2015 -- H 5728

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LC001803

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     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015

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A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT - MODERNIZATION OF LEGAL

NOTICES AND ADVERTISEMENTS

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Carnevale, Almeida, Slater, Diaz, and Palangio

     Date Introduced: February 26, 2015

     Referred To: House Finance

     It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

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     SECTION 1. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND

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GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter:

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CHAPTER 157

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MODERNIZATION OF LEGAL NOTICES AND ADVERTISEMENTS

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     42-157-1. Legislative findings. – It is hereby found and declared as follows:

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     (1) Throughout the Rhode Island general laws, there are over two hundred and fifty (250)

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discrete requirements for legal notices or advertisements to be published in newspapers. While

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the responsible parties, geographies (e.g., statewide or local), and frequencies of notice vary

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widely among these hundreds of different requirements, their common goal is to notify the public

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about informational requirements under law and to give the public a meaningful opportunity to

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participate in its government. However, modes of communication change over time, and along

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with these changes there is an obligation to openness for technological innovation.

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     (2) The United States Census Bureau reports that computer possession and household

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Internet usage have consistently risen over time. For example, in 1997, there was a computer in

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thirty six and six-tenths percent (36.6%) of U.S. households, with eighteen percent (18%) of U.S.

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households reporting Internet usage. By 2011, there was a computer in seventy five and six-tenths

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percent (75.6%) of U.S. households, with seventy one and seven-tenths percent (71.7%) of U.S.

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households reporting Internet usage. The Bureau reported similar rates of household Internet

 

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connection of Rhode Islanders in 2011 seventy two and two-tenths percent (72.2%). These

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increases are inclusive, cutting across age, education attainment, income, and racial and ethnic

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boundaries.

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     (3) Using the Internet to conduct civic transactions is a common practice according to a

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2010 Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project survey, which reported that eighty

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two percent (82%) of U.S. Internet users looked for information or completed a transaction on a

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government website in the preceding twelve (12) months. This data is consistent with the

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experience in Rhode Island, where executive agencies have rolled out several new initiatives over

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the past few years that illustrate this trend: the expansion of online services at the division of

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motor vehicles; the introduction of a transparency portal (one of the first in the country) to

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provide more information regarding the operation and management of government; the creation

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of a new division of veterans' affairs website; and the launch of an e-Licensing initiative by the

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department of business regulation, working with the office of digital excellence and the division

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of information technology.

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     (4) Further, Rhode Island is particularly well poised to harness the power of

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communicating digitally because of its depth of digital infrastructure. The New York Times

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reported in 2011 that Rhode Island had the fastest Internet speed for residential customers in the

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country; and "broadband service," which describes high-speed Internet, digital cable and digital

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phone services traveling through a single pipeline, is available to ninety seven percent (97%) of

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Rhode Islanders, with eighty three percent (83%) of Rhode Islanders having the choice of at least

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two (2) broadband providers, according to the Broadband Rhode Island initiative.

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     (5) While the use of the Internet has grown nationally and in Rhode Island over time,

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with investments in expansion of online services and digital infrastructure, readership of daily

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newspapers has shown a steady slide in paid circulation. For example, the Pew Research Center's

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Project for Excellence in Journalism reported in 2011 that daily newspaper circulation, which

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stood at sixty two million three hundred thousand (62,300,000) in 1990, had fallen to forty-three

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million four hundred thousand (43,400,000) in 2010, a decline of thirty percent (30%). In 1990,

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evening papers, which began to decline in the 1970s, made up about one third (1/3) of daily

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circulation. In 2009, this ratio had dropped to just over ten percent (10%).

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     (6) Moreover, a national survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press

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in 2010 found that "more people continue to cite the Internet than newspapers as their main

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source of news, reflecting both the growth of the Internet, and the gradual decline in newspaper

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readership, [from thirty four percent (34%) in 2007 to thirty one percent (31%) now]."

