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U.S. News & World Report
12/22/03
Investigative Reports
Keeping Secrets
The Bush administration is doing the
public's business out of the public eye. Here's how--and why
"Veil
of Secrecy," a NOW with Bill Moyers report produced
in collaboration withU.S. News, has more information on
this story.
By Christopher H. Schmitt and Edward T. Pound
Air and water / Bait and switch / Get
out of jail free / Trigger finger
/ Surveillance / Key
Dates: Secrecy and the Bush Administration
"Democracies die behind closed doors."
--U.S. APPEALS COURT JUDGE DAMON J. KEITH
At 12:01 p.m. on Jan. 20, 2001, as a bone-chilling rain fell
on Washington, George W. Bush took the oath of office as the
nation's 43rd president. Later that afternoon, the business of
governance officially began. Like other chief executives before
him, Bush moved to unravel the efforts of his predecessor. Bush's
chief of staff, Andrew Card, directed federal agencies to freeze
more than 300 pending regulations issued by the administration
of President Bill Clinton. The regulations affected areas ranging
from health and safety to the environment and industry. The delay,
Card said, would "ensure that the president's appointees
have the opportunity to review any new or pending regulations."
The process, as it turned out, expressly precluded input from
average citizens. Inviting such comments, agency officials concluded,
would be "contrary to the public interest."
Ten months later, a former U.S. Army Ranger named Joseph McCormick
found out just how hard it was to get information from the new
administration. A resident of Floyd County, Va., in the heart
of the Blue Ridge Mountains, McCormick discovered that two big
energy companies planned to run a high-volume natural gas pipeline
through the center of his community. He wanted to help organize
citizens by identifying residents through whose property the
30-inch pipeline would run. McCormick turned to Washington, seeking
a project map from federal regulators. The answer? A pointed
"no." Although such information was "previously
public," officials of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
told McCormick, disclosing the route of the new pipeline could
provide a road map for terrorists. McCormick was nonplused. Once
construction began, he says, the pipeline's location would be
obvious to anyone. "I understand about security," the
rangy, soft-spoken former business executive says. "But
there certainly is a balance--it's about people's right to use
the information of an open society to protect their rights."
For the past three years, the Bush administration has quietly
but efficiently dropped a shroud of secrecy across many critical
operations of the federal government--cloaking its own affairs
from scrutiny and removing from the public domain important information
on health, safety, and environmental matters. The result has
been a reversal of a decades-long trend of openness in government
while making increasing amounts of information unavailable to
the taxpayers who pay for its collection and analysis. Bush administration
officials often cite the September 11 attacks as the reason for
the enhanced secrecy. But as the Inauguration Day directive from
Card indicates, the initiative to wall off records and information
previously in the public domain began from Day 1. Steven Garfinkel,
a retired government lawyer and expert on classified information,
puts it this way: "I think they have an overreliance on
the utility of secrecy. They don't seem to realize secrecy is
a two-edge sword that cuts you as well as protects you."
Even supporters of the administration, many of whom agree that
security needed to be bolstered after the attacks, say Bush and
his inner circle have been unusually assertive in their commitment
to increased government secrecy. "Tightly controlling information,
from the White House on down, has been the hallmark of this administration,"
says Roger Pilon, vice president of legal affairs for the Cato
Institute.
Air and water. Some of the Bush administration's initiatives
have been well chronicled. Its secret deportation of immigrants
suspected as terrorists, its refusal to name detainees at the
U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the new surveillance powers
granted under the post-9/11 U.S.A. Patriot Act have all been
debated at length by the administration and its critics. The
clandestine workings of an energy task force headed by Vice President
Dick Cheney have also been the subject of litigation, now before
the Supreme Court.
