Judge Rules Marinette Common Council Violated Open Meetings Law
Yesterday, Oconto County Circuit Court Judge Jay N. Conley ruled that the Marinette Common Council violated the Open Meetings Law when holding a closed session on October 7, 2020. During that meeting, the council received and discussed a report from engineers hired by the City to analyze the Town of Peshtigo’s options for obtaining clean drinking water to replace wells contaminated with PFAS chemicals. Because “there were no negotiations or bargaining position to protect” during that meeting, “the meeting could have been held in open session” according to the Judge’s ruling.
Wisconsin’s Open Meetings Law requires all meetings of governmental bodies to be held in open session unless a statutory exception clearly applies.The City had argued that because it might be asked to provide water to the Town at some point in the future, it was entitled to hold a closed session to hear and discuss a report from the Ruekert Mielke engineering firm. The Judge rejected that argument and declared “that the Open Meetings law was violated for the October 7, 2020 meeting.”
“A disturbing pattern of secrecy and manipulation was exposed during this litigation,” commented Marinette Alderman Doug Oitzinger, who attended the closed session and brought the case. “City officials hid from the public – and members of the Council – that Ruekert Mielke had written a report concluding that Marinette providing municipal water to replace wells contaminated by PFAS was the “most feasible and most economical alternative.”
The Judge also ruled that an October 6, 2020 closed session to discuss a proposed deal with Tyco Fire Products to pay for equipment to make disposal of the city’s wastewater treatment plants’ byproducts cheaper was lawful. “Despite the split outcome,” continued Oitzinger, “this litigation brought many facts and documents to light that were previously kept secret by the administration, and I consider this a success.”
Oitzinger is represented in the suit by Attorney Tom Kamenick, President and Founder of the Wisconsin Transparency Project, a law firm dedicated exclusively to enforcing the state’s Open Records and Open Meetings Laws. “I’m concerned by the court’s ruling on the October 6 meeting,” explained Kamenick. “It seems to suggest that if a government entity is in negotiations, it is entitled to hold all discussion related to that topic in closed session. That’s not what the law says, and that is not consistent with prior cases that have ruled the government can only use closed sessions to protect a bargaining position. Negotiations with Tyco had already completed.”For a copy of the decision, complaint, or briefs, contact Attorney Kamenick
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
More about the PFAS Problem
- Wisconsin Conservation Voters Celebrates Historic $132 Million Pfas Victory - Wisconsin Conservation Voters - Mar 18th, 2026
- After Years of Delay, WI Legislature Passes Bills Addressing PFAS - Danielle Kaeding - Mar 17th, 2026
- Gov. Evers Celebrates Senate Approval of Bipartisan Pfas Compromise After Years of Urging Republicans to Release $125 Million to Fight Pfas Contamination Statewide - Gov. Tony Evers - Mar 17th, 2026
- Gov. Evers Signs New PFAS, Lead Regulations - Danielle Kaeding - Mar 2nd, 2026
- Gov. Evers Builds Upon Efforts to Clean Up Wisconsinites Water, Approves New Rule Changes Strengthening Pfas Drinking Water Standards - Gov. Tony Evers - Mar 2nd, 2026
- PFAS Levels in Great Lakes Fish Are Dropping - Danielle Kaeding - Feb 6th, 2026
- Gov. Evers and GOP Lawmakers Near a Deal on PFAS Pollution - Danielle Kaeding - Jan 22nd, 2026
- Gov. Evers Optimistic About Reaching Final Deal With Republican Lawmakers to Secure Release of $125 Million in Long-Awaited Pfas Investments - Gov. Tony Evers - Jan 21st, 2026
- Bipartisan Push to Tell Counties Faster When Water Tests Fail - Henry Redman - Dec 19th, 2025
- MKE County: County Seeks to Sue PFAS Producers, Oil Companies - Graham Kilmer - Dec 10th, 2025
Read more about PFAS Problem here
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