The Pullins Report (TPR) - Groups Urge Senate to Enact FOIA Reform
July 3, 2007
Groups Urge Senate to Enact FOIA Reform on the Law’s 41st Birthday
Contacts: Meredith Fuchs, National Security Archive, 202-994-7000
Patrice McDermott, OpenTheGovernment.org, 202-332-6736
WASHINGTON, DC – As the 41st birthday of the
Our government is not at its best, however, when it takes up to 20 years for a FOIA request to be processed, agencies routinely lose FOIA requests because they have no tracking system and the government leads requesters into litigation only to release requested documents on the eve of a judicial decision, as several studies have demonstrated.
Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas) proposed the OPEN Government Act of 2007 (S. 849). The bill aims to solve some of the FOIA’s persistent problems by:
- Creating a tracking system for FOIA requests so they are not lost, forgotten and ignored;
- Clarifying the time limits for agency responses;
- Authorizing the recovery of reasonable attorneys fees for requesters who prevail in FOIA litigation, including when a government agency releases records in response to a lawsuit before a judge rules on the case;
- Requiring reports to Congress on how agencies handle FOIA requests; and
- Creating
a FOIA ombudsman to help resolve disputes between members of the public
and agencies without litigation.
The concerns raised by some federal agencies have been addressed by the managers’ amendment SA 1147 and lack merit. And a new suggestion—that attorneys fees be permitted only when the person making the FOIA request can prove that the government acted in bad faith—would actually weaken FOIA, making it virtually impossible for FOIA requesters to obtain records under the FOIA. In contrast, the attorneys fees provision currently in the bill, which would restore the ability of FOIA requesters to receive attorneys fees when their cases cause an agency to release records before the court makes a decision, would strengthen FOIA and the democratic principles it promotes.
The OPEN Government Act of 2007 is supported by a wide range of organizations and individuals across the ideological, political, and economic spectrum:
- The United States Chamber of Commerce;
- The National Association of Manufacturers;
- More than 100 public interest organizations, historical groups and associations, including: the American Library Association, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the National Taxpayers Union and the Liberty Coalition;
- The Sunshine in Government Initiative, a coalition comprised of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Associated Press, the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government, the National Association of Broadcasters, the National Newspapers Association, the Newspaper Association of America, the Radio-Television News Directors Association, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, and the Society of Professional Journalists;
- Public Citizen;
- The American Civil Liberties Union;
- The National Security Archive;
- 10 members of the Arizona State Senate;
- The Open Society Policy Center;
- David Keene, Chairman, American Conservative Union;
- John W. Whitehead, President, The Rutherford Institute;
- Thomas R. Pickering, former Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs and United States Ambassador to the United Nations;
- Bob Barr, former member of Congress;
- Veterans for Common Sense;
- The Andrew Jackson Society;
- Americans for Tax Reform; and others.
American
Association of Law Libraries
American Civil Liberties
American Library Association
Association of American Physicians and Surgeons
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)
Cyber Privacy Project
Doctors for Open Government (DFOG)
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Ethics in Government Group
Georgians for Open Government
National Coalition for History
National Freedom of
National Taxpayers
Natural Solutions Foundation
OMB Watch
OpenTheGovernment.org
Pain Relief Network
Public Citizen
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
Republican
Semmelweis Society International (SSI)
Student Health Integrity Project (SHIP)
The New Grady Coalition
The Pullins Report
The Rutherford Institute
US Bill of Rights Foundation
VA Whistleblowers Coalition
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