But the administration's efforts to shield the actions of,
and the information obtained by, the executive branch are far
more extensive than has been previously documented. A five-month
investigation by U.S. News detailed a series of initiatives
by administration officials to effectively place large amounts
of information out of the reach of ordinary citizens. The magazine's
inquiry is based on a detailed review of government reports and
regulations, federal agency Web sites, and legislation pressed
by the White House. U.S. News also analyzed information
from public interest groups and others that monitor the administration's
activities, and interviewed more than 100 people, including many
familiar with the new secrecy initiatives. That information was
supplemented by a review of materials provided in response to
more than 200 Freedom of Information Act requests filed by the
magazine seeking details of federal agencies' practices in providing
public access to government information.
The principal findings:
Important business and consumer information is increasingly
being withheld from the public. The Bush administration is
denying access to auto and tire safety information, for instance,
that manufacturers are required to provide under a new "early-warning"
system created following the Ford-Firestone tire scandal four
years ago. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, meanwhile,
is more frequently withholding information that would allow the
public to scrutinize its product safety findings and product
recall actions.
New administration initiatives have effectively placed
off limits critical health and safety information potentially
affecting millions of Americans. The information includes
data on quality and vulnerability of drinking-water supplies,
potential chemical hazards in communities, and safety of airline
travel and other forms of transportation. In Aberdeen, Md., families
who live near an Army weapons base are suing the Army for details
of toxic pollution fouling the town's drinking-water supplies.
Citing security, the Army has refused to provide information
that could help residents locate and track the pollution.
Beyond the well-publicized cases involving terrorism suspects,
the administration is aggressively pursuing secrecy claims in
the federal courts in ways little understood--even by some in
the legal system. The administration is increasingly invoking
a "state secrets" privilege (box, Page 24) that allows
government lawyers to request that civil and criminal cases be
effectively closed by asserting that national security would
be compromised if they proceed. It is impossible to say how often
government lawyers have invoked the privilege. But William Weaver,
a professor at the University of Texas-El Paso, who recently
completed a study of the historical use of the privilege, says
the Bush administration is asserting it "with offhanded
abandon." In one case, Weaver says, the government invoked
the privilege 245 times. In another, involving allegations of
racial discrimination, the Central Intelligence Agency demanded,
and won, return of information it had provided to a former employee's
attorneys--only to later disclose the very information that it
claimed would jeopardize national security.
New administration policies have thwarted the ability of
Congress to exercise its constitutional authority to monitor
the executive branch and, in some cases, even to obtain basic
information about its actions. One Republican lawmaker, Rep.
Dan Burton of Indiana, became so frustrated with the White House's
refusal to cooperate in an investigation that he exclaimed, during
a hearing: "This is not a monarchy!" Some see a fundamental
transformation in the past three years. "What has stunned
us so much," says Gary Bass, executive director of OMB Watch,
a public interest group in Washington that monitors government
activities, "is how rapidly we've moved from a principle
of `right to know' to one edging up to `need to know.' "
The White House declined repeated requests by U.S. Newsto
discuss the new secrecy initiatives with the administration's
top policy and legal officials. Two Bush officials who did comment
defended the administration and rejected criticism of what many
call its "penchant for secrecy." Dan Bartlett, the
White House communications director, says that besides the extraordinary
steps the president has taken to protect the nation, Bush and
other senior officials must keep private advice given in areas
such as intelligence and policymaking, if that advice is to remain
candid. Overall, Bartlett says, "the administration is open,
and the process in which this administration conducts its business
is as transparent as possible." There is, he says, "great
respect for the law, and great respect for the American people
knowing how their government is operating."
Bartlett says that some administration critics "such
as environmentalists . . . want to use [secrecy] as a bogeyman."
He adds: "For every series of examples you could find where
you could make the claim of a `penchant for secrecy,' I could
probably come up with several that demonstrate the transparency
of our process." Asked for examples, the communications
director offered none.
There are no precise statistics on how much government information
is rendered secret. One measure, though, can be seen in a tally
of how many times officials classify records. In the first two
years of Bush's term, his administration classified records some
44.5 million times, or about the same number as in President
Clinton's last four years, according to the Information Security
Oversight Office, an arm of the National Archives and Records
Administration. But the picture is more complicated than that.
In an executive order issued last March, Bush made it easier
to reclassify information that had previously been declassified--allowing
executive-branch agencies to drop a cloak of secrecy over reams
of information, some of which had been made available to the
public.
Bait and switch. In addition, under three other little-noticed
executive orders, Bush increased the number of officials who
can classify records to include the secretary of agriculture,
the secretary of health and human services, and the administrator
of the Environmental Protection Agency. Now, all three can label
information at the "secret" level, rendering it unavailable
for public review. Traditionally, classification authority has
resided in federal agencies engaged in national security work.
"We don't know yet how frequently the authority is being
exercised," says Steven Aftergood, who publishes an authoritative
newsletter in Washington on government secrecy. "But it
is a sign of the times that these purely domestic agencies have
been given national security classification authority. It is
another indication of how our government is being transformed
under pressure of the perceived terrorist threat." J. William
Leonard, director of the information oversight office, estimates
that up to half of what the government now classifies needn't
be. "You can't have an effective secrecy process,"
he cautions, "unless you're discerning in how you use it."
New administration policies have thwarted the ability of Congress
to exercise its constitutional authority to monitor the executive
branch and, in some cases, even to obtain basic information about
its actions. One Republican lawmaker, Rep. Dan Burton of Indiana,
became so frustrated with the White House's refusal to cooperate
in an investigation that he exclaimed, during a hearing: "This
is not a monarchy!" Some see a fundamental transformation
in the past three years. "What has stunned us so much,"
says Gary Bass, executive director of OMB Watch, a public interest
group in Washington that monitors government activities, "is
how rapidly we've moved from a principle of `right to know' to
one edging up to `need to know.' "
The White House declined repeated requests by U.S. Newsto
discuss the new secrecy initiatives with the administration's
top policy and legal officials. Two Bush officials who did comment
defended the administration and rejected criticism of what many
call its "penchant for secrecy." Dan Bartlett, the
White House communications director, says that besides the extraordinary
steps the president has taken to protect the nation, Bush and
other senior officials must keep private advice given in areas
such as intelligence and policymaking, if that advice is to remain
candid. Overall, Bartlett says, "the administration is open,
and the process in which this administration conducts its business
is as transparent as possible." There is, he says, "great
respect for the law, and great respect for the American people
knowing how their government is operating."
Bartlett says that some administration critics "such
as environmentalists . . . want to use [secrecy] as a bogeyman."
He adds: "For every series of examples you could find where
you could make the claim of a `penchant for secrecy,' I could
probably come up with several that demonstrate the transparency
of our process." Asked for examples, the communications
director offered none.
There are no precise statistics on how much government information
is rendered secret. One measure, though, can be seen in a tally
of how many times officials classify records. In the first two
years of Bush's term, his administration classified records some
44.5 million times, or about the same number as in President
Clinton's last four years, according to the Information Security
Oversight Office, an arm of the National Archives and Records
Administration. But the picture is more complicated than that.
In an executive order issued last March, Bush made it easier
to reclassify information that had previously been declassified--allowing
executive-branch agencies to drop a cloak of secrecy over reams
of information, some of which had been made available to the
public.
New administration policies have thwarted the ability of Congress
to exercise its constitutional authority to monitor the executive
branch and, in some cases, even to obtain basic information about
its actions. One Republican lawmaker, Rep. Dan Burton of Indiana,
became so frustrated with the White House's refusal to cooperate
in an investigation that he exclaimed, during a hearing: "This
is not a monarchy!" Some see a fundamental transformation
in the past three years. "What has stunned us so much,"
says Gary Bass, executive director of OMB Watch, a public interest
group in Washington that monitors government activities, "is
how rapidly we've moved from a principle of `right to know' to
one edging up to `need to know.' "
The White House declined repeated requests by U.S. Newsto
discuss the new secrecy initiatives with the administration's
top policy and legal officials. Two Bush officials who did comment
defended the administration and rejected criticism of what many
call its "penchant for secrecy." Dan Bartlett, the
White House communications director, says that besides the extraordinary
steps the president has taken to protect the nation, Bush and
other senior officials must keep private advice given in areas
such as intelligence and policymaking, if that advice is to remain
candid. Overall, Bartlett says, "the administration is open,
and the process in which this administration conducts its business
is as transparent as possible." There is, he says, "great
respect for the law, and great respect for the American people
knowing how their government is operating."
