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Penn State's FOIA exemption helped enable, hide Sandusky

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As long as they're handing out penalties for enabling Jerry Sandusky, let's hand out some to the Pennsylvania state lawmakers who exempted Penn State from the state's Freedom of Information Act.

That's right, folks. Penn State is almost completely exempt from the state's FOIA, which in Pennsylvania is called the Right to Know Law. This is despite the fact that the university received taxpayer subsidy to the tune of $276 million.

We have a school that employed a monster who preyed on children, leaders who enabled said monster, and is filled with numbskull students whose cognitive and linguistic skills appear to be limited to caring solely about football and screaming "We are Penn State." The stiff punishments handed down Monday are well-deserved.

Now let's examine how Sandusky could have been stopped earlier had it not been for some numbskulls in Harrisburg who decided that the public has no right to know when it comes to Fear and Loathing in Happy Valley.

How did Penn State get such a juicy open-records exemption? For one reason, because the university president at the heart of the cover-up scandal asked for it.

The road to secrecy

Pennsylvania historically had one of the worst open-records laws in the land, and that's saying a lot when you stack it up against the pre-reform FOIA in Illinois, Land of Corruption. Unlike many states, records in Pennsylvania were presumed closed unless the requester could prove why they should be open.

(Speaking of keeping an eye on governmenrt corruption, while Illinois has the most governments with more than 7,000, our first runner-up is ... drum roll, please ... Pennsylvania!)

Like Illinois' FOIA overhaul after the Blagojevich disgrace, public scandals shamed Pennsylvania's lawmakers in 2007 into reforming the Right to Know Act to make government more transparent, including state universities.

Enter now-ousted university president Graham Spanier, a man who in hindsight had everything to gain by keeping Penn State's records secret, and a lot to lose by opening them up to the public.

Spanier argued before state lawmakers that including Penn State in an expanded open records law would scare off private donors, affect employee compensation and talent retention, and hamper things like research that are dependent on proprietary information.

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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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