Sunshine Creates More Government Transparency

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Sunshine Creates More Government Transparency

Any Reading Of The Constitution Gives The Impression That Coverage Of Government Should be Relatively Simple. The Operations Of Government Should be Open And Clear. Whether The Story Is Focused On The Municipal Animal Control Or The Office Of The President, Government Should Operate With Full Transparency. Our Representatives And Their Staff Should Be Interested In Explaining Their Activity To Those Who Fund It.  But Any Average American Who Has Questioned The Activity Of Their Local Dog Catcher Or Their State Legislature Or The Federal Government Knows That’s Too Often Not The Case. 

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Published March 15, 2021

By Chris Krug [The Center Square] –

The work of a journalist isn’t easy.

Transparency is not natural. No one – politician, public official, or not-so-public official – is eager to be held accountable by their employer. Not a single one is waiting by the phone to answer questions about what they may know, what they may be doing, or what they’ve done. It doesn’t work that way.

No, journalists who are focused on straight-news reporting and who create a story from a source origin use every bit of their monthly data plans. Ask a journalist about the amount of time required to report and write – let alone to edit – a story that may take five minutes to read.

Reporting on the private sector is challenging, because sources may have no interest in participating. That’s their right.

But these same challenges shouldn’t exist for reporters who focus on the public sector. Too often the difference between the two isn’t always clear among those who serve in government at any level.

Every week is Sunshine Week for journalists at Franklin News Foundation. The core of our work is focused on the public sector with coverage in 35 states. Our national newswire service, The Center Square, invests the full account of its time on local issues that matter to taxpayers.

Editors and reporters at The Center Square focus on the effectiveness and efficiency of government, holding politicians and unelected bureaucrats accountable for what they are and aren’t doing at the state and local levels across the country.

Dogged persistence and diligence matter. Over the past four years, Franklin’s journalists wrote more than 650 stories about now-former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.

The Center Square was first to report on the hundreds of pages of federal documents that were released the night before Thanksgiving, which ultimately led to Illinois Democrats turning on and thus ending the career of the Chicago Machine’s Chief Executive Officer. Our story, incidentally, was rewarded by Twitter censorship with a brief – though never explained – platform suspension.

We report the news with a taxpayer’s sensibility, taking that additional reporting step that Big Media does not by asking specific questions about the cost of government – anything from the way that statehouses spend other people’s money to the ways in which they get that money from the citizens they represent.

Any reading of the Constitution gives the impression that coverage of government should be relatively simple. The operations of government should be open and clear. Whether the story is focused on the municipal animal control or the Office of the President, government should operate with full transparency. Our representatives and their staff should be interested in explaining their activity to those who fund it.

But any average American who has questioned the activity of their local dog catcher or their state legislature or the federal government knows that’s too often not the case.

Again, nobody – not your school board president, not your state legislator, definitely not your representative in Congress – is waiting by the phone hoping that a reporter calls them to check in and ask about what they’re up to. Journalists know “circle back” and “whatever” are synonyms.

Politicians have priorities, especially in budgets. Every operating budget for every size and shape of government allocates dollars to every kind of initiative, but rarely are enough resources dedicated to adequately respond to citizens’ requests for information. Our Freedom of Information laws, in many states, are toothless and allow government too many opportunities to sidestep or stall while readying scant information it eventually releases to the public.

As an exercise, submit a freedom of information request for something at a local or state government and see for yourself what you get back and when it arrives. See if even the most specific requests, where information you seek has been narrowed, are fulfilled. See how long it takes. And then see how much information has been redacted. What’s left is frequently unhelpful.

Journalism has changed over time. Straight-news reporting once was a commodity. Most metropolitan cities were served by multiple newspapers and independent reporting staffs at radio and television stations. Even the smallest towns had viable, 7-day-a-week newspapers that covered local government.

That is no longer the case. The blame is varied: the rise in cost of producing a newspaper every day. The rise of “Twitter journalism.” And the rise in distrust of journalists. Each helped shrink newsrooms with even fewer reporters who are vying for the truth, and checking government via compulsory, pocketbook-focused reporting.

At the same time, most local and state – and certainly the federal – governments expanded in size but not in transparency. Government has grown while newsgathering has shrunk. The amount of time and treasure to request, receive, and report government comings and goings has remained virtually unchanged. It’s a tragic equation in which bad governments win and good taxpayers lose.

Many view government as too big, too complex, and too far beyond the man on the street’s ability to question and understand. That need not be the case.

Government should not be able to cloak its mechanics, its decisions, or its operations from the citizens it serves and get away with it. At least, if journalists have anything to say about it.

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About the Author:

Chris Krug, Publisher of The Center Square

Chris Krug brings more than 25 years of award-winning media experience to The Center Square. He is the former publisher of the Chicago Pioneer Press newspaper chain, and was vice president for Shaw Suburban Media and a deputy editor at the Denver Post.

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2 Responses

  1. Without online conservative and nonprofit news reporters like Centersquare and The Tennessee Conservative, our republic will perish. National and traditional media are no longer the watchdogs of our republican democratic government. They now report opinions as news. All of us who toil in the trenches of the backrooms of local county commissions and the chambers of state legislatures for hours, digging up real news stories so our citizens can stay informed, do this as a labor of love for the profession we dedicated our lives to. Chris has never spoken a more truism: nobody knows or appreciates the hours that it takes to write our news articles and opinion columns, edit them, and reedit the, so someone can read a headline and paste on social media without reading a word. Many of us work for free or almost free for the love of our profession—nothing more. We deserted the newsrooms and offices of lame-stream media long ago, because they betrayed us and the obligation that we had to report the real news as watchdogs of government. Thank you to helping us keep real journalism alive and well in our republic.

  2. I believe transparency in government is vitally important. Transparency of process insures that citizens are getting what they pay for with their taxes. However, if you do not demand your local government invests in the tools to make transparency easily attained or participatory governance possible you have not fulfilled your duty as a citizen. Elect people who “walk the walk” and remove those who do not. The power to vote belongs to those who chose to use that power.

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