“Sunlight is the best antiseptic” — and yes, we stole the line
Why our new Document Library matters — and why FOIA isn’t enough in Superior, Wisconsin
Icy Sidewalks and Even Colder Politics
Let’s get real: Our forefathers weren’t pitching six‑figure salaries, lifetime tenures and sprawling bureaucracies so officials could luxuriate in comfortable power. They envisioned citizens who served, then went home to tend fields, mind the small businesses, live real lives — keeping government lean, fresh, and corrupt‑resistant.
As Thomas Jefferson wrote, “The policy of the American government is to leave their citizens free, neither restraining nor aiding them in their pursuits.”
And: “The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others.”
In other words: Serve the people. Don’t become the people’s overlords.
The Voters Have Spoken — And They’re Tired of the B.S.
In Superior, under Jim Paine’s leadership, city government spending has exploded and our taxes have steadily climbed.
Yet what did taxpayers get in exchange for those extra dollars?
– Not greater transparency.
– Not proactive disclosure.
– Instead: a computer‑file cabinet labeled “FOIA request” — meaning you have to ask, wait, maybe pay, hope, maybe never get what you want.
Let’s be clear: That’s not open government. It’s permission‑based information, which might as well be “Ask the City nicely to tell you what we’re up to.”
FOIA Doesn’t Cut It — Here’s Why
FOIA is the right of citizens to ask for documents. Great. But let’s be brutally honest:
It requires you to ask. You don’t get it automatically.
It allows delay, redaction, hoops, maybe none of the context you need.
Worst of all: In practice, some governments (yes, ours) use FOIA‑systems as speed‑bumps. “Wait here while we identify you. Are you serious? Why do you want it? Our cost‑estimate is…”
And meanwhile spending balloons. Accountability shrinks. The public watch‑dog? Snoozing.
As Jefferson warned: “The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground.”
That’s what happens when transparency is reactive, not automatic.
The Document Library Solution — Because Enough Is Enough
At SoupNutz.net we’re not waiting for City Hall to wake up. We believe:
Taxpayers should have access to the documents they fund — without having to beg for them.
Documents should be posted publicly in a Document Library — searchable, downloadable, available to all.
FOIA should be a backup, not the frontline.
So here’s the deal: We’ve built the Document Library. We want your documents. Yes — yours. If you’ve got city contracts, meeting minutes, emails, spreadsheets — send them to sunlightinsuperior@mailfence.com
We’ll publish them. Because in a “serve‑then‑go‑home” style government, transparency is the rule, not the exception.
Government Does Not Exist for Itself
Remember: The government isn’t the endgame. It’s the tool. You the people are the endgame.
James Madison once wrote: “A popular Government, without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or, perhaps, both.”
In Superior spending has exploded in the last 8 years under Paine and the “access to information” is now tucked behind Just FOIA requests — we’re teetering dangerously toward that farce.
We demand sunlight. The Document Library is the stick; you are the lever. City hall, the fulcrum that can’t hide.
Final Crossing Signal
This isn’t about politics‑as‑usual. It’s about reclaiming civic power. If you pay the taxes, you own the documents. If the City can spend it, you should see it.
Send your files. We’ll publish them. We’ll shine that light so hard the cockroaches of secrecy can’t hide.
Mic drop.
#FoldersOverPhotoshoots
#CityHallLeaksFasterThanWiFi
This March 7, 2025 federal complaint by Mikayla LeRette alleges that the City of Superior and former Captain Thomas Champaigne violated her workplace rights and constitutional protections. The filing details inadequate lactation accommodations and the warrantless use of a GPS tracking device on her police vehicle.
This University of Wisconsin–Superior report details 72 traffic citations issued by campus police between June 1 and September 25, 2025. Organized by officer, it lists violations, locations, fine amounts, and mandatory court appearances, totaling $11,469.90 in unpaid fines. The document offers a clear snapshot of campus-area traffic enforcement for accountability and public review.
This December 5, 2022 message from Mayor Jim Paine seeks an update from the Wisconsin DNR on the Paine Property conservation easement review. The email highlights the City’s need for preliminary guidance to prepare for potential next steps and maintain progress before year-end.
This November 21, 2022 email documents ongoing coordination between the City of Superior and the Wisconsin DNR regarding the Paine Property conservation easement. It confirms that the DNR is preparing a formal response and outlines upcoming communication steps involving city staff and regional DNR leadership.
This November 18, 2022 correspondence documents the Wisconsin DNR’s update to the City of Superior on its forthcoming response to the Paine Property easement proposal. The email confirms active review, internal coordination, and plans for direct discussion with city officials.
This email set from August to November 2022 documents coordination between the City of Superior, the Wisconsin DNR, and the Paine family regarding updates and questions surrounding the Paine Property conservation easement. The chain highlights efforts to clarify historical records, address compliance concerns, and identify next steps for managing the easement and related habitat protections.
Filed July 31, 2025, Glen R. Bayless sues RBC Capital Markets, advisor Patrick Pfahl, the City of Superior, and Captain Jeffrey Harriman. He alleges interference with a planned sale of his practice and wrongful failure to return electronics seized in 2022, seeking damages, injunctive relief, and a jury trial.
In a March 16, 1982 order, Chief Judge Crabb allowed plaintiffs’ §1983 claims over alleged police dog attacks to proceed against the City of Superior, finding the complaint plausibly alleged a policy or custom. The court dismissed pendent state claims because plaintiffs cited the wrong dog-liability statutes.
At its October 7, 2025 meeting, the Superior Common Council received the Mayor’s 2026 budget presentation and voted to postpone action pending a November 4 public hearing. Highlights included a 1.55% levy decrease driven by reduced debt service, seed funding for part-time Community Service Officers and firefighter mental-health checkups, and CIP placeholders for clerk archiving and expanded DTA service.
A 2014 dashboard-camera video showing Superior police officer George Gothner striking Natasha Lancour sparked protests and a state investigation. Years later, the City of Superior settled the case for $50,000 without admitting wrongdoing, highlighting ongoing concerns about police accountability and community trust in municipal oversight.