Albuquerque Journal

LETTING MORE OF THE SUNSHINE IN

Move praised as ‘victory for open government’

- BY DAN MCKAY JOURNAL CAPITOL BUREAU

Governor’s office working to begin posting settlement­s against state agencies online.

SANTA FE — Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s administra­tion is preparing to make it easier for the public to track pricey settlement­s that resolve claims against New Mexico state agencies.

Ken Ortiz, Cabinet secretary for the General Services Department, said Thursday that his department is working with the state’s informatio­n technology staff to establish a page within New Mexico’s online Sunshine Portal where settlement­s would be published.

The agreements would go online as soon as allowed by law, usually 180 days after the settlement is reached or the department closes the claim administra­tively.

Under the current system, the agreements can be obtained only after the confidenti­ality period has expired and someone files a request under the state Inspection of Public Records Act. But for members of the public, it’s often unclear which claims have been settled or when they can be disclosed.

“I fully support making these publicly available,” Ortiz said in an interview. “It’s the taxpayers’ dollars, and every New Mexican should be able to access this informatio­n without the required IPRA.”

Melanie Majors, executive director of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government, said Ortiz is making the right move. The public has a strong interest in seeing how public money is spent, she said, and people deserve timely access to the settlement­s.

“It’s a victory for open government,” Majors said.

Debate over the secrecy surround

ing state settlement­s has intensifie­d in recent years.

In May, Lujan Grisham said she won’t enforce an unusual secrecy provision contained in at least one settlement agreement approved during her predecesso­r’s administra­tion, when Susana Martinez served as governor.

The unusual agreement called for the terms of the settlement to remain sealed until 2023 — several years rather than the standard 180 days of confidenti­ality.

The settlement involved a lawsuit that accused then-State Police Chief Pete Kassetas of discrimina­tion against officers based on gender and sexual orientatio­n. It contained allegation­s that the chief had mooned employees and sent an image of a man’s testicles blocking out the sun to a female deputy Cabinet secretary. Kassetas denied the allegation­s. The settlement, in any case, will become public this summer once the 180day confidenti­ality period expires.

In this year’s legislativ­e session, Republican Sen. Sander Rue of Albuquerqu­e and Democratic Rep. Linda Trujillo of Santa Fe pushed for more disclosure of how much New Mexico spends to settle allegation­s of discrimina­tion in state agencies.

The proposal, Senate Bill 317, passed the Senate without opposition in March but failed to make it through the House in the last week of the session.

The proposal called for the state to publish the nature of discrimina­tion claims, the agency against which they were lodged and the total amount of state money used to settle the allegation, including damages and attorney fees.

Publicatio­n would happen on the state’s online Sunshine Portal after a certain amount of time elapsed.

Ortiz said Thursday that he supports the legislatio­n. Its passage would bind future administra­tions, and legislator­s could make other changes in the law to boost disclosure of settlement agreements.

As for the automatic posting his department is pushing for, Ortiz said the first settlement­s should be published online in August.

It should save money, he said, by streamlini­ng the process for releasing settlement­s.

 ??  ?? General Services Secretary Ken Ortiz
General Services Secretary Ken Ortiz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States