Cumberland Times-News

Opinion

January 22, 2013

Bad idea

Newspapers best way to access legal notices

Imagine this scenario: A portion of your neighborhood has been zoned from residential to commercial and you knew nothing about it. Or another one: Your local government floated a multi-million bond bill that you would have opposed, had you known about it.

Those are just a couple of examples of what could happen if local governmental bodies in Maryland are no longer required to have legal notices published in newspapers.

For several years there has been talk or proposals in Annapolis to have legal notices placed online, rather than published in local newspapers.

The idea is a bad one and will make it more difficult for constituents to keep tabs on what their local government is planning.

Requiring municipal and county governments and public school systems to place printed public notices lets constituents know about such things as budgets, charter changes, zoning meetings, permit requests, unclaimed property, jobs that are available for bidding and a host of other government issues.

Despite the increased use of the Internet, there are still many people who do not have — or want — computers. For them, going to a government site to read public notices is not an option. There also is the challenge of easily finding a website — or the correct website — and then being able to locate a public notice.

Newspapers have long been considered the best outlets for public notices because of their easy and wide accessibility and the fact that they are relatively inexpensive and have a documented list of subscribers. Readers know public notices appear daily in the classified ad section and surveys show public notice readership is consistently high.

The University of Southern California Annaneberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy notes that public notices are one of the few regular and official communication channels that exist between government and citizens. Public notice laws additionally regulate the way in which government communicates with citizens.

The Maryland Municipal League is proposing legislation in Annapolis this year to do away with the legal notice publication. The group sees the elimination as a way of saving money.

But the savings would come at a dear price. It is in the public’s best interest to have easy access to public notices. Newspapers provide that easy access — and the newspaper is where the public notices should remain.

Text Only
Opinion
  • ‘Forgotten warrior’ not forgotten

    The Korean War is often called “The Forgotten War.” My generation remembers the Battle for LZ X-Ray at Ia Drang, The Tet Offensive, and Khe Sahn of the Vietnam War.

    May 18, 2013

  • Organization needed to help utilize the Potomac River

    I am a committee remember on the Tamiami Trail Scenic Highway which stretches from Palmetto to Venice, Fla.

    May 18, 2013

  • Reducing meat consumption can help ease climate change

    A review of 12,000 papers on climate change, in the May 15 issue of “Environmental Research Letters,” found that 97 percent of scientists attribute climate change to human activities.

    May 18, 2013

  • It’s good to be the queens

    One of the many nuggets of knowledge that Crash Davis tried to bestow upon Nuke LaLoosh in the movie Bull Durham was that ‘strikeouts are boring. Besides that, they’re fascist.’

    May 16, 2013

  • Harper just needs to stop scoring the wall

    • Happy birthday, Brooks Robinson. No. 5 will be 76 tomorrow.
    Remember, in the words of Gordon Beard, “Brooks Robinson never asked anybody to name a candy bar after him. In Baltimore people name their children after him.”

    May 16, 2013

  • Maryland has stopped being “The Free State”

    I am a lifetime member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans and, last but not least, the National Rifle Association. I am a yearly member of the American Legion.

    May 17, 2013

  • Outrageous Outrageous

    Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
    This amounts to spying on an American news organization — common practice in dictatorships but scary conduct in a democratic system that prizes the public value of an independent watchdog press.

    May 16, 2013 1 Photo

  • Save the Bridge Program

    Please do not close the Frostburg United Methodist Church Bridge Program. The community and many families need this program. Let me enlighten you about a few things.

    May 16, 2013

  • Town of Westernport needs a police force and a curfew

    Since the consolidation of Bruce and Valley high schools the town of Westernport rapidly deteriorated from what was once a quite respectable community to a community in a decline in residents, and along with that came a collapse in local government due to lack of knowledge and bad decisions that set the town of Westernport back 60 years.
    One bad decision was to give up their police force, and with no constant visual law enforcement it has created an open range for drug dealerss, addicts, thieves, drunks and speeding vehicles that choose to ignore our city laws and speed limits and have totally disregard for the safety of the citizens who are on the streets, especially the children who are like deer, you don’t see them until their in front of you.

    May 16, 2013

  • Financial gutting will damage school system

    I am writing in response to the Allegany County Commissioners’ efforts to cut local education spending to the lowest possible level allowed under state law.

    May 15, 2013