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Social Media Contract Causes a Stir in Fort Wayne

BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, November 16 2010

Cities and towns across the country might be rushing Gov 2.o-ify, but embracing political innovation doesn't mean that political squabbles evaporate into the ether. In Fort Wayne, Indiana, a $72,000 contract with a Chicago firm to help the city get up and running on Twitter and other social media platforms has become ammunition in the upcoming mayoral race. County Council President Paula Hughes is also a candidate for mayor who has been energetically employing Facebook and Twitter in her campaign to oust current mayor Tom Henry. Hughes is going after Henry for bringing on an outside, and even out-of-state, firm called Carolyn Grisko & Associates  to help in doing what the county council somehow managed to figure out on their own. Hughes posted on her Facebook page yesterday afternoon a gently mocking open letter to Mayor Henry which wraps with an offer to help:

We would be happy to share our experience, expertise and knowledge in this area with you, and to help you craft your own strategy. We are interested in being good government neighbors with you – consider this our offer of the loan of a cup of sugar. We are interested in local government being cooperative and interactive. It’s time that we realize that we are all in this together – City and County – and that our citizens don’t care which of us does what. They just want to know what’s going on and that their resources are being used wisely.

Give us a call; send us a message, type out a tweet. We’ll be here and we would love to help you get up to speed on what the County has been doing all along -- for free.

By the way, all this talk of local Indiana politics got me thinking, for some reason, about the show "Parks and Recreation." And it turns out, rather awesomely, that the fictional town of Pawnee, Indiana has an 'official' website. It's chock full of truly useful information for Pawneers, like the notice of a mistaken ball call at Bingo night: "The correct ball was B-11. Our deepest apologies." The good people Fort Wayne could take some lessons from those folks.

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