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- Date: Fri, 30 Apr 1993 11:23:41 EDT
- From: Paul Hyland <phyland@ESSENTIAL.ORG>
- Subject: File 5--Clinton Administration Freedom of Information Policy
-
- >Originally From--rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
-
- /* Written 2:09 am Apr 14, 1993 by nigel.allen@canrem.com in
- igc:alt.news-media */
- /* ---------- "White House Official Outlines Freed" ---------- */
-
- White House Official Outlines Freedom of Information Strategy
- at 'Information Summit'
- To: National Desk, Media Writer
- Contact: Ellen Nelson of The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center,
- 615-321-9588
-
- NASHVILLE, Tenn., April 13 -- A White House official today outlined
- a broad open government strategy for the Clinton administration,
- throwing support behind legislation to apply the Freedom of
- Information Act to electronic records.
-
- "At the Clinton White House, most of the debate over the E-mail
- system is about how we can interconnect it to public services rather
- than how we can destroy the records or tear out the hard drives before
- the subpoenas come to reach us," said John Podesta, assistant to the
- president and staff secretary.
-
- Podesta made his comments in front of 70 participants in the
- nation's first Freedom of Information Summit, sponsored by The Freedom
- Forum First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University.
-
- Though the economy dominates the headlines, Podesta said the new
- administration was quietly working across a broad front to open
- government. His "predictions for the first year," included:
-
- -- Working with Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) to win approval
- this session for a bill allowing access to dozens of electronic
- databases in the federal government.
-
- -- Developing an electronic mail system within the federal
- government to improve citizen participation in government.
-
- -- Making the government's archives available on the nation's
- "information highway," and appointing a national archivist "who cares
- more about preserving history than about preserving his job."
-
- --Creating a "mood of declassification" with new executive orders
- from the president outlining what government may keep secret.
-
- -- "Reinventing government" under initiatives developed by the fall
- by Vice President Gore to require more openness on the part of civil
- servants throughout the bureaucracy.
-
- Podesta also pledged lobbying reform and political reform to "get
- rid of the soft money in campaigns." The Freedom of Information Act
- may need strengthening in addition to electronic access, he said.
-
- Pinched by a dozen years of tight information policy, news
- organizations have sent President Clinton a freedom of information
- policy paper calling for wholesale personnel changes in FOIA-related
- jobs, junking the secrecy classifications of President Reagan's
- Executive Order 12356, overhauling the Freedom of Information Act and
- ending military censorship of war reporting.
-
- "People working on behalf of the public on more openness in
- government at all levels are heartened by the prospect of the White
- House taking the lead in this area," said Paul McMasters, executive
- director of The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt
- University.
-
- The conference, sponsored by The Freedom Forum First Amendment
- Center at Vanderbilt University, is focusing on issues ranging from
- the Clinton administration's policies on open government to
- restrictions on public access to crime, accident and disaster scenes.
- The conference, open to the public, is at the Stouffer Hotel in
- downtown Nashville.
-
- Speakers on the Clinton FOI Agenda included Richard Schmidt Jr.,
- general counsel to the American Society of Newspaper Editors and
- partner in the law firm of Cohn & Marks in Washington, D.C.; Theresa
- Amato, the director of the FOI Clearinghouse in Washington, D.C. and
- staff counsel for Public Citizens Litigation Group in Washington,
- D.C.; and Quinlan Shea, former Carter administration official who
- discussed problems of access to government. Former American hostage
- Terry Anderson will give the keynote address at the dinner tonight.
-
- The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University is
- an independent operating program of The Freedom Forum. The Center's
- mission is to foster a better public understanding of and appreciation
- for First Amendment rights and values, including freedom of religion,
- free speech and press, the right to petition government and peaceful
- assembly.
-
- The Freedom Forum is a nonpartisan, international organization
- dedicated to free press, free speech and free spirit for all people.
- It is supported entirely by an endowment established by Frank E.
- Gannett in 1935 that has grown to more than $700 million in
- diversified managed assets. Its headquarters is The Freedom Forum
- World Center in Arlington, Va.
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253
-