Search
Close this search box.

Friday, April 26, 2024

Search

Stone Harbor Council Meeting Hacked

Stone Harbor Logo

By Vince Conti

To access the Herald’s local coronavirus/COVID-19 coverage, click here.
STONE HARBOR – Borough Council experienced little difficulty as it moved its governing body meetings to Zoom, in response to COVID-19.
Putting a toe in the water, the council’s first virtual meeting was short, with its customary work session abandoned and the regular meeting agenda kept to essential business only. The meeting went off without any difficulty.
Emboldened, the council added back its work session discussion format. Public participation picked up and attendance, judged by the electronic voice that announces the participants in the meeting, was higher at times than it normally would be at an in-person meeting. The technology allowed the effective sharing of presentation slides.
The May 5 meeting didn’t go as smoothly. Hacking into Zoom meetings for little apparent gain has become a COVID-19 isolation-era sport. On that day, Stone Harbor was the unwelcome recipient of a hack, inserting what Mayor Judith Davies-Dunhour termed, “a lot of profanity and racial slurs” into a necessary borough meeting dealing with an important bond issue.
The rules concerning bond ordinances require certain advertising and notification periods that were put in place to ensure voter awareness of government actions. Calling off the meeting and rescheduling the vote for another day would have set in motion a series of required actions that in turn would delay consideration of the ordinances. The rules also do not allow the governing body to proceed without public access to the meeting.
The result was a 45 minute delay, during which time new access parameters were put in place that allowed the borough to individually admit participants it could verify.
That these meetings held by municipalities across the county go as well as they do is testimony to the hard work of municipal staff who have had to incorporate conferencing technology into a rule-based process of public governance without warning or advanced planning. Now, new vulnerabilities need to be considered and planned for.

Spout Off

Dennis Township – Sorry Democrats, who was it that fought Trump’s immigration policy tooth and nail? Oh right, that was you! So you don’t get to blame Trump for illegal immigrants murdering Americans. I don’t think…

Read More

Del Haven – Imagine that at a rose garden ceremony where a president is about to sign legislation into law, a group opposed to the legislation, breaks onto the White House grounds. They attack security and…

Read More

Wildwood Crest – The UAW’s successful unionization effort at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee — the first successful unionization effort at a car factory in the South since the 1940s — is breaking the…

Read More

Most Read

Print Edition

Recommended Articles

Skip to content