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SPONSOR: |
Vaughn |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
254/aHGUAC |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Amend Inspection of Public Records Act |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
Gonzales |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal |
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB112 and SB36
Responses
Received From
State
Commission of Public Records (CPR)
State
Highway and Transportation Department (SHTD)
Attorney
General (AG)
Department
of Health
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of HGUAC Amendment
The House Government and Urban Affairs Committee
amendment removes three words from the original bill language to clarify that
only tactical response plans or procedures prepared for or by the state or
political subdivision of the state are excluded from inspection by the public
as opposed to “records that contain” the items listed above.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
House Bill 254
provides an exception to the Inspection of Public Records Act for “records that
contain tactical response plans or procedures prepared for or by the state or a
political subdivision of the state since the publication could reveal specific
vulnerabilities, risk assessments or tactical emergency security procedures
that could be used to facilitate the planning or execution of a terrorist
attack.”
Significant
Issues
This bill is for the Corrections Oversight and
Justice Committee, the Information Technology Oversight Committee and the
Legislative Health and Human Services Committee.
According to both the Office of the Attorney
General and the Department of Public Safety, this bill relates to the package
of emergency preparedness bills that resulted from the legislation passed
during the 2002 legislative session (SJM62/HJM34, emergency Preparedness
Study). This bill was drafted in
response to that legislation requesting the Office of the Attorney General,
Department of Public Safety and the Department of Health to work together to
assess the existing statutory and regulatory laws and functional emergency
management areas. Further, the AG notes
this legislation was based on the responses received from town hall meetings as
well as meetings with interested groups such as the American Civil Liberties
Union, the
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
State Commission of
Public Records staff would be required to identify records in the agency’s
custody that would be affected by the exception, and procedures—and possible
rule changes—implemented to address denial of access to the records referred to
in this bill. Additionally, agency staff
in conjunction with the CPR staff would need to update records retention and
disposition schedules.
RELATIONSHIP
This bill relates to
House Bill 112 and Senate Bill 36 (duplicates) that propose to amend the Inspection
of Public Records Act to provide an exception for certain veterans’ discharge
papers filed with county clerks.
This bill also relates
to the package of emergency preparedness bills that resulted from the legislation
passed during the 2002 legislative session (SJM62/HJM34, emergency Preparedness
Study.
HB231, Public Health Emergency Act
HB232, Emergency Powers Code
HB253, Allow Governor Authority to Order Evacuations
SB194, Public Health Emergency Response Act
SB365, Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The State Commission
of Public Records states that for clarity purposes, the definition
section of the Act should be amended to define: what records, for example, fall
within tactical response plans or procedures; tactical response plans or
procedures; building plans or blueprints; information technology plans,
required by law of state entities, that contain detailed information about
agencies' IT infrastructure and disaster response provisions and,
theoretically, could be used in planning or executing attacks on
communications.
The
The State Commission
of Public Records raises the following questions:
JMG/sb/njw