Council Member Bill Lusk, Council Member Matt Kunz, Council Member Thurman, Election 2017, Milton City Council

Three Sad Chapters in Our City’s Narrative . . . Let’s Turn the Page on Dysfunction in Our City

Ask yourself:  Are Lusk, Thurman, and Kunz really the best we can do?

Triumvarate

It’s hard to watch the news anymore.  And no, I am not talking about the national news.  I am talking about the local news.  Over the last 4 months, Milton has gotten more than its fair share of negative press.  And it is always the same 3 Council Members at the center of the dysfunction:  Lusk, Thurman, and Kunz.  Let me take you down Bad Memory Lane:

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Chapter 1:  Thurman’s Redistricting – A Scandal of “Biblical” Proportions (July 2017)

In July, Council Member Karen Thurman was at the center of the redistricting scandal.  As you might recall, Ms. Thurman was moving outside of her district, but desperately wanted to keep her seat.  So Thurman found a legislator willing to sponsor a bill to redraw her district lines to include her new home.  The problem is that this change was made totally unbeknownst to Milton’s citizens.  Zero transparency.  Following is the story from the Milton Herald:

Milton Herald: Thurman Redistricting Scandal

This story elicited two very bizarre political speeches from Ms. Thurman.  In the first speech, Ms. Thurman descended from the council dais to deliver a speech to Council from the citizens’ podium.  Wrapping herself in an armor of Bible scripture, she delivered a rambling, holier-than-thou attack on her critics . . . we were all haters.

 

Then, a few weeks later and after the scandal had broken, Ms. Thurman again attacked citizens—this time from her lofty perch on the council dais.  Ms. Thurman cast aside her previous love-thy-neighbor theme in favor of Old Testament fire-and-brimstone.  In rambling tirade, Ms. Thurman screamed at citizens and even threatened the Milton Herald.  It was the epitome of a self-inflicted mortal wound.  Ms. Thurman had dashed all hopes for re-election and withdrew from the race for her Council seat.

 

However, Mr. Lusk later carried on the fight for Ms. Thurman, delivering a quite nasty speech in her defense while also excoriating fellow Council Member Joe Longoria.

 

Chapter 2:  Matt Kunz Meltdown – Heisman for Unsportsmanlike Behavior (August/Sept 2017)

Events in Milton got even stranger with Matt Kunz’s tirade against Joe Longoria prior to a special-called Council meeting.  Mr. Kunz squared up with Mr. Longoria and was yelling at the top of his lungs.  Longoria had the good sense to retreat to his seat.  During the council meeting, Kunz then doubled down on his bad behavior when Kunz tagged-teamed with Bill Lusk to humiliate Joe Longoria, who was recused from the discussion.  Following are stories from the Milton Herald and WSB:

WSB: Kunz Goes Off On Longoria

Milton Herald: Near-Violence Event Before Council Meeting

 

 

At a later council meeting, Kunz later made matters even worse when he later issued a weeping non-apology apology for his previous bad behavior.  See video.

 

In addition to his Heismann, Mr. Kunz recently won his merit badge for conflict of interest when it was revealed Kunz swore in the President of the Great Atlanta Homebuilders Association . . . the one and only Charlie Bostwick of Brightwater Homes . . . the developer whose project Kunz marketed in the Ebenezer rezoning.

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Chapter 3:  Bill Lusk Email Scandal:  Political Limbo – How Low Can You Go! (October 2017)

Not to be outdone, Bill Lusk wins the Oscar for Malfeasance and Misbehavior with his misappropriation and misuse of the Memorial Markers list.  Every major local news outlet covered that story.  No surprise.  After all, how often is a sitting council member reprimanded by the City Manager and City Attorney for a major ethics violation?  Mr. Lusk set a new low in city politics.  No matter how low the bar, Mr. Lusk somehow manages to shimmy his way under it . . . Lusk is a master of the political limbo dance.

Milton Herald: Milton Issues Apology for Improper Use of Emails

WSB: Longtime Councilman Using City-run Database to Solicit Votes

The Patch: Councilman Used Emails For Veterans Program To Promote Campaign Event

AJC: Milton Councilman Improperly Used Email Addresses From City

Chapter 4:  ??????????????????????????

After reading and watching these news stories, can you honestly say these Council Members (Thurman, Kunz, and Lusk) are the best we can do?  Do we really want our city to continue to be mired in dysfunction brought on by this triumvirate?  Citizens, with this election, let’s start a new chapter in City politics—one focused on smart land use, good governance, and listening to citizens.  Let’s begin by electing Laura Bentley to City Council.  Let’s leave behind the dysfunction of Lusk, Kunz, and Thurman.

