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Front Page

Column One

Opening the Government

Tools for FOI Work

FYI on FOI

How You Can Help


Pushing Back

In the latter half of the 20th Century, we saw significant progress toward transparency in government in our cities, states and in the federal government.  Since 2000, we’ve seen steady erosion and increasing secrecy, particularly at the federal level.

In a speech in Riverside, California in May, Associated Press President Tom Curley committed his organization to being more aggressive in its coverage of open government issues and he urged journalists and journalism organizations to join the fight.

“The government is pushing hard for secrecy. We must push back equally hard for openness.” 

How can the individual journalist best push back?

FOI Information, Please

Our goal is to make sure our member organizations are heard, early and often, on open government issues. To achieve that, we need quality intelligence.

A few good spies would help. Actually, a lot of them.

You may qualify. If your reporting puts you in contact with the Congress, the administration and the agencies, or the courts – or anyone who is plugged in to those places --  we’d like to enlist your help.

All you have to do is send us an e-mail if you come across something of  (a bill, regulation, new policy, closed court hearing, etc) that affects access to information.  If you can, also take a few moments to share as much background information as possible or to point us to contacts or sources of information that would help us learn more.   

We’ll use the information to inform our coalition organizations and their members working on open government issues and by regularly posting news of what government is doing on our website. Where appropriate, we’ll send a protest letter,  or work to develop other strategies to block or reverse closure.

Our e-mail is .