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From Town Hall, It's Council Meetings Live By Webcast
November 20, 2008
CUMBERLAND - With earlier hiccups in the system chased away, Cumberland
residents may now access the Internet from home to watch the Town
Council meetings live from Town Hall on the first and third Wednesdays
of the month.
Better yet, they may go back later and choose to hear just sections of the meeting by clicking on specific agenda items.
See the Planning Director John Aubin describe the new piece of open
space he's hoping to purchase with state funds. Or the mayor describe
plans for expanding the sewer system. Listen to the council deliberate
a peddler's license for a spot on Diamond Hill Road.
It's instant and easy, or, as the computer techies say, seamless and transparent.
And soon, says the town's technology consultant Dan Lemois, meetings of
the School Committee, Planning Board and Zoning Board of Review will be
accessible, too.
The process, called webcasting, and offered by the Granicus Inc. of San
Francisco, is opening up the workings of town and city governments
across the nation.
Granicus, founded in 1999, describes its business as providing public meeting management technology.
It currently provides government webcasting for more than 450 government agencies in 43 states.
The process works so efficiently that the governor of New York mandated all state meetings must be available online.
"It's going perfectly," Lemois, told The Breeze this week. He suggests
that 90 percent of computers can now access online videotape of the
council meetings.
The number of residents taking advantage of the process hasn't been
many so far, he said, but he's expecting the deliberations of the seven
councilors to gain popularity as residents learn to use the system.
"There's nothing like this video," he suggests. "It puts everyone out there, word for word and how they said it."
While the written minutes may be accurate, he said, the tape reveals
the tone of the comments, "If they are condescending or joking, you can
see it," says Lemois. "It's a phenomenal tool for voters."
In Cumberland, the options for citizens to follow Town Council business are several.
You might watch the meeting live every other Wednesday.
Or, simply review the agenda and go back later and hear a specific
topic. Replays by agenda items are available the following day.
Or use the search engine that's part of the town's ClerkBase software
to review past actions on issues of interest, then go to the video of
those meetings click on the topic, and listen.
Town Clerk Sandra Giovanelli, who attends each meeting, inserts breaks
between each topic as the meeting progresses to allow citizens to later
access only the awarding of truck bids or financial reports, for
instance.
Consultant Lemois of Pawtucket, who is the brother of Councilor Bruce
Lemois, began working on the webcasting project with Giovanelli last
spring but needed the summer to perfect it, he said, because it could
only be tested on meeting nights when the camera operator was actually
recording the meeting.
The school board's involvement in this same process - streaming their
meetings live and later making them available to citizens - was
mentioned last week by School Committee member Lisa Beaulieu after new
member Brian Kelly and citizen Richard Otto both questioned the $700
per meeting currently being spent on a court stenographer.
The stenographer was hired last spring.
With a projected annual bill of more $16,000 for the service, Kelly suggested the money might be put to better use.
According to Deputy Town Clerk Augusta Johnson, the town spent $16,922
to initiate the Granicus service and pays another $1,005 a month for
the complete service.
Under the plan Lemois is working out, he said, the school board would split that monthly cost with the town.
The Town Council also pays $180 a meeting for someone to record the
meeting, while the schools currently have a student performing that
service.
Marcia Green
http://www.valleybreeze.com/Free/MAIN-C-meetings-online
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