Louisiana May Broaden University Public Records Exemptions

April 1, 2026
3,508 Views

Louisiana is one step closer to broadening public records exemptions for its public universities.

On Tuesday, the Louisiana Senate voted 36 to 2 to advance Senate Bill 289, which would shield universities from having to disclose application materials for top jobs, the names of donors and some research materials. 

Supporters of the legislation, which now heads to the Louisiana House, say it’s designed in part to protect prospective applicants for executive positions at universities—including but not limited to presidents, chancellors, senior vice chancellors and athletic coaches—by keeping private all application records until finalists are named. However, the exemption continues for the records of any applicant who is not named a finalist. 

“As we know, sometimes someone does not want to do that, they want to be kept private so that where they’re serving now, they don’t know they’re applying to another university,” the bill’s primary sponsor, Republican state senator Mark Abraham, said at a public hearing about the bill last month. “I want to keep the confidentiality of executive-level job applicants.”

The bill would also exempt “any record that identifies or could lead to the identification of a private donor or prospective donor” to a public college, university or its affiliated foundation, “unless the donor provides written consent for disclosure.” But the amount of the donation and how it’s spent would remain subject to public records laws. 

Lastly, the bill would exempt records that contain proprietary research, unpublished data, grant applications or information related to intellectual property and industry partnerships, “where disclosure would reasonably result in a competitive disadvantage to the institution or its partners.” Such records would become public once the research is published in a peer- reviewed journal or receives a patent, the grant period ends or “the institution determines the information no longer meets the criteria to remain private.”

Critics have said the legislation is too broad.  

“I have concerns whenever there’s a reduction in the public’s right to know,” Steven Procopio, president of the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana, said at the public hearing last month. “I don’t think citizens and the public should have to justify why they get to see the government’s workings.”



Source by [author_name]

You may be interested

Trump call with Taiwanese president on hold
Top Stories
shares2,009 views
Top Stories
shares2,009 views

Trump call with Taiwanese president on hold

new admin - May 29, 2026

President Trump is no longer expected to speak with Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te before Chinese President Xi Jinping's potential trip…

Locations, severity, how contagious it is and more
World
shares3,282 views
World
shares3,282 views

Locations, severity, how contagious it is and more

new admin - May 29, 2026

The ongoing Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo has alarmed global public health experts over the ferocity…

Nvidia, Microsoft, and Arm are all teasing Nvidia’s new N1X laptop processors
Technology
shares2,105 views
Technology
shares2,105 views

Nvidia, Microsoft, and Arm are all teasing Nvidia’s new N1X laptop processors

new admin - May 29, 2026

It’s the world’s worst kept secret that Nvidia is about to announce its own Arm-powered laptop chips at Computex this…