Connecticut
Understanding How Government Works
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 03/11/2010 - 11:58On February 28th, Former New Haven Alderman Gerry Garcia called into my daughter’s radio show to talk about his run for Connecticut Secretary of State. One of the first questions that Fiona asked him was, “What does the Secretary of State do?” It seems like a good candidate should be able to explain the office he is running for to an eight year old. It also seems like a lot of people don’t really understand how State Government works, and the explanation might be helpful to listeners not as informed about how government works.
The recent articles about the current Secretary of State’s Constituent Relationship Management database seems to reflect some of this lack of understanding about how government works. Everyone is focusing on the potential political uses of the database, since it was obtained by a freedom of information request by the Friends of Susan 2010 campaign, presumably for political uses. Yet in doing so, they are overlooking the much more important story about how our government works, and how it could work better.
Many organizations use CRMs, sometimes called Client, Customer, or Constituent Relationship Management Systems, depending on the context. A good CRM should have a section for notes about the constituents. The Secretary of State’s is no exception. Of the nearly thirty seven thousand names in the database, around seven thousand have special notes. These special notes provide some insight into the working of the Secretary of State’s office.
For example, 269 of the notes talk about people being candidates of some sort. Another 138 talk specifically about people running for State Representative. 117 people were noted as complaining about various important issues, 113 were listed as CEOs who have important interactions with the Secretary of State’s Office, 55 people were listed as being involved in various zoning boards, 37 provided nicknames that people preferred to be called and 17 noted that various phone numbers were unlisted.
Likewise, some people have raised concern about the ethnicity data that is tracked. This is standard information that many systems track and is usually asked during surveys. Of the six and a half percent of the records that have ethnicity information, the largest group is Polish with 1251, with around a quarter of them being elected officials. The second largest group with 629 members were Hispanics. About 20% of the Hispanics listed were elected officials.
While this information may not be as colorful as comments about people’s beards or hats, it is the bulk of the information that is gathered. Yet even stylistic information or whether a person prefers to bow instead of shake hands is important for elected officials to know when they meet and talk with them.
The information about how we are perceived by people in office is very interesting to all of us, and I’ve had several people ask for information about how they are listed or for copies of the database. People interested in reviewing the data themselves are encouraged to contact me directly. I will note that my record in the database lists me as being interested in ‘Election Practices, Ballot Access, etc.’
Perhaps the real story that needs to be investigated is about what public information various State Agencies have. How easy is it to get this information? Are there ways that State Agencies could better organize data and improve services to constituents.
As part of this, I sent an Freedom of Information request for copies of constituent databases to the Governor’s Office, the Lt. Governor’s Office, the Attorney General’s Office, the Secretary of State’s Office, the Treasurer’s Office and the Comptroller’s Office. The Secretary of State’s Office was quickest in replying and easily produced the information I was looking for. The Treasurer’s and Comptroller’s Offices said that they do not have any sort of constituent database. They offered to provide me access to the chronological logs of people contacting their office, but for my current research, I did not find that of value.
The Attorney General’s Office took a little longer to reply. They have a complicated database for tracking communications. It is much larger than the Secretary of State’s database, both in terms of the number of people tracked, and the information stored. The technology staff calculated that it would take about four hours time to extract the data and make it available. At the rate they are paying their staff, it would cost me about $218 to obtain that data. At this point, it is not worth that much to me. However, if people want to chip in, I might revisit the request. It is worth noting that people involved in various law cases that the Attorney General is involved with, or in potential class action law cases in other states, similar to cases in Connecticut frequently request information from the Attorney General’s Office under Freedom of Information Laws.
The Lt. Governor’s office took a few days to respond and said they are researching it with their information technology staff. That was a month ago, and there has been no further word on what their research has turned up.
The Governor’s office has gone back and forth with me clarifying exactly what data they have. Their data is in a Microsoft Access database. It is also apparently a large database and it contains a free form field for notes about constituents. It does not appear to have ethnicity data but it does have information about positions on various bills. In my most recent discussion with the Governor’s office they said they would need to redact certain confidential information such as personal contact information for State Police Officers and Judges so I’m still waiting for my copy of the data.
We need to think seriously about how our government is run; what data they have, how they can make it more accessible while protecting people’s privacy, and how technology can be used to make government more efficient. The current issue about the Secretary of State’s Constituent Relations Database could be a great opportunity to do this. Or, it could be used for titillating but not very well founded attacks on political candidates. Unfortunately, right now, the latter seems to be the case.
SB 365 – An Act Concerning the Posting of Public Agency Minutes and Legal Notices on the Internet Web Site of a Municipality
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 03/08/2010 - 11:49Last year, I wrote a blog post about bills before the Government Administrations and Elections Committee of the CT General Assembly. One bill would have delayed the implementation of a requirement that municipalities post their minutes on their websites. Another bill would have allowed municipalities to post legal notices on their websites instead of in local papers. The issue of legal notices has come up again this year, and I’ve recently written about it in public notices and covering the news and in Lebanon CT rejects budget ordinance.
