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Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council

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A representative government is dependent on an informed electorate

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Author: Bill Lueders

August: Respect the rights of news photographers

August 4, 2008January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

A picture, they say, is worth 1,000 words. The television and print photographers who take them play a vital role in keeping the public informed. It’s a job that requires much skill, and sometimes entails great risk. News photographers in Wisconsin have been attacked, threatened, arrested, and had their cameras and film confiscated. They have […]

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March: Openness group doles out honors

April 16, 2008January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

As part of national Sunshine Week, March 16-22, the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is bestowing its second annual Opee Awards in recognition of people and institutions which have had an impact on open government in Wisconsin during the last year. The honorees are: Political Openness Advocate of the Year (the “Popee”): Wisconsin Supreme Court. […]

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December: Early case sheds light on records

December 5, 2007January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Walter H. Besley may well have been Wisconsin’s first open-government crusader. Back in 1853, five years after Wisconsin became a state, Besley, the clerk of circuit court in Jefferson County, billed the county board of supervisors $22 for two expenses: wood to furnish his office, and a large box of candles to light and warm […]

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March: Openness group awards cheers and jeers

March 5, 2007January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

As part of national Sunshine Week (sunshineweek.org), March 11-17,  the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is for the first time giving awards in recognition of people and events that shaped the fortunes of open government in Wisconsin in 2006, for better or worse. The honorees are: Political Openness Advocate of the Year (the “Popee”): Peg […]

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October: How open to openness will new AG be?

October 16, 2006January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Almost every state official, when asked, will express support for the public’s right to know how government operates. This is especially true of anyone who aspires to be attorney general, a job that entails authority to interpret and enforce Wisconsin’s open records and meetings laws. In fact, though, there are vast differences in the extent […]

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May: Attorney General defends secrecy

May 16, 2006January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Gregg Walker is ticked off. “It’s absolutely ludicrous that this attorney general thinks she’s for open government and open records,”  fumes Walker, the general manager of The Lakeland Times newspaper in Minocqua, referring to Peg Lautenschlager. “In a critical test of the public’s right to know, [she] failed us and fought for secrecy in government […]

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January: How to use the open records law

January 16, 2006January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

(Revised August 2013) Wisconsin’s Open Records Law begins with a declaration: “In recognition of the fact that a representative government is dependent upon an informed electorate, it is declared to be the public policy of this state that all persons are entitled to the greatest possible information regarding the affairs of government and the official […]

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August: Ruling could wreak records havoc

August 6, 2005January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Wisconsin’s Open Records Law, passed in 1981, is clear and unequivocal. It says the public is entitled to “the greatest possible information regarding the affairs of government” and the actions of officials and employees, and that “only in an exceptional case may access be denied.” But the Wisconsin Supreme Court seems bent on making these […]

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January: Lautenschlager champions open government

January 6, 2005January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Last spring, the newspaper I work for had a problem obtaining some public records from our local school district. Officials there demanded that we first send a check for $613.08 to cover the costs they expected to incur reviewing the records and deciding what information to black out. These costs put the records effectively beyond […]

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May: Officials concoct ways to thwart records access

May 5, 2004January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Why do we need a strong open records law? One answer can be found in the eagerness of some public officials to avoid complying with it. These officials would rather not have the public looking over their shoulders, second-guessing their decisions. And so they scrutinize open records rulings in search of new ways to rebuff […]

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March: Limiting records access invites abuse

March 5, 2004January 24, 2018Bill Lueders

Just as protecting civil liberties often entails defending unpopular causes, ensuring the greatest possible access  to public information can mean opposing what seem, at first, to be perfectly sensible restrictions. Two examples of this can be found in bills now before the Wisconsin Legislature. The first, AB-448, would prohibit the copying of autopsy photos; the […]

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Recent Posts

  • February: How cost is used to deny access to records
  • Wisconsin FOIC Seeking Opee Award Nominations through Jan. 31, 2025
  • January: Protect the press against frivolous lawsuits
  • December: Long waits undercut records law
  • November: A fund to fight government secrecy

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