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Thank you for your on-going support of good governance and smart land use in Milton.  Yesterday, the blog passed 10,000 hits . . . a major milestone.

Tim Becker

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Council Member Bill Lusk, Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Ethics

Bill Lusk: Major Accomplice and Beneficiary in Redistricting

Vote-Denied

July 27, 2017

Council Member Bill Lusk has pooh-poohed Milton’s redistricting scandal as much ado about nothing.  The Milton Herald wrote about Mr. Lusk that he felt “the request was a minor change and he didn’t think it required a public discussion.”  Furthermore, Mr. Lusk was the only member of Council that complied with Ms. Thurman’s request for a letter to Representative Jones supporting legislation to change the district.  Mr. Lusk made minor modifications to a form letter provided to him by Ms. Thurman.

We strongly disagree that the district change was minor.  As we have discussed (in more detail) in previous posts, Ms. Thurman should have vacated her seat when she moved outside her district.  Changing District 1’s boundaries meant that all of Milton’s voters—every one of them (as voting is at large)—were disenfranchised.  Furthermore, the one third of Milton voters that live in District 1 were denied the opportunity to run for the vacated seat.  So the redistricting was actually a major change that impacted all voters.  Furthermore, with this district change, Mr. Lusk’s actions revealed his propensity for non-transparency, even when changing Milton’s Charter.

Unfortunately, there is an even darker side to this story.  It is a story that Mr. Lusk would prefer that citizens not know.  You see, Mr. Lusk was the one person, other than Ms. Thurman, that most directly benefited from the redistricting.  By moving the district lines, Mr. Lusk eliminated a potential competitor for his seat.  Had the district lines not been changed, Ms. Thurman would have found herself in Mr. Lusk’s district and might have challenged him.  Additionally, Mr. Lusk and Ms. Thurman have been political allies since the founding of the City, so the district change kept their alliance intact.  So you see, Mr. Lusk was Ms. Thurman’s primary accomplice in clandestinely changing the district lines in Milton, so that he could eliminate a potential competitor while also keeping his voting bloc intact.  Mr. Lusk aided and abetted the thwarting of democracy in Milton.  Now you know the rest of the story . . .

Council Member Thurman, Ethics, Good Governance

Milton City Attorney Favors Privacy-invasive Policies For Open Records Requests

Big Brother
Big Brother:  Should you be careful about communicating with volunteers on Milton’s Committees?

July 25, 2017

Did you know that, in Milton, an e-mail to a government official’s private e-mail account about a matter outside that government official’s responsibilities and sent to the official in his capacity as a private citizen constitutes a government record that is then subject to open records laws?  If not, then read on . . .

Consider the following scenario.  You have a friend with whom you communicate by e-mail (or text).  That friend serves on one of the City’s volunteer committees.  You may not even know about your friend’s government service.  One day, you send that friend a political e-mail about some City government issue that has nothing to do with the committee on which your friend serves.  And that e-mail includes other news and information you would rather the world not know about.  Did you know that email (or text) is a government record discoverable through an Open Records Request (ORR)?  Well, according to Milton’s City Attorney, such communications are property of the Milton City government and can be made public subject to the redacting of certain personal information (like your personal cellphone number).

Invasion of Privacy

How do we know this?  Because the City has already published such communications as part of a massive ORR submitted by Council Member Karen Thurman.  More importantly, the City Attorney has stated that the law supports his views on privacy; we strongly disagree.  This Thurman ORR encompasses e-mail and text communications of around 40 city government officials over a two-year period. This ORR targets members of five committees, who all use private e-mails for their City business.  And these members may be your friends, your business colleagues, or mere acquaintances.  And you might not even know they serve on a Milton City government committee.  However, if you send them a communication about anything that can be construed as “city business,” your communication is a public record, including the parts that do not relate to City business whatsoever.  In Milton, it has now become necessary for citizens to vet their friends, neighbors, colleagues, and acquaintances to determine whether they serve on a volunteer government committee.  And perhaps, volunteers on citizen committees need to include disclaimers on their private e-mails:

“Warning!  I serve on a Milton citizen volunteer committee.  Any communications sent to or from me that can be construed as City of Milton business are considered public records discoverable through an Open Records Request.”

Of course, this de facto policy reeks of Big Brother.  Furthermore, we believe it is patently unconstitutional–a violation of citizens’ privacy.  In Griswold vs. Connecticut, the United States Supreme Court established a citizen’s right to privacy.  In the wake of Griswold, a whole body of case law further defines this constitutional right to privacy.  We wonder how far the City Attorney might extend its definition of “government official.”  For example, if you participate in Milton’s Adopt-A-Road program, are your e-mails now subject to scrutiny by the government if they contain information that might be construed as “government business?”  What nowadays is not government business?

