Politics & Government

L.A. Times, Sac Bee Sue Over Assembly Records

According to the Sacramento Bee, the two newspapers have jointly filed suit over the Assembly's failure to release the current assembly office budgets and spending records.

The publishers of The Sacramento Bee and Los Angeles Times newspapers joined on Friday to sue the California State Assembly over its refusal to release legislators' spending records and office budgets.

The Bee's full story can be found here.

The lawsuit stems from a public request filed independently by each newspaper, as well as the office of Assemblyman Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada-Flintridge) in mid-July.

Find out what's happening in Highland Park-Mount Washingtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Portatino after being warned by the Assembly's rules committee that he would need to reduce his office's budget by $67,000 or risk having his staff furloughed between Oct. 21 and Nov. 30.

He claims that the threats of furloughs come not as a result of overspending, but are a punishment for failing to follow in line with Assembly Democrats on several key issues, including the state's annual budget.

Find out what's happening in Highland Park-Mount Washingtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Portantino's staff recieved official notices from the rules committee warning them of the on Friday, July 29. On Tuesday, the assembly  the public requests for Assembly spending records.

In rejecting the request, the Assembly's Rules Committee chief administrative officer, Jon Waldie, cited the budget information as being  "correspondence of and to individual Members of the legislature and its staff" and said it could be exempt on the basis of being "preliminary drafts, notes or legislative memoranda," which are exempt under the California Public Records Act.

The Bee's story quotes directlly from the lawsuit, stating:

"... the requested records do not fall under the exemptions cited by the Rules Committee. The Asseembly's refusal to release them violates provisions in the state Constitution that give residents the right to access information about government conduct."

Peter Scheer of the First Amendement Coalition said in an on Wednesday that even if state open records laws did not explicitly suggest that all budget information should be made public, it should be obvious that the public has a right to the information.

"Even if there were no open records law at all you would think that every government official would acknowledge that government budgets are the property of the public," Scheer said.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Highland Park-Mount Washington