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Iowa given D+ rating for government transparency

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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A grieving Burlington family had to fight state and local agencies for months to get official records about a fatal police shooting of a 34-year-old mother.

Although such records are routinely released in many jurisdictions, the family began to make progress with its request only after Iowa’s Public Information Board, created three years ago to arbitrate such disputes, intervened on its behalf.

The fact that state authorities sought to obstruct the disclosure explains, in part, why Iowa received an overall grade of D-plus in the State Integrity Investigation, an assessment of state government transparency and accountability conducted by the Center for Public Integrity and Global Integrity. The score ranks the Hawkeye State tied for ninth out of 50 states. That’s a drop from the first time the project was carried out, in 2012, when Iowa earned a C-plus and ranked seventh, though the scores are not directly comparable because of changes made to improve and update the study and its methodology.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/st...ce-shooting-open-records-complaints/27743001/
A 12-second excerpt from a video of the Burlington incident, taken by a policy body camera and released by the state Division of Criminal Investigation, attracted considerable public interest. It initially shows a snowy residential street filled with the sound of a child crying. The video shakes as the officer runs toward a couple fighting on the sidewalk. “Stop it,” he yells, and then, as a dog begins barking, he tells them to “get your dog” away. The camera jolts, and two shots ring out. Off camera, the woman groans after being struck by two bullets.

“They are our records. We paid for them. It tells the public what happened in this incident and they have a right to know,” said local newspaper editor Steve Delaney, who sought access to the full video as well as other records. The officer was cleared of wrongdoing, but requests by the family of the woman he shot and by Delaney’s newspaper, the Hawk Eye, for police investigative reports, 911 telephone transcripts, and all the related body-camera and dashboard video were denied.

On Sept. 17, however, members of the Iowa Public Information Board voted 5-3 to take up their complaint. The board promised to seek an informal resolution or, failing that, to launch an investigation that could compel the agencies to release the records.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/st...-police-fatal-shooting-body-cameras/70373048/
Improvements for access to information
Overall, Iowa has achieved some gains in public records access, and its score of 73, or a C-minus, in this category of the project was the best in the nation. The Iowa Public Information Board was created by state lawmakers in the aftermath of the first State Integrity Investigation, when Iowa received a failing grade for public records access. The board fields complaints about records requests and alleged open meetings violations. It can seek informal resolutions for disclosure requests or conduct a formal investigation. If a violation is found, the board can issue civil fines of up to $2,500.

Access to records improved after members of the board began briefing state and local officials about the open records and meetings laws, said Rox Laird, a retired editorial writer with The Des Moines Register and past president of the Iowa Freedom of Information Council, a nonprofit group promoting greater government transparency.

Before the board was created in 2012, the fight for such records would have gone through expensive, lengthy court procedures. But Iowans still face challenges when requesting law enforcement investigative files, procurement bid documents and personnel files, Laird and others said. Gaining efficient access to such records is “the only way people can know what’s going on in their government, how their tax money is being spent and whether public employees — who work for the public after all — are doing their job,” Laird said.
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/st...-state-covers-facts-police-shooting/28050995/
Still room for improvement
Difficulties surrounding access to police records are not unique to Iowa. Delaney said he faced issues gaining access to law enforcement records in the past, both in Iowa and during his time as an editor and publisher in Kansas. “That’s why we need to step up to defend the public’s right to know,” he said. “If we don’t do it, no one else will.”

Kathleen Richardson, who until last month was executive director of the Iowa Freedom of Information Council, said exceptions in the law include too much gray area. Agencies can deny requests by using broad exemptions, including two for personnel files and law enforcement investigative files, which she likened to “a black hole.”

After requests were made for the full Burlington shooting video, for example, state officials cited a court ruling in Polk County that police officers’ investigative reports can remain confidential even after the completion of an investigation — in contrast to police agencies’ email and telephone billing records, which become public at the end of an investigation.

W. Charles Smithson, the Public Information Board’s executive director, said “it is a matter of statutory interpretation.” But he agreed that the law has “an awful lot of exceptions” that could be tightened up.

Separately, the Associated Press is waiting for the board to act on a complaint it filed over the state’s refusal to release the results of an internal probe of three State Patrol officers put on leave and then allowed to return to work. The Department of Public Safety has said the probe results are confidential under exemptions for personnel records.

Iowa received its worst marks for the categories examining judicial accountability and lobbying disclosure, receiving an F in both.

Corporate redactions
Others have expressed concern about transparency in the state’s procurement practices, for which the state earned a D-minus.

