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Category: Your Right To Know

Your Right to Know is a monthly column distributed by the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council (www.wisfoic.org), a nonprofit group dedicated to open government.

October: Photojournalist’s arrest is troubling

October 10, 2011January 24, 2018By Michelle Vetterkind

  On Sept. 19, Clinton Fillinger was arrested while doing his job — perhaps because he was doing it. The 68-year-old veteran photojournalist, employed by Milwaukee’s WITI Fox6, was filming a house fire from behind yellow police tape. A Milwaukee police sergeant approached and ordered Fillinger to move back, “all the way back.” Fillinger’s video […]

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September: Contacts with lawmakers should be public

September 12, 2011January 24, 2018WisFOIC

Rep. John Nygren, R-Marinette, is an insurance agent who sponsored an auto insurance bill in January, one of the first bills to pass the new Legislature. His opponents pegged him as the insurance industry’s best friend; Nygren said he was following the will of the people, many of whom had told him their auto insurance […]

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August: Redistricting should be more transparent

August 2, 2011January 24, 2018WisFOIC

Every ten years, legislative and congressional district boundaries are redrawn to account for population shifts reflected in the U.S. Census. It’s an important process, one that merits months of public deliberation and scrutiny. But that’s not what happens in Wisconsin. Our state’s redistricting process is handled almost completely out of public view by the party […]

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July: Legislature should be subject to Open Meetings Law

July 5, 2011January 24, 2018WisFOIC

Wisconsin has a long and proud history of open government. We have a strong Open Meetings Law which has served Wisconsin citizens well. That law, which requires public notice at least 24 hours before public meetings, applies to your library board, school board and city council – but it does not apply to the Wisconsin […]

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June: Judge gives meetings law vital support

June 3, 2011January 24, 2018WisFOIC

No matter how people feel about the changes to Wisconsin’s collective bargaining laws passed by the Legislature in March  — and then voided on May 26 by Judge Maryann Sumi — Wisconsin residents should take heart in Judge Sumi’s decision. She declared the state’s Open Meetings Law means something. “This case is the exemplar of […]

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May: Lawmakers shouldn’t meet in secret

May 13, 2011January 24, 2018By Dee J. Hall

When 14 Democratic state senators from Wisconsin fled to Illinois in February to avoid voting on Gov. Scott Walker’s controversial anti-collective bargaining bill, a constituent complained to Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen about the secret meetings the senators were having far from the Capitol, with no public notice. Van Hollen’s office told the disgruntled taxpayer […]

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April: Open meetings case presents tough issues

April 15, 2011January 24, 2018By Bob Dreps

The key question in the ongoing legal tussle over Gov. Scott Walker’s budget repair bill comes down to this: “Must the Legislature comply with the state’s Open Meetings Law?” At first glance, the answer might seem obvious, since the Legislature itself pledged to comply when it passed the law in 1975. Here’s the exact language: […]

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March: In Madison’s memory, let the sunshine in

March 11, 2011January 23, 2018By Mark Pitsch

In 1836, with a vision for the city that would become Wisconsin’s capital, James Doty proposed that it be named after the man known as the “father of the Constitution,” who had died that year. James Madison, the fourth U.S. president, is one of the most lasting and relevant of our Founding Fathers. A signer […]

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March: Opee Awards toast open government

March 11, 2011January 24, 2018By Bill Lueders

Sunshine Week, a national celebration of the ideal (if not always the practice) of openness in government, was launched in 2005 and is already a tradition. This year it’s set for March 13-19. In connection with this event, the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is giving its fifth annual “Opee” Awards to those who’ve made […]

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February: Keep electronic communications open

February 4, 2011January 24, 2018By Christa Westerberg

Wisconsin’s open records and open meetings laws are decades old, passed long before the Internet was even a twinkle in Al Gore’s eye. While the state’s open records law explicitly includes electronic records, it falls short of providing clear guidance in every situation. And that creates problems in an age where the Internet and e-mail are […]

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December: How open will Scott Walker be?

December 21, 2010January 23, 2018By Mark Pitsch

My first question was a softball: “Will you pledge right now to run the most open, transparent gubernatorial administration in the history of the universe?” Gov.-elect Scott Walker’s one-word reply: “Absolutely.” In fact, it’s hard to imagine that Walker will not oversee a more forthcoming executive branch than his predecessor once he’s sworn into office […]

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November: Open up complaints against lawyers

November 6, 2010January 24, 2018By Dave Zweifel

The case of Ken Kratz, the “sexting” former Calumet County district attorney, suggests the state of Wisconsin needs to revamp its rules regarding the regulation of lawyers, especially those on the public payroll. Stephanie Van Groll, a victim of domestic violence, blew the whistle on Kratz, deserves credit for standing up to his disgusting behavior. […]

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October: Let the sunshine in on contracts

October 12, 2010January 24, 2018WisFOIC

A state website operating since 2007 is supposed to be informing citizens how state government spends some of their taxpayer dollars by disclosing information on state contracts worth $10,000 or more. But that is not happening. And for a state that strives to be a leader in government transparency, this is not a pretty story. […]

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September: Ask candidates about openness

September 20, 2010January 24, 2018WisFOIC

Complaints about secrecy in government tend to come after important information has been withheld. Wouldn’t it make more sense to clear the path to open government early on – before an official is elected?            With fall elections approaching, it is a good time to ask candidates what they would reveal – or not reveal – […]

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August: Email ruling a blow to openness

August 4, 2010January 24, 2018By Bill Lueders

It was like those legal dramas on TV. The judge, ruling from the bench, always starts out paying homage to some legal principle or perspective. Then there’s a “but” and the judge shifts gears, coming down firmly on the other side. So it was with the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s recent ruling in a case known […]

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August: SEC working in secrecy

August 4, 2010January 24, 2018WisFOIC

  SEC, as it turns out, is not an acronym for Securities and Exchange Commission, it’s an abbreviation for SECRECY. That’s the only conclusion we can draw after reading that the agency believes it no longer has to comply with the Freedom of Information Act under the new Wall Street reform signed into law last […]

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July: Public info belongs on the Internet

July 9, 2010January 24, 2018By Bill Lueders

Albert Einstein famously said, at the advent of the nuclear age: “The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything, save our modes of thinking, and we thus drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.” Substitute a few words and it reflects how some people feel about the information age: “The unleashed power of the Internet has changed […]

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May: State shield law a step forward

May 21, 2010September 19, 2018By Dee J. Hall

Last month, as the current legislative session ground to a close, Wisconsin became the 39th state to pass a shield law for news reporters. The law, the Whistleblower Protection Act, provides assurance to confidential sources that their identities will be protected should an attempt be made in court to force a reporter to reveal this […]

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April: Don’t end access to 911 calls

April 1, 2010January 24, 2018WisFOIC

  Wisconsin lawmakers are considering a bill to bar public access to recordings of 911 emergency calls. These audio recordings would be replaced with transcripts. As a broadcast news professional, I understand that 911 calls may be painful for families of victims. That’s why a lot of thought already goes into deciding whether and how […]

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March: Openness group honors highs and lows

March 12, 2010January 24, 2018By Bill Lueders

As part of national Sunshine Week (sunshineweek.org), March 14-20, the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is bestowing its fourth annual Opee Awards to people and institutions that have had an impact on open government in Wisconsin. This was an usually busy year for openness issues. The state Supreme Court ruled that state agencies could not […]

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  • November: Data center secrecy is unacceptable
  • October: Costs shouldn’t be used to deter records requests
  • September: ‘No comment’ is no help to the public
  • August: Ann Walsh Bradley and the cause of openness
  • July: When transparency is disregarded

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