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Ep. 11 They Didn't Ask For Slack Chats

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Manage episode 514744104 series 3685829
Content provided by Jamie Nixon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jamie Nixon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we return to a recurring pattern in Washington’s public records system: agencies only search what you name — and quietly celebrate when you don’t.

First, an update on PRR 24-530. WaTech has now formally closed the request while falsely claiming they produced the live DAUG meeting chats. They didn’t. What they provided were full-length recordings with a few seconds of chat accidentally visible on screen — not exported chats, not searchable text, and not compliant production. That contradiction is now locked on the record.

Then we turn to the Office of Insurance Commissioner, where internal emails show staff openly relieved that their work chats were in Slack, a platform the requester didn’t explicitly name, punctuated by an actual wink emoji. This wasn’t an accident. It was the strategy. And it’s the same strategy seen at DCYF (“didn’t specify Teams, so we didn’t search Teams”) and DOC (text messages only searched if explicitly requested).

This is not ambiguity. It is intent:
Search narrowly. Delete quickly. Deny accountability.

Finally, I’m joined by Bill Lucia, editor of the Washington State Standard, for a conversation about Governor Bob Ferguson’s increasingly closed-door approach to governing — from withheld schedules to centralized message control to the absence of unscripted press availability since the Teams deletion suspension quietly expired.

Additional Links...

Attorney General Nick Brown announces changes to the AG's Model Rules on Public Disclosure

Two Pieces by Bill Lucia:

Where's Gov. Bob Fergsuon?

Known unknowns in Bob Ferguson's Olympia


Support the show

Transcript + Source Docs:
Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode:
thepublicrecordsofficer.com

Sign up for updates:
Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations
thepublicrecordsofficer.com

Support the show:
We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer

About WashCOG:
The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more:
washcog.org

Follow & Share
X (Twitter): @opengovpod
Instagram: @opengovpod
BlueSky: @thepropodcast.bsky.social

  continue reading

13 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 514744104 series 3685829
Content provided by Jamie Nixon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jamie Nixon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we return to a recurring pattern in Washington’s public records system: agencies only search what you name — and quietly celebrate when you don’t.

First, an update on PRR 24-530. WaTech has now formally closed the request while falsely claiming they produced the live DAUG meeting chats. They didn’t. What they provided were full-length recordings with a few seconds of chat accidentally visible on screen — not exported chats, not searchable text, and not compliant production. That contradiction is now locked on the record.

Then we turn to the Office of Insurance Commissioner, where internal emails show staff openly relieved that their work chats were in Slack, a platform the requester didn’t explicitly name, punctuated by an actual wink emoji. This wasn’t an accident. It was the strategy. And it’s the same strategy seen at DCYF (“didn’t specify Teams, so we didn’t search Teams”) and DOC (text messages only searched if explicitly requested).

This is not ambiguity. It is intent:
Search narrowly. Delete quickly. Deny accountability.

Finally, I’m joined by Bill Lucia, editor of the Washington State Standard, for a conversation about Governor Bob Ferguson’s increasingly closed-door approach to governing — from withheld schedules to centralized message control to the absence of unscripted press availability since the Teams deletion suspension quietly expired.

Additional Links...

Attorney General Nick Brown announces changes to the AG's Model Rules on Public Disclosure

Two Pieces by Bill Lucia:

Where's Gov. Bob Fergsuon?

Known unknowns in Bob Ferguson's Olympia


Support the show

Transcript + Source Docs:
Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode:
thepublicrecordsofficer.com

Sign up for updates:
Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations
thepublicrecordsofficer.com

Support the show:
We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer

About WashCOG:
The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more:
washcog.org

Follow & Share
X (Twitter): @opengovpod
Instagram: @opengovpod
BlueSky: @thepropodcast.bsky.social

  continue reading

13 episodes

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