Update: Both bills died in committee today. 2-3-15.
State Senator Lydia Chassaniol (R-Butler Snow) filed two bills last week that would restrict the Open Meetings Act. The Greenwood Commonwealth reported last week:
Both bills would redefine a “meeting” under the Open Meetings Act to apply only to those meetings at which at least a quorum of board members is present.
Senate Bill 2489 is even more explicit, specifying that a meeting “does not include serial assemblages of less than a quorum of members.”..... ( Earlier post. )
Tom Hood, the executive director of the Mississippi Ethics Commission, the body charged with enforcing the Open Meetings Act, said the Ethics Commission and the state’s courts have repeatedly deemed such practices, called a “rolling quorum,” as illegal under the state’s sunshine laws.The bill was apparently filed in retaliation for the Ethics Commission finding the Lauderdale County Board of Supervisors in violation of the Open Meetings Act. The supervisors issued bonds in 2013 to pay for various projects. Groups of supervisors that were smaller than a quorum met with the county administrator, the board attorney, and the financial consultant. All groups met on the same day and the total groups included all supervisors. The subject of the meetings was the sale of the bonds. The bond issue was placed on the agenda for a meeting and the supervisors voted to issue $14 million in bonds. The board hired Butler Snow for representation before the commission. The board also voted to appeal the decision.
Chassaniol’s bills, Hood said, would make it far easier for boards to hold critical discussions or debate public policy without giving members of the public and the press a chance to be present....
The commission ruled that the practice of using a "piecemeal quorum" was illegal and a violation of the Open Meetings Act. The commission ruled:
On March 26, 2013, the bond consultant met with four supervisors, a quorum of the board. The consultant first met with two supervisors and then separately met with another two supervisors but discussed the same topic with all four supervisors. Although the board intended to comply with the law, these two separate meetings circumvented the Open Meetings Act by avoiding a physical gathering of a quorum at the same place at the same time. However, the consultant met with all four supervisors about the same matter, a matter under the authority of the Board. Those gatherings involved the “deliberative stages of the decision-making process that lead to formation and determination of public policy” regarding the subsequent bond issue. Those gatherings collectively constitute a “meeting” of the Board within the meaning of the Act. These private gatherings were clearly intended to exclude the public from the deliberations by the board members about a matter of public concern. Those deliberations should have only occurred at a properly noticed public meeting of the Board.Legislative sources told JJ that Butler Snow was the prime mover behind these two bills. Butler Snow seems to think it can get these bills passed when Mississippi's public corruption and weak ethics laws are in the spotlight. The Ethics Commission also issued similar rulings against Yazoo City and the city of Columbus as well . The mayors of both cities contacted members of their respective city councils/board of aldermen to discuss specific items to avoid meeting the requirements of the Open Meetings Act. The legislature should say hell no to Butler Snow and kick these attempts to weaken good government laws out of the capitol back to Lauderdale, Columbus, and Yazoo where they belong.
24 comments:
KF - Forgive my ignorance but what does the BS firm care about whether there are open meeting laws? Why is it your view that this is their agenda?
For the record, I fully support the open meeting laws currently on the books and would oppose an attempt to restrict that.
The bill was filed by Chas at the request of Jeff Turnage, attorney for the Columbus City Council and Mayor after they were cited for a rolling violation. There was a story in the Commercial Dispatch wherein Turnage admitted he solicited the bill filing.
He's involved as well. Am surprised he didn't get Jeff Smith to carry water on this one.
Let's ask our Mississippi Lord and Saviour Haley Barbour what we should do. He knows what is best for us!
Hope the ethics commission dusts off their research on executive sessions, since this ruling is going to drive up their use and/or mis-use.
Columbus Dispatch story on Columbus's involvement in bill.
Tag-team.
Smith is involved. Other Lowndes reps and sens refused to help.
Smith carried Butler Snow's water on weakening the law on governments entering into contribution agreements as well.
And a two-bit prosecutor from a small town in Mississippi wouldn't have the juice to get that law changed even with her help. And he would know it.
Wonder if Jeff Smith is going to give the Speaker another custom suit this year so all the lobbyist can have another good laugh.
Follow the money.
Turnage is not a prosecutor, much less a "two bit" one.
He's the city attorney. His firm is locally prominent with offices in Tupelo and Columbus.
I'm sorry. I meant to write "two-bit city attorney".
Do you think that this is going to go through?
Is there anything to be done about it?
Why does it matter to Butler Snow?
http://www.butlersnow.com/attorney/haley-barbour/
I dunno, just politics I guess.
Turnage is Lydia Chassaniol's cousin!
Good guayd...politics is not for the pure of heart. I guess that is why Hayley and his ilk are so successful.
Top contributors to Lydia Chassaniol's campaign in 2011
1. Mississippi Bankers Association $4,000
2. Mississippi Physicians Association $3,000
3. Friends Of Tate Reeves $2,500
4. Home Builders Association Of Mississippi $2,000
5. Mississippi Association Of Realtors $2,000
Turnage is Lydia Chassaniol's cousin!
Only in Mississippi!!!
Not much more can be said here, but if there are questions just direct them to Butler Snows staff at the Capitol who leave their lobbying jobs just for the session to work for Tate and Gunn. How did this happen??
Well, well, well. Drinkin', Drivin', Do-You-Know-Who-I-Am? Johnny Horhn wants to establish a Mississippi State Truth Commission.
SECTION 3. (3) The commission, any member of the commission or any employee designated by the commission may issue and enforce a subpoena and a subpoena duces tecum, administer oaths and examine persons under oath in accordance with civil laws and rules.
The same Senator Horhn who did everything he could to stop JPD from releasing any information about his drunk driving exploits.
These gold plated Jackson law firms are too much a part of the county control of the legislature. They make a living off white collar criminal defense for all of these local government parasites. At some point the business lobby will propose the consolidation of counties and we will have a modern administrative model for local government. The whole of England has but 50 county councils. Why do we need over 80?
The same system that whitey built to keep the black man down is now used by establishment whiteys, er, Republicans to keep the rest of Mississippi down.
I suspect and certainly hope that there's more than a little anger on the part of many of the partners at Butler Snow that one of their fellow partners missed the memo that practicing law well means you sometimes have to explain to a client why you can't do what he or she wants you to do.
Those partners are very concerned about how their clients are going to react to this.
I have seen more than a few law firms end up ridding themselves of those who get too overly involved in politics so as to lose their perspective and ridding themselves of those with personal or family " issues".
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