Tags for Forum Posts: Freedom, information, of
Sounds just like Haringey Council, doesn't it ?
Some of our rulers, it seems, have learned nothing at all from the expenses scandal and the damage it did to people's trust in our political system. Nor from Heather Brooke's long battle to overturn what Boyd Tonkin - in The Independent - described as "the entire reeking apple-cart of British institutional secrecy".
Will this "Review" extend our rights to information and the powers of the Information Commissioner? Or are the powers-that-be determined to see how far they can roll-back to bad business as usual? As usual we can hope for the best and prepare to protest at the worst.
In the reeking, secretive, murk at the higher reaches of Haringey Council the F.o.I. Act has been one of the few effective methods we have to find out what's going on.
Michael, what do you suggest people can do to express their views on this to our MPs and elsewhere?
Ed Gorman - defeatism is not the best starting point. Heather Brooke's account of her battle is still inspiring. It has a majority of 12.
Thanks, Michael, for that thoughtful response. Food for further thought.
I just watched Alistair Campbell interviewed on BBC Newsnight about the Volkswagen emissions scandal.
Evan Davis asked him if the problem was spin. Alistair Campbell said that what Volkswagen did was concealing. "They were lying". Suggesting that especially with global corporations, they needed: "to think transparency" . Then saying:
"They have to assume now that every single thing that has happened in the past is going to come out. And they should get it out first."
"And maybe in politics", said Evan Davis.
Earlier today Volkswagen announced they have: "decided to make a clean break and a fresh start".
I don't see our own Tory Government adopting "Think Transparency" as its guiding principle. Nor unfortunately do I expect any change from the spin and PR of our KoberTories. But it might be a sound principle and promise for a future Labour Government. And even a future Haringey Council.
Completely agree. FOI is incredibly important but there needs to be some kind of fine tuning to ensure requests are in some way legitimate and fair. I worked for a publicly funded body where the sheer number of requests meant we had a staff member working on them two days a week. An awful lot of requests were obviously from journalists who had sent identical requests to loads of organisations without bothering to find out what they actually did or whether the question was relevant. As you say a quick chat on the phone would have been much more efficient for both parties.
There is a bloke in Canada who uses FoI in the UK to pester any academics here remotely interested in climate change.
If you want to know how much to bid to take over a public service, FoI to see how much it currently costs to run.
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