Council Member Thurman, Ethics, Good Governance

Thurman Uses Open Records Request to Bully Citizen

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July 19, 2017

Author:  Tim Becker

Council Member Karen Thurman has submitted a ginormous Open Records Request (ORR).  Why ginormous?  Because it sweeps up the email and text messages from several dozen—perhaps as many as 42—city government officials for a two-year period.  These are mostly citizen volunteers to City committees and commissions, who give freely of their time to serve the City.  And most have no connection whatsoever to the person being member targeted by Ms. Thurman, which is me.  Georgia’s Open Records Act requires that government entities turn around ORRs in 3 business days.  Each and every one of these individuals has had to divert attention from their work, from their families, and from other important tasks to comply with Ms. Thurman’s request.  Because of its sensitivity, this ORR is being handled by the City Attorney.  Accordingly, the ORR will be expensive to process.  It is important to note that processing an ORR requires the reading of each e-mail 1) to ensure it is pertinent to the request and 2) to redact certain types of personal information (e.g., private e-mail addresses).

20170713 Thurman Open Records Request

(Note:  The City does not notify a citizen that is the subject of an ORR that he/she is the subject of an ORR.  The City does inform City Council Members.  This needs to change.  If you are the subject of an ORR, then you have a right to know that.  This is an issue of good governance.)

Let us be crystal clear.  Ms. Thurman has a right to all communications of any government official about city business relating to the scope of responsibilities of that official.  Transparency is a cornerstone of good governance.   And I have submitted a number of ORRs, some of which included e-mails to and from Ms. Thurman.  However, there are several important differences between my ORRs and Ms. Thurman’s ORR:

  • My ORRs have always been focused on a specific policy issue (e.g., changing of district boundaries). Thurman’s request has no specified purpose.  Furthermore, Ms. Thurman’s ORR is focused on a person, not a policy issue.
  • My ORRs have only focused on specific individuals with a connection to the policy issue being investigated. Thurman’s search includes people with absolutely no connection to me (but whom will nevertheless have to waste time searching their e-mails.)
  • My ORRs have specified search criteria to narrow the search to minimize the use of City resources and delve only into pertinent areas of concern.
  • My ORRs have covered time periods pertinent to the issue being investigated.

So these differences beg the question of Ms. Thurman’s motives for submitting such a request.  Why has Ms. Thurman submitted such a broad and vague request?  I believe there are a number of reasons.  The most obvious reason is that Ms. Thurman is clearly on a fishing expedition.  She is looking to dig up whatever dirt she can on whoever she can.  She has cast a wide dragnet to dredge up morsels of information that she can exploit to deflect attention from the Redistricting Scandal.  And I suppose that given her dire political situation, this vast ORR is understandable.  However, there is more to this ORR than just deflection.

Ms. Thurman’s ORR is meant to bully others into not exercising their political rights.  This is ironic given that Ms. Thurman recently gave a speech casting herself as the victim of bullying by citizens, which is really as oxymoron, given that individual citizens have such little power compared to Council Members.  However, this is an old political tactic:  Cast yourself as the victim of whatever tactic you plan to employ against your opponents.

Quite simply, with this ORR, Ms. Thurman is trying to face down citizens (that disagree with her).  Using various tactics, Council Members Thurman and Lusk have been trying to silence citizen-critics for months—thankfully, without success.  Both have claimed citizen-critics are violating or abusing free speech rights . . . a chilling and anti-Constitutional assertion.  Furthermore, Ms. Thurman is sending a message to others:  Be careful or I will use an ORR to beat you into submission.  This sort of bullying from Council Members is one reason why citizens disengage from politics and goverment

In submitting such a broad ORR, Ms. Thurman is also trying to isolate certain citizens.  The ORR is meant to confer pariah status on certain citizens.  The message to citizen committee volunteers is that they should exercise caution in associating with certain citizens.

However, I am confident that Ms. Thurman’s attempts to bully and isolate citizens with ginormous ORRs will backfire—similar to the failure of other tactics she has recently employed.  (See speeches at City Council on July 10th and July 17th).  Ironically, Ms. Thurman’s attempts to bully citizens into submission or isolate them have only isolated Ms. Thurman.  At Monday’s City Council meeting, citizens showed up en masse to question Ms. Thurman; no Thurman supporters showed up.  Ms. Thurman’s fellow Council Members were clearly disturbed by her recent speech, as evidenced by their expressions and other body language.

