The Norman Transcript

Headlines

March 15, 2013

The search for the truth: Making an open records request

NORMAN — On Wednesday, City Attorney Jeff Bryant refused to release a redacted version of the mayor’s Feb. 19 memo to The Transcript. At that time, Bryant said the memo is an extension of the executive session. But the executive session of Feb. 12 had long since closed, and there is no authority in the law to extend executive sessions indefinitely through memo, email or otherwise.

“When public bodies finish an executive session, they vote to end the executive session and re-enter the regular session,” said Dr. Joey Senat, associate professor at OSU School of Media and Strategic Communications. “So how can they have a continuation of an executive session after the meeting is adjourned? The answer is that they can’t. A public body can’t claim that an executive session continues on and on.”

Senat writes an open government blog for FOI Oklahoma.

“I deal with these issues every day,” Senat said. “Open government is my research area.”

On Thursday, Bryant again refused to release the memo, saying it constitutes client-attorney confidentiality. But the memo is issued by the mayor to the city council. Any legal opinions in the memo are limited and would not fall into privileged areas. Releasing the memo would not limit the ability of the city to negotiate with a union or to purchase land, for example. There is no compelling reason to keep the memo confidential.

Bryant was not willing to redact, or black out allegedly protected portions of the memo, to release information that should be subject to public scrutiny. Title 51 Section 24 of the law allows that “Any reasonably segregable portion of a record containing exempt material shall be provided after deletion of the exempt portions.”

Bryant said the document should be confidential, not because of content but because of the process.

“Our perspective is we have a statute that says memorialization of records of what transpires in meetings closed to the public are not subject to the open records act,” Bryant said.

“The law only exempts the minutes of the executive session,” Senat said. “Minutes should be a summary of what was discussed. Did he (Bryant) take the minutes?”

According to the Oklahoma Open Meetings Act, “Minutes must be an official summary of the proceedings clearly showing those members present and absent and what they considered,” Senat said.

The opening sentence of the memo appears to stake a claim for memorialization or record status.

“This memorandum is to memorialize the results of the Norman City Council’s discussion,” it reads. But merely claiming something is a memorialization does not make it so.

“How can there be results?” Senat said. “They’re not supposed to make decisions in executive session.”

Minutes are to be kept sealed in a separate file, Senat said. They are not passed out via memo. Following an explanation of possible percentage salary increases, new information is presented that was not discussed in executive session, further belying the claim that the memo is any kind of official record of executive session discussions.

A public body “may” (not “shall”) keep personnel records confidential if “disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” according to Title 51 Section 24.

Nothing in the memo is information that is unfavorable to the city manager or that is not already or will not soon become a matter of public record.

 

For local news and more, subscribe to The Norman Transcript Smart Edition, or our print edition.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Headlines
  • Former OU Golfer Jade Staggs ****Check with Kyle before Using*** Former Sooner takes a stand

    All Jade Staggs ever wanted to do was play golf for Oklahoma. Growing up less than 15 miles from the campus, it was her dream school....

    May 17, 2013 2 Photos

  • Former student sues OU over school’s refusal to release student parking citation information

    A lawsuit was filed against the University of Oklahoma last week after the university repeatedly refused to release student parking citation information. The lawsuit was specifically filed against David Boren, individually and as the ...

    May 18, 2013

  • City water customer says site identifying high water users is misleading

    A social media website identifying Norman residents as high water users is factually misleading, according to one Norman homeowner who made the list....

    May 17, 2013

  • Nonprofithealth care centers Variety Care and Health for Friends to merge

    In an effort to serve Cleveland County’s medically under-served residents, Health for Friends, a Norman nonprofit community health center since 1985, is merging with Variety Care, an Oklahoma City-based nonprofit Federally Qualified Health ...

    May 18, 2013

  • 405 bikers take the path less traveled to work

    Rain, shine or fog, Norman bicyclists show up every year, and have been showing up every year for eight years, for the city’s annual Bike to Work event. Despite drizzle and fog Friday morning, this year was no exception. “Norman has one ...

    May 18, 2013

  • OU student allegedly changed his grades and faculty members’ passcodes

    Charges were filed against a University of Oklahoma student Thursday after the student allegedly changed faculty members’ passcodes and his own grades on Wednesday. Roja Osman Hamad, 24, was charged in Cleveland County District Court with ...

    May 18, 2013

  • Fallin asks Oklahoma Legislature for health care fix

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Gov. Mary Fallin proposed a last-minute legislative change on Friday to the state’s Insure Oklahoma program that would direct $50 million in state tobacco taxes to pay for more than 9,000 people who are expected to lose ...

    May 18, 2013

  • Fallin urges last-minute health care fix

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Gov. Mary Fallin proposed a last-minute legislative change Friday to the state’s Insure Oklahoma program that would direct $50 million in state tobacco taxes to pay for more than 9,000 people who are expected to lose their ...

    May 18, 2013

  • Five face drug charges after police search

    Five individuals face drug charges in Cleveland County District Court after Oklahoma City police executed a search warrant for a home in Cleveland County....

    May 18, 2013

  • Ousted IRS chief apologizes

    WASHINGTON — The ousted head of the Internal Revenue Service apologized to Congress on Friday for his agency’s tougher treatment of tea party and other conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status. He said they resulted from a misguided ...

    May 18, 2013