Ohio Supreme Court: FirstEnergy records improperly shielded from public

From The Columbus Dispatch

The Ohio Supreme Court has found that state utility regulators went too far in shielding documents from public view in a case dealing with FirstEnergy’s purchases of renewable-energy credits.

Consumer and environmental advocates had pushed for release of the documents, saying they would help the public understand why regulators found that FirstEnergy had overpaid by $43 million for the credits in transactions that may have involved an affiliated company, FirstEnergy Solutions.

“If a utility is misspending customers’ money, it should not be able to keep that a secret,” said Madeline Fleisher, an attorney in the Columbus office of the Environmental Law and Policy Center, reacting to the decision released Wednesday. Her group argued before the court that the documents should be public.

But this was a mixed result for consumers.

The court also found that FirstEnergy does not need to repay the $43 million because of a precedent that bars retroactive changes to utility rates. This part of the decision rejects the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio’s order to refund the money.

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Judge denies attempt by city of Alliance to dismiss public meeting lawsuit

From The Alliance Review

The city of Alliance’s attempt to have a public meetings lawsuit dismissed was denied by Stark County Common Pleas judge Taryn L. Heath on Tuesday. 

Alliance requested a summary judgment — which seeks a ruling by a court without a trial — in a lawsuit filed by a city man, who contends an executive session in Alliance City Council was a violation of the Ohio Sunshine Law. 

Heath noted in the five-page judgment entry that she “cannot, and will not, accept (the city’s) contention that a Court must blindly accept the meeting minutes of a public body because they have been approved — particularly in the face of evidence that they are incorrect.” 

In April 2017, days after city council’s regular meeting, attorney Steven Okey filed the court action on behalf of resident Leslie J. Young, citing public meetings law violations after council recessed into an executive session without giving the reason. The complaint alleged this violated the Ohio Revised Code rules, pointing to a video of the meeting posted by the Alliance Review on its YouTube channel. 

“The video accurately records that no member of council cited any purpose (for the executive session),” Okey wrote in a 12-page memorandum Nov. 13 responding to the city’s motion for summary judgment against his case. “Yet the statutory purpose (personnel) conveniently appears in the minutes.” 

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Emails suggest Columbus superintendent vetting process not so transparent

From The Columbus Dispatch

The Columbus Board of Education has not only been interviewing a secret list of candidates to become the next district superintendent, but it has added names not on the list of 19 applicants it released in December.

The board also has been allowing a consultant to keep documents to avoid the Ohio Public Records Act and has been making official board decisions in potentially illegal private meetings, district emails — released to The Dispatch under a records request — reveal.

After promising a transparent process, the board scheduled interviews for seven potential superintendent candidates that occurred between Jan. 8-10. According to emails, they included: current Acting Superintendent John Stanford; former district deputy superintendent Keith Bell, who later took a post in suburban Cleveland; Errick Greene, chief of schools in Tulsa, Oklahoma; and David James, superintendent of Akron City Schools.

But the board also held get-togethers with three candidates whom the district did not name when it released the list of applicants in December. The board called those “meetings” rather than “interviews,” the term they used for the four candidates who actually applied.

The district released applications from new candidates, some with dates before the Dec. 8 deadline but who weren’t on the list of candidates that the board released Dec. 11. New applicants include: Robert Haworth, superintendent of Elkhart Community Schools in Indiana; Michael Conran, superintendent of Global Education Excellence in Ann Arbor, Michigan; Corwin Robinson, principal of St. Tammany Parish Schools in Mandeville, Louisiana; and Jesse Pratt, academic improvement officer for Indianapolis Public Schools.

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Midvale Mayor says newspaper coverage ‘disrupting’ village's public meetings

From The Times Reporter

... (Mayor) 

Cross said he intends to use his office to bring order to village affairs, including meetings of Village Council, over which he presides. Anyone who disrupts the meeting will be removed from the building by a police officer, he said.

"I don't think that anybody, be it a reporter, a citizen, a police chief, a whoever-it-might-be, has any business coming into a council meeting in any village creating disruptions in a council meeting," he said. "The village cannot get no kind of agenda done because of this Police Department thing."

Newspaper labeled as disruptive

He made reference to Times-Reporter coverage of the police issue when taking about activities he considers disruptive.

