Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: WEDNESDAY, March 27, 1991 TAG: 9103270388 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-9 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: RICHMOND LENGTH: Medium
The suit filed in Richmond Circuit Court charges that a Dec. 28, 1990, gathering of Finance Committee members and a Feb. 20, 1991, meeting of House and Senate budget conferees violated the Virginia Freedom of Information Act.
"The point here is these meetings are examples of a long history of closed government in Virginia both before and after the passage of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act," said Kent Willis, executive director of the state ACLU.
ACLU is joined in the suit by Common Cause of Virginia, a self-styled citizens' lobby.
"The goal of the lawsuit is to get members of the General Assembly to obey their own laws and practice the open government that they profess to care so much about," Willis said Tuesday night.
The Dec. 28 meeting was held at the Chesterfield County hunting lodge of a Finance Committee member, Sen. Elmon Gray, D-Waverly. Participants said it was not a formal meeting and thus was exempt from the legal requirement to notify the press and public.
The Feb. 20 meeting occurred in Richmond during negotiations on amendments to the 1990-1992 state budget. The lawsuit names Dels. Robert Ball, D-Richmond; Alan Diamonstein, D-Newport News, and Earl Dickinson, D-Mineral, because they attended that meeting.
Ball, Diamonstein and Dickinson could not be reached for comment.
Calls Tuesday night to the offices of several Senate Finance Committee members, including committee Chairman Sen. Hunter Andrews, D-Hampton, were not answered or not returned.
by CNB