Thursday, June 25, 2015

Carolina Press Webinar Last Chance Registration

Last chance to register for Friday's 'Behind the Door' webinar 
from Carolina Public Press

Registration is still open for a free Carolina Public Press training webinar to help journalists, public officials and community members understand when, according to North Carolina state laws and guidelines, government agencies and officials may close public meetings.


Behind the Door: Understanding NC's open, closed meetings law
12-1 PM, Friday, June 26 2015
Free and online only
Pre-registration required; space is limited


During the training session and conversation led by Carolina Public Press Investigations and Open Government Editor Jon Elliston, participants will have the opportunity to:

  • learn the definition of a public meeting;
  • learn the lawful reasons for which public agencies and public officials may enter into a closed meeting;
  • discuss best practices for local governments in both following open meetings law and being transparent about closed sessions;
  • discuss strategies for challenging what appear to be violations of open meetings law;
  • learn the methodology behind Carolina Public Press’s investigation into the closed sessions held by boards of commissioners in Western North Carolina, a reporting project that could be replicated by other North Carolina news organizations; and
  • discuss how to obtain records of discussion items and details from closed meetings.
Elliston was the lead reporter for a recent month-long Carolina Public Press investigation into the frequency and causes of board of commissioners in Western North Carolina to go into closed meetings to conduct public business. The investigation revealed that, in the 17 counties where closed session numbers were made available, WNC boards of commissioners held a total of 303 closed sessions. It also found that only fragments of these back-room conversations ultimately go public, in procedures that seem arbitrary at times. For 75 percent of the closed meetings, minutes remain sealed and away from public scrutiny.

READ: Govt. behind closed doors: Investigation shows hundreds of secretive WNC county meetings, with few details released
 

The reporting resulted in several counties adopting new disclosure policies and others releasing previously closed records. The investigation was cited in a roundup of North Carolina’s top open government stories for Sunshine Week 2015, and it was shared and/or co-published by the (Asheville) Citizen-Times and The Charlotte Observer.


 
ABOUT THE TRAINER
Carolina Public Press’s lead investigative reporter, Elliston is also a frequent trainer for Carolina Public Press about accessing public records at the state and federal level. He has also written for The Nation, Popular Communications, U.S. News & World Report and WNC Magazine, among other publications. His reporting has garnered awards from the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, the Society of Professional Journalists and the North Carolina Press Association. His book-in-progress, about an integrated summer camp in Western North Carolina that was attacked by a local mob and run out of the state in July 1963, was supported by a research fellowship from the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library Foundation.


 
PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. For more information, please call Carolina Public Press at 828-774-5290. 


The Carolina Public Press Mission:
Carolina Public Press is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit online news organization providing unbiased, in-depth and investigative reporting as well as educational opportunities to journalists, students and others in the 18 westernmost counties of North Carolina. Our vision is to promote an informed, engaged electorate to ensure government accountability by building the region's most reputable public interest news source.  




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