Of course, we believe one purpose of these broad and vague ORRs is to coerce and to intimidate citizens to not exercise their First Amendment political rights:  speech, assembly, and petition.  Some Council Members are increasingly politically vulnerable because more and more citizens in Milton are objecting to their wrongdoing and misbehavior.  Some politicians are looking for ways to silence influential citizens, who (armed with the truth about their wrongdoing and misbehavior) are organizing citizens through petitions and other means.  Unfortunately, the City Attorney seems to be aiding and abetting the efforts of Council Members to abridge citizens’ political rights.  The City Attorney has adopted an unjustifiably broad (and we believe, unconstitutional) definition of a public record that facilitates (and perhaps even incents) politically-motivated fishing expeditions that waste taxpayer money.

So how should the City Attorney process an ORR that seeks to gather all communications relating to “city business” from citizens serving on volunteer committees?  First, the City should provide guidance to ORR recipients about how to respond to the ORR.  In this situation, none was provided; ORR recipients were just forwarded the ORR without guidance.  Specifically, the City Attorney should define “city business” for ORR recipients.  And we believe this definition of “city business” should be narrow—that is, limited to matters before the committee on which a citizen is serving.  Furthermore, communications that fit this definition should be cleansed of information not relevant to the matter before the committee.

We believe a longer-term and better solution to this issue of transparency vs. privacy would be 1) to issue City e-mail accounts to all committee members and 2) to require that City email be used for all City Business conducted by that committee.  This is a simple and clean solution.  All city-issued e-mail accounts would then be subject to public examination and there would be no need to request private or company e-mails.  This would not only solve the privacy problem, but it would eliminate any burden on volunteers to make judgments about e-mail and to provide e-mails.  The City would simply retrieve committee members’ emails from the City server.

(Note:  The City does not notify a citizen who 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 and just plain common courtesy.)

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Update on processing of Ms. Thurman’s ginormous ORR. 

Normally, a response to an ORR is required within 3 days.  However, because of the breadth of Ms. Thurman’s ORR, the City had to extend the response period.  Processing is likely going to cost the City a lot of money, because of the time and resources involved.  Due to its sensitivity, Ms. Thurman’s ORR is being processed by the City Attorney, who contracts to the City.  A staff attorney is processing Ms. Thurman’s ORR, so taxpayers will be paying lawyer, not clerk, rates.  Ms. Thurman will be charged for some of the costs of the ORR.  However, because of how fees are computed for processing ORRs, taxpayers will likely be subsidizing a good portion this ORR’s costs.  So you will be paying for a politician’s attempts to dig up political dirt.  And we are sure that these efforts, like a similar ginormous ORR submitted by Ms. Thurman in 2008, will come to nought.  This ORR will be a huge waste of money for taxpayers.

Wasted Taxpayer Money

We will be submitting our own ORR to determine what resources were expended on this ORR and the cost to Ms. Thurman and to taxpayers.  We will keep you updated.

Lastly, citizens, please know that we will continue to report on the affairs of our City government at this website.  Our focus is on policy and good governance.  You have a right to know what is going on with your local government.  We appreciate the trust and confidence you have placed in us.  Even if we have to hire lawyers to protect our free speech rights, we will continue to advocate for clean, competent, courageous, and citizen-centric government.

Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Good Governance

Democracy Thwarted But Good Governance Is On The March

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July 23, 2017

First, I appreciate the tremendous outpouring of support from Milton’s citizens.  Since the relaunch of the blog in late May, over 1300 of you have visited the blog and it has received nearly 3500 hits.  Around 130 new people have signed our petition.  Our videos have been watched nearly 700 times.

Several attempts are being made to silence Milton’s citizens, including the submission of a massive Open Records Request, but I am certain it will all come to nought.  As always, my focus will be on debating policy and governance, rather than the politics of personal destruction.

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Today’s blog is about the impact of the redistricting on Milton.  Of course, the process violated nearly every principle of good governance:  transparency, rigor, fairness, and citizen participation.  But what about the act itself?  Who cares that 182 citizens were moved?  According to Bill Lusk, the change was minor.  And Ms. Thurman claims that because voting in Milton is at-large (i.e., all Milton citizens vote for all Council Members, regardless of district), the change did not affect how a single citizen votes.  However, this is backwards logic.

