Category Archives: Tips and tricks

Announcing Help Me Investigate Welfare

We’re launching a new site to help people investigating issues relating to the welfare system. 

Help Me Investigate Welfare is published by Chie Elliott, who is investigating the end of the Travel to Interview scheme.

Chie will not just be blogging about her progress but also broader information about the welfare system itself, including useful data and information; profiles of key individuals; the laws and regulations that affect welfare; and updates on welfare-related stories and investigations both in the mainstream media and blogs.

The site is part of the new Help Me Investigate: Networks project

Working with Chie are Teo Beleaga, Kristina Khoo and Charlotte Hawkins. They are looking for contributors so if you want to know more about the welfare system – or have experiences you’d like to share – let them know.

Announcing Help Me Investigate Health

Today we're launching a new site to help people investigating issues relating to the health service.?

Help Me Investigate Health will provide resources on sources of data and information on the health service; profiles of key players; useful laws and regulations to be aware of; and updates on health-related stories and investigations both in the mainstream media and blogs.

The site is part of the new Help Me Investigate: Networks project. Already on the site is a video of tips on investigating health from British Medical Journal reporter Deborah Cohen, and data on GP surgeries. We'll be publishing further data and other posts in the coming months.

If you are curious about the health system and want to get involved please get in touch.

How does Help Me Investigate: Networks work?

HMI:Networks aims to provide 2 things: 

A set of resources to help people who want to investigate; and

A place to connect with other people who want to investigate

The second relies on the first, so if you can contribute any knowledge – however small – on your own progress in exploring the health, education or welfare systems, it will make a big difference in providing a place for others to pitch in.

Why networks?

The project is based on the experiences of the original Help Me Investigate project, which helped people collaborate to successfully investigate questions ranging from local authority spending to misleading claims by a publisher.

Since then increasing numbers of people are using the web to both ask questions and share the answers. The confidence to ask questions of power – and the ability to get answers – is growing.

We need to be able to find each other and share experiences; to be able to access useful resources; and to raise awareness of the results.

But the idea of a central site where all those investigations take place has various weaknesses, so we’re focusing on supporting the various networks of people who are already investigating – or who want to find out how to.

The central HMI blog, then, will continue to provide general guidance on areas such as investigating bribery, writing FOI requests, and analysing the results. If there’s an area you want guidance on, let us know.

The specialist sites – initially on health, education and welfare – will publish specific information on those fields. That might include who the key players are and their connections; useful laws and regulations to be aware of; and sources of data and information that can help answer questions.

The sites will also link to stories and investigations in that field – not just in the mainstream media but across blogs and forums.

Each specialist site will have their own site editor. If you want to be a site editor or contributor, let us know in the comments or via email to paul@helpmeinvestigate.com.

Want to help hold power to account?

Today I am launching a new?Help Me Investigate?project called Help Me Investigate: Networks. And I need your help.

Help Me Investigate: Networks aims to provide help to anyone who wants to investigate public interest issues.

There are 3 ways you can help:

1. Join the network

One of the biggest problems when investigating public interest is being able to find people who can help. Perhaps you have worked in a particular sector? Or have studied the laws and regulations relating to it? Perhaps you have experience of writing FOI requests, or organising awareness-raising events?

If you have knowledge or experience that you'd be willing to pass on at some point, add yourself to the?private contact list.

2. Contribute to one of the site blogs

Help Me Investigate is hosting sites covering health, education and welfare. If you want to find out how to investigate – or are already investigating – issues related to any of these areas, please get in touch via paul@helpmeinvestigate.com or the blog comments, and the site editors will help you get stuck in.

3. Contribute to an investigation – or add a new one

If you want to contribute to one of the investigations taking place (not all of which are public), or want to investigate an area that isn't already covered by Help Me Investigate then let me know on paul@helpmeinvestigate.com and I will try to help you get started.

A post detailing how HMI:Networks will work will be coming later on this blog.

Finding documents online – FindThatFile

Here's a potentially useful search engine if you're specifically looking for documents:?http://www.findthatfile.com

findthatfile.com?allows you to narrow your search by filetype in a way that is a little bit more powerful than Google's own advanced search facility (and more intuitive). Filetypes include?PDFs, documents (DOC, TXT, etc), audio, video, RAR and ZIP compressed files.?

