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Echols Funeral Home
806 Brunswick Ave
Emproia,Virginia
Janie Marie Merricks Brown, 87, of Emporia, Virginia received her angel wings and went home on Saturday, January 28, 2023. She was the daughter of Henry Edward Merricks and Clara Wright Rawlings Merricks.
Janie was a loving wife, mother, Granny, aunt, sister-in-law, coworker, and friend. Her family came first including her church family. Janie lived her life demonstrating Christian values in all she did. She was kind, loving, hardworking, and put the care of others first.
She worked as a bookkeeper at C. S. Livesay; Creedle, Jones, and Alga; and S. A. Thompson & Associates for 65 years. Her passion was working with her farm clients in the counties surrounding Emporia, Virginia.
Ĵanie had a strong service philosophy which was clearly demonstrated by her work with the Emporia Greensville Recreation Association (EGRA) as the treasurer and a member of the board of directors. She is a lifelong member of Purdy Baptist Church. She served in many capacities, such as Sunday School teacher, deacon, treasurer (40 years) and as a member of various committees.
Janie is survived by daughter Deborah Brown Pearce (Randy), granddaughter Brittney Pearce, grand-fur-babies (Brody, SydneeMae, & Midnight); and grandson, Zachary Brown. She was preceded by her husband, Bobby Gene Brown and her son James “Jimmy” Brown. She is alao survived by her sister, Lorrell Merricks Wilson (John R. Wilson, "Big Bobby") and preceded by her youngest sister, Barbara C. Wilson (Robert Joseph Wilson, "Little Bobby"). She is also survived by 2 sister-in-laws, Cotrisha Aycock (Tommy) and Betty Lester (Marvin). She loved her nieces and nephews & doted on them regularly.
A funeral service will be held at Echols Funeral Home in their chapel at 806 Brunswick Ave on Tuesday, January 31st at 2PM followed by burial at Greensville Memorial Cemetery.
Online condolences can be made at echolsfuneralhome.com.
By Gabriela de Camargo Gonçalves, Capital News Service
RICHMOND, Va. -- Two Virginia General Assembly bills seeking to strengthen the state's Freedom of Information Act will advance to the House calendar.
Virginia FOIA laws, also known as sunshine laws,require public institutions to disclose public records, and provide access to government meetings unless an exemption applies.
Del. Danica Roem, D-Prince William, introduced House Bill 2006 and HB 2007, which reported out of a committee on Thursday.
Government agencies can charge to provide public records. HB 2006 asks for such charges to have an electronic payment option. HB 2007 proposes that a public body state on its website how it assesses fees.
"I am for better or worse — and God, it seems like worse sometimes — absolutely hellbent on being the voice, if there can be no other, who is going to strongly, passionately support an accessible, strong Freedom of Information Act, as opposed to a restricted one that has so many exemptions," Roem said.
Roem encountered FOIAs in her more than 10 years as a journalist before going into public office. She recalled several deterrents to access public records requests. A constituent drove 40 minutes across the county to deliver a physical check to have a request fulfilled, Roem said.
"The current version more resembles a block of legislative Swiss cheese, than it does the law of the code of Virginia," Roem said.
Roem introduced FOIA legislation in prior sessions that did not advance, such as proposals to create a FOIA ombudsman — a designated authority — in the attorney general's office, establish a cap on hourly billing charges to fulfill records requests and to allow some free FOIA requests, with conditions.
"The point of the Freedom of Information Act is for the public to find out what the hell is going on with its government," Roem said. "For reporters to be able to perform their most essential duties, which is watchdog of the government."
Fewer people are using traditional forms of payment, so the proposed bills are a "step forward with the times," Megan Rhyne, the executive director of the Virginia Coalition for Open Government, stated in an email interview.
"If local governments are already using electronic means for various public transactions, like paying taxes via an electronic check or paying a recycling invoice by credit card, then they should use those systems to accept payment for FOIA requests," Rhyne stated.
This will help citizens who are "often blindsided" by the costs associated with sunshine laws, according to Rhyne.
"I support both of these bills, both of which are trying to chip away at the way in which the increasing costs of FOIA requests are putting government information out of the reach of the taxpayer," Rhyne stated.
The methods of getting information are "crucially important in this time." There is less media coverage on the government in some parts of the state, according to Dina Weinstein, president of the Virginia Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.
"We need to know this information and making it inaccessible is not democratic," Weinstein said.
A fee used to be an exception for a FOIA requester, but it is increasingly becoming the rule, said Tom Nash, the Virginia proxy for the nonprofit MuckRock. The organization aims to make government more transparent and helps file FOIA requests, according to its website.
"It's important for people to keep in mind that when government agencies ask us to pay for FOIA requests, essentially, we are paying for the same information twice," Nash said. "Because we've already been paying government officials to do the work that they do, and part of that work is making documents."
Capital News Service is a program of Virginia Commonwealth University's Robertson School of Media and Culture. Students in the program provide state government coverage for a variety of media outlets in Virginia.