Texas Legislature

Open government, free speech protections to become Texas law

2013-09-30T04:10:28-05:00

Legislation updating the Texas Public Information Act and Texas Open Meetings Act along with measures that further protect freedom of speech and the press have been signed by Gov. Rick Perry and will become state law. Perry signed these open government and First Amendment protection bills Friday. They are among the major legislation supported by the non-profit Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas during the 2013 regular legislative session, which concluded May 27. Here are some of the leading open government bills signed into law: SB 1368: Modernizes the Texas Public Information Act by specifying that electronic messages dealing with official [...]

Open government, free speech protections to become Texas law2013-09-30T04:10:28-05:00

Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas praises open government advances

2013-08-18T16:48:15-05:00

AUSTIN _ Texans will gain greater access to the records and actions of their public officials under several measures supported by the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas (FOIFT) and approved in the 83rd Legislature. FOIFT board members from across the state testified in favor of these leading open government proposals and First Amendment protections that won House and Senate passage, and now head to Gov. Rick Perry. “This is a tremendous step forward,” said Laura Prather, a First Amendment attorney with Haynes and Boone. “We applaud the lawmakers who worked so hard to pass these bills. The people of Texas [...]

Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas praises open government advances2013-08-18T16:48:15-05:00

Critics Say Bill Does Little To Make Judges More Accountable

2013-08-18T16:54:18-05:00

By Shelley Kofler Originally published by KERA on May 21, 2013 The Texas Senate and House have passed legislation that’s supposed to rein in judges who are abusing or misusing their authority. It’s a problem KERA looked at last year in a special series, Texas Judges: Out of Order. On the House floor last Friday it took less than five minutes to pass Senate Bill 209, legislation designed to make the State Commission on Judicial Conduct more effective. The Commission’s job is to ensure the state’s 3,900 judges comply with standards in the Texas constitution. The commission is responsible for investigating [...]

Critics Say Bill Does Little To Make Judges More Accountable2013-08-18T16:54:18-05:00

Questions of Contradiction in Ethics Bills

2013-08-18T17:05:51-05:00

By Emily Ramshaw and Aman Batheja Originally published May 16, 2013 This is one in a series of occasional stories about ethics and transparency in the part-time Texas Legislature. All session long, freshman state Rep. Giovanni Capriglione has been clamoring for greater transparency, trying to force lawmakers and their relatives to disclose their contracts with government agencies and shine a light on closely held state pension benefits. When his first transparency bill got a committee hearing, his senior House colleagues effectively showed him the door. But when it came time this week to vote on Senate Bill 346, a measure that [...]

Questions of Contradiction in Ethics Bills2013-08-18T17:05:51-05:00

Disclosure Bills Get Little Love From Top Leaders

2013-08-18T17:12:35-05:00

By Emily Ramshaw, Texas Tribune Originally published May 1, 2013 This is one in a series of occasional stories about ethics and transparency in the part-time Texas Legislature. Six months before the Texas Legislature kicked into gear, Gov. Rick Perry told reporters that candidates for public office should be as “transparent” as they can possibly be with their personal financial interests. It has remained the term du jour for state leaders this legislative session, used by everyone from House Speaker Joe Straus to Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst to endorse honesty in budgeting, improve grant-making in the state’s troubled cancer agency and [...]

Disclosure Bills Get Little Love From Top Leaders2013-08-18T17:12:35-05:00
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