SEJournal Online is the digital news magazine of the Society of Environmental Journalists. Learn more about SEJournal Online, including submission, subscription and advertising information.
September 10, 2008
The sharp trend toward greater government secrecy across-the-board has not slowed in the latter years of the Bush administration, a new report shows.
The fifth annual report card produced by OpenTheGovernment.org, a coalition of over 70 open government advocacy groups, offers hard numbers from a range of indicators. The conclusion: "Government secrecy increased across a wide spectrum of indicators in 2007."
Some of the key findings:
- "Almost 22 million FOIA requests were received, an increase of nearly 2 percent over last year
- The 25 departments and agencies that handle the bulk of FOIA requests failed to make a dent in their backlogs, although they received the fewest requests since reporting began in 1998
- The number of original classification decisions increased slightly after dropping two consecutive years, and the number of derivative classifications increased by almost 13 percent
- The government spent $195 maintaining the secrets already on the books for every one dollar the government spent declassifying documents, a 5 percent increase in one year
- 18 percent of the requested Department of Defense (DOD) acquisition funding is for classified, or "black," programs. Classified acquisition funding has more than doubled in real terms since FY 1995.
- $114.1 billion of federal contract funding was given out without any competition. On average since 2000, fully and openly competed contracts have dropped by almost 25 percent
- Federal surveillance activity under the jurisdiction of the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has risen for the 9th consecutive year — more than double the amount in 2000."
"2008 Secrecy Report Card," OpenTheGovernment.org, September 9, 2008. Press release. Full report.
SEJ Publication Types:
Topics on the Beat:
Region:
Visibility: