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For Immediate
Release
11/28/07
Contact:
Erik Arneson
(717) 787-4712
Floor Remarks
Sen. Pileggi
Sen. Armstrong
Sen. Brubaker
Sen. Baker
Sen. Erickson
Sen. Folmer
Sen. Vance
Senator Pileggi's Open Records Bill Approved by
Senate; SB 1 Moves to House for Consideration
Senate Bill 1, legislation to strengthen Pennsylvania's Open Records Law
sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi (R-9), was approved by
the Senate today.
"Pennsylvania needs a stronger Open Records Law because openness builds
trust in government," said Sen. Pileggi. "Transparency gives the public the
ability to review government actions – to understand what government does,
to see when government performs well and when government should be held
accountable."
Senate Bill 1, which now moves to the House for consideration, makes
dramatic changes in the records available from various government agencies.
-
For executive
agencies and local agencies, Senate Bill 1 reverses the presumption of
access to records and puts the burden of proof on a government agency
denying access to a record. This is the one change that many advocates
of open government consider the most essential.
- Senate Bill 1
provides a list of 28 plainly stated exceptions for executive agencies
and local agencies. These exceptions include such things as criminal
investigations, Social Security Numbers, personal financial information,
and individual medical records.
- Legislative agencies,
including the Senate and the House, are required to provide access to 17
categories of records.
- Judicial agencies are
required to provide financial records.
- The
four state-related universities – Temple, Penn State, Pitt and Lincoln – are
required to provide information from IRS Form 990, whether or not the
university is required to file that form, along with a list of the highest
25 salaries for university employees.
"Pennsylvania has implemented many important government reforms this year," said
Sen. Pileggi. "But no other reform comes close to matching the impact of a
strong Open Records Law."
Senate
Bill 1 also makes many important changes to the process of obtaining public
records in Pennsylvania:
- It
creates an Open Records Clearinghouse in the Department of Community and
Economic Development to provide information, training and advisory opinions
on Open Records.
- It
improves the appeals process, making it easier for a citizen to challenge an
agency's decision not to release a record.
- It
reduces the time period for response by a Commonwealth agency from 10 to 5
days.
- It
increases financial penalties for noncompliance and makes it easier for
plaintiffs to recover attorneys' fees if an agency acts in bad faith.
- It
requires the Open Records Clearinghouse to establish standard fees for
photocopying records, and to create a uniform form that can be used to
request records.
- It
gives the Open Records Clearinghouse real independence from political
pressure by requiring the governor to appoint an executive director who
serves for six years.
Other
reform measures adopted by the Senate this year include posting more information
than ever online, giving the public easy access to all roll call votes, the full
text of Senate debates, and a live video feed of Senate floor activity.
The
Senate has also approved legislation to increase penalties for violating the
Sunshine Law, to eliminate lame-duck voting sessions, and to prohibit bonuses
for state employees. All of those measures are now before the House for
consideration.
More
information about Senate Bill 1 and other state issues is available at Senator
Pileggi's web site,
www.senatorpileggi.com.
Additional Information:
Reforming
Government
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