Oregon Attorney General has the right idea

February 25, 2010 by Diana Lopez · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Sunshine Review, sunshine review 

Oregon Attorney General John Kroger is really taking transparency to heart. He’s taking part in a series of talks around the state that invite citizens and the media to suggest improvements to the state’s sunshine law.

The Attorney General is “very eager to hear people’s experiences and take input.” A great idea, since the one thing people want when they are upset or frustrated is a sympathetic ear. The people in attendance for this first talk were happy to have an outlet for their concerns, while a handful tried to point fingers about alleged corruption in the court system.

Still, the general feeling of the citizens in attendance was one of collaboration with the government. One citizen said “It’s not a matter of pointing fingers, it’s ‘let’s be as transparent as possible.’”

The talk went on in the same vein of constructive progress. Attendees made suggestions about how to improve Oregon’s law, including putting public records online, cutting fees and limiting what sometimes can be lengthy responses to public-record requests.

The attorney general’s office has taken several steps to promote government transparency. Kroger’s office has put public records and meetings manuals online, created a citizens guide to public records and meetings for laypersons, and has posted records requests online, among other things. A last step to improve Oregon’s law, according to Kroger, is to take suggestions from the public meetings to the Legislature.

This is exactly the type of personal initiative we believe in at Sunshine Review. Attorney General Kroger takes it one step further by actually asking to hear from people who have experience requesting information. And we think it pays off; the option is either becoming a transparent government voluntarily, or waiting too long until your legitimacy takes a hit and you’re forced to release information.


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