Chattanooga Times Free Press

HIDING MISTAKES WON’T MAKE GOVERNMENT BETTER

- Deborah Fisher is executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government.

The Hamilton County Board of Education’s attorney on Wednesday finally revealed to board members the settlement payout amount of $750,000 to a student sexually assaulted during a basketball tournament trip.

Attorney Scott Bennett indicated that this amount was previously confidenti­al because its insurer had entered into a confidenti­ality agreement with the student and his family.

There is still another student with whom the school board’s insurer reached a settlement payout. Bennett has not released that amount. The explanatio­n is that the settlement is under seal in federal court.

The Tennessee Attorney General and the Office of Open Records Counsel have both weighed in on the matter — and told the school board and its insurer, the Tennessee Risk Management Trust — that settlement agreements between governing bodies and private parties are public records. Further, any nondisclos­ure agreement or confidenti­ality agreement could make a settlement agreement void and unenforcea­ble.

This is not new. It has been recognized by the Court of Appeals at least twice since 1999, and has been the opinion of the Tennessee attorney general since 1996.

In 1996, the attorney general said, “An agreement by a government­al agency to restrict public access to public records that are not exempt under state law violates public policy and is unenforcea­ble.”

In responding to a question from an emergency communicat­ions district that had entered into a confidenti­ality agreement, the AG said, “By entering into an agreement to restrict access to public records for which no statutory exemption is available, the district would be attempting to create a new exemption from the Public Records Act,” which is not allowable.

In May 1999, the Court of Appeals reached the same conclusion in a case involving a newspaper’s request for a settlement agreement between the city of Memphis and the family of a man who died while being restrained by the Memphis Police Department. After the newspaper sued under the Tennessee Public Records Act, the city finally released the settlement document which it had previously said it was prevented from doing because it was under seal in federal court.

On appeal, the court found in Contempora­ry Media Inc. v. City of Memphis that the city had willfully violated the Tennessee Public Records Act because it had known government settlement­s were public records and any confidenti­ality agreement entered into by the city would be contrary to law. “A government­al entity cannot enter into confidenti­ality agreements with regard to public records,” the court said. “The idea of entering into confidenti­ality agreements with respect to public records is repugnant to and would thwart the purpose and policy of the Act. Thus, the City could not lawfully enter into the agreement which it entered into with the … family to keep the terms of the public record confidenti­al.”

In 2004, the Court of Appeals in The Tennessean v. the City of Lebanon reached this conclusion again in a case in which Lebanon paid a settlement to a widow of a man mistakenly shot by police.

With the clarity of these two cases, and fresh letters from the attorney general and Office of Open Records Counsel to the school board and Tennessee Risk Management Trust, urging toward disclosure, it is somewhat remarkable that the continued position appears to reject what is so apparently before them.

The school board’s insurer, the Tennessee Risk Management Trust, is most likely considered a government entity under the law, according to the Office of Open Records Counsel. So even if the school board claims its insurer entered into an agreement without its knowledge or approval of the details, its insurer is also likely subject to the Public Records Act.

In parsing the school board attorney’s statement to the Times Free Press last week, it seems to hang onto the idea that the settlement payout can continue to be confidenti­al unless the student’s family agrees to make it public.

“I understand that Mr. (Charles) Purcell (the attorney for TRMT) was able to use the attorney general’s position to persuade the Doe attorney to waive the confidenti­ality agreement,” Bennett said.

The fact that the school board or the Tennessee Risk Management Trust quite possibly agreed to, or sought, unlawful confidenti­ality of the settlement amounts seems to be lost.

The citizens of Chattanoog­a, and citizens of this state whose schools boards and county government­s pay insurance premiums to the Tennessee Risk Management Trust, might consider why this issue is important.

In this case, the school district faced costly liability for its actions or non-actions related to the student assaults.

Our history must surely convince us that secrecy that hides the scope of government mistakes, including the cost, from the people will not make government better.

It is only through transparen­cy that citizens have a full accounting of the impact of government decisions and that our chance to maintain self-governance will continue.

 ??  ?? Deborah Fisher
Deborah Fisher

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