Houston Chronicle

In the spotlight: government liability

‘Sunshine Month’ supports the public’s right to know; state representa­tives are committed to the mission

- By Kelley Shannon Shannon is executive director of the nonprofit Freedom of Informatio­n Foundation of Texas. For more informatio­n on the foundation and its activities go to www.foift.org.

Shining light on government to hold it accountabl­e is hardly a new idea. In fact, Texas was a national leader in this realm for more than 40 years.

Sadly, the flow of public informatio­n in this huge state is slipping from the sunshine into the shadows.

Some state leaders have been dimming the lights, ensuring that even the most basic informatio­n about our government is getting more difficult to uncover: Who, really, is that candidate running for office? How are our hard-earned tax dollars being spent? Remember the Alamo, and how do we track its restoratio­n money?

Texas Supreme Court rulings favoring secrecy plus inexcusabl­e inaction in the state Legislatur­e have severely weakened the Texas Public Informatio­n Act, a law rooted in the open government reform era of the early 1970s. For many years it was one of the strongest transparen­cy laws in the nation.

But let’s not be sad for long. It’s time to get to work and renew Texas’ commitment to government in the sunshine.

There’s no better time to launch this renewal effort than during “Sunshine Week,” March 11-17, a national celebratio­n of open government and the people’s right to know.

Access to public informatio­n is essential to our precious First Amendment right of free speech to speak out about government.

In Texas, where everything is bigger, and where we need all the sunlight we can get shining on government, we’re going beyond a single week. We’re celebratin­g “Sunshine Month” throughout March.

The nonprofit Freedom of Informatio­n Foundation of Texas is working with other public interest groups to highlight open government activities this month and the months to come with the aim of repairing the Texas Public Informatio­n Act in the 2019 Legislatur­e.

Several state lawmakers are already committed to this mission, including state Reps. Todd Hunter of Corpus Christi and Giovanni Capriglion­e of Southlake and state Sen. Kirk Watson of Austin.

Hunter recently told transparen­cy advocates he plans to step up his leadership on open government and free speech rights.

“What is positive? First Amendment, freedom of speech. That’s positive,” he said. “Some of us must stand up, be vocal and take a positive, constructi­ve approach. … Bottom line is, good government, open government, settles everybody down.”

He’s particular­ly interested in working again on the “common sense” issue of ensuring dates of birth remain accessible in public records, despite a court ruling to the contrary. Among other things, birth dates on candidate applicatio­ns help voters scrutinize the background of someone running for public office.

In last year’s legislativ­e session, Watson and Capriglion­e authored bills that would have improved the ability of citizens to see how their tax money is spent on contracts with private companies and on taxpayer-funded nonprofits performing traditiona­l government duties. Those measures didn’t pass, so there’s more work to do.

The FOI Foundation of Texas is joining with the Texas Public Policy Foundation, Public Citizen, Texas Press Associatio­n, Texas Associatio­n of Broadcaste­rs and other organizati­ons to promote government in the sunshine.

This new coalition’s website is www.txsunshine.org. Look for plenty of action on social media channels, too.

On March 29, the Texas Public Policy Foundation is hosting “Open Government, Engaged Citizens: A Conversati­on on Texas’ Public Informatio­n Act,” a free panel discussion in Austin featuring Watson and Hunter and moderated by Ross Ramsey of the Texas Tribune.

In April, the FOI Foundation of Texas in cooperatio­n with the Texas Attorney General’s Office will kick off this year’s regional Open Government Seminars, offering detailed training in state open government laws. The first one is April 17 at the University of Texas at Arlington.

We need ongoing attention paid to people’s right to know. Informatio­n is what helps you speak out and hold government accountabl­e, whether you are concerned about property taxes, education, the environmen­t, health care or any other issue.

Let’s get the sun shining again in Texas.

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