Bartlett says that some administration critics "such
as environmentalists . . . want to use [secrecy] as a bogeyman."
He adds: "For every series of examples you could find where
you could make the claim of a `penchant for secrecy,' I could
probably come up with several that demonstrate the transparency
of our process." Asked for examples, the communications
director offered none.
There are no precise statistics on how much government information
is rendered secret. One measure, though, can be seen in a tally
of how many times officials classify records. In the first two
years of Bush's term, his administration classified records some
44.5 million times, or about the same number as in President
Clinton's last four years, according to the Information Security
Oversight Office, an arm of the National Archives and Records
Administration. But the picture is more complicated than that.
In an executive order issued last March, Bush made it easier
to reclassify information that had previously been declassified--allowing
executive-branch agencies to drop a cloak of secrecy over reams
of information, some of which had been made available to the
public.
From the start, the Bush White House has resisted efforts
to disclose information about executive-branch activities and
decision making. The energy task force headed by Cheney is just
one example. In May 2001, the task force produced a report calling
for increased oil and gas drilling, including on public land.
The Sierra Club and another activist group, Judicial Watch, sued
to get access to task-force records, saying that energy lobbyists
unduly influenced the group. Citing the Constitution's separation
of powers clause, the administration is arguing that the courts
can't compel Cheney to disclose information about his advice
to the president. A federal judge ordered the administration
to produce the records, prompting an appeal to the Supreme Court.
Energy interests aren't alone in winning a friendly hearing
from the Bush administration. Auto and tire manufacturers prevailed
in persuading the administration to limit disclosure requirements
stemming from one of the highest-profile corporate scandals of
recent years. Four years ago, after news broke that failing Firestone
tires on Ford SUVs had caused hundreds of deaths and many more
accidents, Congress enacted a new auto and tire safety law. A
cornerstone was a requirement that manufacturers submit safety
data to a government early-warning system, which would provide
clues to help prevent another scandal. Lawmakers backing the
system wanted the data made available to the public. After the
legislation passed, officials at the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration said they didn't expect to create any new
categories of secrecy for the information; they indicated that
key data would automatically be made public. That sparked protests
from automakers, tire manufacturers, and others. After months
of pressure, transportation officials decided to make vital information
such as warranty claims, field reports from dealers, and consumer
complaints--all potentially valuable sources of safety information--secret.
"It was more or less a bait and switch," says Laura
MacCleery, auto-safety counsel for Public Citizen, a nonprofit
consumer group. "You're talking about information that will
empower consumers. The manufacturers are not going to give that
up easily."
Get out of jail free. Government officials, unsurprisingly,
don't see it that way. Lloyd Guerci, a Transportation Department
attorney involved in writing the new regulations, declined to
comment. But Ray Tyson, a spokesman for the traffic safety administration,
denies the agency caved to industry pressure: "We've listened
to all who have opinions and reached a compromise that probably
isn't satisfactory to anybody."
Some of the strongest opposition to making the warning-system
data public came from the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers.
The organization, whose membership comprises U.S. and international
carmakers, argued that releasing the information would harm them
competitively. The Bush administration has close ties to the
carmakers. Bush Chief of Staff Card has been General Motors'
top lobbyist and head of a trade group of major domestic automakers.
Jacqueline Glassman, NHTSA's chief counsel, is a former top lawyer
for DaimlerChrysler Corp. In the months before the new regulations
were released, industry officials met several times with officials
from the White House's Office of Management and Budget.
