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For Immediate Release
4/26/11



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Senator Smucker Remarks on Senate Passage of Increased
 Penalties for Sunshine Law Violations

During Senate Session, Senator Lloyd Smucker (R-Lancaster) offered floor remarks on Senate Bill 101, which was passed by the Senate. The leading bill of a Senate Republican reform package, Senate Bill 101 increases the penalties for intentional violations of the state Sunshine Law, providing for a fine of up to $1,000 for the first offense and up to $2,000 for a subsequent offense. The bill prohibits the use of tax dollars for paying such fines. Strengthening the penalties is a long-time goal of good government groups.

No law works all that well when it contains nominal penalties rarely applied. But when the subject is the Sunshine Law, which guarantees the public the right to attend and comment at open meetings held by state and local government entities, the problem becomes more acute.

What is otherwise a fairly strong Sunshine Law has been undermined by the weak penalty provisions. Too easy for officials to sidestep requirements, and too hard to convince busy DAs of the merits of enforcing it.

Penalties matter because the law depends on good faith compliance. It is impossible to police the thousands of jurisdictions to which it applies, and to monitor the tens of thousands of meetings those entities hold. With enforceable penalties in place, public officials will be more careful about complying, less inclined to ask solicitors to craft creative opinions, and more wary of the potential for prosecution of intentional violations.

The impetus for this measure came from a Lancaster County grand jury, who reviewed wrongdoing arising from months of secret meetings involving the then county commissioners. This was a notorious situation, but it was not an orphan. Each year, we learn about secret meetings, denial of public comment opportunities, and major decisions suddenly sprung on taxpayers. The concern is about intentional actions, not the inadvertent slipup. The need for meaningful penalties is apparent.

Having served for several years as a township supervisor, I saw in practice the virtues of the Sunshine Law. Granted, it did not always seem the most convenient thing, but it was clearly in the public interest and promoted more trustworthy government.

2011 is the twenty-fifth anniversary of the passage of the modern Sunshine Law, and it is well past time for us to make it a complete and fully functioning law.

Two sessions in a row, the Senate has passed similar bills by huge margins. Each time, the bills died in the House without a floor vote. With new reform-minded management over there, the prospects for this measure becoming law are much improved.

During a time when the words "reform" and "accountability" are commonly expressed as taxpayer priorities, this bill delivers both.

 

Contact:

David Atkinson
717-787-6535

 

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