I made a FOIA request recently in which I went down to the City Hall to inspect the W-2 Forms of all city employees in 2008, finding a few interesting things in the process. I sent the following request last Tuesday in an effort to get to the bottom of how the City Council's salary went from $50 per year in the 1990's to its current rate of $3600, yes that is a 72-fold increase.
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2011 3:20 PM
To: John Shay
Subject: FOIA Request
When the current charter was adopted on August 4, 1992 the City Clerk at that time noted in section 17.10: "The Mayor shall continue to receive an annual salary in the amount of Three Hundred Dollars ($300), and each Council Member shall continue to receive an annual salary of Fifty Dollars ($50), until such amounts are changed by the Council in accordance with the provisions of this Charter." Those provisions noted that this shall be done by ordinance and shall not be increased during their terms of office.
Under provisions of the Michigan Freedom of Information Act (MCLA 15.231 et seq; MSA 4.1801 (1) et seq) I am requesting, preferably in electronic records sent to this E-Mail address, public records detailing all ordinances passed since that time (August 4, 1992- present) wherein the mayor's or city council's salaries were raised, and the minutes from the meeting wherein it was passed.
If you determine that some of the requested information is exempt from disclosure, please detail what is being withheld and cite the exemption under FOIA.
If fees to comply with this request exceed $20, please contact me at this E-Mail address with those fees enumerated.
As provided under FOIA, I would anticipate my request being filled within five working days of receipt of this letter.
I received this reply early this Monday:
From: John Shay <JShay@ci.ludington.mi.us>
Dear Ms.
I have attached the City of Ludington ’s response to your FOIA request. The itemization of the $114.51 fee is as follows:
It took City Clerk Deborah Luskin 3 hours to search through all of the public records since 1992 to locate the public records you requested. At $38.17 per hour (wages and benefits combined), this amounts to $114.51.
Upon receipt of your payment in full, the City will release the records that you have requested.
John Shay
City Manager
City of Ludington
The attached response said the request was granted, and to remit $114.51 to cover costs; it also said it was denied, requested records exempt from disclosure because a public record does not exist under the name given or by another reasonably known by the FOIA Coordinator. Is he saying no such ordinance(s) were discovered? Review by me and XLFD noted other disturbing things. I replied Monday afternoon and gave some of our newspaper friends a copy:
John Shay <JShay@ci.ludington.mi.us>; Richard Wilson <rmw@gwsh.com> | ||
k holman <kayescare@charter.net>; tom rotta cfairfield@muskegonchronicle.com; pkeep@grpress.com |
||
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The Building Inspector created a summary of Building Permits issued the prior year that he would present at the beginning of the year at a CC meeting, back when we had a Building Inspector (before 2010). One would then think these summaries would then be filed, electronically and otherwise, in a common folder/area.
According to the story I eventually got, the summaries weren't available for three years (they were lost) so Shay got the idea that instead of just allowing me to inspect the summaries of the years he had (which would have been acceptable to me, and within my request) he figured the BI would have to get out each individual address file so that I could get the info for those missing years (I did not need that, and it was not really part of my request). He presumed this would take us 40 hours to do. I had to be 'babysat' by the BI because only he should be handling these files, and for security. I was therefore being charged alot because somewhere down the road, the City lost 3 annual summaries. I gave up on this, because most of the info I needed was eventually found by me on the Assessor's page of the City's site.
Isee ..so you were going to be charged for doing something the city should have had to re-create to be legal, in the eventuality that a federal audit may have asked the same question then??
Well Gee ...where is a federal auditor when you need one ehhh??? :)
The new policy is included in the thread head, though it is hard to make out. The new things that Shay has added are definitely not in the spirit of the FOIA, and possibly contrary to it.
FOIA%2520Policy-Revised%25202010%5B1%5D.pdf
Shay repeatedly violated the old policy and broke the law, and is going to be called on it eventually-- legal processes take time. This is likely the main reason why the old policy was changed in December, so that he could (ineffectively) point to his current policy and avoid legal retribution for it.
The Ludington Torch's purpose in all this is to create public awareness of the ongoing struggle between the folks that are for openness and honesty in the local government and the officials in the current regime that are putting their own self-interests ahead of their concerns for the public interest. Much of what is going on behind the scenes are still face-down to all but a select few.
I invite you to make such a request to experience both humility and futility, RJE.
Another good question would be to ask where the $57.23 went that I paid to inspect the water tower competitive bids. There was never no explanation of what the $57.23 was paid for-- no copying fees, no postage, and no calculation of employee fees needed to fulfill the request.
What has been a big disappointment is that the local newspaper is OK with the FOIA changes and the fact we overspent so much money on water tower painting that was done many years before they were needed to be painted.
XLFD
Been there done that many times. Not with the city but with other Governmental agencies. The most recent was with Mason County regarding a minor dispute I am having with the Road Commissioner.
I only presented that idea because I thought it would show a history of City abuse of the FOIA system and could be of some benefit to your situation.
I agree with you, RJE. And I wasn't necessarily being facetious when I said that you (or anyone else who wishes to disprove or prove your thesis) should do so with a FOIA Request. My circle of friends who are up to fighting City Hall are about tapped out, and they would be treated about as bad as I would at this point.
Eve's request is about as precise as you can get with the data available, so when Shay marks that 'the records can't be found' what does he mean:
1) That no such ordinances exist-- meaning that the wages have 72-tupled in an illegal manner contrary to local and state law.
2) That the minutes to the meeting(s) where such ordinances were passed do not exist-- meaning that there is some critically poor record-keeping going on at City Hall.
Guido
I have to disagree with you. If in fact the City is treating all FIOA requests the same way that X has been treated then there really is trouble in River City, but if X is being singled out and treated differently then he could show prejudicial treatment and would have more ammunition for his cause. Just the fact that that a FOIA has been requested regarding the dispensation of FOIA requests would put a kink in Shays neck.
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