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From the Editor
Executive Editor Eric Conrad sheds light on our newspapers and our Web sites, on the role of community journalists, sharing news and perspective about the challenges facing the media industry, and offering insight into the frequent comments and contact we have with readers, government leaders and the business community.

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Freedom of Access
July 08, 2008
Investigating animal cruelty

Last Sunday, we published a lengthy investigative report by staffer Meghan Malloy that looked into an alleged puppy mill that was operating in Somerville, and looked into how state and local officials had regulated the dog-breeding operation prior to 2008.

I don't want to recite the story in this blog. If you haven't read it, here's the link to Malloy's story.

Continue reading "Investigating animal cruelty"
Posted by Eric Conrad at 04:39 PM
Comments (1) | Permalink

Investigating animal cruelty

Last Sunday, we published a lengthy investigative report by staffer Meghan Malloy that looked into an alleged puppy mill that was operating in Somerville, and looked into how state and local officials had regulated the dog-breeding operation prior to 2008.

I don't want to recite the story in this blog. If you haven't read it, here's the link to Malloy's story.

Continue reading "Investigating animal cruelty"
Posted by Eric Conrad at 04:39 PM
Comments (1) | Permalink

November 05, 2007
Teachers, sex and secrecy

The Associated Press has had a good investigative project going. The AP is tracking how many teachers are accused of sexual misconduct but also showing that, if they try to teach again, it isn't always easy for the next school district, perhaps in another state, to know the complete background.

Continue reading "Teachers, sex and secrecy"
Posted by Eric Conrad at 02:15 PM
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June 12, 2007
The powerful vs. the powerful

It's always interesting when powerful parties in the Legislature go after one another. That's what happened last week when state Sen. John Martin, arguably the most influential Maine legislator of our time, took on the Maine School Boards Association, Maine Municipal Association and other groups for lobbying "against" the recently passed school-consolidation plan.

Martin has filed Freedom of Access Requests asking these groups and a few others to detail how much money they spent lobbying against the consolidation plan. Martin's rationale is that these groups receive their funding from municipalities and school districts in the form of membership payments that taxpayers ultimately are making. So, he said, these groups may have used tax money to oppose a plan that would save tax money. The groups are responding by saying they've done nothing wrong and they are startled by Martin's tactic and criticism.

There are some ironies here. For starters, powerful legislators rarely use FOA laws to get data. They have other means at their disposal, including questions at committee meetings, private letters and telephone calls, and reviewing lobbying-disclosure forms when they come in. FOA requests come from frustrated citizen and lobbying groups, and from the media, when they feel the government has information that would explain something, but that information hasn't been made available. On the national level, genealogists use Freedom of Information requests routinely. In Maine, George Smith of the Sportsman's Alliance of Maine is one of the FOA's biggest supporters because his group at times questions various state agencies.

The MMA and MSBA are very influential among state legislators, as many of our lawmakers get started in politics by being elected municipal leaders and school committee members. Much of their training on FOA laws and a vast array of legislative and public-policy issues come from the MMA and MSBA during their earlier, political careers. So it is interesting that an influential lawmaker is tackling two groups that are among the most influential at the Statehouse -- in dealing with lawmakers who they know well.

It is also worth noting that legislators don't always negotiate in public. Some critics say the recently passed state budget (which included the school plan) wasn't aired enough. That charge is being leveled at a tax-reform package currently being debated. Martin probably has been party over the years to his share of quietly brokered, yet very important, agreements.

Finally, when journalists do fight open-records denials and executive sessions held at the local-government level, it is not uncommon for the MMA to represent the municipality in trying to keep a report, some facts, or an excecutive-session conversation confidential. I don't mean to sound criticial of these groups. I am sure the MMA and MSBA help our local leaders invaluably by teaching them about hiring and recruiting, regulatory issues, making budgets and much more. But it is intriguing to see a top legislator fight these groups on FOA grounds when it's something journalists also do on occasion.

Here are links to Susan Cover's Sunday story on this issue and the Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel editorial that followed:
Martin queries lobby tactics

Hardball politics from the master

Here are links to the MMA and MSBA Web sites:
MMA
MSBA

Posted by Eric Conrad at 06:35 PM
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