"I feel as though if the newspaper is going to keep putting big articles on the front page of the newspaper, I feel as though that maybe I need to get another reporter in there, or another newspaper in there," Cross said as he held the business card of the Times-Reporter staff writer who was interviewing him. "Because to me, it's disrupting my council meeting.

"If I can do anything about it legally, or whatever I have to do, if I can get some cooperation from The Times-Reporter, or whoever you work for or whatever, I'm going to try to do that.

"I don't know if I can keep the press out of my meetings. I don't want to do that. But for all this disruption that it's caused this town, with this part-time and full-time Police Department  thing, I feel as though in my ... council meetings, it's a big disruption to me — from village people, from the newspaper, from everybody involved in it."

Ohio's Open Meetings Law, also known as the Sunshine Law, requires meetings of public bodies to be open to the public, including representatives of the news media, with only certain exceptions.

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Short list of superintendent candidates a secret, Columbus school board says

From The Columbus Dispatch

The Columbus Board of Education has a short list of candidates recommended to become the district’s next superintendent — but it doesn’t want you to know who they are.

“This isn’t ‘American Idol’ where contestants are ranked and then cut off a list one-by-one,” board President Gary Baker said in an email Wednesday. “This is an important responsibility the Board takes seriously, and we respect every one of those highly professional individuals who have expressed an interest and will provide them the appropriate courtesy.”

Despite repeated requests by The Dispatch and three days of candidate interviews in closed sessions that wrapped up Wednesday evening, the district won’t say with whom it held interviews.

The district, which said it would be transparent about the selection, said no records on whom the district met and when even exist, despite the fact the board needed to coordinate with people potentially traveling to Columbus from across the nation, typically affording them taxpayer-reimbursed transportation, lodging and meals.

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As Cleveland hides Amazon bid, other cities share details, some unwillingly

From The Plain Dealer

While Cleveland leaders refuse to share with the public the details of the public subsidies they are dangling to bring Amazon's second headquarters to the Northeast Ohio, some of their counterparts in competing cities have shared details of their respective bids with their taxpayers.

Some have done so without the blessing of the business and political leaders controlling the bid process. In other cases, politicians have remembered who elected them and made details available. Some have redacted parts of the bid, but nonetheless offered far more than anything Cleveland's business and civic leaders think you deserve.

Those details from other cities are instructive because they indicate how much taxpayers are being asked to kick in. We're talking billions of dollars, in one case. Of course, Northeast Ohio taxpayers aren't being asked anything. Their tax dollars are being pledged in secret.

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Media questions prompt joint task force on Dayton schools to cancel meeting

From The Dayton Daily News

The new Facilities Task Force studying potential closure of Dayton Public Schools buildings canceled its initial meeting Tuesday morning after the members had already arrived.

At issue was a disagreement between Task Force members and local media about whether the meeting was open to the public under Ohio’s open meetings law.

RELATED: Task force to study potential school closures

Reporters from the Dayton Daily News and WHIO-TV, plus local activist and blogger David Esrati, arrived early for the 9:30 a.m. meeting, and were allowed to set up cameras and tables.

But as the meeting was about to start, DPS spokeswoman Marcia Bonhart asked the media to leave, saying the event was not open to the public. A Dayton Daily News reporter immediately presented a letter suggesting the meeting qualified as an open meeting under Ohio law.

Acting DPS Superintendent Elizabeth Lolli, Dayton City Manager Shelley Dickstein and Task Force co-chairs Mohamed Al-Hamdani and Jeff Mims scanned the document, then told the media they believed the meeting was closed to the public.

Charlie Russo, research professor of law at the University of Dayton, said the Task Force’s attempt to meet in private did not seem to fit the requirements of Ohio’s open meetings law.

“The spirit of the law, not just in Ohio but elsewhere, is that public business should be the business of the public. People should know what’s going on,” Russo said. He acknowledged that there are some exceptions allowing private meeting. “But none of those exceptions applied. I don’t believe they made the right call.”

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Dispatch Editorial: Think before saying 'no'

Columbus Dispatch editorial

For central Ohioans, the $26,000 legal bill the Solid Waste Authority of Central Ohio owes for fighting a public-records request adds insult to injury: First SWACO tried to keep public records away from the public, and now the public gets stuck paying for it.

