“The town eventually responded in June 2012, demanding that Ely pay a schedule of fees for the involvement of various town employees, including $200 an hour for the town attorney. The total cost to access the documents was left open-ended. Ely is not seeking obscure or difficult to obtain records. Instead, he wants the calibration certificates and daily setup logs that must be ‘kept on file’ under the state’s speed camera authorization statute. Already, two localities have been caught violating state law in allowing a private company to operate cameras without documenting the calibrations, as required.”
http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/41/4184.asp
(Visited 34 times, 1 visits today)
Related posts:
Inventor still battling U.S. over patents from '70s
Why One Walmart in North Dakota Is Paying $17.40 an Hour
Tom Woods: The Attractiveness of Austrian Economics
Obama orders federal agencies to cede airwaves to private telecom providers
German jailed for Julius Bär bank data theft
Yes, You Have Something to Fear, Even if You’re a Law-Abiding Person
Visa, MasterCard $5.7 Billion Swipe Fee Accord Approved
Drones For Safe Passage? 'Why Not?' Ald. Cardenas Asks
Police Chief: "We Have Historically Been a Paramilitary Organization"
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Obamacare: Taxpayers Must Report Personal Health ID Info to IRS
Paul Craig Roberts: Why Disinformation Works
Do You Recognize This Country?
In Syria, US sides with local jihadists to defeat global ones
eEconomics Episode 10: Austerity