|
Florida's
Sunshine Sunday grows to national Sunshine Week
Sunshine Week
For release Sunday, March 13, 2005
By BRENDAN FARRINGTON
Associated Press Writer
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -- When post 9-11 fears sent lawmakers
scurrying to close public records, a group of Florida newspaper
editors responded with an event they called Sunshine Sunday.
Members of the Florida Society of Newspaper Editors ran out
stories and editorials making their readers and lawmakers
aware of the importance of public records laws. The goal was
to preserve Florida's reputation as the nation's leader on
open government as lawmakers considered dozens of bills that
would have created exemptions to the public's right of access
embedded in the state constitution.
The reputation has not only stayed intact, but members of
the Legislature are more vocally championing the cause.
"For the first couple of years we did Sunshine Sunday
we saw a significant drop in the number of new exemptions
created and we saw the rise of a group of legislators committed
to the idea of ensuring open government," said Barbara
Petersen, president of the First Amendment Foundation, which
tracks open government issues.
Sunshine Sunday is now being called Sunshine Week and it's
no longer just a Florida thing. The American Society of Newspaper
Editors heard from Florida editors about the success of the
event and is asking newspapers nationwide to raise awareness
from March 13-19 about open government and records access.
"Our hope will be that the coverage, that the stories
that are written, the commentaries that are written will prompt
people to think more about it, to talk more about it and to
discuss what it means in their own lives," said Pete
Weitzel, coordinator of the Arlington, Va.-based Coalition
of Journalists for Open Government. "If that happens
we will all find we are happier with government and are more
confident with what it's doing."
Access helps residents know what the government is doing,
how tax money is spent and assures them officials aren't breaking
the law. It also can be used to research property records,
review lawsuits, check criminal histories, verify a day care
center is licensed, check on a doctor's background and much,
much more.
Tim Franklin was the Orlando Sentinel editor and an FSNE board
member in 2002 when he came up with the idea of Sunshine Sunday.
The question was: Would fierce competitors be able to come
together behind a common goal?
The first year, just more than half of Florida's daily newspapers
participated. It has since grown to include all but one of
the state's dailies, as well as weekly newspapers and television
stations.
"The first Sunshine Sunday had real impact and real positive
impact. We decided we had to keep it going because the threat
to open government was not lessening over time," said
Franklin, who is now editor of The Baltimore Sun.
"It's really heartening to see what we started in Florida
go national and I hope we can have the same impact nationally
as we had in Florida. At a minimum, I hope the public understands
the issues better as a result of this."
It would also be helpful to have the federal government see
the light. Franklin said it's become routine for agencies
to deny or "slow walk" records requests.
State Rep. Fred Brummer knows his colleagues have taken public
records exemptions more seriously since the campaign began
three years ago. Now he wants lawmakers everywhere to take
notice.
"I hope the success that Florida has had will spread
nationwide and make open government the case in all 50 states
and the federal government," said Brummer, R-Apopka.
"Open records and open meetings are just absolutely signal
to a sound democracy -- the cornerstone."
The national campaign, though, is a more difficult task to
coordinate, Weitzel said.
"Florida has had such a wonderful tradition of sunshine
in government and the attitude of the public on openness in
government and the involvement of the press and the media,"
he said. "In that sense, I think it was easier to mobilize
Florida and the newspapers in that state than the national
effort, where there's not always as much of a tradition."
Still, he expects there will be at least some participation
in all 50 states.
___
On the Net:
Florida Society of Newspaper Editors: http://fsne.org
|