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Spinach for Popeye – Or FOIA gets some muscle!

(New stormwater photos and videos available at myvaresource.com – video of the Town Council meeting 6/16/09)

When President Johnson signed the FOIA on July 4, 1966, it was done quietly, very quietly. I think this was in part due to the fears that many government and agency officials fears a sudden influx of a massive amount of requests that would clog normal work functions.

The news media, in particular, since they were some of the primary lobbyist for the FOIA, heard that faint whisper of the Act going into effect and responded. What citizens gained was a new age of information and investigative reporting.

Despite hours of searching the internet, I could not find where that fear of being ‘swamped’ with requests ever really occurred. Sure, there were some issues but not the avalanche that had been predicted.

For the next 8 years not much happened with FOIA. It is likely that focus on the Vietnam War kept many citizens from worrying about access to public documents.

As the Vietnam War (or Conflict, if you insist), slowly and painfully came to a close, another event came to the fore in the political and news cycles. Watergate (you youngsters, do a google search) created a renewed interest in FOIA. It was during this time that President Fords veto was overridden by Congress and an amendment to FOIA was passed in 1974.

Prior to this amendment, if someone or an agency elected to challenge a denial of access to public records, the only thing the agency/government needed to do was to provide the Judge with an affidavit and the appeal would be dismissed. It seems to me that is a lot like having the wolves herd the sheep. In a situation where an agency or the government could be negatively affected by the release of certain information, all that would be needed would be for an affidavit being provided stating the rationale for why it couldn’t be released.

George Washington University’s The National Security Archive website has a good article covering this amendment. It is noted there that while President Ford wanted to sign the amendment, he followed the advice of Donald Rumsfeld (who supported the original act in 1964) and Richard Cheney who expressed concerns of ‘leaks’, and Antonin Scalia’s (then attorney) concern of it being unconstitutional, and vetoed the amendment.

In a fairly rare event, Congress overrode that veto and the basic structure of FOIA as we know it today was formed. If it had not been for that series of events, we could well still exist within an environment that government could refuse to release information, provide an affidavit to the Court and any appeal to obtain those records would have been dismissed.

One quick aside that I would like to note is that despite all of the ups and downs, and changing of positions on FOIA, there has been one constant. Anyone who has benefited from FOIA (and I’ll bet that covers just about everyone, whether they know it or not) has the media, those people representing and working for the newspapers of our county are heros. It is true that no Act or Amendment would have been passed without the dedication and perseverence of those elected officials who took up the fight, but it was the newspapers that pushed the issue and made it important.

Please keep in mind that thus far, I have only discussed the National FOIA laws. Individual states have their own FOIA laws and those differ significantly. In many areas, including in our region, there are still those staff members of local newspapers who continue to fight for FOIA and the right of both citizens and the reporters to know what government is doing in their jobs to serve the public safety, health, and well-being.

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Posted by on June 18, 2009 in FOIA

 

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FOIA used to identify problems at many levels.

Only 17 days until FOIA turns 43 years of age.

FOIA has been used by the reporters and investigators for decades. In some instances, this has resulted in the headlines you’ve seen in your local papers and now carries forward to be seen on the cable news networks. George Washington University’s “The National Security Archive” is a great repository of such FOIA based news items. For instance, here are some samples from their 2001 list:

#1. “Recycled uranium spread wider than thought,” USA Today, 25 June 2001.
#2. “NASA mistakes,  optimism cost taxpayers billions,” Florida Today, 15 June 2001.
#9. “Ritalin prescribed unevenly in U.S.,”
#12. “For VIP’s brother, fish are biting at a tiny lake; State supplies big trout to region where department chief grew up,” San Francisco Chronicle, 2 April 2001.

Another source of where data can be found showing how the use of FOIA has provided important information about government activities is the First Amendment Center. From that page the “Significant FOIA victories” section:

* FOIA requests prompted the Central Intelligence Agency to release documents detailing mind-control experiments it conducted in the 1950s and early 1960s in which unwitting U.S. citizens were administered hallucinogenic drugs, electroshock and radiation.

* After being sued by the National Veterans Task Force on Agent Orange, the Air Force released a history of its use of herbicides during the Vietnam War, allowing researchers to determine which U.S. troops had been sprayed.

* Responding to numerous FOIA requests, the Federal Bureau of Investigation released papers over the years about its 1950s-’60s COINTELPRO program, in which it infiltrated leftist antiwar and civil rights groups as well as the women’s movement to monitor and sabotage their activities. In 2002, after a 17-year FOIA legal battle, the FBI was forced to turn over the details of its unlawful intelligence activities at the University of California during that period.

* In 1982, The Kansas City Times acquired Department of Agriculture papers showing that although a large percentage of meat packing plants failed to meet the department’s standards, its inspectors routinely gave them satisfactory reports and approved contaminated meat.

* In 2000, environmental groups obtained records from the Food and Drug Administration that showed it was failing to control the levels of mercury in fish even though its own tests showed them to be too high. By 2001, the FDA had warned pregnant women against consuming shark, swordfish and mackerel. However, it failed to include mercury-rich tuna. Another FOIA request, this time by the Environmental Working Group, revealed that the FDA had come under intense pressure from the tuna industry to exclude tuna from the warning.

* The Department of Transportation was forced to release a videotape of crash-test dummies flying out the rear of Chrysler-made minivans on impact, owing to a defect that had contributed to numerous deaths and injuries between 1984 and1995.

* The Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal filed FOIA requests to get Department of Energy maps showing radioactive and chemical hazards around the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant, which had long made uranium for nuclear weapons. The maps, released in 2000, showed the levels of plutonium contamination to be much higher than the government had admitted.

If anyone is sitting out there and thinking that FOIA does not matter to them, a look at the above information may change their minds.

The Freedom of Information Act is not always easy to use. In many cases these documents and the information they contain, were not released until the person/agency making the request went through the court system. Sometimes, that trek went all the way to the Supreme Court.

It is the right of people to know what their government, whether national, state, or local is doing. It is the right of people to know how their tax money is spent, what steps are being taken to provide for the health, safety, and well-being of citizens. It is the right of people to know not only the successes of government, but the failings as well.

I will close with this quote from the  Carter Center that gives a slightly different perspective in its last two sentences. http://cartercenter.org/peace/americas/nav_question4.html
“Access to public records gives citizens the opportunity to participate in public life, help set priorities, and hold their governments accountable. A free flow of information can be an important tool for building trust between a government and its citizens. It also improves communication within government to make the public administration more efficient and more effective in delivering services to its constituency. But, perhaps most importantly, access to information is a fundamental human right and can be used to help people exercise other critical human rights, such as clean water, healthcare, and education. Access to information has been more recently recognized as an instrument that can be utilized to fight poverty in developing nations.”

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Posted by on June 16, 2009 in FOIA

 

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