Saslav v. Howe

(Filed: Oct. 30, 2024)

For decades, Montana courts and the Montana Legislature have understood that bill drafts and related documents—often called a bill’s “junque file”—are subject to public disclosure under the Montana Constitution’s fundamental right to know. 

But secrecy is seductive. In September 2024, Defendants Jerry Howe and the Montana Legislative Services Division adopted a policy that affirmatively withholds legislator communications about the bill drafting process from the public. The policy purports to rely on a decision from Montana’s First Judicial District that recognized—in the context of a civil discovery dispute—an unprecedented form of legislative privilege.

On October 30, 2024, Plaintiffs David Saslav, Kaylee Hafer, and the Montana Environmental Information Center asked the Court to order Legislative Services to produce the requested junque file documents, to enjoin Legislative Services from denying right to know requests on the basis of legislative privilege, and to declare that all materials and correspondence used to draft bills, including bill drafts, are public documents subject to the right to know.


Filings


Press

Tom Lutey, Lawsuit filed to again open details of draft bills to the public, Montana Free Press (Oct. 30, 2024)

Mark Moran, Environmental advocates sue Montana over public documents, Public News Service (November 11, 2024)

Darrell Ehrlick, Cascade County judge says legislative ‘junque’ files are public records and must be open, The Daily Montanan (Jan. 21, 2025)