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     (7) Given historical and current trends, offering an electronic means of publishing notices

 

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and advertisements is a common-sense, efficient way to disseminate vital information to the

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public for several reasons:

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     (i) Publication of legal notices and advertisements by electronic means is more likely to

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reach citizens, providing them with crucial information about information required to be

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disclosed under law and a better opportunity to participate in government;

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     (ii) Expanding the amount of information available electronically will allow for new

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forms of connection between citizens and government, through e-mail alerts and enhanced search

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opportunities; and

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     (iii) Posting legal notices and advertisements electronically may ease the regulatory

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burden of compliance for businesses, especially small businesses, and governmental agencies by

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offering a cost-effective alternative to newspaper publication that capitalizes on the state's

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existing technological assets and investments.

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     42-157-2. Definitions. -- As used within this chapter:

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     (1) "Authorized website" means any website approved by the department;

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     (2) "Department" means the department of administration; and

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     (3) "Person" means any individual, corporation, partnership, association, municipality,

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other public body, state agency or department, legal entity, employee or agent of the person.

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     42-157-3. Authorized website transitional notice. -- (a) Notwithstanding any provision

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of the general or public laws to the contrary, any notice or other written matter required to be

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published by any law of this state in a newspaper shall be deemed to satisfy such requirement if

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posted on an "authorized website," approved by the department as defined in the rules and

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regulations promulgated in accordance with §42-157-7.

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     (b) Before any person may post a notice or advertisement on an authorized website, such

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person must announce its intention to do so in the following ways and for the following periods

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of time:

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     (1) By publishing an announcement at least three (3) times a week for three (3)

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consecutive weeks in the newspaper or newspapers where notice or advertisement is currently

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required to be published;

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     (2) By publishing an announcement on the secretary of state's website for at least three

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(3) consecutive weeks; and

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     (3) By publishing an announcement on the Rhode Island transparency portal

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(http://www.transparency.ri.gov/) and the Rhode Island general assembly website for at least

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three (3) consecutive weeks.

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     (c) The provisions of this chapter shall apply to persons, the state of Rhode Island, cities

 

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and towns, and all agencies and departments connected thereto whether public or quasi-public.

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     42-157-4. Required posting. -- Posting a notice or advertisement on the secretary of

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state's website pursuant to § 42-46-6 shall be sufficient to meet the requirements for posting on an

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authorized website provided the provisions of § 42-157-7 are satisfied.

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     42-157-5. Costs. -- Any costs associated with posting the notice or advertisement on the

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authorized website shall be borne by the party required to post the notice or advertisement as set

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forth in the rules and regulations promulgated in accordance with § 42-157-7.

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     42-157-6. Burden of proof. -- In all actions brought under this chapter, the burden shall

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be on the party required to provide notice or advertisement to demonstrate notice or

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advertisement was sufficient pursuant to the rules and regulations set forth in accordance with §

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42-157-7.

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     42-157-7. Rules and regulations. -- (a) No later than one hundred and twenty (120) days

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after the passage of this act, the department shall promulgate rules and regulations, after review

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and recommendation by the office of digital excellence, to implement the provisions of this

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chapter.

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     (b) Such rules and regulations shall include:

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     (1) A mechanism by which the authorized website can send a subscribing person e-mail

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alerts (as specified by such subscribing person), including a choice of how often to receive such

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alerts and the option to terminate such alerts;

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     (2) The ability to search the authorized website by statutory cite, keyword, or date of

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posting; and

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     (3) The particular specifications, if any, required for mobile electronic devices to access

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the authorized website and utilize its functionalities.

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     42-157-8. Penalties. -- Any person aggrieved as a result of violations of the provisions of

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this chapter may file a complaint with the department of attorney general. The attorney general

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shall investigate the complaint and, if the department of attorney general determines that the

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allegations of the complaint are meritorious, such person may file a complaint on behalf of the

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complainant in the superior court against the entities alleged to have violated the requirements of

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this chapter.

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     42-157-9. Severability. – If any provision of this chapter or the application thereof to any

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person or circumstances is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or

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applications of the chapter, which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application,

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and to this end the provisions of this chapter are declared to be severable.

 

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     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

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LC001803

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EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT - MODERNIZATION OF LEGAL

NOTICES AND ADVERTISEMENTS

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     This act would permit the department of administration to provide a method of legal

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notice to be issued by way of a department authorized website. This act would also remove the

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requirement for many legal notices that such notices be published in a newspaper.

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     This act would take effect upon passage.

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