|
Testimony of Tom Curley
President and CEO of
The Associated Press
Representing the Sunshine in Government Initiative
On
"Open Government: Reinvigorating the Freedom of Information
Act"
Senate Judiciary Committee
March 14, 2007
Chairman Leahy, Ranking Member Specter and Members of the
Committee on the Judiciary, thank you on behalf of the Sunshine
in Government Initiative. (Members of SGI include: American
Society of Newspaper Editors, The Associated Press, Association
of Alternative Newsweeklies, Coalition of Journalists for
Open Government, National Association of Broadcasters, National
Newspaper Association, Newspaper Association of America, Radio-Television
News Directors Association, Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press, and Society of Professional Journalists.) Your
efforts to strengthen the Freedom of Information Act show
a courageous and timely commitment to the essence of our democratic
values.
The enactment of the Freedom of Information Act more than
40 years ago affirmed that even though this government had
become the mightiest power on earth, it was still the people’s
government.
It also was a bold admission that failure to allow public
oversight leads quickly to less public service and more self-service.
FOIA was a promise to the people that whatever they might
want to know about what their government was doing, the law
would back them in all but a few kinds of highly sensitive
or confidential matters.
The law does back them. But in too many cases the government
doesn’t back the law. As a result, increasingly we are
seeing in the front-page headlines trends toward self-service
government instead of public service.
First, let’s look at the facts. The Coalition of Journalists
for Open Government reported recently that the backlog of
third party requests to executive departments rose in 2005
to 31 percent.
An Associated Press analysis last year of Freedom of Information
summaries showed that the backlog problem, and the response
delays have steadily worsened since agency performance reporting
started in 1998.
What statistics like these can’t show us is what the
poor performance is costing us. News organizations like the
one I manage understand that cost very well. We use FOIA and
its state law counterparts every day.
When agencies respond as the law says they should, we know
that the information they reveal can provoke public response
that improves government operations, curbs waste and fraud,
and even saves lives. When agencies don’t respond, those
opportunities are delayed, or lost altogether.
What kinds of opportunities lie hidden in the more than 200,000
FOIA requests that went unanswered in 2005?
I can tell you about one of them. It’s not a dramatic
story. It’s as ordinary as the lunchbox a child carries
to school every day.
In 2005, government scientists tested 60 of those little lunchboxes
and found that one in five contained levels of lead that some
medical experts consider unsafe. Several of them had more
than 10 times the maximum acceptable level.
Yet the consumer Product Safety Commission issued a statement
that said the tests uncovered “no instances of hazardous
levels.” AP national writer Martha Mendoza asked to
see the tests and learned that the statement wasn’t
true.
You might have expected to read Martha’s report more
than a year ago when she filed her expedited FOIA request
for the study results. But her story was just published last
month.
That’s because it took an entire year to get the 1,500
pages of lab reports and other documents…a year in which
many parents continued to buy those popular soft vinyl lunch
carriers and hand them to their children without any reason
to wonder if they might not be safe.
Apparently the commission still thinks the boxes are safe.
They told Martha that children don’t use their lunchboxes
in a way that exposes them to the lead found in the tests.
Maybe they’re right. But maybe they’re not.
Martha talked to researchers who study the effects of exposure
to lead. Some of them told her the lead levels were cause
for serious concern.
And they weren’t the only ones who thought the commission
had underplayed the threat. Another federal agency thought
so, too.
When the Food and Drug Administration heard about the test
results last summer – many months after the consumer
commission said there was no problem – FDA officials
warned lunchbox manufacturers that they might face penalties
if they didn’t get the lead out. One major store chained
pulled the boxes off its shelves nationwide.
Evidently, reasonable people can disagree over whether it’s
okay to manufacture a tiny bit of toxic metal into your child’s
lunchbox.
And that’s the point…reasonable people can disagree…but
only if they know. And parents can make informed choices about
what to put in their kids’ hands only if they hear those
differing views.
Why did it take a year for the commission to respond to a
relatively simple request that FOIA says it was supposed to
answer in 20 working days?
The commission offered a reason. Its position was that the
test report could not be released until each lunchbox manufacturer
had been notified that information about its product was being
disclosed.
We’ll leave for another day the question of whether
a government safety agency should be more sensitive to product
manufacturers than to the concerns of parents for their children’s
health.
What I believe should concern this committee is the choice
that agencies like the consumer product commission face when
they confront a FOIA request like Martha’s:
On one hand, ignoring a duty to inform the manufacturers –
whether the duty is real or not – could bring political
or legal repercussions from powerful business interests and
their allies.
On the other hand, ignoring a duty to meet the disclosure
deadlines in the Freedom of Information Act could bring …
no consequences at all.
Any agency compliance officer with a healthy survival instinct
could figure this one out. Disclosure brings risk. Delay or
denial brings no risk.
