Tameside Council’s Twitter response
As I’ve blogged at The Guardian today, Tameside Council has started an ‘accreditation’ system for professional journalists who apply to tweet from council meetings.
In the interests of transparency, the full text of the questions I asked and the council’s reply are posted below;
Inquiry to the council first submitted March 1;
I’m looking at how journalists are using Twitter to cover council meetings and am told that you don’t allow this at present. I’d be grateful if you’d give me a little further information on this;
- First, and most importantly, is it true that the council has banned the use of Twitter during council meetings?
If so,
- Is this for journalists? Councillors? Members of the public?
- Does the restriction only apply to Twitter – i.e. can other forms of instant messaging, micro-blogging still be used.
- What’s the reason for the ban and on what grounds is it made?
- What steps will be taken to enforce the ban?
The reply from the council sent on March 5:
The Council does not have a specific policy concerning twitter at its meetings but follows the legislation governing the conduct of Council meetings and in particular the recording and transmitting of meetings which are set out in Section 100 (A)(7) of the Local Government Act 1972. Below is a link to relevant part of 1972 Act:
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/RevisedStatutes/Acts/ukpga/1972/cukpga_19720070_en_14#v00132-pt6-l1g102
Under the 1972 Act there is no right to attend a council meeting and make a transmission of the meeting whilst it is taking place, or to make recordings of any meeting, this applies to all Local Authorities. Therefore the Council is obliged to consider specific requests to use media such as ‘twitter’. Following requests the Council has authorised the Manchester Evening News, Tameside Advertiser and Tameside Reporter to use twitter in each of the Council meetings they have requested to do so, as duly accredited representatives of the press, as defined in the Local Government Act 1972. Examples of the ‘twitter’ which has taken place at Tameside Council meetings are at the following links:
http://www.tamesideadvertiser.co.uk/news/s/1193501_council_tax_to_go_up_by_over_2_per_centhttp://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/s/1186956_council_meetings__our_online_archive
As you can see the Council allows the use of ‘twitter’ during Council meetings by duly accredited representatives of the press as part of its commitment to increasing involvement in the democratic process. Given that the Council does allow duly accredited representatives of the press to use twitter to cover Council meetings I have not addressed your further questions which are based on the assumption that the Council has banned the use of ‘twitter’.
I’d be interested to hear if any other bloggers have encountered similar issues with access to public meetings.
Democracy Club returns this week
Manchester bloggers, and anyone else interested in how people can use social media to get involved in the next election, are invited to another Democracy Club event on Thursday.
The people behind MySociety.org are running a second night in the city – this time at MadLab.
And there’s now a Facebook group for the event whih can be found here.
The event at MadLab (36-40 Edge Street) runs from 6-9pm on Thursday, February 4.
PCSOs recruited to newspaper hyperlocal initiative
Brighton’s Argus is to tap into the city’s network of PCSOs to provide content for its network of hyperlocal websites – blogging their beat you could say.
Web editor Jo Wadsworth told me that the officers will be working alongside students that have also been recruited to cover stories for the 25 sites.
After training from Jo, the community police officers will be able to upload their appeals and news directly to the sites and she’s also hoping they’ll develop into forums similar to one currently running in Preston Park.
As reported in the Press Gazette this morning, the newspaper has been working with the training organisation Journalist Works, activity which has been going on for over a year with the students pitching in material to the websites for the past six months.
The contributions are unpaid and are in many ways treated as an extension of the sort of work experience commonly on offer across local newspapers, the difference being that the blogs allow those participating a greater sense of ownership of the project.
To that end, the bloggers will receive traffic stats and other analytics plus training seminars on practical skills and going offline with social events is in the pipeline for next year.
The content expected will largely be text and pictures although the students are already creating weekly video vox pops (the latest here) and moving activity into social networks including Twitter and Facebook.
Journalists? Bloggers? Citizens? Who are these people?

Talking about local
This weekend’s first unconference event for those running local community websites raised some fascinating issues – not least in areas of ethics and access.
Bringing together people from across the UK to share skills, knowledge and experience meant Talk About Local 09 quickly revealed some of the issues for these self-publishers, community activists, bloggers and journalists.
And how these people are considered lies at heart of these issues – what do we call someone who’s taken it on themselves to start a website for the local community and how should they be treated?
It was clear from listening to their experiences that there’s no consensus on this. At the one extreme, local councils had denied access and even been accused of making late-night pressuring calls to remove material, while at the other end of the scale, some more enlightened council press officers treated the new news sources in the same way as the established local newspaper.
