As FOIA Anniversary And July 4th
Near,
Leahy Presses For Passage
Of The Leahy-Cornyn OPEN Government Act
To Strengthen Nation’s Foremost Right-To-Know Law
WASHINGTON (Wednesday, June
27) – Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.)
Wednesday noted the upcoming 41st anniversary of the Freedom
of Information Act (“FOIA”) and urged lawmakers to pass the Openness
Promotes Effectiveness in our National Government Act (“OPEN Government
Act,” S. 849). The bipartisan legislation would update FOIA for the
first time in ten years.
Introduced jointly by
Senators Leahy and John Cornyn (R-Texas), the bill has broad support in
the Senate. The Judiciary Committee approved it earlier this year, but
the bill has been stalled on the Senate floor since then by a Republican
“hold.”
“Responsive government and
transparent decision making are bedrock American values,” Leahy said.
“FOIA honors and helps translate those values into practice, and the
OPEN Government Act will help FOIA work better in serving the public’s
interest.”
Statement
Of
Senator Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
Commemorating
The 41st
Anniversary
Of The
Freedom of Information Act
And Urging Passage
Of
The OPEN Government Act
June 27, 2007
Mr. LEAHY: Mr. President, on July 4th,
the Nation will celebrate the 41st anniversary of the Freedom
of Information Act (“FOIA”), landmark legislation that has guaranteed
the public’s “right to know” for generations of Americans. Regrettably,
the Senate will mark this very important anniversary without having
passed the Openness Promotes
Effectiveness in our National Government Act” (the “OPEN
Government Act”), S.849, comprehensive legislation that Senator Cornyn
and I introduced earlier this year to strengthen and reinvigorate FOIA
for all Americans.
Responsive government and transparent
decision making are bedrock American values, FOIA honors and helps
translate those values into practice, and the OPEN Government Act will
help FOIA work better in serving the public’s interest.
The Judiciary Committee favorably reported
this bipartisan legislation in April. But a Republican hold is delaying
consideration of this important FOIA reform bill. The Senate Republican
leadership has also ignored requests to debate this bill on the Senate
Floor,
needlessly stalling
these long-overdue, bipartisan reforms to strengthen FOIA.
The
Timeless Legacy of FOIA
For more than four decades, FOIA’s
timeless values of openness and transparency in government have ensured
access to government information. Just this week, we witnessed the
great value of FOIA in shedding light on a controversial policy within
the Office of the Vice President regarding the handling of classified
information, with news reports that a FOIA request to the Justice
Department first revealed that the Attorney General may have delayed a
review into the legality of this troubling policy.
Although FOIA remains an indispensable
tool in shedding light on bad policies and government abuses, this open
government law is being hampered by excessive delays and lax FOIA
compliance. Today, Americans who seek information under FOIA remain
less likely to obtain it than during any other time in FOIA’s 40-plus
year history. According to the National Security Archive, an
independent research institute, the oldest outstanding FOIA requests
date back to 1989, before the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Moreover, more than a year after the
President’s FOIA executive order to improve agency FOIA performance,
FOIA backlogs are at an all-time
high. According to a recent report by the Government Accountability
Office, federal agencies had 43 percent more FOIA requests pending and
outstanding in 2006 than in 2002. In addition, the percentage of FOIA
requestors who obtained at least some of the information that they
requested from the Government declined by 31 percent in 2006, according
to a study by the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government.
A Wise Investment in
our Democracy
As the first major reform to FOIA in
more than
a decade, the OPEN
Government Act would help to reverse these troubling trends and to
restore the public’s trust in their government. In so doing,
this bill is a fitting tribute to FOIA and a wise investment in
our American Democracy.
The OPEN Government Act promotes and
enhances public disclosure of government information under FOIA by
helping Americans to obtain timely responses to their FOIA requests.
This bill also improves transparency in the federal government’s FOIA
process by:
-
Restoring
meaningful deadlines for agency action under FOIA;
-
Imposing real
consequences on federal agencies for missing FOIA’s 20-day statutory
deadline;
-
Clarifying that
FOIA applies to government records held by outside private
contractors;
-
Establishing a FOIA
hotline service for all federal agencies; and
-
Creating a FOIA
Ombudsman to provide FOIA requestors and federal agencies with a
meaningful alternative to costly litigation.
Let me also be clear about what this bill
does not do. This bill does not harm or impede in any way the
Government’s ability to withhold or protect classified information.
Classified, national security and homeland security-related information
are all expressly exempt from FOIA’s disclosure mandate and this bill
does nothing to alter these important exemptions. Senator Cornyn and I
have also offered an amendment to this bill that would preserve the
right of federal agencies to assert these and other FOIA exemptions,
even if agencies miss the 20-day statutory deadline under FOIA.
The OPEN Government Act is cosponsored by
a bipartisan group of 13 Senators, including the bill’s lead Republican
cosponsor, Senator Cornyn. This bill is also endorsed by more than 115
business, public interest, and news organizations from across the
political and ideological spectrum, including the American Library
Association, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, OpenTheGovernment.org, Public
Citizen, the Republican Liberty Caucus, the Sunshine in Government
Initiative and the Vermont Press Association. I thank all of the
cosponsors of this bill for their commitment to open government. I also
thank the many organizations that have endorsed the OPEN Government Act
for their support of this legislation.
The OPEN Government Act is a
good government bill that Democrats and Republicans, alike, can and
should work together to enact. If there are legitimate concerns with
this bill, those concerns should be openly debated and the Senate should
promptly pass this legislation.
Senator Cornyn and I both
know that open government is not a Democratic issue or a Republican
issue. It is an American issue. It is in this bipartisan spirit that I
urge the Senate to promptly consider the OPEN Government Act and that I
encourage all Senators to support this important FOIA reform
legislation.
I ask unanimous consent that
a list of the bill’s supporters be printed in the
Record
following my remarks.
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