I began attending
council meetings in the late spring of 2006, starting with the
meeting where our former city manager was fired. I took some notes
by hand, but mostly spent my time listening and learning. In October
I began bringing a laptop to council meetings and typing notes as I
listened. I realized, as long as I was doing that, I may as well
make them available to other citizens who might want a summary of the
meetings more detailed than the official minutes, without having to
watch many hours of council meetings. Therefore I offered them to
Maplewood Voices, where they are published on the web.
Taking these notes has
been an important part of my learning process about the city council
and Maplewood government. Do you remember writing term papers in
high school? I think part of the idea of term papers is that to
organize information and rephrase it in your own words, you have to
understand it first, and the whole process really helps you remember it.
Or, to use another comparison, if you've ever worked on a car engine
or anything mechanical, you know there's a world of difference
between looking over some diagrams versus sticking your hands in,
taking it apart, and putting it back together.
Anyway, as I wrote
these notes, I had to try and understand what people were trying to
communicate during a meeting, and restate it by typing while
continuing to listen to the next thing being said. I discovered that
it's a lot more challenging to take notes on the fly that other
people are supposed to be able to understand, compared to scribbling
generally indecipherable notes to myself. On the bright side, the
more you do it, the easier it becomes. As I figured out the
ins-and-outs of more issues before the council, I found it a lot
easier to understand and record what people said on the those topics,
and I think the quality of the notes has therefore improved over
time.
-John Nephew