Thursday, July 10, 2014
State and Local Stories
The Prince William Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to seek the whereabouts of an estimated 7,000 people county police have turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials since 2008. Supervisorsapproved a motion to file a Freedom of Information request with the federal Department of Homeland Security, and move to a lawsuit if necessary. Chairman Corey Stewart proposed the motion, which passed with a 5-1 vote. John Jenkins, D-Neabsco, cast the dissenting vote and Maureen Caddigan, R-Potomac, and Michael May, R-Occoquan, were absent from the meeting.
Inside NOVA
The Virginia Freedom of Information Act lists more than 100 exemptions, some from the time the law was enacted in 1968 but most coming in recent years. The Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council, a result of a bill by Delegate James LeMunyon, R-Chantilly, is reviewing each one. As council members scrutinized exemptions one by one Tuesday, Robert Tavenner, director of the Virginia Division of Legislative Services, urged members to ask themselves whether the exemption is needed. The goal? “To ensure transparency in government,” said George Whitehurst, leader of one of the two FOIA subcommittees and communications and public relations manager for the Fredericksburg Regional Chamber of Commerce. “… I hope we can simplify and modify it for the 21st century.” Still, while everyone on the FOIA council — members of the media, business and government communities — professes the same goal of transparency, competing interests between government representatives who keep those records, and those in the open government community who want those records, are bound to clash.
Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau
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