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Public records:. Let the Sunshine In. Investigative Reporters and Editors. Attitude. Have a document state of mind. Assume it ’ s public. Assume it ’ s free. Documents = databases. Using U.S. open records laws. Federal FOIA Each state has its own laws
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Public records: Let the Sunshine In Investigative Reporters and Editors
Attitude • Have a document state of mind. • Assume it’s public. • Assume it’s free. • Documents = databases.
Using U.S. open records laws • Federal FOIA • Each state has its own laws • Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press • National Freedom of Information Coalition
Getting State Records • Each state has its own rules, but many are similar • Laws are posted online; read before you ask • Many states have organizations that will help you • You don’t have to be a resident to get records
Getting federal records • FOIA is the law that applies • There are timelines, but some agencies are better than others • Look online first • You don’t have to be a resident to request records
Key Strategies • Ask for the cost estimate before work proceeds on filling your request • Ask for everything electronically when possible • Ask to review documents when practical • Require agency to cite speicific law if any portion of request is being denied
How do I get it? • First, try to obtain the records or data without a formal public records request. • FOIA can slow down the process. • Some reporters will FOIA the list of FOIA requests. • Cajole the clerk or flack. • If you’re seeking data, find the data analyst.
Practical tips • To save time, check whether the office will accept e-mail or fax requests. • To save time, have the office e-mail the documents or data to you (if feasible). • Keep a spreadsheet of FOIA requests to stay organized and update status of each one.
Tips for data requests • Advanced Google search for data. • First, get the record layout and a blank form. • Talk directly with data people – not just flacks. • Make sure you have all of the records to avoid import/technical errors. • Know the lingo / formats / file types.
Key elements of request Ask for records electronically Ask for cost estimate in advance Show you know the law Make them explain any rejection
Follow the money • The Big Three: annual report, budget, audit: • Vendors: All businesses that sold goods/services to the local government in the past year. • Payroll data.
Personnel • The employees: The name, title, department, salary and date of hire of each employee. Try to get gender, ethnicity and date of birth. • Boards and committees: All board and committee members. • Internal phone directories: Get the staff or department phone directories. Try to find old copies to locate former employees.
Track the travel • Credit-card receipts for gas, hotels, rental cars, flights, etc. • Flight logs and manifests for a plane, helicopter or other aircraft. • Calendars and official schedules of public officials.
Monitor communications • Internal newsletters and publications. • Appointment calendars and visitor sign-in sheets. • Cell-phone, text messages and calling-card records. • Department/agency phone directories (old ones can help you find former employees).
Remember the regulators • State oversight agencies / departments. • Inspectors general (state and federal). • Congressional oversight committees. • Securities and Exchange Commission. • Attorney general (state and federal). Payroll data for all public employees.
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Aviation Accidents: • NTSB Database: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/query.asp • FAA: http://www.faa.gov/ (track tail numbers) • Airport-Data.com http://www.airport-data.com/ (search everything from tail numbers, to airports, to serial numbers, etc) • PlaneCrashinfo.com: http://www.planecrashinfo.com/ • AirDisaster.com: http://www.airdisaster.com/ • AirSafe.com: http://www.airsafe.com/events/usrecord.htm • NASA ASRS (Aviation Safety Reporting System) http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Aviation Accidents: • FlightExplorer.com: http://www.flightexplorer.com/http://travel.flightexplorer.com/ (actual real time flight tracker) • FlightAware: http://flightaware.com/ (real time flight tracker) • Air Traffic Controllers Radio Traffic: http://www.liveatc.net/ • Airliners.net http://www.airliners.net/aircraft-data/ (see any type of aircraft and its specs in the world) • Airplane photos: http://www.photovault.com/Link/Technology/Aviation/FlightCommercial/AircraftTypes.html • National Wildlife Strike database: http://wildlife.pr.erau.edu/public/index1.html
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Automobile/Trucks: • FARS-Fatality Analysis Reporting System: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/ncsa/fars.html • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/ • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Office of Defects Investigation: http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/ (main page) • http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/problems/defect/defectsearch.cfm (searchable page) • Safety and Fitness Electronic Records System (SAFER): http://www.safersys.org/ (truck accident statistics) • Car Accident Statistics: http://www.car-accidents.com/pages/stats.html • Federal Highway Administration database: http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/index.cfm
No excuses! • That information isn’t public. • Show me the exemption in the law. • The records contain confidential information. • Show me the exemption in the law. • It’s your responsibility to redact private info. • If we give it to you, we’ll have to give it to everyone. • That’s true. That’s why it’s “public” information.
