The Public Records Advisory Council sought to make changes to head off such influence in the future. SB 1506 would allow the PRAC, rather than the governor, to appoint McCall's successors; and it would explicitly allow the public records advocate to weigh in on legislation, which was one of the flashpoints between McCall and Browns' office. (Special interests and lawmakers regularly seek exemptions from the public records law—there are now more than 500 such loopholes.)