2007: For the Public

 

 


In 2006, AP worked internally and in partnership with other news organizations and FOI advocacy groups to prevent strong new pressures for secrecy from threatening the First Amendment values that guarantee freedom for all. Here are some of those actions:

In Iowa, a nonprofit group tasked with examining teacher pay in Iowa acknowledged it violated open meetings laws when it held a closed-door meeting to discuss the hiring of consultants.

The admission by the Institute for Tomorrow's Workforce was part of a settlement announced to a lawsuit filed in Polk County by six media organizations, including The Associated Press.

The media organizations had sued the institute after the group met in private on July 27 to discuss the hiring of consultants. According to the organization's meeting minutes, in open session the board hired Learning Point Associates, of Naperville, Ill., to study Iowa's educational system and performance pay, agreeing to pay the firm $606,450.

According to the media organizations' lawsuit, the closed session deprived the public of access to "meaningful information that relates to the expenditure of more than $600,000" of mostly public money as well as the "setting of educational standards ... for the next generation."

See details in the Sept. 14, 2006 AP story here.

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In Ohio, a federal judge struck down a 2004 directive by Ohio's elections chief against exit polling within 100 feet of a voting place. The judge ruled that a verbal order by Secretary of State Ken Blackwell before the 2004 presidential election violated the press' rights under the First Amendment.

The lawsuit was brought by five television networks -- ABC, CNN, CBS, Fox News and NBC -- and The Associated Press, which had formed a consortium to collect exit-polling data in Ohio and other states.

See details in the Sept. 26, 2006 AP story here.

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In Florida, a federal judge threw out a Florida law that prohibits exit polling within 100 feet of a voting place, finding there was no evidence that such surveys were disruptive or threatened access to voting.

The judge said Florida's law was unconstitutional and ordered state officials not to enforce it in the Nov. 7 election. He left intact the 100-foot limit for other activities such as distributing campaign material or peddling.

The ruling came on a lawsuit brought by The Associated Press and five television networks which sought to conduct exit polls at about 40 Florida polling places.

The 2005 law, the judge concluded, violated the First Amendment's free speech and freedom of the press protections. The judge also said the law was too broad.

See details in the Oct. 24, 2006 AP story here.


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In Colorado, the AP and Colorado Press Association tested the Colorado Open Records Act.

Colorado's public records law is fairly simple. With some exceptions for personnel or proprietary commercial information, the public is entitled to see any record -- on paper or otherwise -- made, maintained or kept by any public entity for use in carrying out its duties or involving the receipt or spending of public money.

Yet the way Colorado local government agencies handle public records requests varies sharply, according to a statewide survey conducted by 23 newspaper members of The Associated Press and Colorado Press Association over the summer.

The results show that obtaining records can be an intimidating and disheartening process for members of the public, said Ed Otte, executive director of the CPA.

"Although this project was organized by the Colorado Press Association and The Associated Press, the intent was to show how easy or difficult it is for the public to access public records," Otte said. "In some situations where there are obstacles to getting copies of records, or the fees seem unusually high, that can serve as a deterrent."

The survey included requests for records in 21 counties from the Western Slope to the eastern Plains. It covered municipal and county agencies, school districts and special districts. To request the records over two days in June, newspapers recruited members of the public, interns and reporters who identified themselves when asked.

See details in the Oct. 25, 2006 AP story here.

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In Pennsylvania, the state's student-loan agency violated the state's Right-to-Know Law in withholding information about its spending on retreats for board members and other financial data, a state court ruled.

Aa Commonwealth Court panel ordered the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Authority to disclose a variety of records and pay a portion of the legal fees incurred by media organizations whose reporters sought the documents -- The Associated Press, The Patriot-News of Harrisburg and Pittsburgh television station WTAE.

"PHEAA failed to comply with its duty and responsibility under the Right-to-Know Law," Judge Doris A. Smith-Ribner wrote on behalf of the majority. "The Right-to-Know Law favors public access regarding any expenditure of public funds."

Sally Hale, the AP's Pennsylvania bureau chief in Philadelphia, called the decision "a small step forward for freedom of information in Pennsylvania."

See details in the Nov. 16, 2006 AP story here.


SUNSHINE WEEK 2007

 

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