(As distributed by the Vermont Press
Association, during Sunshine Week 2007)
A Sunshine Week Forecast:
Mostly Cloudy, Thin Rays Of Hope On The Horizon
By Patrick Leahy
This third annual Sunshine Week comes
after another year of bleak news for the public’s right to know.
But this year, there also are a few tenuous rays of hope on the
horizon.
For six years we have been treading
water against a tide of White House antagonism toward open and
transparent government. By using ideology to trump science,
muzzling government scientists and experts, reclassifying public
documents, unprecedented use of presidential signing statements to
undercut the public’s right to know that the laws are being
faithfully executed, and undermining key information access routes
like the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the Administration has
shown a corrosive disdain for the free press and the public and
unparalleled efforts to expand government secrecy. It should gall
every taxpaying American, for example, that Dr. James Hansen,
director of NASA’s Goddard Institute and a leading authority on
climate change, was kept away from events where he could share his
research insights with the public – the same American public that
pays the bills for the research Dr. Hansen has been doing.
Ironically, at a time when the federal
government is intent on creating more and more databanks to collect
more and more information about every American, it has become harder
and harder for the American people to learn what their government is
up to.
These have also been fragile times for
FOIA, our bedrock open government law. Now in its fourth decade,
FOIA faces challenges like never before. FOIA shines disinfecting
light on the bad policies and abuses that the government would
rather keep hidden from public view. We can depend on government
agencies to tell us when they’re doing things right. We need FOIA
to find out when they’re not. FOIA is the public’s indispensable
accountability tool.
Last year the public learned through a
FOIA request filed by several human rights organizations that the
Bush Administration has kept vital facts secret about human rights
violations and prisoner abuse in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo
Bay. Other FOIA’d documents revealed extensive contacts between
disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and the Bush White House, including
meetings with former White House official David Safavian.
Yet FOIA’s erosion continues. A
recent study by OpentheGovernment.org found that FOIA requests
continue to rise, while federal agencies still are unable to keep
pace. And the Government Accountability Office reports that federal
agencies had 43 percent more pending FOIA requests in 2006 than
during 2002.
We have pushed and pushed for better
FOIA compliance, and the Bush Administration finally responded with
modest efforts that fall far short of what’s needed. More than a
year after the President’s directive to government agencies to
improve their FOIA services, the huge backlogs remain. A recent
study by the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government found that
the first 13 federal agencies to report FOIA data for 2006 reported
slightly higher FOIA backlogs than the year before. Even more
troubling, the report also found that the percentage of FOIA
requestors who actually got at least some of the information that
they requested fell by 31 percent.
All the more reason for Congress to
step in. And here is where some rays of hope are beginning to break
through. The American people last November sent the rubberstamp
Congress packing, and the new Congress is beginning to do real
oversight again. This week I will once again join Senator John
Cornyn of Texas in a bipartisan effort to reinvigorate FOIA, by
reintroducing the OPEN Government Act -- a collection of commonsense
reforms designed to update FOIA and to reduce processing delays.
Our bill was drafted after extensive consultation with those who use
FOIA to make information available to the public, including news
organizations, bloggers, librarians and public interest
organizations across the political spectrum. Our bill reaffirms
FOIA’s central premise -- that government information belongs to the
American people.
In our state we have a proud history
of caring deeply about good government, government transparency and
conscientious journalism, which helps explain Vermonters’ strong
reaction to the dismissal and shabby treatment of Chris Graff, the
former head of the Associated Press’s Vermont bureau.
Sunshine Week is a chance to take
stock and to recommit to defending the public’s right to know.
Without a vibrant and reinvigorated FOIA, citizens can be kept in
the dark about key policy decisions that directly affect their
lives. Without open government, citizens cannot make informed
choices at the ballot box. Without access to public documents and a
vibrant free press, government decisions can be made in the shadows
-- often in collusion with special interests -- without
accountability. And once eroded, these rights are hard to win
back.
A free, open and accountable democracy
is part of our heritage as citizens of this great and good country.
Many have fought and died to preserve it for us. To each new
generation falls the duty to renew and recharge this inheritance, so
that future generations of Americans can have it, too.
# # # # #
[Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) was
installed in the Freedom Of Information Act Hall of Fame in 1996.
He is the author of the Electronic FOIA Amendments of 1996 and
coauthor of the OPEN Government Act, a comprehensive bill to improve
FOIA’s implementation. He also introduced four FOIA improvement
bills in the 109th Congress, three of them with Sen. John
Cornyn (R-Texas). This week, the third annual Sunshine Week, he
will convene a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on strengthening
FOIA.]
Statement:
Of Sen. Patrick Leahy, Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee, On
Reintroduction Of The Leahy-Cornyn OPEN Government Act
Section-By-Section Analysis:
Openness Promotes Effectiveness In Our National Government Act Of
2007
One Pager:
Leahy-Cornyn Openness Promotes Effectiveness In Our National
Government Act Of 2007
Leahy Op-Ed:
A Sunshine Week Forecast: Mostly Cloudy, Thin Rays Of Hope On The
Horizon,
as distributed by the Vermont Press Association during Sunshine Week
2007
Leahy-Cornyn Op-Ed:
The OPEN Government Act:
An Investment In American Democracy
Text Of Legislation