Rhode Island news
03:05 PM EST on Monday, March 14, 2005
FALL RIVER - Ed Lambert, Al Lima and Mike Miozza never thought of
themselves as activists, just regular guys.
Then an energy company announced plans to build a liquefied natural gas
terminal in this small city on the Taunton River. The men -- the mayor,
a city planner and an engineer -- had nightmare visions of gas igniting
into a huge fireball on the river, and asked for government-held reports
that studied the threat to the town if the plant or a tanker were
attacked.
But like many people who ask for government records these days, they
didn't get what they were looking for. "It's a farce," Miozza says.
And it's happening across the country. To a Virginia homeowner seeking
plans for a gas pipeline near his home. To Wyoming politicians worried
about local dams. To an environmental group that wants the studies on
100-year floods and dam failures in a Southwest river canyon.
All asked for records, and all were turned down.
Behind the rejections is a transformation of the nation's Freedom of
Information Act -- a federal law that allows public access to government
reports, documents and other records. That freedom is supposed to be
balanced by the needs of national defense and privacy, and government
officials argue that America's war on terror has made a new, more
closely guarded approach necessary.
The law itself hasn't been changed, but the balance shifted after the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks with a series of actions by the Bush
administration and Congress. The creation of the Homeland Security
Department effectively added another reason government doesn't have to
open its books. States and local governments followed suit, moving more
information out of public view.
"We're denied information that could put our community at risk," Lambert
said during an interview in his sixth-floor office, the granite mills,
sea gulls and steep hills of Fall River spread out below the windows.
"It seems to us like a bad movie . . . yet we're all living it."
ORIGINALLY PASSED in 1966, the Freedom of Information Act grew out of a
backlash to the Cold War-culture of government secrecy that flourished
amid the nation's worries about communism.
The Watergate scandals spurred a strengthening of the law, giving it
teeth for the first time, and it's since been revised -- most recently
in 1996 when it was updated to make more information available over the
Internet.
The American policy has inspired governments across the globe. Slowly at
first, but increasingly in the last decade, nation after nation -- from
Japan to South Africa to Armenia -- have opened their government
information to citizens.
While the U.S. law is often associated with journalists and government
watchdog groups, private citizens actually use it far more frequently.
Individuals with questions for Social Security or Veterans Affairs,
usually about their own personal records, are the biggest users. Prison
inmates frequently make FOIA requests, as do businesses, since documents
can reveal details about government contracts and their competitors.
In all, more than 3.2 million FOIA requests were made to the federal
government in fiscal year 2003, the last year with complete figures, the
Justice Department said. That's up from 1.9 million in 1999.
Staff time on such requests equaled a full year's work of more than
5,000 employees.
The CIA's Web site, where information requests can be made online,
offers a glimpse into the public's obsessions. January's top information
searches? "UFO" (2,019 times) and "Vietnam" (1,889 times). Other
searches in the top 25 included "Iraq," "mind control," "Bay of Pigs"
and "mapping the global future."
While many requests are for personal records and some might be
pointless, in the end, the idea is to help people keep an eye on how
they are being governed, invigorating American democracy. But the
changes in the last few years have raised alarms from journalists and
public interest and civil liberties groups.
"Instead of government officials being considered public servants, they
are now more and more like gatekeepers who can determine what the public
can know," said Steven Aftergood, a Washington-based government watchdog
who runs the Federation of American Scientists. "And that's a profound
change."
A MONTH AND a day after the terrorist attacks, former Attorney General
John Ashcroft issued a memo as part of the guidance the Justice
Department provides to all federal agencies as they consider whether to
grant requests for information or deny them.
Shifting from the Clinton administration's standard that experts say
emphasized "maximum responsible disclosure," Ashcroft encouraged staff
to consider "institutional, commercial, and personal privacy interests"
and said the Justice Department would defend any rejections unless they
lacked a "sound legal basis."
Another memo followed five months later from White House Chief of Staff
Andrew Card, urging agencies to "safeguard" information that could help
in the development or use of weapons of mass destruction, and other
information that could be used "to harm the security of our nation."
Following that note, thousands of documents were removed from public
access, according to government watchdog groups and federal agencies.
Finally, with the creation of the Homeland Security Department, the
administration and Congress created an exemption to FOIA that allows
private companies to give the agency information that can then be kept
secret if it is considered "critical infrastructure." The idea is to get
companies to share more information with the promise it won't be made
public.
"Unquestionably, agencies do look at information now through a post-9/11
lens," said Daniel J. Metcalfe, co-director of the Justice Department's
Office of Information and Privacy. He helped Ashcroft draft his Oct. 12
memo, though he noted work on it started long before the terrorist
attacks.
The Card memo that followed and the provision in the Homeland Security
Act all helped create a new tone for handling information requests, but
Metcalfe stressed they did not change the law.
IN FALL RIVER, that tone meant the denial of information. "We're trying
to balance the public's need to know with the need to keep this
information from getting into the hands of those who would kill our
citizens," said Bryan Lee at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
which holds the reports.
"Nobody here wants to be the equivalent of the State Department
administrator who gave the visas to the terrorists who came into this
country," Lee said.
His agency would allow Lambert, Lima and Miozza to see the records
regarding the Fall River plant only if they promised not to speak about
them. Lambert refused, figuring as mayor it would limit his ability to
address the subject in public. Lima and Miozza agreed, but said so much
of the material they saw was blacked out that it was useless.
"What's the use of the information if we can't talk about it?" Lima
said. "It's this surreal, Kafka-esque situation."
The terminal, if approved, would hold 58 million gallons of gas, with
aircraft carrier-sized tankers coming up the narrow river roughly once a
week. Residents say it's an unacceptable risk, with homes and schools
all within a mile -- the range for second-degree burns if the fuel
ignited, according to government studies.
The federal regulatory agency has yet to decide whether to let the plant
be constructed; the opposition includes the governors and congressmen
from both Massachusetts and nearby Rhode Island.
CASES SUCH as Fall River's are helping fuel the sentiment behind a
bipartisan Senate bill that would revisit FOIA and the exemption created
under the Homeland Security Act.
"As American citizens, we have a right to know the good, bad and ugly,"
said Sen. John Cornyn, a Texan Republican who emphasized he isn't trying
to counteract the Bush administration as much as government
bureaucracy's tendency to protect itself at the public's expense. The
co-sponsor is Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Democrat.
"This is an issue that conservatives and liberals alike, Republicans and
Democrats and independents, can and should support," Cornyn said. "What
we're trying to do is nothing less than a restoration of the people's
power to control the instruments of government."
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