Open records law vital to protecting democracy

 

EDITORIAL, thnt.com Online, July 7, 2007

 

New Jersey's Open Public Records Act turned five years old this week, yet access to government information still isn't what was promised.  Some uninformed or uninterested government clerks to this day don't know the law, whole categories of records remain under lock and key, and when information is parceled out sometimes it isn't what was requested or isn't very useful in the form that it's delivered.

Even so, most who have a desire to view the intimate dealings of government in action — from gadflies, to news reporters, to the curious citizen once in a while — are a far sight better off in the New Jersey of today than they were in the New Jersey of before.  People tend to forget that back then the state's citizens were stymied in their search for even routine government records by the stingiest public access law in the nation.  While abuses might still happen, by and large the quest is much easier today.

That said, there is no denying that the law, known as OPRA, works best when it gets worked aggressively by the public and the politician alike, meaning citizens ought to remain on watch for abuses, and elected officials ought to stay mindful that it is their obligation to streamline the process and expand it to new records whenever possible.

Government does, after all, belong to its citizens.  Elected officials are merely the servant class.  When this relationship gets flipped on its head, as too often happens, excesses are inevitable.  The ability of the public to peer inside that machinery, to ensure that its gears are in proper working order, is a basic necessity of effective representative democracy.  So here's to OPRA, imperfect as it may be.  Happy birthday.

 

(Emphasis added)

 

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