Let public preview public agreements

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State law should require contracts with public employees to be subject to a public hearing before being approved.

Illinois law needs to require that the public be involved before a public body may approve a contract with public employees.

With that many mentions of “public,” you might not think that approval of such contracts is a largely private process.

That is why the Open Meetings Act should be amended to require a public hearing on any public employee contract before a vote. And the terms of the contract – including a fiscal impact statement – should be released at least 48 hours beforehand.

We suggested that amendment in a letter we sent last week to the Illinois attorney general. Our political suggestion was included with a legal request that the attorney general’s public access counselor review the Sterling School Board’s recent approval of a contract with the teachers’ union.

Three weeks ago today, an editorial here explained how we had been denied access to that contract. As it turned out, we were twice denied – first before, then after the school board voted to approve what the agenda described as “a two-year collective bargaining agreement with the Sterling Education Association. ...”

The second denial was clearly illegal. The first might be – and if it’s not, it should be.

It’s not that we were eager to slog through more than a hundred pages of the agreement. The point is, government transparency should make the entire process more public friendly But such contracts normally are negotiated and approved before the public has any idea what has happened.

As we pointed out in that June 27 editorial, the Sterling City Council approved a contract amendment with firefighters in late 2009 before publicly revealing the terms of the agreement.

At our urging, the Sterling school board was a bit more forthcoming, explaining before the vote some salary and insurance provisions of the contract.

The law requires public hearings on annual budgets that are considered by public bodies. It seems to us that because of the financial impact of public employee contracts, which dictate terms of salaries and benefits, they should be subject to similar public scrutiny before they are approved.

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