Connect with us

Local Government

Commentary: What’s at Stake Thursday? Is Transparency a Board Priority or a Slogan?

Published

on

On Thursday, January 8, the Warren County Board of Supervisors holds its first meeting of 2026. The new board members will take their seats. And the first substantive vote? Whether to reverse a transparency policy adopted just four weeks ago.

The agenda calls it “reconsideration.” Let’s call it what it is: reversal.

What the Policy Does

Over the past four articles, I’ve explained what the Legal Services Transparency and Review Policy actually does:

The policy doesn’t prevent the County Attorney from advising the Board. It doesn’t eliminate closed sessions for matters that genuinely require confidentiality under narrowly defined circumstances. It doesn’t micromanage legal strategy.

It simply establishes transparency through operational policy based on FOIA statute and enhanced by FOIA Advisory Council guidance.

The Choice

The Board has a choice. It can keep a policy that:

  • Aligns Warren County’s closed session practices with FOIA Advisory Council guidance
  • Ensures supervisors have the information they need to make informed decisions
  • Creates visibility into legal expenditures by category
  • Demonstrates a commitment to governing in the open

Or it can reverse the policy as its first official act of the new year.

What Reversal Would Signal

Every elected official talks about transparency. It’s a safe word. No one campaigns against it.

But transparency isn’t a slogan. It’s a practice. It requires structure, commitment, and sometimes uncomfortable visibility into how government operates. This policy is that structure. It makes the commitment formal. And it will be uncomfortable sometimes.

Warren County faces serious challenges ahead. Water scarcity and the data center issue are present-day concerns that will require careful deliberation and public engagement. More than ever, citizens want assurance that their government is operating in the open – that decisions affecting their community are being made transparently, with the reasoning visible and the process accessible.

In December, the Board sent a positive signal by adopting this policy. It was an explicit commitment to enhanced transparency at a time when that commitment matters most.

If the Board’s first vote of 2026 is to reverse that commitment – to reduce public access to legal reasoning, to loosen closed session requirements, to eliminate fiscal reporting on legal costs – that tells us something. Not about what they say, but what they are not willing to commit to.

Transparency isn’t just a buzzword. It’s a choice – made in specific votes, on specific policies, in front of the public.

Thursday, we’ll see what the Board chooses.

Rich Jamieson
North River Supervisor

Front Royal, VA
72°
Cloudy
5:46 am8:37 pm EDT
Feels like: 72°F
Wind: 2mph S
Humidity: 84%
Pressure: 29.96"Hg
UV index: 0
ThuFriSat
95°F / 73°F
95°F / 66°F
90°F / 64°F
Local News5 hours ago

Blue Ridge Wildlife Center Patient of the Week: Barred Owl

Local Government11 hours ago

Town Council Weighs Pros and Cons of Accommodating Special Events on Town Property

Historically Speaking13 hours ago

The Lee Resolution and the Road to Independence

Crime/Court18 hours ago

State Police Seek Witnesses in Fatal I-95 Crash in Stafford County

report logo
Arrest Logs18 hours ago

POLICE: 7 Day FRPD Arrest Report 6/8/2026

State News19 hours ago

Judge Approves Settlement Over Rejected Virginia Student Voter Registrations

State News19 hours ago

High-Potency Cannabis Fuels State Debates Over Psychosis and Addiction Risks

Interesting Things to Know20 hours ago

Why Drills and Training Actually Save Lives

Interesting Things to Know21 hours ago

Racket Sports Offer Fitness, Fun and Friendship

Home21 hours ago

Where Is That Bad Smell in the House Coming From?

Local News1 day ago

American Legion Post 53 Brings Baseball Tradition Back to Front Royal

Local News1 day ago

First Baptist Church Celebrates 151 Years of Historic Bell

Local News1 day ago

Judge Weighs Future of Confederate-Linked School Names in Shenandoah County

Local News1 day ago

Commentary: In Light of Horrific Virginia Deaths, Consider Others When Behind the Wheel

National News1 day ago

Trump Administration Swiftly Moves Ahead on Plans to Restrict Voting by Mail in the States

National News1 day ago

Congress Weighs Cuts to States’ Already ‘Insufficient’ Election Security Dollars

Obituaries2 days ago

Judith Darlene Thompson (1952 – 2026)

Community Events2 days ago

Walton Wednesday Invites Kids to Explore Pond Life June 10

Obituaries2 days ago

Steven Dale Boies (1954 – 2026)

Interesting Things to Know2 days ago

Your Next Cereal Spoon Might Be Part of Breakfast

Livestream - FR Cardinals2 days ago

Front Royal Cardinals Host Staunton Braves – June 18

Interesting Things to Know2 days ago

Smart Connectivity Is Changing the Future of Boating

Interesting Things to Know2 days ago

Moving Day: Tips for Keeping Your Pet Comfortable

Mature Living2 days ago

Simple Changes Can Help Older Adults Stay Independent at Home

National News2 days ago

Trump Administration Touts May Job Growth, New Investments in Weekly Briefing