(Strangely spreadsheets are not included, for which you might want to try the excellent Zanran).

The site also has an API, which may be useful if you want to find documents related to a long list kept in a spreadsheet.

Nicole Boivin from Find That File?says:

"We open each file, identify its author, title, contents, text extracts and all kinds of goodies that nobody else does.? We also search more places than anyone else : Web, FTP, Usenet, Metalink and P2P (ed2k/emule) including 47 file types and 557+ file extensions including over 239 file upload services."

New mailing list for FOI and data journalists in Europe

Brigitte Alfter, a specialist in using FOI laws across Europe (often called ‘wobbing’) has emailed about a new mailing list on the topic. 

Established via the Wobbing.eu network, she says: 

“The idea is to share information, experience, developments, new stories, get advice from colleagues and give advice to others.
 
“The list was installed after a meeting in May in Brussels, where we founded a European Data Journalism Network including CAR pioneers, the Farmsubsidy team, FOI journalists and programmers.”
 

You can sign up and contribute at http://www.wobbing.eu/page/network

How to use the Help Me Investigate blog to find specific advice

If you're looking for help on something specific on this blog the best way is to use the tags on the right hand column. This only displays some of the tags so click on 'View all XXX tags' to see the full list.

Posts are tagged in all sorts of ways, but the resulting web addresses are pretty consistent. To see all articles giving help on Freedom of Information (FOI), for example, go to:?

For posts on Environmental Information Regulations (EIR):

The Audit Commission Act:

Planning:

Computer Assisted Reporting:

Companies:

And so on.

If there's an area that's not covered that you'd like us to cover, please leave a comment to let us know. And if you'd like to contribute your own post, all the better!

VIDEO: Helena Bengtsson’s tips on finding stories in data

Helena Bengtsson is a Database Editor at Sveriges Television in Sweden, interrogating data for news stories. After speaking at the Balkan Investigative Reporters Network Summer School in Croatia, as we waited for our flights at Zagreb airport I asked her what tips she would give to people trying to find stories in a dataset.

VIDEO: Drew Sullivan’s tips on investigating people and businesses

Drew Sullivan is a trainer of investigative journalists with a particular interest in corruption and organised crime. In this short video he gives his tips on investigating people and businesses: look for where they have made a mark – their births, partnerships, separations, deaths, connections and purchases.

New Code of Practice for LA Transparency

At the end of September, the Department for Communities and Local Government produced a new code of practice which aims to encourage Local Authorities to improve their openness and transparency. The goal is that the code will encourage the publication of more Local Authority data, which will in turn improve local knowledge and ‘spark more improvements in the way services are delivered’.

Communities Secretary Eric Pickles seems very impressed with the new code saying “The code sets out clear expectations. It will help unlock more information and increase accessibility for everyone, taking us one step closer to our ambition to be the most transparent government in the world.”

It all sounds very good, but what does the new code bring to the table? Overall the message is quite clear – local authorities should publish their data by default. It seems good in theory, but local authorities already have a great justification for publishing their information. The increasing cost of complying with Freedom of Information (FOI) requests was said to be around £34m in November 2010 and anecdotal evidence suggests the number of requests are continuing to rise. Making more data available – and in a way which it is easily located – would help authorities to cut the workload and cost of dealing with FOI requests.

On that basis it’s easy to see why a number of Local Authorities have already adopted some of the points within the code. For example, one of the minimum requirements set out by the code is that expenditure over £500 is published, but even the accompanying press release notes that currently Nottingham City Council is the only council not already doing this on a regular basis – so is there any need to include this?

The press release goes on to say that “ministers are minded to make the Code a legally binding requirement to ensure authorities can be held fully accountable to the local people they serve.” Even if this becomes the case, there are already numerous Local Authorities who can’t – or don’t – comply with transparency laws that already exist.

In the short term the code should aid FOI requesters in their pursuit of information, by providing them with official guidelines with which to base their requests. It may even help to reinforce the idea that the Government are in favour of greater transparency. In the longer term I imagine some of the more upstanding Local Authorities will implement this new code of practice – a few might even go further. It will be interesting to see how the code is implemented in some of the more transparency shy Local Authorities though, after all it’s these authorities that generally hold the more interesting information.