Legislature(2001 - 2002)
04/16/2002 03:40 PM Senate STA
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
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+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
SCR 9-APPROVING LEG. OPEN MEETINGS GUIDELINES
SHIRLEY McCoy, representative from the Select Committee on
Legislative Ethics, said the Legislature enacted a law in 1993
requiring that they abide by open meeting guidelines. The Select
Committee of Legislative Ethics was formed in 1994 and they were
mandated to provide the Legislature with a guide to allow closed
caucuses and private informal meetings to discuss political
strategy without violating open meeting guidelines. The Ethics
Committee has done that; they have submitted guidelines, held
public hearings, talked with Legislators and the public. They
have spent considerable time trying to get guidelines to
Legislators that allowed them to do their best job for the State
of Alaska while honoring the public's desire to know what that
business is. To date the guidelines have not been enacted.
SENATOR HALFORD said the things that are prohibited include a
group of Legislators representing a geographic area or political
subdivision. Any time as few as two people decide or agree upon a
course of action with regard to their particular region or area
they could be affected by this prohibition. This standard is very
broad and could be violated in conversation on a continuous
basis. He asked whether there was a specific number that would
constitute a group.
MS. McCoy replied her understanding is that the proposed
guideline would not prohibit conversations between any number of
people. They gave a definition for both a meeting and a vote,
which clears up some of the ambiguities that have been felt.
CHAIRMAN THERRIAULT thought Senator Halford was concerned about
the concept of a legislative body taking action or agreeing upon
a course of action because the definition of a legislative body
could include the Interior delegation. They could fall under this
prohibition when they get together to strategize on how to deal
with another geographic area.
MS. McCoy replied the problem some public members have is
defining the difference between caucuses versus legislative
bodies and other gatherings. The public would generally prefer
all meetings to be open, but realizes this isn't always possible
because of political strategizing.
The Ethics Committee feels the guideline gives Legislators the
opportunity to complete the business that needs to be completed
without prohibitions.
SENATOR PHILLIPS asked what she meant when she says the general
public wants this.
MS. McCoy replied, "define general public, the people in the
State of Alaska that aren't legislative members."
SENATOR PHILLIPS then asked whether "somebody stopped you in the
store."
MS. McCoy replied they have had lots of members of the public
ask, "When are we going to get open meetings. Why haven't open
meeting guidelines been adopted?" The committee is mandated to
submit guidelines by January 16 every year and they have
faithfully done so since 1995. The committee realizes the entire
legislative body will probably never totally agree on the
guidelines but there must be a starting point. Most of the
committee members, some of whom are Legislators, felt that the
current resolution didn't go to the extremes that most of the
public would like to see, but it was a beginning.
SENATOR PHILLIPS asked what other states have in this regard.
MS. McCoy didn't believe the majority of states have a closed
caucus and most don't require an ethics committee to establish
guidelines.
SENATOR HALFORD apologized for saddling Ms. McCoy with the job
and complemented her on her diligence in trying to complete an
impossible task. The Legislature should have kept this within
their own purview and not asked her to continue to make
recommendations that would probably never be accepted.
MS. McCoy agreed the task was formidable then noted the
Legislature has passed laws requiring adherence from every other
elected official, but they won't do the same for themselves.
SENATOR PHILLIPS replied, "Alaska is full of paradoxes." He then
commented on access and said he'd like to see more people at the
meetings and the guidelines could come later.
CHAIRMAN THERRIAULT closed public comment on SCR 9 and held it in
committee.
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