National Stories
Eight projects from the Knight Open Gov news challenge will divide the money, including the Oyez Project, which gets $600,000 to expand its collection of summaries and transcripts from Supreme Court cases to include information from federal appellate courts. Another winner, OpenPlans, aims to make it easy for cities and towns to provide information about planning projects.
Poynter
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to consider a challenge to a Massachusetts law that ensures access for patients at clinics that offer abortions. Anti-abortion protesters challenged the law, saying it violated their constitutional rights, including their right to freedom of speech, by preventing them from standing on the sidewalk and speaking to those entering clinics.
Reuters
Americans are almost evenly split, 48%-47% according to a USA TODAY poll, over whether they approve or disapprove of these programs to fight terrorism. Yet they believe, 49%-44%, that the release of classified information serves rather than harms the public interest. What about the release of information that's merely embarrassing? The Pentagon in recent months has delayed, or released at night, or denied all together reports that might make the brass turn red in the face. Consider some recent examples.
USA Today
The first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence appeared on July 6, 1776, and the edition will be for sale. Robert A. Siegel Galleries in New York City is auctioning The Pennsylvania Evening Post issue Tuesday. It's estimated to fetch up to $750,000.
USA Today
Publishing the name or address of a concealed gun permit holder or applicant is set to become a crime in Louisiana, under a pair of new laws recently signed by Gov. Bobby Jindal. The laws provide that anyone who publicly identifies a gun permit holder or disseminates information contained in a permit application could face up to six months in jail and a $10,000 fine. The laws also impose penalties on state and local government employees who release gun-permit information without a court order.
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
The Internal Revenue Service targeted liberal groups as well as conservatives seeking tax-exempt status, a Democratic congressman charged on Monday after the agency acknowledged the inappropriate practice continued until last month. Rep. Sander Levin said the term "progressives" was included on IRS screening lists of applicants for tax-exempt status made available to Congress on Monday.
CNN
Following some high-profile leaks of classified data, the spotlight was shining last week on corporations hired to do secret intelligence work for the federal government. The scrutiny came from congressional hearings as well as from a new report on political contributions by private contractors. Because Edward Snowden, who leaked secret info on the National Security Agency’s surveillance programs, was an employee of a private government contractor, the Senate Armed Services Committee Thursday received a closed briefing that included details about who has access to classified data. Senators heard from NSA deputy director John Inglis; Robert Litt, general counsel for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence; and deputy U.S. attorney general James Cole.
Corporate Counsel
U.S. intelligence agencies are worried they do not yet know how much highly sensitive material is in the possession of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, whose whereabouts are unclear, several U.S. officials said.
Reuters
Government in Ohio is supposed to conduct business for the people in public, but several measures being considered by the General Assembly would dim the spotlight that keeps public officials’ actions illuminated. One open government advocate estimates that lawmakers have proposed at least 10 measures that would affect Ohioans’ ability to keep watch on their government. “I think there is more going on than usual,” said Dennis Hetzel, president of the Ohio Coalition for Open Government and executive director of the Ohio Newspaper Association. “I don’t think there’s any big conspiracy to have less open government, I just think there’s a lot going on.” Among the proposals:
Cleveland Plain Dealer |