by Joe Fitzgerald
I’ve wondered since college, if not high school, what happens when a public body decides to just ignore the Freedom of Information Act. I donโt know if thatโs what the Rockingham County School Board is doing right now, but if they are, the criticism might be just the cost of doing business. Itโs not Hell to pay. Itโs Hell to pay off before moving on to the next liberal interference in their drive to replace education professors with City Elders.
The board recently formed a panel to judge their banned books, and because people making decisions for the public should be judged themselves, the Virginia Freedom of Information Act says we should know who those people are.
Of course FOIA doesnโt mention judgment, possibly because so many public servants come up short in that category. What it does mention is that public bodies shall be public, and that the definition of public bodies, โshall not exclude any such committee, subcommittee, or entity because it has private sector or citizen members.โ
Not so much, says Matt Crossโs School Board majority. Theyโre not revealing the names of the book-vetting committee members. The superintendent has said that in forming the committee, they looked for people who could read. Thatโs an extraordinarily low bar for people judging literature, perhaps akin to demanding that a referee be able to see. (more…)



by Kerry Doughertyย 
by Jon Baliles

by Jon Baliles

by Kerry Doughertyย 
