In Montgomery County, senior management in government and the county attorney’s office have grown too accustomed to operating behind closed doors and avoiding the tough questions.This conclusion is based on my six years as Montgomery County’s inspector general. This approach to governing hurts taxpayers by diminishing the ability of oversight organizations such as the inspector general’s office, the ethics commission and the Merit Systems Protection Board to do their jobs. The result has been growing suspicion by residents and county workers of unchecked wrongdoing within government. The lack of transparency can only get worse if some things don’t change...
...The main remedy must come from the Maryland General Assembly. State lawmakers should amend the Maryland Public Information Act to give municipal inspectors general access to the records, including those that are “confidential,” of any state or local government unit, or of another body that receives public funds, with respect to any matter under that inspector general’s jurisdiction. Taking this simple step is necessary to increase government transparency in Maryland. But even with such a law, other changes need to happen, at least in Rockville. Montgomery County would benefit from a cultural change that encourages residents and employees to ask tough questions on difficult issues — and forces leaders to answer...
"...avoiding the tought questions." Mr. Dagley is being too kind. This government won't anwer ANY questions. If anyone can provide any evidence or data at all that this government answered one question, easy or tough, just one, please post it here, or email me offline.
"...avoiding the tought questions." Mr. Dagley is being too kind. This government won't anwer ANY questions. If anyone can provide any evidence or data at all that this government answered one question, easy or tough, just one, please post it here, or email me offline.
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