We newsies try to
keep an eye on the government and on the rest of the population. News crops up
in the public and in the private sector.
The private sector
can limit our access. Obviously we can’t demand admittance to people’s homes,
but sometimes receive or seek invitations to come by for special occasions.
Businesses that are
open to the public are open to us in the newsbiz, ordinarily. In fact, most of
them seem quite eager to have us come around, especially when they are planning
a special event, a grand opening, an expansion or other gala you should know
about.
Occasionally some
business will get all mysterious or downright forbidding. Press and public
experienced some of that when the Fox production company was in the area in
connection with filming “Unstoppable.” Naturally locals were interested, but
the crew and their security got quite pushy. It is a private company, but it’s
our community, and we, press and other members of the public, have our rights
too, including the right to photograph anything that we can get into our
camera’s viewer from any vantage point where we may be lawfully. Fox and their
St. Moritz Security minions eventually got that message, but not until after
they had trampled on the rights of some of us community members to
observe what is going on around us.
It’s usually
government that makes it hard for us to keep track of activities of interest to
us in our community. Our public servants sometimes get the Open Government
rules wrong. I keep talking about it because I have a column. When I start
blogging in earnest, I’ll talk about it then too. It isn’t just because I’m a
reporter and inappropriate government secrecy makes it difficult for me to do
my job. It’s because the government is not serving US, that is, YOU and ME, all
of us, correctly when it does not govern openly.
It’s our government.
It is here to serve us. We are entitled to know how they do it. In detail. As
much as we want to know, each of us with his or her individual degree and kind
of interest in what government is doing. With very few exceptions. Far fewer
than some persons in government seem to realize.
When we find
ourselves seeing less and less government, even though government is as big and
active as before, we have a reason, and maybe an obligation, to wonder and to
ask why. Usually the government isn’t demonstrating willful determination
to break the law or to put something over on the public. At least, so it
appears to me, when I see the many instances of Open Government Law violations.
It’s ignorance of the
actual law and how “agency members” of local governments are supposed to
comply. Also, I detect a certain lack of confidence, an unwillingness to be
seen wrestling with thorny problems or decisions, a reluctance to disagree with
one another in public view or, in some cases, to reveal their individual gaps
in knowledge, their uncertainties.
Those feelings are
understandable, but not acceptable excuses for going behind closed doors.
Most Open Government
violations have to do with Executive Sessions, or those times when agency
members are meeting together while excluding the public. Other kinds of
violations have to do with handling of records, and notice of meetings.
Meetings occur when a
quorum of the agency or body in question is present—enough people to take
action, even if no action is taken. For a school board that would be five
members. For a borough council, four. For county commissioners or township
supervisors, that’s two!
If there are two of
those people talking to each other or where they could do so, is that a
meeting, and a potential violation of Open Government/Sunshine law? Well, maybe
not. They could run into each other at a wedding or after church or in the
store or at a restaurant, accidentally or fleetingly or strictly socially or at
lodge or Rotary. But if they discuss “agency business,” that’s where the
violation occurs. They should not exercise their governmental authority or wear
their agency hats on those occasions.
We can all agree that
it would be awfully easy to forget the restrictions, and to bring up some
matter of interest to them which happens to be “agency business.” But they
swore to uphold our laws. That takes some mindfulness.
The Open Government
exception most frequently cited as a reason for a body going into executive
(closed) session is “personnel.” Whenever any official cites that one with just
one word, there is a violation of law. Perhaps holding the closed meeting was
proper, but we don’t know that, when no specific personnel matter was
mentioned. The specific “personnel” exception must be stated when the
public is told about the closed session.
MOST personnel
matters are NOT proper exceptions—only those where labor negotiations or contract
talks are being held, or in which one or more named individuals’ job
performance or personal behavior or health or similarly private matters are
discussed, or disciplinary action or other career harm is a possible result.
Whether to create a
new position, or to change its scope, or to eliminate a position, or to expand
or contract the work force, is not a personnel matter of the kind that
constitutes a Sunshine or Open Government exception to the requirement to meet
in public.
An announcement that an
executive session was held to discuss a .personnel matter should state WHAT
personnel matter. If it was for negotiations, the announcement should state
what was being negotiations, or with what person or group the negotiations were
conducted.
Also, appointing
someone to fill a vacancy on the board or commission or in an elective office
is NOT an allowable exception to the requirement to meet in public.
The fact that the
officials doing the appointment wanted to discuss the merits of the potential
appointee or the candidates or applicants for the position “freely” does not
alter the fact that the public is entitled to be present for that discussion.
The officials have no right to inquire beyond the personal facts we would be
entitled to know and consider when voting to fill that office. When they
substitute their judgment for ours, we are entitled to watch the process and
hear their reasoning.
Is it okay just
because the chairman called for the executive session, or because the majority
thought it was appropriate? No. And each member of the agency who participated
in an improper executive session committed an Open Government violation,
whenever that kind of secrecy was practiced, against us. It violated our
rights: yours to be there, and also to have the press there; the press’s right
to be there and report to you.
Peace.
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