Tag Archives: Transparency

West Lafayette Joint Board’s Refusal for Pro-Active Transparency on State Street and My Nameless Contribution

IC 5-23-5-6 Disclosure of contents of proposals

Sec. 6. The governmental body may refuse to disclose the contents of proposals during discussions with eligible offerors.

The coverage regarding the recent political conflicts and decisions surrounding the State Street Project are fascinating to watch as someone who has been closely following the events unfold.

If you haven’t already listened to the West Lafayette Redevelopment Commission meeting from January 20th, you should.  The discussion of State Street starts at 7:40.

I am looking forward to the minutes of this meeting and seeing how they compare to actual events.

The three major news outlets, the Journal and Courier, WBAA, and WLFI all had slightly different perspectives on the events.

WLFI was the most sterile of the coverage (TV usually takes the most bland perspective).  Nothing different unique in this article.

The Journal and Courier has had the most coverage of State Street but they have not questioned the narrative put forth by the City of of West Lafayette officials, Purdue, or the Joint Board regarding IC 5-23-5-6.  In fact, the J&C keeps giving inches and ink to the narrative:

Steve Schultz, Purdue’s attorney, bristled Thursday, saying he wanted the record “to be crystal clear” that city and university officials working on the State Street project had been confidential but had followed the letter of the law “to the T.”

UPDATE 2016-01-29:  In Dave Bangert’s recent piece, Objections soften over State St. details, he mentions the fact that it was optional to withhold information regarding the proposals.

The city and university were given the option under state law to hold back information during the negotiation period with possible contractors in the novel “build-operate-transfer” bidding process. Both sides opted to go that route, locking up details by making those involved in negotiations sign confidentiality agreements that kept even Mayor John Dennis out of the conversation.

Thankfully, WBAA’s coverage of the Joint Board’s January 21st meeting included this blurb:

But comments after the announcement noted the state’s so-called “build-operate-transfer” rubric only says such projects may be kept under wraps, not that they must. Schultz noted the letter of the law says only that the documents must be made public at a meeting like Thursday’s, when the Joint Board announces a winner.

Stan Jastrzebski expanded on this with an article on WBAA’s WordPress site: Build Operate Transfer (or: How I Learned To Stop Hiding And Love Transparency).

It’s funny how, in most professions, when someone provides you with unique information, a new perspective, and/or inspires you to create new work, attribution or credit is usually provided and appreciated.

I mentioned this to Stan on Twitter and he responded with the following:

Screen Shot 2016-01-27 at 8.39.34 PM

Well that makes sense.  I’m just looking at it wrong.

Instead of giving  the name of both individuals who spoke during Public Comments (Bunder and I were the only ones to make comments and Bunder was named), I should relish in the knowledge that what I said was important.

For the annals of West Lafayette history, it was irrelevant that it wasn’t a nameless, faceless individual (not a group of commenters) who said this important fact to the Joint Board, at their Public meeting, calling out the City officials, the Mayor, the Joint Board’s legal team, and Purdue for their lack of pro-active transparency and deflating their shoulder shrugging “But we are following the letter of the law” narrative.

It’s obvious now.  Everyone else in the audience would have said the same thing.  They just weren’t at the meeting.  Everyone was thinking about IC 5-23-5-6, they just went to the restroom during the Public Comment portion on January 21st.  Everyone in the media is getting ready to call out the narrative perpetuated by elected and appointed officials, lawyers, Purdue, and the Joint Board.

The piece just needs one more edit.  One more review before it goes live.

I wrote Stan back on twitter:

Screen Shot 2016-01-27 at 8.47.46 PM

Update 2016-01-30:

Screen Shot 2016-01-30 at 10.50.03 AMI’m chalking this as a difference in mass media philosophy.

We’ll see what happens with the state of transparency in Tippecanoe county. Being a constituent is hard work.  Join me if you can.  A lot of important meetings coming up in February.  The 1st is City Council, the 3rd is a Redevelopment work session, 4th is a State Street learning session at Happy Hollow etc.

I promise if you get involved that I will give you credit for your work.

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Here are the written comments I made (paraphrased at points during actual delivery) to the Joint Board at their January 21st meeting.  Audio to follow.

