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Taxpayer Money Used to Pay Off Law Suits and Citizens Never Know.

As many of you know, I keep a running lists of questions that people have contacted me about. One of the most common one’s I hear is “How can the Town of Christiansburg get sued so much and then even the Town Council Members cannot find out what the settlement price was?”

That is a very good question and one that has been answered quite well by the Virginia Coalition for Open Government on a Blog article by Megan Rhyne “Secret lawsuit settlement amounts“. This same blog article was edited and appeared on the May 31, 2009 edition of the Roanoke Times “The public doesn’t know the price it paid“.

What does this mean for citizens? Ultimately, it means that your tax money is used to pay for the insurance that pays settlements in legal cases. Will you know how much or to whom the amount goes to? Not very likley. Will you receive a report of the affect these lawsuits will have on the insurance premiums in the future? What will be the long term financial affect to the taxpayer? There have been multiple instances where law suits have been applied against the Town of Christiansburg. These are almost always settled and with that settlement the records are sealed meaning that you, the taxpayer, have no access to that information.

Now, legal records do not seal themselves. Only a Judge can order the sealing of such records and the Judge has to be asked to do so. That means either the individual/group suing the Town or the Town’s representative MUST ask that those records be sealed.

In other jurisdictions, the facts are known by the elected officials. Christiansburg, however, seems to handle this a bit differently. Only the Town Manager is allowed to know. Town Council Members that were asked advised that they did not know and had been told they could not be given that information.

Some have suggested that it is the Town Attorney that is adding the factor of ‘silence’ to the equation. However, an attorney can advise a client, but it is ultimately the client (in Christiansburg’s case the Town Manager) who prompts the attorney to make a request to the Judge to seal the records. Somehow or other, the wording must be getting included in those orders that either none or only some of the Town Council members are being informed.

Our government has a responsibility to manage the town’s money. We as citizens have the right to see how well they perform that function. As the article referenced above notes, there are certainly some things within a law suit that should be kept confidential, but the amount of settlement hardly seems to be one of them. And, if Town Council members are kept out of the ‘knowledge loop’, how can they be expected to evaluate the situation and make sure it doesn’t happen again. In the recent past, one Town Council member responded to an issue by simply saying…”so sue us”. That’s easy to say when it is not your money or reputation that is one the line but rather the town’s. Just how many law suits have been filed against the Town of Christiansburg in the last 20 years. How many of those cases were settled and an order to seal the records issued by the Court? No. I don’t have the full answer to those questions. Yet:)

If you think taxpayers and Town Council members should be aware of the amount of settlements paid and how it can, will, or has affected insurance rates, please take the time to contact you Delegates and State Senators and let them know. You can find contact information at the Virginia General Assembly homepage.

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Posted by on November 30, 2009 in FOIA

 

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Constitution, Bill of Rights, Declaration of Independence, etc. Let’s get it straight!

Recent months have given ample opportunity for elected officials to cite references to some of our country’s most important documents. These are the very documents that elected officials are expected to adhere to in performing their jobs.

Unfortunately, during these recent months, what has been shown is that there are a lot of elected officials who do not know what those documents were designed to accomplish in general, much less what they contain specifically. I’ll not name names here, but I feel sure there is some egg yolk dripping off a few faces in Washington these days!

I am all about helping elected officials improve their job performance so….

Straight from the University of Oklahoma College Law website site here is a chronology of U.S. Historical Documents.

I am working my way through all of them. (I will warn you that some of them need to be read only on those nights when insomnia strikes and nothing works to help you get to sleep.) What is interesting to me is simply looking at these documents in order and seeing where things have been adapted from earlier documents, been deleted from earlier documents, or have been directly countered from earlier documents.

Also, as I read them, I do a Google search for historical events, populations, businesses, trade, general economics, and social structures that were in place at the time the documents were written.

Interestingly, I found the Iroquois Constitution to hold some interesting ideas from the Pre-Colonial era that could be very useful today.

Of course, I don’t expect elected officials to start actually reading and learning some of these documents. I simply hope that citizens will take the time to read them. Although, it might be nice if every candidate for public office had to pass a basic high school civics exam before being able to run. A citizenry that is as, or more, informed as the people elected to represent them can be a very powerful thing!

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Posted by on November 7, 2009 in Citizen Participation, VOTE

 

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Plan ahead for some important events! LWV Candidate Forums!

