The Rhode Island mother who got herself sued by teachers unions for trying to shine a light on public school curricula is now waging her own legal fight for public access to “secret meetings” about “equity” for students who are black, indigenous and people of color (BIPOC).

Nicole Solas filed an Open Meetings Act (OMA) lawsuit Wednesday against the South Kingstown School Committee and its BIPOC Advisory Committee, which refused to let her attend its meetings where “district policies regarding curriculum, hiring, discipline, and accountability” where discussed, according to her lawyers at the Goldwater Institute.

It’s the latest challenge to a government body allegedly outsourcing its work to evade legal obligations.

Louisiana and Missouri attorneys general updated their lawsuit against federal authorities’ alleged collusion with Big Tech this week, adding censored doctors as plaintiffs and additional federal officials as defendants based on newly disclosed CDC and Department of Homeland Security documents.

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha investigated Solas’ complaint but eventually decided the advisory committee is not a “public body” because it “only makes suggestions and does not have authority over implementing its suggestions.”… (Excerpt from The Wisconsin Daily Star)

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