Tuesday, October 29, 2013
State and Local Stories
Portsmouth City Council members wanted to have a closed meeting with Mayor Kenny Wright on Monday night to discuss the mayor's communication – or lack thereof, as several council members described it. But, just as the council prepared to close the meeting to the public, Wright took the floor, saying that he'd done nothing wrong and that he wouldn't discuss the issue with his fellow council members unless it was in public. "It's not true," Wright said of accusations that he'd shielded information from council members."I would rather we discuss this in open session." And, for a few minutes, the council did. Wright shared a handful of documents – including correspondence with Virginia Department of Transportation officials – that he said served as proof that he had kept the council in the loop.
Virginian-Pilot
In its early days, the little website that Ben Schoenfeld built to track buses around Hampton Roads was so fragile it would break when his wife got on his computer at their Portsmouth home. About a year and a half of tweaks, fixes and design work later, Schoenfeld and his fellow volunteers are now confident enough in their creation to announce it to all transit riders. Like many U.S. cities, the region now has its own mobile, web-based application by which people can see how close a bus is on any route. The app uses public data that each bus transmits every two or three minutes via GPS technology to Hampton Roads Transit, the public agency that runs the region's bus network. The app can be found at www.hrtb.us.
Virginian-Pilot
The list of publicly funded lawyers hired to deal with issues related to federal and state investigations into Gov. Robert F. McDonnell is growing — as is the price tag for Virginia taxpayers. According to documents released Friday by the attorney general’s office, a private lawyer charging $250 an hour was hired in August to handle inquiries at Virginia Commonwealth University from federal prosecutors examining McDonnell’s relationship with a wealthy donor.
Washington Post
James City County's treasurer was busy Monday assuring residents that their private information was not compromised after they received erroneous real estate property tax bills. Residents began receiving the bills Friday and noticed that a "care of" line had been inserted onto the bills and seemingly random entities had been inserted. In fact, Treasurer Ann Davis' bill itself was wrong, and had a local timeshare listed as the contact, she said.
Virginia Gazette
Perhaps the best information on the costs — though not necessarily the benefits — of Medicaid expansion in Alaska under the Affordable Care Act are contained in a report prepared under a state contract by the Lewin Group of Falls Church, Va. The finished report was delivered to the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services April 12. Though it was prepared with $80,000 in public funds, was designed to inform public policy, is owned by the state, contains no reference to national security, doesn't mention the names of undercover officers or informants, and doesn't reference intelligence gathering techniques, it remains virtually a state secret. The governor’s administration has refused at least eight requests from legislators, the media and nonprofits for a copy of the Lewin report, saying it is nondisclosable because it forms part of the executive branch's "deliberative process."
Anchorage Daily News
While the Richmond School Board allotted for 3,888 employees in the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2012, school officials used a staff as large as 5,236 one month, according to the report from Richmond Auditor Umesh Dalal. Dalal’s report on the payroll function in the school system painted a picture of a dysfunctional, disorganized approach to hiring, supervising and paying employees. It said the school system has no consistent means of tracking time and attendance, made liberal use of overtime pay, has little if any command of the recording and use of comp time, and exercised inconsistent hiring and supervisory control in its more than 60 schools and departments.
Times-Dispatch
Virginia’s hunting and fishing department, which collects money for some other agencies and then reimburses them, overpaid one agency by nearly $1 million in one month — and later underpaid that same agency more than $500,000. Those are among the findings of an audit of the state Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. A report of the audit was released Monday. The audit found, among other things:
• The game department did not adequately track and reimburse money collected on behalf of other agencies.
• The department “does not secure one of its databases,” which stores sensitive information such as Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers, in accordance with state and industry standards. There was no indication that any personal information was compromised.
Times-Dispatch
|