November 3, 2009 is election day in Virginia. Voters will be casting votes for:

  • Governor
  • Lieutenant Governor
  • Attorney General
  • House of Delegates
  • Board of Supervisors
  • School Board
  • Mayor of Blacksburg
  • Town Council of Blacksburg
  • Christiansburg Referendum to Move the Voting Date from May to November

That date is not so very far away. Now is the time to either start or continue looking at the choices available to you.

The League of Women Voters of Montgomery County will be hosting several Candidate Forums and you can find information on when those forums will occur at the LWV of Montgomery County, VA’s website at http:lwvmcva.org.  The Leage of Women Voters of Virginia will co-host with the AARP of Virginia a statewide televised Gubernatorial Debate also and that information is on the site as well.

You will also find other useful links such as the VOTER INFORMATION link which gives you links to such information as:

  • how to verify that you are registered to vote
  • where you go to vote
  • what is on your ballot
  • how to submit and verify the status of an absentee ballot
  • Spanish and English version of the aCLU documents describing your voting rights
  • and, FACTCHECK.org, one of the best places around to find out if the information you have been provided is accurate.

Every one of the web pages on that website has a link to VOTE411.org where you can find a ton of information along these lines and MORE!

Be sure to check bookmark the lwvmcva.org website because there will be ongoing updates to the candidate forums page including information such as (for forums sponsored by the LWV of Montgomery County, VA):

  • Links to online videos of the candidate forums
  • Questions presented to the candidates as part of the LWV’s Voter’s Guide candidates’ responses
  • Questions from the public that there was not time to address during the forums and the candidates’ responses

Each time you vote you are investing in your future and the future of your children and grandchildren because the decisions made by elected officials today will have long term repercussions. Each time you vote, whether in National, State, or Local elections there WILL be an impact on you. I think it is worth it to take some time to learn about the candidates and cast my vote for the best person for the job! How about you? Do you have a little bit of time to invest in your future?

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Posted by on September 11, 2009 in VOTE

 

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Countdown to July 4th and an important birthday.

We are now 18 days away from the 4th of July. The Declaration of Independence was adopted on this day. Typically, there is a lot of good food, music, family-time, and fireworks. It is a day in which many take a few moments to think about the concept of Freedom as we define it here in the United States. Well, along with freedom comes associated rights and responsibilities.

One of those rights involves something called the Freedom of Information Act. Ironically, it shares a birthday with Independence Day, the 4th of July. It was in 1966 that, somewhat begrudgingly, President Johnson signed the first version of this Act.

The National Security Archive website hosts an article from July 4th, 2006, when FOIA turned 40 years old. This article, Freedom of Information at 40, gives some information on the process of the ‘birth’ of the FOIA of which you may not be aware.  There was a certain degree of hesitancy in  getting the ‘ball rolling’ on this Act as noted by the fact that it took 11 years of ‘pushing’ to get the FOIA enacted. Interestingly, one finds that one of the biggest proponents of the FOIA was one Donald Rumsfeld, while a major opponent was (initially only) one Bill Moyer.

Over the course of time, FOIA has endured changes that are almost peristaltic in nature (that is the wave like constriction and relaxation of the muscles of part of the human digestive system). As political parties, events, and pressure by the press worked within the political-social environment, one sees FOIA constrict and then expand in a repetitive pattern. Many of these changes, particularly the restrictions, have tended to occur outside of public view.

We currently appear to be entering an era of expansion of FOIA. However, this time there is something different. More people are asking questions and the internet is often found to have those answers. Many governmental agencies are going the extra mile by publishing all of the documents that they are legal able to release on the internet. The press AND the public can now have quick and easy access.

Where government is choosing not to do it voluntarily, citizens are helping them out. More and more people are making sure that the documents they receive through FOIA requests are being made public. (Shock! And, you thought I was the only one:) For decades, this process has been used by corporations/businesses because they knew where to look and what to ask for. They would obtain the information through FOIA requests, then take the information and make it available for resale. Now, it is just average citizens, universities, and concerned groups who are doing it and making those documents available for free. (For one simple example, check out http://www.myvaresources.com.)

Between now and July 4th, I will be focusing my blog on FOIA as a happy birthday salute to a ‘friend’. One of the things that I will be looking at are some of the things that would have remained ‘hidden from public sight’ had it not been for FOIA….things like…..Agent Orange!

The easiest way to keep truth hidden is to keep people ignorant of what their rights are and/or what information is available. For more information on your FOIA rights go to the Citizen Initiative for Transparency hosted by the Montgomery County League of Women Voters or the Virginia Coalition for Open Government.

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Posted by on June 15, 2009 in Citizen Participation, FOIA

 

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