Tag Archives: HMI

Announcing Help Me Investigate Education

Want to know more about how – and if – the education system works? Today we’re launching a new site to help people investigate issues relating to the education sector. 

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

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

We are looking for contributors so if you are passionate about health get in touch.

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.

The Climate Camp story continues…

On 23rd August last year, it was widely reported that “a substance similar to diesel or vegetable oil was poured onto the carriageways” that made up the A720 and A8 roads of Edinburgh.

As a result, protests took place where “hundreds of campaigners spent a week occupying the Gogarburn grounds of RBS’ headquarters protesting against what they believed were environmentally damaging investments”.

The Help Me Investigate investigation began with the legitimacy of the ‘oil slick’ claims, but eventually evolved, alongside The Guardian’s investigations, into the protests themselves.

Yet still, over four months later, Lothian & Borders Police have not released information relating to the costs of the protests, claiming Section 17 (information not found).

The first and second Freedom Of Information Requests were stalled, with Lothian & Borders Police originally claiming that “it will take some time before all costs (expenses etc) have been accounted for and I would therefore suggest that you re-apply for this information in about two month’s time”, and then, come October, announcing that “it is unlikely that this information will be fully collated until the end of October (at the very earliest) and I would therefore suggest that you re-apply after that time”.

The Guardian found similar roadblocks, and with this update last week, it seems that they are still no closer to finding any answers.

The Guardian tells us that “on three occasions since August we have used the Freedom of Information Act to ask the local police force to tell us the cost of policing the protests” but all have been refused.

The report also references the Help Me Investigate findings relating to traffic logs on the day of the alleged oil-spill.

The best quote to leave the story so far on is this:

“The Force Information Unit recommend you resubmit your FOI early in the New Year, as they hope to have a figure available in January.”

We’ll see.