Backroom deals in our backyards How government secrecy harms our communities and the local heroes fighting back

Miranda S. Spivack

Book - 2025

"A work of investigative reporting on five "accidental activists" who fight back against local and state governments to keep their communities safe"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : The New Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Miranda S. Spivack (author)
Physical Description
xxix, 221 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781620978559
  • Introduction: Hiding in Plain Sight
  • 1. Small Town, Big Secrets
  • 2. Public Roads, Hidden Dangers
  • 3. The Safety Gear Detective
  • 4. Toxic Brew, Concealed Deals
  • 5. Chipping Away at the New Blue Wall
  • 6. Playbook for Accidental Activists
  • Conclusion: We Can Overcome the Threat to Democracy That Secrecy Poses
  • Appendix: Resources for Accidental Activists
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Spivack debuts with a stunning survey of "accidental activists" who faced down harm to their communities arising from malfeasance and deception in local government. Spivack argues that lack of transparency is the main avenue by which fraud and incompetence are able to flourish at the local level, and that the problem is growing, contributing to the erosion of the American public's trust in "democratic governance." Her examples are deeply upsetting, each one more indicative of a society whose priorities have gone dangerously out of whack than the last. She profiles Massachusetts resident Diane Cotter, who discovered that her husband Paul's prostate cancer was likely linked to toxic chemicals in his firefighting uniform, but was met with extreme hostility by the firefighters' union because the flame retardant suit's manufacturer paid to advertise in union publications, and Maryland resident Richard Boltuck, who wanted to get a left-turn signal installed at a high-crash-incident intersection near his home, but was opposed for nearly a decade by a shadowy cabal of government contractors with ties to local politicians. Indeed, it's the fad for privatization and outsourcing to contractors, Spivack persuasively demonstrates, that is generating a "nexus growing secrecy" in local government, as kickbacks and preferential treatment become commonplace. The result is an enraging exposé of a nationwide culture of corruption. (May)

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