Ballot initiative would add constitutional right to access public meetings and records in Colorado
Colorado voters could be asked this year to amend the states constitution to include the right to know the goings-on of state and local governments through public meetings and open records.
A ballot initiative filed Friday by the Independence Institute and the League of Women Voters of Colorado would codify that value in Article II of the constitution by establishing the fundamental constitutional right of all persons to know the affairs of all levels of state and local government that guarantees access to public proceedings and public records.
The Colorado Open Meetings Law, first passed in 1972, requires that most meetings of state and local governmental bodies are properly noticed and open to the public. That means everyone can attend a city council meeting, for example, or request correspondence between state lawmakers, with some exceptions.
But the initiative mentions recent restrictions on that law. In 2024, the Legislature narrowed the definition of public business within the states open meeting law as it applies to the General Assembly. Last year, the Legislature passed a bill that would have extended the response timeline for records requests, but Gov. Jared Polis vetoed it. Both bills have drawn critics from the Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition and other groups.
https://coloradonewsline.com/briefs/right-to-access-public-meetings-records-colorado/