No risk, that is, unless you count whatever the risk may be
to your child of lead in the lunchbox.
I urge you to make changes that give the benefits of full
and timely disclosure of government information a fighting
chance of overcoming the often self-serving forces arrayed
against them.
S. 394, the Open Government Act introduced last year by Senators
Cornyn (R. Texas) and Leahy (D. Vermont) included real FOIA
enforcement provisions. The Sunshine in Government Initiative
supported that bill and will help in any way it can toward
enactment of similar legislation this year.
By no means is the news from the FOIA front all bad. I could
tell you FOIA success stories, too.
Thanks to FOIA, AP last year was able to report for the first
time the extent of deaths and injuries among private contract
workers in Iraq.
Thanks to FOIA, AP learned that the FDA suspected but failed
to follow up in time to stop a transplant organ provider who
was using faked health records to ship body parts that were
implanted in human recipients.
And FOIA requests were a crucial part of AP’s reporting
which showed that highly publicized federal fines against
companies that break the law are increasingly being quietly
written down afterwards – sometimes by more than 90
percent.
It’s a tribute to the professionalism and respect for
the rule of law of so many agency FOIA officers that they
respond correctly to thousands of requests for information
each year.
They know – as we do – that our government was
designed to be open and works best when its principles are
upheld.
But I am not here to reassure you that FOIA is working fine
because we all know it’s not. FOIA is a law that protects
us against real harm and real loss. Such laws cannot be asked
to enforce themselves.
If you leave FOIA defenseless, agencies will continue too
often to take the risk-free path -- the easy path -- and just
say no. And they’re all the more likely to do it when
something has gone wrong that the public really, really needs
to know about.
One of our reporters had an experience a few years ago that
shows just how little risk it can take to make “no”
seem like the right answer to a FOIA request.
We asked the Defense Department for a copy of a training video
they had developed.
They said “no.” Their reason was that a Freedom
of Information Act exemption prevented them from releasing
a copy of “Freedom of Information Act: The Public’s
Right to Know.”
We had a good laugh over this. But it was the kind of laughing
you do to keep from crying…because this is what life
has been like so often in recent years for reporters and other
regular FOIA requesters. The very same reflex that prompted
the Department of Defense’s goofy denial of our request
for their video is evident everywhere . . . sometimes with
results nearly as absurd.
When we asked the Interior Department for documents showing
which employees had asked for waivers from agency ethics rules
in 2004, Interior said our request was too broad. They said
we had to provide the names of the employees who sought the
waivers . . . exactly the information we were requesting from
them.
Federal officials who used to provide information for the
asking now say you have to file a time-consuming FOIA request.
Ground-level FOIA officers may be willing enough to comply
with the law, but their bosses look for ways to delay or deny.
Administrative appeals from those denials are often no more
than occasion for further broken deadlines and ritual denials.
The requester ends up with a choice between giving up or commencing
litigation that can easily cost well into six figures.
Even AP has to choose such fights carefully. Another problem
is that we can litigate a FOIA denial for years and still
not get our legal fees reimbursed if an agency turns over
the goods before a court actually orders it to do so.
How many of your small business or private constituents can’t
afford to sue and just have to give up?
There could easily be a third way. A strong FOIA ombudsman
within the federal government could help requesters around
some of the most unreasonable obstacles without forcing them
to go to court.
Unreasonable obstacles abound in part because many agency
executives think obstructing information flow is our national
policy. The Ashcroft memorandum advising agencies that the
Justice Department stands ready to back any plausible argument
for denying a FOIA requests continues to set the tone for
the denial of access.
In similar fashion, the mania for classification of government
documents and the creation of such categories as sensitive
but unclassified continues to be a costly scourge. When in
doubt, stamp it secret…even if it’s been public
for decades.
This reflex undermines our values, erodes public confidence
in its government and in the end leaves the public in far
greater danger than it would be if it knew more about the
threats to its safety.
And the problem is no longer just with federal agencies. An
AP survey last year found that state agencies and legislatures
have caught the secrecy virus. We identified more than 600
new state laws that restrict access to what had once been
public information.
The presumption that any plausible reason for locking the
files is a good enough reason is doing immeasurable harm.
When government has trained itself to believe that the risks
from openness are substantial, while the risks from keeping
secrets are negligible, you begin to get the kind of government
nobody wants – a government that believes its job is
to do all the thinking for us.
You get, for example, a Consumer Product Safety Commission
that decides on its own – for all of us – that
a little bit of toxic lead in a lunchbox is okay…and
that the matter needs no further discussion.
“Further discussion” is the essence of a free
society. We need a strong and effective Freedom of Information
Act to make sure that discussion flourishes.
Mr. Chairman, Senator Specter, members of the committee, on
behalf of the Sunshine in Government Initiative, we are grateful
for this opportunity to appear before you today. We urge you
to pass Open Government Act legislation this year.
|