San Antonio Express-News

Public’s right to know under attack

- By Kelley Shannon

We Texans are fiercely independen­t and like to make our views known. Using our First Amendment right to speak out goes hand in hand with access to public informatio­n that helps us understand how our government functions.

Unfortunat­ely, both basic American principles — free speech and the people’s right to know — are under attack in Texas. There’s no better time to urge our state lawmakers to protect these precious freedoms than this week, “Sunshine Week,” a nationwide celebratio­n of open government.

The Texas Sunshine Coalition, a diverse public awareness alliance of more than 15 organizati­ons, has formed over the past year and is working at the Capitol to improve government transparen­cy by repairing the Texas Public Informatio­n Act.

Atop the coalition’s agenda is restoring the public’s right to informatio­n in government contracts with private businesses and in government agreements with nonprofits that do extensive government work. Two Texas Supreme Court rulings in 2015 blocked off much of this informatio­n.

Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, and Rep. Giovanni Capriglion­e, R-Southlake, filed bipartisan legislatio­n — Senate Bill 943 and House Bill 2189 — to try to plug the informatio­n black hole that the court created.

Yet another attack on the public’s right to know is the recent Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruling declaring part of the Texas Open Meetings Act unconstitu­tionally vague. The ruling dealt with the “walking quorum” provision that bans leaders of a government­al body from meeting in small separate groups to deliberate and undermine the open meetings law.

In response, Watson and Rep. Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, quickly filed Senate Bill 1640 and House Bill 3402 to clarify the law.

As for free speech, the good news is we already have a strong state law that protects Texans from meritless lawsuits filed against them in an attempt to bully them into silence and trample their First Amendment rights.

It’s known as the anti-SLAPP statute and protects people posting online reviews, domestic violence victims speaking about abuse, journalist­s reporting on alleged wrongdoing, law enforcemen­t officers doing their jobs and others who find themselves on the receiving end of a court case meant only to intimidate — a Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participat­ion.

The Texas Citizens Participat­ion Act, the formal name of the anti-SLAPP law, allows a defendant to get a nuisance lawsuit dismissed fairly quickly if a judge determines it’s a SLAPP case.

One bill filed in the Legislatur­e, however, House Bill 2730, would drasticall­y weaken the Texas Citizens Participat­ion Act. Alternativ­e positive legislatio­n, House Bill 3547 by Speaker Pro Tempore Joe Moody, D-El Paso, would provide some clarificat­ions in the law, with a narrower approach that preserves free speech protection­s.

In Texas, lawmakers convene in regular session only every two years. Now through May they’re meeting, and this is the time to let legislator­s know we want them to guard our rights to free speech and public informatio­n.

We Texans don’t want to live our lives any other way. Kelley Shannon is the executive director of the nonprofit Freedom of Informatio­n Foundation of Texas, based in Austin. For more informatio­n go to www.foift.org.

 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? New House Speaker Dennis Bonnen, R-Angleton, opens the 86th Legislatur­e. Bills filed this session would clarify and strengthen open meetings laws.
Eric Gay / Associated Press New House Speaker Dennis Bonnen, R-Angleton, opens the 86th Legislatur­e. Bills filed this session would clarify and strengthen open meetings laws.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States