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Open Government Advocacy Project

Shedding light on TrentonThe Open Government Advocacy Project is a committee of the NJ Libertarian Party. Its goal is to ensure transparency and accountability at all levels of government. Articles posted here are a subset of the work of the committee. For more information visit the Open Government Advocacy Project blog.

If you would like to demand accountability and ensure that your local governing body or school board adheres to the Open Public Records Act we can help you request information from them. Contact John Paff, the project chair here.

Washington Borough Open Government Article

Details
Written by: John Paff
Created: April 23, 2008
No comments on “Washington Borough Open Government Article”

This article appeared in the Express Times about the NJLP's effort to get Washington Borough in Warren County to: a) give the public more detailed reasons why it goes into closed session and b) to advertise the amounts of its no-bid contract awards.

You can read my letters to the Borough HERE and HERE.

Open-records activist targets Washington

Borough urged to give specific reasons for closed sessions.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
By LYNN OLANOFF
The Express-Times

WASHINGTON | A state advocate for open public records who last year raised questions about Washington Township's closed-session policies is raising similar questions in the borough.

John Paff, chairman of the New Jersey Libertarian Party's Open Government Advocacy ...

Read the full article on the Express Times website.

Elmer Borough agrees to improve its "sunshine" compliance

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Written by: John Paff
Created: April 20, 2008
No comments on “Elmer Borough agrees to improve its "sunshine" compliance”

In response to a letter from the New Jersey Libertarian Party's Open Government Advocacy Project, the Borough of Elmer (Salem County) has agreed to make itself more transparent.

First, the Borough has placed its Open Public Records Act request form on its Internet site.  Previously, the only way to get the request form was to request it from the Borough Clerk.  This could inconvenience the public and delay citizens' requests.

Read more …

Watchung Borough passes "transparency" resolution

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Written by: John Paff
Created: April 12, 2008
No comments on “Watchung Borough passes "transparency" resolution”

On April 2, 2008, the New Jersey Libertarian Party's Open Government Advocacy Project wrote to Watchung Borough in Somerset County regarding four areas where the Borough wasn't compliant with the Open Public Meetings Act.  On April 10, 2008, the Council, in response to the Libertarian Party's April 2, 2008 letter, passed the resolution pasted below.

The Borough Council is promising to do a better job providing the public with:

Read more …

Appellate Division decides Meetings and Records cases

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Written by: John Paff
Created: April 11, 2008
No comments on “Appellate Division decides Meetings and Records cases”

On Monday, April 7, 2008, the Appellate Division issued a Open Public Meetings Act (OPMA) decision in Mountain Hill LLC v. Middletown and then on March 31, 2008, the Appellate Division's decided an Open Public Records Act (OPRA case) in Mason v. Hoboken.

Read more …

Burlington Prosecutor lends a hand

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Written by: John Paff
Created: April 07, 2008
No comments on “Burlington Prosecutor lends a hand”

My months of appealing to the Burlington County Prosecutor's office for help enforcing the Open Public Meetings Act (OPMA) appear to have paid off.

I learned today that on March 18, 2008, Burlington County Prosecutor Robert D. Bernardi sent a letter to at least some (and hopefully all) municipalities in Burlington County "strongly suggest[ing]" that they review the OPMA, and advising them that "full and complete compliance with all provisions of the OPMA is absolutely necessary to avoid the possibility of monetary sanctions [and] . . . to continue to maintain the public trust." He credited the NJLP as being the impetus for the letter.

Read more …

Don't Get Slapped

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Written by: Walter M. Luers, Esq.
Created: April 03, 2008
No comments on “Don't Get Slapped”

As citizen oversight of government grows, public agencies are resisting the oversight. One of the ways public agencies resist oversight is by threatening to sue members of the public who exercise their rights. These types of lawsuits are called “SLAPP” lawsuits

Read more …

Open Public Records Act Primer

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Written by: Walter M. Luers, Esq.
Created: March 19, 2008
No comments on “Open Public Records Act Primer”

Citizen oversight of government is essential. To perform adequate oversight of New Jersey public agencies, which include public schools, municipal, county, and much of State government, citizens must have information. In New Jersey, one of the tools citizens can use to acquire information is the Open Public Records Act (“OPRA”). Under OPRA, citizens have the right to inspect or request copies of “public records,” which are broadly defined as:

Read more …

Burlington Prosecutor Misses the Point

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Written by: John Paff
Created: March 04, 2008
No comments on “Burlington Prosecutor Misses the Point”

On February 11, 2008, after learning that the Mount Holly Municipal Utilities Authority (MUA) had failed to record executive session meeting minutes for at least ten years, in blatant violation of the Open Public Meetings Act (OPMA), I asked Burlington County Prosecutor Robert D. Bernardi to do more to ensure compliance with the OPMA by public agencies within Burlington County.

