Transparency News 11/11/19

 

VCOG LOGO CMYK small 3

Monday
November 11, 2019

spacer.gif

There was no issue of Access News on Friday, Nov. 8.
 

divider.gif
 

state & local news stories

MediaAwardsLogo

VCOG's FOI Media Awards Lunch, Nov. 18, The Boathouse at Rockett's Landing in Richmond.
GET TICKETS!

Radford University worker was responsible for at least some of the abrupt disappearance in September of the student-run Tartan newspaper from racks around campus, university officials announced Friday. The worker was not named by the university and will not be charged criminally, but was disciplined within the state employee system, Chief of Police David Underwood said in a letter. According to emails obtained by The Roanoke Times last month under Virginia’s Freedom of Information Act, university President Brian Hemphill and other administrators were displeased with The Tartan’s choice of a front-page photo to accompany a news obituary about Tibbetts. The photo, which Lepore said was provided to the paper by Tibbetts’ family, showed the department chairman and his daughter standing beneath a sign that said “Tibbetts Street” and “Dead End.” Hemphill said in a statement last month that he was disappointed by the newspaper’s choice of the photo. In an email obtained by the Roanoke Times, interim dean of the College of Humanities and Behavioral Sciences Matthew Smith wrote that he was “outraged” by The Tartan’s front page and called it “the singularly most insensitive editorial choice I’ve witnessed in 30 years.”
The Roanoke Times

Do fisticuffs, drunkenness and loitering make Roanoke’s bus station the “epicenter of crime downtown”? That’s been the claim of Bill Chapman, a developer who opposes for various reasons the city’s plan to move the station next to his Salem Avenue apartments, which abut Big Lick Brewing Co. The current station on Campbell Avenue is a “crime magnet” that has “no place downtown” or near his residents, Chapman told the Roanoke City Council earlier this year, citing 911 calls and the city’s online crime map. But a closer look at the data reveals that’s not true. The city’s crime map displays incidents, not arrests, and isn’t address-specific. In fact, Roanoke’s bus station is about as safe as its City Market Building, a tourist draw replete with office workers on lunch breaks, according to a Roanoke Times analysis of police and emergency dispatch data.
The Roanoke Times

A defamation lawsuit against InfoWars and other far-right blogs will move forward after the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals denied a petition from various defendants challenging its venue. Brennan Gilmore, an activist and former U.S. Foreign Service officer, sued Alex Jones, who is the main host and operator InfoWars, as well as InfoWars and several others, in March 2018 for defamation. After Gilmore witnessed and filmed the Aug. 12, 2017, car attack that killed counter-protester Heather Heyer, the defendants started spreading conspiracies about Gilmore, which led to death threats against him and his family, according to the suit.
The Daily Progress

A city councilor and a former city employee are disputing Hopewell Mayor Jasmine E. Gore’s claim that she was unaware of pending criminal charges against a woman she publicly endorsed for a newly created part-time assistant position with City Council. In separate interviews with The Progress-Index, Councilor John B. Partin Jr. and assistant city clerk Debra McKnight said that the mayor did, in fact, know about Patrice Shelton’s upcoming court case. McKnight, who recently tendered her resignation, said she told Shelton face-to-face that “everyone deserves a second chance, but [Shelton] had to tell the mayor because the mayor was backing her.” McKnight’s resignation letter, which was obtained by The Progress-Index, mentions a list of 10 “problems” with working in the City Clerk’s office, “and “the mayor’s intern was another problem.”
The Progress-Index

divider.gif

stories of national interest

After 25 years being hosted at the University of Syracuse, the national FOI-L listserv has relocated to the University of Florida and the National Freedom of Information Coalition (NFOIC).  The owner/manager of  the FOI-L listserv, Barbara Fought is stepping down. Ms. Fought began it as a service to NFOIC to provide a discussion forum for persons working on open government and transparency issues in states. It then morphed into discussion not only about state issues but federal records and access issues, as well.  FOI-L currently includes around 680 subscribers, ranging from journalists to attorneys to access professionals. 
NFOIC