No excuses! • The key person is on vacation. • Who’s filling in for that person? Has he/she not been trained? • So, you can’t serve the public or other agencies if one person is on vacation? • So, the office can’t fulfill its legal obligations? • I’ll need to talk with the office or person that oversees this office.
No excuses! • We don’t want you to do a negative story. • The reasons for requesting data are irrelevant. • I’m doing a factual story. That’s why I need the records or data. • We’ll give you some of the records or data but not all of them. • Show me the exemption in the law.
No excuses! • We don’t keep that information electronically. • Really? Then how do you track anything? • Show me your paper files and storage. • How do you report information/data to other agencies, overseers or regulators? • Our computer system is old and can’t export information. • How do you back up information? • Show me a copy of the contract for the computer system.
No excuses! • Our software is proprietary, so we can’t give you anything. • Wow. Show me the contract for that system. • Who decided to go with an expensive proprietary system, which usually costs taxpayers more? • How does your system back up information? I just want a backup copy, so that’s not proprietary.
No excuses! • That’ll cost you $58,000. • Check agency FOIA logs to see if they’ve already provided it to someone else. • Taxpayers already have paid for the public information. • All I’m asking for is a copy of the existing record or existing table(s). I’ll do the programming or analysis. • Please provide me an itemized breakdown of the costs, including labor hours and pay rates.
No excuses! • This is a huge request, so it’ll take months to pull everything together. • Narrow your focus. Be more specific. • Get records or data for a shorter period of time to see if it’s worth going back many years. • Agree on a sequence of releasing the records so you get what’s most critical first. • Offer to help. They may have ways that you can speed up the process.
No excuses! • Honestly, we’re never going to release that. • What is the appeals process? File an immediate appeal in writing. • Go over their head. • Check on whether the office is required to report that data/information elsewhere. Request it from another office.
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Aviation Accidents: • NTSB Database: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/query.asp • FAA: http://www.faa.gov/ (track tail numbers) • Airport-Data.com http://www.airport-data.com/ (search everything from tail numbers, to airports, to serial numbers, etc) • PlaneCrashinfo.com: http://www.planecrashinfo.com/ • AirDisaster.com: http://www.airdisaster.com/ • AirSafe.com: http://www.airsafe.com/events/usrecord.htm • NASA ASRS (Aviation Safety Reporting System) http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Aviation Accidents: • FlightExplorer.com: http://www.flightexplorer.com/http://travel.flightexplorer.com/ (actual real time flight tracker) • FlightAware: http://flightaware.com/ (real time flight tracker) • Air Traffic Controllers Radio Traffic: http://www.liveatc.net/ • Airliners.net http://www.airliners.net/aircraft-data/ (see any type of aircraft and its specs in the world) • Airplane photos: http://www.photovault.com/Link/Technology/Aviation/FlightCommercial/AircraftTypes.html • National Wildlife Strike database: http://wildlife.pr.erau.edu/public/index1.html
Data on Deadline Useful Web Sites Automobile/Trucks: • FARS-Fatality Analysis Reporting System: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/ncsa/fars.html • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/ • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Office of Defects Investigation: http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/ (main page) • http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/problems/defect/defectsearch.cfm (searchable page) • Safety and Fitness Electronic Records System (SAFER): http://www.safersys.org/ (truck accident statistics) • Car Accident Statistics: http://www.car-accidents.com/pages/stats.html • Federal Highway Administration database: http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/index.cfm