As I pointed out in The Guardian piece on this issue, the governing body the National Association for Local Authorities is reviewing its stance, but one thing’s for sure, the authorities are not moving quickly enough to properly reflect the reality of the changed local news landscape.
One of the participants in Saturday’s event thinks the issue is one of perception of who brings ‘the truth’, as a posting on the blog Culturing Stuff says;
“Just lately it seems as though every institution we hold dear, has some kind of skeletal defect waiting to be discovered if we decide to open the cupboard door. So with this in mind let’s revert back to the point… How come blogging is blogging and the news is THE NEWS (all official and truthful) and is Bloggin seen as a lesser being, just because the format has no established rules or code of conduct?”
All this appears to lead us back to one of the debates circulating last week about transparency and it is perhaps that, in the end, which will provide the measure of whether something is regarded as credible or truthful by the authorities currently keeping the gate of information sources.
Any journalists – or council press officers – want to comment?
* See more pictures at the Flickr pool for Tal09 and dip into the day’s debates with this Tweetdoc.
Bloggers in demand from brands
Whatever you blog about, chances are you’ve been approached recently by a big brand looking for coverage.
And although I’ve heard about this happening across the city, it isn’t just a Manchester thing – witness the Midlands based mom blogger Linda Jones’ recent Disney-funded trip exclusively for bloggers.
Such a non-press press trip for a major holiday company would have been unthinkable just a few years ago and is a clear example of a shift in marketing strategy that I’ve a feeling we will see more of going forward – afterall what better way to engage with a well-defined target audience than through niche publications such as blogs?
(I have contacted the Disney press office to ask what made them decide to handle the trip in this way and to see how they will gauge its success. Hopefully a comment will be forthcoming.)
It’s an issue that has promoted some interesting conversations in recent weeks about the ethics of taking freebies in return for words. It’s an issue which journalists previously had to deal with – a fine line between product trial and advertorial. (Although, as I’ve posted on here previously, for some reason press trips to exotic locations often seem to skip happily under the radar!)
As there’s no guidelines on these sort of issues (and long may that remain the case), it’s a matter for each individual blogger to develop their own ‘code of conduct’ . I’m regularly asked to try out food products and have developed these rules of engagement;
1. The relationship is fully disclosed in the blog post – the company that has provided the product named plus the fact the product was supplied for free.
2. If I don’t like, think it’s poor, over-priced or whatever – I say so. Just because it’s free, doesn’t buy support or favour.
I’d be interested to hear any thoughts on these, or from any other blogger who has attempted to draw up their own personal code of conduct in these matters.
It’s a topic that’s currently under discussion within the Manchester Bloggers group – join us on Facebook here.
A PR company is hoping to sponsor a future meet up in return for being able to engage directly with bloggers who have a music based audience – isn’t that what used to happen with press briefings for entertainment journos? Changing world indeed!
But proving the tried and trusted inducmenets are still the best in the new world, free alcohol is the offer for bloggers at what is being billed as a “blog launch” for the Cutting Room Experiment happening on Thursday evening at 6-7:30 at the Bay Horse, Manchester. Read more about that inititiative on The Manchizzle blog here.
The Manchester blogger, theTelegraph and the Budget
For a short time this afternoon, visitors to the Telegraph’s dedicated online Budget coverage were treated to a stream of expletives and plenty of less offensive general silliness of the “widdle and poo” variety.
No its publishing system hadn’t been hacked, it was all part of an initiative to enable users of the micro-blogging platform twitter to post their own thoughts on this year’s Budget using the online tool Twitterfall.
By posting short messages known as tweets with the tags #Budget09 or including words such as Alistair Darling, messages appeared uncensored in the right hand side of this page.
Journalists at the newspaper watched as streams of inappropriate messages poured into the site before the decision was taken to pull the plug on the experiment.
One of the main protagonists was the Manchester blogger known as JoeThe Dough. He captured his first naughty tweet for posterity here on his Flickr account.
He’s since been rather apologetic about it saying: ” hmmm. Sorry Daily Telegraph. I think if you’d ridden that our for another hour, it would actually have been useful.”
And maybe it would – those who complain that newspapers are aloof and non-inclusive should welcome an opportunity to participate in such a nationally important debate as the Budget.
A Telegraph insider tells me the paper may re-instate the service later as previous use of Twitterfall during the G20 debate resulted in no such problems.
In the meantime, you can read more about today’s events here at The Guardian’s tech pages.





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