They’re cops who can’t be trusted, prosecutors say. In a startling accounting, the Brooklyn D.A.'s office has publicly released a list of 54 NYPD officers with credibility issues — including seven cops who prosecutors will never use as the only witness in a criminal case. The release, following a Freedom of Information Law request from Gothamist and WNYC, comes on the heels of a similar list from the Bronx District Attorney last month.
New York Daily News

In the past 18 months or so, cyberattacks on government have accelerated. Experts say this is an evolution wherein bad actors have moved from targeting individuals at random, to going after governments, school districts, companies, and other institutions, which often have more to lose and are thereby more lucrative. Another factor in the recent acceleration is that many of these entities have been traditionally underfunded in the realm of cybersecurity. As such, public-sector IT leaders have begun to view a successful cyberattack as a matter of when, not if. Essentially, regardless of how well-prepared government is, a breach is still coming, and so a larger onus is now being placed on response, specifically on best practices for the aftermath of a cyberattack. Within this conversation, however, a major point of tension has arisen — transparency. A question local government leaders must grapple with is this: How transparent should government be after a cyberattack? Should they tell citizens everything, or should they downplay incidents altogether, obscuring details under the assumption that any information on their vulnerabilities can and will be used against them?
Governing

Internal emails at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released Thursday showed how the agency scrambled to respond to President Donald Trump's inaccurate claims about Hurricane Dorian and Alabama. The emails, dozens of which were obtained by NBC News in response to a Freedom of Information Act request, also detailed the blowback the NOAA received from both inside and outside the agency over a statement it put out bolstering Trump's claims over prior information from its own forecasters.
NBC News

Nearly 1 million U.S. immigration court records allegedly went missing in September, and the data crunchers at Syracuse University want to know why. The New York university's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, or TRAC, has federal administrations for three decades, making constant FOIA requests to maintain one of the nation's most comprehensive troves of immigration data. Journalists, attorneys and immigrant advocates often rely on TRAC's numbers, which haul of numbers that can otherwise be hard to find. TRAC publicly alleged on Nov. 3 that the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR), which runs the country’s immigration courts, "deleted" records on nearly 1 million applications for immigration relief in its September figures. Hundreds of records of charges filed by the Department of Homeland Security and scheduled court hearing records were also missing, TRAC said.
El Paso Times
 

 

quote_2.jpg"Should they tell citizens everything, or should they downplay incidents altogether, obscuring details under the assumption that any information on their vulnerabilities can and will be used against them?"

divider.gif
 

editorials & columns

quote_3.jpg"If it’s public, it should be released to anyone interested. If it’s not, it should be released to no one."

I was prepared to offer Washington County Sheriff-elect Blake Andis a rose in this column when he told a Bristol Herald Courier reporter on election night that his office will be transparent. He said he plans to do what the current sheriff and the Virginia State Police have so far refused to do — release body-cam and dash-cam video related to a fatal officer-involved shooting in Glade Spring in 2018. The video has been sought through Freedom of Information Act requests by the dead man’s sisters and this newspaper. But we found out a day later that Andis plans to release the video to the family only so they can get closure with regard to a number of questions they’ve had. I’m sure he has the best of intentions. But the video is either public or it’s not. If it’s public, it should be released to anyone interested. If it’s not, it should be released to no one. 
Bristol Herald Courier

Hampton Roads leaders have gone mad lately with the promises of easy money made casino gambling ventures being proposed throughout the region. In September, Norfolk pushed through a proposal with the Pamunkey Indian Tribe to sell waterfront land for a casino complex — including a hotel and restaurants — before the public had ample opportunity to study the proposal’s feasibility. It has cast doubt on the project and those who pushed it through.
The Virginian-Pilot

divider.gif
Categories: