The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 21, 2005, Page 5, Image 5
Novel excuses multiply for keeping government data from public
By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The
government argues that a health
official’s required public financial
disclosure reports should not
become public. Some of President
Bush’s military records were not
released because officials did not
want to search boxes filled with rat
excrement. Homeland Security
Secretary Tom Ridge’s public
schedules were withheld until he
left office.
AP lawyers are still appealing
for copies of the 2001-2003
financial disclosure reports,
required under the Ethics in
Government Act, from Dr.
Edmund Tramont, director of the
National Institutes of Health’s
AIDS division.
Such reports are released every
year for all the government’s top
executives so the public can look
for conflicts of interest. The NIH
released Tramont’s 2004 report
but claimed release of the three
prior years would be an
“unwarranted invasion of his
privacy.”
1 his is outrageous, Schulz
said. “They are convincing
themselves there might be privacy
grounds for withholding
documents that are specifically
required to be created for public
dissemination.”
Those roadblocks to obtaining
government data arose in response
to requests during the past year by
The Associated Press. In recent
years, the AP and other regular
users of the Freedom of
Information Act have been
presented with a growing list of
never-before-seen excuses for
denying the public release of
government documents.
It has taken administrative
appeals or lawsuits to overcome
some obstacles, but not before
requesters had to wait sometimes
until the information sought was
no longer useful and often had to
spend hundreds or thousands of
dollars for lawyers.
Bush administration officials
acknowledge reining in the policies
of earlier administrations to
protect privacy and national
security, particularly after the Sept.
I
11 attacks.
“We were more attuned to
privacy concerns, as well as the
security matters, than prior to this
administration coming in,” said
Mark Corallo, who just retired as
the Justice Department’s
spokesman.
Corallo said the department
relied on recommendations of
career experts to handle
information release requests. He
said that elsewhere “perhaps the
bureaucracy took advantage of the
national security imperative at
times to withhold non-national
security stuff.”
Whatever the case, some new
roadblocks are novel.
During last year’s presidential
campaign, the AP filed federal and
state suits that uncovered new,
long-sought military records of
Bush’s service.
Weeks after Texas National
Guard officials swore under oath
they had released everything, two
retired Army lawyers searched
again under an agreement between
the AP and the Guard and found
31 unreleased pages. These
included orders for high-altitude
training in 1972, less than three
months before Bush abruptly quit
flying.
Defending the failure to hnd the
documents, Guard spokesman Lt.
Col. John Stanford said searching
the old, disorganized boxes was
tough. “These boxes are full of dirt
and rat ... (excrement) and dead
bugs.”
The AP’s general counsel, David
Tomlin, said the company spent
almost $100,000 litigating the
case. The government was ordered
to pay the AP’s legal costs, but
disputed the amount. The AP
settled for a fraction of what it
spent, Tomlin said.
Other times, ordinary citizens
were thwarted because they lacked
time or money.
Whether journalists, advocacy
groups or private citizens make the
requests, the ultimate loser is the
public, which learns less about its
government, say those who have
fought the fights.
Steve Hendricks, a Montana
resident writing a book about
tumultuous relations between
American Indians and the
government in the 1970s, said he
could never afford an expensive
legal battle. He said he was
fortunate that his wife, an FOIA
lawyer, could wage his battle
against the FBI to uncover
documents the agency at first said
did not exist.
AP lawyers are still appealing
for copies of the 2001-2003
financial disclosure reports,
required under the Ethics in
Government Act, from Dr.
Edmund Tramont, director of the
National Institutes of Health’s
AIDS division.
Such reports are released every
year for all the government’s top
executives so the public can look
for conflicts of interest. The NIH
released Tramont’s 2004 report
but claimed release of the three
prior years would be an
“unwarranted invasion of his
privacy.”
“This is outrageous,” Schulz
said. “They are convincing
themselves there might be privacy
grounds for withholding
documents that are specifically
required to be created for public
dissemination.”
In December 2003, the AP
requested copies of Homeland
Security Secretary Ridge’s daily
appointment calendar. The
government resisted expedited
release because the department’s
Web site had a “significant amount
of information about the activities
of Secretary Ridge.”
The documents were released in
February 2005, several days after
Ridge left office.
Two public interest groups,
People for the American Way and
Public Employees for
Environmental Responsibility,
requested National Park Service
records on revisions ordered for the
video played in the museum at the
Lincoln Memorial.
The conservative
CNSNews.com wrote in 2003 that
the video implies Lincoln would
have endorsed homosexual and
abortion rights because the video
contains images of rallies for those
causes held at the memorial.
Complaints flowed into the Park
Service, which announced plans to
revise the video.
“We wanted to see what these
letter-writers were saying and what
response they got,” said Elliot
Mincberg, legal director of People
for the American Way.
The government released some
budget pages and newspaper
clippings but withheld all other
documents as interagency or intra
agency memos or letters. Stunned
that citizen letters might be called
interagency memos, the two
groups sued.
Two years later, the government
has agreed to review its exemptions
for 1,000 pages. “They issue
blanket denials and don’t seriously
look at their records until someone
files a lawsuit,” Mincberg said.
In February 2004, the Center
for Public Integrity, a private
ethics watchdog, requested an
electronic copy of the Justice
Department’s public registry of
foreign agents the lawyers,
lobbyists and consultants who
represent overseas interests before
the U.S. government.
The group wanted to see what
agents were paid by foreign
clients and spend on their behalf.
Its request was denied because
copying the database “risks a
crash that cannot be fixed and
could result in a major loss of
data.”
The center sued and more than
a year later has gotten most of the
data. The government, though,
tried to release a copy after
deleting all the financial
information.
“Unless we’d been on our toes,
we might not have discovered it
until after dropping our suit,” the
center’s Bob Williams said.
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