Transparency News 1/14/19

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Monday
January 14, 2019

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Follow the bills that VCOG follows on our annual legislative bill chart.

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state & local news stories

 

 

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" . . . secrecy frustrates efforts for citizens to assess the plans . . ."

CORRECTION: The bill cited in Friday's recap of the House General Laws subcommittee should have been HB1650.

The two Senate bills dealing with the names of Lottery winners will be heard this afternoon in the Senate General Laws Committee, which is 45 minutes after adjournment of the Senate floor session.

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Henrico County officials are open about the benefits they hope to reap from partnering with a private company to build an indoor sports center at the Richmond Raceway, but won’t say what competing proposals under review could cost taxpayers. The administration of County Manager John Vithoulkas refused to answer questions about the financing of the two pitches and withheld cost estimates and other information from a report released to the Richmond Times-Dispatch under the Freedom of Information Act. The document, a county staff memo provided to the county’s Board of Supervisors for its Dec. 11 meeting, listed total project costs that differed by about $10 million, board Chairman Tyrone Nelson said during the meeting.  It’s unclear what Henrico would owe. That information was not provided to the board, Nelson said. State law allows the county to shield financing information that could hurt ongoing negotiations, a move hailed as effective by some experts on public-private partnerships and questioned by open government advocates who say taxpayers should know what localities are doing on their behalf. Nelson said the secrecy frustrates efforts for citizens to assess the plans, but he trusts county staff to strike a fair and balanced deal with either firm.
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Hampton Roads Regional Jail has settled a lawsuit filed by a former human resources director who alleged she was forced out after being accused of mishandling a sexual harassment investigation. The terms of the deal remain confidential, but it appears the jail didn't have to pay any money to Kathryn Crocker or rehire her as part of the settlement reached last month. The state’s Freedom of Information Act requires the release of documents showing how government agencies spend money, regardless of any confidentiality agreements. But Superintendent David Hackworth said the jail had ”no records for checks or wire transfer records relating to this settlement.” He added that there is no future payment planned and Crocker is not a current employee.
The Virginian-Pilot

Before the fiery crash that left two people dead and dozens displaced, the pilot who crashed his helicopter into Bristol Commons in July had his medical certificate to fly revoked by the Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA denied an October Freedom of Information Act request for Schwarz’s health records. In another request made in October and clarified in November, the FAA provided airman records and Schwarz’s death certificate. A third request is pending, but it remains unclear whether or not it will be processed in a timely manner due to the partial federal government shutdown.
The Virginia Gazette

Reva resident Kathleen Hoffman tells all in her eloquently written new book, “Little Papers are Journalism, Too,” about the people, places and situations she encountered in local newspapering 50 years ago in small-town Culpeper. A reporter, editor and photographer for the Culpeper Star-Exponent and Culpeper News from 1966 to 1984, Hoffman—then Kathleen Crawford—came to town as a 23-year-old recent college graduate of Mary Washington College, launching a career that would present one interesting situation after another in a time very different from today.
Culpeper Star-Exponent

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stories of national interest

It's been nearly eight years since the Argus Leader submitted a request under the Freedom of Information Act related to where food stamp money is spent.  The data still has not been released.  On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a case that will decide whether the public has a right to know how much taxpayer money grocers, gas stations, big box retailers and others get by participating in the federal food stamp program. Here's how we got to this point: 
Argus Leader

The District does not want you to see police body camera footage of a 2017 traffic stop and arrest of Councilmember Trayon White.  D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine argues in court documents that White's expectation of privacy outweighs the public's right to view the footage of an interaction between a sitting councilmember and a District police officer on a public street. The AG's office declined to comment on the pending lawsuit. Mayor Muriel Bowser's office has weighed in as well. A letter from the Mayor's Office of Legal Counsel denying a Freedom of Information Act request submitted by the Washington Post says that White has a "strong privacy interest in not being associated unwarrantedly with alleged criminal activity." White said Friday that he has no problem with the District releasing the footage. "I'm intrigued that the Wash Post is spending money on lawyers about this situation," he says via text message. "I see it's an agenda. D.C. should just go ahead and release the footage."
Washington City Paper

President Donald Trump has repeatedly advocated for a steel slat design for his border wall, which he described as "absolutely critical to border security" in his Oval Office address to the nation Tuesday. But Department of Homeland Security testing of a steel slat prototype proved it could be cut through with a saw, according to a report by DHS. A photo exclusively obtained by NBC News shows the results of the test after experts from the Marine Corps were instructed to attempt to destroy the barriers with common tools. Photos of the breaches were not included in a redacted version of the CBP report, which was first obtained in a Freedom of Information Act Request by San Diego public radio station KPBS.
WRCB-TV
 

 

 

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"On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a case that will decide whether the public has a right to know how much taxpayer money grocers, gas stations, big box retailers and others get by participating in the federal food stamp program."

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editorials & columns

 

 

We have long been staunch advocates of keeping a bright light on the workings of government. So we are delighted that this General Assembly session counts among its members two journalists who believe the same thing. Both have proposed legislation aimed at supporting and protecting members of the media. The two delegates will be holding a joint briefing today at 3:00 p.m. in the House Briefing Room at the Pocahontas Building to discuss their bills. Monday’s forecast is for bright sunshine.
Richmond Times-Dispatch

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