Saturday, May 21, 2011

Do you see any problem with the questions the reporter was asking Rahm's press secretary?

Article updated: 5/16/2011 1:19 PM
The questions that Emanuel's press secretary won't answer
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By Chuck Goudie

Once Rahm Emanuel takes the oath and becomes Chicago' s mayor today, you
will be hearing and seeing a lot more of a young woman named Tarrah
Cooper. She is beginning the job of a lifetime, even though she doesn't
have much life time behind her.

Ms. Cooper (who pronounces her first name as Tair-uh, not Tahr-uh) is
going to be the "face" of the Chicago mayor's office, as Mr. Emanuel's
newly anointed press secretary. At the tender age of 25, she is
certainly a fresh face.
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Never having heard of Cooper before Emanuel returned to the Chicago
political scene last fall, I was curious to find out about this person
who would be responsible for espousing the positions and platforms of
Chicago's first new administration in two decades; would be the go-to
contact for information about important daily news stories; or, heaven
forbid, be the public source in the office if there was a calamity of
some kind.

Last month, after learning that the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission had issued a scathing report against Mr. Emanuel's school
superintendent to-be, I contacted Ms. Cooper for a response. The EEOC in
Rochester, N.Y., where Jean-Claude Brizard had been running the public
schools, determined that he had an age, race and gender bias when firing
a top administrator.

I asked Cooper whether this had been known to Rahm Emanuel and why he
nevertheless selected Brizard? Had Emanuel not known? Was Brizard's job
offer being revoked?

In our very first conversation, rather than simply answer the questions,
Ms. Cooper stated that she wished to speak "off the record." I informed
her that I wouldn't have such a conversation, especially not with
someone who is in the business of providing public information.
Seemingly frustrated by that, she said that she'd have to call back.

During a series of subsequent calls and emails, Ms. Cooper waged a
relentless, several-hour campaign to convince me that such a finding by
a federal panel against their choice to run the Chicago schools was not
a news story. Sounding like a robocall, she persisted in the theme that
"this isn't a story."

As we prepared the report for broadcast, Cooper also sent two emails
containing misleading and false information. First she stated that "an
independent investigation found that Mr. Brizard did nothing wrong." But
that report was prepared by a firm hired by Brizard's school board and
hardly independent.

Next she wrote that "a court of law has proved that he did not do
anything wrong."

That was completely false. A civil suit is still in the early stages.
Ms. Cooper, who did not respond to several requests for comment on this
column, just graduated from the famous University of Missouri journalism
school in 2008, so what she learned should still be fresh.

She worked as a reporter on Mizzou's TV station and interned at MTV in
New York.

Before joining the Emanuel for Mayor campaign, she worked at the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security in Washington, D.C., where her bio
states "she helped to manage the Department's messaging, priorities and
actions for numerous national incidents including the H1N1 epidemic, the
December 25th and Times Square attempted bombings, the Haitian
earthquake and the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill." Based on DHS alerts,
it seems she spent considerable time processing forms submitted by
reporters to attend agency events.

At city hall, she succeeds longtime mayoral press secretary Jackie
Heard, who was paid a salary of nearly $180,000 per year. On April 23, I
sent Ms. Cooper a number of questions for this column. They included:

• Is there a set of written guidelines or protocols that you are working
from in dealing with reporters and news organizations?

• How involved is Mr. Emanuel in setting the tone for dealing with the
press and in what manner? Does each story inquiry get run by him?

• Which of these best describes your view as press secretary in dealing
with Chicago's major newspapers and TV and why: Tools for getting out
message as we see it; aimed at embarrassing or uncovering negative
aspects of the administration; a necessary evil that has to be controlled.

• How will your cooperation with news organizations be based on the
nature and tone of their day-to-day coverage?

• Does your youthfulness and lack of experience symbolize what seems to
be administration focused on hiring managers under 35?

• What qualifies you to be press secretary for the mayor of the
third-largest city?

• How much will you be paid?

• What are your career aspirations?

In more than three weeks she has yet to answer any of the questions.
After asking a few times to meet me "off the record," which I declined,
Tarrah Cooper has stopped replying.

It is interesting that the mayor's new press secretary felt no
inhibition about displaying hundreds of personal photos on her public
Facebook page, showing her partying with friends, in beach attire and at
a slot machine.

When you are 25, apparently some things are OK to be put on the record.

• Chuck Goudie, whose column appears each Monday, is the chief
investigative reporter at ABC 7 News in Chicago. The views in this
column are his own and not those of WLS-TV. He can be reached by email
at chuckgoudie@gmail.com and followed at twitter.com/ ChuckGoudie.

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