Transparency News 7/24/19

 

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Wednesday
July 24, 2019

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state & local news stories

 

As the independent probe into the May 31 mass shooting began on Tuesday, the head of the Chicago firm leading the review said he would not withhold any information that is damaging to the city. The investigation will end in roughly 12 weeks when the security risk management firm, Hillard Heintze, delivers a final report to city leaders, according to the company's bid documents. The company will "have unrestricted access to all employees, reports, documents, and other records necessary to complete the independent review," according to city documents.
The Virginian-Pilot

Police have arrested more than 160 people for illegally carrying guns to Transportation Security Administration checkpoints at the three major airports in the Washington, D.C. area since 2015. But those cases do not lead to jail sentences, large fines or even expulsion from the TSA pre-check program, according to an investigation by the News4 I-Team. Though carrying firearms to TSA checkpoints is illegal, the agency said it seizes an average of 11 guns each day at U.S airports. The agency publicizes many of those cases, but does not publicly release the names of those arrested, which shields the passengers from media scrutiny. Using the Freedom of Information Act, the I-Team obtained arrest records for all people arrested at Dulles International Airport and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport since 2015 and at Baltimore-Washington International Airport in 2018. Court records do not show jail sentences ordered for any of those arrested locally. Most of the cases were dismissed, or prosecutions were deferred, often with monetary fines as low as $100.
NBC Washington

The citizen panel that the Richmond City Council has tasked with reviewing the $1.4 billion Coliseum redevelopment proposal inched closer to beginning its work Monday with the appointments of its first two members. The commission must hold public meetings and keep minutes of its discussions. Homer and Gerner said they plan to make available online any materials provided to the commission in its review so residents can access them as well.
Richmond Times-Dispatch

The Mackinac Center Legal Foundation was awarded $6,000 in attorney’s fees for its lawsuit against Wayne State University. The lawsuit, filed in June 2018, was launched on behalf of Virginia Tech professor, Dr. Marc Edwards, in response to Wayne State deliberately ignoring multiple Freedom of Information Act requests. The first of the FOIA requests, which were filed in an effort to provide additional transparency on the Flint water crisis, were submitted to the university by Dr. Edwards in May 2017. These requests inquired about information associated with the university’s research effort and allegations of conflicts between Wayne State employees and the state of Michigan. "The Mackinac legal team forced Wayne State University to release public documents that were being wrongfully withheld, which shed light on allegations that high-ranking state employees were obstructing justice by interfering with Flint water crisis research at WSU in 2016-2017,” said Dr. Edwards.
Mackinac Center for Public Policy

Portsmouth Councilman Shannon Glover wants to resume broadcasting all public speakers at City Council meetings, reversing a decision his colleagues made in the wake of intense criticism over the ouster of former Police Chief Tonya Chapman. Glover raised the proposal during a lightly attended council work session Monday night, asking fellow members to discuss the idea at an Aug. 12 work session and vote the next day. “I just thought, in my mind, it was hypocritical not to have our citizens be able to be seen and heard at the same time that others on this representative body were.” In addition to taping every public speaker, Glover wants City Attorney Solomon Ashby to draft rules that would require those speakers to talk only about issues relevant to Portsmouth city government, with the hope that [the mayor] would have more control over the efficiency of the group’s meetings.
The Virginian-Pilot

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stories of national interest

The Interior Department’s internal ethics watchdog has opened an investigation into whether top Trump appointees at the agency have violated federal open-record laws by withholding or delaying the release of public documents, emails and policy memos. The investigation by the Interior Department’s Inspector General comes the same day as the separate introduction of a bipartisan Senate bill aimed at overhauling new public-records policies at the Environmental Protection Agency. Senators of both parties say the E.P.A.’s practices of reviewing and responding to public records requests under the Freedom of Information Act have raised “serious concerns” about its transparency. The new policies, which critics say are designed to allow President Trump’s appointees to limit the release of information about their activities, were implemented in the wake of reports of questionable conduct by the former heads of both agencies. 
The New York Times
 

 

 

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editorials & columns

 

Like most other states, Florida had done little to collect, standardize or make publicly available comprehensive data on how our 67 counties handle criminal justice cases. As a result, neither law enforcement nor policymakers could answer basic questions about who was in jail, for what crimes and for how long. We could not gauge the success of our reform efforts or base new initiatives on solid evidence. Thus, we could not make smart decisions about where to channel resources. Florida is known as the Sunshine State, and we take that moniker seriously. A year ago, the legislature passed a landmark criminal justice data transparency law that will go a long way toward tearing down institutional barriers and shedding light on a system that has mostly operated in the shadows. The law mandates the standardized collection of common-sense data points in all of Florida's counties, and the legislature appropriated $1.67 million for its implementation.
Chris Sprowls, Governing

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