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Sunshine laws and the Mental Health Board vote

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How he feels about the finalists – he missed their interviews – has yet to be seen. But at first blush, Hammerand getting to weigh in does not bode well for Ellis.

Calling Hammerand a taxpayer watchdog is an understatement – when it comes to opposing government spending, he's more of a taxpayer tyrannosaurus. All things being equal, he will very likely side with voting for new blood if there are persistent questions about how the Mental Health Board spends tax money.

If incumbent Connee Meschini and former County Board member Mary Donner are still the finalists for the one-year slot, it will be interesting which way Hammerand's vote will go to break the tie.

• ELLIS' "FIOA" REQUEST: As I wrote in today's article, Ellis within hours of the committee's vote Friday emailed a FOIA to the county – or as he called it on the subject line, a "FIOA on Public Health and human services" [sic].

I FOIAd his FOIA – bet you didn't know you could do that, did you?

He requested the minutes, agendas and transcripts from both days of the committee's deliberations, and the ballots that committee members cast in narrowing down their choices and making their decisions.

Of Ellis' four requests, the ballots are the one that makes the most sense. But some sort of smoking gun will likely be hard to come by, given that Jana Blake Dickson, the assistant state's attorney who oversaw Friday's vote, warned committee members several times that the ballots were public documents under FOIA.

Ellis' FOIAs of the minutes and the agendas make less sense. The agendas for both meetings are not only online, but also were available at both meetings. The minutes will be online as well, perhaps as soon as early next week. The "transcripts" he requested will likely come in the form of the audio recordings of the interviews and deliberations – all nine hours' worth.

Of course, Ellis' FOIA may be irrelevant, given that a new vote is going to be taken.

• TIP OF THE HAT: As long as we're talking transparency, I'm going to wrap this up by giving Kurtz and the Public Health and Human Services Committee credit where credit is due.

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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