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Carolina Public Press: Asheville & Charlotte records officers dispute special charges claim of governor's office

February 14, 2014

Carolina Public Press: In response to Attorney General Roy Cooper's letter criticising the public records policy of the governor's office requiring special charges for records requests that take more than 30 minutes to fill, the governor's general counsel, Bob Stephens cited Asheville and Charlotte as examples of local governments that also have special surcharge policies. The Carolina Public Press caught up with municipal workers who handle public records in those places and said that charges are rarely, if ever, assessed. 

Sunshine Day 2014

February 10, 2014

The Sunshine Center of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition is pleased to announce Sunshine Day 2014. The March 17 event will focus on using technology to bring transparency to state and local governments. 

Elon Poll: Majority of North Carolinians unaware of state's Sunshine Laws

December 4, 2013

An Elon University Poll shows that only 30.5 percent of respondents were aware that the state has laws making government records and meetings public. A significant number (41.4 percent) also view the state as being less transparent now than it was five years ago. The poll also asked about how much public records should cost and whether certain records should be public. 

News & Observer: UNC Law faculty question motives of records seeker

November 28, 2013

From the News & Observer (11/27/2013): The Civitas Insitute requested six weeks worth of e-mails and phone records from University of North Carolina School of Law Professor Gene Nichol after Nichol published an op-ed column critical of Gov. Pat McCrory. Thirty faculty members from the law school then signed a letter published in the Chapel Hill News complaining that "surveilling a professor’s communications is a really troubling approach to protecting liberty."

McCrory staff demanding payment for public records

November 26, 2013

From the Associated Press (11/26/2013): Gov. Pat McCrory's administration has interpreted state law to allow a "special service charge" for any record request that takes more than 30 minutes to fulfill. The charges are unprecedented.