And the worst of it is, the public still doesn’t know why a private yard-waste company was allowed free dumping of an astounding amount of garbage — enough to ordinarily have run up tipping fees of nearly $700,000 — at SWACO’s publicly owned landfill.

That’s why The Dispatch demanded to see emails that went between SWACO employees last May, when the newspaper ran a story by reporter Bill Bush revealing that Kurtz Brothers, the Groveport company that SWACO pays to take the yard waste collected from central Ohio households, dumped nearly 800 truckloads over a six-month period without payment.

Kurtz Brothers said its 2005 yard-waste contract with SWACO allows it to dump, at no charge, the odd bits of garbage — pop cans and plastic bags and such — that inevitably get mixed in with loads of yard waste. Over the years, Kurtz typically dumped a few dozen such loads per year.

When that turned into hundreds in 2016, Kurtz claimed that the extraordinary influx was all “foreign material” that it had plucked from yard waste and allowed to build up on its property over the years. Experts are skeptical that anywhere near that much garbage could have come from a decade’s worth of yard waste.

SWACO officials said they were concerned about the dumping, yet couldn’t explain why the public landfill allowed it to continue for so long.

Clearly, every central Ohioan whose trash fees (paid through private haulers or through municipal taxes) support SWACO had an interest in knowing what was going on. When SWACO refused to provide emails without redactions, The Dispatch went to the Ohio Court of Claims, employing a year-old mechanism that allows anyone denied public records to seek mediation.

Rather than release the emails, SWACO lawyered up. It claimed that the emails are exempt from public-records law and argued they are subject to attorney-client privilege because the agency’s in-house attorney had been copied on them.

Simply involving an attorney doesn’t make a conversation privileged; public records can be withheld for attorney-client privilege only when the discussion involves a pending or imminent lawsuit — suing someone or being sued. That wasn’t the case with the SWACO emails.

The Court of Claims public-records appeal, created by state statute in 2016, has given any member of the public an easy and inexpensive way to challenge a government body that denies a request for public records. A $25 filing fee, no lawyer required, triggers a process that begins with mediation and can elevate to formal hearings and a court ruling.

About 90 cases have been filed and, so far, more than half have resulted in Ohioans getting access to records that bureaucrats initially denied.

Open-government advocates say it’s prodding governments to think twice before denying records requests improperly. If SWACO had done that, it could have saved central Ohio taxpayers $26,000.

AEP seeks exception for notices on hearings

From The Columbus Dispatch

American Electric Power failed to publish legal notices for hearings held last April on a rate proposal, and now the company wants a mulligan.

Columbus-based AEP disclosed its error with a filing last week and is petitioning the Public Utilities Commission to make an exception to the rule that requires that notice of those hearings be printed in local newspapers. As an alternative, AEP suggests holding an additional hearing, which would receive proper notice.

The move is an unusual one. The PUCO has no record of a utility company making this type of mistake since the law for rate plans was updated in 2008.

The rate proposal at the heart of this issue is still under review and would run through 2024.

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Fight against mugshot sites yields little success

From The Herald Dispatch

Mike Anderson was an 18-year-old freshman at Texas State University when he was busted with less than a gram of weed. Police arrested him, took his mugshot and he spent the night in jail.

The legal consequences for being caught with such a small amount of marijuana - just enough for a joint or two - were minimal, but expensive. Prosecutors offered to drop the charges if he attended a drug program and did community service, and he could later get the record of his arrest expunged for about $500, wiping the history of his arrest from public view.

"After I got it expunged, I thought it was pretty much a done deal," he said of the order granted earlier this year.

But the next time he Googled his name, he realized the ordeal was far from over. His arrest photo was posted on Mugshots.com. The page was one of the top results for anyone who might be looking for him. And as Anderson applied for internships - a graduation requirement for mechanical engineering majors - recruiters who initially seemed interested would offer the spot to someone else.

"It wasn't right," said Anderson, a junior, who asked that his real name not be used for fear of drawing further attention to his mugshot.

"I called (Mugshots.com) on the phone, and they told me basically the only way I could get the mugshot to come down was to pay a certain fine. Proof of expunction wasn't valid."

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