home > Columns > City/County> Crime> Politics> State> editorial

[Editorial]  Waiting on Transparency

April 6, 2011

The past week was a decent week for transparency in Mississippi, at least compared to most weeks in these parts. For one thing, the city of Jackson launched its 311 service so that residents can both log inquiries and requests and track the progress of the response.

That's a huge step in a state capital where many workers have long taken it personally when a reporter or citizen tries to look at public information. Over the years, we've been told off, more than once by one or another irate city or state public servant for requesting information they don't think we should report on, not to mention for daring to take a critical view on the information once we got it.
  
Or, someone nastily asks, "So why do you want it?" (Uh, because I and other taxpayers own it?)
   
This small-town approach to public information (and criticism) is quaint at best, illegal at worst. That is, individual people who try to block or discourage the access of any public information, including the posting of public meetings of any sort, should go to jail as far as we're concerned. (It is a crime that has far more victims than, say, most minor drug crimes.)
   
Every citizen is a victim anytime a public employee tries to block access to information or to a public meeting. Thus, we're happy that Gov. Barbour signed a law last week making this a more personal crime, even if it still does not go far enough. Starting in July, Mississippi will hold government employees personally liable for meetings that should be open to the public under state law. The state Ethics Commission can fine individual violators up to $1,000 per violation, plus expenses.
   
As for open records, the law seems to be weaker now. Before, it had said that individual violators "shall" be fined for violations; now it says they "may" be fined individually.
   
Of course, the problem here is that the fox is barring the henhouse door. That is, a governmental body is doing a dance about transparency rather than going full bore to ensure that the public can see inside our government and their offices at any time and on request.
   
We need every single public servant to wake up and understand who they work for: the taxpayer. When we want our information, we should get it. It shouldn't take a week, or two weeks, and it shouldn't come with a lecture. Such transparency must be the price a government employee or elected official pays to get that government paycheck and the privilege of serving on the public's behalf.

 
posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 04/06/11 at 04:37 PM. [printer version]    Share |

COMMENTS

You are not logged in. To post a comment, you must be a registered user and logged in. Click here to register or click here to log in.

Log in to JFP using Facebook

:: recentcomments

May 24, 2012 | 10:18 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
DonnaLadd: No, Darryl, no one blocked you. Stop being paranoid. We just typically open comments in moderation during non-office hours. To me, a bozo isn't someone who disagrees with me. It's ...
May 24, 2012 | 06:18 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Darryl: That's funny that you blocked my last comment...
May 24, 2012 | 05:31 AM
Nick Hanauer's 'Controversial' TED Talk -- Tax the Rich?
Renaldo Bryant: So true. This is why critical and analytical thinking are so important to citizens in a democracy. The rich have the power to shape perception ...
May 23, 2012 | 05:24 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Darryl: justjess, you stated "Racism and discriminatory practices continue." What objective data do you have to support this? Calling someone unqualified is a subjective interpretation of ...
May 23, 2012 | 01:37 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: Wow, my English was bad on the previous post. You know how it is on these iPhones.
May 23, 2012 | 12:30 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: @Jess, I think the word you're looking for is "assassination". @Darryl, do we really know that the majority of MS'ians wanted this, when you consider that this was a ...
May 23, 2012 | 12:18 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
DonnaLadd: I can only hope that the reason that this bill passed is that, for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill. Considering that the ...
May 23, 2012 | 11:57 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
justjess: @Darryl 5/23 "....for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill." My question is still on the table: What were you "majority ...
May 23, 2012 | 05:26 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Darryl: justjess, I can only hope that the reason that this bill passed is that, for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill. But, recall, that ...
May 22, 2012 | 04:26 PM
One Night at Fenian's
DonnaLadd: ... because if there is anything The Clarion-Ledger can muster the resources to do, it's show up any night of the week and take drunk pictures. Meantime, they crib our sports stories. ...
May 22, 2012 | 03:53 PM
One Night at Fenian's
Rico: Next time just call Metro Mix at the C-L and have them come and take some pretty pictures for the newspaper. Hell, the got some on karaoke night Monday.
May 22, 2012 | 02:07 PM
[Editorial] To Do Its Job, Council Must Show Up
RobbieR: And Chokwe wants to run for Mayor? Hopefully the citizens of Jackson don't fall for this clown's rhetoric.
May 22, 2012 | 01:15 PM
Catholics Sue Over Birth Control Rule
Brian C Johnson: I cannot decide whether this is a vanity lawsuit, in the sense that the bishops know they stand little chance of prevailing in court. Or to put it more charitably, ...
May 22, 2012 | 01:00 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Brian C Johnson: Darryl, I think it is simply a statement of fact that African Americans in Mississippi are less likely to have the required photo ID. If so, the new law is discriminatory in ...
May 22, 2012 | 11:25 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Duan C.: I am in agreement with Golden Eagle - requiring I.D. ties a fee into voting, the only reason why its considered "discriminatory" towards black, is because it places back into an era ...

100 recent comments »

 


click to view "flip" version of this week's print issue

 

Guests online: 238
Logged-in members: 4
Anonymous members: 6
Elapsed time: 5.1712
The most number of visitors ever was 1961 at once on 03/27/2012
currently online: Barnes Thomas  RobbieR

 

© Jackson Free Press, Inc. - portions of code by CC with EE. User agreement and privacy statement.
phone: 601-362-6121 (ext 11 sales, ext 16 editorial, ext 17 publisher)
fax: 601-510-9019 * P.O. Box 5067 * Jackson, MS * 39296