Tim Burchett

7 Mar, 2019

Tennessee lawmakers consider support for requiring TVA to hold open meetings

By |2019-06-08T07:26:54-05:00March 7, 2019|Categories: Legislature|Tags: , , , |2 Comments

Tennessee state lawmakers are considering a resolution to express support for a bill in Congress that would require TVA's Board of Directors to hold open meetings. State Sen. Ken Yager of Kingston is asking for a Senate resolution to support a bill in Congress to require TVA to hold open meetings that the public can attend. State Sen. Ken Yager, R-Kingston, explained Senate Joint Resolution 192 in a Senate committee meeting this week, in which the resolution won unanimous approval. "We all know, Mr. Chairman, that the TVA is the steward of billions of dollars of ratepayers money," Yager told members of the Energy, Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee this week. [...]

31 Jan, 2019

Burchett introduces bill to require open meetings of TVA board

By |2019-06-08T07:33:36-05:00January 31, 2019|Categories: US House of Representatives|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

U.S. Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Knoxville, has introduced legislation to require TVA board meetings to be open to the public. U.S. Rep. Tim Burchett, R- Knoxville, introduced legislation that would require that TVA's board meetings, and meetings of board subcommittees, be open to the public. The current law governing the board of the Tennessee Valley Authority, which was created by Congress in 1933, requires it to have four meetings a year. But there is no provision requiring that all of its meetings be open to the public, nor that minutes of meetings be publicly available. Burchett's legislation would require the board and subcommittees of the board to hold their [...]

18 Dec, 2017

Knox County Commission removes photography ban on public records

By |2017-12-19T08:47:42-06:00December 18, 2017|Categories: Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , , |2 Comments

The Knox County Commission tonight eliminated a short-lived ban on photography of public records and updated its public records policy to allow citizens to use personal equipment to make their own copies subject to some rules. Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett Mayor Tim Burchett had requested the change and in a consent vote, commissioners unanimously supported removing the ban. TCOG has tracked the growing issue of government entities suddenly banning people from snapping photos with their smartphones of public records they are inspecting. This has particularly affected journalists who use phones to take notes and share information. The Knox County Commission's action appears to be the first of [...]

6 Dec, 2017

Knox County mayor proposes removing photography ban on public records

By |2017-12-06T09:20:54-06:00December 6, 2017|Categories: Tennessee Coalition for Open Government|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett has proposed changing the county's public records policy to remove the ban on taking pictures of public records, a ban that was adopted when the county updated its public records policy to include language from a state model policy. Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett “In Tennessee, citizens can inspect public documents at no charge. There’s no reason they shouldn’t also be allowed to take pictures of those records with their own cellphone cameras,” Burchett said in a new release. “Our taxpayers already pay for these documents and access to public records shouldn’t be limited only to those who can afford to pay for [...]

10 Sep, 2015

Knox County mayor opposes new public records fees

By |2015-09-10T19:06:45-05:00September 10, 2015|Categories: fees|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett filed comments with the Office of Open Records Counsel today, expressing opposition to charging taxpayers to inspect public documents, saying it would be a step backward. Burchett wrote: As a former state senator, I had the opportunity to sponsor bills updating and strengthening portions of the current Open Records Act. As a legislator, my focus was – and remains today – on ensuring openness and transparency in government. Accountability begins with access, and true accountability means reducing, not increasing, obstacles to access public records. Charging taxpayers for exercising their right to merely inspect the very documents their taxes [...]

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