This Month's Top Commentators

  • Be the first to comment.

The Best Voter Lists Available

The Day The Transparency Died In Davidson

|

“I’d like to emphasize that once we have a clear plan in place, we will communicate to our citizens via multiple methods, to ensure they are aware of our plans.”

Those are the words of the Town of Davidson’s public information officer, Christina Shaul, regarding the $6.3 million Capital Improvement Program that passed unanimously Tuesday night. (The actual long-term number will be even higher, as the Town still didn’t include over $2 million for a new fire station.) Shaul’s comment was in an email I received back on Oct. 22 – plenty of time to get the word out about how much money the Town would spend prior to the vote.

Here is the agenda item for the CIP from the Town Board meeting where it was approved. The document below was posted through late Tuesday morning, the day of the meeting, without even the attachment of the CIP details. The link now has the attachment – added just hours prior to the meeting.

 

Normally, agenda items have a detailed summary. Normally, there are attachments giving the details. Normally, this information is available to the public before the meeting.

Normally, local governments possess a sense of obligation to keep their citizens informed about important decisions.

The Town has spent considerable time and expense upgrading its communications infrastructure in the past few years. However, this infrastructure was not used to distribute detailed information for this most expensive decision since the Mi-Connection purchase. Not an email blast, not a Facebook post, not a Twitter tweet on the final details or cost. There was not a public hearing. There was not a PSA over the Town’s phone messaging system.

There were 50+ emails from the Town over the past three months. Dozens of Facebook posts and Tweets sent. Not a single one of them was dedicated to giving the public any details about the financial impacts of this CIP decision or the assumptions behind it.

Now, here’s the truly sad part.

After last year’s election cycle where transparency was a campaign issue, one would have hoped the Town and elected officials would do better to see that this type of thing does not happen. Several candidates who are now elected officials even stated their support for putting large expenditures to a vote of the public. While the CIP does not require a public vote, the level of spending is significant. One would have hoped it might have reminded those officials that clear communication to the public about spending has an impact on public trust in government.

Those hopes were dashed Tuesday night.

Donate Now!We need your help! If you like PunditHouse, please consider donating to us. Even $5 a month can make a difference!

Short URL: https://pundithouse.com/?p=12518

Comments are closed