Page 4A - Wednesday, November 12, 2014 1~ The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. F ROM T HE DA ILY Nothing to hide.? A pattern of obstructing transparency has emerged at the 'U' n the aftermath of former Athletic Director Dave Brandon's resignation, questions have been raised surrounding the University's public document retention procedure. Michigan's Freedom of Information Act requires any public body to provide access to a public record to any person who submits a specific request. Additionally, the state provides a number of Retention and Disposal Schedules for state agencies to follow regarding appropriate maintenance and disposal of public records. Despite the fact that these retention schedules are required for state agencies, University administrators have argued that the school itself is "not a formal part of state government" and therefore exempt from the state's document retention policy. While there are conflicting opinions about whether or not state document retention policies apply to the University, it's also unclear why the school has taken itself to be an exception and is engaging in a larger pattern of behavior that obscures public transparency. At the docks Avery spent the Winter Semes- ter studying abroad in Vifa del Mar, Chile. On Wednesday I skip my 10:30 a.m. class and take a train down to the wharf. It's a short ride away from my host family's house in the suburbs, and I can smell the AVERY fish in the air long DIUBALDO before the doors open. Once inside, I pass along the stands where fishmongers tear the guts from conger eels and slop them in buckets, hacking off the heads without looking and handing them to their children to throw to the gulls. They keep their eyes up at the crowd shopping for lunch, at me, at the sea, their knives flashing away unsupervised. No gloves. Under a plaster statue of Saint Peter, a man in rubber overalls cuts slices from an enormous fish, vertically, as if from a loaf of bread. The statue ' memorializes "our martyrs, fallen in the fulfillment of their labors," their names carved in the base and painted black. People have died for almost everything - stopwatches, television shows, car tires. But many people have died for fish. The want for fish, like for bread or for gold, is such an old and elemental thing that the ocean yawns open to match its hunger for human destruction. I walk to the jetties. Of the two of them, only one charges an entrance fee: 200 pesos for pole-fishing. The other is free and good for watching sea lions. A whole pack of them thud against the pier. In Chile they're called lobos del mar - sea wolves, not lions - but they look more like living sausages. I've come here February. I stood: aged man ina light lunch break from h The sea lions gath below us. "What do theyv in broken Spanish. "The fishermen feed them." "What do they fe "Fish," he said. "Is that what th "In the ocean?" He looked at m child. "Of course,' else are they going "Birds?" "No," he said, course not." A fisherman threw a bucket of fish heads over the edge of the pier and the sea lions foamed in the red chum. We watched until the fish were gone and the lions swam out to sea. run down the beach toward the pier. once before, in They sprint from one end of the sand next to a middle- to the other in the endless task of t suit who was on policing their border, scaring gulls his job in the city. into flight. sered in the surf The smaller one catches a pelican. I'm not sure how he managed it - I wait for?" I asked was watching the sky when it hap- pened, worrying about the clouds, he said. "They dark with rain - but when I look down he's already gripped the bird eed them?" by the neck. Everyone is surprised: the dog, the pelican, the three of us iey eat?" I asked. watching on the pier. Now what? The dog whips the bird around e as if I were a in a few dizzy circles and lets it go, " he said. "What bored, or confused, and runs to to eat?" join his partner at the pier. There, the waves sweep the lions onto the confused. "Of sand, where the dogs snap at them, and then the waves sweep the dogs into the water, and the sea lions do the same. It goes on like this. Nature can be They're waiting, all of them, for majestic, but only the fisherman to come with when it's not coughing. his bucket of chum, the dogs starving with- out the summer 0 "Is that really what you thought?" he asked. "That they ate birds?" I had only asked the question to keep the conversation going. To be honest, I'd never really thought about it. That was the height of summer. This afternoon, in cold May, a tour- ist couple dressed in dark rain jack- ets lean on the railing a few feet away and whisper to each other. A sea lion lolls on its belly and coughs at us, gaping. Nature can be majes- tic, but only when it's not coughing. Distant yapping grows louder as a pair of hungry-looking street dogs tourists to give them scraps, the sea lions dependent on the daily feeding, the lunchtime ritual. And the pelican, alone, clambers to its feet and leaps in the air. One wing flaps, but the other only shud- ders, and the bird hooks down to the ground. It comes in at a bad angle and hits the sand with all its weight. Pelicans are heavy. Dazed, it wan- ders to a pile of rocks and looks up at the gulls, hundreds of feet above, flashing in the sky like silver fish. - Avery DiUbaldo can be reached at diubaldo@umich.edu. When The Michigan Daily submitted a FOIA request for "all e-mails sent to and from Athletic Director Dave Brandon between March 13 and 14,2014," on March 28, Patricia Sellinger, the University's FOIA coordinator, informed the Daily that such records did not exist. "It's our policy that it's up to individual users to determine their own document retention," said University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald. So in this case, it appears that the University as a whole has no specific e-mail retention policy, and therefore allows its own employees to maintain a retention policy that makes administrative