Mike Dinoffria, Berkeley Daily Planet, June 17, 2002
Coalition pushes Sunshine Ordinance:
City should provide easier access to information,
critics say
A group of city officials and citizens last week pushed
forward their intent to bring a Sunshine Ordinance to
Berkeley and, in doing so, open up the city's information airways.
Sunshine commonly refers to legislation that, under the
Brown Act and the California Public Records Act, protects a citizen's
right to access public information and outlines the guidelines requiring
local legislators to have open government meetings and public agendas.
The Berkeley Citizens Sunshine Coalition, meeting last
Thursday evening, said they want a measure implemented in Berkeley similar
to those passed in Oakland, San Francisco and Contra Costa County.
"The coalition is concerned now with identifying
where the problems are and adding a sense of urgency," said Peter
Sesame, a member of the Society of Professional Journalists, who helped
initiatives pass in San Francisco and Oakland.
There have been similar grassroots attempts in Berkeley
to free up information, but Sesame said other attempts came primarily
from citizens groups, while this effort is headed by city officials.
City councilmembers Mim Hawley and Kriss Worthington attended
the meeting as did city commissioners John McBride, Lauren Moret and
L A Wood.
On the issue of obtaining public records, Wood expressed
difficulty in getting the city to turn over documents, namely when he
tried to obtain a report on arsenic and treated wood from the city's
Parks Department.
He believes he should not, as he eventually did, have
to file a Public Records Request to obtain the information. "Everyone
should have equal access (to public records), and that is not the case,"
he said.
Worthington also weighed in on the city's information
process. He pointed out that people can watch City Council meetings
on television, but viewers do not know the content of what is being
discussed because city reports are not widely available.
The written reports are available at the public library,
but the coalition agreed that the community would be better served if
the reports were available on the Internet as well. Berkeley resident
Judith Scherr called the reports 'wonderful information for citizens
who want to participate and understand their local government."
Some city officials, though, believe that the rights of
the citizens of Berkeley are sufficiently protected by the Brown Act
and the California Public Records Act, and that a Sunshine Ordinance
would be redundant.
Manuela Albuquerque, city attorney since 1985, does
not believe that a Sunshine Ordinance is necessary for Berkeley. She
believes that what is stipulated in Contra Costa's Sunshine Ordinance
is, for the most part, already practiced in Berkeley.