Townships Support Legal
Advertising Reform that Saves
Taxpayer Dollars and Increases Transparency
An Op-Ed
by David M. Sanko
Executive Director, Pa. State Association of Township Supervisors (PSATS)
Harrisburg is considering a new law that would give townships and other
local governments in Pennsylvania the authority to place legal
advertising on local government websites and in community papers, in
addition to the traditional advertising in local newspapers. House Bill 955
would give our member townships the flexibility to determine which options will
best provide information to their residents, businesses, and potential vendors
while promoting competition and transparency.
Legal advertising reform is a priority for our membership. PSATS supports any
proposal for legal advertising that would, most importantly, improve access to
legal notices while reducing costs to taxpayers and their local governments.
This legislation would give local governments in Pennsylvania the freedom to
place notices in more places and with greater access to their constituents,
thus enhancing transparency and information sharing.
Local governments could choose where to place the notices, including existing
print newspapers (if they choose), particularly in rural areas where internet
access is still challenged. The public would be better informed, the
township could save money by advertising on their own website or in less
expensive community papers, and the local government could reach more people
than ever before. Local governments could reach more people for the same
costs or less! What could be better for the taxpayers?
Critics, however, would have you believe that local governments, including
townships, will be the downfall of existing print publications because
newspapers’ legal advertising revenue would decline. It is unclear if this is
true, but what is known for sure is that it’s not up to local government
taxpayers to sustain print publications by mandate. We wholeheartedly support a
free press as defined by the Founding Fathers, but the world has changed, and
many newspapers publish much less frequently or not at all. Where does that
leave townships, which have important information that they must, by law, get
out to the public?
As a result of decreasing circulation, newspaper advertisements are no longer
an effective way to provide public notice to residents. The time and expense
required could be better spent on more timely methods that taxpayers have a
better chance of seeing.
Legal notices are expensive, too. Townships shell out hundreds to tens of
thousands of dollars annually to newspapers of general circulation to comply
with antiquated public notice requirements.
While the intent of these advertisements is transparency, which PSATS strongly
supports, newspapers of general circulation are not free. Instead, paid
subscriptions for print and electronic access are required to access many legal
notices. Our members tell us that most residents are not purchasing print
newspapers or electronic access due to the high costs. It makes no sense to
require residents and taxpayers to pay for access to legal notices when they
could be made available electronically or through other means that are free.
Our members note that posting notices on websites and bulletin boards is timely
and effective. Even when newspapers provide free online access to legal
notices, the public is unlikely to look at public notice websites to find
information about their community. Instead, residents look for news about their
township where you would expect it: on the township’s website and social media
pages and in newsletters. This is where they go for information about community
events, police service, trash and recycling service, road construction projects,
meeting dates and times, and much more. Many townships post public notices on
their websites because they are open and accessible even though they are not
required by law to do so.
Pennsylvania is a large and diverse state. One-size-fits-all solutions are not
effective and rarely work. Townships need to have the flexibility to determine
the most effective public notice method, which may vary based on the audience
for that public notice, as well as geographic location. This menu of options is
far superior to the current mandate to use legal advertisements in a print
newspaper of general circulation.
You can’t argue with lower taxpayer costs or the simple logic of getting as
much information into the hands of township residents than ever before.
Taxpayers are looking for – and demanding – that township legal notices be
available in a different, more open and transparent way. Just as the COVID
pandemic has pushed all of us to embrace new ways of communicating and doing
business, local governments have responded by expanding their ability to
communicate and operate in a new way,
too.
Allowing virtual access to and participation in public meetings and instituting
or greatly expanding their public websites and the information that can be
found on them has increased public engagement and participation in a way that
has not been seen in a long time. This is a good thing. Giving local
governments an increased ability to publish notices where they can be most
easily accessible to their constituents is also a good
thing.
Our association looks forward to legislative action to help provide the public
with timely, full, and unfiltered access to the information that is important
to them.
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