January 31, 2008
Blogger Snubbed by City Public Information Officer
He goes by the name 'frazgo' and he had an encounter with a Monrovia Public Information Officer that left a sour taste in his mouth. In a post on blogging.la, he ventures into that new media gray area that still is fuzzy... is a blogger considered media?
I attended the city press conference regarding the gang warfare here. The city Principal Information Officer was giving transcripts of the mayors speech. Several of us asked for a copy and he replied "it is for media only". I said, that's fine "I am the media, I am frazgo at blogging.la and I happen to live here". He said" I am familiar with your work, you are not media you do not get one" He turned around and walked away from me I said, "oh, can I quote you on that?". He stopped for a second and then walked on. [blogging.la]In our new media experience here at LAist, each organization, each city department, each council office has a different take on new media and bloggers. Here in Los Angeles, Councilman Eric Garcetti's office has traditionally been new media friendly, the Mayor's Office is extremely careful, maybe overly cautious, which may cause more harm than good, the Department of Transportation is getting better, but mysteriously sometimes moves as slow as traffic, the LAPD is pretty damn good and the Fire Department is on its way to earning some kind of national award.
And Los Angeles is the second biggest city in the nation! We can't even begin to think why a smaller city like Monrovia would be not want as much accurate information out there to the public as possible. Gang warfare was the topic at the press conference.
Photo by Living in Monrovia via Flickr



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Zach,
Thanks for your kind words, but even more for highlighting an issue (and likely an event) that should cause us each to take pause.
Please know that Los Angeles area bloggers are not alone in trying to better understand much less address the challenges (some contrived and some *very* real) that face those on both sides of the informational divide.
While California has specific laws for enhanced media access, there is a reason for the generic title of PIO... because our first and middle names merely underscore that it is indeed PUBLIC INFORMATION.
Respectfully Yours in Safety and Service,
Brian Humphrey
Firefighter/Specialist
Public Service Officer * (an internal title for the PIO working in the bunker)
Los Angeles Fire Department
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Wow - Brian's speedy response should put his department one step closer to winning that award!
I can understand an agency's hesitance in treating bloggers like they treat other media. After all, anyone can start a blog and declare herself a blogger. There's no vetting process. I can also understand that if there's limited access to an event (e.g., a presidential candidate coming to town) they might need to limit the number of people who attend.
Even so, I think that in most cases, it's better to err on the side of assuming that bloggers are yet one more way to get the word out, and give them the same access they do to other forms of media. After all, it is public information.
Thanks for the thought-provoking post.