Chattanooga Times Free Press

IS TENNESSEE READY FOR LEGISLATIN­G BY PHONE?

- Deborah Fisher is executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n organizati­on working to promote transparen­cy in the state.

During the pandemic, members of local and state governing bodies have been allowed to conduct meetings electronic­ally per executive order by Gov. Bill Lee.

They have not had to hold physical meetings in a physical place. They can hold meetings on Zoom or even by telephone conference call, as long as they allow the public real-time live audio or video access and follow other rules.

It has not been ideal for citizens, who have lost the benefit of interactio­n with their representa­tives before and after phys- ical meetings of county com- missions, city councils and zoning boards. But the minimum — the ability to follow the discussion, know who is speaking and how a person is voting — has been protected under provisions in the governor’s executive order.

After the pandemic eases, the regular rules of Tennessee’s Sunshine Law will go back into effect. But some local elected officials, county commission­ers specifical­ly, want to continue to be able to patch into a meeting and vote by phone instead of physically attend.

Problem is, this time around, the protection­s for the public that were carefully preserved in the governor’s executive order would disappear.

House Bill 327/Senate Bill 301, sponsored by two Knoxville lawmakers at the request of the Knox County Commission, would permit almost half of a county legislativ­e body to participat­e and vote in a given meeting by calling in instead of appearing in person if they meet certain requiremen­ts.

A healthy debate should take place on whether legislatin­g by phone and not in front of constituen­ts is a good idea. The Tennessee Constituti­on prevents state lawmakers from doing this.

But if the General Assembly thinks it’s important to allow county commission members to call in and debate and vote by phone, then surely the public needs protection­s to assure that citizens can hear and understand who is talking on the phone at any given time and how those members vote.

How did such legislatio­n emerge? The idea as presented by its sponsors is noble and kind. It would allow county commission­ers who are having a family emergency or medical emergency to stay at home and still participat­e and vote in a meeting. However, it’s unclear what would constitute a “family emergency” or even “medical emergency.” The legislatio­n gives authority for that determinat­ion to the county commission, raising questions about potential misuse or abuse.

The bill requires that a quorum of the county legislativ­e body be at the physical location of the meeting before other members are allowed to call in and vote by phone.

The legislatio­n creates an exception to the entirety of the Open Meetings Act, not just the section that sets out rules on how electronic participat­ion in meetings should take place — rules that have been developed largely for state boards. This means if the legislatio­n became law, it would trump where it conflicts with any part of Tennessee’s open meetings law.

The bill instead envisions that the county legislativ­e bodies would come up with their own rules to protect the public’s interest in open meetings.

This assumes that each of the state’s 95 county legislativ­e bodies would impose stricter standards on themselves than what is required in the open meetings law, an idea that deserves more examinatio­n and thought.

Finally, the bill’s sponsors point to a natural limitation in the legislatio­n: An elected official could participat­e electronic­ally in only two commission meetings a year.

It’s a seemingly small hole in the open meetings law for the state’s 95 county legislativ­e bodies. But if passed, it likely won’t be long before city councils, boards of aldermen and other local governing bodies ask for the same. And the limits of twice a year? Why not three? And how about expanding it to county budget committee meetings, too?

The enthusiasm of an elected official for more personal convenienc­e should be tempered with the duty of appearing before the public they represent and conducting business in the open.

 ??  ?? Deborah Fisher
Deborah Fisher

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