Bye-Bye Sunshine: Texas Cities Fight Open Meetings

Submitted by MQSullivan on Mon, 11/16/2009 - 6:55pm.

Whether you like it or not, your local tax dollars are subsidizing an effort to effectively gut the state's open meetings laws. The Texas Municipal League, which is funded by local governments using the taxpayers' dollars, is working vigorously to gut laws that have given Texans access to local government. This is the same entity that wants to raise taxes without voter restraint; now apparently they want to make such decisions without voter involvement.

The state's Open Meetings Act makes it illegal for elected officials to meet for secret deliberations. Punishment can include up to a $500 fine and six months in jail.

Apparently the more than 1,000 cities paying into the Texas Municipal League don't like the pesky requirement that they cannot meet in private to make public decisions. They'd much rather meet in secret, it seems.

Or, it is perhaps more accurate to say there doesn't seem to be a single city or councilman opposing this assault by TML on the public's right to be engaged in local government.

A resolution was recently passed by TML -- at the behest of the city of Sugar Land -- demanding that the Texas' open meetings laws be gutted. It seems TML members want "less restrictive penalties." Presumably so local government officials can meet in private without fear.

According to Fred Hartman, vice chairman at Hartman Newspapers and chairman of the Texas Daily Newspaper Association's Legislative Advisory Committee, the cities of Alpine, Rockport and Pflugerville are planning to file a lawsuit calling the 30-year-old law unconstitutional. Residents in those cities must be so proud: their city fathers are using tax dollars to file this lawsuit against the interests of their own citizens!

Remember that the Texas Municipal League is the same entity that opposes taxpayer protection and transparency for reasons of alleged "local control." Whatever good the Texas Municipal League may have provided in the past, their usefulness is long gone and now seem focused only on undermining the rights of the people.

It appears the legislative agenda of the TML is to lock citizens out of the decision-making process, while still treating our homes, businesses and savings accounts as their ATM.

Open meetings

I'd like to send some direct questions to my city council about where they stand, if for no other reason than to let them know we're paying attention. Are there any specific actions being taken by TML other than the lawsuit by the 3 cities?

I'm sure there are, but I just haven't been able to find information on them, and TML isn't going to post any info on the website.

TML has passed a reoslution

TML has passed a reoslution urging that the laws be gutted. This means it will be something they lobby on in the next legislative session unless enough of us complain to our respective city council members. It's time for cities to de-fund TML.

Par for the course in Alpine

I lived in Alpine for four years while earning my BA in Poli Sci from Sul Ross. I witnessed a City Council meeting as part of a graduate public administration class that makes the Ft Stockton meetings look tame.

Alpine city council regularly met behind closed dors or just flat in the open in groups of three or more. Of course nobody wants to speak out about this in Alpine because of who sits on the council.

In my local government course we spent two weeks on the open meetings laws and I really got a good understanding of the laws. Texas has the strongest laws, or did as of 2005 when I had the course.

I've even used the act myself a few times to get records of a meeting.

I agree TML is no longer useful. When I interned in city government I even heard talk of unionizing from TML people.

FRED Hartman, not DAVID

That's an entirely different guy.

Thanks, David!

Appreciate the catch.

Open Meetings in Lago Vista, TX

I have quite a bit of experience with the Texas Open Meetings Act (TOMA) on my terms on city council. Details can be found at http://www.patdixon.org/archive.html. Scroll down to 5/22/06. It will expose the incompetence of Ronnie Earle's office among other things.

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