From my perspective, the change affected how every citizen votes.  Because all Milton citizens vote for all Council Members, all Council Members represent all citizens.  And as often as not, a citizen takes his concerns to a Council Member based on a referral, a friendship, agreement on an issue, or some other factor that has nothing to do with a Council Member living in a citizen’s district.  And even Ms. Thurman acknowledges that the residents of The Estates at Atlanta National were, in fact, seeking her out although she was outside their district.  In fact, she contends that many considered her their representative.  So you see, it is not necessary to change district boundaries to represent any citizen in Milton.  And City Council members represent non-district citizens all the time; that is their obligation.

So the argument that the district lines needed to be moved so that Ms. Thurman could represent the residents of The Estates at Atlanta National (EAN) is contrived.  And it was manufactured to disguise the real reason:  Ms. Thurman needed to change the district lines to keep her seat on Council when she moved to EAN.  The result is that democracy was thwarted in Milton.  Why?

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First, the change should have been approved by our elected representatives on Council before it was introduced as legislation.

Second, Ms. Thurman should have relinquished her seat before she moved.  This would have resulted in an election to fill her seat.  However, changing the district boundaries allowed Ms. Thurman to keep her seat.  In so doing, Ms. Thurman denied all Milton voters an opportunity to elect a new District 1 representative.  All voters were disenfranchised.  So while Ms. Thurman contends that not a single voter was affected, I contend that every voter was affected.

Third and lastly, changing the district lines denied all of the voters in District 1 the right to run for the District 1 seat.

So with the district change, democracy was thwarted in Milton.  And at the time, not a single Milton voter knew about it, but now they do . . .

There is a positive outcome in all this.  It is highly unlikely that a Council Member will ever again get Milton’s Charter changed without Council approval and public input.  Those days are over.  Good governance is on the march.  Last Monday night even Ms. Thurman acknowledged (finally) that she wished she had gone about the district change differently.

Advocating For Good Governance,

Tim Becker

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Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Ethics, Good Governance

Thurman Email Clearly Shows Intent to Move and Destroys Her Main Argument

July 22, 2017

Excerpt from March 22, 2015 email from Council Member Thurman to Representative Jan Jones:

We are still hoping to be able to build another house. The soil is not good on the lot so we are waiting to see if we can get another plan drawn up that will include bringing in soil that will perc.

(Click here to get original e-mail:  20150322 Email From Thurman to Jones re building EAN Home)

These are probably the two most important sentences in the whole Redistricting Scandal.  Why?  Because these two sentences completely obliterate Ms. Thurman’s main argument that she did not intend to move when the bill (HB 570) to change the district lines was being drafted and introduced.  This email was sent just 3 months after Ms. Thurman bought her lot in EAN and just 4 days after HB 570 passed in the Georgia House of Representatives.  Does this sound like someone that is not intending to build herself a home on the purchased lot in EAN and move to that home?  Of course not.

Consider the following:

  • Dec 18, 2014: Ms. Thurman buys a lot in the Estates at Atlanta National (EAN) for $115,500
  • Jan 11, 2015 (or earlier):  By her own admission, Ms. Thurman lobbies Representative Jan Jones to change the district lines.
  • March 9, 2015: A bill (HB 570) is introduced in the Georgia legislature to change District 1’s lines to include EAN
  • March 18, 2015: HB 570 passes in the Georgia House of Representatives.
  • March 22, 2015: Ms. Thurman sends the above email that refers building a home for herself on the purchased lot in EAN and specifically mentions that another plan will have to be drawn up to deal with septic issues.  So clearly Ms. Thurman had a previous plan drawn up for her home while HB 570 was being drafted and introduced.  (And obviously Ms. Thurman had spoken previously with Ms. Jones about the building of this home.)
  • Early August, 2016: Thurman moves to new home on the purchased lot in EAN

It is no coincidence (as she implies) that Ms. Thurman lobbied Jan Jones to change District 1’s boundaries to include the lot where she built her new home.  Plainly, Ms. Thurman intended to move to EAN, which was outside of her district.  The first step in building a new home is to draw up a plan and clearly Ms. Thurman had drawn up a plan simultaneous with the introduction and passage of HB 570.  This is indisputable.

Ms. Thurman continues to assert that it was coincidental that she lobbied to change her district lines within a month of purchasing a lot at EAN.  On Monday night, Ms. Thurman argued no more than 5 times that she had no intent to move while HB 570 was being drafted and introduced.  She recited the same arguments repeatedly.  Most arguments were patently ridiculous.  For example, she asserts that she did not even know if the lot was buildable when it was purchased.  Who buys a lot for $115,500 assuming that it might not be buildable?  Ms. Thurman’s strategy on Monday night was to bury the audience in nonsensical arguments, hoping to sow doubt and confusion in listeners.  The strategy did not work.  Even Council members were plainly not buying her arguments.  Clearly, from the date of the purchase of her lot in EAN, Ms. Thurman set a goal of moving to EAN, established a plan for building a home, and successfully executed that plan.  She never deviated from her plan.

