[nfbmi-talk] it's a start but
Terry D. Eagle
terrydeagle at yahoo.com
Thu Nov 14 07:02:41 UTC 2013
This amendment would not be burdensome, and can be easily avoid being
burdensome, by being transparent with information, posting it on websites in
an accessible format, and rat out the corruption, and set criminal examples
of governmenta officials who engage in corruption and failing to simply
follow the letter and spirit of the law and rules. Let the sunshine to
disinfect the government of corruption and lack of transparency.
Limits on fees for public records passed by state House committee By
Kathleen Gray Detroit Free Press Lansing Bureau Public bodies would be
limited in what
they could charge for copying public records under the Freedom of
Information Act under a bill passed by a House committee Tuesday. The bill
would allow
public bodies to charge $0.10 per page for documents requested by anyone
under the Freedom of Information Act. They also could charge labor costs of
up
to three times the minimum wage in Michigan of $7.40 per hour. "This
represents really good work and really good policy," state Rep. Mike
Shirkey, R-Clarklake,
who sponsored the bill, said during a hearing before the House Oversight
committee. "It will help make watchdogs out of all of our citizens. The bill
is
almost universally opposed by public bodies because of the time and cost
associated with filling hundreds of FOIA requests. Even with changes made to
the
bill that will allow the bodies to raise the per-page charge based on
inflation, they still remain against the bill. When the bills were debated
earlier
this year, Hamtramck Police Chief Max Garbarino said requiring his officers
to review and fill FOIA requests was taking them off road patrols. "FOIA is
very burdensome and this will make it even more so for us," he said. "Every
minute one of my supervisors is reviewing a FOIA tape, it costs us money and
takes the officer away from patrol. But media and other citizens looking for
answers from government hailed the bill as a necessary tool. "One of the
most
significant problems that the public and media have had with FOIA in recent
years has been the explosion of unreasonable labor fee demands from public
bodies," said Herschel Fink, attorney for the Detroit Free Press. " Many of
those are intended to discourage FOIA requests. The bill would allow anyone
filing a FOIA request to sue public bodies to protest unreasonable labor
costs. "This would give us a tool to use against those kinds of demands
which
many public bodies have been imposing," Fink said. State Rep. Jim Townsend,
D-Royal Oak, offered amendments that would require charter schools, public
school academies and the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association, which is
the body that determines an annual fee tacked onto auto insurance bills to
cover the health costs of catastrophic car accident victims, to be subject
to the act. The amendments were voted down. The bill, which passed on a 6-0
vote, now moves to the full House for consideration.
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