Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

December Woodbridge Board of Education Meeting

Last night, the Woodbridge Board of Education had its monthly meeting, which included the presentation of the proposed 2010/2011 budget. The meeting started off with a ‘non-meeting’ where I believe legal issues that the board needs to consider were presented. When the regular meeting started they moved directly into an extended executive session which the agenda listed as to ‘Review Personnel Staffing Issues’.

Although many people had read the proposed budget ahead of time, as well as discussed it at other opportunities, after the executive session Dr. Stella spent time explaining some of the factors going into the budget. Gavel to gavel coverage of the Board of Education meeting will be available on the Woodbridge Government Access Channel as well as on DVD from the public library. A brief clip, recorded with my Nokia N900 is included here.

Various options for further reductions in the budget were discussed including additional reductions in the number of teachers, seeking to end the agreement with the Wintergreen Magnet School or reducing the GASB funding. The reduction of GASB funding would be a short term, and perhaps short sighted effort to deal with the budget. Attempting to end the agreement with the Wintergreen Magnet School would perhaps be even more short sighted because it appears to be a highly efficient way of not only meeting particular needs of certain students, but also fulfilling various school district obligations. The current budget calls for one less teacher and one less teaching assistant. There was a good discussion about the pros and cons of additional cuts to staff.

When it came time for reviewing the administration’s monthly financial reports, again, some members of the board abstained from voting. This has been going on for a few months, and I believe it is irresponsible. With that, I presented a public comment at the end of the meeting. Below, you will find my remarks as prepared for delivery. I tempered them a little bit given the good discussion that had been had about the budget.

“Entertain your cronies with a pork feast...”

There are some great Democrats potentially running for Governor in Connecticut, but I'm not ready to throw my support behind any one of them yet.

This is partly because my wife is a senior organizer for Common Cause in Connecticut, which makes her officially a paid lobbyist. Right now, as the spouse of a paid lobbyist, I’m going to limit my activities to focusing on the issues, and highlight any good potential candidate when they have something important to say on the issues.

One of the top issues that Kim lobbies for is the support of the Citizen's Election Program. Rudy Marconi who is exploring a run for Governor of Connecticut has a great video up about his commitment to the Citizen’s Election Program. It is well worth the watch.

Hat tip to Kim for pointing out the video and to Rick Green for pointing to it from his blog.

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Holiday Traditions

Last weekend, Fiona and I drove over to the local cider mill to get cider for the final batch of hard cider we’re making this year. We stopped at the brewing shop to pick up the yeast we wanted to use. I had been thinking about one of Wyeast’s red wine yeasts for this batch, perhaps a zinfandel or rudsheimer yeast. However the shop didn’t have any of Wyeast’s wine yeasts, so we went with Red Star’s Red Pasteur yeast instead. If this goes well, we might make a tradition of using a red wine yeast for our final batch of hard cider for the year.

On the way over, we participated in an old family tradition. It all started many years ago when my eldest daughters were still little. On a fine December weekend, we would drive to a local Christmas tree farm, to climb the hills and search for the perfect Christmas Tree. We would always search for a Balsam tree; inspired in part by the book, The Year of the Perfect Christmas Tree: An Appalachian Story which was a story I always enjoyed reading to my daughters.

To keep the girls occupied during the drive to pick out the Christmas tree, we would count the number of Christmas trees on the tops of cars we saw along the way. This has become a family tradition, counting the number of trees on top of cars, now not only on our trip to the tree farm, but during the whole season. Kim saw the first tree on top of a car this year shortly before Thanksgiving, and we slowly counted the trees.

However, our trip last weekend to get the cider took us past Jones Family Farm, a popular Connecticut Christmas Tree destination. With Fiona joining in with the counting, we rapidly shot up to 132 trees sighted so far this year.

Later today, we’ll probably head over to Alpaca Hill Farm. Every holiday season, they open the farm up on the weekends to sell various items made from alpaca fur, and our trip to that farm has become A New Christmas Tradition.

Last night, I received an email from Eileen and Tom Warner, who run the farm, letting us know that this year, their open farm days will be December 12th, 19th, and 26th from 10 AM to 5 PM. So, soon, we will get ourselves together and get on the road to see what sort of alpaca stocking stuffers we’ll pick up this year and may be count a few Christmas Trees on top of cars along the way.

What about you? Are you doing anything special? Do you have your own holiday traditions or places that you recommend visiting during the holidays?

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Open Government Directive

On Tuesday, the Obama administration issued its Open Government Directive. It calls on Federal Agencies to publish data that had not been previously available and to use open formats that can be more easily downloaded, searched and analyzed.

It also called on Federal Agencies to create portals, in the form, http://www.agency.gov/open and http://www.whitehouse.gov/open is up as an example.

Wednesday, I received a press release from the Department of Justice about their Fiscal Year 2008 Freedom of Information Act Requests which talked a little bit about their efforts to be more open.

I downloaded the spreadsheet detailing data about the Department of Education’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) processing. The Education Department has the equivalent of about 33 people working full time on FOIA requests. FOIA processing requests are about $1.9 million, with an additional $100,000 in legal fees. 2,236 requests were processed and the average time to process a simple request was 111 days. There were 67 requests for expedited processing, of which ten were granted. There were 326 requests for fee waiver, of which only 4 were granted.