When The Des Moines Register requested copies this year of a company’s bid to monitor state employee medical absences, for example, it found one company redacted entire pages of its bid, including the executive summary, as allowed by the state. The Register reported that the Department of Administrative Services routinely allowed businesses to redact confidential information, such as trade secrets, from public documents.

Caleb Hunter, spokesman for the Department of Administrative Services, said the agency doesn’t have the expertise to judge a company’s assertion of confidentiality. He said the department has discussed the issue internally and with the Public Information Board and state attorney general’s office, but the agency has not changed its policy. He pointed out that the documents in question eventually were released after the department notified the company, which chose not to seek an injunction.

Laird has disputed the agency’s position and said that determining what information can be kept confidential is the government’s responsibility.

Smithson, the executive director of the Public Information Board, seems to agree. He said that in his view, the companies had excessively censored information, and that the board hopes that in the future, government agencies will be the ones redacting information.


http://www.press-citizen.com/story/...en-d-rating-government-transparency/75416520/
 
life in a communist state
STFU-WW2-4Words.jpg
 
Unless the chief exec (Governor or President) promises it, I don't care. If he promises it, he better do it.
 
Iowa
GRADE:D+(67)
RANK:10th
Assessing the systems in place to deter corruption in state government

Click on each category for more detail

Our methodology
Public Access to Information
GRADE:c-(73)
RANK: 1st
Political Financing
GRADE:d-(62)
RANK: 25th
Electoral Oversight
GRADE:d-(61)
RANK: 31st
Executive Accountability
GRADE:d(65)
RANK: 17th
Legislative Accountability
GRADE:d(66)
RANK: 15th
Judicial Accountability
GRADE:F(58)
RANK: 21st
State Budget Processes
GRADE:b(84)
RANK: 13th
State Civil Service Management
GRADE:d-(63)
RANK: 18th
Procurement
GRADE:d-(60)
RANK: 42nd
Internal Auditing
GRADE:b-(83)
RANK: 17th
Lobbying Disclosure
GRADE:F(53)
RANK: 41st
Ethics Enforcement Agencies
GRADE:c-(71)
RANK: 6th
State Pension Fund Management
GRADE:c(74)
RANK: 13th
 
I liked Culver a HELLUVA lot better than Branstad. Branstad is simply a worthless human being as far as I'm concerned.

Sure. If you love incessant spending and high unemployment, then you should love Chet.
 
Yes he is. You're confusing your governors. What you really mean is Chet's a nice guy and Branstad's a piece of $hit.

Yep, laying off thousands of worker's due to his uncontrolled spending despite repeated warnings is a sure sign that Chet was a good man. Is that what you mean by good man?
 
Yep, laying off thousands of worker's due to his uncontrolled spending despite repeated warnings is a sure sign that Chet was a good man. Is that what you mean by good man?
When the econiomy turned (and caught him) he did the CORRECT thing bu making "across the board" budget vuts...as opposed to the current Governor who would chop us the people's budget and selectively choose winners and losers with his budget cuts. Branstad has done this 3-4 times during his terms as Governor. It is his MO....and then he publically campaigns on the fact that government' s job is not to choose winners and losers.
The only time Teflon Terry lies is when he moves his lips.
 
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When the econiomy turned (and caught him) he did the CORRECT thing bu making "across the board" budget vuts...as opposed to the current Governor who would chop us the people's budget and selectively choose winners and losers with his budget cuts. Branstad has done this 3-4 times during his terms as Governor. It is his MO....and then he publically campaigns on the fact that government' s job is not to choose winners and losers.
The only time Teflon Terry lies is when he moves his lips.

So you agreed with Chet making bigger cuts than needed to balance the budget? Got it.
 
So you agreed with Chet making bigger cuts than needed to balance the budget? Got it.
Not at all. Not what I said. He balanced the People's budget ACROSS the board. The budget was the PEOPLE's as it came from the Legislature.....he cut it as it needed to be cut...across the board. If specifics needed to be cut, it would be the job of the PEOPLE (their Legislature) to make those cuts...not of the Governor (Branstad) who cuts the budget based on his personal preferences......of which education and Human Services are always the loser.e
So go back Garry and READ what I said...I don't care if you move your lips, if it helps you better understand.
 
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Really? Highly doubtful...but I bet you got that info from Terry, didn't you? Terry is busy cutting the nuts off of the poor and indigent right now.....and giving away tax dollars to businesses.

