Interior Department
Wants To Shut Down Public Information Access
By
Sarah Okeson
Ryan Zinke is out as secretary of the Interior, but in his last days in office he tried to suppress what we can learn about the destruction Trump is doing to our nation’s public lands.
Attorney Daniel Jorjani, who
previously worked at the Koch-funded Freedom Partners, drafted a proposed rule
that would slash the public’s ability to get
public records from the 10 agencies in the Interior Department.
The Freedom
of Information Act, a federal law signed by former President
Lyndon Johnson in 1966, allows people to ask for previously unreleased
documents.
The law was passed after thousands of federal employees accused of being communists were fired during the McCarthy era, and the Eisenhower administration wouldn’t release records from the dismissals.
The law was passed after thousands of federal employees accused of being communists were fired during the McCarthy era, and the Eisenhower administration wouldn’t release records from the dismissals.
“I signed this measure
with a deep sense of pride that the United States is an open society in which the
people’s right to know is cherished and guarded,” Johnson said
after he signed the law.
Notable uses of the law include environmentalists learning that the EPA knew in the 1980s that paper mills were discharging toxic dioxin into rivers.
Jorjani’s proposal
would allow the Interior Department to reject requests that the Trump
administration decides are “unreasonably burdensome.” Currently, agencies must
fulfill records requests despite how much time and effort is required to search
for records.
“The bureau will not
honor a request that requires an unreasonably burdensome search or requires the
bureau to locate, review, redact, or arrange for inspection of a vast quantity
of material,” he wrote.
The proposal would also allow the Interior Department to impose a monthly limit for processing records.
“We’re deeply
concerned about these proposed changes,” said Nada Culver, senior counsel
for The Wilderness Society.
Jorjani, the principal
deputy solicitor, was on the transition team in the Interior Department after
Trump took office and has run the department’s legal office. The nominee for
the job, Ryan Nelson, withdrew and was nominated to fill an appellate court
vacancy.
Jorjani wrote that the
Interior Department wants to make the changes because of increases in records
requests since Trump took office.
FOIA requests have increased 30% from fiscal 2016 to fiscal 2018 as environmentalists and others have sought information to oppose Zinke’s rollbacks of public lands protections.
FOIA requests have increased 30% from fiscal 2016 to fiscal 2018 as environmentalists and others have sought information to oppose Zinke’s rollbacks of public lands protections.
Alex Thompson, a
spokeswoman for The Wilderness Society, said publishing
the proposed regulation wasn’t allowed during the government shutdown when only
necessary or emergency notices are to be published.
People have until Jan. 28 to comment on the proposed
changes.
Zinke also tried to get permission to destroy
some records about what animals are protected under the
Endangered Species Act.
A recent memo at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Department, part of the Interior Department, directs staffers to withhold or delay releasing some public documents about how the Endangered Species Act is carried out.
A recent memo at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Department, part of the Interior Department, directs staffers to withhold or delay releasing some public documents about how the Endangered Species Act is carried out.
Zinke put Jorjani in
charge of overseeing records requests, a role normally reserved for career
staffers, on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.
ACTION BOX/What You Can Do About It
Comment online or by mailing comments to Executive Secretariat-FOIA regulations, Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street NW, Washington, DC 20240. Please use Docket No. DOI-2018-0017 in your message. Comments must be submitted by Jan. 28.
Tell Daniel Jorjani your thoughts on public
records by calling the solicitor’s office at 202-208-4423, writing him at U.S.
Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street NW, Washington, DC 20240, or emailing
him at Daniel_Jorjani@ios.doi.gov.
The Wilderness Society can be reached at
1-800-THE-WILD.