In my blog post from last year, I noted that I found it interesting that people who supported delaying the requirement that municipalities post their minutes online were the same people that supported allowing municipalities to post legal notices.
This year, the bill looks much better. It links the two together in an appropriate manner:
Any town, city or borough that is in compliance with the provisions of subsection (a) of section 1-225, as amended by this act, concerning the posting of minutes may post any advertisement of a legal notice described in subsection (a) of this section in a conspicuous place on such town's, city's or borough's Internet web site in lieu of insertion of such advertisement in a daily or weekly newspaper.
Today, there is the public hearing about the proposed bill. I’m told that the publisher of the Willimantic Chronicle is testifying against the bill. I’m not particularly impressed with their website, but they do have a link to a very interesting website, Connecticut Public Notices. This site appears to aggregate public notices published in newspapers from across the state and make them easy to search. The site is part of MyPublicNotices which is a unit of Legacy.com. “Founded in 1998, Legacy.com is backed by several individual investors and the Tribune Company”.
It will be interesting to see how this develops. I think there is benefit to municipalities being able to publish their legal notices online. I had previously written:
Perhaps instead of simply doing away with the requirement that municipalities publish notices in local papers, we should allow them to publish them on online sites as well, providing the online sites get sufficient traffic. Municipalities that have vibrant websites might be able to use their own websites. Municipalities with lackluster websites that do not attract traffic might find it more efficient to post their notices on some of the online news sites that are rapidly growing in the state.
The language of SB 365 seems to move us in that direction, but other issues remain, such as with this loss of revenue for local papers, how will local news coverage be supported? Will there be sufficient tools to aggregate the public notices? Is there the possibility of an open standard for posting such notices and open software to facilitate posting such notices? Whatever happens, SB 365 seems to be just another small step in the long journey of news organizations and municipalities adopting to the age of the Internet.
#saveabc7 versus Cablevision and HR 5469
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 03/07/2010 - 11:35Yesterday morning as I surfed my daily allotment of blogs, I notice one recurring advertisement. It was for SaveABC7. Clicking on the ad, I found that Cablevision was entering into a new fracas similar to what happened with Food Channel and HGTV earlier this year. That three week dispute with Scripps was over the amount that Cablevision must pay per subscriber to carry the channels.
This morning channel 7 on Cablevision had a message from the cable company saying that ABC7 was off the air during the current dispute. It appears as if a similar dispute is now being fought out over what Cablevision must pay to carry ABC7.
The media landscape continues to evolve as people argue about creation and distribution of video content. Yet this is not a discussion that the average subscriber needs to be involved in. In fact, using subscribers as pawns in such discussions seems, at best, unfair.
To address this, the Energy and Technology Committee of the Connecticut General Assembly is considering bill HR 5469 – An Act Concerning Cable Subscriber Rights. The proposed bill has the following language:
No certified competitive video service provider, holder of a certificate of cable franchise authority or community antenna television company, as defined in section 16-1 of the general statutes, shall withdraw programming from its channel lineup during the contract renewal process for such programming. A violation of this section shall be deemed an unfair trade practice in violation of subsection (a) of section 42-110b of the general statutes.
If you are tired of being used as a pawn in a high dollar game of who video content is distributed contact your State Legislator to discuss the bill.
Lebanon CT Rejects Budget Ordinance
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/02/2010 - 12:51Yesterday, I received a phone call from a Lebanon, CT resident concerned about a town meeting that had been scheduled for last night. The purpose of the meeting was to ‘Consider and act upon an Ordinance providing for the separate consideration of the General Town Budget and the Board of Education Budget’. However, last November during the municipal elections there had been a ballot question asking if the town should enact such an ordinance. If it was already voted on in November, why was there this special meeting?
Lebanon is a small town in eastern Connecticut. The population was just under seven thousand at the 2000 Census. In 2005, there were about 4,800 voters in the town. The local paper is the Norwich Bulletin from the city 12 miles to the southeast.
Last November, there was a ballot question about whether or not the town should enact an ordinance separating the town budget from the education budget. Prior to the vote, there were a couple of informatory meetings to discuss the pros and cons of the proposal, but only a few people showed up for the meetings.
According to the town clerk’s office, this ballot question received 954 yes votes and 391 no votes. However, this question did not have the language of an ordinance and was only informatory to the town boards. Based on the results, a town meeting was scheduled to vote on the ordinance.
On February 18th, the Board of Selectmen posted a Legal Notice of the Special Town Meeting. It was posted in the Norwich Bulletin, on the town website and at town hall. Still, many people did not know about the meeting or about the issue.
Last night, around 150 people showed up for the town meeting. After a discussion of the proposed ordinance there was a paper ballot where 101 people voted against the ordinance and 49 voted for it.
