Councilman Randy Corman
I've recently been asked about Washington's open public meetings act, and how it affects email. I have attached a great article about it from Washington's Municipal Research Center.

Even though council email is a recognized public record, an exchange of emails from a majority of council members can actually constitute an illegal non-public meeting. It's not wrong to send an email to all council members....but it is wrong for a majority of council members to respond back using their reply-to-all function. Furthering this risk, emails can also get appended and forwarded, from one council member to another, which can inadvertantly create a "meeting" via an email daisy chain.

I'm solidly within the spirit and letter of the law with this blog, as long as I don't have a majority of council members replying to my articles. I like this blog format because it keeps my thoughts and discussion out there for all the public to see, without citizens having to trek down to city hall to read email. But, as I promised at the start of the year, the email I do recieve is available for everyone to see.


___________________________________________________

Here is the article:



Municipal Research & Services Center
Ramsey Ramerman, Attorney
Foster Pepper, PLLC

Communicating with today’s technology is faster and easier than ever. But this ease poses new pitfalls for officials subject to the Open Public Meetings Act, 42.30 RCW (“OPMA” or the “Act”). Unless proper safeguards are in place, the careless use of emails, instant message, chat rooms, electronic bulletin boards and other electronic communications can lead to the unintended and unknowing violation of the OPMA. Accordingly, public entities subject to the Act should have rules and procedures in place to ensure that unintended violations do not occur.

The OPMA requires that all “meetings” of a “governing body” be open to the public unless expressly exempt. RCW 42.30.030. Most multimember bodies of public agencies will be subject to the statute. RCW 42.30.020(1)(b). A meeting occurs when a majority of the government body meets to take “action.” RCW 42.30.020(4). The term “action” is expansive and includes not only the transaction of official business, but also simple discussion about official business, and the taking of testimony about official business. Accordingly, the OPMA will usually apply when a majority of any board, commission or council gathers for any official purpose.

Under the plain language of the statute, as well as opinions from the Supreme Court, the Act does not apply if less than a majority meet.1 The Attorney General and Supreme Court have also recognized that the Act does not apply, even when a majority gather, if no “official business” — business that could come before the governing body for a vote2 — is conducted.3 But the Act is not limited to in-person gatherings — a conference call could also amount to a meeting.4

Conceptually, emails land in a gray area. Like letters, emails create their own record that is subject to disclosure under the Public Records Act, so they will already be exposed by the sunshine laws. For example, the Virginia Supreme Court held that an email exchange is like an exchange of letters, already subject to public disclosure, but not amounting to a “meeting.” 5 Unlike letters, however, the exchange of emails can be nearly instantaneous, allowing for a practically real-time exchange. For other forms of communication, like chat rooms and instant message, the exchange is instantaneous, and no “record” is necessarily kept.

Read more... )
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
I really appreciated the strong positive response to my making my council email available for informal public review, anytime. I was intrigued with how the story traveled across the US, and how so many people recognized the numerous advantages in taking this step.

The local story was picked up by the Associated Press, several radio and television stations, and even made USA Today.

The move was also discussed in many online blogs, like this one (click here).

I also recieved calls from councilmembers in nearby jurisdictions, who said they were considering doing the same thing.

Interestingly, almost everyone I spoke with agreed that publiishing the email would also increase courtesy and civility, something which we can never have too much of as far as I'm concerned.

I am anxious to move to the next step of publishing all council emails in an online data base, for easy search on the web. As an alternative, or in addition, a blog system could be developed for council communication to keep the system public and interactive. To do this we will need to make some policy changes within city hall, and I will be pressing for this over the coming months.
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman



"Inside e-mail, there's name-calling that occurs, there's crazy assumptions that people make, there's unsubstantiated reframing of issues," Corman said. "And I'm not just talking about constituents — often it's other public officials that are doing it."


Councilman wants his e-mail to be open book
By Cara Solomon

Seattle Times staff reporter

It's a small thing, but in the suspicious minds of citizens, every effort counts.

That's why Renton City Councilman Randy Corman has asked that his e-mail go into a file that anyone can rifle through and read, right there at City Hall.

"I want it to all be as public as possible," said Corman, who has his own personal Web site, where he explains his votes on certain issues. "We're going to look like a more open and happening city."

Since Corman announced his intention over e-mail, several other City Council members have decided to follow suit.

Maybe, just maybe, they said, this will cut down on the rocketing number of public-disclosure requests. At the very least, it could take the mystique out of their decision-making, showing how boring their e-mail can be.

"I think people have an idea that we are trading a lot of secret information through e-mail," said Councilman Dan Clawson. "Really, a lot of it is very mundane."

The public is already entitled to see any e-mail to or from City Council members, provided that the messages do not discuss confidential matters such as legal action or personnel issues. But it usually takes a public-records request to access the e-mail, plus time and energy on the part of the city staff to find the relevant documents. Spam and other meaningless e-mail will not be included in the public file.

