Orlando Sentinel

Keep Florida in the know with public notice ads.

- By Dominic M. Calabro and Pat Neal Guest columnists Dominic M. Calabro has been president and CEO of Florida TaxWatch for nearly four decades. Former Sen. Pat Neal is chairman-elect of Florida TaxWatch and president of Neal Communitie­s.

The cornerston­e of our constituti­onal democratic republic is protecting citizens’ right to full and public notice when their elected officials are discussing or making decisions that could affect taxpayers’ daily lives.

As a nonpartisa­n government watchdog and taxpayer-research institute that focuses on promoting government accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, Florida TaxWatch supports the use of public notices in local newspapers of record by government entities to notify all of their citizens of meetings and votes. Unfortunat­ely, current proposed legislatio­n would allow municipali­ty websites to be the only required source for public notice posting.

Overall, the changes put forth in the proposed legislatio­n mean that local newspapers would no longer be required to house and circulate public notices, thus causing Floridians to be less informed about current government issues.

Since newspapers and their websites possess a larger audience due to a wealth of informatio­n across a breadth of issues, the fact that these media outlets would no longer be required to house public notices results in less written informatio­n provided to the people. A recent scientific poll by Mason Dixon shows that Florida citizens overwhelmi­ngly want wider access to the public notice informatio­n, as 83 percent of respondent­s want local government­s to carry public notices in newspapers, and 82 percent said they would not seek out informatio­n on government websites.

In addition, the proposed legislatio­n shifts delivering public-notice informatio­n from an active to a passive stance. Newspapers reach out to their audience through intentiona­l delivery, also offering accessibil­ity to those without the means to an internet connection. A notice strictly available on government-run websites would eliminate the critical neutrality and independen­ce of a newspaper or other third party. It would be possible, likely even, for government entities to miss notificati­on deadlines, leave out critical informatio­n or make changes electronic­ally to items on their websites without public knowledge. When something runs in the newspaper, it is permanentl­y printed and distribute­d for all to reference and reexamine anytime.

Here at Florida TaxWatch, we regard transparen­cy as being of paramount importance when it comes to the state and local government­s’ interactio­ns with their citizens.

In order for residents to trust and hold their government accountabl­e, taxpayers should be entitled to an unabridged and open flow of informatio­n concerning public notices in their communitie­s. They should not be beholden by government websites to provide residents with critically important and timely informatio­n. This is why Florida TaxWatch promoted policies that expanded the use and access to public notice informatio­n through newspapers, their websites, and even email to residents who requested updated notices.

With the newspapers providing third-party verificati­on, Florida taxpayers are ensured greater access to publicnoti­ce informatio­n, allowing them to stay in the know about their communitie­s and just how their hard-earned dollars are being utilized.

A notice strictly available on government-run websites would eliminate the critical neutrality and independen­ce of a newspaper or other third party.

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