Really? So you deny Chet created the largest budget gap in Iowa history?
 
Really? So you deny Chet created the largest budget gap in Iowa history?
He didn't create it and more than Branstad created deficits...When the economy turns, revenues fall fast. Terry has had to pare back a budget several times. He however likes to decide winners and losers....atleast Culver had the balls to make "across the board" cuts.....and NOT select winners/losers. And really, Culver's shortfall was not that serious as he dealt with it up front and forthrightly. It was no scandal. Certainly not one of ther multitude thst Branstad is running with right now w/ MedicAid.
 
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Not at all. Not what I said. He balanced the People's budget ACROSS the board. The budget was the PEOPLE's as it came from the Legislature.....he cut it as it needed to be cut...across the board. If specifics needed to be cut, it would be the job of the PEOPLE (their Legislature) to make those cuts...not of the Governor (Branstad) who cuts the budget based on his personal preferences......of which education and Human Services are always the loser.e
So go back Garry and READ what I said...I don't care if you move your lips, if it helps you better understand.

Culver created the need for budget cuts with all of his spending. The economy didn't just turn on him out of nowhere. He was warned repeatedly not to continue spending the way he did. He was warned repeatedly not to continue to increase the budget.

Admit it... The only reason you aren't crucifying Culver the way you do Terry is the "D" next to his name.
 
Culver created the need for budget cuts with all of his spending. The economy didn't just turn on him out of nowhere. He was warned repeatedly not to continue spending the way he did. He was warned repeatedly not to continue to increase the budget.

Admit it... The only reason you aren't crucifying Culver the way you do Terry is the "D" next to his name.


Culver the "D"'s have priorities I more easily align with. Culver wasn't the greatest Governor Iowa has had....but he was a lot better than Branstad. Not as good as Ray or Vilsack or Hughes, but a damn sight better than Terry ever was. Branstad is a damn liar. He always has been. He's just not a nice guy. He's a prick...and a vindictive SOB, too. But, 55% of Iowans just love his mustachioed arse. They deserve him, I guess.
 
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He didn't create it and more than Branstad created deficits...When the economy turns, revenues fall fast. Terry has had to pare back a budget several times. He however likes to decide winners and losers....atleast Culver had the balls to make "across the board" cuts.....and NOT select winners/losers. And really, Culver's shortfall was not that serious as he dealt with it up front and forthrightly. It was no scandal. Certainly not one of ther multitude thst Branstad is running with right now w/ MedicAid.

Again... He was told over and over to watch his spending. Culver chose to ignore it. He was spending even after the economy turned.

Culver created the mess that ended up being his undoing. I didn't say anything about a scandal. Culver was just an incompetent governor.
 
He didn't create it and more than Branstad created deficits...When the economy turns, revenues fall fast. Terry has had to pare back a budget several times. He however likes to decide winners and losers....atleast Culver had the balls to make "across the board" cuts.....and NOT select winners/losers. And really, Culver's shortfall was not that serious as he dealt with it up front and forthrightly. It was no scandal. Certainly not one of ther multitude thst Branstad is running with right now w/ MedicAid.

Now look who's lying. Yes he did create it.
 
Again... He was told over and over to watch his spending. Culver chose to ignore it. He was spending even after the economy turned.

Culver created the mess that ended up being his undoing. I didn't say anything about a scandal. Culver was just an incompetent governor.

Governor's make these budget decisions based on "best evidence" at the time. That's what Culver did. He was wrong.
The current Governor is is going to take about $60M from the poor and indigent based on numbers that have NO source in his effort to "privitize" Iowa's MedicAid program. Atleast the big lug has number that were real. This current Governor is all about crony capitalism and lower wages and reducing Iowa's tax revenues...and I almost forgot, polluted waterways.
Branstad got out of politics in '98 as he saw he had no chance of defeating Vilsack....because of a similar budget mess HE created.
 
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Governor's make these budget decisions based on "best evidence" at the time. That's what Culver did. He was wrong.
The current Governor is is going to take about $60M from the poor and indigent based on numbers that have NO source in his effort to "privitize" Iowa's MedicAid program. Atleast the big lug has number that were real. This current Governor is all about crony capitalism and lower wages and reducing Iowa's tax revenues...and I almost forgot, polluted waterways.
Branstad got out of politics in '98 as he saw he had no chance of defeating Vilsack....because of a similar budget mess HE created.

You sure do like to deflect don't you.

All this complaining about Branstad and you probably don't even know the D who could beat him when election time comes. Do you?
 
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