Law
Read Woodbridge Police Department Press Releases Online
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 01/06/2010 - 22:45Woodbridge, CT is a small peaceful New England town. There isn’t normally a lot of news coming out of the local Police Department. However, last month, I was forwarded a press release about some local burglaries so I contacted the Police Department to ask to be put on the Press Release email distribution list. Things move slowly in a small New England town, especially in a state known as the land of steady habits, and I eventually received a response denying my request.
Well, another trait of small New England towns is that their residents can be pretty stubborn and I was not going to take no as an answer. I contacted various people in various media advocacy organizations, and everyone was lining up to support me in whatever efforts would be necessary to obtain fair access to the press releases.
The Woodbridge Police Commission meets on the first Monday of every month and I saw that this month’s agenda included a discussion about press releases. So, I attended and presented my case. In response, the chief of police informed me that Woodbridge Police Press Releases would now be available on the Police Department website and that they would stop mailing the press releases to the commissioners. They would call them instead if there was anything they needed to know.
Sure enough, the website now contains links to six recent press releases. This is a step in the right direction. I did note that I saw no reason to discontinue sending the press releases to the commissioners. In addition, I suggested that the police department might consider using the town’s mailing lists to send press releases to commissioners, members of the press, and any residents of the town that are interested in receiving them.
I believe this would create less of a administrative burden and provide better access than the website does. Instead of having to check regularly for press releases that are few and far between, but should be read as soon as they come up, people could receive them immediately. We shall see if this gets addressed in the future.
I also now note that the press release about the burglaries does not show up on the website. I am hoping this is just a small oversight as they get this process in place. This again illustrates why using the town mailing lists might be more effective.
Even in a small peaceful New England town in the State of Steady Habits, the Internet is bringing change. It is bringing about a more open and transparent government, and in this case new ways in which the Police Department can work more closely with the residents of the town to improve the public safety and keep the town peaceful.
The Woodbridge Burglaries
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 12/29/2009 - 19:03Today, I receive an email from the Hartford Police Department. Their Media and Communications Coordinator was responding to a request I had sent to be added to their distribution list.
Thank you for your email. I am always looking for new avenues/groups to get the HPD message and information out too - so I welcome your request and have added both Connecticut News Wire and your personal email as well. BTW, I also joined CT news wire. Happy New Year.
I set up the Connecticut News Wire earlier this year as a means for government agencies, elected officials, candidates, and advocacy organizations to get their message out to the people of Connecticut, especially to bloggers and citizen journalists.
I am pleased to find that the Hartford Police Department is interested in reaching out to the people of Connecticut to help make our State’s Capitol safer.
The importance of this sort of outreach was brought home to me this evening as I read an article in the New Haven Independent, After Burglary, Family Helps Find Suspects. It provides a great example of what happens when police departments and citizens work together. What is particularly striking is that suspects are believed to have been involved in the Woodbridge Burglaries that led to my request to receive press releases from the Woodbridge Police Department. The Woodbridge Police Department declined my request and several journalism organizations, freedom of information organizations and open government organizations have offered to assist me in gaining the public information I have requested.
Yet as the Hartford Police and the story in the New Haven Independent illustrate, there are better ways to promote community involvement in protecting our neighborhoods than police departments denying requests for public information from its citizens.
How are the police in your community trying to improve communications between citizens and the police department? What are you doing to help?
The Woodbridge Police Department and the National Battle of Open Access for Citizen Journalists
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 12/23/2009 - 10:08It was a quiet day yesterday. I received several notices from the Connecticut Department of transportation about various motor vehicle accidents around the state, including an accident in Stratford. The Attorney General’s office sent me an email about Attorney General Blumenthal submitting to the court a proposed settlement providing around $1 million in restitution to F&S Oil Company customers. I received a press release from the Connecticut Office of State Ethics concerning court reporters “allegedly using their state positions to obtain financial gain”, including a court reporter from Orange and the City of New Haven sent a press release informing interested parties that “the Chapel Street bridge in the City's Fair Haven neighborhood has been closed temporarily for mechanical reasons. “ It is expected to reopen today. In addition, ConnCan sent out to mailings about their latest report card on Connecticut Schools.
On the national level, I received a press release from Sen. Dodd’s office concerning his letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates urging him “to halt procurement of any further Russian-made Mi-17 helicopters until an analysis of options-including an American-made alternative helicopter-has been completed”. Around the same time, I received an email from the communications director of the Connecticut Democratic Party concerning the latest polls in the U.S. Senate Race.
The U.S. Census Bureau sent a note to correspondents concerning the release of 2009 State Population Estimates. The release had been scheduled for Tuesday, but has been postponed because of the inclement weather which closed the federal government on Monday. It should come out today at noon. I also received various notices from the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice and a fascinating news release from the National Building Museum and National Capital Planning Commission about twenty-four middle school students views on the best way to design a new White House Visitor Center.
