The public has a right to know who's trying to do what deals behind closed doors.
EDITORIAL As the stories in this issue show, open government laws are critical to democracy. Without the city's sunshine law, we wouldn't know how the proposal to give Twitter a tax break ballooned into a major giveaway. Without the sunshine laws, Tim Crews, the embattled publisher of the Sacramento Valley Mirror, wouldn't have been able to use his small paper to hold public officials accountable.
That's why the laws on the books need to be enforced — and sometimes strengthened. One example in San Francisco is the lobbyist registration requirement.Read more »