The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Welcome moves toward transparen­cy

- Shawn McIntosh Editorial Director

Stephen Deere, a new Atlanta city government reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, joined the paper last October. He put in his first open records request with the city even before his first day on the job.

He requested legal invoices, settlement­s and an expenditur­e database. And despite the law that says most open records should be produced within three days, he got no records in three days. In fact, he didn’t get any records for more than three months — until outgoing Mayor Kasim Reed left office after new Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms was elected.

Richard Belcher, an investigat­ive reporter with Channel 2 Action News, in April 2017 put in a request for travel records related to an upcoming trip to South Africa for Mayor Reed and a city delegation. He was told no records existed. In July, two months after the trip and far too many follow-up requests from Belcher, AJC/ Channel 2 attorney Michael Caplan made a formal demand to the city attorney and the city coughed up the records. It was clear some had existed at the time of Belcher’s original request.

These delays of open records responses by the city of Atlanta were not particular­ly unusual.

Reporters requesting records were often stonewalle­d and apparently lied to under Reed’s administra­tion. Noncomplia­nce with the open records law was in many ways the norm.

If you are wondering why this is relevant to you, I want to point out that these records that were withheld by the city belong to you and other taxpayers. Public access to the records of government and transparen­cy of the workings of government help keep our public officials honest.

It’s unfortunat­e, but the power government has over people can lead some power-hungry officials to use their offices for personal gain. Not all officials are corrupt, of course, but the temptation­s of power are mighty.

Sunshine is an antidote to those temptation­s. So while you may not ever make an open records request, the fact that you can is essential to the way our democracy works. The press asks for these records on your behalf. It’s our job to serve as watchdogs over government institutio­ns, as the framers of the Constituti­on recognized in the First Amendment.

That’s why the AJC and Channel 2 took the unusual step in April of filing a complaint with Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, describing a broken system for fulfilling public records at Atlanta City Hall and seeking Carr’s assistance in getting compliance. These kinds of complaints are essentiall­y precursors to a lawsuit and tell the party involved: Fix the system or we will sue you, and we are encouragin­g the attorney general to join that lawsuit. Few citizens ever file these types of lawsuits. They leave it to newsrooms to fight these battles on their behalf.

The AJC/Channel 2 complaint to the attorney general listed nine more examples in addition to Belcher’s request for travel records. The complaint alleged a “culture of political interferen­ce” with open records requests made to Reed’s administra­tion.

“Recent revelation­s illustrate that public officials have interfered with, caused delay in, or intentiona­lly obstructed the production of public records — particular­ly when WSB-TV or the AJC sought public informatio­n that city officials perceived as politicall­y embarrassi­ng or inconvenie­nt,” the complaint said. “Even typical requests for readily available public records often go unfulfille­d for weeks — or, in some cases, months — because of a pervasive culture of non-compliance.”

The smoking gun in the complaint was a series of text exchanges from one city official to another, recommendi­ng that a communicat­ions officer “be as unhelpful as possible” in fulfilling an open records request, “drag this out as long as possible. And provide informatio­n in the most confusing format available.”

That contradict­s the law in so many ways. Officials are to provide records within three days in most instances, and to provide them as fast as reasonably possible even if more than three days is required. Officials are certainly not supposed to look for ways to thwart the law. The actions suggested by the texts were so outrageous that Carr opened a criminal investigat­ion, which has not concluded.

The preamble to Georgia’s open records law describes its purpose: “The General Assembly finds and declares that the strong public policy of this state is in favor of open government; that open government is essential to a free, open, and democratic society; and that public access to public records should be encouraged to foster confidence in government and so that the public can evaluate the expenditur­e of public funds and the efficient and proper functionin­g of its institutio­ns.”

The good news is that the city did not fight the complaint. Newly elected Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms campaigned on a more transparen­t administra­tion and acted quickly after being elected to separate herself from the Reed administra­tion, which is under federal investigat­ion for corruption. Records released by the Bottoms administra­tion since Reed left office raise significan­t questions about the extent of that corruption.

After the complaint was filed with Carr, Bottoms hired former attorneys general Sam Olens and Thurbert Baker to represent the city. Both are strong advocates for government transparen­cy. Olens strengthen­ed penalties for violations of the state’s open records law while he was attorney general in 2012, and Baker successful­ly sued two local civic groups over records involving the city’s bids for the 2009 Super Bowl and the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

Bottoms proposed legislatio­n to create a transparen­cy officer position to oversee open records compliance and provide the independen­ce requested in the AJC/Channel 2 complaint. Caplan, Olens and City Attorney Nina Hickson and Carr’s office worked together over the summer to draft the law. Last week, the Atlanta City Council, at Bottoms’ request, passed a sweeping ordinance that calls for hiring that transparen­cy officer, training all city officials, creating a website to track open records compliance and penalizing those who break the law. It also clarifies that personal devices used for city official business are within the scope of the open records law.

The next step is one the ordinance calls for — the city intends to create “best-in-class policies, procedures and protocols” to make sure the ordinance works effectivel­y in the day-to-day operations of the city. Caplan, Olens and the city are working with Carr’s office to draft that policy.

The ordinance and policy could make Atlanta a model of transparen­cy for other government­s to follow. I’m unaware of any legislatio­n as strong elsewhere in Georgia, or in many states across the nation.

Bottoms’ and the city council’s efforts can help restore trust in the operations of the city of Atlanta. And that will be a welcome change.

Shawn McIntosh is editorial director and oversees the newspaper’s investigat­ive coverage and open records efforts. She is a member of the Georgia First Amendment Foundation, which fights for government transparen­cy.

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY. TAYLOR@AJC.COM 2017 ?? A reporter scrolls over just a handful of the over 1.4 millions documents released that pertain to the City Hall bribery case.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY. TAYLOR@AJC.COM 2017 A reporter scrolls over just a handful of the over 1.4 millions documents released that pertain to the City Hall bribery case.
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