Virginia's Freedom of Information Act lets state and local governments hide critical information from you when officials do their jobs badly.
It lets them keep secret when top public servants — such as city managers and others who wield significant influence— receive raises at taxpayers' expense. Records of disciplinary action, including firings of county managers and school superintendents, as well as meetings to discuss the performance of those officials, can be shielded from citizens. The law doesn't mandate secrecy — but guess what happens when our brave public officials have the option to hide the truth? As Virginia conducts its two-year review of the commonwealth's FOIA, special attention should be paid to how it is repeatedly abused in regard to information about public employees.
Daily Press
The recent prosecution and conviction of a very honorable man, Gov. Bob McDonnell, is a tragic miscarriage of justice and a trampling of Virginia law. I am not a lawyer nor have I, other than a handshake, any acquaintance with the governor. What I am, or strive to be, is an alert Virginia citizen who, for the better part of 88 years, has been a strong advocate of integrity and ethics in government and business.
Brenton S. Halsey, Times-Dispatch
Former Gov. Bob McDonnell's conviction on corruption charges ensured that state lawmakers would spend much of their time in the next General Assembly discussing ethics-related measures. Gov. Terry McAuliffe's new commission on government reform ensures that ethics – and a litany of other governance-related issues – will be a part of political campaigns in state elections through 2017. Good.
Shawn Day, Virginian-Pilot
Virginia’s House and Senate leaders reacted with unwarranted coolness this week to Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s newly empaneled Commission to Ensure Integrity and Public Confidence in State Government. Lawmakers set asea in unfamiliar ethical waters could use some direction from McAuliffe’s bipartisan panel of smart and — this is key — disinterested dignitaries. Many, but not all, are past state legislators who know about the sacrifices, temptations and jealously guarded prerogatives of power.
Roanoke Times
Last week offered this nugget of potential good news: Gov. Terry McAuliffe appointed a bipartisan ethics commission of reasonable people, with redistricting reform as one of their assignments. We say “potential,” because the commission is merely a panel and this is Virginia, where only the General Assembly has the power to depoliticize redistricting while lacking the motivation or integrity to do so. Still, we welcome the chance to address redistricting again because ending gerrymandering is as important as ending Rolex giving.
News Leader
Too many times in Virginia's recent past, elected officials or their families have benefited personally from votes they cast or work they did while representing the public. The work – and the votes – in many cases were perfectly legal, thanks to Virginia's worthless ethics laws. In some cases, the conflicts were severe enough to violate federal laws. Former Gov. Bob McDonnell and former Del. Phil Hamilton were successfully prosecuted. In others, a mere recusal from voting would have cleared up questions. Virginia Beach City Council member John Uhrin voted twice to support a plan to renovate the Cavalier Hotel and develop the land around it, despite his wife's years of work for one of the two developers involved. The first vote came before Catherine Uhrin was hired to market the new development; the second came months after. Uhrin, who has served on the council for eight years and faces no opposition for re-election, has been a tireless supporter of projects that would entice more people to the resort area. No one can question his commitment to tourism. On this project, though, he should have abstained.
Virginian-Pilot
Not knowing if something's going to impact you can be worse than the alternative. It stirs up questions, makes you wonder “what if” and worry about how things could change. At least knowing that your land is or isn't in the path of the natural gas pipeline gives some security. You know what's coming. That's why we encourage Dominion Resources to agree to the request put out this week by Augusta County supervisors and release the list of landowners affected by the pipeline route. Currently, Dominion officials are surveying land and mapping out the final route of the pipeline. Once that's established, they will have to submit the final route for approval with the federal government. During their meeting on Wednesday, Augusta supervisors asked that 90 days before the company files with federal regulators for the project, they inform the landowners who would be impacted by the pipeline.
News Virginian