[comp.org.eff.talk] Principles of Public Information

sean@dranet.dra.com (02/25/91)

The U.S.  National Commission on Libraries and Information Science is a
permanent, independent agency of the federal government charged with
advising both Congress and the President on matters relating to national
library and information policies and plans.

The commission has approved unanimously a major federal policy document,
``Principles of Public Information,'' and urged its use by all branches of
the federal government as well as state and local government, and the
private sector in the development of information policies.  The document
was adopted by the commission at its June 29, 1990 meeting.

The full text of the ``Principles of Public Information'' follows:

Preamble

 From the birth of our nation, open and uninhibited access to public
 information has ensured good government and a free society.  Public
 information helps to educate our people, stimulate our progress and solve
 our most complex economic, scientific and social problems.  With the
 coming of the Information Age and its many new technologies, however,
 public information has expanded so quickly that basic principles regarding
 its creation, use and dissemination are in danger of being neglected and
 even forgotten.

 The National Commission on LIbraries and Information Science, therefore,
 reaffirms that the information policies of the U.S.  government are based
 on the freedoms guaranteed by the constitution, and on the recognition of
 public information as a national resource to be developed and preserved in
 the public interest.  We define ``public information'' as information
 created, compiled, and/or maintained by the Federal Government.  We assert
 that public information is information owned by the people, held in trust
 by their government, and should be available to the people except where
 restricted by law.  It is this spirit of public ownership and public trust
 that we offer the following Principles of Public Information.

1. The public has the right of access to public information.

 Government agencies should guarantee open, timely and uninhibited access
 to public information except where restricted by law.  People should be
 able to access public information, regardless of format, without any
 special training or expertise.

2. The Federal Government should guarantee the integrity and preservation
   of public information, regardless of its format.

 By maintaining public information in the face of changing times and
 technologies, government agencies assure the government's accountability
 and the accessibility of the government's business to the public.

3. The Federal Government should guarantee the dissemination,
   reproduction, and redistribution of public information.

 Any restriction of dissemination or any other function dealing with public
 information must be strictly defined by law.

4. The federal government should safeguard the privacy of persons who use
   or request information, as well as persons about whom information exists
   in government records.

5. The Federal Government should ensure a wide diversity of sources of
   access, private as well as governmental, to public information.

 Although sources of access may change over time and because of advances in
 technology, government agencies have an obligation to public to encourage
 diversity.

6. The Federal Government should not allow cost to obstruct the people's
   access to public information.

 Costs incurred by creating, collecting, and processing information for the
 government's own purposes should not be passed on to people who wish to
 utilize public information.

7. The Federal Government should ensure that information about government
  information is easily available and in a single index accessible in a
   variety of formats.

 The government index of public information should be in addition to
 inventories of information kept within individual government agencies.

8. The Federal Government should guarantee the public's access to public
   information, regardless of where they live and work, through national
   networks like the Depository Library Program.

 Government agencies should periodically review such programs as well as
 the emerging technology to ensure that access to public information
 remains inexpensive and convenient to the public.

Conclusion

 The National Commission on Libraries and Information Science offers these
 Principles of Public Information as a foundation for the decisions made
 throughout the Federal Government and the nation regarding issues of
 public information.  We urge all branches of the Federal Government, state
 and local governments and the private sector to utilize these principles
 in the development of information policies and in the creation, use,
 dissemination and preservation of public information.  We believe that in
 so acting, they will serve the best interests of the nation and the people
 in the Information Age.
-- 
Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO 63132-1806
Domain: sean@dranet.dra.com, Voice: (Work) +1 314-432-1100