
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE, Tuesday, April
12, 2005
Contact:
Dr. James Simon, 203 254 4000 x2792
Mitchell
Pearlman, state FOI, 866-374-3617
ON 30TH ANNIVERSARY OF STATE
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT,
FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY STUDENTS FIND OFFICES
IN EVERY CITY AND TOWN
IN FAIRFIELD COUNTY VIOLATING THE LAW
A group
of Fairfield University
journalism students celebrated
the 30th anniversary
of the state’s Freedom of Information
Act by going undercover
and learning whether
Fairfield County cities and towns provided
public access to government documents, as
mandated by the law.
The students visited three
offices in each community – the police station, Board
of Education, and city or town clerk’s
office – and asked for documents, defined under
state law, as being available to the public.
Not one of the 23 cities and
towns had all three offices fully in
compliance with the law, according to the
study, released Tuesday. Overall,
51 of the 69 individual offices, or 74 percent,
were violating state regulations.
The students either
were refused
access to the documents, or municipal
officials violated state regulations by
demanding to know their name, to know the reason
for seeing the documents, to see
identification, to put the request in writing,
or imposed other
roadblocks that have been ruled
improper under
the FOI law.
“The Fairfield
County results are
consistent with studies across the country
that show citizens are being denied their
right to public information,”
said Mitchell Pearlman, executive director
of the Connecticut Freedom of Information
Commission. His group coordinated
a similar statewide survey,
with Fairfield University
participation, in 1999 that also found widespread
non-compliance with the law.
“These students performed
a real public service.
Most of these municipal officials know the law, and they are
choosing to not obey it. It’s useful to use publicity to let citizens know when
their local officials are
out of compliance,” he said.
Connecticut has one of the most
aggressive laws in the country
to guarantee that citizens have the right
to see documents that are created
with public tax dollars.
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more –
Page 2
FOI
Citizens do not have to file a written
request with the FOI Commission in Hartford;
instead, cities and towns must make documents available for
public inspection during normal
business hours without imposing any other
restrictions
to access.
The 17 students in the Contemporary
Journalism class at Fairfield
University visited the municipal offices in March
during “Sunshine Week,” a national celebration
of the public’s right to open access for
government documents and access to open government
meetings.
In Fairfield
County, they found the opposite of what the law intended:
·
The students visited three
offices in each of the 23 communities, or a
total of 69 offices. Only 18 of 69 offices were
in compliance, or 26 percent.
The results were
similar to the 1999 survey
in which 20 percent of Fairfield
County offices were in compliance.
·
The remaining
offices either refused
requests to inspect the public documents or
violated state regulations by asking the requesters
their name, the reason
for seeing them, asked to see an ID, asked to
put the request in writing,
or improperly
blacked out information designed to remain
public.
·
While there was
no city or town where
the police, and clerk’s office, and school
officials all were in compliance, the most
cooperative officials were
in Newtown, New Canaan and Stratford,
where two of the three
offices were cooperative
and in full compliance with state regulations.
·
There
was a sharp increase
in the percentage of police offices that
complied with the law, compared to the 1999 survey.
Of the 23 police departments in Fairfield
County surveyed, 10 of 23, or
43 percent, were
in full compliance with the FOI law, compared
to only 4 percent in 1999. In contrast,
26 percent of city and town clerk’s
offices complied in 2005, and 9 percent of the
school board offices.
For a descriptive look at what the students found in each city and town, go to
The students followed the rules
used in the 1999 survey. They arrived
at the office during business
hours. They asked police to see arrest
records for
the current
and preceding week. They asked city and town
clerks for
all marriage
license applications (with social security
numbers blacked out). They asked school
officials for the teacher
attendance records.
In all three settings, the requested
documents are defined as public records.
The three types of records
were picked because they were
used in the 1999 Connecticut study and, Pearlman
said, officials clearly know they require
public access.
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FOI
While the documents were
supposed to be available at any time for
public inspection, some offices asked for time
to prepare
the documents; students judged an office to be in compliance if it produced
the documents within two hours.
“As a young journalism
student, I was amazed to see the roadblocks
that people face in trying to get public information,”
said Ashleigh Egan, a Fairfield senior
and managing editor of the school‘s newspaper.
Egan was the field director
for the project,
and her experience
was typical of that faced in the class. She said she arrived
at the police station, asked to see the police records,
“and the woman behind the glass window asked if I was with the press.
I said, ‘I would rather
not say.’ She said, ‘Well, then, you’re not
going to see the records’.”
“The Freedom
of Information law is for
all of us, not just journalists,” said Dr.
James Simon, a Fairfield journalism
professor who
coordinated the project.
“While journalists regularly
use the law to gain access to documents, most FOI requests
are filed by businesses or
average citizens interested
in knowing how their tax dollars
are being spent.”
“City and town officials
sometimes forget that they don’t own the
documents,” said Dr. Simon, who covered
government for
10 years with The Associated Press. “While most public officials work
hard for their
communities, they have to keep in mind that any person
has the right to walk into a government
office and see the documents that their tax
dollars paid to create.”
Appendix 1: City and town breakdown,
2005 Fairfield University
survey of FOI compliance
The three offices in each
city and town were given one of the following
three ratings,
based on the responses of municipal officials
when students asked for access to public records:
·
Yes: full compliance with the FOI regulations;
students allowed to inspect records
without being asked their name, the reason
for seeing them, asked to show an ID, asked to
put the request in writing,
or information
was improperly
blacked out that was designed to remain
public.
·
View/restrictions:
Students were allowed to view records
with restrictions
that are deemed improper
by the state FOI commission, such as
being asked their name, the reason
for seeing them, asked to show an ID, asked to
put the request in writing,
or information
was improperly
blacked out that was designed to remain
public.
- No:
Students denied access to public records
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FOI
|
Town
|
2005 city or town clerk
|
2005 police
|
2005 schools
|
|
Bethel
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
Bridgeport
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
Brookfield
|
No
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Danbury
|
No
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Darien
|
View/restrictions
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Easton
|
No
|
No
|
Yes
|
|
Fairfield
|
No
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Greenwich
|
Yes
|
No
|
No
|
|
Monroe
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
New Canaan
|
Yes
|
No
|
Yes
|
|
New Fairfield
|
No
|
View/restrictions
|
No
|
|
Newtown
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Norwalk
|
No
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Redding
|
View/restrictions
|
Yes
|
View/restrictions
|
|
Ridgefield
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
Shelton
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
Sherman
|
View/restrictions
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Stamford
|
No
|
No
|
No
|
|
Stratford
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
Trumbull
|
Yes
|
No
|
No
|
|
Weston
|
Yes
|
No
|
No
|
|
Westport
|
No
|
View/restrictions
|
No
|
|
Wilton
|
No
|
Yes
|
No
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
County totals
|
6/23 yes, or 26% yes
|
10/23 yes, pr 43% yes
|
2/23 yes, or
9% yes
|