102 views 5 min 0 Comment

Best from the Virginia nonprofit news world

- August 26, 2023

August 26, 2023

Virginia Mercury: ‘Transparency groups file brief on working papers exemption in tip line case

(Republished with permission under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.)

Ten media and transparency organizations including the Virginia Coalition for Open Government have filed an amici brief with the Virginia Court of Appeals, urging it to uphold a lower court ruling ordering the release of documents related to Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s education tip line that were sought by left-leaning watchdog group American Oversight. (Virginia Mercury Editor-in-Chief Sarah Vogelsong is on the Virginia Coalition for Open Government Board of Directors.) 

After the Youngkin administration in January 2022 opened up the tip line for parents to report “inherently divisive practices” in public schools, American Oversight submitted a series of FOIA requests related to the tip line. The administration withheld over 800 pages of records, citing the exemption in the law for governors’ working papers. In August 2022, American Oversight sued for access to the records in Arlington Circuit Court, which last January ordered the governor’s office to produce the documents. However, the court agreed to pause that order while the administration appealed the ruling. 

Virginia has argued in its appeal that the working papers exemption applies to all “written communications to and from the Governor’s Office” and that the circuit court didn’t provide any evidence for finding the working papers exemption “inapplicable.” In addition, the state says it is entitled to the presumption that the government conducts searches for records “in good faith.” 

The 10 transparency groups in their amici brief object to those arguments, writing that the working papers exemption “was not codified to absolutely insulate the executive from transparency and, thus, from accountability.” 

“If there were no such limits on the executive’s ability to assert the exemption, officials would be free to invoke the exemption in perpetuity across the entire government, simply by establishing pro forma procedures that make officials within the Office of the Governor party to any official correspondence or document,” the groups wrote. “The upshot would be freedom to thwart the legislature’s intent in enacting VFOIA: using the Working Papers Exemption to fully withhold information that is merely embarrassing or reveals malfeasance, mismanagement, and waste.”

Cardinal News: ‘Budget deal reached; includes tax rebates and restores sales tax holiday for school supplies

“Other details haven’t been released. A special session of the General Assembly will be needed to pass what budget negotiators have agreed on.”

Read the full story at Cardinal News

FXBG Story (Stories) of the week

It was a record-setting week here in Fredericksburg at the Advance. We have not one, but three pieces that set all-time readership records. Revisit your favorites, and share them with your neighbors

No. 3 – ‘I’m Done with Politics’ … Not

No. 2 – Make Mark Taylor the Most Over-paid Janitor in the State

No. 1 – Fools, Fabulists, and Toxic Behavior in Spotsylvania

The Week Ahead

Monday: Our newest writer, Jess Kirby, takes readers inside this week’s City Council meeting.

Tuesday: Shaun Kenney returns with his popular column

Martin Davis is currently working on several stories – but mum’s the word for the moment. Watch this week to see what all the secrecy’s about.

New Dominion Podcast: Our newest episode with popular writer Traci Abramson (author of 50 titles in the field of suspense and intrigue) and recently retired North Stafford High School swim coach drops Monday. And on Thursday night, we record an episode with George Washington district candidates for Stafford Board for Supervisors Tom Coen (incumbent) and challenger, Stafford County Sheriff’s Deputy Deunte Diggs, where we will be talking all things Stafford County.

Come grow with all the readers who are finding in FXBG Advance the news they can use.


Help Support Local Journalism

The FXBG Advance is off and running, but we can’t do this without your help. You can support local journalism here in Fredericksburg by donating $8 a month. Your dollars will go toward hiring journalists so that we can broaden our reach and strengthen our coverage.

The content is now, and will continue to be, free.

Help us bring aboard the journalists who will elevate our coverage and strengthen the community we all share.

Consider joining for $8 monthly, $80 yearly, or becoming a supporting member for $200 or a Founding Member for $500.

Thank you for reading and supporting FXBG Advance.

-Martin Davis, Editor


Comments are closed.