Time to End Legislative Exemptions from Public Records & Open Meeting Laws

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on
LinkedIn
+
Under Massachusetts law, the state Legislature is not considered a “public body” in the traditional sense, and therefore enjoys exemptions from open meeting and public records laws. Pioneer Institute believes this is unconstitutional. The state constitution says the Legislature should be accountable to citizens “at all times.”
The laws that apply to municipalities and the rest of state government should also apply to the Legislature. The 2016 public records reform law failed to adequately address this exemption but did establish a special legislative commission to look into the issue further. The commission’s report was supposed to be submitted to the House and Senate Clerks’ Offices by December 30, 2017. Unfortunately, the deadline was quietly extended to December 1, 2018. In February of 2018, the commission began its work on the matter.
Through PioneerLegal, Pioneer Institute’s public-interest law initiative, we reviewed the state’s constitution and existing statutes and concluded that the legislative exemptions from public records law and open meeting laws are unconstitutional. To give input on this issue, we have sent an open letter to the chairs of the legislative commission detailing the argument. Please read our letter here.

Letter to Public Records Commission 4-3-18 by Pioneer Institute on Scribd

(function() { var scribd = document.createElement(“script”); scribd.type = “text/javascript”; scribd.async = true; scribd.src = “https://www.scribd.com/javascripts/embed_code/inject.js”; var s = document.getElementsByTagName(“script”)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(scribd, s); })();
Related Posts:

Pioneer Urges Gov. Baker to Take Bolder Action on Public Records Reform

Governor’s Office in Massachusetts is one of only a handful…

Public Statement on the Recommendations of the Legislature’s Healthcare Provider Price Variation Commission

Commission Misses Great Opportunity to Advance Healthcare Price…

The Clock is Ticking…….

/
The clock is ticking towards December 30, 2017.  As part of…

Achieving a Sustainable and Transparent Healthcare System

/
As the Legislative Special Commission on Provider Price Variation…

Op-ed: Justification For 40% Legislative Leadership Raises Is Political Voodoo

/
When doing the people's will is secondary to legislators'…

Auditing the New Transparency Law: Where are the Records Access Officers?

/
With the advent of the Baker administration, Massachusetts transparency…

Our Government Transparency Resolutions for 2017

/
Although transparency was the expression of choice on Beacon…

MBTA Analysis Offers Data Comparisons between MBTA & Other Transit Agencies Nationwide

Pioneer Institute is unveiling “MBTAanalysis.com,” a web-based data tool that provides year-by-year comparative data and performance ratings for the MBTA and other transit agencies across the country.

A look at Massachusetts updated public records legislation

/
 A version of this article appeared on MuckRock. In September,…

UMass Amherst Athletics’ Spending: Costing the Taxpayer Money

/
College sports have long been a major and growing attraction…

How Legislators’ Late Session Scramble affects Government Transparency

/
Now that there has been sufficient time for experts and the media…