Following is the video of Ms. Thurman’s comments about the redistricting.  She is throwing everything against the wall, hoping something will stick.  Nothing does.

Note:  Ms. Thurman very often uses personal and company e-mail for City business.  This in non-transparent and makes us skeptical that we were provided all of the emails relating to this scandal.  If Ms. Thurman used her city-issued e-mail account, the City would be able to provide all of her e-mails, including her deleted emails.  When company and personal e-mail are used, Council Members are on the honor system to provide all of the emails being requested.  This issue of using non-City email has been broached several times, without any response from Ms. Thurman.  Such non-transparency seriously undermines Ms. Thurman’s credibility.

Advocating For Good Governance,

Tim Becker

Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Ethics, Good Governance, Milton City Council

City Attorney Admits He Was Left in Dark About Redistricting

July 21, 2017

Perhaps, the most damning moment for Council Member Thurman in Monday’s City Council meeting was the City Attorney’s admission that he knew nothing about the redistricting when it occurred.  Following is the video.

Why is this important?  Because the City Attorney is the City’s expert on the proper government procedures.  This includes the process for changing the City’s Charter, which is akin to a municipal constitution.  He is the first person that Council Member Thurman should have consulted when she sought to change the district lines.  It is certain that he would have advised Ms. Thurman to put the change on a Council agenda and obtain approval from Council (as Representative Jones also initially requested).  Not only was the City Attorney not consulted about the district change, he was also omitted from all communications on this matter.  We believe this was intentional.  The City Attorney appears on none of the emails we reviewed.

It was clear that when Council Member Thurman asked the City Attorney about his awareness of the change, she was expecting a different answer.  However, the City Attorney was clearly not going to fall on his sword for Ms. Thurman.  And he is likely pretty steamed about being left in the dark about this matter.  On Monday night, his answers to Ms. Thurman were short and subdued; he was signaling to Ms. Thurman that he was not going to support her in this matter and that she needed to change the subject.

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Of course, you can already see Ms. Thurman’s defense in her response to the City Attorney.  Clearly, she is going to blame the City Manager (who she states was very aware of the change) for not informing the City Attorney.  This is no defense.  City councilors routinely consult and communicate directly with the City Attorney on these sorts of matters.  And clearly this was a matter where Ms. Thurman was the point person for the change, so it was her responsibility to ensure the proper people were involved.  In any case, the first documented evidence of the City Manager’s involvement was an e-mail to him on the day the district change bill was introduced into the Georgia legislature.

Ms. Thurman has cast around for various people to blame or include as co-conspirators in this debacle:  Representative Jones’ administrative assistant, Representative Jones, the City Attorney, her fellow Council Members, the previous City Manager, and the Milton Herald.  And unfortunately, Ms. Thurman is also blaming citizens . . . it’s a classic case of not liking the message, so shooting the messengers.  At some point, Ms. Thurman needs to realize that the redistricting debacle is not everyone else’s fault.  Accountability rests with Ms. Thurman and Ms. Thurman alone.

Tomorrow’s post will be about the “smoking gun” in this scandal.

Advocating For Good Governance,

Tim Becker

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.

Council Member Thurman, Milton City Council

Citizens, You Decide . . .

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July 19, 2017

Author:  Tim Becker

Citizens:

Today, we want to give Council Member Thurman the floor so that she can make her case about the re-drawing of District 1’s boundaries.  We are providing the following (in order):

  1. July 10, 2017:  Video of Ms. Thurman’s address to Council from the citizens’ podium in advance of the publication of the Milton Herald article.
  2. July 12, 2017: Milton Herald‘s story about redistricting.  (Link provided.)
  3. July 17, 2017:  Video of Tim Becker’s public comments to Council and Ms. Thurman’s immediate reaction.
  4. July 17, 2017:  Video of Ms. Thurman’s later reaction to public comment from citizens, including Tim Becker (at City Council meeting).
  5. July 19, 2017:  Milton Herald Letter to the Editor from Ms. Thurman.
  6. July 13, 2017:  Open Records Request from Council Member Thurman for all communications from all members of Council, the Mayor, and the member of 5 commissions/committees for the past 2 years with Tim Becker

We are providing these items so that you can decide about the redistricting issue based on Ms. Thurman’s own words and actions.