In many cases, a volunteer citizen journalist can relatively easily get information from various agencies. Unfortunately, Woodbridge is different. Last Friday, a neighbor forwarded a copy of a press release concerning two recent burglaries in town. I sent a request to be added to the distribution list for the emails of the Woodbridge Police Department Press Releases.
Yesterday, I was disappointed to receive the following reply:
We received your request, however, the Press Releases are e-mailed to our Police Commission members as a courtesy. The Press Releases appear in the New Haven Register. At this time, we will not be e-mailing Press Releases to any other outside agencies.
This raises concerns on many levels. The most immediate is public safety. If the Woodbridge Police Department is truly concerned with public safety, they should be making every effort to distribute public information to any journalist or citizen in the town, and not simply to the police commissioners and the police department’s preferred news organizations.
Likewise, there is the message of courtesy. The police department shows courtesy to commissioners but not to journalists that reside in the town. That is not a message that is good for the Police Department’s image. On a mailing list of media reformers, one person wrote that this was the dumbest thing they had ever heard and hoped that the Woodbridge Police Department was better at fighting crime that it is at handling information.
A Woodbridge resident noted that the Woodbridge Police Department does not seem to understand public relations and noted that the point of issuing press releases is to publicize activities in a consistent and efficient manner.
Then, there are questions of fact. Do the press releases appear in the New Haven Register? Most news organizations do not publish press releases directly. Instead, they are used as material for their reporters to write news stories. I’ve contacted several reporters at the New Haven Register to ask for details about how press releases from the Woodbridge Police Department are handled and am awaiting replies. A quick search online for the press release that started this discussion did not show anything at the New Haven Register. However, it did find an article in the Amity Observer, a local weekly paper. That article does not identify itself as being a press release thought it appeared to be a nearly verbatim copy of the press release.
Even if the press releases do show up in the New Haven Register, or the Amity Observer, there can be an additional lag before this information gets distributed, returning back to the public safety issue.
There is also the issue of unfair preference to some news organizations over others. This can be a subtle attempt at censorship, by not sharing information with news organizations that write critical stories of the Police Department. I believe it was protection from this sort of concern that led our forefathers to including protection of the press in the Bill of Rights.
Beyond the issues of how this action relates to freedom of the press, there are important freedom of information issues. One lawyer observed that a basic rule of government speech is that while they may not be compelled to speak, once they do they should do so in a nondiscriminatory manner. Several people encouraged me to contact the Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission which I will probably do after the holidays.
Yet it is not fair to single out the Woodbridge, CT police department. I found similar stories of people dealing with local police departments in upstate New York, Virginia, and other states. Others have reported police departments that have been particular helpful in disseminating public information, including police departments in Washington State and California.
It isn’t just police departments that make efforts to restrict public information. According to Huffington Post, radio talk show host Bill Press took a job as an intern in Sen. Bernie Sanders office to better cover what is going on in the Senate after being denied he “was denied a request for media credentials from the Congressional Radio-Television Galleries”.
Numerous people noted that this is a problem that is likely to get worse before it gets better, especially as more and more downsized traditional journalists set up their own online news sites and attempt to get access. The media advocacy group Free Press is looking at this on the national level and the Citizen Media Law Project has launched the Online Media Legal Network, a project hosted by Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. They are prepared to offer legal aid to online journalists in these battles.
On the one hand, I am hoping that this is just a small misunderstanding on the part of the Woodbridge Police Department and I will not have to pursue legal actions with the help of the various organizations listed above. On the other hand, if I do have to pursue this through various legal fronts, I hope that this will prove beneficial to citizen journalists around the country fighting for more open access to public information in their communities.
Have you tried gaining access to important public information? What have been your successes? What have been your challenges? How have you worked around them? Let’s get a good dialog going to discuss how we can all work together to improve government services in all our communities.
Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 11/01/2009 - 09:24#NaNoWriMo, Google Voice, StatusNet, Karmic Koala, Matlab in Joomla, Portfolio Analytics, Ad:Tech, Citizen Journalism conference, Trip to Virginia and to Cape Cod, proceedings in the Cablevision request, CEP, Doninger Case, making cider. The list seems to go on and on.
I often start each months’ blog posts with the old childhood saying, “Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit” meant to bring good luck for the month. Yet there is also an old saying, chase two rabbits, catch none. I feel more like a young kid in with ADHD in a field full of rabbits randomly running this way and that, sort of like Brownian motion.
I’ll keep this post short as short as I can, so I can start chapter one of Liza’s Party, my NaNoWriMo project. If you are interested in sharing ideas, or reading and commenting on my rough draft, please contact me directly.
When I’m not writing fiction, I’ll be busy writing and testing code, for both fun and profit. My Google Wave Federated Server is up. I’m working on setting up a second so I can actually test federation. If you have a federated server, let me know and we can collaborate. If you want to get text console access to a Google Wave server that is not connected yet to the main Google Wave servers, let me know. I’ve done some interesting hacking to make that possible. It isn’t as nice as the full Google experience, but it is a way to play with the technology.
