Transparency News 3/23/18

 
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Friday
March 23, 2018
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state & local news stories
quote_1.jpg"Even though these are chain emails, the message is sadly the truth."
In early 2018, Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Dorothy Jaeckle received a stream of emails from constituents asking for answers about a nearly 1,700-acre industrial megasite pitched by the Chesterfield Economic Development Authority for her southeastern district. “In August, you let the governor share the county’s well-kept secret about the megasite project. Then, you held four meetings where we received very few answers. Nearly six months later, we know nothing new. What’s the holdup?” dozens of nearly identical emails obtained by the Richmond Times-Dispatch through a Freedom of Information Act request read. “I still have questions; where are your answers?” Their concerns were shared by one of the county’s elected leaders. After a resident sent him a similar email, Supervisor Steve Elswick wrote to County Administrator Joe Casey and Jaeckle on Feb. 19. “Joe, you and I have discussed numerous times the lack of leadership and urgency in managing this project. Even though these are chain emails, the message is sadly the truth,” Elswick wrote.
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Prince William County school officials released the names and resumes Monday of 20 candidates vying for a rare opportunity to serve at the helm of the board overseeing the second-largest school division in Virginia. They include three former school board members, an FBI accountant, an eye surgeon, a retired judge, a custom-cake baker, a music teacher, a retired school psychologist, an Ace hardware-store owner, an attorney, three former military officers, the “recess mom” and an 18-year-old high school senior who is homeschooled.
Prince William Times
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stories of national interest
measure declaring that emails and text messages sent on Kentucky public officials' privately owned devices are not public records was approved by a Senate committee Wednesday, setting off alarms among advocates for government transparency.  The provision was tacked on to House Bill 302 (a bill dealing with reorganization within the state Public Protection Cabinet) on Wednesday by the Senate State and Local Government Committee on a motion from Senate Majority Leader Damon Thayer, R-Georgetown.
Courier-Journal

The Los Angeles Times has sued L.A. County, accusing it of repeatedly and routinely flouting laws designed to ensure government transparency. Over the last year alone, county officials have refused to release information about the status of homicide investigations, allegations of sexual misconduct against prosecutors and even mundane information such as email addresses for Sheriff's Department employees, the lawsuit says. County officials also ignored a request for copies of two instruction manuals coaching employees on how to respond to such requests, according to the lawsuit. One of the manuals is titled "California Public Records Act 'Emergency Kit' for County Counsel."
Los Angeles Times

THERE’S NO SUCH thing as the US criminal justice system. There are, instead, thousands of counties across the country, each with their own systems, made up of a diffuse network of sheriffs, court clerks, prosecutors, public defenders, and jail officials who all enforce the rules around who does and doesn’t end up behind bars. It’s hard enough to ensure that key details about a case pass from one node of this convoluted web to the other within a single county; forget about at the state or national level. That's what makes a new criminal justice reform bill now making its way to Florida governor Rick Scott’s desk especially noteworthy. On Friday, the Florida Legislature approved a bill, introduced by Republican state representative Chris Sprowls, that requires every entity within the state’s criminal justice system to collect an unprecedented amount of data and publish it in one publicly accessible database. That database will store anonymized data about individual defendants—including, among other things, previously unrecorded details about their ethnicities and the precise terms of their plea deals. It will also include county-level data about the daily number of people being held in a given jail pre-trial, for instance, or a court’s annual misdemeanor caseload. All in, the bill requires counties to turn over about 25 percent more data than they currently do.
Wired

 
 

 

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