KAILUA-KONA — The media and public now can find Hawaii County documents and correspondence for all departments in one spot online. ADVERTISING KAILUA-KONA — The media and public now can find Hawaii County documents and correspondence for all departments in
KAILUA-KONA — The media and public now can find Hawaii County documents and correspondence for all departments in one spot online.
In a Facebook post Tuesday, Mayor Harry Kim’s office wrote: “In the interests of being transparent, your County government is posting online all public record correspondence, including Legislative testimony. Just click on this link: http://records.co.hawaii.hi.us/weblink/Browse.aspx?dbid=1.”
One of Kim’s promises to the public during his campaign for mayor was to improve transparency in the county. This site is the county’s way of fulfilling that promise.
“We have to realize the need to improve the communication to the people,” Kim said.
Since Kim was elected, he said, policies have been put in place where any county employee can speak to the media. The only time an employee would not speak is when it deals with personnel or litigation matters.
“Other than that, they can release whatever they want out of their department,” Kim said about the new site.
The mayor said if there is information that is not on the site, it can be directly requested.
Concern about answering public records requests was an issue for some residents in the past. Last month, West Hawaii Today reported about persistent records requests from three Kailua-Kona residents that put state and county agencies on the defensive, leading to attempts to clamp down on those they think ask for too much information.
At the state level, the House has so far looked kindly on a bill bringing back legislation against so-called “vexatious” records requesters, allowing agencies to ignore requests from individuals declared vexatious by the state Office of Information Practices.
At the county level, Kim is trying to broker peace between resident Aaron Stene and the director of the Department of Public Works, who banned the resident’s phone calls and emails because his staff was feeling harried from frequent, multiple questions.
Stene had no comment about the new site.
The mayor’s office has been posting on Facebook and Twitter. As of Tuesday evening, Kim had 23 tweets on Twitter and approximately 40 posts on Facebook.
While he does not have the expertise himself, Kim said, there are people in the mayor’s office who are working on social media.
Email Tiffany DeMasters at tdemasters@westhawaiitoday.com.