Then, when I get a chance, I’ll continue my StatusNet migration. My previous installation was so old, that I’m planning on dumping what I had and starting from scratch. I’m partway through the installation, and I really want to connect it up to my XMPP server so that I can explore StatusNet to Google Wave integration options. Again, if you’re interested in this, ping me, but it may be a little while before I can really explore this.
In order to upgrade my laptop for testing with Google Wave, I’ve kicked off the upgrade to Ubuntu 9.10, also known as Karmic Koala. I left it running last night and it said it would take several hours to download all the updates. Now, it is sitting with the message fetching file 1295 of 1295 on the screen. It has been like that for a while, and not moved to the Installing the upgrades phase. I’ll keep glancing at that, and then eventually test some of my Google Wave Federation from that machine.
Of course all of this needs to happen in the background as I work on two paying projects involving Matlab. One is in the final phases of testing and hopefully will be completed soon. The other involves implementing a routine written with the Matlab Runtime Executable into a Joomla website. Most of the pieces are in place, and now I need to try putting them together to see how they work, and then fine tuning the result.
Then, there are the conferences. Ad:Tech is coming up this month, as is a conference on Citizen Journalism. It looks like the conference on Drama Therapy is likely to fall by the wayside. For other travels, there will be a trip to Virginia for a weekend at my daughters’ college, and a trip to Cape Cod for an extended family Thanksgiving celebration.
In legal and rules making activity, there is the Cablevision case, where their replies are due in about a week. There is the Citizens’ Election Program case, where replies are still being written, and there is the Doninger Case where I believe the replies are all written and we’re just waiting for oral arguments. This may involve another trip to blog from the Second Circuit in New York City before I know it.
Beyond all of this there are ongoing projects like the cider making, Fiona’s Radio Show, and who knows what else. Time to end this blog post, without spending time for editing and getting on with #NaNoWriMo 2009 – Word Count 0. Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, indeed.
The Battle for Digital Cable
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 10/26/2009 - 20:29Back in September, Cablevision petitioned the FCC to be able to encrypt basic cable in New York City. I submitted my comment to the FCC and have been reading other comments ever since.
A wide collection of views have been submitted and some common themes seem to appear. One of the biggest seems to be confusing related issues. One is confusing the move of the cable signal to digital, and with whether or not the digital signal should also be encrypted or scrambled. Another is confusing the number of households with set top boxes with the number of television receivers that are getting their signal from a set top box. While many subscribers may have a set top box for one or more of their televisions, they may not have it for all of their televisions. Understanding these and other issues will be important in how cable systems move to digital signals.
A comment submitted by Public Knowledge and the Media Access Project places the request in the proper framework.
While Cablevision is the first major cable system to apply for such a waiver, it certainly won’t be the last. To the contrary this petition marks only the beginning of a “cable digital conversion” that will reshape the industry.
They go on to say that “It is critical that the Commission move expeditiously to a general rulemaking”. Sure enough, RCN Telecom Services supports Cablevision’s request and “requests the Commission to extend such waiver to other cable and open video system operators”. Bend Cable Communications (“BendBroadband”) , a small family owned cable operator in Oregon also commented in support of the waiver.
BendBroadband comes the closest to presenting a viable argument for why cable operators should be allowed to encrypt digital basic cable signals. They talk about the need to install traps to protect against signal theft and the need for cable operators to be able to make service changes without a truck roll if they are going to be able to compete with satellite services. Yet under current rules, to request a waiver, a cable company must show that there is significant cable theft that cannot be thwarted other ways.
Arguing on the other side is Elgato, a leading vendor of products for watching of television on Macintosh Computers. Such a waiver would have a significant negative impact on customers that have bought their products in the past, as well as making their product less valuable for future potential customers. Broadening this argument is the Consumer Electronics Industry.
They present, in a particularly clear manner, that Cablevision has not met the requirements necessary for a waiver; showing neither a substantial problem of theft of basic tier services or some other “strong need”. They also illustrate the vast number of devices currently on the market that would be negatively affected by such a waiver. These arguments are also particularly well presented by the Association for Maximum Service Television (MSTV).
MSTV describes itself as “the leader in fostering over-the-air digital broadcast television” and “represents the television broadcast industry on technical issues before the Federal Communications Commission”.
So, we see a battle brewing between the cable companies, the consumer electronics manufacturers and the broadcast companies. It is also interesting to see ordinary citizens, and people involved in public, educational and government television channels weighing in on the issue.
Public Knowledge and the Media Access Project are right. This does only mark the beginning. They are right, the FCC should address the issue of the transition to digital cable. However, there has not been a compelling reason presented that the transition to digital cable should include allowing the encrypting or scrambling of basic tier cable channels. Indeed, the arguments by broadcasters and television manufacturers present a much more compelling reason why digital basic tier cable should not be encrypted or scrambled.
Cablevision’s comment reply date is November 6th. It will be interesting to see what they have to say, as well as what the FCC ends up doing. What is exciting to me is that as the large industry groups battle it out, more and more individuals are getting involved and that, I believe, is good for our country.
What are your thoughts on the requested waiver? Are there other rules being made or re-evaluated that you believe we should be paying attention to?