May 6, 1996

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:




Many years ago, when I was a young immigrant with very limited knowledge of English-stuck without money, education or support of any kind in a Canadian basement apartment with a savagely handicapped child-somebody sent a social worker my way to check on how I was doing.

My son, then three or so, had a horrendous gagging problem as part of his overal paralysis, and feeding him was Nightmare Magnified. When I had finally succeeded in getting him to manage a whole doughnut, that was a major victory. There sat this social worker on my couch, and I, elated at my triumph, told her, all flushed and happy: "All day, I feed him doughnuts." I really meant to say ". . . every day" but linguistic subtleties were not my worry in those years.

That simple sentence went into my youngster's "Progress Folder", thanks to Canadian bureaucracy. For what this social worker wrote was this: "This child is badly malnourished. All his mother does is feed him doughnuts." My son graduated at age twenty from high school, and that note was still in his folder. For seventeen years or so, every time he had a new teacher, or a new doctor, or a new social worker, I had to defend myself that, no, I never had neglected, maltreated, starved or otherwise abused my child.

That is what falsified records can do.

Against that backdrop, consider the following. It is an excerpt from the "The Cook Report on Internet: The Dark Side in Washington State."

". . . The COOK Report finds that the state of Washington leads the rest of the nation in developing the building blocks of a statewide information infrastructure. What is being "leveraged" there is the Clinton -- Gore push for National Information Infrastructure (NII). NII is touted in commercials by AT&T and others as being kind of warm and friendly communications utopia. But the essence of NII is often in the eye of the beholder. In fact, there is no widely accepted definition of or goals for NII. Instead, it is one of those terms with a definition specific to whomever is talking about it at any given moment.

In the state of Washington what is being constructed is not a service for video on demand; nor is it home shopping. It is a statewide web of state agency networks and interlinked databases. While other states have some NII related projects, we are not aware of any that have the number and scope of those in Washington.

People with whom we talked generally agreed that the citizens of Washington are facing a situation where their privacy is fast disappearing and where the rights to information that they own and should effectively control are being sold out from under them. In the opinion of many to whom we talked, the situation is volatile and may become more so. Even George Lindamood, the outgoing Director of the Department of Information Services, acknowledged that when the citizens of the state understand the totality of what had happened to them, they will be angry.

In order to bring a "competitive environment" to the citizens of the state, Washington State agencies are moving forward to implement new information technology programs. But this information technology is the new hucksterism of the second half of the '90s. With the Clinton Administration pushing it in the first half of the decade, officials from the various departments of state government are lined up at the federal table to make sure they get the technology grants that will make their agencies stand out at home. They are very likely perfectly well-intentioned civil servants - in a hurry to build now and ask questions later. Policy issues, the big picture, privacy and confidentiality concerns are given lip service, but usually put off as being to difficult to deal with now. As these are put off, the web of interconnected communications systems and databases grows and wraps more firmly in place around Washington State residents.

There may be about a year to make meaningful changes before the average citizen is irretrievably caught in the emerging state data web. The only hope that we see is for citizen groups to coalesce, get educated and agree on the objectives for and definition of a state commission on citizen information rights -- one that has legal power to slow down the technocratic juggernaught -- until adequate legal safeguards to protect privacy can be put in place. The citizen's lobby must then sell these objectives to the legislature. If they don't succeed, Washington State may be neither comfortable nor a good place in which to live. It will be a combination of "Brave New World," "Blade Runner" and a digital Singapore transplanted to the Pacific northwest by a seemingly well-intentioned alliance between corporate and political technocratic elites.

One agency that is part of this Washington State web has a database of at-risk four-year-olds that can be linked with databases of violent juveniles, drug use incidence, trade and economic activity. All this information can be mapped matched with census tract and other economic data through a Geographic Information System (GIS). A GIS Database allows many different kinds of information to be overlaid on maps of differing scales according to physical location. GIS was described to us by the Assistant Director of Administrative Services of Community, Trade and Economic Development (CTED), a relatively new state agency, as "the glue that holds all the other disparate information together". The CTED system is under construction.

Someone has obviously decided there is a public purpose to be served in creating a database of at-risk four-year- olds and another of violent offenders. Missing from the Washington State scene is any widespread public understanding either that these and other data bases exist. Also absent is any reasonable means of challenge by the public to state agency use of them. For example, what if CTED were to decide that when a business had narrowed its choice to four potential locations, the final step towards maximum competitiveness for that business would be to show it the population density of at-risk four-year-olds and violent offenders in each of the sites? The business would surely choose to locate in an area with as few undesirables as possible. The potential of information technology to be used in building economic ghettos in Washington State is not generally known let alone an item on the public policy agenda.

This report describes the all ensnaring data web that is being woven in Washington State. Since many of the programs being field tested in Washington are federally backed, what happens there is likely to spread to other states unless we understand what is happening and insist that it be stopped. The spinning of the data web begins in kindergarten -- or even earlier -- when parents are asked to supply their children's Social Security Numbers as identifiers. Goals 2000 and other school restructuring efforts have led to increased data collection about individual students. Educators want to know everything about today's students, even whether they arrive at school "ready to learn." With the help of national business groups and the well-intentioned but perhaps naive support of the Annenberg Foundation, Total Quality Management is the current Band-Aid being applied to a education system that policy makers with the study A Nation at Risk, in the early 1980s declared effectively "broken." Total Quality Management demands that all "relevant" data be gleaned and applied to the process at hand whether it involves manufacturing, or shaping our children's future.

To this end, the educational bureaucrats within the US Department of Education have established a National Center for Education Statistics. The Center has come up with standards for state student record databases and over 500 questions for states and local school districts to choose from in constructing their own systems. Depending on how faithfully the states follow the federal model, what could easily become the student's life long dossier may start with questions like the date of the last dental exam and the condition of soft tissue inside the student's mouth!

Indeed the federal student data handbooks contains fields for the phone number of the students email provider, whether the student is a registered voter and information about the student's post high school employment. If the student moves between states, a national system called SPEEDE/ExPRESS is being put into place to transfer his or her electronic record from one jurisdiction to another. If federal planners have their way, electronic tracking will continue throughout high school and from there into the student's employment.

The product of this nationalized and homogenized school record system -- the graduate -- may ultimately submit electronic portfolios, including teacher evaluations, to area employers via WORKLINK, a national program developed by Educational Testing Service. Under the guise of making school more relevant to the world of work, employers with desirable jobs will be able to glean electronically, from among thousands of area graduates, the few with the cleanest records. Those who don't make the electronic cut may walk their paper records to the nearest McDonalds. . ."

People laugh when I speak of the Global Plantation. Their children and their children's children will not laugh.

Ingrid


Thought for the Day:

"Even if you are on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there."

(Will Rogers)


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