FOIA Facts: The Lighter Side of FOIA
By Scott A. Hodes, Published on April 24, 2005 [Editor's Note – Scott Hodes is "away." This month’s FOIA column is
being channeled through a well known cable talk show host, from Scott, to
you. Enjoy..."and away we go."]
It seems the
Department of Justice has given up on its idea to impose
six-digit search fees on the request made
by
People for the American Way Foundation seeking information on
the number of times since September 11, 2001 that secret evidence has been
used in criminal proceedings. The DOJ is
now planning to search for the records
without payment, but the scope of what will be provided remains in
question. The parties were scheduled to be back in Court on April 21,
2005.
Isn’t Sabrina Pacifici and her blog,
beSpacific, just great?
Senator John Corwyn’s (R-TX) idea to create a
commission to study and issue advice on
the FOIA has made it through
committee in the Senate. Wonder what
Washington D.C. FOIA powers want to be on this sexy committee?
For my money, the most musically talented Jackson has always been Joe.
Meanwhile, Sen. Corwyn’s FOIA amendments seem to be going nowhere fast in
either houses of Congress. Maybe if the FOIA was in need of life-support,
the government would act quicker.
Come Sunday night, I’m watching Arrested Development on Fox. On
Tuesdays, its NBC’s Scrubs and the Office.
They say you should never watch sausage being made. So, do FOIA requesters
really want a database to continually track the states of their FOIA
requests as they meander through the bureaucracy, as pending legislation
provides?
The music of the
Bangles really holds up. Monday is still
manic, even 20 years later. And Susannah Hoff was never tough on the eyes.
The FOIA has really shined a lot of light on government in the past year.
Without it, we’d provably never have seen the
torture memos.
I miss hair bands [Editor's note...so do I...sigh]
Writing about FOIA is tough. Writing about baseball is a lot easier. And
isn’t it great our nation's capital now has a team. Go
Nats!
Nearly
four million FOIA requests were made last
year. Puts the number of my marriages in perspective.
The non-profit group
Fund for Constitutional Government
reports that the federal government classified a record 15.6 million
documents in 2004. I wonder what’s the big secret?
It’s been a pleasure. Scott will be back next month, but you can always find him at www.infoprivacylaw.com.
