FAC

Super Bowl Score: Cop Overtime $6.3 Million, Taxpayers 0

By Karl Olson — The big winners of Super Bowl 50 were not just the Denver Broncos, they were San Francisco cops who racked up over $6.3 million in overtime while The City hosted “Super Bowl City.” And the big losers were not just the Carolina Panthers, they were San Francisco taxpayers, whose elected representatives threw a big party for the billionaire owners of the National Football League. Those are the revelations from public records produced

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A&A: Press Credential renewal denied by CCAC

Q: I am a journalist that covers Capitol politics. This year, my request for Capitol press credentials from the Capitol Correspondents Association of California (CCAC) was denied. Their reasoning was this: one of my publishers also has a political consulting business – the CCAC board believes payments to him violate CCAC bylaws. I am in no way affiliated with the political consulting business, however they are leveraging this connection to inhibit my journalistic access. Is

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A&A: Does the PRA apply to community college records

Q: A recent student survey was conducted by my community college’s general emailing service. Can I send a CPRA request form to the community college to receive the results of the survey? A: The Public Records Act (PRA) applies to “any writing containing information relating to the conduct of the public’s business prepared, owned, used, or retained by any state or local agency,” so it should cover the community college.  Govt. Code § 6252(e).  Such

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A&A: Government agency refusal of email records

Q: I was refused access to government emails and correspondence because the records were determined to be exempt from disclosure under the Public Records Act (recognized under the public interest balancing exemption provided by Government Code section 6255). Does this also refuse my right to access the time and date of the email correspondence? A: Under the California Public Records Act (“PRA”), public records are presumed to be open to the public and must be disclosed

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A&A: City Planning Commission failure to address public comment

Q: I recently submitted comments for discussion at a City Planning Commission meeting. In accordance with the established procedure, I submitted 3 pages of comments before the onset of the meeting. During the meeting my comments were overlooked – the Planning Director claimed they lacked relevance to the agenda item, even though they were directly pertinent to the discussion. Does this incident qualify as a violation of the Brown Act? [su_button url=”https://firstamendmentcoalition.org/legal-hotline” target=”blank” style=”flat” background=”#0eb4f6″

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