Miami Herald (Sunday)

There’s too much that Florida won’t tell you

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For a whole year, as Floridians suffered and died by the tens of thousands from COVID-19, Florida’s government routinely kept the public from seeing detailed informatio­n about the course and intensity of the pandemic, often until the trend line had changed to better match the governor’s sunnier version.

That disgracefu­l behavior by a state known for its broad publicreco­rds laws is detailed in a story and accompanyi­ng timeline published by the Miami Herald and Tampa Bay Times last week.

That important reporting shows that Florida’s government spent a year stonewalli­ng, obfuscatin­g and evading requests for informatio­n about such vital matters as the number of COVID deaths recorded by medial examiners’ offices, details about contact tracing to see where transmissi­on was occurring and which eldercare facilities had seen outbreaks among staff and residents.

Mounting such a pervasive and sustained attack on the state’s public-records law in the midst of a tragedy that has killed 31,000 people and infected more than

1.9 million in the state should outrage and offend every Florida taxpayer.

In some ways, this is no surprise. Under former Gov. Rick Scott, now Florida’s junior senator, the state became increasing­ly hostile to open- government principles. But current Gov. Ron DeSantis has expanded on Scott’s antagonism, chipping away at the public’s right to know what its government is doing — just when Floridians most needed to rely on their leaders on life-or-death issues. That is inexcusabl­e.

Starting last spring, when thecoronav­irus was taking hold in Florida, and continuing to today, the state slow-walked requests to see a wide variety of informatio­n relating to the pandemic.

Let’s be clear: The informatio­n we’re talking about doesn’t fall under the umbrella of national security or nuclear codes, exceptions any thinking person would agree are reasonable. No, we’re talking about the kind of informatio­n that might be critical to helping Floridians gauge the riskto themselves and their families in a pandemic — no small thing at all.

DESANTIS MUM

For example, the state attempted to block the release of COVID death records, informatio­n used to determine how severely Florida had been hit. The DeSantis administra­tion ignored publicreco­rds requests for specifics of contact tracing in Florida — the government-financed program that is supposed to help cut down on transmissi­on by notifying people when they’ve been around someone who tested positive.

And Florida’s government wouldn’t disclose the number of deaths at specific eldercare facilities, something that families of vulnerable seniors surely should be able to know.

In a particular­ly egregious and revealing moment in April, the state refused requests by the Herald and family members of people in eldercare facilities to give them informatio­n that the state collected identifyin­g which facilities had staff and residents who tested positive for COVID. When the Herald’s law firm, Holland & Knight, drafted a public-records lawsuit seeking the informatio­n, the governor’s office tried to stop the suit by pressuring the law firm, which does a lot of work for state agencies.

It worked. Holland & Knight backed down, and the Herald had to find another law firm to file the suit.

Florida’s Government-in-theSunshin­e Law, a tradition of openness that includes a constituti­onal amendment passed by voters in 1992, is a series of statutes intended to give the people access to the meetings and records of the government they elect and pay for. But the Herald/ Times report, along with additional proposed exemptions now before the Legislatur­e, show in no uncertain terms that these are dark times for the Sunshine Law.

Pamela Marsh, president of the Florida First Amendment Foundation, said government­al openness and accountabi­lity in the state have “gotten worse in every way.”

From exorbitant fees for residents to obtain public records to mothballin­g requests until threatened with a lawsuit, the state has tried to prevent access to informatio­n that rightfully belongs to the public. Worse, those tactics often have succeeded.

“Transparen­cy has gone downhill,” Marsh told the Miami Herald Editorial Board. “It got bad under Rick Scott when he was governor, but I do think it’s gotten worse under this administra­tion.”

There already are 1,159 exemptions to the Sunshine Law — and more in the works, if some of our state legislator­s have their way. It’s a grim prospect, especially as Sunshine Week — dedicated to promoting open government across the country — is about to be observed March 14-20. For example, there are bills this year that would make voter-registrati­on records secret, hide the home addresses of members of Florida’s Cabinet and Legislatur­e (making it hard to determine whether a lawmaker lives in his or her district) and keep secret the names of candidates applying for the presidency of a university or college.

Some public-records exemptions may sound reasonable on their surface — until you look deeper. Marsy’s Law, passed by voters in 2018, was part of a national push to protect crime victims from harassment by their attackers, among other things. But law-enforcemen­t agencies in Florida are now using it to protect the names of cops after they use force, as USA Today reported.

Why does the state’s openrecord­s law matter so much? Because informatio­n is power.

HIDING INFORMATIO­N

The government works for the people. The people get to decide what the government does. And the only way for the people to do that is to have free and open access to government records and meetings. There have to be exceptions to that basic democratic premise, of course, but they should be, as noted in the Sunshine Law, as narrow as possible and fulfill a public need.

Yet in this monumental, yearlong struggle with COVID, the government of Florida has tried — not even subtly — to keep pandemic informatio­n away from the people. Has the state paid too much for contact tracing? Was it effective? We Floridians don’t know — but we should.

In the governor’s annual State of the State address Tuesday, he cited his pandemic response in a speech that sounded more like a campaign rally for his reelection next year than a somber address in the midst of possibly the worst crisis the state has ever faced.

“Our nation and our state have endured a tumultuous year. Floridians have responded in ways that would make our founders proud,” DeSantis said. “Because of that, the sun is rising here in Florida, and the Sunshine State will soon reach new horizons.”

That’s an awfully optimistic vision when cast — as it must be — against the backdrop of 31,000 deaths. But maybe Florida did avoid the worst of the pandemic. Maybe our government and governor rose to the occasion and functioned at their best in a situation terrible beyond imaginatio­n. Without transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, we’ll never know.

 ?? Getty Images ?? In Florida, the DeSantis administra­tion initially wouldn’t reveal the nursing homes where the coronaviru­s was found.
Getty Images In Florida, the DeSantis administra­tion initially wouldn’t reveal the nursing homes where the coronaviru­s was found.

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