The administration's commitment to increased secrecy measures
extends to the area of "critical infrastructure information,"
or CII. In layman's terms, this refers to transportation, communications,
energy, and other systems that make modern society run. The Homeland
Security Act allows companies to make voluntary submissions of
information about critical infrastructure to the Department of
Homeland Security. The idea is to encourage firms to share information
crucial to running and protecting those facilities. But under
the terms of the law, when a company does this, the information
is exempted from public disclosure and cannot be used without
the submitting party's permission in any civil proceeding, even
a government enforcement action. Some critics see this as a get-out-of-jail-free
card, allowing companies worried about potential litigation or
regulatory actions to place troublesome information in a convenient
"homeland security" vault. "The sweep of it is
amazing," says Beryl Howell, former general counsel to the
Senate Judiciary Committee. "Savvy businesses will be able
to mark every document handed over [to] government officials
as `CII' to ensure their confidentiality." Companies "wanted
liability exemption long before 9/11," adds Patrice McDermott,
a lobbyist for the American Library Association, which has a
tradition of advocacy on right-to-know issues. "Now, they've
got it."
Under the administration's plan to implement the Homeland
Security Act, some businesses may get even more protection. When
Congress passed the law, it said the antidisclosure provision
would apply only to information submitted to the Department of
Homeland Security. The department recently proposed extending
the provision to cover information submitted to any federal agency.
A department spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.
Business objections were also pivotal when the Environmental
Protection Agency recently backed off a plan that would have
required some companies to disclose more about chemical stockpiles
in communities.
If the administration's secrecy policies have helped business,
they have done little for individuals worried about health and
safety issues. The residents of the small town of Aberdeen, Md.,
can attest to that. On a chilly fall evening, some 100 people
gathered at the Aberdeen firehouse to hear the latest about a
toxic substance called perchlorate. An ingredient in rocket fuel,
perchlorate has entered the aquifer that feeds the town's drinking-water
wells. The culprit is the nearby U.S. Army's Aberdeen Proving
Ground, where since World War I, all manner of weapons have been
tested.
Trigger finger. After word of the perchlorate contamination
broke, a coalition of citizens began working with the Army to
try to attack the unseen plume of pollution moving through the
ground. But earlier this year, the Army delivered Aberdeen residents
a sharp blow. It began censoring maps to eliminate features like
street names and building locations--information critical to
understanding and tracking where contamination might have occurred
or where environmental testing was being done.
The reason? The information, the Army says, could provide
clues helpful to terrorists. Arlen Crabb, the head of a citizens'
group, doesn't buy it. "It's an abuse of power," says
Crabb, a 20-year Army veteran, whose well lies just a mile and
a half from the base. His coalition is suing the Army, citing
health and safety concerns. "We're not a bunch of radicals.
We've got to have the proof. The government has to be transparent."
Aberdeen is but one example of the way enhanced security measures
increasingly conflict with the health and safety concerns of
ordinary Americans. Two basics--drinking water and airline travel--help
illustrate the trend. A public health and bioterrorism law enacted
last year requires, among other things, that operators of local
water systems study vulnerabilities to attack or other disruptions
and draw up plans to address any weaknesses. Republicans and
Democrats praised the measure, pushed by the Bush administration,
as a prudent response to potential terrorist attacks. But there's
a catch. Residents are precluded from obtaining most information
about any vulnerabilities.
This wasn't always the case. In 1996, Congress passed several
amendments to the Clean Water Act calling for "source water
assessments" to be made of water supply systems. The idea
was that the assessments, covering such things as sources of
contamination, would arm the public with information necessary
to push for improvements. Today, the water assessments are still
being done, but some citizens' groups say that because of Bush
administration policy, the release of information has been so
restricted that there is too little specific information to act
upon. They blame the Environmental Protection Agency for urging
states to limit information provided to the public from the assessments.
As a result, the program has been fundamentally reshaped from
one that has made information widely available to one that now
forces citizens to essentially operate on a need-to-know basis,
says Stephen Gasteyer, a Washington specialist on water-quality
issues. "People [are] being overly zealous in their enforcement
of safety and security, and perhaps a little paranoid,"
he says. "So you're getting releases of information so ambiguous
that it's not terribly useful." Cynthia Dougherty, director
of EPA's groundwater and drinking-water office, described her
agency's policy as laying out "minimal standards,"
so that states that had been intending to more fully disclose
information "had the opportunity to decide to make a change."
