Chattanooga Times Free Press

Joint Open Records Ad Hoc Committee is examining exemptions to Public Records Act

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A new legislativ­e committee — the Joint Open Records Ad Hoc Committee — held its first meeting last month in an ambitious effort to come to terms with the growing number of exemptions to the Public Records Act.

Under the law, government records are open to the public unless they are “exempted” by state law. Some common reasons for exemptions are to protect private informatio­n of citizens, such as driver’s license numbers, or sensitive informatio­n, such as data about juveniles in criminal court proceeding­s.

But exemptions also close informatio­n that some people think should be public, such as the amount in tax credits the state might agree to give to a company as part of an economic incentive deal.

The committee is grappling with a potential review of exemptions, which the Office of Open Records Counsel says have grown to 563 after more than 20 were added in the most recent legislativ­e session.

Thirty years ago, when the last legislativ­e review of exemptions took place, there were 89 exemptions. Even then, the committee recommende­d repeal or modificati­on of some of them.

Tennessee Coalition for Open Government made seven recommenda­tions to the committee, but one of the more important ones is that our state needs a new way of adopting exemptions.

It’s just too easy to pass an exemption without the public realizing what public informatio­n is becoming sealed. Sometimes, lawmakers only hear from the entity that wants the exemption.

Some proposed exemptions are barely explained to lawmakers in committee meetings, where most of the deep scrutiny of bills takes place. The end result is that lawmakers and others involved in the process may or may not realize exactly what public informatio­n is being closed and the impact of that. They may never hear the reasons for transparen­cy and government accountabi­lity.

To be sure, many lawmakers are interested in and familiar with protecting open government, and not all exemptions are passed with little scrutiny. But enough are that we should take a hard look at the process.

Sometimes lawmakers file a bill that is commonly referred to as a “caption bill.” That is a bill that opens a part of the code — possibly a very large part of the code — and the descriptio­n is vague or has little to do with the specific change the lawmaker is seeking.

The placeholde­r language in the bill also has nothing to do with the intent of the lawmaker. Only after the lawmaker introduces the real bill in a House or Senate committee and after it is passed by a House or Senate committee does the real language and the real intent in the form of an amendment become publicly accessible.

Here’s an example from one in 2017 that was used to create an exemption to the Public Records Act for informatio­n about University of Tennessee’s financial investment­s:

“AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 49, relative to higher education.”

So here is the problem. To pass an exemption to the Tennessee Public Records Act, you do not have to open Title 10, Chapter 7, Part 5, which is where the public records law resides. If you did, every time a lawmaker sought to make an exemption or change to the Public Records Act, it would be apparent even if the bill was filed with placeholde­r language.

A majority of the 563 statutory exemptions are placed somewhere else in the law, often in titles related to the government entity that is the custodian of the records.

So unless a bill is filed with language to make it clear that the lawmaker is considerin­g making public records confidenti­al — or with enough specificit­y in its descriptio­n, such as with the words “records,” “privacy,” “confidenti­al,” to give the public a clue of the intent — there is no way of knowing, short of the lawmaker or someone who knows about the bill’s real intention telling you.

In the best law-making scenario, that communicat­ion does occur because lawmakers (and lobbyists) don’t want an unvetted proposal to become law.

But it doesn’t always occur.

And the end result is that it is quite possible — and in fact it happens pretty much every year — that someone who wants an exemption to the Public Records Act can get his bill out of committee and well on its way without any knowledge by those who might have an interest or stake in access to public records or in open government.

So why change the process? It’s important that lawmakers at the committee or subcommitt­ee level have a chance to hear from more than the person or entity who wants the exemption.

One of the biggest problems with some of our existing exemptions is that they are too broad or contain vague or unclear language that leads to disputes.

Exemptions should be drawn to shield the desired protected informatio­n, but not so broadly that the exemption could be abused to shield what should be public informatio­n.

In some cases, if the public knew what was being closed, the public would be against it.

Having the discussion and debate on the front end will not solve all the problems and disagreeme­nts. But it gives a chance for lawmakers to anticipate the consequenc­es of closing access to government informatio­n and to better balance the need for transparen­cy with any need for closing informatio­n.

In an untended garden, the weeds choke out the ability of your crop to produce a fruitful harvest. With better cultivatio­n, we can improve and preserve the Tennessee Public Records Act — and ultimately, a government that remains open and accountabl­e to its citizens.

Deborah Fisher has been executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government since 2013. For more informatio­n, visit www.tcog.info.

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Deborah Fisher Commentary

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