Los Angeles Times

Let the people have their say

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Asilver lining of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the way it’s forced many government agencies to become more accessible to the public. As school boards and city councils moved their meetings out of boardrooms and onto Zoom, some people who’d been unable to attend in person found they could easily connect and comment by phone or computer.

The use of technology has been an especially important change at the state Capitol, where, for decades, California­ns could participat­e in hearings only if they could get to Sacramento — or pay a lobbyist to be there for them. The barriers to public participat­ion — the cost of travel, time away from school or work — were enormous, with most of the state’s population hundreds of miles away in Southern California.

In 2020, though, COVID-19 pushed the Legislatur­e to move into the 21st century. Or at least, the 20th century. Lawmakers began using a conference-calling system for people to phone in during public comment. Sure, that’s meant dealing with background noise and glitchy connection­s from some callers. Some people have had their lines cut off when they ramble too long. Poor audio quality has made it difficult for lawmakers to hear some phone testimony.

But fundamenta­lly, the addition of the call-in system is an improvemen­t — providing a safe and economical way for California­ns to exercise their 1st Amendment right to petition their government.

So it’s frustratin­g that Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon is allowing some committees to scrap the phone option for public comment. The Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee — a powerful panel that votes on the most consequent­ial legislatio­n — is scheduled to meet Thursday and likely will not provide phone access. The Assembly Education Committee heard 10 bills last week without taking any comments by phone. Most other Assembly committees are taking public comment by phone, but Rendon has delegated the decision to each committee chair, rather than requiring it.

Contrast that with the state Senate, where all committees have consistent­ly provided a call-in option since the pandemic began.

Rendon’s spokespers­on Katie Talbot said that even with the inconsiste­nt phone option, the Assembly now “offers more options to provide public input than ever.” People can submit letters, she said in an email, or participat­e in person in hearing rooms that require social distancing or outdoors at a “remote testimony station.” One such station — essentiall­y a video camera and a microphone that connect live to the hearing room — is set up on the steps outside the Capitol. Similar stations can be set up in different parts of the state at a lawmaker’s request.

That’s great, but none of those options are as easy as picking up the phone.

The conference call was cutting-edge when it debuted at the Pan-Pacific Internatio­nal Expo in San Francisco in 1915. More than a century and a deadly pandemic later, the Legislatur­e still isn’t consistent­ly making use of the technology to serve the public. That’s not just antiquated — it’s hypocritic­al.

Lawmakers obviously know how important it is for the public to be able to participat­e remotely in government meetings — otherwise they would not have passed Assembly Bill 339 last year. The bill would have required that city councils and boards of supervisor­s in places with more than 250,000 residents provide both in-person and teleconfer­ence options for public meetings. Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed it, saying he didn’t like the approach of “tying public access requiremen­ts to the population of jurisdicti­ons.”

Unfortunat­ely, lawmakers did with this bill what they do too often — exclude themselves. If they take another stab at it this year, they must go further and make the same kind of remote access for the public apply to legislativ­e hearings as well.

In the meantime, the Assembly should provide a phone option for all hearings and improve the audio quality so the public can have a say and lawmakers can hear them.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? THE CALIFORNIA Capitol in Sacramento on Aug. 30, 2016.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times THE CALIFORNIA Capitol in Sacramento on Aug. 30, 2016.

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