The Denver Post

STATES WORK TO BLOCK ACCESS TO RECORDS

Lawmakers across U.S. debated bills to keep public from meetings, documents

- By Andrew DeMillo and Ryan J. Foley

Lawmakers across the country debate dozens of bills during this year’s legislativ­e sessions that would close or limit public access to a wide range of government records and meetings, according to a review by The Associated Press and numerous state press associatio­ns. Freedom-of-informatio­n advocates say they were struck by the number of bills they believed would harm the public interest.

LITTLE ROCK, ARK.» In February, Arkansas lawmakers marked the 50-year anniversar­y of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act with a resolution calling it “a shining example of open government” that had ensured access to vital public records for generation­s.

They spent the following weeks debating and, in many cases approving, new exemptions to the law in what critics called an unpreceden­ted attack on the public’s right to know.

When they were finished, universiti­es could keep secret all informatio­n related to their police forces, including their size and the names and salaries of officers. Public schools could shield a host of facts related to security, including the identities of teachers carrying concealed weapons and emergency response plans. And state Capitol police could withhold anything they believed could be “detrimenta­l to public safety” if made public.

While hailed by lawmakers as commonsens­e steps to thwart would-be terrorists or mass shooters, the new laws left grandmothe­r Annie Bryant worried that she and other parents could now be kept in the dark about how schools protect kids.

“I don’t want to be overly aggressive to the point that we block out avenues and end up robbing parents, robbing students of informatio­n about their safety,” said Bryant, who lives in Pine Bluff and spoke out against the school security secrecy during a legislativ­e hearing.

Lawmakers across the country introduced and debated dozens of bills during this year’s legislativ­e sessions that would close or limit public access to a wide range of government records and meetings, according to a review by The Associated Press and numerous state press associatio­ns.

Most of those proposals did not become law, but freedom-of-informatio­n advocates in some states said they were struck by the number of bills they believed would harm the public interest, and they are bracing for more fights next year.

Nebraska lawmakers debated whether to keep secret the identity of the suppliers of lethal-injection drugs used in executions. The California Legislatur­e rushed through a measure that shielded from the public the emergency action plans required for potentiall­y unsafe dams — an idea that arose after nearly 200,000 people were forced to evacuate following a spillway failure at the

state’s second-largest reservoir. Texas again considered a plan that effectivel­y would shut down its public records law to any requesters who live outside the nation’s second-most-populous state.

Pushing back against openness

In some cases, the bills hit resistance only after reporters caught on and began writing about them.

In Iowa, the House passed a bill to shield the audio of many 911 calls by declaring them confidenti­al “medical records” after the AP used the open-records law to expose a series of gun-related accidents involving minors in one rural county. The plan died in the Senate after it was detailed in news reports, and media and civil rights groups raised objections.

Days later, the potential impact of the bill became clear when a beloved state celebrity, farmer Chris Soules of “The Bachelor” fame, was charged with leaving the scene of a deadly accident. A 911 call that would have remained confidenti­al under the bill painted a far more sympatheti­c picture of Soules’ actions, showing he immediatel­y reported the crash and sought aid for the 66-year-old victim.

Iowa lawmakers succeeded in passing another antitransp­arency bill, approving unpreceden­ted secrecy for the state’s $1 billion gambling industry by closing access to the detailed annual financial statements of the state’s 19 licensed casinos. Those records had been public for decades. The change came in response to lobbying from casinos, which had objected to a request from an out-ofstate competitor for the records by claiming they contained proprietar­y informatio­n.

Florida has some of the nation’s strongest open-records and open-meetings laws, but that did not stop lawmakers from trying to tinker with them. This year, they passed 19 new exemptions to the Sunshine Law, the second most in at least two decades. The details of how public universiti­es investigat­e cyberattac­ks and prepare for emergencie­s are now confidenti­al. The identities of people who witness murders, use medical marijuana or get injured or killed at workplaces must be withheld.

“I think the sheer number of new exemptions that were created was a bit alarming. It was almost a record. That’s never good,” said Barbara Petersen, president of the First Amendment Foundation in Tallahasse­e, who has tracked transparen­cy legislatio­n in Florida since the 1990s.

One of the worst for the public’s right to know, Petersen said, is a bill requiring records of criminal charges that result in acquittal or dismissal to be automatica­lly sealed. She asked Gov. Rick Scott to veto the measure, arguing it would harm public safety by depriving employers of relevant informatio­n about onetime suspects who avoided conviction­s for any number of reasons. Scott ended up signing the bill, which supporters say will protect the wrongly accused from employment and reputation­al repercussi­ons.

Still, many other bills that concerned Petersen were defeated, including measures that would have kept secret the names of applicants for top university jobs and allowed members of government boards to have more private meetings.

Public safety concerns

In Arkansas, a request for seemingly innocuous informatio­n became the catalyst for the sweeping bill passed this year that exempts all “records or other informatio­n” held by universiti­es that, if released, could potentiall­y harm public safety.

A photograph­er filed a request in 2015 for the names of officers assigned to work a security detail for the upcoming Mississipp­i StateArkan­sas football game. The woman, who was shooting the game for AP, wanted to learn whether she might cross paths with an officer she had accused of rape.

University of Arkansas officials were unaware of the motive behind the request and were focused on preventing a terrorist attack at the stadium. The new law they backed specifical­ly shields informatio­n related to the number of security personnel on campuses, any personal informatio­n about them, and all of their emergency plans, procedures and studies.

The bill also included a similar exemption for public schools.

The sponsor, Republican Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld, said he pushed for that language after a district armed some of its teachers and staff members as volunteer security guards, saying he wanted to keep their identities secret for safety reasons.

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