It may well be that there is something about this in the Norwich Bulletin, but my search online turned up nothing. Previously, I’ve written about Public Notices and Covering the News. In order for ballot questions and votes on proposed ordinances at town meetings to be meaningful, voters need to know about the town meetings as well as understand the issues they are voting on. I suspect that many of my friends could argue strong points on either side of whether or not a town ordinance to separate the town budget from the education budget would be a good thing. Unfortunately, this debate did not seem to happen in any visible manner in Lebanon. Either people didn’t know, didn’t care, or couldn’t attend the town meeting.
Yesterday, Chris Powell, posed the question, What are legals worth? in a column in the Journal Inquirer. He writes:
In determining whether the legal notice requirement gives value, the value of news reporting about government has to be considered, since that is also what legal notice advertising pays for and what will diminish if that advertising diminishes. Right now Connecticut's newspapers report about state and local government all out of proportion to the public's interest, apparently in the belief that the public should be more civic-minded than it is and that newspapers should strive to compensate for the long decline in civic virtue.
I do believe that newspapers should strive to compensate for the long decline in civic virtue. They need to do it for the good of the country as well as for their own good. He is right in noting that newspapers report about local government disproportionately to the apparent public interest. Yet there may be a chicken and egg problem here. Why are people interested, or not interested in something? Does some of it have to do with whether or not it is being reported on?
Unfortunately, despite the legal notice about the town meeting, the Norwich Bulletin does not appear to have covered the event and there was low turnout. Yes, Mr. Powell is right, the value of news reporting about government needs to be considered, and in this case I have to question the value of the legal notice in the Norwich Bulletin and the value of any reporting it might have generated.
CT Senate Debate
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/02/2010 - 10:26Tuesday morning. The first debate of Democratic Candidates for U.S. Senate in Connecticut this year took place at University of Hartford last night and everyone is bound to be out spinning the results and claiming victory. As is often the case, I have my own peculiar perspective which I hope will flavor some of the discussion.
Friends of mine spoke highly of Merrick Alpert’s appearance last night and a Richard Blumenthal support wrote to say that she did not think Blumenthal helped himself by debating Alpert so early.
Alpert did do very well, trying to wrap himself in the mantle of Paul Wellstone and Howard Dean by claiming to represent the Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party. He went on the offensive against ‘incrementalism’. However, his rhetoric did seem a bit over the top at times. For example when he spoke about his mother-in-law and Cuba, it almost sounded like he said he could see Cuba from his mother-in-law’s house.
One of the narratives leading up to the debate was that Alpert is a fringe candidate that shouldn’t be taken seriously. I always dislike and distrust such narratives and I think Alpert did a good job of destroying that narrative.
On the other hand, Attorney General Blumenthal delivered a steady and solid performance. In fact, he seemed to take the famous Goldwater quote and turn it inside out. Incrementalism, in the pursuit of justice, is, in fact, a virtue. Alpert called for immediately normalizing relations with Cuba and for a single payer health care system. I agree with him that these are goals we should seek to obtain. However, it seems like Blumenthal, through his willingness to work incrementally through the system is much more likely to obtain them.
Another narrative that I would be very concerned about if I were part of the Blumenthal campaign is that Blumenthal is Coakley 2.0. Indeed, many have compared the current Blumenthal campaign to Coakley’s campaign and even gone so far as to suggest that Blumenthal might have been better served by Coakley’s team than by the team he’s assembled so far.
Blumenthal’s charismatic nature, showing up at just about every event in Connecticut has not been shining through in the campaign so far. Rob Simmons has ten times as many people following him on Twitter as Dick Blumenthal does, and they do a great job or repeating Simmons’ talking points.
This only furthers the Coakley narrative. Coakley was the Massachusetts Attorney General who seemed likely to inherit Ted Kennedy’s seat. She was challenged by two progressive candidates in the primary, and while she received twice as many votes as her nearest competitor, she still did not receive a majority of the votes. She did not seem to get out there and campaign the way it has felt that Blumenthal has been campaigning for ever.
Fortunately for Blumenthal, he deflated this narrative a little bit last night. He showed himself willing to debate even a long shot underdog in an effort to talk seriously about the issues our state faces. He spoke about the importance of listening, something he’s always seemed good at doing. He would be well served to take attitude into the rest of his campaign.
Yet Blumenthal isn’t running just against Alpert. He is also running against Rob Simmons and Linda McMahon. It appears as if he has given bait to Simmons and Simmons has take the bait and ran with it. Simmons tweeted during the debate “Say what?! Blumenthal says his lawsuits “actually create jobs.” Bizarre. #ctgop #ctsen”. This was promptly picked up by his supporters and retweeted broadly. He then used it in a press release.
It seems striking that a former CIA operative like Rob Simmons would be so weak on crime. Typically Republican candidates are strong on crime, wanting to see state laws enforced. Simmons seems to be saying the corporate crime does not hurt citizens or honest business people.
In the end, Merrick Alpert came out much stronger than many suspected and it will help his campaign. However, Richard Blumenthal came out even stronger and showed why, despite his lackluster campaign so far, he would be a great senator. Rob Simmons on the other hand came out in defense of corruption and that is going to have to hurt his campaign.