I received a February 19, 2008 response from Assistant Prosecutor Thaddeus E. Drummond informing me that he had contacted the MUA's attorney about the ten-year lapse, but his letter did not address the larger issue of his office's proper role in generally enforcing the OPMA.

All the correspondence, including my March 4, 2008 reply to Drummond, is on-line at: http://www.lpcnj.org/OGTF/MtHollyMUA1.pdf

John Paff
Somerset, New Jersey

LP of Central NJ to appear as Friend of the Court in Open Records Case

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Written by: John Paff
Created: January 18, 2008
No comments on “LP of Central NJ to appear as Friend of the Court in Open Records Case ”

On January 15, 2008, the New Jersey Supreme Court granted the Libertarian Party of Central New Jersey motion to appear as "amicus curiae" (i.e. friend of the court) in a pending public records case. The motion, brief, certification and court order are at www.lpcnj.org/OGTF/HobokenAmicus.pdf

Mason v. City of Hoboken, the case that the LPCNJ is participating in, presents the Supreme Court with two issues:

Read more …

Manasquan Honors NJLP Request to Change Minutes Disclosure Policy

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Written by: Webmaster
Created: January 01, 2008
No comments on “Manasquan Honors NJLP Request to Change Minutes Disclosure Policy”

According to the Coast Star of December 20, 2007 Manasquan Borough agreed to amend its policy so that disclosure of closed
session minutes no longer relies on formal "approval" by the council. The article began by describing John Paff,” a member of the New Jersey Libertarian Party and chairman of the party's Open Government Advocacy Project,” who had requested the closed session minutes of a number of council meetings

As reported in the newspaper, the council discussed Mr. Paff's letter urging the borough to alter its policy to speed up the release of closed session meeting minutes. At the meeting of the mayor and council. It was decided that the clerk, township administrator, and borough counsel could review the documents together before releasing them. The step where the council would formally resolve to release the records would be eliminated. John says “this might shave a week or two from responses to requests.”

John Paff Raising New OPRA Issues

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Written by: Webmaster
Created: January 01, 2008
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Seeking the “naked truth” from Long Hill Board os Ed

With attorney Walter Luers representing him, John sued the Long Hill (Morris County) school board so that he could either confirm or dispute unverified statements on the Internet that a former, male member of the Long Hill Board of Education told a female member of the school district's administration that "If you take your clothes off, you can have anything you want in [administrative contract] negotiations."

After having received a heavily redacted copy of the Board's
nonpublic (i.e. closed or executive session) minutes from April 23, 2007 in response to an earlier records request, he found an on-line article that claimed that "reliable sources" had reported that a former Board of Education member had allegedly made the above-described comment that ultimately resulted in the member's resignation from the Board and the female administrator filing a grievance and taking an extended medical leave

Read more …

NJL Interviews John Paff

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Written by: Webmaster
Created: December 21, 2007
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The NJ Libertarian recently interviewed John Paff asking him why Libertarians should care about the Open Public Records Act (OPRA).  John's name and activities are well known to the regular readers of the NJ Libertarian.  John is serving as the Chair of the Open Government Advocacy Council of the NJ Libertarian Party.

Read more …

Open Government Task Force Strikes Again

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Written by: Webmaster
Created: December 17, 2007
No comments on “Open Government Task Force Strikes Again”

On June 26, 2007, during a public meeting, the Evesham Township (Burlington County) suspended a kindergarten teacher, with pay, for "improper interaction with a student in her charge."

For the last several weeks, John Paff of the NJLP Open Government task force has been trying to learn the nature of the "improper interaction" so that he (and others--especially parents and taxpayers in Evesham) can be in a position to judge whether the paid suspension was appropriate. As expected, the Board has completely denied him access to any and all information regarding this matter.

See John's letter to the Board's attorney.

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The NJ Libertarian Party is NJ's third largest political party, founded in 1972. Our vision is for a world in which all individuals have the right to exercise sole control over their own lives, and have the right to live in whatever manner they choose, so long as they do not forcibly interfere with the equal right of others to live as they choose. Our goal is to build a political party that elects Libertarians to public office, and moves public policy in a libertarian direction.

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