A bill winding its way through Sacramento right now would make some of the biggest changes in decades to the California Public Records Act — the 58-year-old state law that guarantees everyone has access to government documents and data.

Proponents argue AB 1821 is necessary to help local governments weather a deluge of burdensome requests that have swamped cities and other local agencies. But the changes it proposes have alarmed First Amendment groups, manynews organizations, and government watchdogs, who worry it will allow officials to delay handing over records and impose financial barriers to information access.

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