Unsettling

August 19, 2013

This week’s city council agenda has two items on it that continue the saga.

What’s to settle?

The lawsuit against the Texas Attorney General will be discussed in executive session.  Word is that the parties are in settlement discussions.

I don’t see what there is to settle.  The law says the documents must be turned over.  The Texas Attorney General says the documents must be turned over.  The state legislature passed a new law this year furthering the requirement that the documents must be turned over.

The original request was made September 5, 2012, almost one year ago.  The law requires them to turn the documents over within ten days of the request.

The Texas Local Government Records Act should be looked at here also but evidently our local prosecutor feels that he should spend his time prosecuting  private citizens and leave other government officials alone.  I guess that might be like honor among thieves.

Change it later

The ordinance I wrote about in Another faulty ordinance is on the agenda.  They still have not fixed the language and we still have not seen the proposed budget resolution that it is based on.

Oh well, they will change  it later.  Illegally in my opinion.  Read Cover up if you are interested in how.

We deserve better

Brutus


Not yet

August 6, 2013

Tuesday’s city council agenda has an item on it that will allow city council to talk in executive session about the El Paso lawsuit against the attorney general of Texas.

Some former city representatives and current city staff do not want to turn over emails that pertain to city business that were sent or received from their personal electronic devices.  The attorney general says they must.

There is not an item that will allow city council to take action on the issue after returning to the public session.

Something is wrong here.  It seems that the city attorney wants more time.

Why?  What are they hiding?  How bad will it be when the emails are ultimately released?  Are they stalling to have some statutory time limit pass?  Are they stalling to get some other deal finished before some damaging truth is disclosed?

We deserve better

Brutus


Pork

August 4, 2013

The 2nd special session of the Texas state legislature has adjourned without passing the special bill to raise an additional $900 million a year for transportation.

The legislative backers of the bill suggest that the governor may want to call another special session after the 2014 primaries.

As you know, our legislature only has regular sessions every other year.

It seems that Texas now needs to spend $4 billion each year to keep up with growth.

The prior El Paso city council (the 26 percenters) just spent $4.7 million to finance a study that we were told was necessary in order to secure $90 million in state funding to create a street car line. Us 74 percenters were told in an open city council session that the money was guaranteed.

Maybe next year city council will spend $5 million on a study to determine if pigs can fly.

We deserve better

Brutus


Scofflaws

July 31, 2013

A reader pointed out the Texas Local Government Records Act to me.

My previous posts about the email controversy have addressed the issue with the Texas Public Information Act in mind.

This post, like all of my others, is only my opinion.

I conclude that the emails in question are local government records under the Texas Local Government Records Act (the law).  If my readers want me explain my thought process, I will post subsequent articles explaining the several steps that it took for me to come to this conclusion.

What surprised me is that it looks like our former city representatives are already in violation of Texas law.

City representatives hold a public office, that of district representative.  Section 201.006 of this law requires each of them to turn over all local government records in their possession at the expiration of their term to the person who becomes their successor.  Not eventually.  There are exemptions, like a copy of a record or a personal journal, but the emails in question are correspondence.  If the district representative has an email that qualifies as a local government record that the city does not already have, it must be turned over.

Possession of a local government record (not a copy) by a private individual is a class A misdemeanor.  Class A misdemeanors are punishable by a fine up to $4,000 and/or one year in jail.

We need to ask

The new district representatives should each ask their predecessor for all local government records in the former district representative’s possession.  I would think that the criminal charge would not be appropriate if the records are turned over now.

City council also has the right to demand return of the documents and I believe it should.

We need to communicate with city council and let them know that we would like them to take these actions.

District attorney

I believe that our district attorney should investigate this situation and announce his findings to the public.  Part of his job is to prosecute violators of state laws.

I would think that 74% of the voters think the same thing.

We deserve better

Brutus


Fighting a losing battle

July 23, 2013

The old city council sued the attorney general of Texas in an effort to avoid disclosing certain communications between city representatives, and between city representatives and city staff, that were sent or received on an individual’s personal electronic device.

The attorney general has ruled that those communications are subject to disclosure if they pertain to city business.

Our new city council has instructed the city attorney to bring the lawsuit  to closure.  They fell just short of telling the city attorney to drop the lawsuit.  It is certainly reasonable to believe that the litigation will be settled shortly and that the city will stop objecting to the release of the communications.

That leaves a question about what the former city council members will be compelled to do.  It is possible that one or more former city representatives will refuse to turn over the documents.

Regardless of who owns the communication device, Texas law says that elected officials are the official custodians of records in their offices. Section 201.003(2) of the Local Government Records Act defines “custodian” as the appointed or elected public officer who … is in charge of the office that creates or receives local government records.”  The city representative operates an office — the office of city representative.

The Texas Public Information Act then makes the chief administrative officer (in El Paso that is the city manager) also responsible for complying with the act.

The city representatives that are no longer on city council may think that they are off the hook.  One or more may initiate a lawsuit against the attorney general, but that is unlikely since they would have to use their own money.

The public can take civil action if the former city representatives  refuse to turn over the documents.  That may happen given that there are local activists that do not want to give up on this.  Or a member of the public could bring a complaint to the local district attorney or county attorney with the hope that one of those two elected officials would pursue the issue on behalf of the public (using public money).  The prosecutor would then have 31 days to either decide to pursue the issue or drop it.  That would be an interesting dynamic given our recent 74% vote.  These prosecutors have been noticeably reluctant to take action against government officials in the past but may fear the wrath of the voters in this case.

A civil case would be complicated by the fact that the city representatives are no longer in office.  They may get away with not turning over their side of the communications.  However any communication with a sitting city representative or a city staff member would still have to be disclosed by the city itself.

There are also criminal penalties for violating the law, including penalties for destroying information.

Putting the legal arguments aside, refusing to comply could get expensive for the former city representatives.  My guess is that they may start by ignoring the requests.  Someone will have to file a civil or criminal complaint or file a civil lawsuit.  At that point I would imagine that the former city representatives will give up and turn over some of the emails.  They will face considerable risk if they forget to turn over other emails and those emails are disclosed by a third party.

We would all be better served if the documents were released without any of this drama.  These documents may lead to ugly disclosures but I don’t see how or why anyone would prevent this.

We deserve better

Brutus