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  1. ruaidhri O'Cruadhlaoich

    Excellent piece of reporting! I’m looking forward to the next article. It’s not easy for citizens to know who is influencing our elections or how candidates are posturing for votes. We hear so much of the same rhetoric from political parties that often we don’t listen to the actual message even if we think we have figured it out. Thanks for showing me how candidates are aligning themselves and with which special interest groups. It gives me a better idea of who they will have to nod to if elected. Good stuff! My check is in the mail! (for VTdigger)

  2. Stan Wilber

    I’m glad business is lining up behind Dubie. That should give Vermonters an idea of who they support to create jobs around here. We need jobs and opportunity people and the Democrats talk the talk, but don’t walk the walk. Period

  3. walter carpenter

    “the Democrats talk the talk, but don’t walk the walk. Period”

    And how many jobs has Vermont lost with Jim Douglas, Jim = jobs, as governor? This even before the great recession struck — another job killing measure handed to us by the GOP? Douglas/Dubie will create jobs alright — in China, but not in the green mountains, which is what these people want. This is scary, but not surprising. Thanks so much for the great reporting in bringing this out in the open.

  4. Ron Pulcer

    Anne, et al,

    Thank you for all your hard work and effort to unearth this information.

    It is interesting that the State of Vermont will only provide this information in a “spreadsheet” and not via an easy to use database with web search capability. Either the State of VT can’t afford it, or the politicians don’t want us to know who is funding these campaigns.

    I look forward to seeing your other reports on the five Democratic candidates.

    Does your WordPress blog software allow for separate database to be setup for campaign funding info?

    Maybe you have already done this, but you could take the individual sheets (pages) in spreadsheet and export as CSV (comma delimited format) file, and then import into a desktop DB like Microsoft Access. They you might be able to link together the tables, and possibly automate some of your manual efforts. If you need some assistance with this going forward let me know.

    Finally, I have to say I am long overdue in sending a check to VTDigger for all the fine reporting over the last year that I have been reading your website.

    I am not planning on donating to anyone in either party this year. All of these candidates have been in elective office for years. So to me, their actions speak louder than the words in their political advertising (paid for by the above mentioned funders). I may donate time to one or more candidates, but not money. It is ridiculous how much money they spend on campaigns.

    Thanks again for your reporting. I finally am in a position to donate to VTDigger, and will be doing so shortly. After C-SPAN, I think you have one of the best news sites I have seen long awhile.

  5. Ron Pulcer

    Anne,

    I would like to offer a “clarification” to your statement:

    “More than 300 pages of campaign finance report spreadsheets, which are not available in searchable database format on the Secretary of State’s Web site, were analyzed by hand.”

    http://vermont-elections.org/elections1/71510dubieb.pdf

    Actually, this is NOT a spreadsheet. It is a PDF file which contains various “scanned” documents, including the “printouts” FROM a spreadsheet. Not only is this data not searchable, but you would have to attempt to SCAN it in again to capture the text. But these politicians are sneaky: They (or their staff) placed the documents in the scanner at a slight angle. Therefore, anyone who prints from PDF and then tries to rescan the images may have some troubles, depending on the quality of their OCR scanner software (optical character reader).

    I have a question for Secretary of State Deb Markowitz, and Governor Douglas, and EVERY other candidate for Secretary of State this year:

    “When is Vermont going to get an online searchable database with campaign finance information which every citizen can search?”

    “What steps do you plan to take as an elected official to achieve this level of transparency regarding campaign funding?”

    Anne, could you please ask these question the next time you speak with these candidates?

    I work in the IT field, and I chuckle every time Governor Douglas mentions his E-State Initiative. Check out this press release from Gov. Douglas’ Inaugural Address of January 4, 2007:

    http://governor.vermont.gov/priorities/e-state_Initiative_VTA_Briefing_2007.pdf

    “I propose that by 2010, Vermont be the nation’s first true “e-state””

    Yeah right!?!

    E-State should be about more than broadband coverage. It should also include access to important information. If this information was in a searchable database, you could still access it via “dialup” Internet access.

    The fact that the State of Vermont only has PDF files of scanned images of printouts of spreadsheets in ridiculous.

    I will be writing an email to all the candidates for Governor about a searchable online database for election year 2012.

    Thanks again for all your hard work. This must have been taken many, many hours to comb through this information.

  6. Paul Donovan

    A database of campaign finance would be very useful, but after years of being told that government is larded with fat and can be cut without consequences, there’s no way they can afford it. Welcome to smaller government.

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