For the first time, Cleveland students have participated in documenting local government meetings. Cleveland Documenters teamed up with Cleveland Metropolitan School District’s Civics 2.0 program to train and support students who virtually attended several Cleveland City Council Public Safety Committee meetings.

The students, Aaliyah Abdul-Basit, Kayden Ferris, Henry Hodge, Elijah McWilliams, Owen Pennington and Chardon Black, followed up on questions they had from the meetings to write stories for the students’ Unsilenced Voices blog

CMSD’s Civics 2.0 program was launched by Gayle Gadison, the social studies manager for the district, as a way to create pathways to civic involvement for students. Students participants have worked on public policy and public health issues related to gun violence, learned about systems of government and contributed to Unsilenced Voices with the help of volunteer adviser Conor Morris, Ideastream Public Media’s education reporter. 

Cleveland Documenters trains and pays residents to attend and take notes at public meetings. Documenters have covered nearly 1,000 meetings since the effort launched in 2020 and more than 600 Cleveland area residents have participated. 

Students learned about their rights to attend public meetings and how to summarize the legislation and topics discussed. They covered meetings when City Council members discussed and voted on steeper fines for parents whose children violated curfew, police department staffing, a new county jail, Mayor Justin Bibb’s public safety initiatives and the use of surveillance technology such as license plate readers. Students then followed up to ask public officials questions and each wrote stories. 

Read the students’ latest work:


Cleveland Metropolitan School District student Elijah McWilliams Credit: Unsilenced Voices blog

Councilman Polensek stakes out his position on police staffing and crime

Cleveland City Council’s safety committee has discussed police staffing levels frequently in recent months.

Councilman Michael Polensek, chair of the safety committee, has voiced concerns about the city having fewer police officers than its budgeted. I was curious about the topic.



Cleveland Metropolitan School District student Kayden Ferris Credit: Unsilenced Voiced blog


Cleveland Metropolitan School District student Owen Pennington. Credit: Unsilenced Voices blog

What do Clevelanders need to know about the (vacant) public safety inspector general role?

Cleveland City Council’s safety committee has discussed the need to hire an inspector general over police, a position which currently isn’t filled.

While covering those meetings for the Cleveland Documenters, I was curious about this job and what the inspector general will do. Cleveland reportedly hasn’t had a person in that role since 2021.


Community and Special Projects Editor (she/her)
I foster civic and accountability reporting that is inspired by and responsive to community questions, curiosity and demand so Clevelanders have the opportunities they deserve to understand and participate in local democracy and build power.

Cleveland Documenters pays and trains people to cover public meetings where government officials discuss important issues and decide how to spend taxpayer money.