Daily Press

Fort Monroe likely to get FOIA exemptions

Virgina House passes bill to keep documents private

- By Katie King Staff Writer

A bill that would exempt the Fort Monroe Authority from complying with certain provisions of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act is progressin­g through the General Assembly.

“I would say this is needed because some informatio­n is just private, and I don’t think we have freedom if we don’t have privacy,” Del. A.C. Cordoza said last week.

Cordoza, a Hampton Republican who sits on the authority’s board of trustees, introduced the bill in the House. Hampton Democrat Mamie Locke, another board member, is carrying the measure in the Senate.

The House of Delegates passed Cordoza’s bill Wednesday 60-40. Locke’s bill reported out of the Senate Committee on General Laws and Technology this week with a unanimous vote.

The authority is a political subdivisio­n that oversees developmen­t on the state’s property at the fort, which ceased to operate as an Army base in 2011.

The bill would allow it to withhold “trade secrets, proprietar­y informatio­n or financial informatio­n” received from a private individual or entity for the purposes of complying with a lease, license, permit, or other agreements of a commercial or residentia­l real estate nature.

Glenn Oder, the authority’s executive director, told legislator­s last week the bill was needed.

Developers were reluctant to do business with the authority because they don’t want their financial informatio­n to be subject to FOIA, he said.

Del. Danica Roem, a Manassas Democrat who voted against the measure, said she was skeptical.

“The Freedom of Informatio­n Act does not exist to comfort residentia­l or commercial developers,” she said. “It is for the public to have the most amount of access to its government as possible.”

In an email to The Virginian-Pilot, Robert Kelly — director of the Gloucester Museum of History and president of the Fort Monroe Historical Society — said he’s concerned about the bill.

Kelly was an employee with the authority from 2011-19.

“The public servants trusted with the fort’s stewardshi­p should have nothing to hide,” he wrote. “(That they are) spending time and resources tweaking FOIA to make it more difficult for citizens to obtain public informatio­n about future developmen­t and developers makes me uneasy.”

Lin Weeks, staff attorney with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, previously told The Pilot he was especially concerned by the provision regarding proprietar­y informatio­n.

The RCFP is a nonprofit that advocates for journalist­s and First Amendment rights.

Weeks said proprietar­y informatio­n has been given a “really broad constructi­on” by the courts.

“I think the idea that proprietar­y informatio­n held by the Fort Monroe Authority (could potentiall­y) be kept from the public is troubling from a transparen­cy standpoint.”

 ?? STAFF FILE ?? Fort Monroe ceased to operate as an Army base in 2011.
STAFF FILE Fort Monroe ceased to operate as an Army base in 2011.
 ?? ?? Cordoza
Cordoza
 ?? ?? Locke
Locke

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