It’s
like George Orwell meets the Mad Hatter. A local government board in Arizona
finds nothing wrong with charging taxpayers nearly $2 million for a new police facility
– and then refusing to disclose the building’s location.
True
story.
City
council members in Scottsdale, Ariz., have voted unanimously, 7-0, to spend
$1.87 million for a new 17,827 square-foot offices for the police department’s
Investigative Service Bureau. At the same time, they won’t disclose the address
of the building. That’s the Orwell; now here’s the Hatter. Given the building’s
size and office zoning, most in the community already know where it’s located.
So
why is the government going through this charade of withholding public records?
It’s
a safety thang.
“A
substantial number of police undercover personnel will work out of this
building. Therefore, in the interest of the safety of our officers and the
integrity of future undercover investigations, the city will not disclose its
precise location,” Kelly Corsette, communications and public affairs director
for the City of Scottsdale, explains in an email.
Sure.
That makes sense. So long as logic doesn’t get in the way, that is. Else one
might arrive at a conclusion similar to that of one attorney schooled in
Freedom of Information Act and public records law: Even federal investigative
agents have public work addresses.
“Everybody
knows where the CIA building is,” says Dan Barr, an attorney with a Phoenix law
firm who also works with the National Freedom of Information Coalition.
One
could say the same about the building that serves the FBI. Or, Homeland
Security. Or the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. But
perhaps these federal entities don’t deal with as sensitive security issues as
Scottsdale police?
Not
to mock – but really. This is government-gone-wild at its worst.
It’s
bad enough when Capitol Hill politicians raid the public coffers for pork
barrel projects, or special interest expenditures, or for wealth distribution
schemes. It’s hard enough to keep congressional lawmakers in line who work, in
some cases, hundreds of miles from their constituents and who conduct business
in the labyrinth of Washington, D.C. But we’re talking local government body
here. Scottsdale council members vote on the issues that impact the neighbors
they speak with, the restaurants they eat in, the streets they drive, the
schools their children attend.
They’re
accountable, up close and personal.
So
when seven members of the local governing board, including the mayor – who could
not be reached for comment – decide that it’s perfectly sensible to take $1.87
million of taxpayer dollars and spend it on a police facility, and refuse to
disclose the address of this facility, that’s quite a face slap. That’s a ‘we
know best’ and ‘trust me’ philosophy of governance that runs counter to Founding
Father or constitutional ‘we the people’ and ‘of, by and for the people’ principles.
And given the flimsy excuse for the secrecy, more – much more – than just Scottsdale
should be outraged.
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