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The Missouri State Board of Education’s Teacher Recruitment and Retention Blue Ribbon Commission's inaugural meeting was initially not going to be open to members of the public.
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The state of Missouri is defending itself with an argument that could deliver "fatal blows" to the Sunshine Law: As long as officials don’t bother to keep records in the first place, they can’t be held responsible for refusing to turn them over to the public.
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Attorneys Eric Banks, Nicole Gorovsky and Dave Roland analyze high-profile litigation in Missouri and Illinois.
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APM Reports, the investigative unit of American Public Media, sued the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department to get details about which homicide cases the police have solved.
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A city-appointed group assembled to evaluate proposals to privatize St. Louis' airport held hours of closed-door meetings involving topics that should have been discussed publicly, according to an attorney who disclosed newly released recordings and documents.
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Complainants are left with few options, with the attorney general’s office instructing them to “contact a private attorney” if they wish to pursue the matter further.
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Gov. Mike Parson’s office pushing for a bill that would increase costs of obtaining records from the government
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Judge ruled state health department 'purposely' violated Sunshine Law in a case brought by a genealogical research service.