These items are provided with explanations, but without any editorial comment, so that you can make an informed decision about the redistricting and Ms. Thurman’s conduct.  However, we offer the following questions for your consideration.  After reviewing all of the provided items, ask yourself:

  • Who is being hostile, negative, and hateful?  Who is the bully?  Citizens or Ms. Thurman?
  • Who is focused on policy and who is focused on personal attacks?  Who is focused on good governance?  Citizens or Ms. Thurman?
  • Is Ms. Thurman’s approach to citizens appropriate?  Is it respectful?  Is it receptive?
  • Is Ms. Thurman’s conduct conducive to citizen participation in government?  Would you be afraid to challenge your City Council?
  • Will citizens be more or less eager to volunteer for commissions and committees because of Ms. Thurman’s words and actions?
  • Does Ms. Thurman’s conduct encourage or discourage exercise of First Amendment freedoms?  Freedom of speech?  Freedom of assembly?  Freedom to “petition the government for redress of grievances”?
  • How would you like to have an Open Records Request like the one below submitted on you?  Are you more or less likely to correspond with City officials knowing that a Council Member might submit such an Open Records Request?
  • Do you feel better or worse about your local government after reviewing the below videos, stories and documents?
  • Does this redistricting matter motivate you to work to change and to improve our government in Milton?

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July 10, 2017 Video Excerpt From City Council Meeting.

On July 10, 2017, Ms. Thurman requested to speak during general public comment at the City Council meeting.  She descended from the council dais to address council from a podium normally used by citizens, staff, and others with business before Council.  These comments were made 2 days in advance of the Milton Herald publishing its story about the redistricting.

 

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July 12, 2017 Milton Herald Story About Redrawing of District 1’s Boundaries

On July 12, 2017, the Milton Herald published an story, written by Pat Fox, about the redrawing of District 1’s boundaries in 2015.  Following is a link to the story.

Milton Herald: Group Questions Motives Behind Milton Redistricting

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July 17, 2017:  Video of Tim Becker’s public comments to Council and Ms. Thurman’s immediate reaction.

On July 17, 2017, Council discussed an agenda item relating to whether the City should respond to the Milton Herald‘s story about the redistricting.  30+ citizens were in attendance.  The public was allowed to speak in advance of Council’s discussion.  Four speakers came to the podium and provided remarks.  Tim Becker was one of these citizens.  Ms. Thurman’s request to immediately respond to Mr. Becker’s comments was denied.

To watch the full video of the redistricting discussion, click on the following link, download the MP4 file, and queue to 37 minutes.

City of Milton: Watch A Meeting

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July 17, 2017:  Video of Ms. Thurman’s later reaction to public comment from citizens, including Tim Becker (at City Council meeting).

Following is Ms. Thurman’s response to citizens’ (mostly Tim Becker’s) public comments.  Please note the reactions of other Council members and citizens in the audience.  Council decided against an official response from the City.

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July 19, 2017:  Milton Herald Letter to the Editor from Ms. Thurman.

Today’s Milton Herald published a Letter to the Editor from Ms. Thurman.  It is similar to Ms. Thurman’s general public comments delivered from the citizens’ podium on July 10, 2017.  It is nearly 1100 words in length.  Click on the following link:

Milton Herald: Milton Councilwoman Thurman Responds to Black Box Story

miltonherald

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July 13, 2017:  Open Records Request from Council Member Thurman for all communications from all members of Council, the Mayor, and all members of 5 commissions/committees for the past 2 years with Tim Becker

On July 13, 2017, Ms. Thurman submitted an Open Records Request to the City of Milton requesting all communications (i.e., email and texts) with Tim Becker for a 2 year period with all members of Council and five committees/commissions.  This request was sent to all 6 Council Members, the Mayor, and about 35 volunteer citizens.  There is significant time and money expended to fulfill such a request.  This request requires all these individuals to provide their personal and company e-mails/texts from/to Mr. Becker.  The City will provide e-mails to or from City-issued e-mail accounts; only Council members have such accounts.  This request is being processed by the City Attorney’s office by a staff attorney.  The staff attorney ensures the emails fall within the scope of the request and redacts certain personal information for reasons of privacy.

20170713 Thurman Open Records Request

Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Ethics, Good Governance, Milton City Council

Thurman Lashes Out At Citizens . . . Again

July 18, 2017

Author:  Tim Becker

We are posting video of last night’s Council meeting.  Council Member Karen Thurman went on a tirade that lasted over 10 minutes.  She insulted, patronized, and attacked the citizen-audience and embarrassed her fellow Council members.  Once again, she digressed from issues of policy and made personal attacks on citizens, even calling out one citizen by name multiple times.  It was a sad spectacle for the City.