  • Thank you.
  • Again, the Claim information was not included on the table when we entered the meeting.
  • Will all of the PowerPoints utilized tonight by the Joint Management Team and the Joint Board, also be uploaded to the City’s web site after tonight’s meeting?
  • It was joked that the documents submitted by one of the teams were delivered in a small moving van.
    • In less than a month, the Financial and Technical teams read through these truck loads of proposal pages, gave out up to 105 points to each proposal, on a variety of metrics, and then meditate on these findings, all in less than a calendar month.  That included holidays, the New Year, and other life interruptions.
    • The decision we make moving forward will impact generations, such as my son Hieronymus, along with future residents, some will make their decision to call West Lafayette their home based on the the State Street Project.
    • I appreciate the Mayor’s extension of time for the Public to review the proposals from the meager 10 days to 20 days.  Maybe it is because the Public only has access to heavily redacted copies of the proposals, allowing a more light reading vs. the intense details.
  • I had made a public records request for the proposals submitted to the Joint Board on January 12th.  I heard back from Ms. Daniels on January 14th:
    • The Board is reviewing the proposals and anticipates having disclosable public records within 30 business days.
    • I followed up with a request for the current redacted portions of the proposals on January 14th and Ms. Daniels responded on January 15th stating:
      • Furthermore, the Board is currently engaged in discussions with at least two (2) eligible offerors.  Pursuant to IC 5-23-5-6, the Board will not disclose records related to the contents of the proposals that are under discussion at this time.
    • IC 5-23-5-6 Reads:  Disclosure of contents of proposals:  Sec. 6. The governmental body may refuse to disclose the contents of proposals during discussions with eligible offerors.
    • I spoke with Luke Britt, the Public Access Counselor for the State of Indiana, and he told me that it was at the pleasure of the governmental body if they wished to refuse disclosure of the proposals.  They were not compelled under the law to withhold the proposals from the Public.
    • I am disappointed in the narrative put forth by a variety of Public officials, that the Joint Board’s hands were tied from disclosing the redacted proposals to the Public until tonight, when Indiana Code clearly states that the governmental body MAY disclose the contents of the proposals.
  • I look forward to a more transparent process moving ahead.
  • Thank you.

West Lafayette City Council District 3 Candidate Interviews

I have been lucky enough to acquire a handful of minutes over the past few weeks (in between family, work, and public meetings) to interview the District 3 candidates for West Lafayette City Council. For this round of interviews, I chose to focus on the topics of transparency and open government.

Of the three candidates, I asked the following questions:

  1. What are your views on transparency in government?
  2. In what ways is the City of West Lafayette open and transparent?
  3. In what ways can the City of West Lafayette become more proactively transparent.
  4. If elected, how would you help citizens become more informed and knowledgeable of the City’s plans and actions?
  5. How do you currently assess the City’s utilization of the Internet?
  6. Can a government be too open, too transparent, too accountable?
  7. Final thoughts?

Democrat Joelle Jones


Download the MP3

Independent Donnie Spencer


Download the MP3

Republican Aseem Jha


Download the MP3

How Uploading Audio to YouTube Can Make a Difference

I have recently started converting audio files to YouTube videos to make them easier to reference, share, and discover on the Internet.

A few months back I learned that the New Albany-Floyd County Consolidated School Corporation would start to post the audio of their meetings as an experiment.  I quickly wrote an e-mail to the Board members, applauding their decision and encouraging them to keep up the work.  Subsequently, I wrote a Letter-to-the-Editor to the The Courier and Journal to this effect as well.

Following up on NAFCS, I discovered that the they would only host their audio files for 60-days after their initial posting:

Please click the applicable play button below to listen to the entire school board meeting.  These audio recordings are available on this site for 60 days from original date of posting.

After the internal struggle with their board, I wanted to keep them online in perpetuity.

It was surprisingly easy to convert an image and an audio file to a YouTube video once I found the right ffmpeg arguments.  I am going to slowly start putting more and more government meetings online in this way.

An interesting byproduct of this endeavor was that once I posted the videos online and tweeted @NAFCSuccess a link to a video, the 60-day limit text was removed from their web site.

Never under estimate the power of yourself. Every politically-aware person is fond of quoting Margaret Mead in these instances.  I will do no different:

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.

Hell.  You may be a group of one in some cases.


Letter-to-the-Editor

I want to thank and celebrate the recent move toward greater transparency by the New Albany-Floyd County Consolidated School Corporation Board of Trustees.

By proactively posting the audio of their meetings online the public has an opportunity to listen, with historical accuracy, to what exactly transpired at the meeting instead of relaying on the distilled minutes. The beauty of government is in the details, not in the summary.

Board Member George Gauntt asked if there would be any public interest in the audio. The public may be interested in a topic presented at the previous meeting or wish to research how a specific issue evolved over time. The return on investment is magnitudes beyond the initial required effort; trim the ends of the file, amplify, compress, and upload. Nothing to redact, since it took place in a public meeting.

I would also like to encourage every individual (including students, members of the public without students, etc) to attend the next school board meeting and push for the adoption of the second transparency resolution that was tabled. Once passed, even greater transparency will be achieved by posting supplemental materials prior to scheduled NAFCCSC Board meetings. An informed community is an empowered one.

Remember, do not limit your political life to the ballot box. There are plenty of opportunities to engage your community now, regardless of your age, without waiting for the next election.

ZACHARY BAIEL