulfill July public records request

By |2015-01-13T12:58:59-06:00January 13, 2015|Categories: requests|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

The Tennessean gave the state a Tuesday deadline to fulfill a public records request it originally made in July last year as it considers asking a court to intervene, the newspaper reported today. The news organization had requested from TennCare emails and documents related to the state's massive Medicaid debacle in which it could not properly process applications despite buying a $35.7 million new computer system. (The backlog led to a federal lawsuit, and the agency yesterday said it was firing its vendor Northrop Grumman, and hiring another one.) After narrowing the request in September, the newspaper got an estimate of $4,139.56 for costs to compile and copy the records, which [...]

11 Jan, 2015

Judge allows public records lawsuit against Sumner County schools to proceed

By |2015-01-12T14:51:08-06:00January 11, 2015|Categories: public records lawsuits Tennessee, requests|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Sumner County Judge Dee David Gay listens to arguments by attorney Kirk Clements, who says his client was wrongly denied access to public records. GALLATIN -- The Sumner County School Board lost the first round in a court fight Friday to be able to reject public records requests from citizens who make those requests by email or phone. The school district’s policy requires citizens to make public records requests by U.S. mail or by appearing in person, according to Jeremy Johnson, the school district’s board and community relations supervisor. Because of this, Johnson told citizen Ken Jakes that his request by email to view a public record was [...]

29 Oct, 2014

The law says “promptly” when it comes to public records requests

By |2014-10-29T09:27:48-05:00October 29, 2014|Categories: requests|Tags: , |1 Comment

A news reporter in Nashville called me recently when a public information officer for the Metropolitan Development and Housing Agency refused to release a document that had been voted upon a few days earlier by a subcommittee of the public agency’s board of directors. The full board of directors was set to vote on it in less than a week. It was not secret document. It had no confidential information. It was an agreement that outlined how a developer would get $12.5 million in taxpayer money through tax-increment financing to help him build a $225 million skyscraper in downtown Nashville. The public information officer told the reporter that he could [...]

Go to Top