Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Reworking set for records bills

Legislator­s plan amendments after hearing from advocates

- GINNY MONK

A state lawmaker is planning a major rework to a bill that she wrote intending to protect the identities of confidenti­al informants, but that free-press advocates said would keep many pieces of police investigat­ions secret.

Rep. Michelle Gray, R-Melbourne, filed the bill Thursday and discussed it with the Arkansas Freedom of Informatio­n Task Force on Friday. All members of the task force and the public who spoke on the bill opposed it.

“What we’re trying to do is protect the identity of a confidenti­al informant from the FOI,” Gray said.

But House Bill 1417 doesn’t set a timeline for eventual release of the informatio­n and says only that individual­s who are “assisting a government­al entity,” or have “assisted a government­al entity” in a criminal investiA

gation would be exempt from the state Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Robert Steinbuch, a task force member and law professor, said the vague language could mean that the exemptions apply to all police investigat­ions and include forensic evidence, among other things.

“This bill would be the biggest sea change since the FOIA’s inception,” said Steinbuch, who teaches at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock’s W. H. Bowen School of Law. He is also a co-author of the sixth edition of The Arkansas Freedom of Informatio­n Act

reference book.

David Bailey, the managing editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, also spoke against the language in the bill, saying he hoped the Arkansas Press Associatio­n or members of the task force would be involved in helping amend it.

“I’m not really against the intent of this bill,” Bailey said. “I can’t imagine any right-thinking person would be.”

Gray said in a later interview that she planned to either amend the bill to make it more specific or write a fresh piece of legislatio­n.

“After that task force meeting, I realized I think they were correct that the language was too broad,” she said.

Two other legislator­s also said after the meeting that they plan to amend their own open-records bills.

Sen. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, said he wants to make a couple of changes to his bill that would make private groups performing government functions, such as fundraisin­g or labor, subject to the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

The changes would remove a previous requiremen­t that an agency spend 20 percent of its time, efforts or resources in support of a government­al function.

Hammer wanted other changes to Senate Bill 231, filed Jan. 31, to help keep donations by nonprofits private as long as they aren’t performing government functions.

“The intent of it [the bill] is to provide access to informatio­n that is shrouded or shielded,” Hammer said.

Rep. Jim Sorvillo, R-Little Rock, said he would amend House Bill 1382, which would keep the identities of lottery winners private. The bill was filed Tuesday.

“It’s dangerous if we find someone who wins a large jackpot,” Sorvillo said.

He said he wanted to set specific limits so that only those who win larger amounts of money would have their identities secret for security reasons and that people can sign a release so their names can be public.

A couple of task force members said they supported the bill, but representa­tives from the Arkansas Press Associatio­n and the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette spoke against it. Aaron Sadler, the communicat­ions director for the Arkansas Press Associatio­n, said Sorvillo’s bill would hurt marketing efforts for the Arkansas Lottery and leave the system open to corruption.

“It’s very important, I would say, for transparen­cy’s sake, for marketing’s sake,” Sadler said.

The names of lottery winners are currently public record.

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