Posts filed under ‘Journalism’
My comments referenced on LFPress.com blog post “Tight-lipped Fair out of touch”
Columnist Ian Gillespie pursues the issue of stonewalling the press in his blog In The Margin, with his post, Tight-lipped Fair out of touch, where he comments on city officials’ resistance to disclose their participation in ‘private’ Western Fair meetings while preciding over decisions that have public impact, as reported in the London Free Press article highlighted in my previous post.
Updated: Here are some additional thoughts sent to Ian Gillespie further to his piece “Tight-Lipped Western Fair”:
If the City Council members are denying you and other London media access to the WFA meeting agendas then perhaps they are in fact covering up more than meets the eye.
It has occurred to me, as it probably may have also with you and your editor and colleagues, that perhaps these agenda items were not only discussions pertaining to disabled person’s entrance fees but may have also contained points about Fair contracts for which Councillors or their friends and family are personally and monetarily benefitting.
Such contracts from which they could be benefitting could range from concession spaces to sale/purchase/conveyance of real estate in the area, or even city service arrangements, and therefore it would be in their interest to maintain a “tight-lipped” sidestepping of your earlier questions.
If this proves true, needless to say, this would be a very provocative and disturbing turn of events. It still remains to be seen if the Councillors can continue to avoid your straightforward questions in this regard.
Clearly, the Councillors need to be reminded by you and your paper that they have an ethical if not legal obligation to disclose to the citizens of the City what kind of business they are transacting in “secret” at the WFA meetings. They need to be reminded that as Public Servants everything they do in the name of the People by definition needs to be public.
I think this issue is worth pursuing.
London Free Press requests disclosure from Western Fair
Applause and Kudos to The London Free Press, doing its job on behalf of the community. This is the way journalism should always work: The newspaper vigilant as a public watchdog.
Also laudable, the paper providing open comments to examine each side of the issue.
http://www.lfpress.com/news/london/2010/08/08/14961966.html#/news/london/2010/08/08/pf-14961966.html
Fair keeps its secrets
(by Jonathan Sher, London Free Press, August 9, 2010. Contact: E-mail jonathan.sher@sunmedia.ca, or follow jsherLFPRESS on Twitter.
NO DISCLOSURE: Boss Hugh Mitchell has refused requests to shed light how a controversial decision about charging the disabled was originally made.
It was a decision that outraged Londoners, one that would slap charges on disabled people attending the Western Fair.
But if you want know how it came to be, or which politicians supported or opposed it, you’re out of luck — the fair boss says citizens have no right to know.
Hugh Mitchell, the fair’s chief executive, rejected a request by The Free Press to provide records that show how the controversial charge — one the fair’s board of governors reversed last week, after a storm of public protest — was proposed and who voted for it.
He even declined to say on which dates deliberations took place.
Asked for the basis of his refusal. Mitchell said again and again, “We’re not at liberty to do so.”
Asked why, he said, “There’s no law that requires us to do so,”
Asked if any law forbid disclosure, he said no.
Last week, public backlash led fair executives to rescind their plan to introduce a $5 admission fee to disabled people and their attendants. They did not reverse their decision to levy new admission charges for children.
Mitchell admits the charge on the disabled was a mistake — but he’ll oppose efforts to make public those documents that show who was responsible.
“We’re not a public company,” he said.
His stance stunned an expert in civic government, University of Western Ontario political scientist Andrew Sancton.
“I’m just astounded . . . I’ve never heard of anything quite so outrageous,” Sancton said.
The fair’s bottom line is boosted by public entities: It rakes in millions of dollars a year from government-owned slot machines at the casino at the fairgrounds and pays below-market rent on the city-owned property.
Fair executives should make as much information as possible available to citizens, especially when five politicians and former politicians serve as fair directors or governors, Sancton said.
“Any enlightened board and management, given these circumstances, would go out of the way to have a strategy to release the maximum amount of information,” Sancton said.
The Western Fair Association, which operates the annual September fair and other attractions at the fairgrounds, is — as Mitchell describes it — a “quasi-public” organization.
The association is regulated by Ontario legislation that dates back about a century.
Had the fair board’s and directors’ agendas been public from the get-go, the controversial charge for the disabled could have been scuttled before it was adopted, Sancton said.
Controller Gina Barber, who isn’t on the fair board, agreed.
“This has been a PR disaster for them . . . If they don’t have things to hide, then why aren’t they open about it?” she asked.
The secrecy comes at a time when it’s not clear what role city politicians played in hiking admission charges,
Coun. Cheryl Miller at first said the board of governors, on which she sits, wasn’t told about the new charge for the disabled.
Later, Miller told a local radio station she’d re-checked her agendas and found she missed a key meeting at which the charge was discussed.
The Free Press has phoned and e-mailed Miller to request copies of the agendas, but she hadn’t replied by Sunday evening.
Coun. Harold Usher also faced questions about his role as a fair director: He supported the board after it passed the new charge, but later said he personally had opposed it.
Asked for agendas and minutes, Usher said he throws them out after meetings.
Coun. Bernie MacDonald, also a fair director, said he’d ask the board to reconsider Mitchell’s refusal.
“That where the request has to go,” he said.
Mitchell says he’ll forward any request made in writing by MacDonald, but will personally recommend the board reject the request.
If the board declines to publicly disclose its minutes and agendas, the three city councillors should, Sancton said.
PEJ: Tracking the News Narrative
Ever wonder what the other media outlets are saying and how they are covering the ‘hot button’ news stories of the day?
PEJ: The Project for Excellence in Journalism at the Pew Research Center in Washington, DC provides a cross-section of coverage trends week by week.
Their Daily Briefing, News Index, Research & Analysis as well as their State of the News Media reports provide a great background for seeing how the news narrative develops.
Visit PEJ at at Journalism.org
J-Lab: Resource for New Media Journalism
J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism at American University School of Communication in Washington, DC (3201 New Mexico Ave. NW, Ste. 330, Washington, DC 20016) helps journalists and citizens use digital technologies to develop new ways for people to participate in public life with projects on innovations in journalism, citizen media, news games, interactive stories, entrepreneurship, research, training, and publications.
Sign up for their newsletter, new media production tool kits and other resources for 21st journalism. You can contact them at (202) 885-8100 or email them at: news@j-lab.org.