“I would like to see crowdsourcing reach deep down into the bowels of local city governments… [The suburbs] need good investigative journalism as much as anywhere else. More probably. There’s a lot of corruption in those places, and the mainstream press is dropping the ball.”
– Chris Anderson, New York City Indypendent
“I think local crowdsourcing is an excellent idea… We are suffering from a lack of news about local and state government because [the local paper] has been undergoing severe budget cuts…”
– Ms. Panstreppon, citizen journalist
Unmasking government corruption is never easy. Crooked politicians go to great lengths to conceal evidence of their schemes, which are often hidden behind a complex maze of bureaucracy and legal jargon.
But, as Anderson and Panstreppon point out in “Open-Source Journalism: It’s a Lot Tougher Than You Think,” citizens are far from powerless.
Crowdsourcing and crack citizen journalism can help break through the walls of political establishment, protecting taxpayers and keeping our politicians honest.
Unfortunately, the “watchdog” that is traditional news media can be asleep on the job. They often fail to recognize scandal as it’s unfolding, or only put the pieces of corruption together after it’s too late.
A perfect example occurred in 2000 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In a quiet vote, the Milwaukee County Board (a body of locally elected officials charged with administering key municipal services to county citizens) approved a benefits package for themselves and several of high-ranking employees.
Provisions in the package allowed lump sum payments to then-County Executive Tom Ament that could have topped $2 million (on top of his $136,000 yearly pension), as well as $1 million payments to three other county officials who were also slated to rake in hefty pensions.
Now, you would think the citizens of Milwaukee would raise holy hell after such a bold dereliction of duty. Well, they did… nearly two years later when the mainstream press finally realized and reported what had happened.
Here’s a clear example of why crowdsourcing is key. It’s ridiculous that Milwaukee County citizens had to wait two years before catching wind of the pension scandal. Clearly, the county government beat reporters throughout the city failed to fulfill their journalistic responsibilities by not recognizing the vote for what it was: a fleecing of county taxpayers.
Had more citizen reporters been on hand to study the vote and consider its implications, perhaps the proposal could have been stopped dead in its tracks.