County websites

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Budget
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Meetings
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Elected Officials
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Administrative Officials
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Permits, zoning
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Audits
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Contracts
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Lobbying
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Public records
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Local taxes
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County websites
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What information should counties disclose on their websites?

County residents and taxpayers need to be able to adequately gauge whether a county government is:

In order for this to happen, residents and taxpayers should expect to find key information on any county's website.

[edit] Budget

The county website should include comprehensive budget information.

[edit] Checkbook register

The county's checkbook register should be posted online. This information provided should include:

  1. The amount of each payment
  2. Date
  3. Check number
  4. To whom the payment was made (including the address)
  5. What it was for
  6. Budgetary authority for the expenditure
  7. Functional expenditure category
  8. Sources of funds
  9. Links to the relevant contracts under which the payment was made

[edit] County government meetings/agendas

The county's website should disclose all county government meetings and agendas.

[edit] Elected officials and elections

The county's website should disclose key information about the county's elected officials.

[edit] Administrative officials

The county's website should disclose key information about the county's appointed administrators:

[edit] Building permits and zoning

[edit] Audits (Financial/Performance)

If the county conducts financial and management audits to ensure that it is operating in accordance with the highest standards of financial and management competence and integrity:

[edit] Contracts

The county's website should provide comprehensive information about the contracts it enters into with vendors.

[edit] Lobbying/advocacy

[edit] Local taxes

How much information can you learn from your county's website about local taxes?

[edit] Access to government records and public documents

The county website should include comprehensive information about how citizens can obtain access to public records in the custody of the county.

[edit] Problems with your county's grade:

If you find that any of the information that is posted on your county's website is false, not up-to-date, or has been taken down please e-mail Kristinpedia at [kristinpedia@sunshinereview.org] and let us know. We'll retract the point from the county's score, and lower its transparency score.

However, we do not take away points due to wasteful spending, unanswered FOIA requests, or other "offline" activities—our scores are based solely on the county's website. We do hope that you'll report on these other instances by adding additional information to your county's page, like we have in Houston Independent School District, Texas.

[edit] Evaluate your county's website

To find out whether your city is responsible about providing key information to its residents and taxpayers:

[edit] Adding information to Sunshine Review

  1. Log in to your Sunshine Review Account. This will allow you to edit (add information to) a page.
  2. Look at Alexandria, Louisiana as an example.
  3. For your county, add information to your county's page on Sunshine Review in the same manner that information was added to the Alexandria, Louisiana page.

If you add a line saying that "no budget was found" or "the county's website has a budget for each of the last three years", you can also link to the place on the county website where you found the budget.

If the county's website has a budget, but it isn't searchable, or it only includes a budget for one year, or you have any suggestions for improving how the county presents the budget, please note those recommendations or concerns on the Sunshine Review article about your county.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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