The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Observance celebrates public right to know

- — Mizell Stewart III, Gannett/USA TODAY Network, via The Associated Press

Sunshine Week is a nonpartisa­n effort to highlight the critical role of open government and freedom of informatio­n at the local, state and federal levels.

Rita Ward had a question: Why did a weekly listing of causes of death suddenly stop appearing in the local newspaper?

It turned out the health department in Vanderburg­h County, Indiana, halted its practice of providing causes of death to the Evansville Courier & Press. When Ward and a reporter for the newspaper asked why those records were no longer available, the department cited an Indiana law intended to protect citizens against identity theft.

“I truly do believe printing the cause of death is important,” Ward told the Courier & Press in a 2012 interview. “Maybe a reader might see a neighbor who died of colon cancer and make the decision to have their first overdue colonoscop­y. It can be a first step toward a change for the better. It can touch a reader. It’s personal. That’s why it is important.”

Ward and the newspaper sued for access to the informatio­n under Indiana’s Access to Public Records Act. They lost two lower-court rulings before the Indiana Supreme Court ruled in 2014 that the records, focused on the decedent’s name, age and cause of death, should continue to be made available to the public. In their ruling, the judges underscore­d “the importance of open and transparen­t government to the health of our body politic” and held that “the public interest outweighs the private.”

The court’s explicit link between government transparen­cy and the welfare of citizens underpins Sunshine Week, a national, non-partisan effort to highlight the critical role of open government and freedom of informatio­n at the local, state and federal levels. The March 12-18 celebratio­n is led by the American Society of News Editors and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, with support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Gridiron Club and Foundation.

Now, more than ever, Americans are urged to recognize the importance of open government to a robust democracy. Access to meetings, minutes and records of our elected and appointed representa­tives is a key element of the constituti­onal right to petition the government for redress of grievances. It is not strictly for the benefit of the news media.

Access to government informatio­n helps citizen’s groups hold public officials accountabl­e through firsthand observatio­n of their actions. Access also enables historians to accurately describe past events and gives individual­s critical informatio­n about public safety in the neighborho­ods where they live.

The National Park Service, fulfilling a request under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, provided aerial photograph­s last week that showed a sharp contrast between crowds on the National Mall for the inaugurati­on of President Trump and those who turned out for the first inaugurati­on of President Obama.

Despite public statements by Trump and White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer that crowds for Trump dwarfed those of Obama, the photos told the full story.

The Freedom of Informatio­n Act gives citizens the right to obtain informatio­n from the federal government — informatio­n that your tax dollars paid to collect. In addition, more and more local government­s are leveraging technology to make public informatio­n, from traffic data to public transit schedules, even more accessible and more useful to citizens.

This week and every week, take a moment to consider what your life would be like if government officials operated in total secrecy and restricted your access to informatio­n. Join with fellow citizens in seeking disclosure. When you want informatio­n from a police department, local government or school board, ask for it. Just like Rita Ward learned in the Indiana death records case, you have the right to know.

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