About 30 Milton Coalition supporters attended; no one attended in support of Ms. Thurman.  Several citizens walked out in disgust before Ms. Thurman even finished her comments.  The attacks from Ms. Thurman elicited pushback from the audience several times.

The purpose of the Council agenda item was to discuss the City’s response to the Milton Herald’s story about changing District 1’s boundaries.  Council Member Matt Kunz pushed for this agenda item citing a single tweet from a citizen as the impetus for the agenda item . . . that’s right, a single tweet.  So please tweet your agenda items to Mr. Kunz . . . that is now how we are drafting City Council agendas . . . government by tweet.  You could tell from the City Attorney’s initial comments (in City-Attorney speak) that he was trying to wave off Council from pursing the redistricting topic.  He could clearly see the risk of embarrassment to the City—a risk that became manifest as the discussion proceeded.  However, Ms. Thurman came loaded for bear and was determined to fire all her ammunition, which she did.

Milton Herald Story: Milton Coalition Questions Redistricting

Ms. Thurman returned immediately to her themes of hatred, bullying, and negativity.  However, this time she did so without verses from the New Testament; this time, it was pure old Testament fire-and-brimstone stuff.  It was quite a nasty and personal attack on her critics.  At one point, the City Attorney, backed by the Mayor, warned Ms. Thurman that some of her comments were inappropriate and that she needed to restrain herself.

We suggest watching the video at least twice.  First, watch it with a focus on Ms. Thurman and ask yourself:  Is this really how a Council Member should interact with citizens, even those who have pointedly criticized her on policy?  The second time you watch it, focus on the other Council members.  If there is any doubt about Ms. Thurman’s impropriety, Council’s expressions, body language, and gestures demonstrate their shock, disgust, discomfort, disapproval, etc. of Ms. Thurman’s tone and comments.

Despite a mountain of evidence to the contrary, Ms. Thurman’s current stance is “That’s my story and I am sticking to it.”  We do want to address some of Ms. Thurman’s points.

  • Thurman contends this district change only affected Council members because it did not affect how a single person voted (as voting is at-large), so there was no need to get citizen input. However, this is backwards logic.  At-large voting means all citizens vote for all 6 Council Members, regardless of district.  That means all 6 Council Members represent all citizens.  Therefore, there is no need to change district lines in order to represent any particular set of voters.  However, the district change did affect how citizens vote.  Ms. Thurman should have relinquished her seat because of her move, and an election should have been held to fill her open seat.  This did not happen, so the district change essentially disenfranchised all of Milton’s voters. Furthermore, it denied all of the voters in District 1 the opportunity to run for Ms. Thurman’s District 1 seat.
  • Repeatedly, Ms. Thurman stated that at the time of the district change, she did not intend to move to the lot she purchased in The Estates at Atlanta National. She even stated that she did not know whether the lot was even buildable, but who pays $115,000 for a potentially unbuildable lot?  However, consider the following:
    • Thurman bought the lot in EAN on December 18, 2014.
    • By her own admission, Thurman lobbied Representative Jones to change the district lines before the legislative session began on January 12, 2015, so within a month of her purchase of the lot in EAN.
    • Thurman implies that this was purely coincidental. She contends she had no intent to move to EAN at the time the bill (to change the district lines) was introduced and passed.  However, consider this e-mail excerpt with Jan Jones on March 22, 2015 (3 months after she purchased her lot in EAN and a mere 4 days after the district change bill passed the Georgia House.)

We are still hoping to be able to build another house. The soil is not good on the lot so we are waiting to see if we can get another plan drawn up that will include bringing in soil that will perc.

So in the 3 months after the lot was purchased, Ms. Thurman clearly had a plan drafted for her new home . . . this shows she did have an intent to move to EAN while district lines were being changed.  Because of septic issues, she had to have new plans drafted, which clearly solved the septic issues.  Furthermore, the e-mail excerpt implies that Ms. Thurman and Ms. Jones had previously discussed the home at EAN.  So it astounds us that Ms. Thurman continues to assert there was no intent to move at the time the bill was drafted, introduced, and passed.

