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Mississippi Public Records Act Miss. Code Ann. §§ 25-61-1 to 25-61-19 1983 [36] Any person Missouri Missouri Public Records Act: Mo. Code §§ 109.180; 610.010 to 610.225 1961 [37] Citizens of the state/commonwealth Montana Montana Public Records Act Montana Code §§ 2-6-101 to 2-6-1020 1895 [38] Any person Nebraska Nebraska Public Records Law
The term "National Personnel Records Center Director" only came into being when the two buildings were administratively (but not physically) merged in 1966. [9] National Personnel Records Center Directors. Joseph Wertzberger: 1966–1973; Warren Griffin: 1973–1979 [N 1] J. D. Kilgore: 1979–1982; David Petree: 1982–2000; Ronald Hindman ...
Local election officials in Florida and Michigan have reported spending 25-70% of staff time in recent years on processing public records requests. [55] In 2022, officials in Maricopa County, Arizona reported one request that required nearly half the election office’s staff to spend four days sorting and scanning 20,000 documents. [56]
Air Force records were considered under the Department of the Army custody at the time of MPRC's opening and were stored at various facilities until July 1, 1956 when the Air Force took custody of its records and moved them to the Air Force Records Center in Kansas City, Missouri. In 1957, the records were then transferred to MPRC in St. Louis.
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The California Public Records Act (California Government Code §§6250-6276.48) covers the arrest and booking records of inmates in the State of California jails and prisons, which are not covered by First Amendment rights (freedom of speech and of the press). Public access to arrest and booking records is seen as a critical safeguard of liberty.
The Missouri Sunshine Law is meant to give light to important government issues in the state. The Missouri Sunshine Law is the common name for Chapter 610 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, the primary law regarding freedom of the public to access information from any public or quasi-public governmental body in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1]
The following table identifies which articles in the UCC each U.S. jurisdiction has currently adopted. However, it does not make any distinctions for the various official revisions to the UCC, the selection of official alternative language offered in the UCC, or unofficial changes made to the UCC by some jurisdictions.