The Reporter's Notebook from The Las Cruces Sun-News

The Reporter's Notebook, Ep. 61: Melanie Majors, NMFOG and 2023 Legislature

March 25, 2023 Damien Willis / Melanie Majors Season 1 Episode 61
The Reporter's Notebook from The Las Cruces Sun-News
The Reporter's Notebook, Ep. 61: Melanie Majors, NMFOG and 2023 Legislature
Show Notes

This week, we’re talking to Melanie Majors, the executive director of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government. FOG was created because citizens have a fundamental right to know what their government is doing, and that includes the right to inspect public records and the right to attend public meetings.

FOG works to make sure these rights are strong and available to everyone. Sometimes, this means assisting individual citizens who are denied information by local or state government. It also means strengthening and broadening freedom-of-information laws through legislation and litigation. And it means educating the public and public officials about the letter and spirit of sunshine laws.

With New Mexico’s 60-day legislative session having just wrapped up, several bills of interest were winding their way through the legislature — bills that would have a tremendous impact on transparency and the state’s Inspection of Public Records Act.

For instance, Senate Bill 63 — sponsored by Sen. Bill Tallman, an Albuquerque Democrat, would shield the names of applicants of high-level government jobs, including city managers, school superintendents and police chiefs. Tallman contended the bill’s passage would attract a better pool of candidates. We’ll talk to Melanie about FOG’s opposition to that bill and what became of it.

Another proposed bill, House Bill 232, would revise New Mexico’s public records law to exempt from release certain cybersecurity records and law enforcement video of death notifications, nudity or certain other images. It would also require people requesting law enforcement video to include either a police report number, computer dispatch number or a date range. A request using a date range would need to include the officer’s name, time or location of what the requester is seeking. While FOG was involved in discussions surrounding the bill, the organization did not formally oppose the changes.