e-mails unavailable fp the public in just two weeks at best. This hardly seems like a policy that promotes transparency. In fact, a document retention process that forces the public to file a FOIA request within a two-week window - further shortenedby the five-day grace period granted for a response - actually makes access to public records extremely difficult to obtain. Regardless of the University's legal status and responsibility to abide by state document retention policy, it's morally impermissible for the University to neglect its responsibility to diligently maintain public records. AccordingtoWesternMichiganUniversity's Record Retention Guide, "E-mail messages, both those stored in the computer and those printed out, should not be considered private. E-mail messages may be considered public records pursuant to Michigan and federal law and may be subject to disclosure." WMU has stipulated that e-mails, along with several other types of documents, must be retained under certain established guidelines. For example, any correspondence designated under its retention guidelines must be kept for three years. Similarly, Michigan State University and Northern Michigan University closely follow state guidelines pertaining to record management and retention. MSU dictates that any record pertaining to general correspondence involving an administrator about the workplace must be kept for two years or as long as the record is active. While NMU doesn't seem to give specific timeperiodsforrecordretentiononitswebsite, it states that according to the Michigan Penal Code, disposal of university records without the approval of a university archivist or authorization of the approved Retention and Disposal Schedule may result in penalization by the state courts, suggesting NMU considers itself a state agency. But perhaps even more troubling is that in recent years, the University has developed something of a bad habit of obstructing access to public information. In 2011, the Daily filed a series of FOIA requests to multiple Big Ten schools and found that the University of Michigan consistently charged significantly higher fees for such requests. Specifically, the Daily requested the number of parking tickets issued by campus police within a one-year time frame. While Big Ten schools such as Indiana University, the University of Iowa, the University of Nebraska and The Ohio State University all provided the information free of charge, the University of Michigan estimated a fee of $1,240. The total number of parking tickets provided was comparable across these schools, suggesting comparable corresponding costs at each university - unless, of course, the University of Michigan's documentation procedure is highly inefficient relative to similar Big Ten institutions. The Daily also requested records for employee purchasing card transactions in a one-year span, for which the University of Michigan charged $1,800 for data on nine administrators. In comparison, the University. of Iowa charged $181.50 for records on more than 2,500 employees. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of Nebraskaand OSU provided the information for free. Such excessive fees create a de facto barrier between the public and its right to access governmental documents. It is illegal for the University to charge substantial fees for the purpose of discouraging FOIA requests, but a disorganized and inefficient record-keeping process that leads to high fees effectively creates identical repercussions. In the end, the public is financially discouraged from pursuing University records.' Earlier this year, the University again acted in a manner that effectively blocked access to public information. In late January, after former Michigan kicker Brendan Gibbons was permanently separated from the school for a violation of the Student Sexual Misconduct Policy, the University refused to confirm the separation and elected not to respond to public outrage over the four-year delay of disciplinary action against Gibbons. Among other reasons, the University used the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act as an excuse to justify its silence, even though the text of FERPA does not prohibit the University from "disclosing the final results of any disciplinary proceeding ... against a student who is an alleged perpetrator of any crime of violence, or a nonforcible sex offense ... " After declining to release information pertaining to Gibbons, Fitzgerald said school administrators considered "the spirit of the law" as well as "the letter of the law." Looking at all these different cases, it is clear that the University is behaving in a suspicious manner. The problem is that it appears as though the University has become too fond of using "the spirit of the law," often interpreting the law in different ways that always appear to be at odds with institutional transparency. In some ways this makes complete sense, and a strong sense of self- preservation is to be expected. But in doing so, the University is mortgaging its future in order to inflate an artificial image now. A failure to openly admit flaws and mistakes prevents the University from wholeheartedly pursuing possible solutions. The school must adopt a long-term perspective for its own well-being, as engaging in dubious practices that mitigate today's problems will only allow underlying faults to fester and reemerge in the future. