In the News

Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Sunshine Week promotes government transparenccy

Sunshine Week is a national nonpartisan effort to shine a light on the value of open government and access to public records and meetings. Participating programs come from journalists, civic and government organizations and others who want to raise awareness of access issues.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Toby Nixon to head Sunshine Committee

Toby Nixon, a former state lawmaker and WashCOG president emeritus, has been named chair of the state’s struggling Sunshine Committee by Gov. Jay Inslee. Nixon will chair the March 12 committee meeting.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Sunshine Committee founder quits

Another longtime member of the Sunshine Committee has resigned in frustration. Former state Rep. Lynn Kessler said she was tired of commttee volunteers being ignored.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

WashCOG releases annual report

2023 was a landmark year for the Washington Coalition for Open Government. We saw warning signs of eroding transparency in the state, but also the sunlight of new resources. We have additional staff, a new office and a special report on our challenges and opportunities.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

WashCOG opposes bill that would weaken Public Records Act

The Washington Coalition for Open Government is urging proponents of state transparency to scrutinize and speak out regarding House Bill 2307, which would impose additional steps for processing public records requests and rein in penalties and fees when an agency fails to fulfill a request.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

WashCOG announces 2024 legislative priorities

Listen to the Sunshine Committee’s pro-transparency recommendations and to its ongoing advice, require committees to meet in public, eschew “legislative privilege” and protect the 52-year-old Public Records Act are among WashCOG’s top priorities for legislative action during the 2024 regular legislative session.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Support WashCOG’s fight for transparency

During this time of celebration and joy, please remember the coalition is still a small organization, fighting a truly David and Goliath battle on your behalf in protecting the People’s Right to Know against the unlimited resources of the government committed to darkness. With lack of transparency and darkness comes the failure of our democracy. Please help us in our fight for the United States of America here in Washington.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

WashCOG opens nominations for annual Kenneth F. Bunting Award

WashCOG is now accepting nominations until Jan. 19, 2024 for its annual Kenneth F. Bunting Award for outstanding journalism in the interest of government transparency. The Bunting Award recognizes journalists and media outlets for work that uses or advances Washington state’s open government laws, or educates citizens about them.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Entries due March 5 for WashCOG’s open government contest

Entries are being accepted for WashCOG’s annual Open Government contest for high school students, this year expanded to welcome multimedia messages about access issues. Students may submit videos, podcasts, posters or essays. Entries are due March 5, 2024.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Thurston County Court rules legislators can withhold docs

Washington state legislators can deny access to public records under an expanded definition of “legislative privilege,” a Thurston County Superior Court judge ruled Nov. 17, 2023. The ruling came in the case of Jamie Nixon and the Washington Coalition for Open Government v. the State of Washington.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Court hearing Friday on legislators’ secrecy claim

Thurston County Superior Court will this week consider whether the state legislators have a legal privilege to withhold public information, despite a 2019 Washington State Supreme Court ruling that they are covered by the PRA.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

News from the WashCOG Watchdog

The newest issue of our newsletter shines light on recent efforts to weaken Washington’s sunshine laws, and suggests what we should be asking our elected officials about ensuring access.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

WashCOG sues the state for public records violations

WashCOG has joined with a citizen requester to sue the state of Washington because Washington’s legislators claim that they have a legislative privilege to conduct the people’s business in private and withhold public records from public scrutiny.

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Peggy Watt Peggy Watt

Employee secrecy bill won’t protect vulnerable workers

The Coalition strenuously objects to SHB1533, a well-intentioned bill intended to protect crime victims. But it’s so monumentally overbroad that it would allow any employee of a state agency, including K-12 education, to opt out of the public record — and disappear from accountability.

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