Processing FIOA requests are expensive and cost money, and this is something that people need to keep in mind during the discussions about the future of journalism. Us volunteer, citizen journalists and bloggers are unlikely to fork out of our own pockets the money it takes to get big FOIA requests processed.

On the other hand, making more information available for free on the Internet could significantly cut down the amount of FOIA requests. It will be interesting to see a long-term analysis of the trend in FOIA requests following the implementation of the Open Government Directive.

I sent off a quick email to a friend at the Department of Justice with my suggestion about something that could make the Federal Judiciary much more open. Court records and documents for the U.S. Appellate, District, and Bankruptcy Courts are available in a system called Pacer. Currently, reporters and bloggers wishing to get access to these records must pay eight cents per page to access the data online. I can understand why you might charge eight cents a page for something that needs to be photocopied, but data distributed over the Internet shouldn’t cost eight cents a page.

In terms of the timeliness of information, the FCC and FTC are pretty good about making comments that they’ve received available online in a timely basis. They have systems in place to facilitate that. They may not be as easy to navigate as I would like, but they are a great starting point. Other governmental agencies do not have this ability.

This was driven home to me yesterday when the Connecticut General Assembly Appropriations Committee held a public hearing on the latest proposed budget cuts.

Over 350 people came to testify, which means over 350 documents needing to be scanned in and made available as part of the public record. This is likely to take a week or two of time from the overburdened staffers of the committee. In addition, numerous other people submitted testimony via email. The technology is not in place for those emails to be made automatically available online or forwarded to interested parties, so they will be included with the over 350 documents waiting to be scanned.

If more of this information could be made available immediately, the way the FCC and FTC do, or perhaps even made available in such a way that they could be loaded into an online system where people could rate, tag, and comment on the documents, a richer and more nuanced discussion of how best to allocated limited resources could take place.

The Federal Open Government Directive is a great starting point in making government more efficient and more responsive. It will be great to see how it gets implemented over the coming months. It will be even greater if state and local governments and even nonprofits adopt similar directives.

(Originally published at Greater Democracy.)

The Tedium of Electoral Politics

As the battle for the Governor’s Seat in Connecticut heats up, so does the battle about how the election will be funded. On Friday Republicans announced their latest deficit mitigation package which

For the fourth time since they’ve been offering alternative budget plans to their majority party colleagues, the Republicans proposed eliminating the funding for the Citizens’ Election Program. Currently the fund has about $30 million in it, which would be used to help fund the 2010 elections.

Apparently, they would rather see a campaign for governor between two men from Greenwich that can self fund their campaigns.

Then, in the Hartford Courant today, Former Republican State Senator Kevin Rennie suggested that Election Finance Law Shackles Candidates. He suggested that “Raising that $250,000 from the thin ranks of Connecticut Republicans requires a taste for tedium.” Given the lack of substance in most Republican discourse I’ve heard over the recent months, I can understand why some would view discussions with Republicans tedious, but I would hope that anyone running for office would not find talking with their possible constituents, especially constituents in their own party, tedious.

Most candidates in the 2006 cycle reported that by participating in the Citizens’ Election Program, they spent more time talking to their possible constituents about the issues that matter most. First, they had to spend time talking to a wide array of low dollar donors, and then, when they had completed this, they were free to spend all their time talking about the issues, and not having to waste more time dialing large donors for dollars.

Yet perhaps it is this fear of having to talk about positions that worries Mr. Rennie and his friends the most. Ken Dixon, in a recent blog post wrote, Tom Foley Wants To Be Governor, But Needs Time To Say Why. Several people commented on Mr. Dixon’s post suggesting it was unfair for members of the media to want information about why a candidate is running for office.

Mr. Rennie seems to long for the days when donors could give up to $2,500 per person. He also goes on to say that “The campaign finance law championed by Rell, Fedele's ‘partner in government,’ bars many citizens from participating in politics.” The ‘many citizens’ that Mr. Rennie is so concerned about are the 622 registered lobbyists and their family members who are barred from making financial contributions to campaigns and for Mr. Rennie, ‘participating in politics’ seems to be limited to writing large checks.

I should note that I am the spouse of one of those 622 registered lobbyists. My wife is a Senior Organizer for Common Cause here in Connecticut. She continues to fight hard for the Citizens Election Program. The law does bar me from making financial contributions to the Gubernatorial campaigns. However, I believe there are much more important ways of participating in politics than writing checks, including discussing the issues that matter to the people of Connecticut.

This leads me to a final thought, for right now, about Mr. Rennie’s column. He ends off his column saying,

If there's an unexpected choice, someone who isn't rich but who advocates interesting ideas, he or she will have a hard time being heard. So many people are banned from participating that if you aren't rich, you're sentenced to months of scavenging for small contributions in the name of Jodi Rell's virtue.

I fail to comprehend this logic. If all the candidates, whether they have a rolodex of rich friends, or an email list of loyal supporters, are limited to spending the same amount of money, then everyone has the same chance of getting their message out. Of course, this will depend on members of the media, both old and new, to focus on the issues, the way Mr. Dixon and myself wish to do, instead of making sure that rich lobbyists can pay campaigns to hire expensive consultants and air expensive television advertisements, the way Mr. Rennie seems to think political coverage should be done.

(Cross posted at My Left Nutmeg.)

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