Byย Brent Walth, University ofย Oregon
Itโs spring, and in Americaโs state capitals legislatures are winding up their business and, too often, bringing out theย padlocks.
All 50 states give the public the right to see government records and documents, but many state legislatures are weighing changes in their open-recordsย laws.
These changes rarely end up making our government more transparent. Instead, lawmakers often try to conceal public records from the people who own them โ that is, you andย me.
Public records laws exist to allow us to see into the decision-making of our government. When bureaucrats make efforts to obscure our view into their actions, it serves only to undermine government officialsโย accountability.
It also diminishes the publicโs understanding of, and faith in,ย democracy.
Making Whatโs Public aย Secret
In Massachusetts, lawmakers are making it harder for the public to see elected officialsโ financial disclosureย statements.
In California, the legislature has been considering the shuttering of records that could reveal misconduct or conflicts of interest in publicly fundedย research.
Last year, Washington state lawmakers rushed through a bill that allowed them to hide lawmakersโ calendars and email exchanges with lobbyists. Only after public outrage erupted over the move did the governor veto the measure.
Most efforts to hide public records arenโt asย brazen.
Here in Oregon, our once-robust disclosure law, passed in 1973, is now pockmarked with more than 500 exemptions, many chiseled by bureaucrats wishing to avoid scrutiny or lobbyists seeking to protect theirย clients.
Oregon officials can conceal investigative evidence of wrongdoing by medical professionals โ not just doctors but also dentists, veterinarians and undertakers. Basic information about birth, marriage and deaths is locked away. The pest-extermination industry won a special exemption to keep secret information about bedbug infestations. Oregonโs once-solid disclosure has become so flimsy that it once allowed state officials to declare it was a confidential trade secret to reveal the location of lightning strikes.
The Right toย Know
The fight over public access to government documents has often involved the mundane grist of government, such as studies and budgets and memos andย emails.
This tension over whatโs called the โright to knowโ debates back to the countryโsย founding.
โA popular government,โ as James Madison wrote to a friend, โwithout popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy; or perhapsย both.โ
I spent 30-plus years as a journalist and editor, focusing on investigative reporting on the state and federal levels. Iโve filed hundreds of requests for documents and now teach journalism students to do the same. And I believe the best way to protect these laws of transparency is to put them to use โ and show the public why theyย matter.
In 1966, Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act, the first law that required all federal agencies to make documents public when asked. But in some ways, state public-access laws that were passed as post-Watergate, good-government reforms have a greater role in our everydayย lives.
What the Defense Department has in its files may be of national import, but it can be just as powerful for a community to find out what the local zoning board โ behind closed doors โ is planning for a cityโsย neighborhoods.
Using Yourย Rights
Journalists do perhaps more than anyone to advertise the power of theseย laws.
A study looking at more than 30 years of news stories found that almost all investigative reporting relies on government documents, and nearly half of investigative reporters make a point of telling readers these disclosure laws played a role in prying records out of governmentโsย grip.
Researchers, advocacy groups and businesses are among the most common users of these laws, but anyone can write out a request and hand it to a government agency. (In a pinch, I once scrawled a request on the back of a reporterโs notebook. It worked.) Today, in most states, public officials must work under a deadline to respond to theย request.
And thatโs when things can get difficult, because officials have three big ways to block your access to the publicโsย records.
One is fees. State laws allow government to make you pay for the records, although many have provisions to reduce or waive these costs. In most cases, government can charge only for the actual cost of retrieving, reviewing and copying documents. But those costs can still be high enough to thwartย inquiry.
Another method is delay. Most states have deadlines under which agencies should hand over records, but the waits can range from fewer than 21 days in states such as Vermont and Rhode Island to more than 100 days in Arizona, Mississippi and the District of Columbia. The wait for federal records under the Freedom of Information Act can take much longer โ sometimesย years.
The third way is through more exemptions. Some debates are notย easy.
The Florida legislature recently passed a bill that would prevent disclosure of photos, audio or video recordings of mass shootings, such as the 2018 shooting that killed 17 students and staff members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School inย Parkland.
Supporters say that this exemption could prevent further trauma. But others argue hiding these images makes these tragedies sterile and makes them more likely to occur. The availability of these kinds of images later helped news organizations hold police and school officials accountable for failing to do more to stop the Parkland shooter. The South Florida Sun Sentinel won a Pulitzer this year for its reporting that held those officialsย accountable.
Records Belong toย You
In recent years, a rise of public-records watchdogs, such as Muckrock, has made filing public records requests easier while shining a light on government efforts to close off records. The Student Press Law Center offers a public records letter generator.
Journalists are writing about government efforts to hide documents โ a move that properly puts the heat on government officials and increases their own transparency by showing readers how journalists go about doing theirย jobs.
News outlets in Atlanta banded together to expose the mayorโs secret effort to defy the Georgia public records law. The stories led to a criminal charge against the mayorโs press secretary for improperly withholding records embarrassing to herย boss.
โPublic records are public because they belong to you โ you and other taxpayers paid to create them and, of course, you paid for all the work they record and represent,โ Kevin Riley, editor of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, said during the unfolding scandal.
โSo no one should be looking for ways to keep them secret from you.โ
Brent Walthย is Assistant Professor of Journalism and Communication at theย University of Oregon.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Main image:ย Seattle Times publisher Frank Blethen testifies in February at a public hearing at the Washington legislature against limiting legislative branch disclosure. Credit:ย AP/Ted S.ย Warren
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