And Ms. Thurman’s bullying does not stop with citizens.  Thurman also has the Milton Herald in her crosshairs.  At Monday night’s City Council meeting, Ms. Thurman blasted the Milton Herald, claiming the Milton Herald is “making news rather than reporting factual news” and becoming a “tabloid.”  She implied that the City needs to severe its relationship with the paper because of its reporting of the redistricting scandal.  We find her discussion of the city’s contractual relationship with a vendor in such informal and negative manner to be borderline unethical.  The city has a formal process for securing and evaluating relationships with vendors.  It was highly inappropriate for Ms. Thurman to broach the City’s relationship with the newspaper in the context of the redistricting discussion.  More importantly, it seems Ms. Thurman wants to infringe upon another First Amendment right:  Freedom of the Press.  She has previously made comments showing ignorance of, or disdain for, 3 other First Amendment freedoms:  speech, assembly, and right to petition.

first-amendment-freedom-of-the-press

Lastly, this is not Ms. Thurman’s first ginormous ORR.  Back in the early days of the city, she submitted an ORR requesting all communications among City Council members, for which she paid $2100.  As you can read below, that money would have been better used to make a charitable contribution.  Perhaps to an anti-bullying organization or a good governance advocacy group.  Here is the link the AJC article on Ms. Thurman’s 2008 ORR, which we have also pasted below:

AJC Article: Member Opens Records On Milton City Council

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Atlanta Journal-Constitution:  Member Opens Records On Milton City Council

By Doug Nurse  http://www.ajc.com/

It was one of the largest open records request ever received by the city clerk of Milton. Karen Thurman recently asked for, and received, months of e-mails involving City Council members. She said she simply wants to know what is going on in the city.

What makes this request so extraordinary? Thurman is a member of the City Council.

Saying she felt out of the loop, Thurman filed an open records request with the city for e-mails among city senior staff and other council members going back to Jan. 1.”I know that this will be a significant number of e-mails but feel it is necessary for me to get a handle on what is happening within the city,” she wrote in a Feb. 26 e-mail to the city clerk.

On March 7, the city provided her with 6,000 pages of e-mails on a computer disc, which she read over the next two days.She said her review confirmed instances where she and Councilman Bill Lusk had been left out of the loop by other council members. For example, she said she was caught flatfooted by the City Council’s decision to move the meeting date from Thursdays to Mondays, which is a bad time for her. She said e-mails indicate that other council members were aware of the proposal.

Thurman said none of the issues where she was omitted was major, but she finds it disturbing, nonetheless.”It’s political,” she said.Last year, Thurman and Lusk were often part of a bloc of four votes, but two of their allies were defeated in the fall election. Since the city was founded Dec. 1, 2006, it had been riven with political dissension, prompting the council last year to call an organizational psychologist to help them deal with conflict.

Amy Henderson, spokeswoman for the Georgia Municipal Association, said Thurman’s open records request was an unusual move.“It’s rare for anybody to ask for city council e-mails, but it’s even more uncommon when it’s coming from a member of the City Council,” Henderson said.

Thurman said the freedom of information act request was justified. She said that, sometimes, threads of discussions from City Manager Chris Lagerbloom and Mayor Joe Lockwood would be discussed online among council members — minus Thurman and Lusk. She said Lagerbloom and Lockwood probably weren’t even aware it was going on.“She gets the same e-mails that everyone else gets, at least from me,” Lockwood said. “Everything that has to do with the decisions of the city, I send to everyone. Everyone is in the loop.”

Lagerbloom said Thurman is being charged for the research but said doesn’t know how much it will cost.  Lusk said it’s disconcerting to be excluded from discussions. Thurman shared some of the e-mails with him.”If you’re part of a team and it’s time to go into a huddle and everyone gets asked except for two players, I don’t know how you win, how to play when you’ve been marginalized,” Lusk said. “It’s frustrating.”

Lusk said he might have voted differently on some things if had had the same information as everyone else, but he said he couldn’t name any specifics off the top of his head.”We’re supposed to come together here since the city has been taken back,” Lusk said, referring to campaign slogans last fall that said it was time to take back Milton.