• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Sunday, May 25, 2025
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
No Result
View All Result
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
No Result
View All Result

Supreme Court ruling will impact Sunshine requests

Debbie Coleman-Topi by Debbie Coleman-Topi
August 27, 2021
in Headlines
Missouri Sunshine Law
11
SHARES
278
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

Locally and throughout the state

A recent Missouri Supreme Court decision defines just how far-reaching the popular proverb “the long arm of the law” can stretch by ruling governments may not charge fees for time spent sifting public records prior to release of the records.

The decision stems from the case in which attorney and Sunshine Law advocate Elad Jonathan Gross sued Missouri Gov. Mike Parson’s office for charging more than $3,600 for records pertaining to former Gov. Eric Greitens’ administration. The ensuing bill charged $40 per hour for more than 90 hours of time for such processing.

RelatedNews

Park University notes 150 years of history

Amenities being added to Park at Platte Meadows

Police have suspect in string of Platte City burglaries

In response to the suit, the court fully defined the parameters of the law by stating that government bodies may not charge those requesting the documents, for time spent by attorneys reviewing the documents. The 6 to 0 decision by the state’s highest court supersedes an earlier decision by the Cole County Circuit Court.

In addition, the ruling clarified that Parson’s legal representation failed to provide an explanation for why some information was redacted.

The scenario not only describes the actions of those representing Parson’s office, but had repercussions in dozens of Sunshine cases, possibly including a suit filed by Jason Maki against the City of Parkville, alleging Sunshine violations.

That suit was settled recently when the City of Parkville agreed to pay Maki $195,000.

In that case, the city charged Maki more than $4,000 for documents he requested and stated much of the charges stemmed from the city administrator’s time sifting through the documents. Sunshine attorney Bernie Rhodes said that the ruling against the governor’s office is “a great victory for openness and transparency” and.”a wonderful decision” that is destined “to put teeth into the Sunshine Law.”

Rhodes said the ruling should stop a common response by those seeking government documents: withdrawing their requests. He called governments’ practices “artificial barriers and outrageous demands” and provides a way for officials to skirt the law, which is designed to provide the public access to records as a means of protecting democracy. He said governmental bodies at all levels have learned from each other which barriers to erect in blocking information, calling it an “increasing crackdown by governments and an increasing desire to keep government’s actions a secret.”

The ruling further reinforces a Missouri Court of Appeals decision that sorting and sifting by government officials indeed violates Missouri law. The law allows governmental bodies to charge for “staff time needed to make copies or transfer electronic records” when responding to requests for public records stored electronically.

The ruling will impact dozens of cases currently pending, said Rhodes of Lathrop GPM group in Kansas City, who has represented The Kansas City Star and The St. Louis Post Dispatch in numerous cases, including several that currently are pending.

Prior to the ruling, Rhodes filed a brief of “amici curiae,” a persuasive legal document meant to provide the court with additional information about the pending case and its effects. Rhodes described ongoing litigation he filed on behalf of the Star against Clay County as “the poster child of attorney review abuse.”

In that case, Star reporters requested bills the county had paid to “Sunshine Law counsel” and the county refused to provide the information unless they received $4,200 ($373.50 per hour) for time an attorney spent reviewing the bills.

In the Parkville lawsuit, which Maki filed in February of 2020, city officials submitted a charge of more than $6,222 to Maki for time a high-ranking official, City Administrator Joe Parente, spent reviewing requested documents. He has waited months for some public documents while Parente sifted and culled documents to remove information that would paint city leaders in an unfavorable light, Maki alleged in a court filing.

The practice of charging for documents by adding time spent culling them, and other similar practices meant to restrict public information, are a power play by officials and strikes at the heart of our country’s founding principles, Rhodes said.

“An informed citizenry can only be informed by knowing what the government is doing,” Rhodes said and added that the ruling and resulting requested information is “crucial to our exercising of democracy.”

Tags: Lawsuitsparkvilleplatte countySunshine Laws
Debbie Coleman-Topi

Debbie Coleman-Topi

Debbie’s journalism career officially began at the University of Missouri School of Journalism, where she was trained. Her works have appeared in the Kansas City Star and its former Sunday Magazine, the Independence Examiner and TWINS Magazine. Since 2016, Debbie has written for The Landmark, where she has reported on a wide range of Platte County area issues and people.

Related Posts

45 Years Ago–May 23, 1980

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Former President Gerald Ford, in a Platte County appearance Saturday, described President Jimmy Carter as a man who “tries to make himself a hero out of disasters he has created” and likened him to an arsonist “who starts fires and...

30 Years Ago–May 25, 1995

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Joseph Gates had always told his wife, Juanita, and their nine children that he would buy Juanita a new car if he won the Missouri Lottery. So when he came home from work on May 14 and announced that a...

15 Years Ago–May 26, 2010

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Riverside police opened a homicide investigation this week after entering an apartment to check the welfare of a man who had reportedly failed to appear at his place of employment for several days. The man was found dead in his...

Letter to the Editor

Words about Randy

by Landmark Digital
May 22, 2025
0

EDITOR: First of all my sincere condolences to you and your entire family on the loss of your brother, Randy. When I got your paper yesterday I immediately opened it to the middle, which I never do, and saw your...

Next Post
Landmark Pickem! contest ready for you

Landmark Pickem! contest ready for you

Popular News

  • Jeff Wilson

    Police have suspect in string of Platte City burglaries

    35 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Surgery Center of Northland being built in Platte City

    51 shares
    Share 20 Tweet 13
  • KC’s curfew, backyard chickens, selfie stations

    11 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 3
  • ‘Guilt by association’ ends appointment talk

    8 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 2
  • Amenities being added to Park at Platte Meadows

    7 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 2
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Call us at 816-858-0363

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Online
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved