Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Transparency News will be offline until Dec. 29. Wishing you all a safe, joyous and sunny holiday.
State and Local Stories
Gov. Terry McAuliffe's ethics advisory panel is endorsing the creation of an independent commission to redraw legislative district lines without regard to partisan politics. Right now, state lawmakers draw the districts, and convincing legislators there's a better way won't be easy. The ethics panel, which met Monday, is "not naive enough to think that whatever we recommend is going to be enthusiastically received by members of the General Assembly," said former Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling, a co-chairman. "But it is an issue that we need to keep front and center."
Virginian-Pilot
Attorneys for the ACLU of Virginia in the Pittsylvania County prayer case plan to seek more money for the cost of their work during the county’s appeal of an injunction banning supervisor-led sectarian invocations. The county lost its appeal Wednesday in the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals because it filed it too late. U.S. District Court Judge Michael Urbanski had issued an injunction against the Pittsylvania County Board of Supervisors in March 2013 ordering it to cease their practice of leading Christian prayers at the start of their meetings.
Register & Bee
A Fairfax County Circuit Court judge on Monday ordered county police to provide vast portions of their investigation into the police shooting death of an unarmed Springfield man to the attorneys for the man’s family, including the officer’s name, which had been previously undisclosed. Just three days after a hearing on the Geer family’s request for information in their civil suit against Fairfax Police Chief Edwin C. Roessler Jr., Judge Randy I. Bellows issued a 12-page ruling that threatens to end nearly 16 months of silence by Fairfax authorities concerning the death of John Geer. The judge did so, in large part, by noting that the case is now being handled by federal authorities, who did not object to any of the Geer family’s requests and who expressly stated publicly that they had not instructed Fairfax to refrain from disclosing information about the case. The judge’s order redacts the home addresses, phone numbers and identifying data of the law enforcement and civilian witnesses. Fairfax said it would comply with the order, according to county spokesman Tony Castrilli, and not appeal to a higher court. Bellows gave Fairfax 30 days to produce the documents and records requested. Bellows ruled that any documents created after Jan. 7, when the case went from Fairfax to the Justice Department, could be withheld, because they were part of the federal investigation. He also ruled that documents created since Fairfax police launched their internal affairs investigation, sometime after Sept. 2 when the suit was filed, also could be withheld, but that documents before that time “are not part of the internal administrative investigation.”
Washington Post
Hampton has budgeted $44,725 in fiscal year 2015 to coordinate the records it produces. The money is used to organize and track city records by "improving the timeliness and accessibility of information to City Council, citizens and city staff," according to the budget. Staff manages agendas, publications and codes legislative action taken by the City Council so those documents can be recalled whenever needed. This expense doesn't include Freedom of Information Act requests, which are budgeted until the City Attorney's Office.
Daily Press
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