In deciding to make his e-mail more public, Corman took some inspiration from the state Attorney General's Office, which has pushed in recent years for local politicians to make public records more accessible.

Some cities, like Bellevue, are trying hard to put as many public documents as possible online. In other cities, like Olympia, council members' e-mails are kept on CDs, available to the public by request.

Greg Overstreet, special assistant attorney general for government accountability, said he had not yet heard of council members making their e-mails available in public files.

"I think it's a great idea," said Overstreet. "It takes the middleman out of the process of getting public records."

The city of Renton received nearly 190 written requests for public records in 2006 — the most ever, and more than twice that of the previous year, according to the city clerk. Many requests involved e-mails.

At some point, one citizen filed a public-records request to find out how many public-records requests another citizen had made. The city answered that inquiry last week. Inez Petersen, a 61-year-old retired computer programmer, has written about 45 percent of the requests filed over the past year.

She was not pleased to hear about Corman's effort to make e-mail more accessible. The move would make it more difficult for her to find pertinent information, she said. Faced with folders full of e-mails, she would not know where to begin.

"It's like saying, 'Here's the haystack, go find the needle,' " she said.

Petersen's requests range from a list of city contractors to all correspondence over the past six years that mentioned her by name. She was acting on a tip on that last request; she had heard that one council member wrote "I hate Inez" repeatedly over e-mail.

"I never did find the 'I hate Inez' e-mail," she said.

She did, however, find herself described as a "cranky individual" in one message. Which leads to Corman's second hope: that by putting their e-mails on display, people will become more civil in conversation.

"Inside e-mail, there's name-calling that occurs, there's crazy assumptions that people make, there's unsubstantiated reframing of issues," Corman said. "And I'm not just talking about constituents — often it's other public officials that are doing it."

For her part, Mayor Kathy Keolker said she could not understand why the extra e-mail folder was necessary. Citizens already can fill out a form and get nearly any public document they want. This seemed to her to add another layer of work for city staffers. And why would anyone want immediate access to Corman's correspondence, anyway?

"His e-mail must be more interesting than mine," she said.


Cara Solomon: 206-464-2024 or csolomon@seattletimes.com
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
From:
pkplmarcie@comcast.net
To:
racorman@comcast.net (Randy Corman),Jmedzegian@ci.renton.wa.us
Subject:
Email public access
Friday, December 22, 2006 15:30:36

Randy, I just came from your website and saw the entry about our Council email. Julia, please do the same with mine. I totally agree that we should make our public information available to the Public. It will be interesting to see whether anyone is interested in reading it throughout the next year.

Marcie
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
From: Corman, Randy
Sent: Thursday, December 21, 2006 12:51 PM
To: 'Julia Medzegian'; Jay Covington
Subject: Making council email more accessible to the public

Julia, Jay - Please forward appropriately for me. Thanks, Randy
______________________________________________________________________



Dear Council, Mayor, City Clerk, and City Attorney

I'm writing to let you know that effective immediately, I've asked
Council Liaison Julia Medzegian to process my council email in a new
and more public way. She has agreed to place hard copies of all of my
incoming and outgoing email correspondence into a notebook at her
desk, that will be available for the public to access and review.

I am confident that this change is within my authority, and will have
many positive benefits to the public. It will allow the public to
better understand the nature and volume of council email, which I
predict will reduce the number of Freedom of Information requests (and
expense associated with them.) It will also further trust in Renton's
government, which we can never have too much of.

Perhaps this change may even be a stepping stone to an eventual
end-state where all public-official email is available and searchable
online. Since email is a public record, an on-line data base would be
welcome by many, and would help keep the public informed of government
activities on a daily basis.

Since we do not receive privileged legal information or executive
session material via email, I have not given Julia any limitations on
what she places in the file. Every email I have ever seen at city
hall seems to me to be a valid public record. And of course, the
public is so-advised on our website when they write to us.

Best Wishes to all of you for a happy holiday.

Randy
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
All of our council email is public record, and I feel that the public needs better access to it. Therefore, starting immediately, I will ask that my council email be printed and placed in a notebook for public review. I'm optimistic that this will set a positive example for other elected officials, help reduce the number of Freedom of Information Requests, and save taxpayers money. When I shared this idea with Councilman Denis Law, he loved the idea, and immediately told me he wants to do the same thing. The same was true when I mentioned it to Councilman Don Person. I stopped my conversations after speaking with two of them, but I'm hoping other councilmembers will follow suit.


Click here to read more background on my decision )
 
 
Councilman Randy Corman
Mr. McKenna was the Eastside's and Renton's King County Councilman for many years prior to winning his State Attoney General post. Here is an article about his diligent work to further open access to government records.


Thursday, December 21, 2006

McKenna proposes 'Sunshine Committee' to keep records open

By DAVID AMMONS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OLYMPIA -- Attorney General Rob McKenna urged the Legislature on Wednesday to create a "Sunshine Committee" to promote disclosure of public records.

Read more... )