From Deseret News archives:

Media fighting GRAMA changes

Published: Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005 11:33 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
What lawmakers deem as necessary housekeeping to modernize Utah's public records law would minimize public involvement in government business, a coalition of local news outlets says.

The Deseret Morning News, Salt Lake Tribune, KSL, Utah Press Association and the Society of Professional Journalists is calling for a group of nine state representatives and five senators to reject the proposals. The lawmakers are set to meet Tuesday for a sixth and final time to put the finishing touches on three proposed bills that would change how the public accesses government information — from the Legislature to the smallest town council.

The task force co-chairmen, Sen. David Thomas, R-South Weber, and Rep. Doug Aagard, R-Kaysville, said the 13-year-old Government Records Access Management Act (GRAMA) needs a comprehensive review, particularly in two key areas: There is no clear guidance on how governments should deal with technological ad- vances, such as digital databases and e-mail; and a growing perception among lawmakers that GRAMA is being used to harass government agencies or by attorneys gathering background information for lawsuits. There is also growing concern that business marketers are culling out private citizen information.

Story continues below
When the law was passed, "they only began to contemplate the value of data and they only began to comprehend the explosion of e-mail," Aagard said, adding that he knows of citizens filing repeated but unnecessary records requests just to swamp city workers with retrieving the information. Those concerns, combined with private information being used by marketers, prompted the creation of the task force, Aagard said.

Despite being "beaten up pretty good in the media," Thomas said most of GRAMA will remain intact. "We're not talking about dramatically changing GRAMA."

Several other groups representing title companies, appraisers, consumer credit bureaus, open government advocates and insurance companies see enough change to worry them that people buying homes or their agents would be prohibited from background information routinely obtained now.

One local development company has accused one of the co-chairmen of failing to disclose what it considers a conflict of interest.

Attorneys for Anderson Development, which is currently locked in a legal battle with Summit County officials over a development, say that Thomas — an assistant Summit County attorney — stands to benefit from changes to GRAMA by shielding county documents and e-mails from Anderson's requests for copies.

Recent comments

Mr. Thomas' comments are offensive. It is not in his position to...

Kerry Spendlove | Feb. 17, 2009 at 1:11 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

"G - You realize the '120' number was done as a study, right?" Yes,...

Just so you know (especially Murray Skeptic) I happen to be adopting one of...

We need answers from Hasan

Willfully blind | 7:29 a.m. wrote: "We will continue to fight the enemies of...

This is so silly. I can't believe the negativity going on here. This story...

Pretty sure she is making a lot of this up. But also pretty sure that he has...

Cougs listen up who is ranked higher Utah or BYU??? Who has only lost one...

It doesn't say she supported communism. She helped some poor people. She...

for this article. I am tired of reading garbage such as the discrimination...

The story is in the Moromon Times. If it were in the Stamp Collector...

'08 loss 'learning experience' for TCU

Good luck Utes, I'm cheering for you. This game may be on over here in Iraq,...

Advertisements
Advertisement