Tuesday, August 26, 2014
State and Local Stories
Yesterday the FOIA Council’s subcommittee on records exemptions reviewed more than a dozen exemptions in the catch-all category that apply to specific agencies. For a recap of the meeting, check out this chronology of our tweets.
Storify
Concerned Danville residents can speak out again about the search for a new superintendent in two additional public input sessions Wednesday. The first session was held last Thursday. Board member Steven Gould said it helped him get a sense of what the community wanted in a school leader. “I think it is always helpful to hear directly from the public what it is they are most interested in seeing,” Gould said.
Register & Bee
An attorney for Richmond Chief Administrative Officer Byron C. Marshall has accused City Auditor/Inspector General Umesh Dalal of damaging the credibility of the auditor’s office by issuing a “grossly inaccurate” report on the controversial departure of former finance official Sharon Judkins. In a letter to Dalal dated Monday, former Virginia Attorney General Anthony F. Troy said Dalal had enough information to know that the steps Marshall took to boost the pension for ex-deputy administrator Sharon Judkins would not have cost the city roughly $400,000 as Dalal reported, because Marshall was already fixing the problem. “You had absolutely no basis for that assertion and had to know that it was not just mistaken, but indeed you had to know that it was false,” Troy, a defense attorney with Eckert Seamans, wrote in the three-page letter.
Times-Dispatch
Want a real-life example of voter fraud? Fairfax County election officials say they have 17— and they’re providing names to local, state and federal authorities for prosecution. The 17 voters reportedly cast ballots in both Fairfax County, Va., and the state of Maryland during the 2012 presidential election. Officials from Fairfax and Montgomery County, Md., identified dual voters by matching first and last names, dates of birth and Social Security numbers. Brian Schoenemann, secretary of the Fairfax County Electoral Board, said he sent letters and evidence to county Commonwealth Attorney Ray Morrogh, state Attorney General Mark Herring, U.S. Attorney Dana Boente and the Public Integrity Section of the Department of Justice requesting further investigation. Names of the voters were not disclosed. But Watchdog.org learned that one of the multiple voters had been casting double ballots for the past decade.
Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau
On Tuesday, nine Mecklenburg County residents filed a petition with the Mecklenburg County Circuit Court to “review action by the Mecklenburg County School Board” concerning the recent extension of Superintendent of Schools Dr. James Thornton’s contract. Thornton’s contract was extended from June of 2016 until June of 2018 by a 6-2 vote of the school board at its July 31 regular meeting. The nine residents, representing each of the school board’s voting districts, collaborated to ask the courts to rescind the new contract and reinstate the previous one. The petition argues any extension of Thornton’s contract should be the province of the new school board to be elected in November of 2015.
South Hill Enterprise
The Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy will create a database mapping earthquakes throughout the state. A $411,727 grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency will be used to create the database, which will include information about past earthquakes and the locations of known geologic faults in seismically active parts of Virginia, according to a written statement. The database is meant to be a resource for citizens, local governments and other state agencies, the statement said. The database is expected to be complete in September 2016.
Herald Courier
|