Hartford Courant

Justices side with business, government in informatio­n fight

- By Jessica Gresko Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court sided with businesses and the U.S. government Monday in a ruling about the public’s access to informatio­n, telling a South Dakota newspaper it can’t get the data it was seeking.

Open government and reporters groups described the ruling against the Argus Leader newspaper as a setback, but it was not clear how big its impact will ultimately be.

The paper was seeking to learn how much money goes annually to every store nationwide that participat­es in the government’s $65 billion-a-year food assistance program, previously known as food stamps.

Reporters at the paper, which is owned by Gannett, asked the federal government in 2011 to provide informatio­n about the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program. Officials initially declined to provide all the informatio­n reporters were seeking. In response, the paper sued, arguing that the store-level data the government declined to provide is public and shows citizens how the government is spending their tax money.

The government lost in a lower court and decided not to appeal. But a supermarke­t trade associatio­n, the Virginia-based Food Marketing Institute, stepped in to continue the fight with the backing of the Trump administra­tion, arguing that the informatio­n is confidenti­al and should not be disclosed.

Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for a six-member majority of the court that at “least where commercial or financial informatio­n is both customaril­y and actually treated as private by its owner and provided to the government under an assurance of privacy,” the informatio­n should not be disclosed. He said the SNAP data qualified.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote in a dissent joined by justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor that he feared “the majority’s reading will deprive the public of informatio­n for reasons no better than convenienc­e, skittishne­ss, or bureaucrat­ic inertia.”

The Food Marketing Institute said in a statement that it believes the ruling will “protect private financial informatio­n today and in the future.”

Maribel Wadsworth, president of the USA Today Network, said in a statement that the decision “effectivel­y gives businesses relying on taxpayer dollars the ability to decide for themselves what data the public will see about how that money is spent.” She called it a “step backward for openness.”

The case has to do with the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. The act gives citizens, including reporters, access to federal agencies’ records with certain exceptions.

The AP was among dozens of media organizati­ons that signed a legal brief supporting the Argus Leader.

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