Farm
Bill Threatens Our Right to Know
By Patrice McDermott
Families who live near or share waterways with large corporate farms or concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) have a critical need to know some basic facts about these operations. The public's right to this information, however, could be stripped away by the Farm Bill currently under debate in Congress.
By Patrice McDermott
Families who live near or share waterways with large corporate farms or concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) have a critical need to know some basic facts about these operations. The public's right to this information, however, could be stripped away by the Farm Bill currently under debate in Congress.
We
understand that the House's intent in including the language is to make sure
that the government does not release farmers' personal information. But, there
are two major problems with the way that the House's approach to this: one, the
language ignores that the law already includes strong protections for personal
privacy; and two, the language is so broad that it wraps up information about
corporate farms with small farm operations.
Earlier
this year the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released the information of
around 80,000 livestock operations across the country to environmental groups.
After hearing from affected farmers and members of Congress, the EPA determined
that it improperly released personal information.
The EPA asked that the
requesters return the information and the requesters complied, agreeing to
return the original documents and destroy all copies of the information in
their possession. In other words, the EPA determined that existing protections
for personal privacy should have prevented them from releasing this information
in the first place.
Beyond
being an over-reaction to the controversy surrounding the EPA's actions, the
House's language sets a terrible precedent for extending the Freedom of
Information Act's personal privacy protections to corporations.
The House's
failure to define "owners" or "operators" means that the
EPA will be required to deny the public access to not only small family
operations but to large corporate operations as well. In a recent Supreme Court
case, FEC vs. ATT, the Court ruled that Congress never intended for corporations
to enjoy such protections under the FOIA. To extend these rights to
corporations would allow them to abuse personal privacy to escape public
oversight and corporate responsibility.
FOIA
is built on the premise that if the public has a right to government records,
particularly if there is a public interest in the information. The House's
language eviscerates the law's promise of transparency by completely cutting
off access to information that people might need to protect the health and
safety of their family and the broader community. House and Senate negotiators
must not allow this harmful secrecy provision to become law.
McDermott is executive director of
OpenTheGovernment.org, and author of "Who Needs to Know? The State of
Public Access to Federal Government Information," and numerous articles.
She is a recipient of the James Madison Award from the American Library
Association in recognition of her work to champion, protect and promote public
access to government information and the public's right to know.