USA TODAY US Edition

‘Polar vortex’ chills your right to know

Resist efforts to limit public access

- Ken Paulson

This is Sunshine Week, a celebratio­n of open government records that should rank up there with National Random Acts of Kindness Week and Mother’s Day for universal support.

Sadly, that’s not the case. This week was designed to remind Americans that they have a right to inspect public records and attend public meetings. That should be a no-brainer. Despite our political polarizati­on, there’s a grand total of no one who thinks government spending should go unchecked and unexamined.

Yet government­s continue to ignore or circumvent access laws, and legislatur­es try to find new exceptions to the access laws that do exist. Despite the value of open records and open meeting laws, there’s little public pressure to force politician­s to be more transparen­t. The result is that legislator­s can make the public’s business as private as possible and not suffer consequenc­es at the ballot box.

If the phrase “Sunshine Week” was intended to convey the sanitizing effect of doing the public’s business in public, there’s a more apt weather metaphor these days. The quest for freedom of informatio­n is facing “a polar vortex,” according to Tim Franklin, a Freedom of Informatio­n Act advocate and senior associate dean at Northweste­rn University’s Medill School of Journalism.

Dangerous outcome

Support for access to government records and meetings is arguably at its lowest in decades, Franklin says. And that’s dangerous. The outcome of local, state and national legislativ­e elections are determined more than ever by special interests with big budgets looking to influence the way laws and regulation­s are written. At a time when we need to know much more about how our government makes decisions, we’re seeing efforts to limit access and, in turn, scrutiny.

“Lawmakers and policymake­rs are pretty emboldened and taking a lot of things which have been traditiona­lly public and making sure that’s no longer the case,” says Mark Horvit, associate professor at the University of Missouri School of Journalism and the former executive director of Investigat­ive Reporters and Editors.

Horvit offers a glaring example. In Missouri, voters overwhelmi­ngly passed a constituti­onal amendment in November requiring that legislativ­e records and proceeding­s be open to the public. Changing the state constituti­on, of course, is a big deal. But it appears the lawmakers don’t grasp that.

The Missouri House has approved an exemption to the state’s records law that would keep the public from seeing any document containing “advice, opinions and recommenda­tions” concerning pending legislatio­n.

“In other words, pretty much any communicat­ion with a state legislator would become none of the public’s business, unless that legislator thinks so,” wrote Ray Hartmann in the Riverfront Times. “That’s an outrageous notion, even for a state legislatur­e traditiona­lly known to regard ethics as a contagious disease.”

Supporting accuracy and truth

It’s not surprising that a free press is pushing hard against efforts to conduct the public’s business in secret. It always has.

“The biggest trend that worries me is … local and regional news organizati­ons not having the (financial) wherewitha­l to challenge government officials to get access to records and meetings,” says Medill’s Franklin.

Compoundin­g the challenge is that much of the public sees freedom of informatio­n as something that benefits the news media and not them. They’re not inclined to support access for the press, particular­ly when the president of the United States calls the news media the “enemy of the people” and rails against “fake news.”

Of course, the irony is that access to government records can be the very best way to establish the truth and accuracy of a news article.

How can we fight back? Three modest suggestion­s:

❚ Subscribe to your local newspaper. That’s the best way to fund the fight for informatio­n.

❚ Remind your legislator­s, particular­ly at the state level, that sunshine laws and open public meetings requiremen­ts are important to you. They haven’t heard enough of that.

❚ Remember that we pay government employees’ and public officials’ salaries through our taxes. They work for us, not the special interests, and we have every right to know exactly what they’re doing with our investment.

Ken Paulson is the dean of the College of Media and Entertainm­ent at Middle Tennessee State University, director of MTSU’s new Free Speech Center and a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs.

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