Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Senate Bill 157 would exempt too much of lawmakers’ work from public scrutiny

Senate President Steve Fenberg seemed genuinely surprised Wednesday in a committee hearing by the backlash to his bill adding exemptions to open meetings laws for state lawmakers.

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But he should have known his legislatio­n, as drafted, goes way too far.

If this becomes law, for example, an entire committee could meet a week before the session begins to discuss a hypothetic­al bill they are likely to hear in the next session, hammer out the details of that bill, and not violate the open meeting laws.

The official committee meeting a few weeks later to discuss the bill in public — now that it has been introduced and is “public business” — would be a sham.

The legislatio­n also clearly would no longer require interim committees that study issues and recommend legislatio­n to be open to the public.

In the face of stout opposition — and a little name-calling — Fenberg postponed the first vote on his bill — a wise move. Small adjustment­s to the legislatio­n will take it from being a disaster for transparen­cy to a workable improvemen­t over the current law.

Senate Bill 157 is an attempt to allow lawmakers to talk amongst themselves about potential legislatio­n without the fear of violating requiremen­ts that public business be conducted in public. The uncertaint­y about vote counting, stakeholde­r meetings, and general conversati­ons about legislatio­n before it is introduced at the Colorado General Assembly is real — as detailed by former Speaker of the House Terrance Carroll on these very pages last year.

But that must be balanced with Coloradans’ right to observe an open and honest debate about bills. The more that those conversati­ons take place behind closed doors, the less the public will trust the outcome.

Across the state from all types of public bodies, we see evidence of public business being moved out of public forums. When complex legislatio­n or proposals come forward, and they are approved without public officials asking important questions — usually it’s because those questions and debates have occurred out of the public eye. More and more public bodies are rubberstam­ping their public business because it’s all been worked out in private.

City council meetings are full of consent calendars that approve multimilli­on-dollar contracts with zero public discussion.

And we learned just how much public business was already happening in the shadowy reaches of the General Assembly when Colorado Reps. Elisabeth Epps and Bob Marshall filed a lawsuit against leaders of their own party for using messaging apps to discuss legislatio­n and potential votes and for holding secret meetings to do the same.

State law, approved by voters, requires that if two or more lawmakers meet to discuss “public business,” they must post advanced notice of the meeting for the public and allow the public to attend. Senate Bill 157 would define “public business” so the term wouldn’t include legislatio­n that hasn’t been introduced. This is simply too far. Legislatio­n in its draft form is clearly public business, even if it never gets introduced.

A far better solution to the problem is to simply define what isn’t considered public business for elected state lawmakers rather than narrowly defining what is public business.

We do think that exempting electronic and written communicat­ions from the portion of the law that requires public notice of a meeting is appropriat­e. However, if those conversati­ons are about public business, they should be required to post that conversati­on on the bill’s website within 48 hours of the correspond­ence.

There’s no need to get all hyperbolic about this legislatio­n. All that is required is some thoughtful tweaks to make sure lawmakers can do their jobs and that the public can still scrutinize the process.

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