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Edvinas Berzanskis, Devin Eggert, David Harris, Rachel John, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Paul, Allison Raeck, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Mary Kate Winn, Jenny Wang, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe Draw back the curtains A s an incoming college student, one of the questions that I was most frequently asked - up there with which classes I signed up for and where I was living - was whether or not I had bought football season tickets, and if I was excited for VICTORIA the season to NOBLE start. Some asked rather ironically - my all-girls high school didn't have a football team, and unless you counted skiing, sailing or lacrosse, I never really cared much for sports. But some, maybe most, asked with genuine excitement, eager for me to experience what was, in their view, one of the best parts of life as a University of Michigan student. Before I even arrived on campus, I understood the privileged place that football held at the University. Things have certainly changed since then. A series of high-profile mistakes resulted in glaring media pressure and student protest, and ultimately, the resignation of former Athletic Director Dave Brandon. But that's not what this column is about. Enough has been written already about the trials and tribulations of Michigan football. Univeristy President Mark Schlissel, in an earnest though decidedly awkward recent talk, put it rather well. "If we had won Nobel Prizes this year, we wouldn't have gotten as much attention as did our A.D.," Schlissel said. "It's sad but it's really true." The public scrutiny that natural- ly follows an athletic program as big and profitable as ours, intensified by a lackluster season, prompted relentless information-gathering and commentary on a traditionally opaque organization, revealing key institutional flaws. This pressure is rarely, if ever, applied to other areas of University administration. The public just doesn't seem as inter- ested in playing a watchdog role on, say, the Board of Regents or Office of Undergraduate Admissions. But in terms of their effect on student experience, these groups are just as important. Yet, just like the Athletic Department's well- documented lackc - deleting e-mai could be accessed of Information A adjusting ticket pri without student in in the deciding prc the fact - the Unix practiced its own b But, I can't give kinds of examples sity. It's possible th Regents, each indi department, the O graduate Admission versity bodies hide evidence of misha similar to the wayt Department has. W because the inform able or easily access not the Universityi something wrong, o to know, in itself, is: In July, The De filed a lawsuit agai sity for its alleged Open Meetings Act the regents to me formally vote. Wh do hold public me Press called into qu private meetings to things, before form erencing their data: voted on between J February 2014, 12 were dis- cussed by the regents at these meetings. The regents' failure to include the public in impor- tant decisions is problematic regardless ~-of whether or not they are techni- cally violating any 1 By failing to inc - or at the very le, faculty - in majo regents and other erning bodies are gi mistakes that prob: to some of the A ment's poorer de students aren't i administrative deci way for them to voi and concern. Ther no exchange, no in best, the administr of transparency perpetuating an information prob- ils before they lem between itself and its students; by a Freedom at its worst, the University makes ct request and itself appear as though it has some- ces and policies thingto hide. Either way, the lack of put and insight transparency makes it difficult for ocess until after students to exercise any informed versity itself has oversight of their school. rand of opacity. And maybe students don't want e you the same to anyway. It's possible that students for the Univer- may not care to voice concern over iat the Board of issues that don't involve nationally vidual academic televised sporting events. I'd have ffice of Under- to guess that this isn't the case. The s and other Uni- student body is distinguished in its from students' high levels of engagement. In the past ndled situations year alone, we've seen protest over that the Athletic the University's role in international e just don't know, security (or human rights, depending ation isn't avail- on how youwant toviewit) and envi- ible. Whether or ronmental issues. There have been is actually doing protests about the handling of sexual ur limited ability assault cases and the experience and a problem. admission rates of racial minori- troit Free Press ties. Deeper access to the informa- inst the Univer- tion surrounding these issues could violation of the have furthered debate on these ,which requires issues, or given rise to debate on new et publically to issues altogether, allowing students ile the regents to assume an even greater role in etings, the Free addressing problems that undoubt- estion the use of edly color their college experiences. actually decide It's time that the University draw rally voting, ref- back the curtain on its decision- that of 116 things making processes and shed light on anuary 2013 and the rationale behind its policies. The University is an incredibly large It's time that the organization it ti e tat he that performs University draw back a huge array of functions, the curtain and shed and governing it is more com- light on the rationale plicated than behind its . students often polcies, give it credit for. But despite the impressive aws. research, high-tech development lude the public and lifesaving procedures that ast students and occur at any given time at the Uni- r decisions, the versity, the school serves a more University gov- basic purpose for its more than uilty of the same 40,000 students: it is the frame- ably contributed work within which their entire kthletic Depart- college experience will take place. ecisions. When Prioritizing those students means nformed about allowing them input and access to sions, there's no information on decisions made by ice their opinion the University. lw 6 6 0 CONTRIBUTE TO THE CONVERSATION Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor and viewpoints. Letters should be fewer than 300 words while viewpoints should be 550-850 words. Send the writer's full name and University affiliation to tothedaily@michigandaily.com. 0 's no dialogue, iput. At its very ation is actively - Victoria Noble can be reached at vjnoble@umich.edu. Ip I 1