Skip to main content

Sunshine Week 2019: 'It's your right to know'

Subhead
This week focuses on importance of open government
By
Jim Zachary, deputy national editor, Community Newspaper Holdings Inc.

Sunshine Week is a national initiative spearheaded by the American Society of News Editors to educate the public about the importance of open government and the dangers of excessive and unnecessary secrecy
For government to be of, by and for the people, it must be out in front of the people.
The theme for Sunshine Week 2019 is simply, “It’s your right to know.”
The reason it’s your right to know is that it’s your government.
From the courthouse to the statehouse to the White House, it is your right to know what government is up to.
Every deliberation by city council, county commission, the General Assembly or U.S. Congress is the people’s business.
Every penny spent by local, state and federal government is your money.
Every document held in the halls of government belongs to you.
Transparency is not, or at least should not be, partisan.
Access to government meetings and public documents should never be arduous or even controversial.
Government derives all of its powers from the public and is answerable to the public.
It is unfortunate state and federal laws are needed to protect the public’s right to know.
Of course, we know those laws are needed and more often than not must be leveraged by people requesting even the most basic information from elected and appointed officials.
No branch of government should exempt itself from freedom of information laws and no person in government should seek to circumvent those laws.
Accessing government information and attending deliberative meetings should simply be viewed as democracy in action and not as an adversarial relationship between the governing and the governed.
Access laws are not media laws.
Every person should have free and open access.
The right to know is not only an American right, it is fundamentally right.
Government secrecy that goes beyond national security is fundamentally wrong.
So records custodians at city hall, the county courthouse, with the public school system or at the state capitol must not bristle when a person asks for public records. The records requestors are simply asking for a copy of what belongs to them already.
Records requestors should not create an unnecessarily hostile relationship when making requests.
A records request and fulfillment should be a basic and ordinary transaction between government and the public it serves.
City council, county commission, the board of education, the General Assembly and its committees should not balk at the public’s right to attend meetings and should not look for every excuse to retreat into an executive session or closed door meeting.
Attending meetings, sitting in on deliberations, understanding not only what decisions are reached but how those decisions are reached are all things which are simply basic American rights, fundamental to living in an open and free society.
In our politically charged, polarized, vitriolic climate there is very little conservatives and progressives can agree on.
The public’s right to know is one thing that everyone, both in and out of government, both left and right leaning, and at the local, state and federal levels, should agree on.
We are the government.
The government is us.
It is, therefore, everyone’s fundamental right to know what government is, and is not, doing.
 
Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. is an American publisher of newspapers and advertising-related publications throughout the United States.
 

You must log in to continue reading. Log in or subscribe today.