Royal Oak Tribune

House gives unanimous approval to records bill

- By Anna Liz Nichols

LANSING » Michigan’s governor, lieutenant governor and legislator­s, to a lesser extent, would be subject to public records requests under a bill the House passed unanimousl­y on Thursday.

Michigan is one of only two states that exempts the governor’s office from Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests. Before voting in favor of the measure, Republican­s and Democrats alike said it was essential to increase trust between elected officials and those they represent.

If the Senate also passes the bill, it would go to Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who said while campaignin­g in 2018 that if the Legislatur­e didn’t act, she would open the governor’s office to FOIA requests. Republican­s pointed to Whitmer as the prime example for why Michigan needs expanded FOIA laws, citing her handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and recent controvers­y over a confidenti­ality clause in the state’s former health director’s severance deal to leave state employment.

Rep. Bryan Posthumus and other Republican­s took verbal swings at Whitmer while addressing the need for government transparen­cy.

“When it comes down to it, we work for our constituen­ts,” Posthumus said.

“We owe it to them, regardless of political party or ideology, to pass transparen­cy laws that will prove it is our intent to use taxpayer resources responsibl­y, not recklessly.”

Democratic Rep. Tyrone Carter said that despite holes in the legislatio­n, it is a good start.

“This is the people’s government, so the people need to know what’s happening in their government,” Carter said. “This is a long overdue package, and it’s not perfect, and we still have work to do to build the public’s trust. But today, we can make a step in the right direction.”

The legislatio­n would create a separate standard of transparen­cy for the legislativ­e branch than for other state employees by creating a Legislativ­e Open Records Act, which would include different exemptions than the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

LORA specifies that something would only be public record and subject to an informatio­n request if it’s been in the possession of a person or body for 15 days or more, which could be a motivation for lawmakers to quickly dispose of emails and other correspond­ence to avoid them being subject to FOIA requests.

Additional­ly, under LORA’s rules, an Legislatur­eappointed administra­tor, not a court, would handle appeals of rejected records requests and other matters.

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