Dear Neighbors:
Thank you for your vote last Tuesday nominating me as the Democratic Party candidate to serve our neighborhood in the Senate next term. As my current term continues, I will now provide an update of my efforts to bring transparency and accountability to the Washington Bridge lawsuit. I apologize in advance for this letter’s length, which I believe is necessary to provide you with the relevant context.
A. A Proposal To The Attorney General:
In my September 2 letter, I explained how a February oversight hearing concerning the Washington Bridge closure was less informative than hoped because RIDOT deferred questions of responsibility until its completion of a forensic audit report, which it later refused to produce because of the lawsuit. I described my August 19 letter to the Attorney General, urging him to use his dual role as (1) co-counsel in the lawsuit and (2) the State’s open government lawyer to bring transparency and accountability to the lawsuit by taking these four steps:
A 4-Step Transparency Initiative
1. Create a web page to inform the public about the lawsuit;
2. Publish the court docket (filed pleadings, motions and court rulings) on the web page;
3. Object to any motion to impose a protective order of confidentiality on discovery materials, including document production, interrogatories (answers to written questions) and depositions (pretrial testimony under oath);
4. Publish the discovery materials on the web page. Any privileged materials would not be published, and any partially privileged materials would be redacted as necessary.
To be sure, this Initiative is just one proposal for the Attorney General’s consideration.
B. The Attorney General’s Response
1. A Promising, If Modest, First Step
This past Thursday (Sept. 12), the Attorney General announced his decision to carry out the first two steps of this Transparency Initiative, as reported by the Providence Journal. This a promising first step.
With that said, it is a very modest first step, as any Rhode Island attorney can access the court docket to view (and disseminate) the filed documents. Also, the court docket does not include discovery, which likely will include thousands of pages of documents, such as the forensic audit report, RIDOT documents, statements by RIDOT officials and the consultants) which may be critical for the public to know what happened with the Washington Bridge, how it happened and why. We should not have to wait (as we did for 38 Studios) until the lawsuit ends years from now to gain answers to these crucial questions.
2. A Disappointing Final Step?
I am concerned that the Attorney General plans to have this promising first step of accountability also serve as a disappointing final step. Although the Attorney General did not respond to my letter or a later telephone message, he did post this tweet on Thursday, the same day he announced his office’s implementation of Steps 1 and 2: |