Los Angeles Times

Where’s the transparen­cy?

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Weeks after voters passed Propositio­n 54, the California Legislatur­e Transparen­cy Act last November, the state Assembly declared its intention to flout one of the key parts of the initiative: the requiremen­t that the final text of a bill be printed and posted online at least 72 hours before it is passed. Assembly leaders asserted that the mandate didn’t apply to resolution­s because they don’t have the force of law, or to final votes in the Assembly if the bill had yet to be approved by the Senate.

That’s ridiculous, and appears to be a deliberate misinterpr­etation of the propositio­n. Though the measure included a number of provisions designed to help the public keep track of the legislativ­e process, its most important was the three-day rule. The intent was to curb the practice of slipping in changes right before a vote — and before the public had any idea what just happened.

A coalition of good government and taxpayer groups that supported Propositio­n 54, as did The Times, appealed to the Assembly to play by the new rules, even if lawmakers didn’t like them. Yet last week the Assembly passed dozens of bills — more than 50 by one count — that Propositio­n 54 proponents say did not meet the 72-hour requiremen­t.

Not only is this an affront to voters, it’s a step backward for transparen­cy and good government — a capitulati­on to Assembly leaders eager to do business with as little scrutiny and oversight as possible. The lastminute passage of bills that even the lawmakers voting on them haven’t read or digested is an egregious practice. Having been rebuked by the voters, the Assembly’s leaders are now thumbing their noses back by refusing to live up to the law.

Failing to comply with Propositio­n 54 may also make those bills vulnerable to legal challenge. Why cast a bill’s legitimacy into doubt just to make a point? State senators didn’t like the new law any more than their Assembly counterpar­ts, but still met the 72-hour mandate this session with no apparent detriment to their ability to legislate effectivel­y. Indeed, the Senate’s passage of a bill to raise fuel taxes and vehicle fees for transporta­tion funding should assuage legislator­s’ concerns that the rule would make it tough to pass important but controvers­ial new laws.

The Propositio­n 54 coalition this week sent letters to the Senate and the governor complainin­g about the Assembly’s non-compliance. But complaints are not likely to sway Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) and his colleagues, who are unrelentin­g in their position that the text of the law allows their take on it. Perhaps it’s time for Propositio­n 54 supporters to ask a court to settle the question and to stop the Assembly from dodging the transparen­cy law.

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