Austin American-Statesman

Firm: Music data off limits

City-funded industry survey spawns public records access fifight.

- By Lilly Rockwell lrockwell@statesman.com

For Texas State University professor Cindy Royal, the Austin Music Census data was like Christmas came early.

A city-hired consultant had collec ted surveys from nearly 4,000 people in Austin’s music industry, with data ranging from musicians’ revenue sources to answers on broader questions about the challenges facing the local music scene.

Royal, who teaches a class in the journalism program at Texas State on computer coding and data skills, wanted to use the survey data in her class.

So she fifiled an open records request in August with the city of Austin, clarifying that she did not want personally identifyin­g informatio­n and was seeking the raw quantitati­ve data.

In the ensuing month and a half, that request has turned into a legal squabble over whether the data should be publicly available.

The company that collec ted the data, Titan Music Group, and its attorney insist the raw data is not subject to the Texas Public Informatio­n Act. Titan Music Group President Nikki Rowling said there was “clear agreement” between her company, which received $45,000 for the study, and the city that the census data would not be owned by the city and would stay with Titan.

Indeed, an Aug. 27 email from Mona Sanchez, who works in the city’s Economic Developmen­t Department, told Royal that “due to privacy and security concerns” about informatio­n in the raw data, the department “specifific­ally requested that the city of Austin not receive or own any of that data in any aspect.”

Rowling said releasing the data would violate the confifiden­tiality she promised to the musicians and music industry workers who fifill ed out the survey, which asked personal questions about, for instance, personal income and business revenue.

“So much detailed data was elicited in the census that anonymity would be impossible given Austin’s close-knit music communit y,” Rowling said in a written statement. “Releasing the raw data online could turn the entire process into an Internet parlor game of who is

who.”

The American-Statesman also requested the data in September and has not received it.

Several musicians who reached out to the Statesman on Monday at Rowling’s behest said they were concerned about the survey data being released.

Dave Madden, an Austin-based keyboardis­t and songwriter, said musicians felt comfortabl­e disclosing informatio­n about their personal finances because they were assured it was being kept confidenti­al. Even if names and other identifyin­g informatio­n were stripped out, Madden said, it would be easy to match the names of some people with unusual jobs or high income levels to financial data.

But Royal says she doesn’t plan on publishing the data “line by line” and instead would aggregate the data. She said there are new ways to analyze the data, such as looking at answers sorted by genre of music, or looking at how the number of shows a band plays per month affects income. Royal also said there is value in essentiall­y “fact-checking” Rowling’s data and conclusion­s.

“The public is entitled to this data; it’s the only way we can verify what’s in the report,” Royal said, adding that she had “no reason to believe” it wasn’t correct.

For now, the city’s legal department is siding with Royal. In a Sept. 17 letter to Titan Music Group, Assistant City Attorney Patricia Link wrote that informatio­n produced by the study is subject to the Texas Public Informatio­n Act. “Please promptly provide that informatio­n to the city,” Link wrote.

In an email to the city’s law department last week, Royal noted that the contract specifical­ly requires Titan Music Group to provide the city a comma-separated values data set, or CSV, of “all survey results, including contact informatio­n.” But a Sept. 30 letter from Rowling’s attorney to the city says the only CSV file Titan was required to submit was an Austin music business directory that was unrelated to the survey results.

Royal said the open records dispute has become a “teachable moment” for her students on the challenges of public informatio­n requests. She’s mulling over next steps, including reaching out to the Texas attorney general’s office, which oversees enforcemen­t of the Texas Public Informatio­n Act.

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