Page 2A

Tax dollars to fund study on restricting public data
Pentagon to pay school to devise statute curbing freedom-of-information 
requests

By Richard Willing
USA TODAY

07/06/06

http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20060706/a_foia06.art.htm


The federal government will pay a Texas law school $1 million to do 
research aimed at rolling back the amount of sensitive data available to 
the press and public through freedom-of-information requests.

Beginning this month, St. Mary's University School of Law in San Antonio 
will analyze recent state laws that place previously available information, 
such as site plans of power plants, beyond the reach of public inquiries.

Jeffrey Addicott, a professor at the law school, said he will use that 
research to produce a national “model statute” that state legislatures and 
Congress could adopt to ensure that potentially dangerous information 
“stays out of the hands of the bad guys.”

“There's the public's right to know, but how much?” said Addicott, a former 
legal adviser in the Army's Special Forces.

“There's a strong feeling that the law needs to balance that with the need 
to protect the well-being of the nation. … There's too much stuff that's 
easy to get that shouldn't be,” he said.

The federal Freedom of Information Act, which became law 40 years ago this 
week, has long been a source of tension between the government and the 
public and news media.

Critics say the research plan overstates the need for secrecy and is likely 
to give state and federal governments too much discretion to withhold 
material. “Restricting information (for) security and efficiency and 
comfort level, that's the good story,” says Paul McMasters, a specialist in 
public information law at the First Amendment Center in Arlington, Va. “The 
bad story is that it can also be a great instrument of control. … To 
automatically believe that the less known the better is really not rational.”

Congress added the grant to this year's Defense Department budget. It is 
being administered through the Air Force Research Laboratory, Addicott 
said. The laboratory in Rome, N.Y., specializes in information technology, 
according to its website.

The Freedom of Information Act was signed July 4, 1966. All 50 states and 
the federal government have “sunshine laws” that allow reporters and 
citizens access to many government meetings and to government records 
through freedom-of-information requests.

In the past four years, Congress, the District of Columbia and 41 of the 50 
states have moved to close some meetings and restrict records for fear of 
making information available to terrorists, according to the Reporters 
Committee for Freedom of the Press in Arlington, Va.

Under a 2002 law, for instance, information submitted to the federal 
government by private industry that concerns “critical infrastructure 
programs” is exempt from Freedom of Information Act requests or use in 
lawsuits.

Since 2004, Virginia has withheld terrorism response plans, as well as 
engineering and architectural drawings of government buildings that are 
deemed to be possible terrorist targets. Since 2004, Ohio has required 
formal requests and fees to access formerly open birth and death records.

Addicott says the various state plans should “take a more uniform approach” 
so that neighboring states and the federal government are “on the same page.”

In 2003, he said, a simulated cyberattack on San Antonio's water and 
government information systems showed that computer security data that was 
protected under federal law could have been accessed by terrorists under 
Texas legislation.

Lucy Dalglish, director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the 
Press, says the research program is in keeping with a recent federal trend 
to use “homeland security” as an excuse to restrict unrelated material.

“Decisions (on requests for public information) are being handled in 
progressively less friendly ways,” she said.

Addicott said he knows of no cases in this country in which public records 
or a public meeting were used for a terrorist act. In 2002, a hacker in 
Australia breached the data control system of a water treatment plant and 
caused 260,000 gallons of sewage to be discharged.

“We're leaning forward in the saddle (and) thinking about this before it 
happens,” he said.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
medianews@twiar.org
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to