  • Thurman mercilessly attacked the Milton Herald. She accused the newspaper of creating fake news, of numerous factual errors, and of being a tabloid.  She went on to threaten the Milton Herald by asserting that the City should drop the newspaper as its outlet for legal notices.  She complained that the newspaper would not run her letter-to-the-editor at the same time as the story about the redistricting.  She also complained that she had to limit her letter-to-the-editor to 500 words . . . BTW, citizens are limited to about 300 words.  She complained about the length of comments from citizens at the on-line article, although she is free (like anyone else) to post comments there.  She complained that the newspaper did not follow her directives about how to write the story and that her comments were too few and provided too far into the story.
  • The City Attorney revealed that he was not aware of the district change at the time it occurred. This was shocking as the City Attorney is the person most responsible for ensuring that Council follows good governance practices.  We did notice that Thurman left the City Attorney off the correspondence in the matter of the redistricting.  Had the City Attorney been in the loop, he likely would have steered Council in a different direction—e.g., urged Council to put the redistricting on a Council Agenda.  Was the City Attorney purposely kept in the dark?
  • Thurman refused to conduct a town hall meeting with citizens to answer their questions. She explained that she had invited one citizen to meet with her and that citizen had refused.  That apparently was the public’s one opportunity to ask questions.  We don’t really understand the connection between one citizen’s refusal to meet with Ms. Thurman and Ms. Thurman’s refusal to hold a town hall meeting.  We suppose it is easier to just rant and rave from the City Council dais than engage citizens in honest dialogue.

We are also including Ms. Thurman’s speech from the citizens’ podium on July 10, 2017, which is also disconcerting to watch.

We are deeply concerned about Ms. Thurman’s behavior in the Council Chamber.  Ms. Thurman’s behavior seems designed to bully citizens into not speaking in opposition to her policies and her actions as a government official.  Screaming from the Council dais, calling out citizens by name, and referring to her critics as “hateful” is completely beyond the pale of appropriate behavior from a government official.

Also, we have become aware that Ms. Thurman has filed an Open Records Request (ORR) to obtain, for a two-year period, all communications between all members of all committees, commissions, and City Council and a member of the Milton Coalition.  This is clearly an attempt to dredge up information to discredit and disparage a citizen advocate.  Many hundreds of hours of government officials’ time will be wasted on a fishing expedition.  We will provide a future post on this issue, once we obtain a copy of the ORR.

Council Member Thurman, District 1 Redistricting Scandal, Ethics, Good Governance, Milton City Council, Uncategorized

Milton “Show Trial”? . . . Submit Your Questions and Attend

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Soviet Era Show Trial

July 16, 2017

For Monday night, City Council has added the following item to their Work Session agenda:  “Council Discussion Regarding Possible Response to Redistricting News
Story.”

(City Council Meeting:  July 17, 2017 at 6 pm at the new City Hall)

This agenda item is an attempt to whitewash the Redistricting Scandal and exonerate Ms. Thurman.  It is reminiscent of the show trials that were perfected in the Soviet Era and are today a ubiquitous feature of totalitarian regimes around the world.  Citizens, consider the notion of Council passing judgment on its own actions and then issuing a propagandist “official” response from the City of Milton.

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Citizens, please heed our call to attend Monday night’s City Council meeting to ensure Council does not support this transparent attempt to dismiss the Redistricting Scandal.  We believe a majority of Council are probably not inclined to support Kunz and Thurman, so we need citizens to show up and support these Council Members.

Citizens, what we need from you are questions that you would like Council to answer about this Scandal.  We will collate those questions and submit them to the Council.  We will check off how many of these questions get asked and answered and provide a scorecard at this blog.

Please submit your questions by sending them to miltoncoalition@outlook.com (or use the contact form at the blog).

At Monday’s meeting, the City Attorney will play a prominent role.  However, keep a few things in mind as you listen to him.  First, the City Attorney will never (publicly) make a statement that will put the City in legal jeopardy or otherwise cast the city in a bad light.  His job is to protect the City.  Second, the City Attorney is really Council’s attorney.  He advises them and for certain matters, they have attorney-client privilege with him.  Third, the City Attorney’s contract with the City relies on his keeping in the good graces of a majority of Council.  So he is in a very difficult position.  Please understand his comments in the context of the above discussion.

If City Council and Ms. Thurman truly want the truth to be uncovered, then two actions need to occur:

  • The City should hire an independent third party to investigate the district change.  This needs to be someone that citizens will agree is truly objective.
  • Ms. Thurman should conduct a video-taped town hall meeting.  If she truly believes that she did nothing wrong and wants to be honest about this matter, she should have no problem facing citizens and answering their questions.  Town hall meetings were recently very effective in explaining the Fulton County tax fiasco and addressing citizen concerns.

Rather than labeling citizens concerned about this district change as negative, hostile, and divisive bullies, whose hearts are filled with hate, Ms. Thurman needs to engage citizens in a direct and honest dialogue.  Ms. Thurman’s actions to date, including her speech last week, remind us of the following truism:

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(Note:  We will continue to publish evidence of the Redistricting Scandal, once we are past the City Council meeting tomorrow night.)