Proposition 59 -- it’s a matter of public knowledge
Lost among the statewide propositions concerning Indian gaming and
the greater national race for the presidency of the United States is
a little known proposed amendment to the state’s Constitution known
as Proposition 59.
While it has been overshadowed by bigger and sexier campaigns, the
truth is this initiative strikes a blow against those who would deny
the people’s right to know what government is doing.
Proposition 59’s passage would strengthen the Ralph M. Brown Act
and the California Public Records Act and make it the state
constitutional right for the public and journalists, acting on behalf
of the public, to access governmental meetings and governmental
documents.
No surprise here, we back Proposition 59 100%.
Too often, members of the public and the press are denied access
to government records, government institutions and government
meetings at the whim of mostly well-meaning but often misinformed
public officials.
We are then forced to ask for the access and then wait for the
anticipated denial.
If this proposition passes, that access will be constitutionally
protected, putting the onus on government agencies to explain more
precisely why the information is not public.
According to the state attorney general’s summary, the measure
would:
* Provide right of public access to meetings of government bodies
and writings of government officials.
* Provide that statutes and rules furthering public access shall
be broadly construed, or narrowly construed if limiting public
access.
* Require future statutes and rules limiting access to contain
findings justifying necessity of those limitations.
* Preserve constitutional rights including rights of privacy, due
process, equal protection; expressly preserves existing
constitutional and statutory limitations restricting access to
certain meetings and records of government bodies and officials,
including law enforcement and prosecution records.
In fact, it was put on the ballot by a two-thirds vote of the
state Legislature, all though that very same Legislature is exempt
from much of the laws.
“The main reason it is needed is to prevent dilution of access
rights by the courts,” said Peter Scheer, the executive director of
the California First Amendment Coalition, a Sacramento based public
access watchdog group. “Because it will be part of the constitution,
it can’t be altered by judges but only another amendment. And access
rights have been watered down. This will put a stop to that.”
Proposition 59 is supported up and down the state. Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger is in favor of it as is the California Newspaper
Publishers Association, the California First Amendment Coalition, the
League of Women Voters and city attorneys across the state.
Count us and we hope the voters among them.
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