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Robert Wechsler's blog
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Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
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Florida League of Cities' Ethics Reform Proposals I - Preventing the Filing of Complaints
Trying to Do Too Much in an Ethics Code
Problems with the Perfectly Ordinary
Legislative Immunity: An Official's Motive Is Not At Issue in a Conflict Situation
More Bad Consequences of Gubernatorial Selection of EC Members in Georgia
[CityEthics] A Citizen Transparency Initiative
Recent blog posts
Barriers to Civic Engagement -- a TED Talk from Dave Meslin
Larry Lessig's 7 minute plenary speech at the #UNRIG conference in New Orleans
Charleston Post Courier Article
A new way to influence elections without transparency
Congratulations to Robert Wechsler on his retirement!
City Ethics' Director of Research Announces Retirement
Appearance Is All We Have
Announcing the Book "The Regulation of Local Lobbying"
Efforts to Influence Through the News Media as Lobbying
Gifts of Sexual Relations
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Comments
donmc says:
Wed, 2008-10-01 16:09
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By far the most common strategy by Cities in response to a FOI request is to be painfully slow to respond to the request, and additionally to charge a fee per page/email etc. to avoid fishing expeditions...
What really needs to be addressed is the new world that has opened up when you consider the improvements in efficiency and ease of access to data that the changed technology landscape has brought forth in the last 5-10 years. Now, a city can easily deliver the entire email archive for a specific user or group of users with a few simple commands, and then load it onto a USB RAM stick (as an example). Such an activity might take 20 minutes to deliver onto the requester's USB storage device, so what charges are reasonable given that ease of access and delivery ?
I see technology as an increasingly important issue that is still avoided by many agencies in doing business. There needs to be continuous review of procedures, charges, and the time limits for response to FOI requests in many government jurisdictions.