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McCullom Lake saga another reason why gov't wants to gut FOIA

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Think that's unlikely? As I blogged about here and wrote in a Sunday analysis piece here, at least two municipal governments took extreme liberties with a new exemption aimed at reining in "vexatious" FOIA requesters. The exemption took effect last August, the village governments started abusing it weeks later, and the Attorney General was forced to intercede in January and close the new loophole.

Whenever government gets a new power, it always, always tries to find new, lively and fun ways to use it to the detriment of our liberties and our wallets. New exemptions to FOIA, the Open Meetings Act and other sunshine laws are no different.

Regardless of what side if any a reader takes on the McCullom Lake situation, my stories have raised questions, from what health department officials choose to ignore to revealing the private 2006 meeting they had with Rohm and Haas executives, who got to review what the department intended to show worried McCullom Lake residents.

As I blogged about here, a reasonable person can ask whether our tax dollars paid for a rather slipshod attempt to come to the rescue of a multi-billion-dollar chemical company that obviously can take care of itself in court. And considering that the judge hearing the first case ruled the work of the health department, the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention inadmissible at trial and "irrelevant" to health issues in McCullom Lake, the county wasn't much of a knight in shining armor for said chemical company.

Our local governments' desire to scale back our sunshine laws have absolutely nothing to do with saving money or relieving staff of unduly burdensome work. That goes double for a County Board that's sitting on a $47.5 million cash reserve that can fund almost seven months of government operations.

It's about their desire to make investigative stories like these go away.

Hence your local governments' clandestine war against FOIA to keep the public from getting access to information. If you can't muzzle a watchdog, blind it.

Senior Writer Kevin Craver can be reached at kcraver@shawmedia.com.

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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