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Resources: -- A
Society of Professional Journalists resolution on “allowing federal employees to freely talk with the press” notes that “journalists’ obligation to do all they can to seek the full truth includes fighting against barriers to understanding the full truth and reporting those barriers to the public.”
--SPJ has sponsored
seven surveys showing the restrictions are pervasive in federal, state and local government, education, science organizations, police departments, etc.
--Glen Nowak, a former CDC head of media relations and a longtime communications employee,
has said that since the 1980s the restrictions on CDC staff have grown tighter with each presidential administration; every contact with a reporter is controlled by the higher political levels; and that this system “works” for officials in terms of suppressing information.
-- A recent
article in FAIR.org and an earlier
one in Columbia Journalism Review examine the gag rules.
--The New England Chapter of SPJ sponsored a
Zoom program on the Allegheny suit, moderated by First Amendment attorney Frank LoMonte, who has written a
legal pathway for such actions.
--A Maryland, Delaware, and District of Columbia Press Association
podcast episode features the lawsuit by journalist Brittany Hailer and one of her lawyers, RCFP attorney Paula Knudsen Burke.
--Among many communications over the years, 25 journalism and other groups
wrote to the Biden Administration’s Office of Science and Technology Policy asking for the elimination of such restrictions in the federal government.
--Journalism groups’ FOI officers
told the New York Times, “The press should not be taking the risk of assuming that what we get is all there is when so many people are silenced. We should be openly fighting these controls.” The longer
version of the letter is here.
--A
review of recent actions is in the PR Office Censorship
blog.