Transparency News, 2/26/26

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Follow the bills we follow. VCOG’s annual bill chart is up and running
and will be updated daily throughout the legislative session.
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The Senate General Laws Committee refused to advance a bill proposed by VCOG, carried by Del. Marcus Simon (chair of the FOIA Council), and which passed the House unanimously. The bill clarifies existing law that when a person files a petition to enforce FOIA rights in general district court, they do not have to get a sheriff or some other party to “serve” the government defendant. FOIA does not require formal service, but in the past two years, some judges have dismissed cases for not doing so. Despite the fact that the relevant section of FOIA has been on the books for 15 years, general counsel for the Office of the Attorney General objected to the bill, saying it offended notions of a court’s jurisdiction over the government. The bill will go to the FOIA Council, leaving citizens vulnerable for at least another year to a judge who might impose this obstacle to citizen FOIA suits. HB159

The effort to crackdown on last minute agenda changes is moving forward

'Shall means shall’ bill praised as ‘most important’ effort of 2026

Anger, frustration from audience at data center forum; second forum postponed

Local
Friction from a comment made by Hopewell’s interim city manager about residents questioning last September’s City Council retreat “if they dare” was evident in council’s Feb. 24 meeting, as Michael Rogers apologized to both councilors and citizens for his choice of words. Rogers’ apology closed out the meeting after many of the citizens who took him to task for his Feb. 10 remark had already left the council chambers. One of those citizens was removed from the chambers by security during the meeting’s public-comment period after Mayor Johnny Partin Jr. repeatedly attempted to tell her she had gone beyond the three-minute time allotment. Several citizens used that public-comment period to again call out Rogers for what they perceived was his unprofessionalism in addressing questions at the Feb. 10 council meeting about the $17,000 cost of a retreat at the Kingsmill resort in Williamsburg last September. They said that Hopewell was too fiscally strapped to spend that much and could have saved time and money by holding the retreat in the city. … “The citizens can object to that retreat continuously, if they dare, if they want to,” Rogers said at that Feb. 10 meeting.
The Progress-Index

VCOG’s annual FOI awards nomination form is open.
Nominate your FOIA hero!

“Democracies die behind closed doors.” ~ U.S. District Judge Damon Keith, 2002

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