SPJ Mobile | Click to view full site version

> Latest News, Blogs and Events (click to expand)


Join SPJ    Why Join?    Home    Members    Leaders    Help/Contact    Advertise   
SPJ Events Calendar:
Stay in Touch
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn RSS

News and More
Click to Expand Instantly
SPJ News
Events and Deadlines
SPJ Blogs (National)
Quill Online
Journalist's Toolbox

Latest Working Press Stories
- Disco maniac on 'Stayin' Alive'
- Organizers hope for more innovation, less uncertainty at 2010 convention
- Harper family accepts Wells Key
- Song recalls earlier days of SDX
- Revving their engines
- New officers urged to reduce dues, communicate
- Pulliams keep alive family's century-long media legacy
- Covering journalism's most difficult stories
- Society's longest-serving member: 'Our job is content'
- Young journalists confront burnout
- The Buzz: jail, jokes, jobs
See all stories



2010 SPJ Convention & National Journalism Conference
October 3-5, 2010
Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino, Las Vegas

Register Online
Schedule at a Glance
   Detailed Schedule:
   Sun | Mon | Tue
Pricing Details
Journalism Expo
Hotel/Travel Info
Things to do in Vegas
For Sponsors and Exhibitors
Information for SPJ Leaders
Need a Roommate?

Sponsored by


















2009 SPJ
Convention Recap

Streaming Audio
Working Press Coverage
2008 Highlights
2007 Highlights
2006 Highlights

Questions about the Convention?
317/927-8000
E-mail

About SPJ
Mission
Membership
General Info
Board of Directors
Committees
Bylaws | PDF version
Headquarters
Documentation
History | Past Presidents

Home > Publications > The Working Press > Former SPJ president pushes for transparency

Working Press D.C. Header
Monday, September 06, 2010 | Front Page | About/Staff | SPJ Convention Home Page
8/29/2009 7:14:40 AM
Former SPJ president pushes for transparency


By Josephine Varnier

After a revealing statewide audit conduced by watchdog group Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, resources about open records and meetings have become available in Tennessee, and the number of requests for information has increased.

And now the government has started pushing back.

Former SPJ President and Wells Memorial Key recipient Frank Gibson has been lobbying for sunshine laws with the coalition, but said legislators have started filing more bills to close certain records and meetings.

In 2004, Gibson, with the help of 100 volunteers, arranged Tennessee’s first public records audit, finding that 35 percent of records requests for police departments and 45 percent of records requests for sheriff’s departments were denied.

The Tennessee Office of Open Records Counsel was created in 2008 to answer questions from journalists, citizens and government officials to confirm or deny the accessibility of records. It has handled 600 calls in its first year without any promotion or advertising.

“Citizens have a place to call now,” Gibson said. “They can call and check it … and get told a record is open.”

The sunshine laws on the books had been neglected since 1974, Gibson said. Between 1974 and 2008, around half a dozen exemptions had been passed, closing certain records or meetings, he said. But in the last year alone, legislators have filed for three times as many exemptions as is the norm in a single year for a two-year session, Gibson said.

The Tennessee General Assembly meets for 90 days spread over a two-year term.

Exemptions passed this year have sealed government building security documents, labor negotiation meetings, autopsy photographs and governing bodies’ personal chat rooms.

A citizens’ advisory committee on open government is trying to get broader review for legislation before it’s passed so that members of the press, citizens and government representatives discuss and screen proposed legislation.

Gibson said the committee managed to get some legislation postponed until next session, and that a lot of homework needs to be done to fight them.

“Out of a total of 30 (bills), 25 have been stopped or delayed until next year’s general assembly session,” he said.

The coalition is working on its latest project, the citizens' guide “The Keys to Open Government.”

“There is no information for citizens,” Gibson said. “Just reading laws doesn’t satisfy or answer questions. The key to open government is knowledge."

Copyright © 1996-2010 Society of Professional Journalists. All Rights Reserved. Legal

Society of Professional Journalists
Eugene S. Pulliam National Journalism Center, 3909 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, IN 46208
317/927-8000 | Fax: 317/920-4789 | Contact SPJ Headquarters | Employment Opportunities | Advertise with SPJ