state museum board

10 Oct, 2017

State museum board rescinds controversial “code of conduct” policy

By |2017-10-10T09:44:54-05:00October 10, 2017|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

The Douglas Henry State Museum Commission has rescinded a controversial code of conduct policy that had required board members to notify the commission before they talked to the media and threatened ouster of board members who didn't follow the rules. State Sen. Mike Bell, R-Riceville The code of conduct policy came under fierce criticism by lawmakers at a Joint Government Operations Committee meeting in August. Several were appalled at the restrictive speech policy and one said it appeared to be an attempt to silence museum board member and former Knoxville mayor Victor Ashe. The code of conduct policy prohibited board members from saying anything that would "disparage" the [...]

15 Aug, 2017

Tennessee Journal: Museum retreats from new code of ethics in face of legislator attacks

By |2017-08-15T15:40:54-05:00August 15, 2017|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , |0 Comments

The Tennessee Journal did a good writeup on what happened at the Joint Operations Committee Hearing, in which the state museum commission's new code of conduct policy was under scrutiny. From Tom Humphrey with The Tennessee Journal: The chairman of the Tennessee State Museum’s governing board pledged that the panel would reconsider its controversial “code of ethics” in the face of round of strong criticism from state legislators at a hearing Tuesday. “Do you want to take the legislature on?” asked Senate Government Operations Committee Chairman Mike Bell, R-Riceville, addressing Thomas Smith, chairman of the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission at the outset of a hearing. An hour and a [...]

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. [...]

14 Jul, 2017

Dear Tennessee museum commissioners, the state constitution is not a relic yet

By |2017-07-14T13:35:45-05:00July 14, 2017|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

This week's account of a state worker snatching a meeting agenda packet from a news reporter’s hands was a low point in the open government ethic of Tennessee. I wish it were the only one. At a public meeting of the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission, Nashville Scene reporter Cari Wade Gervin picked up a meeting packet laying on the table that contained a proposed new operating policy, including a new Code of Conduct for commissioners. She was trying to copy down information in it. Also see: State museum commission restricts speech, communication with the press The Nashville Scene reported that the museum’s media relations officer grabbed the document out of [...]

11 Jul, 2017

State museum commission restricts speech, communication with the press

By |2017-07-11T16:16:35-05:00July 11, 2017|Categories: Open Meetings|Tags: , , , , , |1 Comment

The Douglas Henry State Museum Commission adopted a new code of conduct on Monday that requires all commission members except for the chair and vice-chair to provide advance notification to the entire commission of any comments that they make to the public before making them. The policy would cover any communication with the press, or any public comments or written comments. The commission also decided it would apply to social media. "Should a Commissioner, excluding the Chair and Vice-Chair, publish any written statement, including blogs, or give any public statement regarding the Commission, Museum, Executive Director, or Museum personnel the Commissioner shall provide the Commission with an advance copy of [...]

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