The Federal Aviation Administration has its own security concerns,
and supporters say it has addressed them vigorously. In doing
so, however, the agency has also made it harder for Americans
to obtain the kind of safety information once considered routine.
The FAA has eliminated online access to records on enforcement
actions taken against airlines, pilots, mechanics, and others.
That came shortly after the 9/11 attacks, when it was discovered
that information was available on things like breaches of airport
security, says Rebecca Trexler, an FAA spokeswoman. Balancing
such concerns isn't easy. But rather than cut off access to just
that information, the agency pulled back all enforcement records.
The FAA has also backed away from providing access to safety
information voluntarily submitted by airlines.
As worrisome as the specter of terrorism is for many Americans,
many still grumble about being kept in the dark unnecessarily.
Under rules the Transportation Security Administration adopted
last year--with no public notice or comment--the traveling public
no longer has access to key government information on the safety
and security of all modes of transportation. The sweeping restrictions
go beyond protecting details about security or screening systems
to include information on enforcement actions or effectiveness
of security measures. The new TSA rules also establish a new,
looser standard for denying access to information: Material can
be withheld from the public, the rules say, simply if it's "impractical"
to release it. The agency did not respond to requests for comment.
This same pattern can be seen in one federal agency after
another. As Joseph McCormick, the former Army Ranger trying to
learn more about the pipeline planned for Virginia's Shenandoah
Valley, learned, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission now
restricts even the most basic information about such projects.
The agency says its approach is "balanced," adding
that security concerns amply justify the changes.\
The Bush administration is pressing the courts to impose more
secrecy, too. Jeffrey Sterling, 36, a former CIA operations officer,
can testify to that. Sterling, who is black, is suing the CIA
for discrimination. In September, with his attorneys in the midst
of preparing important filings, a CIA security officer paid them
a visit, demanding return of documents the agency had previously
provided. A mistake had been made, the officer explained, and
the records contained information that if disclosed would gravely
damage national security. The officer warned that failure to
comply could lead to prison or loss of a security clearance,
according to the lawyers. Although vital to Sterling's case,
the lawyers reluctantly gave up the records.
What was so important? In a federal courtroom in Alexandria,
Va., a Justice Department attorney recently explained that the
records included a pseudonym given to Sterling for an internal
CIA proceeding on his discrimination complaint. In fact, the
pseudonym, which Sterling never used in an operation, had already
been disclosed through a clerical error. Mark Zaid, one of Sterling's
attorneys, says the pseudonym is just a misdirection play by
the CIA. The real reason the agency demanded the files back,
he says, is that they included information supporting Sterling's
discrimination complaint. Zaid says he has never encountered
such heavy-handed treatment from the CIA. "When they have
an administration that is willing to cater [to secrecy], they
go for it," he says, "because they know they can get
away with it." A CIA spokesman declined comment.
In this case, which is still pending, the administration is
invoking the "state secrets" privilege, in which it
asserts that a case can't proceed normally without disclosing
information harmful to national security. The Justice Department
says it can't provide statistics on how often it invokes the
privilege. But Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University
law professor active in national security matters, says: "In
the past, it was an unusual thing. The Bush administration is
faster on the trigger."
Surveillance. At the same time, the government is opening
up a related front. Last spring, the TSA effectively shut down
the case of Mohammed Ali Ahmed, an Indian Muslim and naturalized
citizen. In September 2001, Ahmed and three of his children were
removed from an American Airlines flight. Last year, Ahmed filed
a civil rights suit against the airline. But TSA head James Loy
intervened, saying that giving Ahmed information about his family's
removal would compromise airline security. The government, in
other words, was asserting a claim to withhold the very information
Ahmed needed to pursue his case, says his attorney, Wayne Krause,
of the Texas Civil Rights Project. "You're looking at an
almost unprecedented vehicle to suppress information that is
vital to the public and the people who want to vindicate their
rights," Krause says.
