First Amendment Group Opposes Webinars on Toll Roads
"The webinars are a poor substitute for the kind of government that is required by Florida's Sunshine Law," First Amendment Foundation President Pamela Marsh wrote.
June 01, 2020 at 06:50 AM
5 minute read
Open-government advocates want the brakes applied to upcoming webinars about controversial toll-road projects, contending that more-inclusive in-person meetings should be held as the state reopens amid the coronavirus pandemic.
While a state Department of Transportation spokeswoman said the webinar plans will continue, the First Amendment Foundation also questioned the legality of six webinars already held by task forces working on the projects, which would stretch from Collier County to the Georgia border.
"The webinars are a poor substitute for the kind of government that is required by Florida's Sunshine Law, which does apply to the M-CORES task force meetings," First Amendment Foundation President Pamela Marsh wrote Thursday to Transportation Secretary Kevin Thibault, using an acronym for the projects that the state has dubbed the "Multi-use Corridors of Regional Economic Significance."
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