PATRICK HENRY ONCE SAID THAT
LIBERTY IS NEVER SECURE
AS LONG AS GOVERNMENT DOES BUSINESS IN SECRET.
The Liberty
Sentinel, Feb. 28, 2008
(Colby Free Press) Thomas County
Commissioners have an opportunity to avoid prosecution for
two Kansas Open Meetings Act violations that took place Dec
28, 2007.
Commissioners Ken Christiansen, Paul Steele and Byron Sowers
have until March 5 to accept a settlement agreement offered
by the Kansas Attorney Generals Office. Assistant Attorney
General Michael Smith, in a letter dated Feb. 4, told Thomas
County Attorney Andrea Wyrick the commissioners violated the
Open Meetings Act by "discussing a salary plan that covered
all non-elected county employees behind closed doors."
Smith said a second violation took place when the
commissioners failed to open the doors when they said they
would.
Smith is giving Christiansen, Steele and Sowers six months to
obtain one and one-half hours training on the provisions of
the KOMA, according to the settlement agreement. The training
must be paid for out of each commissioner's own pocket, not
county money.
In addition to getting training about the Kansas Open
Meetings Act, the commissioners must not violate the act in
the future. Should they do so, the agreement would be
nullified and they could face prosecution.
According to the act, any member of a body or agency who
knowingly violates any of the provisions of it or
intentionally fails to furnish information as required by it
shall be liable for the payment of a civil penalty of not
more than $500 for each violation. Smith said the state is
offering the commissioners the opportunity to enter into the
agreement as a way to avoid expending additional time and
resources on this matter.
Besides the commissioners, those meeting for non-elected
personnel matters were Road and Bridge Supervisor Clair
Schrock, Landfill Supervisor Larry Jumper, Emergency Medical
Service Director Ken Gatlin, Undersheriff Allen Marcum,
Sheriff Mike Baughn, Register of Deeds Maybelle Moore and
County Clerk Shelly Harms. Baughn, Moore and Harms are
elected officials, all three of which do not qualify as
non-elected personnel.
Colby Free Press Editor Patty Decker contacted the Attorney
Generals office after Colby Free Press reporter Kevin Johnson
reported his suspicion the commissioners violated the act.
Steele was the only one of the three commissioners who
believed the executive session was inappropriate, according
to Decker's complaint filed with the state.
PATRICK HENRY ONCE SAID THAT
LIBERTY IS NEVER SECURE
AS LONG AS GOVERNMENT DOES BUSINESS IN SECRET.
The Topeka
Capital-Journal Editorial Board, Feb. 16, 2008
In a perfect world, there would
be no need for proposals like the one introduced by Sen. Tim
Huelskamp to clarify the Kansas Open Meetings Act.
But an action by some members of the Topeka City Council --
an imperfect group if ever there was one -- provides ample
reason why Huelskamp's bill deserves consideration.
The proposal by Huelskamp, a Republican from Fowler, would
prohibit members of governing bodies from engaging in "serial
communications."
That term has become part of the Topeka lexicon since last
December, when the city council made its end run around Mayor
Bill Bunten's veto of the purchase of a backup police
helicopter.
To recap, the open meetings flap came to light after five
members of the council voted in favor of another type of a
"communication" -- this one a governing body procedure -- to
approve the helicopter purchase.
Later, it was revealed Deputy Mayor Brett Blackburn had
contacted four members of the council -- Jack Woelfel, Jeff
Preisner, Deborah Swank and Lana Kennedy -- by phone to seek
their support of the "communication." Some other members of
the governing body hadn't been made aware of the action.
And who were the five who voted for the "communication"?
Blackburn, Woelfel, Preisner, Swank and Kennedy.
Enter Shawnee County District Attorney Robert Hecht, who
investigated the discussions between the five council
members.
Hecht determined there was no violation of the law. However,
he ruled Blackburn may have violated the spirit of the law in
contacting his four fellow council members.
And that's where Huelskamp has stepped in.
With help from Mike Kautsch, a professor of media law at The
University of Kansas, Huelskamp drafted a bill aimed at
barring individual communications "that collectively involve
a majority of a quorum and that share a common topic of
discussion."
Kautsch summed up the need for the bill this way: "One should
not be using the exception for meetings of fewer than a
majority of a quorum to generate a consensus on a single
issue that ought to be discussed before the public."
We couldn't agree more.
Blackburn also welcomed the proposal, saying he believed any
clarification in the open meetings law is a good thing.
There's definitely a fine point to be determined here. In
ruling the "communication" caper wasn't a violation of the
law, Hecht cited prior court rulings saying serial
communications had to be interactive -- in other words, that
each person Blackburn called had to understand they were part
of the majority of a quorum.
The four council members who spoke with Blackburn contended
Blackburn had asked only about their support of the
"communication." They said Blackburn didn't mention others to
whom he was talking about the issue.
What the issue proved, though, is that there is wiggle room
in the open meetings law.
Here's wishing Huelskamp the best of luck in tightening the
rules.
Do you have an Open Government experience to
share?
E-mail it to
rgannon@kspress.com