Secret evidence of a different kind comes into play through
a little-noticed effect of the U.S.A. Patriot Act. A key provision
allows information from surveillance approved for intelligence
gathering to be used to convict a defendant in criminal court.
But the government's application--which states the case for the
snooping--isn't available for defendants to see, as in traditional
law enforcement surveillance cases. With government agencies
now hoarding all manner of secret information, the growing stockpile
represents an opportunity for abusive leaks, critics say. The
new law takes note of that, by allowing suits against the federal
government. But there's an important catch--in order to seek
redress, one must forfeit the right to a jury trial. Instead,
the action must be held before a judge; judges, typically, are
much more conservative in awarding damages than are juries.
Most Americans appreciate the need for increased security.
But with conflicts between safety and civil rights increasing,
the need for an arbiter is acute--which is perhaps the key reason
why the vast new security powers of many executive-branch agencies
are so alarming to citizens' groups and others. A diminished
role of congressional oversight is just one area of fallout,
but there are others. Some examples:
It took the threat of a subpoena from the independent commission
investigating the 9/11 attacks to force the White House to turn
over intelligence reports. Even at that, family members of victims
complain, there were too many restrictions on release of the
information. In Congress, the administration has rebuffed members
on a range of issues often unrelated to security concerns.
In a huge military spending bill last year, Congress directed
President Bush to give it 30 days' notice before initiating certain
sensitive defense programs. Bush signed the bill into law but
rejected the restraint and said he would ignore the provision
if he deemed it necessary.
Initial contracts to rebuild Iraq, worth billions of dollars,
were awarded in secret. Bids were limited to companies invited
to participate, and many had close ties to the White House. Members
of Congress later pressed for an open bidding process.
Many public interest groups report that government agencies
are more readily denying Freedom of Information Act requests--while
also increasing fees, something small-budget groups say they
can ill afford. The Sierra Club, for example, has been thwarted
in getting information on problems at huge "factory farms"
that pollute rivers and groundwater. Says David Bookbinder, senior
attorney for the group: "What's different about this administration
is their willingness to say, `We're going to keep everything
secret until we're forced to disclose it--no matter what it is.'
"
The administration is undeterred by such complaints. "I
think what you've seen is a White House that has valued openness,"
says Daniel Bryant, assistant attorney general for legal policy,
and "that knows that openness with the public facilitates
confidence in government."
That's not the way Jim Kerrigan sees it. He operates a small
market-research firm in Sterling, Va., outside Washington. For
more than a decade, he has forecast federal spending on information
technology. Three months after Bush took office, the Office of
Management and Budget issued a memo telling government officials
to no longer make available such information so as to "preserve
the confidentiality of the deliberations that led to the president's
budget decisions."
As a result, Kerrigan says, information began to dry up. Requests
were ignored. And the data he did get came with so much information
censored out that they were barely usable. The fees Kerrigan
paid for a request, which once topped out at $300, jumped to
as much as $6,500. "I can't afford that," he says.
"This administration's policy is to withhold information
as much as possible."
Key Dates: Secrecy and the Bush Administration
Inauguration Day (1/20/01) Administration freezes Clinton-era
regulations, without allowing for public comment.
10/12/01 Attorney General John Ashcroft, reversing
Clinton policy, encourages agencies to deny Freedom of Information
Act requests if a "sound legal basis" exists.
10/26/01 President Bush signs U.S.A. Patriot Act, expanding
law enforcement powers and government surveillance.
2/22/02 Congress's General Accounting Office sues Vice
President Dick Cheney for refusing to disclose records of his
energy task force; the GAO eventually loses its case. A separate
private case is pending.
3/19/02 White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card directs
federal agencies to protect sensitive security information.
11/25/02 Bush signs Homeland Security Act. Its provisions
restrict public access to information filed by companies about
"critical infrastructure," among other matters.
01/3/03 Administration asks, in papers filed before
the Supreme Court, for significant narrowing of the Freedom of
Information Act.
3/25/03 Bush issues standards on classified material,
favoring secrecy and reversing provisions on openness.
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